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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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-Title: The Shadow of Life
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: June 17, 2013 [EBook #42965]
-
-Language: English
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SHADOW OF LIFE ***
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42965 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Shadow of Life
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: June 17, 2013 [EBook #42965]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SHADOW OF LIFE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-BY
-
-Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-AUTHOR OF "THE RESCUE," "THE CONFOUNDING OF
-CAMELIA," "PATHS OF JUDGEMENT," ETC.
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-NEW YORK
-
-The Century Co.
-
-1906
-
-Copyright, 1906, by
-The Century Co.
-
-_Published February, 1906_
-
-THE DE VINNE PRESS
-
-
-
-
-
-THE SHADOW OF LIFE
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-Elspeth Gifford was five years old when she went to live at Kirklands.
-Her father, an army officer, died in her babyhood, and her mother a few
-years later. The uncle and aunts in Scotland, all three much her
-mother's seniors, were the child's nearest relatives.
-
-To such a little girl death had meant no more than a bewildered
-loneliness, but the bewilderment was so sharp, the loneliness so aching,
-that she cried herself into an illness. She had seen her dead mother,
-the sweet, sightless, silent face, familiar yet amazing, and more than
-any fear or shrinking had been the suffocating mystery of feeling
-herself forgotten and left behind. Her uncle Nigel, sorrowful and grave,
-but so large and kind that his presence seemed to radiate a restoring
-warmth, came to London for her and a fond nurse went with her to the
-North, and after a few weeks the anxious affection of her aunts Rachel
-and Barbara built about her, again, a child's safe universe of love.
-
-Kirklands was a large white house and stood on a slope facing south,
-backed by a rise of thickly wooded hill and overlooking a sea of
-heathery moorland. It was a solitary but not a melancholy house. Lichens
-yellowed the high-pitched slate roof and creepers clung to the roughly
-"harled" walls. On sunny days the long rows of windows were golden
-squares in the illumined white, and, under a desolate winter sky, glowed
-with an inner radiance.
-
-In the tall limes to the west a vast colony of rooks made their nests;
-and to Eppie these high nests, so dark against the sky in the vaguely
-green boughs of spring or in the autumn's bare, swaying branches, had a
-weird, fairy-tale charm. They belonged neither to the earth nor to the
-sky, but seemed to float between, in a place of inaccessible romance,
-and the clamor, joyous yet irritable, at dawn and evening seemed full of
-quaint, strange secrets that only a wandering prince or princess would
-have understood.
-
-Before the house a round of vivid green was encircled by the drive that
-led through high stone gates to the moorland road. A stone wall, running
-from gate to gate, divided the lawn from the road, and upon each pillar
-a curiously carved old griffin, its back and head spotted with yellow
-lichens, held stiffly up, for the inspection of passers-by, the family
-escutcheon. From the windows at the back of the house one looked up at
-the hilltop, bare but for a group of pine-trees, and down into a deep
-garden. Here, among utilitarian squares of vegetable beds, went
-overgrown borders of flowers--bands of larkspurs, lupins, stocks, and
-columbines. The golden-gray of the walls was thickly embroidered with
-climbing fruit-trees, and was entirely covered, at one end of the
-garden, by a small snow-white rose, old-fashioned, closely petaled; and
-here in a corner stood a thatched summer-house, where Eppie played with
-her dolls, and where, on warm summer days, the white roses filled the
-air with a fragrance heavy yet fresh in its wine-like sweetness. All
-Eppie's early memories of Kirklands centered about the summer-house and
-were mingled with the fragrance of the roses. Old James, the gardener,
-put up there a little locker where her toys were stored, and shelves
-where she ranged her dolls' dishes. There were rustic seats, too, and a
-table--a table always rather unsteady on the uneven wooden floor. The
-sun basked in that sheltered, windless corner, and, when it rained, the
-low, projecting eaves ranged one safely about with a silvery fringe of
-drops through which one looked out over the wet garden and up at the
-white walls of the house, crossed by the boughs of a great, dark
-pine-tree.
-
-Inside the house the chief room was the fine old library, where, from
-long windows, one looked south over the purples and blues of the
-moorland. Books filled the shelves from floor to ceiling--old-fashioned
-tomes in leather bindings, shut away, many of them, behind brass
-gratings and with all the delightful sense of peril connected with the
-lofty upper ranges, only to be reached by a courageous use of the
-library steps.
-
-Here Uncle Nigel gave Eppie lessons in Greek and history every morning,
-aided in the minor matters of her education by a submissive nursery
-governess, an Englishwoman, High Church in doctrine and plaintive in a
-country of dissent.
-
-A door among the book-shelves led from the library into the morning-room
-or boudoir, where Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara sewed, read, dispensed
-small charities and lengthy advice to the village poor--a cheerful
-little room in spite of its northern aspect and the shadowing trunk of
-the great pine-tree just outside its windows. It was all faded chintzes,
-gilt carvings, porcelain ornaments in corner cabinets; its paper was
-white with a fine gilt line upon it; and even though to Eppie it had sad
-associations with Bible lessons and Sunday morning collects, it retained
-always its aspect of incongruous and delightful gaiety--almost of
-frivolity. Sitting there in their delicate caps and neatly appointed
-dresses, with their mild eyes and smoothly banded hair, Aunt Rachel and
-Aunt Barbara gathered a picture-book charm--seemed to count less as
-personalities and more as ornaments. On the other side of the hall,
-rather bare and bleak in its antlered spaciousness, were the dining-and
-smoking-rooms, the first paneled in slightly carved wood, painted white,
-the last a thoroughly modern room, redolent of shabby comforts, with
-deep leather chairs, massive mid-century furniture, and an aggressively
-cheerful paper.
-
-The drawing-room, above the library, was never used--a long, vacant
-room, into which Eppie would wander with a pleasant sense of
-trespassing and impertinence; a trivial room, for all the dignity of its
-shrouded shapes and huge, draped chandelier. Its silver-flecked gray
-paper and oval gilt picture-frames recalled an epoch nearer and uglier
-than that of the grave library and sprightly boudoir below, though even
-its ugliness had a charm. Eppie was fond of playing by herself there,
-and hid sundry secrets under the Chinese cabinet, a large, scowling
-piece of furniture, its black lacquered panels inlaid with
-mother-of-pearl. Once it was a quaintly cut cake, neatly sealed in a
-small jeweler's box, that she thrust far away under it; and once a
-minute china doll, offspring of a Christmas cracker and too minute for
-personality, was swaddled mummy fashion in a ribbon and placed beside
-the box. Much excitement was to be had by not looking to see if the
-secrets were still there and in hastily removing them when a cleaning
-threatened.
-
-The day-nursery, afterward the school-room, was over the dining-room,
-and the bedrooms were at the back of the house.
-
-The Carmichaels were of an ancient and impoverished family, their
-estates, shrunken as they were, only kept together by careful economy,
-but there was no touch of dreariness in Eppie's home. She was a happy
-child, filling her life with imaginative pastimes and finding on every
-side objects for her vigorous affections. Her aunts' mild disciplines
-weighed lightly on her. Love and discipline were sundered principles in
-the grandmotherly administration, and Eppie soon learned that the
-formalities of the first were easily evaded and to weigh the force of
-her own naughtiness against it. Corporal punishment formed part of the
-Misses Carmichael's conception of discipline, but though, on the rare
-occasions when it could not be escaped, Eppie bawled heart-rendingly
-during the very tremulous application, it was with little disturbance of
-spirit that she endured the reward of transgression.
-
-At an early age she understood very clearly the simple characters around
-her. Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara were both placid, both pious, both
-full of unsophisticated good works, both serenely acquiescent in their
-lots. In Aunt Barbara, indeed, placidity was touched with wistfulness;
-she was the gentler, the more yielding of the two. Aunt Rachel could be
-inspired with the greater ruthlessness of conscientious conviction. It
-was she who insisted upon the letter of the law in regard to the Sunday
-collect, the Sunday church-going, who mingled reproof with her village
-charities, who could criticize with such decision the short-comings,
-doctrinal and domestic, of Mr. MacNab, minister of the little
-established church that stood near the village. Aunt Barbara was far
-less assured of the forms of things; she seemed to search and fumble a
-little for further, fuller outlets, and yet to have found a greater
-serenity. Aunt Rachel was fond of pointing out to her niece such facts
-of geology, botany, and natural history in general as the country life
-and her own somewhat rudimentary knowledge suggested to her as useful;
-Aunt Barbara, on the contrary, told pretty, allegorical tales about
-birds and flowers--tales with a heavy cargo of moral insinuation, to
-which, it must be confessed, Eppie listened with an inner sense of
-stubborn realism. It was Aunt Barbara who sought to impress upon her
-that the inclusive attribute of Deity was love, and who, when Eppie
-asked her where God was, answered, "In your heart, dear child." Eppie
-was much puzzled by anatomical considerations in reflecting upon this
-information. Aunt Rachel, with clear-cut, objective facts from Genesis,
-was less mystifying to inquisitive, but pagan childhood. Eppie could not
-help thinking of God as somewhat like austere, gray-bearded old James,
-the gardener, whose vocation suggested that pictorial chapter in the
-Bible, and who, when he found her one day eating unripe fruit, warned
-her with such severity of painful retribution.
-
-The aunts spent year after year at Kirklands, with an infrequent trip to
-Edinburgh. Neither had been South since the death of the beloved younger
-sister. Uncle Nigel, the general, older than either, was russet-faced,
-white-haired, robust. He embodied a sound, well-nurtured type and
-brought to it hardly an individual variation. He taught his niece,
-re-read a few old books, followed current thought in the "Quarterly" and
-the "Scotsman," and wrote his memoirs, that moved with difficulty from
-boyhood, so detailed were his recollections and so painstaking his
-recording of inessential fact.
-
-For their few neighbors, life went on as slowly as for the Carmichaels.
-The Carstons of Carlowrie House were in touch with a larger outside
-life: Sir Alec Carston was member for the county; but the inmates of
-Brechin House, Crail Hill, and Newton Lowry were fixtures. These dim
-personages hardly counted at all in young Eppie's experience. She saw
-them gathered round the tea-table in the library when she was summoned
-to appear with tidy hair and fresh frock: stout, ruddy ladies in
-driving-gloves and boat-shaped hats; dry, thin young ladies in
-hard-looking muslins and with frizzed fringes; a solid laird or two.
-They were vague images in her world.
-
-People who really counted were the village people, and on the basis of
-her aunts' charitable relationship Eppie built up for herself with most
-of them a tyrannous friendship. The village was over two miles away; one
-reached it by the main road that ran along the moor, past the
-birch-woods, the tiny loch, and then down a steep bit of hill to the
-handful of huddled gray roofs. There was the post-office, the sweet-shop
-with its dim, small panes, behind which, to Eppie's imagination, the
-bull's-eyes and toffee and Edinburgh rock looked, in their jars, like
-odd fish in an aquarium; there was the carpenter's shop, the floor all
-heaped with scented shavings, through which one's feet shuffled in
-delightful, dry rustlings; there the public-house, a lurid corner
-building, past which Miss Grimsby always hurried her over-interested
-young charge, and there the little inn where one ordered the dusty,
-lurching, capacious old fly that conveyed one to the station, five miles
-away. Eppie was far more in the village than her share of her aunts'
-charities at all justified, and was often brought in disgrace from
-sheer truancy. The village babies, her dolls, and Robbie, her Aberdeen
-terrier, were the realities at once serious and radiant of life. She
-could do for them, love them as she would. Her uncle and aunts and the
-fond old nurse were included in an unquestioning tenderness, but they
-could not be brought under its laws, and their independence made them
-more remote.
-
-Remote, too, though by no means independent, and calling forth little
-tenderness, were her cousins, who spent part of their holidays each
-summer at Kirklands. They were English boys, coming from an English
-school, and Eppie was very stanchly Scotch. The Graingers, Jim and
-Clarence, were glad young animals. They brought from a home of small
-means and overflowing sisters uncouth though not bad manners and an
-assured tradition of facile bullying. The small Scotch cousin was at
-first seen only in the light of a convenience. She was to be ignored,
-save for her few and rudimentary uses. But Eppie, at eight years old,
-when the Graingers first came, had an opposed and firmly established
-tradition. In her own domain, she was absolute ruler, and not for a
-moment did her conception of her supremacy waver. Her assurance was so
-complete that it left no room for painful struggle or dispute. From
-helpless stupor to a submission as helpless, the cousins fell by degrees
-to a not unhappy dependence. Eppie ran, climbed, played, as good a boy
-as either; and it was she who organized games, she who invented
-wonderful new adventures, all illumined by thrilling recitatives while
-in progress, she who, though their ally, and a friendly one, was the
-brains of the alliance, and, as thinker, dominated. Brains, at their
-age, being rudimentary in the young male, Eppie had some ground for her
-consciousness of kindly disdain. She regarded Jim and Clarence as an
-animated form of toy, more amusing than other toys because of
-possibilities of unruliness, or as a mere audience, significant only as
-a means for adding to the zest of life. Clarence, the younger, even from
-the first dumb days of reconstruction, was the more malleable. He was
-formed for the part of dazzled subjection to a strong and splendid
-despotism. Eppie treated her subject races to plenty of pomp and glory.
-Clarence listened, tranced, to her heroic stories, followed her
-leadership with docile, eager fidelity, and finally, showing symptoms of
-extreme romanticism, declared himself forever in love with her. Eppie,
-like the ascendant race again, made prompt and shameless use of the
-avowed and very apparent weakness. She bartered rare and difficult
-favors for acts of service, and on one occasion--a patch of purple in
-young Clarence's maudlin days--submitted, with a stony grimace, to being
-kissed; for this treasure Clarence paid by stealing down to the
-forbidden public-house and there buying a bottle of beer which Eppie and
-Jim were to consume as robbers in a cave,--Clarence the seized and
-despoiled traveler. Eppie was made rather ill by her share of the beer,
-but, standing in a bed-gown at her window, she called to her cousins, in
-the garden below, such cheerful accounts of her malady, the slight
-chastisement that Aunt Rachel had inflicted, and her deft evasion of
-medicines, that her luster was heightened rather than dimmed by the
-disaster. Jim never owned, for a moment, to there being any luster. He
-was a square-faced boy, with abrupt nose, and lips funnily turning up at
-the corners, yet funnily grim,--most unsmiling of lips. He followed
-Eppie's lead with the half-surly look of a slave in bondage, and seemed
-dumbly to recognize that his own unfitness rather than Eppie's right
-gave her authority. He retaliated on Clarence for his sense of
-subjection and cruelly teased and scoffed at him. Clarence, when pushed
-too far, would appeal to Eppie for protection, and on these occasions,
-even while she sheltered him, a strange understanding seemed to pass
-between her and the tormentor as though, with him, she found Clarence
-ludicrous. Jim, before her stinging reproofs, would stand tongue-tied
-and furious, but, while she stung him, Eppie liked the sullen culprit
-better than the suppliant victim.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-When Eppie was ten years old, she heard one day that a boy, a new boy,
-was coming to spend the spring and summer--a boy from India, Gavan
-Palairet. His mother and her own had been dear friends, and his father,
-as hers had been, was in the army; and these points of contact mitigated
-for Eppie the sense of exotic strangeness.
-
-Eppie gathered that a cloud rested upon Mrs. Palairet, and the boy,
-though exotic, seemed to come from the far, brilliant country with his
-mother's cloud about him.
-
-"Ah, poor Fanny!" the general sighed over the letter he read at the
-breakfast-table. "How did she come to marry that brute! It will be a
-heart-breaking thing for her to send the boy from her."
-
-Eppie, listening with keen interest, gathered further, from the
-reminiscent talk that went on between the sisters and brother, that Mrs.
-Palairet, for some years of her boy's babyhood, lived in England; then
-it had been India and the effort to keep him near her in the hills, and
-now his delicacy and the definite necessity of schooling had braced her
-to the parting. The general said, glancing with fond pride at his
-niece, that Eppie would be a fine playmate for him and would be of great
-service in cheering him before his plunge into school. Fanny had begged
-for much gentleness and affection for him. Apparently the boy was as
-heartbroken as she.
-
-Eppie had very little diffidence about her own powers as either playmate
-or cheerer: she was well accustomed to both parts; but her eagerness to
-sustain and amuse the invalid was touched with a little shyness. The sad
-boy from India--her heart and mind rushed out in a hundred plans of
-welcome and consolation; but she suspected that a sad boy from India
-would require subtler methods than those sufficing for a Jim or a
-Clarence. From the first moment of hearing about him she had felt, as if
-instinctively, that he would not be at all like Jim and Clarence.
-
-He came on a still, sunny spring day. The general went to meet him at
-the station, and while he was gone Eppie made excitement endurable by
-vigorous action. Again and again she visited the fresh little room
-overlooking the hills, the garden, the pine-tree boughs, standing in a
-thoughtful surveyal of its beauties and comforts or darting off to add
-to them. She herself chose the delightful piece of green soap from the
-store-cupboard and the books for the table; and she gathered the
-daffodils in the birch-woods, filling every vase with them, so that the
-little room with its white walls and hangings of white dimity seemed
-lighted by clusters of pale, bright flames.
-
-When the old fly rumbled at last through the gates and around the drive,
-Miss Rachel and Miss Barbara were in the doorway, and Eppie stood
-before them on the broad stone step, Robbie beside her.
-
-Eppie was a lithe, sturdy, broad-shouldered child, with russet,
-sun-streaked hair, dark yet radiant, falling to her waist. She had a
-pale, freckled face and the woodland eyes of a gay, deep-hearted dog.
-To-day she wore a straight white frock, and her hair, her frock, dazzled
-with sunlight. No more invigorating figure could have greeted a jaded
-traveler.
-
-That it was a very jaded traveler she saw at once, while the general
-bundled out of the fly and handed rugs, dressing-cases, and cages to the
-maid, making a passage for Gavan's descent. The boy followed him,
-casting anxious glances at the cages, and Eppie's eyes, following his,
-saw tropical birds in one and in the other a quaint, pathetic little
-beast--a lemur-like monkey swaddled in flannel and motionless with fear.
-Its quick, shining eyes met hers for a moment, and she looked away from
-them with a sense of pity and repulsion.
-
-Gavan, as he ascended the steps, looked at once weary, frightened, and
-composed. He had a white, thin face and thick black hair--the sort of
-face and hair, Eppie thought, that the wandering prince of one of her
-own stories, the prince who understood the rooks' secrets, would have.
-He was dressed in a long gray traveling-cloak with capes. The eager
-welcome she had in readiness for him seemed out of place before his
-gentle air of self-possession, going as it did with the look of almost
-painful shrinking. She was a little at a loss and so were the aunts, as
-she saw. They took his hand in turn, they smiled, they murmured vague
-words of kindness; but they did not venture to kiss him. He did not seem
-as little a boy as they had expected. The same expression of restraint
-was on Uncle Nigel's hearty countenance. The sad boy was frozen and he
-chilled others.
-
-He was among them now, in the hall, his cages and rugs and boxes about
-him, and, with all the cheery bustling to and fro, he must feel himself
-dreadfully alone. Eppie, too, was chilled and knew, indeed, the
-childish, panic impulse to run away, but her imagination of his
-loneliness was so strong as to nerve quite another impulse. Once she saw
-him as so desolate she could not hesitate. With resolute gravity she
-took his hand, saying, "I am so glad that you have come, Gavan," and, as
-resolutely and as gravely, she kissed him on the cheek. He flushed so
-deeply that for a moment all her panic came back with the fear that she
-had wounded his pride; but in a moment he said, glancing at her, "You
-are very kind. I am glad to be here, too."
-
-His pride was not at all wounded. Eppie felt that at all events the
-worst of the ice was broken.
-
-"May I feed your animals for you while you rest?" she asked him, as,
-with Aunt Barbara, they went up-stairs to his room. Gavan carried the
-lemur himself. Eppie had the birds in their cage.
-
-"Thanks, so much. It only takes a moment; I can do it. My monkey would
-be afraid of any one else," he answered, adding, "The journey has been
-too much for him; he has been very strange all day."
-
-"He will soon get well here," said Eppie, encouragingly--"this is such a
-healthy place. But Scotland will be a great change from India for him,
-won't it?"
-
-"Very great. I am afraid he is going to be ill." And again Gavan's eye
-turned its look of weary anxiety upon the lemur.
-
-But his anxiety did not make him forget his courtesy. "What a beautiful
-view," he said, when they reached his room, "and what beautiful
-flowers!"
-
-"I have this view, too," said Eppie. "The school-room has the view of
-the moor; but I like this best, for early morning when one gets up. You
-will see how lovely it is to smell the pine-tree when it is all wet with
-dew."
-
-Gavan agreed that it must be lovely, and looked out with her at the
-blue-green boughs; but even while he looked and admired, she felt more
-courtesy than interest.
-
-They left him in his room to rest till tea-time, and in the library Aunt
-Rachel and Aunt Barbara exclaimed over his air of fragility.
-
-"He is fearfully tired, poor little fellow," said the general; "a day or
-two of rest will set him up."
-
-"He looks a very intelligent boy, Nigel," said Miss Rachel, "but not a
-cheerful disposition."
-
-"How could one expect that from him now, poor, dear child!" Aunt Barbara
-expostulated. "He has a beautiful nature, I am sure--such a sensitive
-mouth and such fine eyes."
-
-And the general said: "He is wonderfully like his mother. I am glad to
-see that he takes after Claude Palairet in nothing."
-
-Eppie asked if Captain Palairet were very horrid and was told that he
-was, with the warning that no intimation of such knowledge on her part
-was to be given to her new playmate; a warning that Eppie received with
-some indignation. No one, she was sure, could feel for Gavan as she did,
-or know so well what to say and what not to say to him.
-
-She was gratified to hear that he was not to go down to dinner but was
-to share the school-room high-tea with her and Miss Grimsby. But in the
-wide school-room, ruddy with the hues of sunset and hung with its maps
-and its childish decorations of Caldecott drawings and colored Christmas
-supplements from the "Graphic,"--little girls on stairs with dogs, and
-"Cherry Ripe,"--he was almost oppressively out of place. Not that he
-seemed to find himself so. He made, evidently, no claims to maturity.
-But Eppie felt a strange sense of shrunken importance as she listened to
-him politely answering Miss Grimsby's questions about his voyage and
-giving her all sorts of information about religious sects in India. She
-saw herself relegated to a humbler rle than any she had conceived
-possible for herself. She would be lucky if she succeeded in cheering at
-all this remote person; it was doubtful if she could ever come near
-enough to console. She took this first blow to her self-assurance very
-wholesomely. Her interest in the sad boy was all the keener for it. She
-led him, next morning, about the garden, over a bit of the moor, and
-into the fairyland of the birch-woods--their young green all tremulous
-in the wind and sunlight. And she showed him, among the pines and
-heather, the winding path, its white, sandy soil laced with black
-tree-roots, that led to the hilltop. "When you are quite rested, we will
-go up there, if you like," she said. "The burn runs beside this path
-almost all the way--you can't think how pretty it is; and when you get
-to the top you can see for miles and miles all about, all over the
-moors, and the hills, away beyond there, and you can see two villages
-besides ours, and such a beautiful windmill."
-
-Gavan, hardly noticing the kind little girl, except to know that she was
-kind, assented to all her projects, indifferent to them and to her.
-
-A day or two after his arrival, he and Eppie were united in ministering
-to the dying lemur. The sad creature lay curled up in its basket,
-motionless, refusing food, only from time to time stretching out a
-languid little hand to its master; and when Gavan took it, the delicate
-animal miniature lay inert in his. Its eyes, seeming to grow larger and
-brighter as life went, had a strange look of question and wonder.
-
-Eppie wept loudly when it was dead; but Gavan had no tears. She
-suspected him of a suffering all the keener and that his self-control
-did not allow him the relief of emotion before her. She hoped, at least,
-to be near him in the formalities of grief, and proposed that they
-should bury the lemur together, suggesting a spot among birch-trees and
-heather where some rabbits of her own were interred. When she spoke of
-the ceremony, Gavan hesitated; to repulse her, or to have her with him
-in the task of burial, were perhaps equally painful to him. "If you
-don't mind, I think I would rather do it by myself," he said in his
-gentle, tentative way.
-
-Eppie felt her lack of delicacy unconsciously rebuked. She recognized
-that, in spite of her most genuine grief, the burial of the lemur had
-held out to her some of the satisfactory possibilities of a solemn game.
-She had been gross in imagining that Gavan could share in such divided
-instincts. Her tears fell for her own just abasement, as well as for the
-lemur, while she watched Gavan walking away into the woods--evidently
-avoiding the proximity of the rabbits--with the small white box under
-his arm.
-
-The day after this was Sunday, a day of doom to Eppie. It meant that
-morning recitation of hymn and collect in the chintz and gilt boudoir
-and then the bleak and barren hours in church. Even Aunt Barbara's
-mildness could, on this subject, become inflexible, and Aunt Rachel's
-aspect reminded Eppie of the stern angel with the flaming sword driving
-frail, reluctant humanity into the stony wilderness. A flaming sword was
-needed. Every Sunday saw the renewal of her protest, and there were
-occasions on which her submission was only extorted after disgraceful
-scenes. Eppie herself, on looking back, had to own that she had indeed
-disgraced herself when she had taken refuge under her bed and lain
-there, her hat all bent, her fresh dress all crumpled, fiercely
-shrieking her refusal; and disgrace had been deeper on another day when
-she had actually struck out at her aunts while they mutely and in pale
-indignation haled her toward the door. It was dreadful to remember that
-Aunt Barbara had burst into tears. Eppie could not forgive herself for
-that. She had a stoic satisfaction in the memory of the smart whipping
-that she had borne without a whimper, and perhaps did not altogether
-repent the heavier slap she had dealt Aunt Rachel; but the thought of
-Aunt Barbara's tears--they had continued so piteously to flow while Aunt
-Rachel whipped her--quelled physical revolt forever. She was older now,
-too, and protest only took the form of dejection and a hostile gloom.
-
-On this Sunday the gloom was shot with a new and, it seemed, a most
-legitimate hope. Boys were usually irreligious; the Grainger cousins
-certainly were so: they had once run away on Sunday morning. She could
-not, to be sure, build much upon possible analogies of behavior between
-Gavan and the Graingers; yet the facts of his age and sex were there:
-normal, youthful manliness might be relied upon. If Gavan wished to
-remain it seemed perfectly probable that the elders might yield as a
-matter of course, and as if to a grown-up guest. Gavan was hardly
-treated as a child by any of them.
-
-"You are fond of going to church, I hope, Gavan," Aunt Rachel said at
-breakfast. The question had its reproof for Eppie, who, with large eyes,
-over her porridge, listened for the reply.
-
-"Yes, very," was the doom that fell.
-
-Eppie flushed so deeply that Gavan noticed it. "I don't mind a bit not
-going if Eppie doesn't go and would like to have me stay at home with
-her," he hastened, with an almost uncanny intuition of her
-disappointment, to add.
-
-Aunt Rachel cast an eye of comprehension upon Eppie's discomfited
-visage. "That would be a most inappropriate generosity, my dear Gavan.
-Eppie comes with us always."
-
-Gavan still looked at Eppie, who, with downcast eyes, ate swiftly.
-
-"Now I'll be bound that she has been wheedling you to get her off,
-Gavan," said the general, with genial banter. "She is a little rebel to
-the bone. She knows that it's no good to rebel, so she put you up to
-pleading for her"; and, as Gavan protested, "Indeed, indeed, sir, she
-didn't," he still continued, "Oh, Eppie, you baggage, you! Isn't that
-it, eh? Didn't you hope that you could stay with him if he stayed
-behind?"
-
-"Yes, I did," Eppie said, without contrition.
-
-"She didn't tell me so," said Gavan, full of evident sympathy for
-Eppie's wounds under this false accusation.
-
-She repelled his defense with a curt, "I would have, if it would have
-done any good."
-
-"Ah, that's my brave lassie," laughed the general; but Aunt Rachel ended
-the unseemly exposure with a decisive, "Be still now, Eppie; we know too
-well what you feel about this subject. There is nothing brave in such
-naughtiness."
-
-Gavan said no more; from Eppie's unmoved expression he guessed that such
-reproofs did not cut deep. He joined her after breakfast as she stood
-in the open doorway, looking out at the squandered glories of the day.
-
-"Do you dislike going to church so much?" he asked her. The friendly
-bond of his sympathy at the table would have cheered her heart at
-another time; it could do no more for her now than make frankness easy
-and a relief.
-
-"I hate it," she answered.
-
-"But why?"
-
-"It's so long--so stupid."
-
-Gavan loitered about before her on the door-step, his hands in his
-pockets. Evidently he could find no ready comment for her accusation.
-
-"Every one looks so silly and so sleepy," she went on. "Mr. MacNab is so
-ugly. Besides, he is an unkind man: he whips his children all the time;
-not whippings when they deserve it--like mine,"--Gavan looked at her,
-startled by this impersonally just remark,--"he whips them because he is
-cross himself. Why should he tell us about being good if he is as
-ill-tempered as possible? And he has a horrid voice,--not like the
-village people, who talk in a dear, funny way,--he has a horrid, pretend
-voice. And you stand up and sit down and have nothing to do for ages and
-ages. I don't see how anybody _can_ like church."
-
-Gavan kicked vaguely at the lichen spots.
-
-"Do you really _like_ it?"
-
-"Yes," he answered, with his shy abruptness.
-
-"But why? It's different, I know, for old people--I don't suppose that
-they mind things any longer; but I don't see how a boy, a young
-boy"--and Eppie allowed herself a reproachful emphasis--"can possibly
-like it."
-
-"I'm used to it, you see, and I don't think of it in your way at all."
-Gavan could not speak to this funny child of its sacred associations. In
-church he had always felt that he and his mother had escaped to a place
-of reality and peace. He entered, through his love for her, into the
-love of the sense of sanctuary from an ominous and hostile world. And he
-was a boy with a deep, sad sense of God.
-
-"But you don't _like_ it," said the insistent Eppie.
-
-"I more than like it."
-
-She eyed him gravely. "I suppose it is because you are so grown up. Yet
-you are only four years older than I am. I wonder if I will ever get to
-like it. I hope not."
-
-"Well, it will be more comfortable for you if you do,--since you have to
-go," said Gavan, with his faint, wintry smile.
-
-She felt the kindness of his austere banter, and retorting, "I'd rather
-not be comfortable, then," joined him in the sunlight on the broad,
-stone step, going on with quite a sense of companionship: "Only one
-thing I don't so much mind--and that is the hymns. I am so glad when
-they come that I almost shout them. Sometimes--I'm telling you as quite
-a secret, you know--I shout as loud as I possibly can on purpose to
-disturb Aunt Rachel. I know it's wrong, so don't bother to tell me so;
-besides, it's partly because I really like to shout. But I always do
-hope that some day they may leave me at home rather than have me making
-such a noise. People often turn round to look."
-
-Gavan laughed.
-
-"You think that wicked no doubt?"
-
-"No, I think it funny, and quite useless, I'm sure."
-
-After all, Gavan wasn't a muff, as a boy fond of church might have been
-suspected of being.
-
-Yet after the walk through the birch-woods and over a corner of moor to
-the bare little common where the church stood, and when they were all
-installed in the hard, familiar pew, a new and still more alienating
-impression came to her--alienating yet fascinating. A sense of awe crept
-over her and she watched Gavan in an absorbed, a dreamy wonder.
-
-Eppie only associated prayers with a bedside; they were part of the
-toilet, so to speak--went in with the routine of hair-and tooth-brushing
-and having one's bath. To pray in church, if one were a young person,
-seemed a mystifying, almost an abnormal oddity. She was accustomed to
-seeing in the sodden faces of the village children an echo to her own
-wholesome vacuity. But Gavan really prayed; that was evident. He buried
-his face in his arms. He thought of no one near him.
-
-It was Eppie's custom to vary the long monotony of Mr. MacNab's dreary,
-nasal, burring voice by sundry surreptitious occupations, such as
-drawing imaginary pictures with her forefinger upon the lap of her
-frock, picking out in the Bible all the words of which her aunts said
-she could only know the meaning when she grew up, counting the number of
-times that Mr. MacNab stiffly raised his hand in speaking, seeing how
-often she could softly kick the pew in front of her before being told to
-stop; and then there was the favorite experiment suggested to her by the
-advertisement of a soap where, after fixing the eyes upon a red spot
-while one counted thirty, one found, on looking at a blank white space,
-that the spot appeared transformed, ghost-like and floating, to a vivid
-green. Eppie's fertile imagination had seen in Mr. MacNab's thin, red
-face a substitute for the spot, and most diverting results had followed
-when, after a fixed stare at his countenance, one transferred him, as it
-were, to the pages of one's prayer-book. To see Mr. MacNab dimly
-hovering there, a green emanation, made him less intolerable in reality:
-found, at least, a use for him. This discovery had been confided to the
-Graingers, and they had been grateful for it. And when all else failed
-and even Mr. MacNab's poor uses had palled, there was one bright moment
-to look forward to in the morning's suffocating tedium. Just before the
-sermon, Uncle Nigel, settling himself in his corner, would feel, as if
-absently, in his waistcoat pocket and then slip a lime-drop into her
-hand. The sharply sweet flavor filled her with balmy content, and could,
-with discretion in the use of the tongue, be prolonged for ten minutes.
-
-But to-day her eyes and thoughts were fixed on Gavan; and when the
-lime-drop was in her mouth she crunched it mechanically and heedlessly:
-how he held his prayer-book, his pallid, melancholy profile bent above
-it, how he sat gravely listening to Mr. MacNab, how he prayed and sang.
-Only toward the end of the sermon was the tension of her spirit relieved
-by seeing humanizing symptoms of weariness. She was sure that he was
-hearing as little as she was--his thoughts were far away; and when he
-put up a hand to hide a yawn her jaws stretched themselves in quick
-sympathy. Gavan's eyes at this turned on her and he smiled openly and
-delightfully at her. Delightfully; yet the very fact of his daring to
-smile made him more grown up than ever. Such maturity, such strange
-spiritual assurance, could afford lightnesses. He brought with him, into
-the fresh, living world outside, his aura of mystery.
-
-Eppie walked beside her uncle and still observed Gavan as he went before
-them with the aunts.
-
-"How do you like your playmate, Eppie?" the general asked.
-
-"He isn't a playmate," Eppie gravely corrected him.
-
-"Not very lively? But a nice boy, eh?"
-
-"I think he is very nice; but he is too big to care about me."
-
-"Nonsense; he's but three years older."
-
-"Four, Uncle Nigel. That makes a great deal of difference at our ages,"
-said Eppie, wisely.
-
-"Nonsense," the general repeated. "He is only a bit down on his luck;
-he's not had time to find you out yet. To-morrow he joins you in your
-Greek and history, and I fancy he'll see that four years' difference
-isn't such a difference when it comes to some things. Not many chits of
-your age are such excellent scholars."
-
-"But I think that we will always be very different," said Eppie, though
-at her uncle's commendation her spirits had risen.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Greek and history proved, indeed, a bond. The two children, during the
-hours in the library, met on a more equal footing, for Gavan was
-backward with his studies. But the question of inequality had not come
-up in Gavan's consciousness. "I'm only afraid that I shall bore her," he
-hastened, in all sincerity, to say when the general appealed to a
-possible vanity in him by hoping that he didn't mind being kind to a
-little girl and going about with her. "She's the only companion we have
-for you, you see. And we all find her very good company, in spite of her
-ten years."
-
-And at this Gavan said, with a smile that protested against any idea
-that he should not find her so: "I'm only afraid that I'm not good
-company for any one. She is a dear little girl."
-
-It was in the wanderings over the moors and in the birch-woods and up
-the hillside, where Eppie took him to see her views, that the bond
-really drew to closeness. Here nature and little Eppie seemed together
-to thaw him, to heal him, to make him unconsciously happy. A fugitive
-color dawned in his wasted cheeks; a fragile gaiety came to his manner.
-He began to find it easy to talk, easy to be quite a little boy. And
-once he did talk, Gavan talked a great deal, quickly, with a sort of
-nervous eagerness. There grew, in Eppie's mind, a vast mirage-like
-picture of the strange land he came from: the great mountains about
-their high summer home; the blue-shadowed verandas; the flowers he and
-his mother grew in the garden; the rides at dawn; the long, hot days;
-the gentle, softly moving servants, some of whom he loved and told her a
-great deal about. Then the crowds, the swarming colors of the bazaars in
-the great cities.
-
-"No, no; don't wish to go there," he said, taking his swift, light
-strides through the heather, his head bent, his eyes looking before
-him--he seldom looked at one, glanced only; "I hate it,--more than you
-do church!" and though his simile was humorous he didn't laugh with it.
-"I hate the thought of any one I care about being there." He had still,
-for Eppie, his mystery, and she dimly felt, too, that his greater ease
-with her made more apparent his underlying sadness; but the sense of
-being an outsider was gone, and she glowed now at the implication that
-she was one he cared about.
-
-"It's vast and meaningless," said Gavan, who often used terms curiously
-unboyish. "I can't describe it to you. It's like a dream; you expect all
-the time to wake up and find nothing."
-
-"I know that I should never love anything so much as Scotland--as
-heather and pines and sky with clouds. Still, I should like to see
-India. I should like to see everything that there is to be seen--if I
-could be sure of always coming back here."
-
-"Ah, yes, if one could be sure of that."
-
-"I shall always live here, Gavan," said Eppie, feeling the skepticism of
-his "if."
-
-"Well, that may be so," he returned, with the manner that made her
-realize so keenly the difference that was more than a matter of four
-years.
-
-She insisted now: "I shall live here until I am grown up. Then I shall
-travel everywhere, all over the world--India, Japan, America; then I
-shall marry and come back here to live and have twelve children. I don't
-believe you care for children as I do, Gavan. How they would enjoy
-themselves here, twelve of them all together--six boys and six girls."
-
-Gavan laughed. "Well, I hope all that will come true," he assented. "Why
-twelve?"
-
-"I don't know; but I've always thought of there being twelve. I would
-like as many as possible, and one could hardly remember the names of
-more. I don't believe that there are more than twelve names that I care
-for. But with twelve we should have a birthday-party once a month, one
-for each month. Did you have birthday-cakes in India, Gavan, with
-candles for your age?"
-
-"Yes; my mother always had a cake for my birthday." His voice, in
-speaking of his mother, seemed always to steel itself, as though to
-speak of her hurt him. Eppie had felt this directly, and now, regretting
-her allusion, said, "When is your birthday, Gavan?" thinking of a cake
-with fifteen candles--how splendid!--to hear disappointingly that the
-day was not till January, when he would have been gone--long since.
-
-On another time, as they walked up the hillside, beside the burn, she
-said: "I thought you were not going to like us at all, when you first
-came."
-
-"I was horribly afraid of you all," said Gavan. "Everything was so
-strange to me."
-
-"No, you weren't afraid," Eppie objected--"not really afraid. I don't
-believe you are ever really afraid of people."
-
-"Yes, I am--afraid of displeasing them, trying them in some way. And I
-was miserable on that day, too, with anxiety about my poor monkey. I'm
-sorry I seemed horrid."
-
-"Not a bit horrid, only very cold and polite."
-
-"I didn't realize things much. You see--" Gavan paused.
-
-"Yes, of course; you weren't thinking of us. You were thinking of--what
-you had left."
-
-"Yes," he assented, not looking at her.
-
-He went on presently, turning his eyes on her and smiling over a sort of
-alarm at his own advance to personalities: "_You_ weren't horrid. I
-remember that I thought you the nicest little girl I had ever seen. You
-were all that I did see--standing there in the sun, with a white dress
-like Alice in Wonderland and with your hair all shining. I never saw
-hair like it."
-
-"Do you think it pretty?" Eppie asked eagerly.
-
-"Very--all those rivers of gold in the dark."
-
-"I _am_ glad. I think it pretty, too, and nurse is afraid that I am
-vain, I think, for she always takes great pains to tell me that it is
-striped hair and that she hopes it may grow to be the same color when
-I'm older."
-
-"_I_ hope not," said Gavan, gallantly.
-
-Many long afternoons were spent in the garden, where Eppie initiated him
-into the sanctities of the summer-house. Gavan's sense of other people's
-sanctities was wonderful. She would never have dreamed of showing her
-dolls to her cousins; but she brought them out and displayed them to
-Gavan, and he looked at them and their appurtenances carefully, gravely
-assenting to all the characteristics that she pointed out. So kind,
-indeed, so comprehending was he, that Eppie, a delightful project
-dawning in her mind, asked: "Have you ever played with dolls? I mean
-when you were very little?"
-
-"No, never."
-
-"I've always had to play by myself," said Eppie, "and it's rather dull
-sometimes, having to carry on all the conversations alone." And with a
-rush she brought out, rather aghast at her own hardihood, "I suppose you
-couldn't think of playing with me?"
-
-Gavan, at this, showed something of the bashful air of a young bachelor
-asked to hold a baby, but in a moment he said, "I shouldn't mind at all,
-though I'm afraid I shall be stupid at it."
-
-Eppie flushed, incredulous of such good fortune, and almost reluctant to
-accept it. "You _really_ don't mind, Gavan? Boys hate dolls, as a rule,
-you know."
-
-"I don't mind in the least," he laughed. "I am sure I shall enjoy it.
-How do we begin? You must teach me."
-
-"I'll teach you everything. You are the very kindest person I ever knew,
-Gavan. Really, I wouldn't ask you to if I didn't believe you would like
-it when once you had tried it. It is such fun. And now we can make them
-do all sorts of things, have all sorts of adventures, that they never
-could have before." She suspected purest generosity, but so trusted in
-the enchantments he was to discover that she felt herself justified in
-profiting by it. She placed in his hand Agnes, the fairest of all the
-dolls, golden-haired, blue-eyed. Agnes was good, and her own daughter,
-Elspeth, named after herself, was bad. "As bad as possible," said Eppie.
-"I have to whip her a great deal."
-
-Gavan, holding his charge rather helplessly and looking at Elspeth, a
-doll of sturdier build, with short hair, dark eyes, and, for a doll, a
-mutinous face, remarked, with his touch of humor, "I thought you didn't
-approve of whipping."
-
-"I don't,--not real children, or dolls either, except when they are
-really bad. Mr. MacNab whips his all the time, and they are not a bit
-bad, really, as Elspeth is." And Elspeth proceeded to demonstrate how
-really bad she was by falling upon Agnes with such malicious kicks and
-blows that Gavan, in defense of his own doll, dealt her a vigorous slap.
-
-"Well done, Mr. Palairet; she richly deserves it! Come here directly,
-you naughty child," and after a scuffling flight around the
-summer-house, Elspeth was secured, and so soundly beaten that Gavan at
-last interceded for her with the ruthless mother.
-
-"Not until she says that she is sorry."
-
-"Oh, Elspeth, say that you are sorry," Gavan supplicated, while he
-laughed. "Really, Eppie, you are savage. I feel as if you were really
-hurting some one. Please forgive her now; Agnes has, I am sure."
-
-"I hurt her because I love her and want her to be a good child. She will
-come to no good end when she grows up if she cannot learn to control her
-temper. What is it I hear you say, Elspeth?"
-
-Elspeth, in a low, sullen voice that did not augur well for permanent
-amendment, whispered that she was sorry, and was led up, crestfallen, to
-beg Agnes's pardon and to receive a reconciling kiss.
-
-The table was then brought out and laid. Eppie had her small store of
-biscuits and raisins, and Elspeth and Agnes were sent into the garden to
-pick currants and flowers. To Agnes was given the task of making a
-nosegay for the place of each guest. There were four of these guests,
-bidden to the feast with great ceremony: three, pink and curly, of
-little individuality, and the fourth a dingy, armless old rag-doll,
-reverently wrapped in a fine shawl, and with a pathetic,
-half-obliterated face.
-
-"Very old and almost deaf," Eppie whispered to Gavan. "Everybody loves
-her. She lost her arms in a great fire, saving a baby's life."
-
-Gavan was entering into all the phases of the game with such spirit,
-keeping up Agnes's character for an irritating perfection so aptly that
-Eppie forgot to wonder if his enjoyment were as real as her own. But
-suddenly the doorway was darkened, and glancing up, she saw her uncle's
-face, long-drawn with jocular incredulity, looking in upon them. Then,
-and only then, under the eyes of an uncomprehending sex, did the true
-caliber of Gavan's self-immolation flash upon her. A boy, a big boy, he
-was playing dolls with a girl; it was monstrous; as monstrous as the
-general's eyes showed that he found it. Stooping in his tall slightness,
-as he assisted Agnes's steps across the floor, he seemed, suddenly, a
-fairy prince decoyed and flouted. What would Uncle Nigel think of him?
-She could almost have flung herself before him protectingly.
-
-The general had burst into laughter. "Now, upon my word, this is too bad
-of you, Eppie!" he cried, while Gavan, not abandoning his hold on
-Agnes's arm, turned his eyes upon the intruder with perfect serenity.
-"You are the most unconscionable little tyrant. You kept the Grainger
-boys under your thumb; but I didn't think you could carry wheedling or
-bullying as far as this. Gavan, my dear boy, you are too patient with
-her."
-
-Eppie stood at the table, scarlet with anger and compunction. Gavan had
-raised himself, and, still holding Agnes, looked from one to the other.
-
-"But she hasn't bullied me; she hasn't wheedled me," he said. "I like
-it."
-
-"At your age, my dear boy! Like doll-babies!"
-
-"Indeed I do."
-
-"This is the finest bit of chivalry I've come across for a long time.
-The gentleman who jumped into the lions' den for his mistress's glove
-was hardly pluckier. Drop that ridiculous thing and come away. I'll
-rescue you."
-
-"But I don't want to be rescued. I really am enjoying myself. It's not a
-case of courage at all," Gavan protested.
-
-This was too much. He should not tarnish himself to shield her, and
-Eppie burst out: "Nonsense, Gavan. I asked you to. You are only doing it
-because you are so kind, and to please me. It was very wrong of me. Put
-her down as Uncle Nigel says."
-
-"There, our little tyrant is honest, at all events. Drop it, Gavan. You
-should see the figure you cut with that popinjay in your arms. Come,
-you've won your spurs. Come away with me."
-
-But Gavan, smiling, shook his head. "No, I don't want to, thanks. I did
-it to please her, if you like; but now I do it to please myself. Playing
-with dolls is a most amusing game,--and you are interrupting us at a
-most interesting point," he added. He seemed, funnily, doll and all,
-older than the general as he said it. Incredulous but mystified, Uncle
-Nigel was forced to beat a retreat, and Gavan was left confronting his
-playmate.
-
-"Why did you tell him that you enjoyed it?" she cried. "He'll think you
-unmanly."
-
-"My dear Eppie, he won't think me unmanly at all. Besides, I don't care
-if he does."
-
-"_I_ care."
-
-"But, Eppie, you take it too hard. Why should you care? It's only funny.
-Why shouldn't we amuse ourselves as we like? We are only children."
-
-"You are much more than a child. Uncle Nigel thinks so, too, I am sure."
-
-"All the more reason, then, for my having a right to amuse myself as I
-please. And I am a child, for I do amuse myself."
-
-Eppie stood staring out rigidly at the blighted prospect, and he took
-her unyielding hand. "Poor Elspeth is lying on her face. Do let us go
-on. I want you to hear what Agnes has to say next."
-
-She turned to him now. "I don't believe a word you say. You only did it
-for me. You are only doing it for me now."
-
-"Well, what if I did? What if I do? Can't I enjoy doing things for you?
-And really, really, Eppie, I do think it fun. I assure you I do."
-
-"I think you are a hero," Eppie said solemnly, and at this absurdity he
-burst into his high, shrill laugh, and renewed his supplications; but
-supplications were in vain. She refused to let him play with her again.
-He might do things for the dolls,--yes, she reluctantly consented to
-that at last,--he might take the part of robber or of dangerous wild
-beast in the woods, but into domestic relations, as it were, he should
-not enter with them; and from this determination Gavan could not move
-her.
-
-As far as his dignity in the eyes of others went, he might have gone on
-playing dolls with her all summer; Eppie realized, with surprise and
-relief, that Gavan's assurance had been well founded. Uncle Nigel,
-evidently, did not think him unmanly, and there was no chaffing. It
-really was as he had said, he was so little a child that he could do as
-he chose. His dignity needed no defense.
-
-But though the doll episode was not to be repeated, other and more equal
-ties knit her friendship with Gavan. Wide vistas of talk opened from
-their lessons, from their readings together. As they rambled through the
-heather they would talk of the Odyssey, of Plutarch's Lives, of nearer
-great people and events in history. Gavan listened with smiling interest
-while Eppie expressed her hatreds and her loves, correcting her
-vehemence, now and then, by a reference to mitigatory circumstance.
-Penelope was one of the people she hated. "See, Gavan, how she neglected
-her husband's dog while he was away--let him starve to death on a
-dunghill."
-
-Gavan surmised that the Homeric Greeks had little sense of
-responsibility about dogs.
-
-"They were horrid, then," said Eppie. "Dear Argos! Think of him trying
-to wag his tail when he was dying and saw Ulysses; _he_ was horrid, too,
-for he surely might have just stopped for a moment and patted his head.
-I'm glad that Robbie didn't live in those times. You wouldn't let Robbie
-die on a dunghill if _I_ were to go away!"
-
-"No, indeed, Eppie!" Gavan smiled.
-
-"I think you really love Robbie as much as I do, Gavan. You love him
-more than Uncle Nigel does. One can always see in people's eyes how much
-they love a dog. That fat, red Miss Erskine simply feels nothing for
-them, though she always says 'Come, come,' to Robbie. But her eyes are
-like stones when she looks at him. She is really thinking about her
-tea, and watching to see that Aunt Rachel puts in plenty of cream. I
-suppose that Penelope looked like her, when she used to see Argos on the
-dunghill."
-
-Robbie was plunging through the heather before them and paused to look
-round at them, his delicate tongue lapping in little pants over his
-teeth.
-
-"Darling Robbie," said Gavan. "Our eyes aren't like stones when we look
-at you! See him smile, Eppie, when I speak to him. Wouldn't it be funny
-if we smiled with our ears instead of with our mouths."
-
-Gavan, after a moment, sighed involuntarily and deeply.
-
-"What is the matter?" Eppie asked quickly, for she had grown near enough
-to ask it. And how near they were was shown after a little silence, by
-Gavan saying: "I was only wishing that everything could be happy at
-once, Eppie. I was thinking about my mother and wishing that she might
-be here with you and me and Robbie." His voice was steadied to its cold
-quiet as he said it, though he knew how safe from any hurt he was with
-her. And she said nothing, and did not look at him, only, in silence,
-putting a hand of comradeship on his shoulder while they walked.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Once a week, on the days of the Indian mail, Eppie's understanding
-hovered helplessly about Gavan, seeing pain for him and powerless to
-shield him from it. Prayers took place in the dining-room ten minutes
-before breakfast, and with the breakfast the mail was brought in, so
-that Gavan's promptest descent could not secure him a solitary reading
-of the letter that, Eppie felt, he awaited with trembling eagerness.
-
-"A letter from India, Gavan dear," Miss Rachel, the distributer of the
-mail would say. "Tell us your news." And before them all, in the midst
-of the general's comments on politics, crops, and weather, the rustling
-of newspapers, the pouring of tea, he was forced to open and read his
-letter and to answer, even during the reading, the kindly triviality of
-the questions showered upon him. "Yes, thank you, very well indeed. Yes,
-in Calcutta. Yes, enjoying herself, I think, thanks." His pallor on
-these occasions, his look of hardened endurance, told Eppie all that it
-did not tell the others. And that his eagerness was too great for him to
-wait until after breakfast, she saw, too. A bright thought of rescue
-came to her at last. On the mornings when the Indian mail was due, she
-was up a good hour before her usual time. Long before the quaint,
-musical gong sounded its vague, blurred melody for prayers, she was out
-of the house and running through the birch-woods to the village road,
-where, just above the church, she met the postman. He was an old friend,
-glad to please the young lady's love of importance, and the mail was
-trusted to her care. Eppie saved all her speed for the return. Every
-moment counted for Gavan's sheltered reading. She felt as if, her back
-to its door, she stood before the sheltered chamber of their meeting,
-guarding their clasp and kiss, sweet and sorrowful, from alien eyes.
-Flushed, panting, she darted up to his room, handing his letter in to
-him, while she said in an easy, matter-of-fact tone, "Your mail, Gavan."
-
-Gavan, like the postman, attributed his good luck to Eppie's love of
-importance, and only on the third morning discovered her manoeuver.
-
-He came down early himself to get his own letter, found that the mail
-had not arrived, and, strolling disappointedly down the drive, was
-almost knocked down by Eppie rushing in at the gate. She fell back,
-dismayed at the revelation that must force the fullness of her sympathy
-upon him--almost as if she herself glanced in at the place of meeting.
-
-"I've got the letters," she said, leaning on the stone pillar and
-recovering her breath. "There's one for you." And she held it out.
-
-But for once Gavan's concentration seemed to be for her rather than for
-the letter. "My mother's letter?" he said.
-
-She nodded.
-
-"It was you, then. I wondered why they came so much earlier."
-
-"I met the postman; he likes to be saved that much of his walk."
-
-"You must have to go a long way to get them so early. You went on
-purpose for me, I think."
-
-Looking aside, she now had to own: "I saw that you hated reading them
-before us all. I would hate it, too."
-
-"Eppie, my dearest Eppie," said Gavan. Glancing at him, she saw tears in
-his eyes, and joy and pride flamed up in her. He opened the letter and
-read it, walking beside her, his hand on her shoulder, showing her that
-he did not count her among "us all."
-
-After that they went together to meet the postman, and, unasked, Gavan
-would read to her long pieces from what his mother said.
-
-It was a few weeks later, on one of these days, that she knew, from his
-face while he read, and from his silence, that bad news had come. He
-left her at the house, making no confidence, and at breakfast, when he
-came down to it later, she could see that he had been struggling for
-self-mastery. This pale, controlled face, at which she glanced furtively
-while they did their lessons in the library, made her think of the
-Spartan boy, calm over an agony. Even the general noticed the mechanical
-voice and the pallor and asked him if he were feeling tired this
-morning. Gavan owned to a headache.
-
-"Off to the moors directly, then," said the general; "and you, too,
-Eppie. Have a morning together."
-
-Eppie sat over her book and said that perhaps Gavan would rather go
-without her; but Gavan, who had risen, said quickly that he wanted her
-to come. "Let us go to the hilltop," he said, when they were outside in
-the warm, scented sunlight.
-
-They went through the woods, where the burn ran, rippling loudly, and
-the shadows were blue on the little, sandy path that wound among pines
-and birches. Neither spoke while they climbed the gradual ascent. They
-came out upon the height that ran in a long undulation to the far lift
-of mountain ranges. Under a solitary group of pines they sat down.
-
-The woods of Kirklands were below them, and then the vast sea of purple,
-heaving in broad, long waves to the azure, intense and clear, of the
-horizon. The wind sighed, soft and shrill, through the pines above them,
-and far away they heard a sheep-bell tinkle. Beyond the delicate
-miniature of the village a wind-mill turned slow, gray sails. The whole
-world, seemed a sunlit island floating in the circling blue. Robbie sat
-at their feet, alert, upright, silhouetted against the sky.
-
-"Robbie, Robbie," said Gavan, gently, as he leaned forward and stroked
-the dog's back. Eppie, too, stroked with him. The silence of his unknown
-grief weighed heavily on her heart and she guessed that though for him
-the pain of silence was great, the pain of speech seemed greater.
-
-He presently raised himself again, clasping both hands about his knees
-and looking away into the vast distance. His head, with its thick hair,
-its fine, aquiline nose and delicately jutting chin, made Eppie think,
-vaguely, of a picture she had seen of a young Saint Sebastian, mutely
-enduring arrows, on a background of serene sky. With the thought, the
-silence became unendurable; she strung herself to speak. "Tell me,
-Gavan," she said, "have you had bad news?"
-
-He cast her a frightened glance, and, looking down, began to pull at the
-heather. "No, not bad news, exactly."
-
-Eppie drew a breath of dubious relief. "But you are so unhappy about
-something."
-
-Gavan nodded.
-
-"But why, if it's not bad news?"
-
-After a pause he said, and she knew, with all the pain of it, what the
-relief of speaking must be: "I guess at things. I always feel if she is
-hiding things."
-
-"Perhaps you are only imagining."
-
-"I wish I could think it; but I know not. I know what is happening to
-her."
-
-He was still wrenching away at the heather, tossing aside the purple
-sprays with their finely tangled sandy roots. Suddenly he put his head
-on his knees, hiding his face.
-
-"Oh, Gavan! Oh, don't be so unhappy," Eppie whispered, drawing near him,
-helpless and awe-struck.
-
-"How can I be anything but unhappy when the person I care most for is
-miserable--miserable, and I am so far from her?" His shoulders heaved;
-she saw that he was weeping.
-
-Eppie, at first, gazed, motionless, silent, frozen with a child's quick
-fear of demonstrated grief. A child's quick response followed. Throwing
-her arms around him, she too burst into tears.
-
-It was strange to see how the boy's reserves melted in the onslaught of
-this hot, simple sympathy. He turned to her, hiding his face on her
-shoulder, and they cried together.
-
-"I didn't want to make you unhappy, too," Gavan said at last in a
-weakened voice. His tears were over first and he faintly smiled as he
-met Robbie's alarmed, beseeching eyes. Robbie had been scrambling over
-them, scratching, whining, licking their hands and cheeks in an
-exasperation of shut-out pity.
-
-"I'm not nearly so unhappy as when you don't say anything and I know
-that you are keeping things back," Eppie choked, pushing Robbie away
-blindly. "I'd much rather _be_ unhappy if you are."
-
-It was Gavan, one arm around the rejected Robbie, who had to dry her
-tears, trying to console her with: "Perhaps I did imagine more than
-there actually is. One can't help imagining--at this distance." He
-smiled at her, as he had smiled at Robbie, and holding her hand, he went
-on: "She is so gentle, and so lonely, and so unhappy. I could help her
-out there. Here, I am so helpless."
-
-"Make her come here!" Eppie cried. "Write at once and make her come.
-Send a wire, Gavan. Couldn't she be here very soon, if you wired that
-she must--_must_ come? I wouldn't bear it if I were you."
-
-"She can't come. She must stay with my father."
-
-All the barriers were down now, so that Eppie could insist: "She would
-rather be with you. You want her most."
-
-"Yes, I want her most. But he needs her most," said Gavan. "He is
-extravagant and weak and bad. He drinks and he gambles, and if she left
-him he would probably soon ruin himself--and us; for my mother has no
-money. She could not leave him if she would. And though he is often very
-cruel to her, he wants her with him." Gavan spoke with all his quiet,
-but he had flushed as if from a still anger. "Money is an odious thing,
-Eppie. That's what I want to do, as soon as I can: make money for her."
-He added presently: "I pray for strength to help her."
-
-There was a long silence after this. Gavan lay back on the heather, his
-hat tilted over his tired eyes. Eppie sat above him, staring out at the
-empty blue. Her longing, her pity, her revolt from this suffering,--for
-herself and for him,--her vague but vehement desires, flew out--out; she
-almost seemed to see them, like strong, bright birds flying so far at
-last that the blue engulfed them. The idea hurt her. She turned away
-from the dissolving vastness before which it was impossible to think or
-feel, turned her head to look down at the long, white form beside her,
-exhausted and inert. Darling Gavan. How he suffered. His poor mother,
-too. She saw Gavan's mother in a sort of padlocked palanquin under a
-burning sky, surrounded by dazzling deserts, a Blue-beard, bristling
-with swords, reeling in a drunken sentinelship round her prison.
-Considering Gavan, with his hidden face, the thought of his last words
-came more distinctly to her. A long time had passed, and his breast was
-rising quietly, almost as if he slept. Conjecture grew as to the odd
-form of action in which he evidently trusted. "Do you pray a great deal,
-Gavan?" she asked.
-
-He nodded under the hat.
-
-"Do you feel as if there was a God--quite near you--who listened?"
-
-"I wouldn't want to live unless I could feel that."
-
-Eppie paused at this, perplexed, and asked presently, with a slight
-embarrassment, "Why not?"
-
-"Nothing would have any meaning," said Gavan.
-
-"No meaning, Gavan? You would still care for your mother and want to
-help her, wouldn't you?"
-
-"Yes, but without God there would be no hope of helping her, no hope of
-strength. Why, Eppie," came the voice from behind the hat, "without God
-life would be death."
-
-Eppie retired to another discomfited silence. "I am afraid I don't think
-much about God," she confessed at last. "I always feel as if I had
-strength already--I suppose, heaps and heaps of strength.
-Only--to-day--I do know more what you mean. If only God would do
-something for you and your mother. You want something so big to help you
-if you are very, very unhappy."
-
-"Yes, and some one to turn to when you are lonely."
-
-Again Eppie hesitated. "Well, but, Gavan, while you're here you have me,
-you know."
-
-At this Gavan pushed aside his hat almost to laugh at her. "What a
-funny little girl you are, Eppie! What a dear little girl! Yes, of
-course, I have you. But when I go away? And even while I'm here,--what
-if we were both lonely together? Can't you imagine that? The feeling of
-being lost in a great forest at night. You have such quaint ideas about
-God."
-
-"I've never had any ideas at all. I've only thought of Some One who was
-there,--Some One I didn't need yet. I've always thought of God as being
-more for grown-up people. Lost in a forest together? I don't think I
-would mind that so much, Gavan. I don't think I would be frightened, if
-we were together."
-
-"I didn't exactly mean it literally,--not a real forest, perhaps." He
-had looked away from her, and, his thin, white face sunken among the
-heather, his eyes were on the blue immensities where her thoughts had
-lost themselves. "I am so often frightened. I get so lost sometimes that
-I can hardly believe that that Some One is near me. And then the fear
-becomes a sort of numbness, so that I hardly seem there myself; it's
-only loneliness, while I melt and melt away into nothing. Even now, when
-I look at that sky, the feeling creeps and creeps, that dreadful
-loneliness, where there isn't any I left to know that it's lonely--only
-a feeling." He shut his eyes resolutely. "My mother always says that it
-is when one has such fancies that one must pray and have faith."
-
-Eppie hardly felt that he spoke to her, and she groped among his strange
-thoughts, seizing the most concrete of them, imitating his shutting out
-of the emptiness by closing her own eyes. "Yes," she said, reflecting in
-the odd, glowing dimness, "I am quite sure that you have much more
-feeling about God when you think hard, inside yourself, than when you
-look at the sky."
-
-"Only then, there are chasms inside, too." Gavan's hand beside him was
-once more restlessly pulling at the heather. "Even inside, one can fall,
-and fall, and fall."
-
-The strange tone of his voice--it was indeed like the far note of a
-falling bell, dying in an abyss--roused Eppie from her experiments. She
-shook his shoulder. "Open your eyes, Gavan; please, at once. You make me
-feel horridly. I would rather have you look at the sky than fall inside
-like that."
-
-He raised himself on an arm now, with a gaze, for a moment, vague,
-deadened, blank, then sprang to his feet. "Don't let's look. Don't let's
-fall. We must pray and have faith. Eppie, I have made you so pale. Dear
-Eppie, to care so much. Please forgive me for going to pieces like
-that."
-
-Eppie was on her feet, too. "But I want you to. You know what I mean:
-never hide things. Oh, Gavan, if I could only help you."
-
-"You do. It is because you care, just in the way you do, that I _could_
-go to pieces,--and it has helped me to be so selfish."
-
-"Please be selfish, often, often, then. I always am caring. And just
-wait till I am grown up. I shall do something for you then. _I'll_ make
-money, too, Gavan."
-
-"Eppie, you are the dearest little girl," he repeated, in a shaken
-voice; and at that she put her arms around his neck and kissed him. The
-boy's eyes filled with tears. They stood under the sighing pines, high
-in the blue, and the scent of the heather was strong, sweet, in the
-sunny air. Gavan did not return the kiss, but holding her face between
-his hands, stammering, he said, "Eppie, how can I bear ever to leave
-you?"
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-In looking back, after long years, at their summer, Eppie could see,
-more clearly than when she lived in it, that sadness and Gavan had
-always gone together. He had, as it were, initiated her into suffering.
-Sadness was the undertone of their sweet comradeship. Their happy
-stories came to tragic endings. Death and disaster, though in trivial
-forms, followed him.
-
-With his returning strength, and perhaps with a sense of atonement to
-her for what he had called his selfishness, Gavan plunged eagerly into
-any outer interest that would please her. He spent hours in building for
-her a little hut on the banks of the brae among the birches: the dolls'
-Petit Trianon he called it, as the summer-house was their Versailles.
-They had been reading about the French Revolution. Eppie objected to the
-analogy. "I should always imagine that Elspeth's head were going to be
-cut off if I called it that."
-
-Gavan said that Elspeth need not be the queen, but a less exalted, more
-fortunate court lady. "We'll imagine that she escaped early from France
-with all her family, saw none of the horrors, was a happy _migre_ in
-England and married there," he said; and he went on, while he hammered
-at the pine boughs, with a desultory and reassuring account of Elspeth's
-English adventures. But poor Elspeth came to as sad an end as any victim
-of the guillotine. Eppie was carrying her one day when she and Gavan had
-followed Aunt Barbara on some housewifely errand up to the highest attic
-rooms. Outside the low sills of the dormer-windows ran a narrow stone
-gallery looking down over the pine-tree and the garden. The children
-squeezed out through the window to hang in delighted contemplation over
-the birds'-eye view, and then Eppie crawled to a farther corner where
-one could see round to the moorland and find oneself on a level, almost,
-with the rooks' nests in the lime-trees. She handed Elspeth to Gavan to
-hold for her while she went on this adventure.
-
-He had just risen to his feet, looking down from where he stood over the
-low parapet, when a sudden cry from Eppie--a great bird sailing by that
-she called to him to look at--made him start, almost losing his balance
-on the narrow ledge. Elspeth fell from his arms.
-
-She was picked up on the garden path, far, far beneath, with a shattered
-head. Gavan, perhaps, suffered more from the disaster than Eppie
-herself. He was sick with dismay and self-reproach. She was forced to
-make light of her grief to soothe his. But she did not feel that her
-soothing hoodwinked or comforted him. Indeed, after that hour on the
-hilltop, when he showed her his sorrow and his fear, Eppie felt that
-though near, very near him, she was also held away. It was as if he felt
-a discomfort in the nearness, or a dread that through it he might hurt
-again or be hurt. He was at once more loving and more reticent. His
-resolute cheerfulness, when they could be cheerful, was a wall between
-them.
-
-Once more, and only once, before their childhood together ended, was she
-to see all, feel all, suffer all with him. Toward the end of the summer
-Robbie sickened and died. For three nights the children sat up with him,
-taking turns at sleep, refusing alien help. By candle-light, in Eppie's
-room, they bent over Robbie's basket, listening to his laboring breath.
-The general, protesting against the folly of the sleepless nights, yet
-tiptoed in and out, gruffly kind, moved by the pathos of the young
-figures. He gave medical advice and superintended the administering of
-teaspoonfuls of milk and brandy. That he thought Robbie's case a
-hopeless one the children knew, for all his air of reassuring good
-cheer.
-
-Robbie died early on the morning of the fourth day. A little while
-before, he faintly wagged his tail when they spoke to him, raising eyes
-unendurably sad.
-
-Eppie, during the illness, had been constantly in tears; Gavan had shown
-a stoic fortitude. But when all was over and Eppie was covering Robbie
-with the white towel that was to be his shroud, Gavan suddenly broke
-down. Casting his arms around her, hiding his face against her, he burst
-into sobs, saying in a shuddering voice, while he clung to her, shaken
-all through with the violence of his weeping: "Oh, I can't bear it,
-Eppie! I can't bear it!"
-
-Before this absolute shattering Eppie found her own self-control.
-Holding him to her,--and she almost thought that he would have fallen if
-she had not so held him,--she murmured, "Gavan, darling Gavan, I know, I
-know."
-
-"Oh, Eppie," he gasped, "we will never see him again."
-
-She had drawn him down to the window-seat, where they leaned together,
-and she was silent for a moment at his last words. But suddenly her arms
-tightened around him with an almost vindictive tenderness. "We _will_,"
-she said.
-
-"Never! Never!" Gavan gasped. "His eyes, Eppie,--his eyes seemed to know
-it; they were saying good-by forever. And, oh, Eppie, they were so
-astonished--so astonished," he repeated, while the sobs shook him.
-
-"We will," Eppie said again, pressing the boy's head to hers, while she
-shut her eyes over the poignant memory. "Why, Gavan, I don't know much
-about God, but I do know about heaven. Animals will go to heaven; it
-wouldn't be heaven unless they were there."
-
-That memory of the astonishment in Robbie's eyes seemed to put knives in
-her heart, but over the sharpness she grasped her conviction.
-
-In all the despair of his grief, the boy had, in answering her, the
-disciplined logic of his more formal faith, more clearly seen fact.
-
-"Dear Eppie, animals have no souls."
-
-"How do you know?" she retorted, almost with anger.
-
-"One only has to think. They stop, as Robbie has."
-
-"How do you know he has stopped? It's only," said Eppie, groping, "that
-he doesn't want his body any longer."
-
-"But it's Robbie in his body that we want. It's his body, with Robbie in
-it, that we know. God has done with wanting him--that's it, perhaps; but
-we want him. Oh, Eppie, it's no good: as we know him, as we want him, he
-is dead--dead forever. Besides,"--in speaking this Gavan straightened
-himself,--"we shall forget him." He turned, in speaking, from her
-consolations, as though their inefficiency hurt him.
-
-"I won't forget him," said Eppie.
-
-Gavan made no reply. He had risen, and standing now at the widely opened
-window, looked out over the chill, misty dawn. Beneath was the garden,
-its golden-gray walls rippling with green traceries, the clotted color
-of the hanging fruit among them. Over the hilltop, the solitary group of
-pines, the running wave of mountain, was a great piece of palest blue,
-streaked with milky filaments. The boughs of the pine-tree were just
-below the window, drenched with dew through all their fragrant darkness.
-
-Eppie, too, rose, and stood beside him.
-
-The hardened misery on his young face hurt her childish, yet
-comprehending heart even more than Robbie's supplicating and astonished
-eyes had done. She could imagine that look of steeled endurance freezing
-through it forever, and an answering hardness of opposition rose in her
-to resist and break it. "We won't forget him."
-
-"People do forget," Gavan answered.
-
-She found a cruel courage. "Could you forget your mother?"
-
-Gavan continued to look stonily out of the window and did not answer
-her.
-
-"Could you?" she repeated.
-
-"Don't, Eppie, don't," he said.
-
-She saw that she had stirred some black terror in him, and her ignorant,
-responsive fear made her pitiless: "Could you forget her if she died?
-Never. Never as long as you lived."
-
-"Already," he said, as though the words were forced from him by her
-will, "I haven't remembered her all the time."
-
-"She is there. You haven't forgotten her."
-
-"Years and years come. New things come. Old things fade and fade,--all
-but the deepest things. They couldn't fade. No," he repeated, "they
-couldn't. Only, even they might get dimmer."
-
-She saw that he spoke from an agony of doubt, and he seemed to wrench
-the knife she had stabbed him with from his heart as he added: "But
-Robbie is such a little thing. And little things people do forget, I am
-sure of it. It's that that makes them so sad."
-
-"Well, then,"--Eppie, too, felt the relief of the lesser pain,--"they
-will remember again. When you see Robbie in heaven you will remember all
-about him. But I won't forget him," she repeated once more, swallowing
-the sob that rose chokingly at the thought of how long it would be till
-they should see Robbie in heaven.
-
-Gavan had now a vague, chill smile for the pertinacity of her faith.
-Something had broken in him, as if, with Robbie's passing, a veil had
-been drawn from reality, an illusion of confidence dispelled forever. He
-leaned out of the window and breathed in the scent of the wet pine-tree,
-looking, with an odd detachment and clearness of observation,--as if
-through that acceptation of tragedy all his senses had grown keener,--at
-the bluish bloom the dew made upon the pine-needles; at the flowers and
-fruit in the garden below, the thatched roof of the summer-house, the
-fragile whiteness of the roses growing near it, like a bridal veil blown
-against the ancient wall. It was, in a moment of strange, suspended
-vision, as if he had often and often seen tragic dawn in the garden
-before and was often to see it again. What was he? Where was he? All the
-world was like a dream and he seemed to see to its farthest ends and
-back to its beginnings.
-
-Eppie stood silent beside him.
-
-He was presently conscious of her silence, and then, the uncanny
-crystal, gazing sense slipping from him, of a possible unkindness in his
-repudiating grief. He looked round at her. The poor child's eyes, heavy
-with weeping and all the weight of the dark, encompassing woe he had
-shown her, dwelt on him with a somber compassionateness.
-
-"Poor, darling little Eppie," he said, putting an arm about her, "what a
-brute, a selfish brute, I am."
-
-"Why a brute, Gavan?"
-
-"Making you suffer--more. I'm always making you suffer, Eppie, always;
-and you are really such a happy person. Come, let us go out for a walk.
-Let us go out on the moor. It will be delicious in the heather now. I
-want to see it and smell it. It will do us good."
-
-She resented his wisdom. "But you won't forget Robbie, while we walk."
-
-For a moment, as if in great weariness, Gavan leaned his head against
-her shoulder. "Don't talk of Robbie, please. We must forget him--just
-now, or try to, or else we can't go on at all."
-
-Still she persisted, for she could not let it go like that: "I can think
-of him and go on too. I don't want to run away from Robbie because he
-makes me unhappy."
-
-Gavan sighed, raising his head. "You are stronger than I am, Eppie. I
-must--I must run away." He took her hand and drew her to the door, and
-she followed him, though glancing back, as she went, at the little form
-under the shroud.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Robbie's death overshadowed the last days of Gavan's stay. Eppie did not
-feel, after it, after his avowed and helpless breakdown, the barrier
-sense so strongly. He didn't attempt to hide dejection; but that was
-probably because she too was dejected and there was no necessity for
-keeping up appearances that would only jar and hurt. Eppie gave herself
-whole-heartedly to her griefs, and this was her grief as well as his. He
-could share it. It was no longer the holding her at arm's length from a
-private woe. Yet the grief was not really shared, Eppie knew, for it was
-not the same grief that they felt. Of the difference they did not speak
-again. Then there came the sadness of the parting, so near now and for
-the first time realized in all its aspects.
-
-Eppie gathered, from chance remarks of the general's, that this parting
-was to be indefinite. The summer at Kirklands was no precedent for
-future summers, as she and Gavan had quite taken for granted. An uncle
-of Gavan's, his father's eldest brother, was to give him his home in
-England. This uncle had been traveling in the East this summer, and
-Gavan did not formally come under his jurisdiction until autumn. But the
-general conjectured that the jurisdiction would be well defined and
-tolerably stringent. Sir James Palairet had clearly cut projects for
-Gavan; they would, perhaps, not include holidays at Kirklands. The
-realization was, for Gavan, too, a new one.
-
-"Am I not to come back here next summer?" he asked.
-
-"I'm afraid not, Gavan; we haven't first claim, you see. Perhaps Sir
-James will lend you to us now and then; but from what I know of him I
-imagine that he will want to do a lot with you, to put you through a
-great deal. There won't be much time for this sort of thing. You will
-probably travel with him."
-
-They were in the library and, speaking from the depths of her fear,
-Eppie asked: "Do you like Sir James, Uncle Nigel?" She suspected a
-pitying quality in the cogitating look that the general bent upon Gavan.
-
-"I hardly know him, my dear. He is quite an eminent man. A little
-severe, perhaps,--something of a martinet,--but just, conscientious. It
-is a great thing for Gavan," the general continued, making the best of a
-rather bleak prospect, "to have such an uncle to give him a start in
-life. It means the best sort of start."
-
-Directly the two children were alone, both sitting in the deep
-window-seat, Gavan said, "Don't worry, Eppie. Of course I'll come
-back--soon." His face took on the hardness that its delicacy could so
-oddly express. He was confronting his ambiguous fate in an attitude of
-cold resolution. For his sake, Eppie controlled useless outcries. "You
-have seen your uncle, Gavan?"
-
-"Yes, once; in India. He came up to Darjeeling one summer."
-
-"Is he nice--nicer than Uncle Nigel made out, I mean?"
-
-"He isn't like my father," said Gavan, after a moment.
-
-"You mean that he isn't wicked?" Eppie asked baldly.
-
-"Oh, a good deal more than that. He is just and conscientious, as the
-general said. That's what my mother felt; that's why she could bear it,
-my going to him. And the general is right, you know, Eppie, about its
-being a great thing for me. He is a very important person, in his way,
-and he is going to put me through. He is determined that my father
-sha'n't spoil my life. And, as you know, Eppie, my mother's life, any
-chance for her, depends on me. To make her life, to atone to her in any
-way for all she has had to bear, I must make my own. My uncle will help
-me."
-
-The steeliness of his resolves made his face almost alien. Eppie felt
-this unknown future, where he must fight alone, for objects in which she
-had no share, shutting her out, and a child's sick misery of desolation
-filled her, bringing back the distant memory of her mother's death, that
-suffocating sense of being left behind and forgotten; but, keeping her
-eyes on his prospect, she managed in a firm voice to question him about
-the arid uncle, learned that he was married, childless, had a house in
-the country and one in London, and sat in Parliament. He was vastly
-busy, traveled a great deal, and wrote books of travel; not books about
-foreign people and the things they ate and wore, as Eppie with her
-courageous interest hopefully surmised, but books of dry, colorless
-fact, with lots of statistics in them, Gavan said.
-
-"He wants me to go in for the same sort of thing--politics and public
-life."
-
-"You are going to be a Pitt--make laws, Gavan, like Pitt?" Eppie kept up
-her dispassionate tone.
-
-He smiled at the magnified conception. "I'll try for a seat, probably,
-or some governmental office; that is, if I turn out to be worth
-anything."
-
-How the vague vastness shut her out! What should she do, meanwhile? How
-carve for herself a future that would keep her near him in the great
-outside world? And would he want her near him in it when he was to be so
-great, too? This question brought the irrepressible tears to her eyes at
-last, though she turned away her head and would not let them fall. But
-Gavan glanced at her and leaned forward to look, and then she saw, as
-her eyes met his, that the hard resolve was for her, too, and did not
-shut her out, but in.
-
-"I'm coming back, Eppie," he said, taking her hand and holding it
-tightly. "Next to my mother, it's _you_,--you know it."
-
-"I haven't any mother," said Eppie, keeping up the bravery, though it
-was really harder not to cry now. He understood where she placed him.
-
-Eppie was glad that it was raining on the last morning. Sunshine would
-have been a mockery, and this tranquilly falling rain, that turned the
-hills to pale, substanceless ghosts and brought the end of the moor,
-where it disappeared into the white, so near, was not tragic. Gavan was
-coming back. She would think only of that. She would not--would not cry.
-He should see how brave she could be. When he was gone--well, she
-allowed herself a swift thought of the Petit Trianon, its hidden refuge.
-There, all alone, she would, of course, howl. There was a grim comfort
-in this vision of herself, rolling upon the pine-needle carpet of the
-Petit Trianon and shrieking her woes aloud.
-
-At breakfast Gavan showed a tense, calm face. She was impressed anew
-with the sense of his strength, for, in spite of his resolves, he was
-suffering, perhaps more keenly than herself. Suffering, with him,
-partook of horror. She could live in hopes, and on them. To Gavan, this
-parting was the going into a dark cavern that he must march through in
-fear. And then, he would never roll and shriek.
-
-After breakfast, they hardly spoke to each other. Indeed, what was there
-to say? Eppie filled the moments in superintending the placing of fruit
-and sandwiches in his dressing-case. The carriage was a little late, so
-that when the final moment came, there was a hurried conventionality of
-farewell. Gavan was kissed by the aunts and shook hands with Miss
-Grimsby, while the general called out that there was no time to lose.
-
-"Come back to us, dear boy; keep your feet dry on the journey," said
-Miss Rachel, while Miss Barbara, holding his hand, whispered gently
-that she would always pray for him.
-
-Eppie and Gavan had not looked at each other, and when the moment came
-for their farewell, beneath the eyes of aunts, uncle, Miss Grimsby, and
-the servants, it seemed the least significant of all, was the shortest,
-the most formal. They looked, they held hands for a moment, and Gavan
-faltered out some words. Eppie did not speak and kept her firm smile.
-Only when he had followed the general into the carriage and it was
-slowly grinding over the gravel did something hot, stinging, choking,
-flare up in her, something that made her know this smooth parting to be
-intolerable--not to be borne.
-
-She darted out into the rain. Bobbie was dead; Gavan was gone; why, she
-was alone--alone--and a question was beating through her as she ran down
-the drive and, with a leap to its step, caught the heavy old carriage in
-its careful turning at the gate. Gavan saw, at the window, her white,
-freckled face, her startled eyes, her tossed hair all beaded with the
-finely falling rain--like an apparition on the ghostly background of
-mist.
-
-"Oh, Gavan, don't forget me!" That had been the flaring terror.
-
-He had just time to catch her hand, to lean to her, to kiss her. He did
-not speak. Mutely he looked at the little comrade all the things he
-could not say: what she was to him, what he felt for her, what he would
-always feel,--always, always, always, his eyes said to hers as she
-stepped back to the road and was gone.
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-He had never seen Eppie again, and sixteen years had passed.
-
-It was of this that Gavan was thinking as the Scotch express bore him
-northward on a dark October night.
-
-A yellow-bound, half-cut volume of French essays lay beside him. He had
-lighted a cigar and, his feet warmly ensconced on the hot-water tin, his
-legs enfolded in rugs, the fur collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears, he leaned back, well fortified against the sharp air that struck
-in from the half-opened window.
-
-Gavan, at thirty, had oddly maintained all the more obvious
-characteristics of his boyhood. He was long, pale, emaciated, as he had
-been at fourteen. His clean-shaved face was the boy's face, matured, but
-unchanged in essentials. The broad, steep brow, the clear, aquiline jut
-of nose and chin, the fineness and strength of the jaw, sculptured now
-by the light overhead into vehement relief and shadow, were more
-emphatic, only, than they had been.
-
-At fourteen his face had surprised with its maturity and at thirty it
-surprised with its quality of wistful boyishness. This was the obvious.
-The changes were there, but they were subtle, consisting more in a
-certain hardening of youth's hesitancy into austerity; as though the
-fine metal of the countenance had been tempered by time into a fixed,
-enduring type. His pallor was the scholar's, but his emaciation the
-athlete's; the fragility, now, was a braced and disciplined fragility.
-No sedentary softness was in him. In his body, as in his face, one felt
-a delicacy as strong as it was fine. The great change was that hardening
-to fixity.
-
-To-night, he was feeling the change himself. The journey to Kirklands,
-after the long gap that lay between it and his farewell, made something
-of an epoch for his thoughts. He did not find it significant, but the
-mere sense of comparison was arresting.
-
-The darkness of the October night, speeding by outside, the solitude of
-the bright railway carriage, London two hours behind and, before, the
-many hours of his lonely journey,--time and place were like empty
-goblets, only waiting to be filled with the still wine of memory.
-
-Gavan had not cast aside his book, lighted his cigar, and, leaning back,
-drawn his rugs about him with the conscious intention of yielding
-himself to retrospect. On the contrary, he had, at first, pushed aside
-the thoughts that, softly, persistently, pressed round him. Then the
-languor, the opportunity of the hour seized him. He allowed himself to
-drift hither and thither, as first one eddy lapped over him and then
-another. And finally he abandoned himself to the full current and, once
-it had him, it carried him far.
-
-It was, at the beginning, as far back as Eppie and childhood that it
-carried him, to the sunny summer days and to the speechless parting of
-the rainy autumn morning. And, with all that sense of change, he was
-surprised to find how very much one thing had held firm. He had never
-forgotten. He had kept the mute promise of that misty morning. How well
-he had kept it he hadn't known until he found the chain of memory hold
-so firm as he pulled upon it. The promise had been made to himself as
-well as to her, given in solemn hostage to his own childish fears. Even
-then what an intuitive dread had been upon him of the impermanence of
-things. But it wasn't impermanent after all, that vision.
-
-Dear little Eppie. It was astonishing now to find how well he
-remembered, how clearly he could see, in looking back,--more clearly
-than even his acute child's perception had made evident to him,--what a
-dear little Eppie she had been. She lived in his memory, and probably
-nowhere else: in the present Eppie he didn't fancy that he should find
-much trace of the child Eppie, and it was sad, in its funny way, to
-think that he, who had, with all his forebodings, so felt the need of a
-promise, should so well remember her who, undoubtedly, had long ago
-forgotten him. He took little interest in the present Eppie. But the
-child wore perfectly with time.
-
-Dear child Eppie and strange, distant boy, groping toward the present
-Gavan; unhappy little boy, of deep, inarticulate, passionate affections
-and of deep hopes and dreads. There they walked, knee-deep in heather;
-he smelled it, the sun warm upon it, Eppie in her white,
-Alice-in-Wonderland frock and her "striped" hair. And there went Robbie,
-plunging through the heather before them.
-
-Robbie. Eppie had been right, then. He had not forgotten him at all. He
-and Eppie stood at the window looking out at the dawn; the scent of the
-wet pine-tree was in the air, and their eyes were heavy with weeping.
-How near they had been. Had any one, in all his life, ever been nearer
-him than Eppie?
-
-Curious, when he had so well kept the promise never to forget, that the
-other promise, the promise to return, he had not been able to keep. In
-making it, he had not imagined, even with his foreboding, what manacles
-of routine and theory were to be locked upon him for the rest of his
-boyhood. He had soon learned that protest, pleading, rebellion, were
-equally vain, and that outward conformity was the preservative of inner
-freedom. He could not jeopardize the purpose of his life--his mother's
-rescue--by a persistence that, in his uncle's not unkind and not
-unhumorous eyes, was merely foolish. He was forced to swallow his own
-longings and to endure, as best he could, his pangs of fear lest Eppie
-should think him slack, or even faithless. He submitted to the treadmill
-of a highly organized education, that could spare no time for
-insignificant summers in Scotland. Every moment in Gavan's youth was to
-be made significant by tangible achievement. The distilled knowledge of
-the past, the intellectual trophies of civilization, were to be his; if
-he didn't want them, they, in the finished and effective figure of his
-uncle, wanted him, and, in the sense of the fulfilment of his uncle's
-hopes, they got him.
-
-During those years Gavan wrote to Eppie, tried to make her share with
-him in all the lonely and rather abstract interests of his life. But he
-found that the four years of difference, counting for nothing in the
-actual intercourse of word and look, counted for everything against any
-reality of intercourse in writing. Translated into that formality, the
-childish affection became as unlike itself as a pressed flower is unlike
-a fresh one. Eppie's letters, punctual and very fond, were far more
-immature than she herself. These letters gave accounts of animals,
-walks, lessons, very bald and concise, and of the Grainger cousins and
-their doings, and then of her new relation, cousin Alicia, whose
-daughters, children of Eppie's own age, soon seemed to poor Gavan, in
-his distant prison, to fill his place. Eppie went away with these
-cousins to Germany, where they all heard wonderful music, and after that
-they came to Kirklands for the summer. Altogether, when Gavan's
-opportunity came and, with the dignity of seventeen to back his request,
-he had his uncle's consent to his spending of a month in Scotland, he
-felt himself, even as he made it, rather silly in his determination to
-cling at all costs to something precious but vanishing. Then it was that
-Eppie had been swept away by the engulfing relative. At the very moment
-of his own release, she was taken to the Continent for three years of
-travel and study. The final effort of childhood to hold to its own
-meaning was frustrated. The letters, after that, soon ceased. Silence
-ended the first chapter.
-
-Gavan glanced out at the rushing darkness on either side. It was like
-the sliding of a curtain before the first act of a drama. His cigar was
-done and he did not light another. His eyes on that darkness that passed
-and passed, he gave himself up to the long vision of the nearer years.
-Through them went always the link with childhood, the haunting phrase
-that sounded in every scene--that fear of life, that deep dread of its
-evil and its pain that he had tried to hide from Eppie, but that,
-together, they had glanced at.
-
-In that first chapter, whose page he had just turned, he had seen
-himself as a very unhappy boy--unhappy from causes as apparent as a cage
-about a pining bird. His youth had been weighted with an over-mature
-understanding of wrong and sorrow. His childish faith in supreme good
-had shaped itself to a conception of life as a place of probation where
-oneself and, far worse, those one loved were burned continually in the
-fiery furnace of inexplicable affliction. One couldn't say what God
-might not demand of one in the way of endurance. He had, helpless, seen
-his fragile, shrinking mother hatefully bullied and abused or more
-hatefully caressed. He had been parted from her to brood and tremble
-over her distant fate. Loved things had died; loved things had all, it
-seemed, been taken from him; the soulless machinery of his uncle's
-system had ground and polished at his stiffening heart. No wonder that
-the boy of that first chapter had been very unhappy. But in the later
-chapters, to which he had now come, the causes for unhappiness were not
-so obvious, yet the gloom that overhung them deepened. He saw himself at
-Eton in the hedged-round world of buoyant youth, standing apart,
-preoccupied, indifferent. He had been oddly popular there. His
-selflessness, his gentle candor, his capacity for a highly keyed
-joy,--strung, though it was, over an incapacity for peace,--endeared
-him; but even to his friends he remained a veiled and ambiguous
-personality. He seemed to himself to stand on the confines of that
-artificially happy domain, listening always for the sound of sorrow in
-the greater world outside. History, growing before his growing mind,
-loomed blood-stained, cruel, disastrous. The defeat of goodness, its
-degradation by the triumphant forces of evil, haunted him. The
-dependence of mind, of soul, on body opened new and ominous vistas. For
-months he was pursued by morbid fears of what a jostled brain-cell or a
-diseased body might do to one. One might become a fiend, it seemed, or
-an imbecile, if one's atoms were disarranged too much. Life was a tragic
-duty,--he held to that blindly, fiercely at times; but what if life's
-chances made even goodness impossible? what if it were to rob one of
-one's very selfhood? It became to him a thing dangerous, uncertain, like
-an insecurely chained wild beast that one must lie down with and rise
-with and that might spring at one's throat at any moment.
-
-Under the pressure of this new knowledge, crude enough in its
-materialistic forms, and keen, new thought, already subtle, already
-passing from youthful crudity, the skeptical crash of his religious
-faith came at last upon him. Religion had meant too much to him for its
-loss to be the merely disturbing epoch of readjustment that it is in
-much young development. He found himself in a reeling horror of darkness
-where the only lights were the dim beacons of science and the fantastic
-will-o'-the-wisps of estheticism. In the midst of the chaos he saw his
-mother again. He dreaded the longed-for meeting. How could he see her
-and hide from her the inner desolation? And when she came, at last,
-after all these years, a desperate pity nerved him to act a part. She
-was changed; the years had told on her more than even his imagination
-had feared. She drooped like a tired, fading flower. She was fading,
-that he saw at the first glance. Mentally as well as physically, there
-was an air of withering about her, and the look of sorrow was stamped
-ineffaceably upon her aging features. To know that he had lost his
-faith, his hold on life, his trust in good, would have been, he thought,
-to kill her. He kept from her a whisper of his desolation; and to a
-fundamental skepticism like his, acting was facile. But when she was
-gone, back to her parched life, he knew that to her, as well as to him,
-something essential had lacked. Her love, again and again, must have
-fluttered, however blindly, against that barrier between them. The years
-of separation had been sad, but, in looking back at it, the summer of
-meeting was saddest of all.
-
-The experience put an edge to his hardening strength. He must fail her
-in essentials; they could never meet in the blessed nearness of shared
-hopes; but he wouldn't fail her in all the lesser things of life. The
-time of her deliverance was near. Love and beauty would soon be about
-her. He worked at Oxford with the inner passion of a larger purpose than
-mere scholarship that is the soul of true scholarship. He felt the
-sharp, cold joy of high achievement, the Alpine, precipitous scaling of
-the mind. And here he embarked upon the conscious quest for truth, his
-skepticism grown to a doubt of its own premises.
-
-Gavan looked quietly back upon the turmoil of that quest.
-
-He watched himself in those young years pressing restlessly, eagerly,
-pursued by the phantoms of death and nothingness, through spiral after
-spiral of human thought: through Spinoza's horror of the meaninglessness
-of life and through Spinoza's barren peace; through Kant's skepticism
-that would not let him rest in Kant's super-rational assurance;
-precipitated from Hegel's dialectics--building their pyramid of paradox
-to the apex of an impersonal Absolute--into Schopenhauer's petulant
-despair. And more and more clearly he saw, through all the forms of
-thought, that the finite self dissolved like mist in the one
-all-embracing, all-transcending Subject. Science, philosophy, religion,
-seemed, in their final development, to merge in a Monism that conceived
-reality as spirit, but as impersonal spirit, a conception that, if in
-western thought it did not reduce to illusion every phase of
-experience, yet reduced the finite self to a contradiction and its sense
-of moral freedom, upon which were built all the valuations of life and
-all its sanctions, to a self-deception. His own dual life deepened his
-abiding intuition of unreality. There was the Gavan of the river, the
-debate, the dinner, popular among his fellows, gentle, debonair; already
-the man of the world through the fineness of his perception, his
-instinct for the fitting, his perfection of mannerless manner that was
-the flower of selflessness. And there was the Gavan of the inner
-thought, fixed, always, in its knot of torturing perplexity. To the
-inner Gavan, the Gavan of human relations was a wraith-like figure. Now
-began for him the strange experience at which childish terrors had
-hinted. It was in the exhaustions that followed a long wrench of
-thought, or after an illness, a shock of sorrow that left one pulseless
-and inert, that these pauses of an awful peace would come to him. One
-faced, then, the dread vision, and it seized one, as when, in the deep
-stillness of the night, the world drops from one and only a
-consciousness, dispassionate and contemplative, seeing all life as
-dream, remains. It was when life was thus stilled, its desires quenched
-by weakness or great sorrow, that this peace stole into the empty
-chambers, and whispered that all pain, all evil, all life were dreams
-and that the dreams were made by the strife and restlessness of the
-fragmentary self in its endless discord. See oneself as discord, as part
-of the whole, every thought, every act, every feeling determined by it,
-and one entered, as it were, into the unwilling redemption. Desire,
-striving, hope, and fear fell from one. One found the secret of the
-Eternal Now, holding in its timelessness the vast vision of a world of
-change. But to Gavan, in these moments, the sorrow, the striving, the
-agony of life was sweet and desirable; for, to the finite life that
-strove, and hoped, and suffered the vision became the sightless gaze of
-death, and nothingness was the guerdon of such attainment. To turn, with
-an almost physical sickness of horror, from the hypnotic spell, to
-forcibly forget thought, to clasp life about him like a loved
-Nessus-robe, was a frequent solution during these years of struggle; to
-renter the place of joy and sorrow, taking it, so to speak, at its own
-terms. But the specter was never far from the inner Gavan, who more and
-more suspected that the longing for reality, for significance, that
-flamed up in him with each renewal of personal force and energy, was the
-mere result of life, not its sanction. And more and more, when, in such
-renewals, his nature turned with a desperate trust to action, as a
-possible test of worth, he saw that it was not action, not faith, that
-created life and the trust in life, but life, the force and will
-incarnated in one, that created faith and action. The very will to act
-was the will to live, and the will to live was the will of the Whole
-that the particular discord of one's personal self should continue to
-strive and suffer.
-
-Life, indeed, clutched him, and that quite without any artificial effort
-of his own, when his mother came home to England to die.
-
-Gavan had just left Oxford. He was exquisitely equipped for the best
-things of life, and, with the achievement, his long dependence on his
-uncle suddenly ceased. An eccentric old cousin, a scholarly recluse, who
-had taken a fancy to him, died, leaving him a small estate in Surrey and
-fifteen hundred pounds a year.
-
-With the good fortune came the bitter irony that turned it to dust and
-ashes. All his life he had longed to help his mother, to smooth her
-rough path and put power over fate into her hand. Now he could only help
-her to die in peace.
-
-He took her to the quiet old house, among its lawns, its hedges, its
-high-walled gardens and deep woods. He gave her all that it was now too
-late to give--beauty, ease, and love.
-
-She was changed by disease, more changed than by life and sorrow;
-gentle, very patient, but only by an effort showing her appreciation of
-the loveliness, only by an effort answering his love.
-
-Of all his fears the worst had been the fear that, with the conviction
-of the worthlessness of life, the capacity for love had left him. Now,
-as with intolerable anguish, her life ebbed from her, there was almost
-relief in his own despair; in feeling it to the full; in seeing the
-heartlessness of thought wither in the fierce flame of his agony.
-
-It seemed to him that he had never before known what it was to love. It
-was as if he were more her than himself. He relived her life and its
-sorrows. He relived her miserable married years, the long loneliness,
-parted from her child, her terror of the final parting, coming so
-cruelly upon them; and he lived the pains of her dissolution. He
-understood as he had never understood, all that she was and felt; he
-yearned as he had never yearned, to hold and keep her with him in joy
-and security; he suffered as he had never suffered.
-
-Such passionate rebellion filled him that he would walk for hours about
-the country, while merciful anesthetics gave her oblivion, in a blind
-rage of mere feeling--feeling at a white heat, a core of tormented life.
-And the worst was that her life of martyrdom was not to be crowned by a
-martyr's happy death; the worst was that her own light died away from
-before her feet, that she groped in darkness, and that, since he was to
-lose her, he might not even have her to the end.
-
-For months he watched the slow fading of all that had made her herself,
-her relapse into the instinctive, almost into the animal. Her lips, for
-many days, kept the courage of their smile, but it was at last only an
-automatic courage, showing no sweetness, no caress. Her eyes, in the
-first tragic joy of their reunion, had longed, grieved, yearned over the
-son who hid his sorrow for her sake. Afterward, all feeling, except a
-sort of chill resentment, died from her look. For the last days of her
-life, when, in great anguish, she never spoke at all, these eyes would
-turn on him with a strange immensity of indifference. It was as if
-already his mother were gone and as if a ghost had stolen into his life.
-She died at last, after a long night of unconsciousness, without a word
-or look that brought them near.
-
-Gavan lived through all that followed in a stupor.
-
-On the day of her funeral, when all was over, he walked out into the
-spring woods.
-
-The day was sweet and mild. Pools of shallow water shone here and there
-in the hollows, among the slender tree-stems. Pale slips of blue were
-seen among the fine, gray branches, and pushing up from last year's
-leaves were snowdrops growing everywhere, white and green among the
-russet leaves, lovely, lovely snowdrops. Seeing them, in his swift,
-aimless wandering, Gavan paused.
-
-The long nights and days had worn him to that last stage of exhaustion
-where every sense is stretched fine and sharp as the highest string of a
-musical instrument. Leaning against a tree, his arms folded, he looked
-at the snowdrops, at their vivid green, and their white, as fresh, as
-delicate as flakes of newly fallen snow.
-
-"Lovely, lovely," he said, and, looking all about him, at the fretwork
-of gray branches on the blue, the pale, shining water,--a little bird
-just hopping to its edge among the shorter grass to drink,--he repeated,
-"Lovely," while the anguish in his heart and the sweet beauty without
-combined in the sharp, exquisite tension of a mood about to snap, the
-fineness of a note, unendurably high, held to an unendurable length.
-
-A dimness overtook him: as if the note, no longer keenly singing, sank
-to an insect-like buzz, a chaos of minute, whirring vibrations that made
-a queer, dizzy rhythm; and, in a daze of sudden indifference, both to
-beauty and anguish, he seemed to see himself standing there, collapsed
-against the tree, his frail figure outworn with misery,--to see himself,
-and the trees, the pools of water, the drinking bird, and the snowy
-flowers,--like a picture held before calm, dying eyes.
-
-"Yes," he thought, "she saw it like this,--me, herself, life; that is
-why she didn't care any longer."
-
-He continued to look, and from the dimness and the buzzing the calm grew
-clear--clear as a sharply cut hallucination. He knew the experience, he
-had often before known it; but he had never yet felt it so unutterably,
-so finally. Something in him had done struggling forever; something was
-relinquished; he had accepted something. "Yes, it is like that," he
-thought on; "they are all of them right."
-
-With the cold eye of contemplation he gazed on the illusion of life:
-joy, suffering, beauty, good and evil. His individual life, enfranchised
-from its dream of a separate self, drifted into the life about him. He
-was part of it all; in him, as in those other freed ones, the self
-suddenly knew itself as fleeting and unsubstantial as a dream, knew its
-own profound irrationality and the suffering that its striving to be
-must always mean.
-
-He was perfectly at peace, he who had never known peace. "I am as dead
-as she is," he thought.
-
-In his peace he was conscious of no emotion, yet he found himself
-suddenly leaning his head against the tree and weeping. He wept, but he
-knew that it was no longer with grief or longing. He watched the
-exhausted machine give way, and noted its piteous desolation of
-attitude,--not pitying it,--while he thought, "I shall feel, perhaps
-suffer, perhaps enjoy again; but I shall always watch myself from above
-it all."
-
-The mystic experience had come overwhelmingly to him and his mind was
-never to lose the effect of that immediacy of consciousness,
-untransmissible, unspeakable, ineffaceable. And that with which he found
-himself one was far from any human thoughts or emotions; rather it was
-the negation of them, the infinite negation of finite restlessness.
-
-He went back to the house, to the darkened, empty room. The memories
-that crowded there, of pity and love and terror, were now part of the
-picture he looked at, as near and yet as far, as the vision of the
-snowdrops, the bird, and the spring sky.
-
-All was quiet. She was gone as he would go. The laboring breath was
-stilled forever.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Gavan did not address himself to an ascetic remodeling of his life. He
-pursued the path traced out before him. He yielded placidly to the calls
-of life, willing to work, to accomplish, willing even to indulge his
-passions, since there could lurk for him no trap among the shows of
-life. His taste soon drew back, disdainful and delicate, from his
-experience of youthful dissipation; his ironic indifference made him
-deaf to the lures of ambition; but he was an accurate and steady worker
-and a tolerably interested observer of existence.
-
-As he had ceased to have value for himself, so others had no value in
-his eyes. Social effort and self-realization were, as ideals, equally
-meaningless to him; and though pity was always with him, it was a pity
-gentle and meditative, hopeless of alleviation: for suffering was life,
-and to cure one, one must abolish the other. Material remedies seemed to
-him worse than useless; they merely renewed the craving forces. The
-Imitation of Christ was a fitter panacea than organized charities and
-progressive legislation.
-
-Physical pain in the helpless, the dumbly conscious, in children or
-animals, hurt him and made him know that he, too, lived; and he would
-spend himself to give relief to any suffering thing. He sought no
-further in metaphysical systems; he desired no further insight. Now and
-then, finding their pensive pastures pleasant, he would read some Hindoo
-or medieval mystic; but ecstasies were as alien to him as materialism:
-both were curious forms of self-deception--one the inflation of the
-illusory self into the loss of any sense of relation, and the other the
-self's painful concentration into imbecilely selfish aims. The people
-most pleasing to him were the people who, without self-doubt and without
-self-consciousness, performed some inherited function in the state; the
-simply great in life; or those who, by natural gift, the fortunately
-finished, the inevitably distinguished, followed some beautifully
-complex calling. The mediocre and the pretentious were unpleasing
-phenomena, and the ideals of democracy mere barbarous nonsense.
-
-His own pursuits were those of a fashionable and ambitious man, and, to
-the casual observer, the utter absence of any of the pose of
-disillusionized youth made all the more apparent what seemed to be a man
-of the world cynicism. Those who knew him better found him charming and
-perplexing. He seemed to have no barriers, yet one could not come near
-him. His center receded before pursuit. And he was much pursued. He
-aroused conjecture, interest, attachment. His exquisite head, the chill
-sweetness of his manner, the strange, piercing charm of his smile, drew
-eyes and hearts to him. Idly amused, he saw himself, all inert, boosted
-from step to step, saw friends swarm about him and hardly an enemy's
-face.
-
-It was rare for him to meet dislike. One young man, vaguely known at
-Oxford, noticed with interest as a relative of Eppie's, he had, indeed,
-by merely being, it seemed, antagonized. Gavan had really felt something
-of a shy, derivative affection for this Jim Grainger, a dogged, sullen,
-strenuous youth; because of the dear old memory, he had made one or two
-delicate, diffident approaches--approaches repulsed with bull-dog
-defiance. Gavan, who understood most things, quite understood that to
-the serious, the plain, the obviously laborious son of an impecunious
-barrister, he might have given the impression, so funnily erroneous, of
-a sauntering dilettantism, an aristocratic _flnerie_. At all events,
-Grainger was intrenched in a resolute disapproval, colored, perhaps,
-with some tinge of reminiscent childish jealousy. When their paths again
-crossed in London and Gavan found his suavity encountered by an even
-more scowling sarcasm, jealousy, of another type, was an obvious cause.
-Grainger, scornful of social dexterities and weapons, had worked himself
-to skin and bone in preparation for a career, and a career that he
-intended to be of serious significance. And at its outset he found
-himself in apparent competition with Gavan for a post that, significant
-indeed to him, as the first rung on the political ladder, could only be
-decorative to his rival--the post of secretary to a prominent
-cabinet-minister. Grainger had his justified hopes, and he was, except
-for outward graces, absolutely fitted for the place.
-
-In his path he found the listless figure of the well-remembered and
-heartily disliked Gavan--a gilded youth, pure and simple, and as such
-being lifted, by all accounts, onto the coveted rung of the coveted
-ladder. Gavan's scholarly fitness for the post Grainger only half
-credited. Of the sturdy professional class, with a streak of the easily
-suspicious bourgeois about him, he was glad to believe tales of
-drawing-room influence. He expressed himself with disgusted openness as
-to the fatal effect of a type like Palairet's on public life. Gavan
-heard a little and guessed more. He found himself sympathizing with
-Grainger; he had always liked him. With an effort that he had never used
-on his own behalf, he managed to get him fitted into the pair of shoes
-that were standing waiting for his own feet. It had been, indeed, though
-in superficial ways, an affair of drawing-room influence. The wife of
-the great statesman, as well as that high personage himself, was one of
-Gavan's devoted and baffled friends. She said that he made her think of
-a half-frozen bird that one longed to take in one's hands and warm, and
-she hopefully communed with her husband as to the invigorating effect of
-a career upon him. She suspected Gavan--his influence over her
-husband--when she found that an alien candidate was being foisted upon
-her.
-
-"Grainger!" she exclaimed, vexed and incredulous. "Why Grainger? Why not
-anybody as well as Grainger? Yes, I've seen the young man. He looks
-like a pugilistic Broad-Church parson. All he wants is to climb and to
-reform everything."
-
-"Exactly the type for British politics," Gavan rejoined. "He is in
-earnest about politics, and I'm not; you know I'm not." His friend
-helplessly owned that he was exasperating. Grainger, had he known to
-whom he was indebted for his lift, would have felt, perhaps, a
-heightened wrath against "drawing-room influence."
-
-Happily and justifiably unconscious, he proceeded to climb.
-
-Meanwhile another pair of shoes was swiftly found for Gavan. He went out
-to India as secretary to the viceroy.
-
-Here, in the surroundings of his early youth, the second great moral
-upheaval of his life came to him. Three years had passed since his
-mother's death. He was twenty-six years old.
-
-During a long summer among the mountains of Simla, he met Alice Grafton.
-She was married, a year older than himself, but a girl still in mind and
-appearance--fragile, hesitant, exquisite. Gavan at his very first seeing
-of her felt something knocking in his heart. It seemed like pity,
-instinctive pity, the bond between him and life, and for some time he
-deluded himself with this comparatively safe interpretation. He did not
-quite know why he should pity Mrs. Grafton. That she should look like a
-girl was hardly a reason, nor that her husband, large, masterful,
-embossed with decorations, was uninteresting. She had been married to
-him--by all accounts the phrase applied--at nineteen and could not find
-him sympathetic; but, after all, many cheerful women were in that
-situation. He was a kindly, an admiring husband, and her life was set in
-luxurious beauty. Yet piteousness was there. She was all promise and
-unfulfilment; and dimly, mutely, she seemed to feel that the promise
-would never be fulfilled, as though a too-early primrose smiled
-wistfully through a veil of ice. Should she never become consciously
-unhappy that would be but another symptom of permanent immaturity.
-
-Gavan rode with her and talked with her, and read with her in her fresh,
-flower-filled drawing-room. Their tastes were not at all alike; but he
-did not in the least mind that when she lifted her lovely eyes to him
-over poor poetry; and when she played and sang to him her very
-ineffectuality added a pathos, full of charm, to the obvious ballads
-that she liked. It was sweet, too, and endearing, to watch her, by
-degrees, molding her taste to his until it became a delightful and
-intuitive echo.
-
-He almost wondered if it was also in echo that she began to feel for
-herself his own appreciation of her. Certainly she matured to
-consciousness of lack. She began to confide; not with an open frankness,
-but vaguely, as though she groped toward the causes of her sadness. She
-shrank, and knew now why she shrank, when her loud-voiced, cheerful
-husband came tramping into the room. Then she began to see that she was
-horribly lonely. Unconsciously, in the confidences now, she plead for
-help, for reassurance. She probed him constantly as to religious hopes
-and the real significance of life. Her soft voice, with its endearing
-little stammer, grew to Gavan nearer and dearer than all the voices of
-the world. At first it appealed, and then it possessed him. He had
-thought that what he felt for her was only pity. He had thought himself
-too dead to all earthly pangs for the rudimentary one of love to reach
-him. But when, one day, he found her weeping, alone, among her flowers,
-he took her into his arms and the great illusion seized him once more.
-
-It seized him, though he knew it for illusion. He laughed at the specter
-of nothingness and gloried in the beauty of the rainbow moment. This
-human creature needed him and he her: that was, for them, the only
-reality; who cared for the blank background where their lives flashed
-and vanished? The flash was what mattered. He sprang from the dead self,
-as from a tomb, when he kissed her lips. Life might mean sorrow and
-defeat, but its tragedy was atoned for by a moment of such joy.
-
-"Gavan, Gavan, do we love each other? Do we?" she wept.
-
-He saw illusion and joy where her woman's heart felt only reality and
-terror in the joy.
-
-They obviously loved each other, though it was without a word of love
-that they found themselves in each other's arms. Had ever two beings so
-lonely so needed love? Her sweet, stunned eyes were a rapture of
-awakening to him, and though, under all, ran the deep, buried river of
-knowledge, whispering forever, "Vanity of vanities," he was far above it
-in the sunlight of the upper air. He felt himself, knew himself only as
-the longing to look forever into her eyes, to hold her to him forever.
-That, on the day of awakening, seemed all that life meant.
-
-Later on he found that more fundamental things had clutched him through
-the broken barriers of thought--jealousies and desires that showed him
-his partaking of the common life of humanity.
-
-Gavan's skepticism had not come face to face with a moral test as yet,
-and he could but contemplate curiously in himself the strong,
-instinctive revolt of all the man of hereditary custom and conscience
-from any dishonorable form of illegal love. He couldn't justify it, but
-it was there, as strong as his longing for the woman.
-
-It was not that he cared a rap, so he analyzed it, for laws or
-conventions: it was merely that he could not do anything that he felt as
-dishonorable.
-
-He told Alice that she must leave her husband and come openly to him.
-They would go back to Europe; live in Italy--the land of happy outcasts
-from unhappy forms; there they would study and travel and make beauty
-grow about them. Holding her hands gently, he put it all before her with
-a reverent devotion that gave the proposal a matrimonial dignity.
-
-"You know me well enough, dear Alice," he said, "to know that you need
-fear none of the usual dangers in such cases. I don't care about
-anything but you; I never will--ambition, country, family. Nothing
-outside me, or inside me, could make me fail you. All I want, or shall
-ever want, is to make you happy, and to be happy with you."
-
-But the things he put away as meaningless dreams the poor woman with the
-girl's mind saw as grim realities. It was easy for Gavan to barter a
-mirage for the one thing he cared to have; the world was not a mirage to
-her, and even her love could not make it so. Her thin young nature knew
-only the craving to keep and not the revulsion from a hidden wrong.
-Every fiber in her shrank from the facing of a hostile order of things,
-the bearing through life of a public dishonor. It was as if it were he
-who purposed the worse disgrace, not she.
-
-She wept and wept in his arms, hoping, perhaps, to weaken him by her
-feebleness and her abandonment, so that an open avowal of cowardice, an
-open appeal that he should yield to it, might be needless; but at last,
-since he would not speak, only stroking her hair, her hand, sharing her
-sorrow, she moaned out, "Oh, Gavan, I can't, I can't."
-
-He only half understood, feeling his heart freeze in the renunciation
-that she might demand. But when she sobbed on brokenly, "Don't leave me.
-Stay with me. I can't live without you. No one need ever know," he
-understood.
-
-Standing white and motionless, it was he now who repeated, "I can't. I
-can't. I can't."
-
-She wept on, incredulous, supplicating, reproachful. "You will not leave
-me! You will not abandon me!"
-
-"I cannot--stay with you."
-
-"You win my heart--humiliate me,--see that I'm yours--only yours,--and
-then cast me off!"
-
-"Don't speak so cruelly, Alice. Cast you off? I, who only pray you to
-let me take you with me?"
-
-"A target for the world!"
-
-"Darling, poor darling, I know that I ask all--all; but what else is
-there--unless I leave you?"
-
-She hid her face on his shoulder, sobbing miserably, her sobs her only
-answer, and to it he rejoined: "We can't go on, you know that; and to
-stay, to deceive your husband, to drag you through all the baseness, the
-ugliness, the degradation, Alice, of a hidden intrigue--I can't do that;
-it's the only thing I can't do for you."
-
-"You despise me; you think me wicked--because I can't have such horrible
-courage. I think what you ask is more wicked; I think it hurts everybody
-more; I think that it would degrade us more. People can't live like
-that--cut off from everything--and not be degraded in the end."
-
-It was a new species of torture that now tore at Gavan's heart and mind.
-He saw too clearly the force of the arguments that underlay her specious
-appeal--more clearly, far, than she could see. It was horribly true that
-the life of happy outlawry he proposed might wither and debase more than
-a conscious sin. The organized, crafty wisdom of life was on her side.
-And on his was a mere matter of taste. He could find no sanction for his
-resistance to her and to himself except in that instinctive recoil from
-what he felt as dishonor. He was sacrificing them both to a silly,
-subjective figment. The lurid realization, that burned and froze, went
-through him, and with it the unanswerable necessity. He must, he must,
-sacrifice them. And he must talk the language of right and wrong as
-though he believed in it. He acted as if he did, yet nothing was further
-from him than such belief; that was the strange agony that wrenched his
-brain as he said: "You are blind, not wicked. Some day you will thank me
-if I make it possible for you to let me go." And, he too incredulous, he
-cried, "Alice, Alice, will you really let me go without you?"
-
-She would not consent to the final alternative, and the struggle lasted
-for a week, through their daily meetings--the dream-like, deft meetings
-under the eyes of others,--and while they rode alone over the
-hills--long, sad rides, when both, often in a moody silence, showed at
-once their hope and their resistance.
-
-Her fear won at last. "And I can't even pretend that it's goodness," she
-said, her voice trembling with self-scorn. "You've abased me to the
-dust, Gavan. Yes, it's true, if you like--my fear is greater than my
-love." Irony, a half-felt anger, helped her to bear the blow, for, to
-the end, she could not believe that he would find strength to leave her.
-
-The parting came suddenly. Wringing her hands, looking hard into her
-face, where he saw still a fawning hope and a half-stupefied despair, he
-left her, and felt that he had torn his heart up by the very roots.
-
-And he had sacrificed her and himself, to what? Gavan could ask himself
-the question at leisure during the following year.
-
-Yet, from the irrational sacrifice was born a timid, trembling trust, a
-dim hope that the unbannered combat had not been in vain, that even the
-blind holding to the ambiguous right might blossom in a better life for
-her than if he had taken the joy held out to him. The trust was as
-irrational as the sacrifice, but it was dear to him. He cherished it,
-and it fluttered in him, sweet, intangible, during all the desolate
-year. Then, at the year's end, he met Alice, suddenly, unexpectedly, and
-found her ominously changed. Her girlhood was gone. A hard, glittering
-surface, competent, resourceful, hid something.
-
-The strength of his renouncement was so rooted that he felt no personal
-fear, and for her, too, he no longer felt fear in his nearness. What he
-felt was a new pity--a pity suffocating and horrible. Whispers of
-discreet scandal enlightened him. Alice was in no danger of what she
-most shrank from--a public pillory; but she was among those of whom the
-world whispers, with a half-condoning smile and shrug.
-
-Gavan saw her riding one morning with a famous soldier, a Nietzschian
-type of strength, splendor, and high indifference. And now he understood
-all. He knew the man. He was one who would have stared light irony at
-Gavan's chivalrous willingness to sacrifice his life to a woman; to such
-a charming triviality as an intrigue he would sacrifice just enough and
-no more. He knew the rules of the game and with him Alice was safe from
-any open pillory. People would never do more than whisper.
-
-A bitter daylight flooded for Gavan that sweet, false dawn, and once
-again the cruelty, the caprice at the heart of all things were revealed
-to him. He knew the flame of impotent remorse. He had tossed the
-miserable child to this fate, and though remorse, like all else, was
-meaningless, he loathed himself for his futile, empty magnanimity.
-
-She had seen his eyes upon her as she rode. She sent for him, and, alone
-with him, the glitter, the hardness, broke to dreadful despair.
-
-She confessed all at his knees. Hardness and glitter had been the shield
-of the racked, terror-stricken heart. The girl was a woman and knew the
-use of shields.
-
-"And Gavan, Gavan, worst of all,--far worst,--I don't love him; I never
-loved him. It was simply--simply"--she could hardly speak--"that he
-frightened and flattered me. It was vanity--recklessness--I don't know
-what it was."
-
-After the confession, she waited, her face hidden, for his reproach or
-anger. Neither came. Instead, she felt, in the long silence, that
-something quiet enveloped her.
-
-She looked up to see his eyes far from her.
-
-"Gavan, can you forgive me?" she whispered.
-
-Once more he was looking at it all--all the cruel, the meaningless drama
-in which he had been enmeshed for a little while. Once more his thought
-had risen far above it, and the old peace, the old, dead peace, with no
-trembling of the hopes that meant only a deeper delusion, was regained.
-He knew how deep must be the reattained tranquillity, when, the woman he
-had loved at his feet, he felt no shrinking, no reproach, no desire,
-only an immense, an indifferent pity.
-
-"Forgive you, Alice? Poor, poor Alice. Perhaps you should forgive me;
-but it isn't a question of that. Don't cry; don't cry," he repeated
-mechanically, gently stroking her hair--hair whose profuse, wonderful
-gold he had once kissed with a lover's awed delight.
-
-"You forgive me--you do forgive me, Gavan?"
-
-"It isn't a question of forgiveness; but of course I forgive you, dear
-Alice."
-
-"Gavan, tell me that you love me still. Can you love me? Oh, say that I
-haven't lost that."
-
-He did not reply, looking away and lifting his hand from her hair.
-
-The woman, leaning on his knees, felt a stealing sense of awe, worse
-than any fear of his anger. And worse than a vehement disavowal of love,
-worse than a spurning of her from him, were his words: "I want you not
-to suffer, dear Alice; I want you to find peace."
-
-"Peace! What peace can I find?"
-
-He looked at her now, wondering if she would understand and willing to
-put it before her as he himself saw it: "The peace of seeing it all, and
-letting it all go."
-
-"Gavan, I swear to you that I will never see him again. Oh, Gavan, what
-do you mean? If you would forgive me--really forgive me--and take me
-now, I would follow you anywhere. I am not afraid any longer. I have
-found out that the only thing to be afraid of is oneself. If I have you,
-nothing else matters."
-
-He looked steadily at her, no longer touching her. "You have said what I
-mean. You have found it out. The only thing to be afraid of is
-ourselves. You will not see this man again? You will keep that promise
-to me?"
-
-"Any promise! Anything you ask! And, indeed, indeed, I could not see him
-now," she shuddered. "Gavan, you will take me away with you?"
-
-He wondered at her that she did not see how far he was from her--how
-far, and yet how one with her, how merged in her through his
-comprehension of the essential unity that bound all life together, that
-made her suffering part of him, even while he looked down upon it from
-an almost musing height.
-
-He felt unutterable gentleness and unutterable ruthlessness. "I don't
-mean that, Alice. You won't lose yourself by clinging to me, by clinging
-to what you want."
-
-"You don't love me! Oh, you don't love me! I have killed your love!" she
-wailed out, rising to her feet, pierced by her full realization. She
-stepped back from him to gaze at him with a sort of horror. "You talk as
-if you had become a priest."
-
-He appreciated what his attitude must seem to her--priestly indeed,
-almost sleek in its lack of personal emotion, its trite recourse to the
-preaching of renunciation. And, almost with a sense of humor, that he
-felt as hateful at such a moment, the perception came that he might
-serve her through the very erroneousness of her seeing of him. The sense
-of humor was hateful, and his skilful seizing of her suggestion had a
-grotesque aspect as well. Even in his weariness, he was aware that the
-cup of contemplation was full when it could hold its drop of realized
-irony.
-
-"I think that I have become a priest, Alice," he said. "I see everything
-differently. And weren't you brought up in a religious way--to go to
-church, seek props, say your prayers, sacrifice yourself and live for
-others? Can't you take hold of that again? It's the only way."
-
-Her quick flaming was justified, he knew; one shouldn't speak of help
-when one was so far away; he had exaggerated the sacerdotal note. "Oh,
-you despise me! It is because of that, and you are trying to hide it
-from me! What is religion to me, what is anything--anything in the world
-to me--if I have lost you, Gavan? Why are you so cruel, so horrible? I
-can't understand it! I can't bear it! Oh, I can't! Why are our lives
-wrecked like this? Why did you leave me? Why have I become wicked? I was
-never, never meant to be wicked." Tears, not of abasement, not of
-appeal, but of pure anguish ran down her face.
-
-He was nearer to that elemental sadness and could speak with a more
-human tone. "You are not wicked--no more--no less--than any one. I don't
-despise you. Believe me, Alice. If I hadn't changed, this would have
-drawn me to you; I should have felt a deeper tenderness because you
-needed me more. But think of me as a priest: I have changed as much as
-that. And remember that what you have yourself found out is true--the
-only thing to be afraid of is oneself, and the only escape from fear is
-to--is to"--he paused, hearing the triteness of his own words and
-wondering with a new wonder at their truth, their gray antiquity, their
-ever-verdant youth--"is to renounce," he finished.
-
-He was standing now, ready for departure. In her eyes he saw at last the
-dignity of hopelessness, of an accepted doom, a pain far above panic.
-
-"Dear Alice," he said, taking her hand--"dear Alice." And, with all the
-delicacy of his shrinking from a too great directness, his eyes had a
-steadiness of demand that sank into the poor woman's tossed, unstable
-soul, he added, "Don't ever do anything ugly--or foolish--again."
-
-Her lover lost,--the very slightness of the words "ugly," "foolish,"
-told her how utterly lost,--a deep thrill of emotional exaltation went
-through the emptiness he left. She longed to clasp the lost lover and to
-sink at the knees of the priest.
-
-"I will be good. I will renounce myself," she said, as though it were a
-creed before an altar; and hurriedly she whispered, poor child, "Perhaps
-in heaven--we will find each other."
-
-Gavan often thought of that pathetic human clutch. So was the dream of
-an atoning heaven built. It kept its pathos, even its beauty, for him,
-when the whole tale ended in the world's shrug and smile. He heard first
-that Alice had become an emotionally devout churchwoman;--that lasted
-for a year;--and then, alas! alas!--but, after all, the smile and shrug
-was the best philosophy,--that she rode once more with the Nietzschian
-lover. He had one short note from her: he would have heard--perhaps, at
-any rate, he would know what to think when he did hear that she saw the
-man again. And she wanted him to know from her that it was not as he
-might think: she really loved him now--the other; not as she had loved
-Gavan,--that would always be first,--but very much; and she needed love,
-she must have it in her life, and she was lifting this man who loved
-her, was helping his life, and she had broader views now and did not
-believe in creeds or in the shibboleths that guided the vulgar. And she
-was harming no one, no one knew. Life was far too complicated, the
-intricacies of modern civilization far too enmeshing, for duty to be
-seen in plain black and white. The whole question of marriage was an
-open one, and one had a right to interpret one's duty according to one's
-own lights. Gavan saw the hand of the new master through it all. Shortly
-after, the death of Alice's husband, killed while tiger-shooting, set
-her free, and the new master proved himself at all events a fond one by
-promptly marrying her. So ended Alice in his life.
-
-There was not much more to look back on after that. His return to
-England; his entering the political arena, with neither desire nor
-reluctance; his standing for the town his uncle's influence marked out
-for him; the fight and the very gallant failure,--there had been, for
-him, an amused interest in the game of it all. The last year he had
-spent in his Surrey home, usually in company with a really pathetic
-effigy of the past--his father, poor and broken in health, the old
-serpent of Gavan's childhood basking now in torpid insignificance, its
-fangs drawn.
-
-People probably thought that he had been soured by an initial defeat.
-Gavan knew that the game had merely ceased to amuse him. What amused him
-most was concentrated and accurate scholarship. He was writing a book on
-some of the obscurer phases of religious enthusiasm, studying from a
-historical and psychological point of view the origin and formation of
-queer little sects,--failures in the struggle for survival,--their
-brief, ambiguous triumphs and their disintegrations.
-
-His unruffled stepping-back from the arena of political activity was to
-the more congenial activity of understanding and observation. But there
-burned in him none of the observer's, the thinker's passion. He worked
-as he rode or ate his breakfast. Work was part of the necessary fuel
-that kept life's flame bright. While he lived he didn't want a feeble,
-flickering flame. But at his heart, he was profoundly indifferent to
-work, as to all else.
-
- * * * * *
-
-GAVAN'S mind, as he leaned back in the railway carriage, had passed over
-the visual aspect of this long retrospect, not in meditation, but in a
-passive seeing of its scenes and faces. Eppie's face, fading in the
-mist; Robbie, silhouetted on the sky; the sulky Grainger; his uncle; his
-mother, and the vision of the spring day where he had wandered in the
-old dream of pain and into its cessation; finally, Alice, her pale hair
-and wistful eyes and her look when, at parting, she had said that they
-might be together in heaven.
-
-He had rarely known a greater lucidity than in those swift, lonely
-hours of night. It was like a queer, long pause between a past
-accomplished and a future not yet begun--as though one should sunder
-time and stand between its cloven waves. The figures crossed the stage,
-and he seemed to see them all in the infinite leisure of an eternal
-moment.
-
-This future, its figures just about to emerge from the wings into full
-view, slightly troubled his reverie. It was at dawn that his mind again
-turned to it with a conjecture half amused and half reluctant. There was
-something disturbing in the linkage he must make between that child's
-face on the mist and the Miss Gifford he was so soon to see. That she
-would, at all events in her own conception, dominate the stage, he felt
-sure; she might even expect a special attention from a spectator whose
-memory could join hers in that far first act. He was pretty sure that
-his memory would have to do service for both; and quite sure that memory
-would not hold for her, as it did for him, a distinct tincture of pain,
-of restlessness, as though there strove in it something shackled and
-unfulfilled.
-
-One's thoughts, at four o'clock in the morning, after hours of
-sleeplessness, became fantastic, and Gavan found himself watching, with
-some shrinking, this image of the past, suddenly released, brought
-gasping and half stupefied to the air, to freedom, to new, strong
-activity, after having been, for so long, bound and gagged and thrust
-into an underground prison.
-
-He turned to a forecast of what Eppie would probably be like. He had
-heard a good deal about her, and he had not cared for what he had
-heard. The fact that one did hear a good deal was not pleasing. Every
-one, in describing her, used the word charming; he had gathered that it
-meant, as applied to her, more than mere prettiness, wit, or social
-deftness; and it was precisely for the more that it meant that he did
-not care.
-
-Apparently what really distinguished her was her energy. She traveled
-with her cousin, Lady Alicia Waring, a worldly, kindly dabbler in art
-and politics; she rushed from country-house to country-house; she worked
-in the slums; she sat on committees; she canvassed for parliamentary
-friends; she hunted, she yachted, she sang, she broke hearts, and, by
-all accounts, had high and resolute matrimonial ambitions. Would Eppie
-Gifford "get" So-and-so was a question that Gavan had heard more than
-once repeated, with the graceless terseness of our modern colloquialism,
-and it spoke much for Eppie's popularity that it was usually asked in
-sympathy.
-
-This reputation for a direct and vigorous worldliness was only thrown
-into more pungent relief by the startling tale of her love-affair. She
-had fallen in love, helplessly in love, with an impecunious younger son,
-an officer in the Guards--a lazy, lovable, petulant nobody, the last
-type one would have expected her to lose her head over. He was not
-stupid, but he didn't count and never would. The match would have been a
-reckless one, for Eppie had, practically, only enough to pay for her
-clothes and her traveling expenses. The handsome guardsman had not even
-prospects. Yet, deliberately sacrificing all her chances, she had fallen
-in love, been radiantly engaged, and then, from the radiance, flung into
-stupefying humiliation. He had thrown her over, quite openly, for an
-ugly little heiress from Liverpool. Poor Eppie had carried off her
-broken heart--and she didn't deny that it was broken--for a year or so
-of travel. This had happened four years ago. She had mended as bravely
-as possible,--it wasn't a deep break after all,--and on the thrilling
-occasion of her first meeting with the faithless lover and his bride was
-magnificently sweet and regal to the ugly heiress. It was surmised that
-the husband was as uncomfortable as he deserved to be. But this capacity
-for recklessness, this picture of one so dauntless, dazed and
-discomfited, hardly redeemed the other, the probably fundamental aspect.
-She had lost her head; but that didn't prove that when she had it she
-would not make the best possible use of it. There was talk now--Eppie's
-was the publicity of popularity--of Gavan's old-time rival, Grainger,
-who had inherited an immense fortune and, unvarnished and defiantly
-undecorative on his lustrous background, was one of the world's prizes.
-All that he had was at Eppie's feet, and some more brilliant alternative
-could be the only cause for hesitation in a young woman seared by
-misfortune and cured forever of folly.
-
-So the talk went, and Gavan took such gabble with a large pinch of
-ironic incredulity; but at the same time the gossip left its trail. The
-impetuous and devastating young lady, with her assurance and her aim at
-large successes, was to him a distasteful figure. There was pain in
-linking it with little Eppie. It stood waiting in the wings and was
-altogether novel and a little menacing to one's peace of mind. He really
-did not want to see Miss Gilford; she belonged to a modern type
-intensely wearisome to him. But she was staying with her uncle and
-aunt--only Miss Barbara was left--at Kirklands, and the general, after a
-meeting in London, had written begging him to pay them all a visit, and,
-since there had seemed no reason for not going, here he was.
-
-Here he was, and round the corner of the wing the new Eppie stood
-waiting. Poor little Eppie of childhood--she was lost forever.
-
-But all the clearness of the night concentrated, at dawn, into that
-vivid memory of the past where they had wandered together, sharing joy
-and sorrow.
-
-That was long, long over. To-morrow was already here, and to-morrow
-belonged to the new Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Gavan spent the morning in Edinburgh, seeing an old relative, and
-reached Kirklands at six.
-
-It was a cold October evening, the moors like a dark, sullenly heaving
-ocean and a heavy bar of sunset lying along the horizon.
-
-The windows of the old white house mirrored the dying color, and here
-and there the inner light of fire and candle seemed like laughter on a
-grave face. With all its loneliness it was a happy-looking house; he
-remembered that; and in the stillness of the vast moors and the coming
-night it made him think of a warmly throbbing heart filling with courage
-and significance a desolate life.
-
-The general came from the long oak library, book in hand, to welcome
-him. Gavan was almost automatically observant of physical processes and
-noted now the pronounced limp, the touch of garrulity--symptoms of the
-fine old organism's placid disintegration. Life was leaving it
-unreluctantly, and the mild indifference of age made his cordiality at
-once warmer and more impersonal than of old.
-
-As he led Gavan to his room, the room of boyhood, near Eppie's,
-overlooking the garden and the wooded hills, he told him that Eppie and
-Miss Barbara were dressing and that he would have time for a talk with
-them before dinner at eight.
-
-"It's changed since you were here, Gavan. Ah! time goes--it goes. Poor
-Rachel! we lost her five years ago. If Eppie didn't look after us so
-well we should be lonely, Barbara and I. We seldom get away now. Too old
-to care for change. But Eppie always gives us three or four months, and
-a letter once a week while she's away. She puts us first. This is home,
-she says. She sees clever people at Alicia Waring's, has the world at
-her feet,--you've heard, no doubt,--but she loves Kirklands best. She
-gardens with me--a great gardener Eppie, but she is good at anything she
-sets herself to; she drives her aunt about, she reads to us and sings to
-us,--you have heard of her singing, too,--keeps us in touch with life.
-Eppie is a wonderful person for sharing happiness," the general
-monologued, looking about the fire-lit room; and Gavan felt that, from
-this point of view, some of the little Eppie might still have survived.
-
-"So you have given up the idea of the House?" the general went on.
-
-"I'm no good at it," said Gavan; "I've proved it."
-
-"Proved it? Nonsense. Wait till you are fifty before saying that. Why,
-you've everything in your favor. You weren't enough in earnest; that was
-the trouble. You didn't care enough; you played into your opponents'
-hands. The British public doesn't understand idealism or irony. Eppie
-told us all about it."
-
-"Eppie? How did Eppie know?" He found himself using her little name as a
-matter of course.
-
-"She knows everything," the general rejoined, with his air of happy,
-derived complacency; "even when she's not in England, she never loses
-touch. Eppie is very much behind the scenes."
-
-The simile recalled to Gavan his own vision of the stage and the waiting
-figure. "Even behind my scenes!" he ejaculated, smiling at so much
-omniscience.
-
-"From the moment you came into public life, yes."
-
-"And she knows why I failed at it? Idealism and irony?"
-
-"That's what she says; and I usually find Eppie right." The general,
-after the half-humorous declaration, had a pause, and before leaving his
-guest, he added, "Right, except about her own affairs. She is a child
-there yet."
-
-Eppie's disaster must have been keenly felt and keenly resented at
-Kirklands. The general made no further reference to it and Gavan asked
-no question.
-
-There was a fire, a lamp, and several clusters of candles in the long,
-dark library when Gavan entered it an hour later, so that the darkness
-was full of light; yet he had wandered slowly down its length, looking
-about him at the faded tan, russet, and gilt of well-remembered books,
-at the massive chairs and tables, all in their old places, all so
-intimately familiar, before seeing that he was not alone in the room.
-
-Some one in white was sitting, half submerged in a deep chair, behind
-the table with its lamp--some one who had been watching him as he
-wandered, and who now rose to meet him, taking him so unawares that she
-startled him, all the light in the dim room seeming suddenly to center
-upon her and she herself to throw everything, even his former thoughts
-of her, into the background.
-
-It was Eppie, of course, and all that he had heard of her, all that he
-had conjectured, fell back before the impression that held him in a
-moment, long, really dazzled, yet very acute.
-
-Her face was narrow, pale, faintly freckled; the jaw long, the nose
-high-bridged, the lips a little prominent; and, as he now saw, a clear
-flush sprang easily to her cheeks. Eyes, lips, and hair were vivid with
-color: the hair, with its remembered rivulets of russet and gold, piled
-high on her head, framing the narrow face and the long throat; the eyes
-gray or green or gold, like the depths of a mountain stream.
-
-He had heard many analogies for the haunting and fugitive charm of Miss
-Gifford's face--a charm that could only, apparently, be caught with the
-subtleties of antithesis. One appreciator had said that she was like an
-angelic jockey; another, that with a statesman's gaze she had a baby's
-smile; another, that she was a Flying Victory done by Velasquez. And
-with his own dominant impression of strength, sweetness, and daring,
-there crowded other similes. Her eyes had the steeplechaser's hard,
-smiling scrutiny of the next jump; the halloo of the hunt under a
-morning sky was in them, the joyous shouts of Spartan boys at play; yet,
-though eyes of heroism and laughter, they were eyes sad and almost
-tragically benignant.
-
-She was tall, with the spare lightness of a runner poised for a race,
-and the firm, ample breast of a hardy nymph. She suggested these pagan,
-outdoor similes while, at the same time, luxuriously feminine in her
-more than fashionable aspect, the last touches of modernity were upon
-her: her dress, the eighteenth-century, interpreted by Paris, her
-decorations all discretion and distinction--a knot of silver-green at
-her breast, an emerald ring on her finger, and emerald earrings, two
-drops of smooth, green light, trembling in the shadows of her hair.
-
-Altogether Gavan was able to grasp the impression even further, to
-simplify it, to express at once its dazzled quality and its acuteness,
-as various and almost violent, as if, suddenly, every instrument in an
-orchestra were to strike one long, clear, vibrating note.
-
-His gaze had been prolonged, and hers had answered it with as open an
-intentness. And it was at last she who took both his hands, shook them a
-little, holding them while, not shyly, but with that vivid flush on her
-cheek, "_You_," she said.
-
-For she was startled, too. It _was_ he. She remembered, as if she had
-seen them yesterday, his air of quick response, surface-shrinking, deep
-composure, the old delicious smile, and the glance swiftly looking and
-swiftly averted.
-
-"And _you_," Gavan repeated. "I haven't changed so much, though," he
-said.
-
-"And I have? Really much? Long skirts and turned up hair are a
-transformation. It's wonderful to see you, Gavan. It makes one get hold
-of the past and of oneself in it."
-
-"Does it?"
-
-"_Doesn't_ it?" She let go his hands, and moving to the fire and
-standing before it while she surveyed him, she went on, not waiting for
-an answer:
-
-"But I don't suppose that you have my keenness of memory. It all rushes
-back--our walks, our games, our lessons, the smell of the heather, the
-very taste of the heather-honey we ate at tea, and all the things you
-did and said and looked; your building the Petit Trianon, and your
-playing dolls with me that day; your Agnes, in her pink dress, and my
-Elspeth, whom I used to whip so."
-
-"I remember it all," said Gavan, "and I remember how I broke poor
-Elspeth."
-
-"Do you?"
-
-"All of it: the attic windows and the pine-tree under them, and the
-great white bird, and the dreadful, soft little thud on the garden
-path."
-
-"Yes, I can see your face looking down. You were quite silent and
-frozen. I screamed and screamed. Aunt Barbara thought that _you_ had
-fallen at first from the way I screamed."
-
-"Poor little Eppie. Yes, I remember; it was horrid."
-
-Their eyes, smiling, quizzical, yet sad, watched, measured each other,
-while they exchanged these trophies from the past. He had joined her
-beside the fire, and, turning, she leaned her hands on the mantel and
-looked into the flames. So looking, her face had its aspect of almost
-tragic brooding. It was as if, Gavan thought, under the light memories,
-all those visions of his night were there before her, as if,
-astonishingly, and in almost uncanny measure, she shared them.
-
-"And do you remember Robbie?" she asked presently.
-
-"I was just thinking of Robbie," Gavan answered. It was her face that
-had brought back the old sorrow, and that memory, more than any, linked
-them over all that was new and strange. They glanced at each other.
-
-"I am so glad," said Eppie.
-
-"Because I remember?"
-
-"Yes, that you haven't forgotten. You said you would."
-
-"Did I?" he asked, though he quite remembered that, too.
-
-"Yes; and I should have felt Robbie more dead if you had forgotten him."
-
-This was wonderfully not the Miss Gifford, and wonderfully the old
-Eppie. She saw that thought, too, answering it with, "Things haven't
-really changed so much, have they? It's all so very near--all of that."
-
-So near, that its sudden sharing was making Gavan a little
-uncomfortable, with the discomfort of the night before justified,
-intensified.
-
-He hadn't imagined such familiar closeness with a woman really unknown,
-nor that, sweeping away all the formalities that might have grown up
-between them, she should call him Gavan and make it natural for him to
-call her Eppie. He didn't really mind. It was amusing, charming perhaps,
-perhaps even touching--yes, of course it was that; but she was rather
-out of place: much nearer than where he had imagined she would be, on
-the stage before him.
-
-Passing to another memory, she now said, "I clung for years, you know,
-to your promise to come back."
-
-"I couldn't come--really and simply could not."
-
-"I never for a moment thought you could, any more than I thought you
-could forget Robbie."
-
-"And when I could come, you were gone."
-
-"How miserable that made me! I was in Rome when I had the news from
-Uncle Nigel."
-
-He felt bound fully to exonerate the past. "I had the life, during my
-boyhood, of a sumptuous galley-slave. I had everything except liberty
-and leisure. I was put into a system and left there until it had had its
-will of me. And when I was free I imagined that you had forgotten all
-about me. To a shy, warped boy, a grown-up Eppie was an alarming idea."
-
-"I never thought you had forgotten _me_!" said Eppie, smiling.
-
-Again she actually disturbed him; but, lightly, he replied with the
-truth, feeling a certain satisfaction in its lightness: "Never, never;
-though, of course, you fell into a background. You can't deny that _I_
-did."
-
-"Oh, no, I don't deny it." Her smile met his, seemed placidly to
-perceive its meaning. She did not for a moment imply, by her admissions,
-any more than he did; the only question was, What did his admissions
-imply?
-
-She left them there, going on in an apparent sequence, "Have you heard
-much about me, Gavan?"
-
-"A good deal," he owned.
-
-"I ask because I want to pick up threads; I want to know how many
-stitches are dropped, so to speak. Since you have heard, I want to know
-just what; I often seem to leave reverberations behind me. Some rather
-ugly ones, I fear. You heard, perhaps, that I was that rather ambiguous
-being, the young woman of fashion, materialistic, ambitious, hard." Her
-gaze, with its cool scrutiny, was now upon him.
-
-"Those are really too ugly names for what I heard. I gathered, on the
-whole, that you were merely very vigorous and that you had more
-opportunities than most people for vigor."
-
-"I'm glad that you saw it so; but all the same, the truth, at times,
-hasn't been beautiful. I have, often, been too indifferent toward people
-who didn't count for me, and too diplomatic toward those who did. You
-see, Gavan," she put it placidly before him, not at all as if drawing
-near in confidence,--she was much further in her confidences than in her
-memories,--but merely as if she unrolled a map before him so that he
-might clearly see where, at present, they found themselves, "you see, I
-am a nearly penniless girl--just enough to dress and go about. Of course
-if I didn't dress and didn't go about I could keep body and soul
-together; but to the shrewd eyes of the world, a girl living on her
-friends, making capital of her personality, while she seeks a husband
-who will give her the sort of place she wants--oh, yes, the world isn't
-so unfair, either, when one takes off the veils. And this girl, with the
-personality that pays, was put early in a place from where she could see
-all sorts of paths at once, see the world, in its ladder aspect, before
-her--all the horridness of low rungs and all the satisfaction of high
-ones. I have been tempted through complexity of understanding; perhaps I
-still am. One wants the best; and when one doesn't see clearly what the
-best is, one is in danger of becoming ugly. But echoes are often
-distorting."
-
-Miss Gifford was now very fully before him, as she had evidently
-intended to be. It was as if she herself had drawn between them the
-barrier of the footlights and as if, on her chosen stage, she swept a
-really splendid curtsey. And this frank and panoplied young woman of the
-world was far easier to deal with than the reminiscent Eppie. He could
-comfortably smile and applaud from his stall, once more the mere
-spectator--easiest of attitudes.
-
-"The echoes, on the whole, were rather magnificent, as if an Amazon had
-galloped across mountains and left them calling her prowess from peak to
-peak."
-
-Her eyes, quickly on his, seemed to measure the conscious artificiality,
-to compare it with what he had already, more helplessly, shown her. He
-felt his rather silly deftness penetrated and that she guessed that the
-mountain calls had not at all enchanted him. She owned to her own
-acuteness in her next words:
-
-"And you don't like young ladies to gallop across mountains. Well, I
-love galloping, though I'm sorry that I leave over-loud echoes. You, at
-all events, are noiseless. You seem to have sailed over my head in an
-air-boat. It was hard for me to keep any trace of you."
-
-"But I don't at all mean that I dislike Amazons to have their rides."
-
-"Let us talk of you now. I have had an eye on you, you know, even when
-you disappeared into the Indian haze; you had just disappeared when I
-first came to London. I only heard of lofty things--scholarly
-distinction, diplomatic grace, exquisite indifference to the world's
-prizes and to noisy things in general. It's all true, I can see."
-
-"Well, I'm not indifferent to you," said Gavan, smiling, tossing his
-appropriate bouquet.
-
-She had at this another, but a sharper, of her penetrative pauses. It
-was pretty to see her, rather like a deer arrested in its careless
-speed, suddenly wary, its head high. And, in another moment, he saw that
-the quick flush, almost violently, sprang to her cheek. Turning her head
-a little from him, she looked away, almost as if his glib acceptance of
-a frivolous meaning in her words abashed her--and more for him than for
-herself; as if she suddenly suspected him of being stupid enough to
-accept her at the uglier valuation of those echoes he had heard. She had
-not meant to say that she was one of the world's prizes, and she had
-perhaps meant to say, generously, that if he found her noisy she
-wouldn't resent indifference. Perhaps she had meant to say nothing of
-herself at all. She certainly wasn't on the stage, and in thinking her
-so he felt that he had shown himself disloyal to something that she,
-more nobly, had taken for granted. The flush, so vivid, that stayed made
-him feel himself a blunderer.
-
-But, in a moment, she went on with a lightness of allusion to his speech
-that yet oddly answered the last turn of his self-reproach. "Oh, you are
-loyal, I am sure, even to a memory. I wasn't thinking of particulars,
-but of universals. My whole impression of you was of something fragrant,
-elusive, impalpable. I never felt that I had a glimpse of really _you_.
-It was almost gross in comparison actually to see your name in the
-papers, to read of your fight for Camley, to think of you in that
-earthly scuffle. It was like roast-beef after roses; and I was glad,
-because I'm gross. I like roast-beef."
-
-He was grateful to her for the lightness that carried him so kindly over
-his own blunder.
-
-"It was only the fragrance of the roast, too, you see, since I was
-defeated," he said.
-
-"You didn't mind a bit, did you?"
-
-"It would sound, wouldn't it, rather like sour grapes to say it?"
-
-"You can say it. It was so obvious that you might have had the bunch by
-merely stretching out your hand--they were under it, not over your head.
-You simply wouldn't play the game." She left him now, reaching her chair
-with a long stride and a curving, gleaming turn of her white skirts,
-suggesting a graceful adaptation of some outdoor dexterity. As she
-leaned back in her chair, fixing him with that look of cheerful
-hardness, she made him think so strongly of the resolute, winning type,
-that almost involuntarily he said, "You would have played it, wouldn't
-you?"
-
-"I should think so! I care for the grapes, you see. It's what I
-said--you didn't care enough."
-
-"Well, it's kind of you to see ineffectuality in that light." Still
-examining the steeplechaser quality, he added, "You do care, don't you,
-a lot?"
-
-"Yes, a lot. I am worldly to my finger-tips." Her eyes challenged
-him--gaily, not defiantly--to misunderstand her again.
-
-"What do you mean, exactly, by worldly?" he asked.
-
-"I mean by it that I believe in the world, that I love the world; I
-believe that its grapes are worth while,--and by grapes I mean the
-things that people strive for and that the strong attain. The higher
-they hang and the harder the climb, the more I like them."
-
-Gavan received these interpretations without comment. "A seat in the
-House isn't very high, though, is it?" he remarked.
-
-"That depends on the sitter. It might be a splendid or a trivial thing."
-
-"And in my case, if I'd got it, what would it have been? Can you see
-that, too, you very clear-sighted young woman?"
-
-He stood above her, smiling, but now without suavity or artificiality;
-looking at her as though she were a pretty gipsy whose palm he had
-crossed with silver. And Eppie answered, quite like a good-natured
-gipsy, conscious of an admiring but skeptical questioner, "I think it
-would have been neither."
-
-"But what then? What would this sitter have made of it?"
-
-"A distraction? An experiment upon himself? I'm sure I don't know.
-Indeed, I don't pretend to know you at all yet. Perhaps I will in time."
-
-Once more he was conscious of the discomfort, slight and stealing, as
-though the gipsy knew too much already. But he protested, and with
-sincerity: "If there is anything to find you will certainly find it. I
-hope that you will find it worth your while. I hope that we shall be
-great friends."
-
-She smiled up at him, clearly and quietly: "I have always been your
-great friend."
-
-"Always? All this while?"
-
-"All this while. Never mind if you haven't felt it; I have. I will do
-for both."
-
-Her smile, her look, made him finally and completely understand the
-application of the well-worn word to her. She was charming. She could be
-lavish, pour out unasked bounty upon one, and yet, in no way
-undervaluing it, be full of delicacy, of humor, in her generosity.
-
-"I thought I hadn't any right to feel it," said Gavan. "I thought you
-would not have remembered."
-
-"Well, you will find out--I always remember, it's my strong point," said
-Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Next morning at breakfast he had quite a new impression of her.
-
-Pale sunlight flooded the square, white room where, in all its dignified
-complexity of appurtenance, the simple meal was laid out. From the
-windows one saw the clear sky, the moor, its summer purple turned to
-rich browns and golds, and, nearer, the griffins with their shields.
-
-Eppie was a little late in coming, and Gavan, while he and the general
-finished their wandering consumption of porridge and sat down to bacon
-and eggs, had time to observe by daylight in Miss Barbara, behind her
-high silver urn, the changes that in her were even more emphatic than in
-her brother. She was sweeter than ever, more appealing, more
-affirmative, with all manner of futile, fluttering little gestures and
-gentle, half-inarticulate little ejaculations of pleasure, approbation,
-or distress. Her smile, rather silly, worked too continually, as though
-moved by slackened wires. Her hands defined, described, ejaculated;
-over-expression had become automatic with her.
-
-Eppie, when she appeared, said that she had had a walk, stooping to
-kiss her aunt and giving Gavan a firm, chill hand on her way to the same
-office for the general. She took her seat opposite Gavan, whistling an
-Irish-terrier to her from the door and, before she began to eat,
-dropping large fragments of bannock into his mouth. Her loose, frieze
-clothes smelled of peat and sunshine; her hair seemed to have the
-sparkle of the dew on it; she suggested mountain tarns, skylarks,
-morning gladness: but, with all this, Gavan, for the first time, now
-that she faced the hard, high light, saw how deeply, too, she suggested
-sadness.
-
-Her face had moments of looking older than his own. It was fresh, it was
-young, but it had lived a great deal, and felt things to the bone, as it
-were.
-
-There were little wrinkles about her eyes; her white brow, under its
-sweep of hair, was faintly lined; the oval of her cheek, long and fine,
-took, at certain angles, an almost haggard sharpness. It was not a faded
-face, nor a face to wither with years: every line of it spoke of a
-permanent beauty; but, with all the color that the chill morning air had
-brought into it, it yet made one think of bleak uplands, of
-weather-beaten cliffs. Life had engraved it with ineffaceable symbols.
-Storms had left their mark, bitter conflicts and bitter endurances.
-
-While she ate, with great appetite, she talked incessantly, to the
-general, to Miss Barbara, to Gavan, but not so much to him, tossing, in
-the intervals of her knife and fork and cup, bits of food to the
-attentive terrier. He saw why the old people adored her. She was the
-light, the movement of their monotonous days. Not only did she bring
-them her life: it was their own that she vivified with her interest. The
-interest was not assumed, dutiful. There was no touch of the conscious
-being kind. She questioned as eagerly as she told. She knew and cared
-for every inch of the country, every individual in the country-side. She
-was full of sagacity and suggestion, full of anecdote and a nipping
-Scotch humor. And one felt strongly in her the quality of old race.
-Experience was in her blood, an inheritance of instinct, and, that so
-significant symptom, the power of playfulness--the intellectual
-detachment that, toward firm convictions, could afford a lightness
-scandalous to more crudely compacted natures, could afford gaieties and
-audacities, like the flights of a bird tethered by an invisible thread
-to a strong hand.
-
-Miss Barbara, plaintively repining over village delinquencies, was lured
-to see comedy lurking in the cases of insubordination and
-thriftlessness, though at the mention of Archie MacHendrie, the local
-drunkard and wife-beater, Eppie's brow grew black--with a blackness
-beside which Miss Barbara's gloom was pallid. Eppie said that she wished
-some one would give Archie a thrashing, and Gavan could almost see her
-doing it herself.
-
-From local topics she followed the general to politics, while he glanced
-down the columns of the "Scotsman," so absorbed and so vehement that,
-meeting at last Gavan's meditative eye, she seemed to become aware of an
-irony he had not at all intended, and said, "A crackling of thorns under
-a pot, all this, Gavan thinks, and, what does it all matter? You have
-become a philosopher, Gavan; I can see that."
-
-"Well, my dear, from Plato down philosophers have thought that politics
-did matter," said the general, incredulous of indifference to such a
-topic.
-
-"Unless they were of a school that thought that nothing did," said
-Eppie.
-
-"Gavan's not of that weak-kneed persuasion."
-
-"Oh, he isn't weak-kneed!" laughed Eppie.
-
-She drove her aunt all morning in the little pony-cart and wrote letters
-after lunch, Gavan being left to the general's care. It was not until
-later that she assumed toward him the more personal offices of deputy
-hostess, meeting him in the hall as she emerged from the morning-room,
-her thick sheaf of letters in her hand, and proposing a walk before tea.
-She took him up the well-remembered path beside the burn; but now, in
-the clear autumnal afternoon, he seemed further from her than last night
-before the fire. Already he had seen that the sense of nearness or
-distance depended on her will rather than his own; so that it was now
-she who chose to talk of trivial things, not referring by word or look
-to the old memories, deepest of all, that crowded about him on the
-hilltop, not even when, breasting the wind, they passed the solitary
-group of pine-trees, where she had so deeply shared his suffering, so
-wonderfully comprehended his fears.
-
-She strode against the twisted flappings of her skirt, tawny strands of
-hair whipping across her throat, her hands deeply thrust into her
-pockets, her head unbowed before the enormous buffets of the wind, and
-he felt anew the hardy energy that would make tender, lingering touches
-upon the notes of the past rare things with her.
-
-In the uproar of air, any sequence of talk was difficult. Her clear
-voice seemed to shout to him, like the cold shocks of a mountain stream
-leaping from ledge to ledge, and the trivial things she said were like
-the tossing of spray upon that current of deep, joyful energy.
-
-"Isn't it splendid!" she exclaimed at last. They had walked two miles
-along the crest of the hill, and, smiling in looking round at him, her
-face, all the sky behind it, all the wind around it, made the word match
-his own appreciation.
-
-"Splendid," he assented, thinking of her glance and poise.
-
-Still bending her smile upon him, she said, "You already look
-different."
-
-"Different from what?" he asked, amused by her expression, as of a
-kindly, diagnosing young doctor.
-
-"From last night. From what I felt of you. One might have thought that
-you had lost the capacity for feeling splendor."
-
-"Why should you have imagined me so deadened?" He kept his cheerful
-curiosity.
-
-"I don't know. I did. There,"--she paused to point,--"do you remember
-the wind-mill, Gavan? The old miller is dead and his son is the miller
-now; but the mill looks just as it did when we were little. It makes one
-think of birds and ships, doesn't it?--with the beauty that it stays and
-doesn't pass. When I was a child--did I ever confide it to you?--my
-dream was to catch one of the sails as it came down and let it carry me
-up, up, and right around. What fun it would have been! I suppose that
-one could have held on."
-
-"In pretty grim earnest, after the first fun."
-
-"It would be the sense of coming grimness that would make the desperate
-thrill of it."
-
-"You are fond of thrills and perils."
-
-"Not fond, exactly; the love of risk is a deeper thing--something
-fundamental in us, I suppose."
-
-She had walked on, down the hillside, where gorse bushes pulled at her
-skirts, and he was putting together last night's impressions with
-to-day's, and thinking that if she embodied the instinctive, the
-life-loving, it wasn't in the simple, unreflecting forms that the words
-usually implied. She was simple, but not in the least guileless, and her
-directness was a choice among recognized complexities. It was no
-spontaneous child of nature who, on the quieter hillside, where they
-could talk, talked of India, now, of his life there, the people he had
-known, many of whom she too knew. He knew that he was being managed,
-being made to talk of what she wanted to hear, that she was still
-engaged in penetrating. He was quite willing to be managed,
-penetrated,--for as far as she could get; he could rely on his own
-deftness in retreat before too deep a probe, though, should she discover
-that for him the lessons of life had resulted in an outlook perhaps the
-antipodes from her own, he guessed that her own would show no wavering.
-Still, she should run, if possible, no such risk. They were to be
-friends, good friends: that was, as she had said, not only an
-accomplished, but a long-accomplished fact; but, even more than in
-childhood, she would be a friend held at arm's-length.
-
-Meanwhile, unconscious, no doubt, of these barriers, Eppie walked beside
-him and made him talk about himself. She knew, of course, of his
-mother's death; she did not speak of that: many barriers were her
-own--she was capable of most delicate avoidances. But she asked after
-his father. "He is still alive, I hear."
-
-"Yes, indeed, and gives me a good deal of his company."
-
-"Oh." She was a little at a loss. He could guess at what she had heard
-of his father. He went on, though choosing his words in a way that
-showed a slight wincing behind his wish to be very frank and friendly
-with her, for even yet his father made him wince, standing, as he did,
-for the tragedy of his mother's life: "He is very much alive for a
-person so gone to pieces. But I can put up with him far more comfortably
-than when he was less pitiable."
-
-"How much do you have to put up with him?" she asked, trying to image,
-as he saw, his mnage in Surrey, in the house he had just been
-describing to her, its old bricks all vague pinks and mauves, its
-high-walled gardens clustering near it, its wonderful hedges, that, he
-said, it ruined him to keep up to their reputation of exquisite
-formality; and, within, its vast library--all the house a brain,
-practically, the other rooms like mere places for life's renewal before
-centering in the intellectual workshop. She evidently found it difficult
-to place, among the hedges, the lawns, the long walls of the library, a
-father, gone to pieces perhaps, but displaying all the more helplessly
-his general unworthiness. Even in lenient circles, Captain Palairet was
-thought to have an undignified record.
-
-"Oh, he is there for most of the time. He is there now," said Gavan,
-without pathos. "He has no money left, and now that I've a little I'm
-the obvious thing to retire to."
-
-"I hope that it's not very horrid for you."
-
-"I can't say that it's horrid at all. I don't see much of him, and, in
-many respects, he has remained, for the onlooker, rather a charming
-creature. He gives me very little trouble--smokes, eats, plays
-billiards. When we meet, we are very affable."
-
-Eppie did not say, "You tolerate him because he is piteous," but he
-imagined that she guessed it.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-He was awakened early next morning by the sound of singing in the garden
-below.
-
-His windows were widely opened and a cold, pure air filled the room. He
-lay dreamily listening for some moments before recognizing Eppie's
-voice--recognizing it, though he had never heard her sing.
-
-Fresh and strong, it put a new vitality into the simple sadness of an
-old Scotch ballad, as though in the very sorrow it found joy. It was not
-an emotional voice. Clearly and firmly it sounded, and seemed a part of
-the frosty, sunny morning, part of the sky that was like a great chalice
-filled with light, of the whitened hills, the aromatic pine-woods, and
-the distant, rushing burn. He had sprung up after the first dreamy
-listening and looked out at it all, and at her walking through the
-garden, her dog at her heels. She went out by the little gate sunken
-deep in the wall, and disappeared in the woods; and still the voice
-reached him, singing on, and at each repetition of the monotonous,
-departing melody, a sadder, sweeter sense of pain strove in his heart.
-
-He listened, looking down at the pine-tree beneath the window, at the
-garden, the summer-house, the withered tangle of the rose upon the wall,
-and up at the hilltop, at the crystalline sky; and such a sudden pang of
-recollection pierced him that tears came to his eyes.
-
-What was it that he remembered? or, rather, what did he not? Things deep
-and things trivial, idle smiles, wrenching despairs, youth, sorrow,
-laughter,--all the past was in the pang, all the future, too, it seemed,
-and he could not have said whether his mother, Alice, Eppie with her
-dolls, and little Robbie, or the clairvoyant intuition of a future
-waiting for him here--whether presage or remembrance--were its greater
-part.
-
-Not until the voice had died, in faintest filaments of sound, far away
-among the woods, did the pain fade, leaving him shaken. Such moods were
-like dead things starting to life, and reminded him too vividly of the
-fact that as long as one was alive, one was, indeed, in danger from
-life; and though his thought was soon able to disentangle itself from
-the knot of awakened emotions that had entwined it for a moment, a vague
-sense of fear remained with him. Something had been demanded of
-him--something that he had, involuntarily, found himself giving. This it
-was to have still a young nature, sensitive to impressions. He
-understood. Yet it was with a slight, a foolishly boyish reluctance, as
-he told himself, that he went down some hours later to meet Eppie at
-breakfast.
-
-There was an unlooked-for refuge for him when he found her hardly
-noticing him, and very angry over some village misdemeanor. The anger
-held her far away. She dilated on the subject all during breakfast,
-pouring forth her wrath, without excitement, but with a steady
-vehemence. It was an affair of a public-house, and Eppie accused the
-publican of enticing his clients to drink, of corrupting the village
-sobriety, and she urged the general, as local magistrate, to take
-immediate action, showing a very minute knowledge of the technicalities
-of the case.
-
-"My dear," the general expostulated, "indeed I don't think that the man
-has done anything illegal; we are powerless about the license in such a
-case. You must get more evidence."
-
-"I have any amount of evidence. The man is a public nuisance. Poor Mrs.
-MacHendrie was crying to me about it this morning. Archie is hardly ever
-sober now. I shall drive over to Carlowrie and see Sir Alec about it; as
-the wretch's landlord he can make it uncomfortable for him, and I'll see
-that he makes it as uncomfortable as possible."
-
-Laughingly, but slightly harassed, the general said: "You see, we have a
-tyrant here. Eppie is really a bit too hard on the man. He is an
-unpleasant fellow, I own, a most unpleasant manner--a beast, if you
-will, but a legal beast."
-
-"The most unpleasant form of animal, isn't it? It's very good of Eppie
-to care so much," said Gavan.
-
-"You don't care, I suppose," she said, turning her eyes on him, as
-though she saw him for the first time that morning.
-
-"I should feel more hopeless about it, perhaps."
-
-"Why, pray?"
-
-"At all events, I shouldn't be able to feel so much righteous
-indignation."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"He is pretty much of a product, isn't he?--not worse, I suppose, than
-the men whose weakness enriches him. It's a pity, of course, that one
-can't painlessly pinch such people out of existence, as one would
-offensive insects."
-
-Eppie, across the table, eyed him, her anger quieted. "He is a product
-of a good many things," she said, now in her most reasonable manner,
-"and he is going to be a product of some more before I'm done with
-him,--a product of my hatred for him and his kind, for one thing. That
-will be a new factor in his development. Gavan," she smiled, "you and I
-are going to quarrel."
-
-"Dear Eppie!" Miss Barbara interposed. "Gavan, you must not take her
-seriously; she so often says extravagant things just to tease one."
-Really dismayed, alternately nodding and shaking her head in reassurance
-and protest, she looked from one to the other. "And don't, dear, say
-such unchristian things of anybody. She is not so hard and unforgiving
-as she sounds, Gavan."
-
-"Aunt Barbara! Aunt Barbara!" laughed Eppie, leaning her elbows on the
-table, her eyes still on Gavan, "my hatred for Macdougall isn't nearly
-as unchristian as Gavan's indifference. I don't want to pinch him
-painlessly out of life at all. I think that life has room for us both. I
-want to have him whipped, or made uncomfortable in some way, until he
-becomes less horrid."
-
-"Whipped, dear! People are never whipped nowadays! It was a very
-barbarous punishment indeed, and, thank God, we have outgrown it. We
-will outgrow it all some day. And as to any punishment, I don't know, I
-really don't. Resist not evil," Miss Barbara finished in a vague,
-helpless murmur, uncertain as to what course would at once best apply to
-Macdougall's case and satisfy the needs of public sobriety.
-
-"Perhaps one owes it to people to resist them," Eppie answered.
-
-"Oh, Eppie dear, if only you cared a little more for Maeterlinck!"
-sighed Miss Barbara, the more complex readings of whose later years had
-been somewhat incongruously adapted to her early simple faiths. "Do you
-remember that beautiful thing he says,--and Gavan's attitude reminds me
-of it,--'_Le sage qui passe interrompt mille drmes'?_"
-
-"You will be quoting Tolstoi to me next, Aunt Barbara. I suspect that
-such sages would interrupt a good deal more than dramas."
-
-"I hope that you care for Tolstoi, Gavan," said Miss Barbara, not
-forgetful of his boyish pieties. "Not the novels,--they are very, very
-sad, and so long, and the characters have such a number of names it is
-most confusing,--but the dear little books on religion. It is all there:
-love of all men, and non-resistance of evil, and self-renunciation."
-
-"Yes," Gavan assented, while Eppie looked rather gravely at him.
-
-"How beautiful this world would be if we could see it so--no hatred, no
-strife, no evil."
-
-Again Gavan assented with, "None."
-
-"None; and no life either," Eppie finished for them.
-
-She rose, thrusting her hands into alternate pockets looking for a
-note-book, which she found and consulted. "I'm off for the fray, Uncle
-Nigel, for hatred and strife. You and Gavan are going to shoot, so I'll
-bring you your lunch at the corner of the Carlowrie woods."
-
-"So that you and Gavan may continue your quarrel there. Very well. I
-prefer listening."
-
-"Gavan understands that Eppie must not be taken seriously," Miss Barbara
-interposed; but Eppie rejoined, drawing on her gloves, "Indeed, I intend
-to be taken seriously. I quarrel with people I like as well as with
-those I hate."
-
-"You are going to be a factor in my development, too?" said Gavan.
-
-"Of course, as you are in mine, as we all are in one another's. We can't
-help that. And my attack on you shall be conscious."
-
-These open threats didn't at all alarm him. It was what was unconscious
-in her that stirred disquiet.
-
-When Eppie had departed and the general had gone off to see to
-preparations for the morning's shoot, Miss Barbara, still sitting rather
-wistfully behind her urn, said: "I hope, dear Gavan, that you will be
-able to influence Eppie a little. I am so thankful to find you unchanged
-about all the deeper things of life. You could help her, I am sure. She
-needs guidance. She is so loving, so clever, a joy to Nigel and to me;
-but she is very headstrong, very reckless and wilful,--a will in
-subjection to nothing but her own sense of right. It's not that she is
-altogether irreligious,--thank Heaven for that,--but she hasn't any of
-the happiness of religion. There is no happiness, is there, Gavan--I
-feel sure that you see it as I do,--but in having our lives stayed on
-the Eternal?"
-
-Gavan, as it was very easy to do, assented again.
-
-He spent the morning with the general in shooting over the rather scant
-covers, and at two, in a sheltered bend of the woods, where the sunlight
-lay still and bright, Eppie joined them, bringing the lunch-basket in
-her dog-cart.
-
-She was in a very good humor, and while, sitting above them, she
-dispensed rations, announced to her uncle the result of her visit to Sir
-Alec.
-
-"He thinks he can turn him out if any flagrant ease of drunkenness
-occurs again. We talked over the conditions of his lease."
-
-"Carston, I am sure, doesn't care a snap of his fingers about it."
-
-"Of course not; but he cares that I care."
-
-"You see, Gavan, by what strings the world is pulled. Carston hasn't two
-ideas in his head."
-
-"Luckily I am here to use his empty head to advantage. I wheedled Lady
-Carston, too,--the bad influence Macdougall had on church-going. Lady
-Carston's one idea, Gavan, is the keeping of the Sabbath. Altogether it
-was an excellent morning's work." Eppie was cheerful and triumphant. She
-was eating from a plate on her knees and drinking milk out of a little
-silver cup. "Do you think me a tiresome, managing busybody, Gavan?" She
-smiled down at him, and her lashes catching the sunlight, an odd, misty
-glitter half veiled her eyes. "You look," she added, "as you used to
-look when you were a little boy. The years collapsed just then."
-
-He was conscious that, under her sudden glance, he had, indeed, looked
-shy. It was not her light question, but the strange depth of her
-half-closed eyes.
-
-"I find a great deal of the old Eppie in you: I remember that you used
-to want to bully the village people for their good."
-
-"I'm still a bully, I think, but a more discreet one. Won't you have
-some milk, Gavan? You used to love milk when you were a little boy. Have
-you outgrown that?"
-
-"Not at all. I should still love some; but don't rob yourself."
-
-"There 's heaps here. I've no spare glass. Do you mind?" She held out to
-him the silver cup, turning its untouched edge to him, something
-maternal in the gesture, in the down-looking of her sun-dazed eyes.
-
-He felt himself foolishly flushing while he drank the milk; and when,
-really seized by a silly childish shyness, he protested that he wanted
-no more, she placidly, with an emphasizing of her air of sweet,
-comprehending authority, said, "Oh, but you must; it holds almost
-nothing."
-
-For the second time that day, as he obediently took from her hand the
-innocent little cup, Gavan had the unreasoning impulse of tears.
-
-The sunny afternoon was silent. Overhead, the sky had its chalice look,
-clear, benignant, brimmed with light. The general, the lolling dogs,
-were part of the background, with the heather and the wood of larches,
-the finely falling sprays delicately blurred upon the sky.
-
-It was again something sweet, sweet, simple and profound, that brought
-again that pang of presage and of pain. But the pain was like a joy, and
-the tears like tears of happiness in the sunny stillness, where her firm
-and gentle hand gave him milk in a silver cup.
-
-The actual physical sensation of a rising saltness was an alarm signal
-that, with a swift reversal of mental wheels, brought a revulsion of
-consciousness. He saw himself threatened once more by nature's
-enchantments: wily nature, luring one always back to life with looks
-from comrade eyes, touches from comrade fingers, pastoral drinks all
-seeming innocence, and embracing sunlight. Wily Circe. With a long
-breath, the mirage was seen as mirage and the moment's dangerous
-blossoming withered as if dust had been strewn over it.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-To see his own susceptibility so plainly was, he told himself, to be
-safe from it; not safe from its pang, perhaps, but safe from its power,
-and that was the essential thing.
-
-It was not to Eppie, as he further assured himself, that he was
-susceptible. Eppie stood for life, personified its appeals; he could
-feel, yet be unmoved, by all life's blandishments.
-
-Meanwhile on a very different plane--the after all remote plane of
-mental encounters and skirmishes--he felt, with relief, that he was
-entirely master of his own meaning. There were many of these skirmishes,
-and though he did not believe any of them planned, believe that she was
-carrying out her threat of conscious attack, he was aware that she was
-alert and inquisitive, and dexterously quick at taking any occasion that
-offered for further penetration.
-
-The first of these occasions was on Sunday evening when, after tea and
-in the gloaming, they sat together in the deep window-seat of one of the
-library windows and listened to Miss Barbara softly touching the chords
-of a hymn on the plaintive old piano and softly singing--a most
-unobtrusive accompaniment, at her distance and with her softness, for
-any talk or any thoughts of theirs. They had talked very little,
-watching the sunset burn itself out over the frosty moorland, and Gavan
-presently, while he listened, closed his eyes and leaned his head back
-upon the oak recess. Eppie, looking now from the sunset to him, observed
-him with an open, musing curiosity. His head, leaning back in the dusk,
-was like the ivory carving of a dead saint--a saint young, beautiful, at
-peace after long sorrow. Peace; that was the quality that his whole
-being expressed, though, with opened eyes, his face had the more human
-look of patience, verging now and then on a quiet dejection that would
-overspread his features like a veil. In boyhood, the peace, the placid
-dejection, had not been there; his face then had shown the tension of
-struggle and endurance.
-
- "Till in the ocean of thy love
- We lose ourselves in heaven above,"
-
-Miss Barbara quavered, and Gavan, opening his eyes at the closing
-cadence, found Eppie's bent upon him. He smiled, and looked still more,
-she thought, the sad saint, all benediction and indifference, and an
-impulse of antagonism to such sainthood made her say, though smiling
-back, "How I dislike those words."
-
-"Do you?" said Gavan.
-
-"Hate them? Why, dear child?" asked Miss Barbara, who had heard through
-the sigh of her held-down pedal.
-
-"I don't want to lose myself," said Eppie. "But I didn't mean that I
-wanted you to stop, Aunt Barbara. Do go on. I love to hear you sing,
-however much I disapprove of the words."
-
-But Miss Barbara, clasping and unclasping her hands a little nervously,
-and evidently finding the moment too propitious to be passed over,
-backed as she was by an ally, rose and came to them.
-
-"That is the very point you are so mistaken about, dear. It's the self,
-you know, that keeps us from love."
-
-"It's the self that makes love possible," said Eppie, taking her hand
-and looking up at her. "Do you want to lose me, Aunt Barbara? If you
-lose yourself you will have to lose me too, you know."
-
-Miss Barbara stood perplexed but not at all convinced by these
-subtleties, turning mild eyes of query upon Gavan and evidently
-expecting him to furnish the obvious retort.
-
-"We will all be at one with God," she reverently said at length, finding
-that her ally left the defense to her.
-
-Eppie met this large retort cheerfully. "You can't love God unless you
-have a self to love him with. I know what you mean, and perhaps I agree
-with what you really mean; but I want to correct your Buddhistic
-tendencies and to keep you a good Christian."
-
-"I humbly hope I'm that. You shouldn't jest on such subjects, Eppie
-dear."
-
-"I'm not one bit jesting," Eppie protested. And now Gavan asked, while
-Miss Barbara looked gratefully at him, sure of his backing, though she
-might not quite be able to understand his methods, "Are they such
-different creeds?"
-
-Still holding her aunt's hand and still looking up into her face, Eppie
-answered: "One is despair of life, the other trust in life. One takes
-all meaning out of life and the other fills it with meaning. The secret
-of one is to lose life, and the secret of the other to gain it. There is
-all the difference in the world between them; all the difference between
-life and death."
-
-"As interpreted by Western youth and vigor, yes; but what of the
-mystics? I suppose you would call them Christians?"
-
-"Yes, dear, they are Christians. What of them?" Miss Barbara echoed,
-though slightly perturbed by this alliance with heathendom.
-
-"Buddhists, not Christians," Eppie retorted.
-
-"That's what I mean; in essentials they are the same creed: the
-differences are only the differences of the races or individuals who
-hold them."
-
-At this Miss Barbara's free hand began to flutter and protest. "Oh, but,
-Gavan dear, there I'm quite sure that you are wrong. Buddhism is, I
-don't doubt, a very noble religion, but it's not the true one. Indeed
-they are not the same, Gavan, though Christianity, of course, is founded
-on the renunciation of self. 'Lose your life to gain it,' Eppie dear."
-
-"Yes, to gain it, that's just the point. One renounces, and one wins a
-realer self."
-
-"What is real? What is life?" Gavan asked, really curious to hear her
-definition.
-
-She only needed a moment to find it, and, with her answer, gave him her
-first glance during their battledore colloquy with innocent Aunt Barbara
-as the shuttlecock. "Selves and love."
-
-"Well, of course, dear," Miss Barbara cried. "That's what heaven will
-be. All love and peace and rest."
-
-"But you have left out the selves; you won't get love without them. And
-as for rest and peace--Love is made by difference, so that as long as
-there is love there must be restlessness."
-
-"Isn't it made by sameness?" Gavan asked.
-
-"No, by incompleteness: one loves what could complete oneself and what
-one could complete; or so it seems to me."
-
-"And as long as there are selves, will there be suffering, too?"
-
-Her eyes met his thought fearlessly.
-
-"That question, I am sure, is the basis for all the religions of
-cowardice, religions that deny life because of their craving for peace."
-
-"Isn't the craving for peace as legitimate as the craving for life?"
-
-"Nothing that denies life can be legitimate. Life is the one arbitrator.
-And restlessness need not mean suffering. A symphony is all
-restlessness--a restlessness made by difference in harmony; forgive the
-well-worn metaphor, but it is a good one. And, suppose that it did mean
-suffering, all of it. Isn't it worth it?" Her eyes measured him, not in
-challenge, but quietly.
-
-"What a lover of life you are," he said. It was like seeing him go into
-his house and, not hastily, but very firmly, shut the door. And as if,
-rather rudely, she hurled a stone at the shut door, she asked, "Do you
-love anything?"
-
-He smiled. "Please don't quarrel with me."
-
-"I wish I could make you quarrel. I suspect you of loving everything,"
-Eppie declared.
-
-She didn't pursue him further on this occasion, when, indeed, he might
-accuse himself of having given her every chance; but on the next day, as
-they sat out at the edge of the birch-wood in a wonderfully warm
-afternoon sun, he, she, and Peter the dog (what a strange, changed echo
-it was), she returned, very lightly, to their discussion, tossing merely
-a few reconnoitering flowers in at his open window.
-
-She had never, since their remeeting, seemed to him so young. Holding a
-little branch of birch, she broke off and aimed bits of its bark at a
-tall gorse-bush near them. Peter basked, full length, in the sunlight at
-their feet. The day had almost the indolent quiet of summer.
-
-Eppie said, irrelevantly, for they had not been talking of that, but of
-people again, gossiping pleasantly, with gossip tempered to the day's
-mildness: "I can't bear the religions of peace, you see--any faith that
-takes the fight out of people. That Molly Carruthers I was telling you
-about has become a Christian Scientist, and she is in an imbecile
-condition of beatitude all the time. 'Isn't the happiness that comes of
-such a faith proof enough?' she says to me. As if happiness were a
-proof! A drunkard is happy. Some people seem to me spiritually tipsy,
-and as unfit for usefulness as the drunkard. I think I distrust anything
-that gives a final satisfaction."
-
-She amused him in her playing with half-apprehended thoughts. Her
-assurance was as light as though they were the bits of birch-bark she
-tossed.
-
-"You make me think a little of Nietzsche," he said.
-
-"I should rather like Nietzsche right side up, I think. As he is
-standing on his head most of the time, it's rather confusing. If it is a
-blind, unconscious force that has got hold of us, we get hold of it, and
-of ourselves, when we consciously use it for our own ends. But I'm not a
-bit a Nietzschian, Gavan, for, as an end, an Overman doesn't at all
-appeal to me and I don't intend to make myself a bridge for him to march
-across. Of course Nietzsche might reply, 'You are the bridge, whether
-you want to be or not.' He might say, 'It's better to walk willingly to
-your inevitable holocaust than to be rebelliously haled along; whatever
-you do, you are only the refuse whose burning makes the flame.' I reply
-to that, that if the Overman is sure to come, why should I bother about
-him? I wouldn't lift my finger for a distant perfection in which I
-myself, and all those I loved, only counted as fuel. But, on the other
-hand, I do believe that each one of us is going to grow into an
-Overman--in a quite different sense. Peter, too, will be an Overdog, and
-will, no doubt, sometime be more conscious than we are now."
-
-Gavan glanced at her and at Peter with his vague, half-unseeing glance.
-
-"Why don't you smile?" Eppie asked. "Not that you don't smile, often.
-But you haven't a scrap of gaiety, Gavan. Do stop soaring in the sky and
-come down to real things, to the earth, to me, to dear little
-rudimentary Overdogs."
-
-"Do you think that dear little rudimentary dogs are nearer reality than
-the sky?" He did smile now.
-
-"Much nearer. The sky is only a background, an emptiness that shows up
-their meaning."
-
-She had brought him down, for his eyes lingered on her as she leaned to
-Peter and pulled him up from his sun-baked recumbency. "Come, sit up,
-Peter; don't be so comfortable. Watch how well I've trained him, Gavan.
-Now, Peter, sit up nicely. A dog on all fours is a darling heathen; but
-a dog sitting up on his hind legs is an ethical creature, and well on
-his way to Overdogdom. Peter on his hind legs is worth all your tiresome
-Hindoos--aren't you, dear, Occidental dog?"
-
-He knew that through her gaiety she was searching him, feeling her way,
-with a merry hostility that she didn't intend him to answer. It was as
-if she wouldn't take seriously, not for a moment, the implications of
-his thought--implications that he suspected her of already pretty
-sharply guessing at. To herself, and to him, she pretended that such
-thoughts were a game he played at, until she should see just how
-seriously she might be forced to take them.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-For the next few days he found himself involved in Eppie's sleuth-hound
-pursuit of the transgressing publican, amused, but quite
-willing,--somewhat, he saw, to her surprise,--to help her in her
-crusade. Not only did he tramp over the country with her in search of
-evidence, and expound the Gothenberg system to Sir Alec, to the general,
-to the rather alarmed quarry himself,--not unwilling to come to
-terms,--but the application of his extraordinarily practical good-sense
-to the situation was, she couldn't help seeing, far more effective than
-her own not altogether temperate zeal.
-
-She was surprised and she was pleased; and at the same time, throughout
-all the little drama, she had the suspicion that it meant for him what
-that playing of dolls with her in childhood had meant--mere kindliness,
-and a selfless disposition to do what was agreeable to anybody.
-
-It was on the Saturday following the talk in the library that an
-incident occurred that made her vision of his passivity flame into
-something more ambiguous--an incident that gave margins for
-possibilities in him, for whose bare potentiality she had begun to
-fear.
-
-They were at evening in the gray, bleak village street, and outside one
-of the public-houses found a small crowd collected, watching, with the
-apathy of custom, the efforts of Archie MacHendrie's wife to lead him
-home. Archie, a large, lurching man, was only slightly drunk, but his
-head, the massive granite of its Scotch peasant type, had been
-brutalized by years of hard drinking. It showed, as if the granite were
-crumbling into earth, sodden depressions and protuberances; his eye was
-lurid, heavy, yet alert. Mrs. MacHendrie's face, looking as though
-scantily molded in tallow as the full glare of the bar-room lights beat
-upon it, was piteously patient. The group, under the cold evening sky,
-in the cold, steep street, seemed a little epitome of life's
-degradation; the sordid glare of debasing pleasure lit it; the mean
-monotony of its daily routine surrounded it in the gaunt stone cottages;
-above it was the blank, hard sky.
-
-Gavan saw all the unpleasing picture, placed it, its past, its future,
-as he and Eppie approached; saw more, too, than degradation: for the
-wife's face, in its patience, symbolized humanity's heroism. Both
-heroism and degradation were results as necessary as the changes in a
-chemical demonstration; neither had value: one was a toadstool growth,
-the other, a flower; this was the fact to him, though the flower touched
-him and the toadstool made him shrink.
-
-"There, there, Archie mon," Mrs. MacHendrie was pleading, "come awa
-hame, do."
-
-Archie was declaiming on some wrong he had suffered and threatened to do
-for an enemy.
-
-That these flowers and toadstools were of vital significance to Eppie,
-Gavan realized as she left him in the middle of the street and strode to
-the center of the group. It fell aside for her air of facile, friendly
-authority, and in answer to her decisive, "What's the matter?" one of
-the apathetic onlookers explained in his deliberate Scotch: "It's nobbut
-Archie, Miss Eppie; he's swearin' he'll na go hame na sleep gin he's
-lickit Tam Donel'. He's a wee bit the waur for the drink and Tam'll soon
-be alang, and the dei'll be in it gar his gudewife gets him ben."
-
-"Well, she must get him ben," said Eppie, her eye measuring Archie, who
-shook a menacing fist in the direction of his expected antagonist.
-
-"We must get him home between us, Mrs. MacHendrie. He'll think better of
-it in the morning."
-
-"Fech, an' it's that I'm aye tellin' him, Miss Eppie; it's the mornin'
-he'll hae the sair head. Ay, Miss Eppie, he's an awfu' chiel when he's a
-wee bittie fou." Mrs. MacHendrie put the fringe of her shawl to her
-eyes.
-
-Archie's low thunder had continued during this dialogue without a pause,
-and Eppie now addressed herself to him in authoritative tones. "Come on,
-Archie. Go home and get a sleep, at all events, before you fight Tom."
-
-"It's that I'm aye tellin' you, Archie mon," Mrs. MacHendrie wept.
-
-Archie now brought his eye round to the speakers and observed them in an
-ominous silence, his thoughts turned from more distant grievances. From
-his wife his eye traveled back to Eppie, who met it with a firm
-severity.
-
-"Damn ye for an interferin' fishwife!" suddenly and with startling force
-he burst out. "Ye're no but a meddlesome besom. Awa wi' ye!" and from
-this broadside he swung round to his wife with uplifted fists. Flinging
-herself between them, Eppie found herself swept aside. Gavan was in the
-midst of the sudden uproar. Like a David before Goliath, he confronted
-Archie with a quelling eye. Mrs. MacHendrie had slipped into the dusk,
-and the bald, ugly light now fell on Gavan's contrasting head.
-
-"_Un sage qui passe interrompt mille drmes_," flashed in Eppie's mind.
-But on this occasion, the sage had to do more than pass--was forced,
-indeed, to provide the drama. He was speaking in a voice so
-dispassionately firm that had Archie been a little less drunk or a
-little less sober it must have exerted an almost hypnotic effect upon
-him. But the command to go home reached a brain inflamed and hardly
-dazed. Goliath fell upon David, and Eppie, with a curious mingling of
-exultation and panic, saw the two men locked in an animal struggle. For
-a moment Gavan's cool alertness and scientific resource were overborne
-by sheer brute force; in another he had recovered himself, and Archie's
-face streamed suddenly with blood. Another blow, couched like a lance,
-it seemed, was in readiness, wary and direct, when Mrs. MacHendrie, from
-behind, seized Gavan around the neck and, with a shrill scream, hung to
-him and dragged him back. Helpless and enmeshed, he received a savage
-blow from her husband, and, still held in the wife's strangling clutch,
-he and she reeled back together. At this flagrant violation of fair play
-the onlookers interposed. Archie was dragged off, and Eppie, catching
-Gavan as he staggered free of his encumbrance, turned, while she held
-him by the shoulders, fiercely on Mrs. MacHendrie. "You well deserve
-every thrashing you get," she said, her voice stilled by the very force
-of its intense anger.
-
-Mrs. MacHendrie had covered her face with her shawl. "My mon was a'
-bluid," she sobbed. "I couldna stan' an' see him done to death."
-
-"Of course you couldn't; it was most natural of you," said Gavan. The
-blood trickled over his brow and cheek as, gently freeing himself from
-Eppie, he straightened his collar and looked at Mrs. MacHendrie with
-sympathetic curiosity.
-
-"Natural!" said Eppie. "It was dastardly. You deserve every thrashing
-you get. I hope no one will interfere for you next time."
-
-"My dear Eppie!" Gavan murmured, while Mrs. MacHendrie continued to weep
-humbly.
-
-"Why shouldn't I say it? I am disgusted with her." Eppie turned almost
-as fierce a stillness of look and tone upon him as upon Mrs. MacHendrie.
-"Let me tie up your head, Gavan. Yes, indeed, you are covered with
-blood. I suppose you never thought, Mrs. MacHendrie, that your husband
-might kill Mr. Palairet." She passed her handkerchief around Gavan's
-forehead as she spoke, knotting it with fingers at once tender and
-vindictive.
-
-"I canna say, Miss Eppie," came Mrs. MacHendrie's muffled voice from
-the shawl. "The wan's my ain mon. It juist cam' ower me, seein' him a'
-bluid."
-
-"Well, you have the satisfaction now of seeing Mr. Palairet a' bluid."
-Eppie tied her knots, and Gavan, submitting a bowed head to her
-ministrations, still kept his look of cogitating pity upon Mrs.
-MacHendrie. "You see how your husband has wounded him," Eppie went on;
-"the handkerchief is red already. Come on, Gavan; lean on me, please.
-Let her get her husband home now as best she can."
-
-But Gavan ignored his angry champion. Mrs. MacHendrie's sorrow, most
-evidently, interested him more than Eppie's indignation. He went to her,
-putting down the hand that held the shawl to the poor, disfigured,
-tallow face, and made her look at him, while he said with a gentle
-reasonableness: "Don't mind what Miss Gifford says; she is angry on my
-account and doesn't really mean to be so hard on you. I'm not at all
-badly hurt,--I can perfectly stand alone, Eppie,--and I'm sorry I had to
-hurt your husband. It was perfectly natural, what you did. Don't cry;
-please don't cry." He smiled at her, comforted her, encouraged her.
-"They are taking your husband home, you see; he is going quite quietly.
-And now we will take you home. Take my arm. You are the worst off of us
-all, Mrs. MacHendrie."
-
-Eppie, in silence, stalked beside him while he led Mrs. MacHendrie,
-dazed and submissive, up the village street. A neighbor's wife was in
-kindly waiting and Archie already slumbering heavily on his bed. Eppie
-suspected, as they went, that she saw a gold piece slipped from Gavan's
-hand to Mrs. MacHendrie's.
-
-"Poor thing," he said, when they were once more climbing the steep
-street, "I 'm afraid I only made things worse for her"; and laughing a
-little, irrepressibly, he looked round at Eppie from under his oddly
-becoming bandage. "My dear Eppie, what a perfect brute you were to her!"
-
-"My dear Gavan, I can't feel pity for such a fool. Oh, yes I can, but I
-don't want to. Please remember that I, too, have impulses, and that I
-saw you 'a' bluid.'"
-
-"Well, then, I'm the brute for scolding you, and you are another poor
-thing."
-
-"Are you incapable of righteous indignation, Gavan?"
-
-"Surely I showed enough to please you in my treatment of Archie."
-
-"You showed none. You looked supremely indifferent as to whether he
-killed you or you him."
-
-"Oh, I think I was quite anxious to do for him."
-
-They were past the village now and upon the country road, and in the
-darkness their contrasting voices rang oddly--hers deep with its
-resentful affection, his light with its amusement. It was as if the
-little drama, that he had made instead of interrupting, struck his sense
-of the ridiculous. Yet, angry with him as she was, a thrill of
-exultation remained, for Eppie, in the thought of his calm, deliberate
-face, beautiful before its foe, and with blood upon it.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Gavan's hurt soon healed, though it made him languid for a day or
-two--days of semi-invalidism, the unemphatic hours, seemingly so
-colorless, when she read to him or merely sat silently at hand occupied
-with her letters or a book, drawing still closer their odd intimacy; it
-could hardly be called sudden, for it had merely skipped intervening
-years, and it couldn't be called a proved intimacy, the intervening
-years were too full, too many for that. But they were very near in their
-almost solitude--a solitude surrounded by gentle reminders of the closer
-past, reminders, in the case of living personalities, who seemed to find
-the intimacy altogether natural and needing no comment. What the general
-and Miss Barbara might really be thinking was a wonder that at moments
-occupied both Gavan and Eppie's ruminations; but it wasn't a wonder that
-needed to go far or deep. What they thought, the dear old people, made
-very little difference--not even the difference of awkwardness or
-self-consciousness under too cogitating eyes. Even if they thought the
-crude and obvious thing it didn't matter, they would so peacefully
-relapse from their false inference once time had set it straight for
-them. Eppie couldn't quite have told herself why its obviousness was so
-crude; in all her former experience such obviousness had never been so
-almost funnily out of the question. But Gavan made so many things almost
-funnily out of the question.
-
-It was this quality in him, of difference from usual things, that drew
-intimacy so near. To talk to him with a wonderful openness, to tell him
-about herself, about her troubles, was like sinking down in a pale,
-peaceful church and sighing out everything that lay heavily on one's
-heart--the things that lay lightly, too, for little things as well as
-great, were understood by that compassionate, musing presence--to the
-downlooking face of an imaged saint.
-
-No claim upon one remained after it; one was freed of the load of
-silence and one hadn't in the least been shackled by retributory
-penances. And if one felt some strange lack in the saint, if his
-sacerdotal quality was more than his humanity, it was just because of
-that that one was able to say anything one liked.
-
-At moments, it is true, she had an odd, fetish-worshiper's impulse to
-smash her saint, and perhaps the reason why she never yielded to it was
-because, under all the seeing him as image, was the deep hoping that he
-was more. If he was more, much more, it might be unwise to smash him,
-for then she would have no pale church in which to take refuge, and,
-above all, if he were more he mustn't find it out--and she
-mustn't--through any act of her own. The saint himself must breathe into
-life and himself step down from his high pedestal. That he cared to
-listen, that he listened lovingly,--just as he had listened lovingly to
-Mrs. MacHendrie,--she knew.
-
-One day when he was again able to be out and when they were again upon
-the hilltop, walking in a mist that enshrouded them, she told him all
-about the wretched drama of her love-affair.
-
-She had never spoken of it to a human being.
-
-It was as if she led him into an empty room, dusty and dark and still,
-with dreary cobwebs stretching over its once festal furniture, and there
-pointed out to him faded blood-stains on the floor. No eyes but his had
-ever seen them.
-
-She told him all, analyzing the man, herself, unflinchingly, putting
-before him her distracted heart, distorted in its distraction. She had
-appalled herself. Her part had not been mere piteous nobility. She would
-have dragged herself through any humiliation to have had him back, the
-man she had helplessly adored. She would have taken him back on almost
-any terms. Only the semblance of pride had been left to her; beneath it,
-with all her scorn of him, was a craving that had been base in its
-despair.
-
-"But that wasn't the worst," said Eppie; "that very baseness had its
-pathos. Worst of all were my mean regrets. I had sacrificed my ambitions
-for him; I had refused a man who would have given me the life I wanted,
-a high place in the world, a great name, power, wide issues,--and I love
-high places, Gavan, I love power. When I refused him, he too married
-some one else, and it was after that that my crash came. Love and faith
-were thrown back at me, and I hadn't in it all even my dignity. I was
-torn by mingled despairs. I loathed myself. Oh, it was too horrible!"
-
-His utter lack of sympathetic emotion, even when she spoke with the
-indignant tears on her cheeks, made it all the easier to say these
-fundamental things, and more than ever like the saint of ebony and ivory
-in the pale church was his head against the great wash of mist about
-them.
-
-"And now it has all dropped from you," he said.
-
-"Yes, all--the love, the regret certainly, even the shame. The ambition,
-certainly not; but in that ugly form of a loveless marriage it's no
-longer a possible temptation for me. My disappointment hasn't driven me
-to worldly materialism. It's a sane thing in nature, that outgrowing of
-griefs, though it's bad for one's pride to see them fade and one's heart
-mend, solidly mend, once more."
-
-"They do go, when one really sees them."
-
-"Some do."
-
-"All, when one really sees them," he repeated unemphatically. "I know
-all about it, Eppie. I've been through the fire, too. Now that it's
-gone, you see that it's only a dream, that love, don't you?"
-
-Eppie gazed before her into the mist, narrowing her eyes as though she
-concentrated her thoughts upon his exact meaning, and she received his
-casual confidence with some moments of silence.
-
-"That would imply that seeing destroyed feeling, wouldn't it?" she said
-at last. "I see that _such_ love is a dream, if you will; but dreams may
-be mirrors of life, not delusions; hints of an awakened reality."
-
-He showed only his unmoved face. This talk, so impersonal, with all its
-revealment of human pathos and weakness, so much a picture that they
-both looked at it together,--a picture of outlived woe,--claimed no more
-than his contemplation; but when her voice seemed to grope toward him,
-questioning in its very clearness of declaration, he felt again the
-flitting fear that he had already recognized, not as danger, but as
-discomfort. It flitted only, hardly stirred the calm he showed her, as
-the wings of a flying bird just skim and ruffle the surface of still,
-deep waters. That restless bird, always hovering, circling near, its
-shadow passing, repassing over the limpid water--he saw and knew it as
-the water might reflect in its stillness the bird's flight. Life; the
-will to live, the will to want, and to strive, and to suffer in
-striving. All the waters of Eppie's soul were broken by the flight of
-this bird of life; its wings, cruel and beautiful, furrowed and cut; its
-plumage, darkly bright, was reflected in every wave.
-
-He said nothing after her last words.
-
-"You think all feelings delusions, Gavan?"
-
-"Not that, perhaps, but very transitory; and to be tied to the
-transitory is to suffer."
-
-"On that plan one ends with nothingness."
-
-"Do you think so?"
-
-"Do _you_ think so?" She turned his question on him and her eyes, with
-the question, fixed hard on his face.
-
-He felt suddenly that after all the parrying and thrusting she had
-struck up his foil and faced him with no mask of gaiety--in deadly
-earnest. There was the click of steel in the question.
-
-He did not know whether he were the more irritated, for her sake, by her
-persistency, or the more fearful that, unwillingly, he should do her
-faith some injury.
-
-"I think," he said, "more or less as Tolstoi thinks. You understood all
-that very well the other evening; so why go into it?"
-
-"You think that our human identity is unreal--an appearance?"
-
-"Most certainly."
-
-"And that the separation between us is the illusion that makes hatred
-and evil, and that with the recognition of the illusion, love would come
-and all selfish effort cease?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And don't you see that what that results in is the Hindoo thing, the
-abolishing of consciousness, the abolishing of life--of individual
-life?"
-
-"Yes, I see that," Gavan smiled, "but I'm a little surprised to see that
-you do. So many people are like Aunt Barbara."
-
-But Eppie was pushing, pushing against the closed doors and would not be
-lured away by lightness. "Above all, Gavan, do you see that he is merely
-an illogical Hindoo when he tries to bridge his abyss with ethics? On
-his own premises he is utterly fatalistic, so that the very turning from
-the evil illusion, the very breaking down of the barrier of self, is
-never, with him, the result of an effort of the will, never a conscious
-choice, but something deep and rudimentary, subconscious, an influx of
-revelation, a vision that sets one free, perhaps, but that can only
-leave one with emptiness."
-
-Above all, as she had said, he saw it; and now he was silent, seeking
-words that might rid him of pursuit, yet not infect her.
-
-She had stopped short before his silence. Smiling, now, on the
-background of mist, her eyes, her lips, her poise challenged him,
-incredulous, actually amused. "Don't you think that _I_ have an
-identity?" she asked.
-
-He was willing at that to face her, for he saw suddenly and clearly,--it
-seemed to radiate from her in the smile, the look,--that he, apparently,
-couldn't hurt her. She was too full of life to be in any danger from
-him, and perhaps the only way of ending pursuit was to fling wide the
-doors and, since she had said the word, show her the emptiness within.
-
-"You force me to talk cheap metaphysics to you, Eppie, but I'll try to
-say what I do think," he said. "I believe that the illusion of a
-separate identity, self-directing and permanent, is the deepest and most
-tenacious of all illusions--the illusion that makes the wheels go round,
-the common illusion that makes the common mirage. The abolishing of the
-identity, of the self, is the final word of science, and of philosophy,
-and of religion, too. The determinism of science, the ecstatic immediacy
-of the mystic consciousness, the monistic systems of the Absolutists,
-all tend toward the final discovery that,--now I'm going to be very glib
-indeed,--but one must use the technical jargon,--that under all the
-transitory appearance is a unity in which, for which, diversity
-vanishes."
-
-Eppie no longer smiled. She had walked on while he spoke, her eyes on
-him, no longer amused or incredulous, with an air now of almost stern
-security.
-
-"Odd," she said presently, "that such a perverse and meaningless Whole
-should be made up of such significant fragments."
-
-"Ah, but I didn't say that Reality was meaningless. It has all possible
-meaning for itself, no doubt; it's our meaning for it that is so
-unpleasantly ambiguous. We are in it and for it, as if we were the
-kaleidoscope it turned, the picture it looked at; and we are and must be
-what it thinks or sees. Your musical simile expressed it very nicely:
-Reality an eternal symphony and our personalities the notes in
-it--discords to our own limited consciousness, but to Reality necessary
-parts of the perfect whole. Reality is just that will to contemplate, to
-think, the infinite variety of life, and it usually thinks us as wanting
-to live. All ethics, all religions, are merely records of the ceasing of
-this want. A man comes to see himself as discord, and with the seeing
-the discord is resolved to silence. One comes to see as the Reality
-sees, and since it is perfectly satisfied, although it is perhaps quite
-unconscious,--or so some people who think a great deal about it
-say,--we, in partaking of its vision, find in unconsciousness the goal,
-and are satisfied."
-
-"You are satisfied with such a death in life?" Eppie asked in her steady
-voice.
-
-"What you call life is what I call death, perhaps, Eppie."
-
-"Your metaphysics may be very cheap; I know very little about them. But
-if all that were true, I should still say that the illusion is more real
-than that nothingness--for to us such a reality would be nothingness.
-And I should say, let us live our reality all the more intensely, since,
-for us, there is no other."
-
-"How you care for life," said Gavan, as he had said it once before. He
-looked at her marching through the mist like a defiant Valkyrie.
-
-"Care for it? I've hated it at times, the bits that came to me."
-
-"Yet you want it, always."
-
-"Always," she repeated. "Always. I have passed a great part of my life
-in being very unhappy--that is to say, in wanting badly something I've
-not got. Yet I am more glad than I can say to have lived."
-
-"Probably because you still expect to get what you want."
-
-"Of course." She smiled a little now, though a veiled, ambiguous smile.
-And as they began the steep descent, the mist infolding them more
-closely, even the semblance of the smile faded, leaving a new sadness.
-
-"Poor Gavan," she said.
-
-He just hesitated. "Why?"
-
-"Your religion is a hatred, a distrust of life; mine is trust in it,
-love of it. You see it as a sort of murderous uncle, beckoning to the
-babes in the wood; I own that I wouldn't stir a step to follow it if I
-suspected it of such a character. And I see life--" She paused here,
-looking down, musing, it seemed, on what she saw, and the pause grew
-long. In it, suddenly, Gavan knew again the invasion of emotion. Her
-downcast, musing face pervaded his consciousness with that sense of
-trembling. "You see life as what?" he asked her, not because he wanted
-to know, but because her words were always less to him than her
-silences.
-
-Eppie, unconscious, was finding words.
-
-"As something mysterious, beautiful. Something strange, yet near, like
-the thought of a mother about her unborn child, but, more still, like
-the thought of an unborn child about its unknown mother. We are such
-unborn children. And this something mysterious and beautiful says: Come;
-through thorns, over chasms, past terrors, and in darkness. So, one
-goes."
-
-Gavan was silent. Looking up at him, her eyes full of her own vision,
-she saw tears in his.
-
-For a moment the full benignity, sweet, austere, of a maternal thing in
-her rested on him, so that it might have been she who said "Come." Then,
-looking away from him again, knowing that she had seen more than he had
-meant to show, she said, "Own that if it's all illusion, mine's the best
-to live with."
-
-He had never seen her so beautiful as at this moment when she did not
-pursue, but looked away, quiet in her strength, and he answered
-mechanically, conscious only of that beauty, that more than beauty,
-alluring when it no longer pursued: "No; there are no thorns, nor
-chasms, nor terrors any longer for me. I am satisfied, Eppie."
-
-She was walking now, a little ahead of him, down the thread-like path
-that wound among phantom bracken. The islet of space where they could
-see seemed like a tiny ship gliding forward with them into a white,
-boundless ocean. Such, thought Gavan, was human life.
-
-In a long silence he felt that her mood had changed. Over her shoulder
-she looked round at him at last with her eyes of the spiritual
-steeplechaser. "It's war to the knife, Gavan."
-
-She hurt him in saying it. "You only have the knife," he answered, and
-his gentleness might have reproached the sudden challenge.
-
-"You have poison."
-
-"I never put it to your lips, dear."
-
-She saw his pain. "Oh, don't be afraid for me," she said. "I drink your
-poison, and it is a tonic, a wine, that fills me with greater ardor for
-the fight."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-They were on the path that led to the deeply sunken garden gate, and
-they had not spoken another word while they followed it, while they
-stooped a little under the tangle of ivy that drooped from the stone
-lintel, while they went past the summer-house and on between the rows of
-withered plants and the empty, wintry spaces of the garden; only when
-they were nearly at the house, under the great pine-tree, did Eppie
-cheerfully surmise that they would be exactly on time for tea, and by
-her manner imply that tea was far more present to her thoughts than
-daggers or poison.
-
-He felt that in some sense matters had been left in the lurch. He didn't
-quite know where he stood for her with his disastrous darkness about
-him--whether she had really taken up a weapon for open warfare or
-whether she hadn't wisely fallen back upon the mere pleasantness of
-friendly intercourse, turning her eyes away from his accompanying gloom.
-
-He was glad to find her alone that evening after dinner when he had left
-the general in the smoking-room over a review and a cigar. Miss Barbara
-had gone early to bed, so that Eppie, in her white dress, as on the
-night of his arrival, had the dark brightness of the firelit room all to
-herself. He was glad, because the sense of uncertainty needed defining,
-and uncertainty, since that last moment of trembling, had been so acute
-that any sort of definition would be a relief.
-
-An evening alone with her, now that they were really on the plane of
-mutual understanding, would put his vague fears to the test. He would
-learn whether they must be fled from or whether, as mere superficial
-tremors, tricks of the emotions, they could not be outfaced smilingly.
-He really didn't want to run away, especially not until he clearly knew
-from what he ran.
-
-Eppie sat before the fire on the low settle, laying down a book as he
-came in. In her aspect of exquisite worldliness, the white dress
-displaying her arms and shoulders with fashionable frankness, she struck
-him anew as being her most perfectly armed and panoplied self. Out on
-the windy hillside or singing among the woods, nature seemed partially
-to absorb and possess her, so that she became a part of the winds and
-woods; but indoors, finished and fine from head to foot, her mastered
-conventionality made her the more emphatically personal. She embodied
-civilization in her dress, her smile, her speech, her very being; the
-loose coils of her hair and the cut of her satin shoe were both
-significant of choice, of distinctive simplicity; and the very bareness
-of her shoulders--Gavan gave an amused thought to the ferociously
-sensitive Tolstoi--symbolized the armor of the world-lover, the
-world-user. It was she who possessed the charms and weapons of the
-civilization that crumbled to dust in the hand of the Russian mystic. He
-could see her confronting the ascetic's eye with the challenge of her
-radiant and righteous self-assurance. Her whole aspect rebuilt that
-shattered world, its pomp and vanity, perhaps, its towering scale of
-values; each tier narrowing in its elimination of the lower, cruder,
-less conscious, more usual; each pinnacle a finely fretted flowering of
-the rare; a dazzling palace of foam. She embodied all that; but, more
-than all for Gavan, she embodied the deep currents of trust that flowed
-beneath the foam.
-
-Her look welcomed him, though without a smile, as he drew a deep chair
-to the fire and sat down near her, and for a little while they said
-nothing, he watching her and she with gravely downcast eyes.
-
-"What are you thinking of?" he asked at last.
-
-"Of you, of course," she answered. "About our talk this afternoon; we
-haven't finished it yet."
-
-She, too, then, had felt uncertainty that needed relief.
-
-"Are you sharpening your knife?"
-
-She put aside his lightness. "Gavan, we are friends. May I talk as I
-like to you?"
-
-"Of course you may. I've always shown you that."
-
-"No, you have tried to prevent me from talking. But now I will. I have
-been thinking. It seems to me that it is your life that has so twisted
-your mind; it has been so joyless."
-
-"Does that make it unusual?"
-
-"You must love life before you can know it."
-
-"You must love it, and lose it, before you can know it. I have had joy,
-Eppie; I have loved life. My experience has not been peculiarly
-personal; it is merely the history of all thought, pushed far enough."
-
-"Of all mere thought, yes."
-
-She rested her head on her hand as she looked at him, seeming to wonder
-over him and his thought, his mere thought, dispassionately. "Don't be
-shy, or afraid, for me. Why should you mind? I've given you my story;
-give me yours. Tell me about your life."
-
-He felt, suddenly, sunken there in his deep chair, passive and peaceful
-in the firelight, that it would be very easy to tell her. Why shouldn't
-she see it all and understand it all? He couldn't hurt her; it would be
-only a strange, a sorrowful picture to her; and to him, yes, there would
-be a relief in the telling. To speak, for the first time in his life--it
-would be like the strewing of rosemary on a grave, a commemoration that
-would have its sweetness and its balm.
-
-But he hesitated, feeling the helplessness of his race before verbal
-self-expression.
-
-Eppie lent him a hand.
-
-"Begin with when you left me."
-
-"What was I then? I hardly remember. A tiresome, self-centered boy."
-
-"No; you weren't self-centered. You believed in God, then, and you loved
-your mother. Why have both of them, as personalities, become illusions
-to you?"
-
-She saw facts clearly and terribly. She was really inside the doors at
-last, and though it would be all the easier to make her understand the
-facts she saw, Gavan paled a little before the sudden, swift presence.
-
-For, yes, God was gone, and yes,--worse, far worse, as he knew she felt
-it,--his mother, too--except as that ghost, that pang of memory.
-
-She saw his pallor and helped him again, to the first and easier avowal.
-
-"How did you lose your faith? What happened to you when you left me?"
-
-"It's a commonplace enough story, that."
-
-"Of course it is. But when loss of faith becomes permanent and
-permanently means a loss of feeling, it's not so commonplace."
-
-"Oh, I think it is--more commonplace than people know, in temperaments
-as unvital and as logical as mine."
-
-"You are not unvital."
-
-"My reason isn't often blurred by my instincts."
-
-"That is because you are strong--terribly strong. It's not that your
-vitality is so little as that your thought is so abnormal."
-
-"No, no; it's merely that I understand my own experience."
-
-But she had put his feet upon the road, and, turning his eyes from her
-as he looked, he contemplated its vista.
-
-It was easy enough, after all, to gather into words that retrospect of
-the train; it was easy to be brief and lucid with such a comprehending
-listener,--to be very impersonal, too; simply to hold up before her eyes
-the picture that he saw.
-
-His eyes met hers seldom while he told her all that was essential to her
-true seeing. It was wonderful, the sense of her secure, strong life that
-made it possible to tell her all.
-
-The stages of his young, restless, tortured thought were swiftly
-sketched for an intelligence so quick, and the growing intuition of the
-capriciousness, the suffering of life. He only hesitated when it came to
-the reunion with his mother, the change that had crept between them; and
-her illness, her death; choosing his words with a reticence that bit
-them the more deeply into the listening mind.
-
-But, in the days that followed the death,--days ghost-like, yet
-sharp,--he lingered, so that she paused with him in that pause of
-stillness in his life, that morning in the spring woods when everything
-had softly, gently shown an abiding strangeness. He told her all about
-that: about the look of the day, not knowing why he so wanted her to see
-it, too, but it seemed to explain more than anything else--the pale,
-high sky, the gray branches, the shining water and the little bird that
-hopped to drink. He himself looked ghost-like while he spoke--sunken,
-long, dark, impalpable, in the deep chair, his thin white fingers
-lightly interlocked, his face showing only the oddity of its strange yet
-beautiful oval and its shadowy eyes and lips. All whiteness and shadow,
-he might have been a projection from the thought of the woman, who,
-before him, leaned her head on her hand, warm, breathing, vivid with
-color, her steady eyes seeing phantoms unafraid.
-
-After that there wasn't much left to explain, it seemed--except Alice,
-that last convulsive effort of life to seize and keep him; and that
-didn't take long--made, as it were, a little allegory, with nameless
-abstractions to symbolize the old drama of the soul entrameled and
-finally set free again. The experience of the spring woods had really
-been the decisive one. He came back to that again, at the end of his
-story. "It's really, that experience, what in another kind of
-temperament is called conversion."
-
-Her eyes had looked away from him at last. "No," she said, "conversion
-is something that gives life."
-
-"No," he rejoined, "it's something that lifts one above it."
-
-The fundamental contest spoke again, and after that they were both
-silent. He, too, had looked away from her when the story was over, and
-he knew, from her deep, slow breathing, that the story had meant a great
-deal to her. It was not a laboring breath, nor broken by pain to sighs;
-but it seemed, in its steady rhythm, to accept and then to conquer what
-he had put before her. That he should so hear it, not looking at her,
-filled the silence with more than words; and, as in the afternoon, he
-sought the relief of words.
-
-"So you see," he said, in his lighter voice, "thorns and precipices and
-terrors dissolve like dreams." She had seen everything and he was
-ushering her out. But his eyes now met hers, looking across the little
-space at him.
-
-"And I? Do I, too, dissolve like a dream?" she said.
-
-His smile now was lighter than his voice had been. "Absolutely. Though I
-own that you are a highly colored phantom. Your color is very vivid
-indeed. Sometimes it almost masters my thought."
-
-He had not, in his mere wish for ease, quite known what he meant to say,
-and now her look did not show him any deepened consciousness; but,
-suddenly, he felt that under his lightness and her quiet the current ran
-deeply.
-
-"I master your thought?" she repeated. "Doesn't that make you distrust
-thought sometimes?"
-
-"No," he laughed. "It makes me distrust you, dear Eppie."
-
-There were all sorts of things before them now. What they were he really
-didn't know; perhaps she didn't, either. At all events he kept his eyes
-off them, and shaking his crossed foot a little, he still looked at her,
-smiling.
-
-"Why?" she asked.
-
-He felt that he must now answer her, and himself, in words that wouldn't
-imply more than he could face.
-
-"Well, the very force of your craving for life, the very force of your
-will, might sweep me along for a bit. I might be caught up for a whirl
-on the wheel of illusion; not that you could ever bind me to it: it
-would need my own will, blind again, for that."
-
-Her eyes had met his so steadily that he had imagined only contemplation
-or perhaps that maternal severity behind the steadiness. But the way in
-which they received these last tossed pebbles of metaphor showed him
-unrealized profundities. They deepened, they darkened, they widened on
-him. They seemed to engulf him in a sudden abyss of pain. And pain in
-her was indeed a color that could infect him.
-
-"How horrible you are, Gavan," she said, and her voice went with the
-words and with the look.
-
-"Eppie!" he exclaimed on a tense, indrawn breath, as if over the sudden
-stab of a knife. "Have I hurt you?"
-
-Her eyes turned from him. "Not what you say, or do. What you are."
-
-"You didn't see, before, what I am?"
-
-"Never--like this."
-
-He leaned toward her. "Dear Eppie, why do you make me talk? Let me be
-still. I only ask to be still."
-
-"You are worse still. Don't you think I see what stillness means?"
-
-She had pushed her low seat from him,--for he stretched his hands to her
-with his supplication,--and, rising to her feet, stepping back, she
-stood before the fire, somberly looking down at him.
-
-Gavan, too, rose. Compunction, supplication, a twist of perplexity and
-suffering, made him careless of discretion. Face to face, laying his
-hands on her shoulders, he said: "Don't let me frighten you. It would be
-horrible if I could convince you, shatter you."
-
-Standing erect under his hands, she looked hard into his face.
-
-"You could frighten me, horribly; but you couldn't shatter me. You are
-ambiguous, veiled, all in mists. I am as clear, as sharp--."
-
-Her dauntlessness, the old defiance, were a relief--a really delicious
-relief. He was able to smile at her, a smile that pled for reassurance.
-"How can I frighten you, then?"
-
-Her somber gaze did not soften. "Your mists come round me, chill,
-suffocating. They corrode my clearness."
-
-"No; no; it's you who come into them. Don't. Don't. Keep away from me."
-
-"I'm not so afraid of you as that," she answered.
-
-His hands were still on her shoulders and their eyes on each other--his
-with their appealing, uncertain smile, and hers unmoved, unsmiling; and
-suddenly that sense of danger came upon him: as if, in the mist, he felt
-upon him the breathing, warm, sweet, ominous, of some unseen creature.
-And in the fear was a strange delight, and like a hand drawn, with slow,
-deep pressure, across a harp, the nearness drew across his heart,
-stirring its one sad note--its dumb, its aching note--to a sudden
-ascending murmur of melody.
-
-He was caught swiftly from this inner tumult by its reflection in her
-face. She flushed, deeply, painfully. She drew back sharply, pushing
-his hands from her.
-
-Gavan sought his own equilibrium in an ignoring of that undercurrent.
-
-"Now you are not frightened; but why are you angry?" he asked.
-
-For a moment she did not speak.
-
-"Eppie, I am so sorry. What is it? You are really angry, Eppie!"
-
-Then, after that pause of speechlessness, she found words.
-
-"If I think of you as mist you must not think of me as glamour." This
-she gave him straight.
-
-Only after disengaging her train from the settle, from his feet, after
-wheeling aside his chair to make a clear passage for her departure, did
-she add: "I have read your priggish Schopenhauer."
-
-She gave him no time for reply or protestation. Quite mistress of
-herself, leaving him with all the awkwardness of the situation--if he
-chose to consider it awkward--upon his hands, very fully the finished
-mondaine and very beautifully the fearless and assured nymph of the
-hillside, she went to the piano, turned and rejected, in looking over
-it, some music, and sitting down, striking a long, full chord, she began
-to sing, in her voice of frosty dawn, the old Scotch ballad.
-
-He might go or listen as he liked. She had put him away, him and his
-mists, his ambiguous hold upon her, his ambiguous look at her. She sang
-to please herself as much as when she had gone up through the woodlands.
-And if the note of anger still thrilled in her voice she turned it to
-the uses of her song and made a higher triumph of sadness.
-
-She was still singing when the general came in.
-
- * * * * *
-
-SHE had been quite right; she had seen with her perfect sharpness and
-clearness indeed, and no wonder that she had been angry. He himself saw
-clearly, directly the hand was off the harp. It was laughably simple. He
-was a man, she a woman; they were both young and she was beautiful. That
-summed it up, sufficiently and brutally; and no wonder, again, that she
-had felt such summing an offense. It wasn't in the light of such
-summings that she regarded herself.
-
-With him she had never, for a moment, made use of glamour. His was the
-rudimentary impulse, and Gavan's sensitive cheek echoed her flush when
-he thought of it. Never again, he promised himself, after this full
-comprehension of it, should such an impulse dim their friendship. He
-would make it up to her by helping her to forget it.
-
-But for all that, it was with the strangest mixture of relief and dismay
-that he found upon the breakfast-table next morning an urgent summons
-for his return home. It was the affable little rector of the parish in
-Surrey who wrote to tell him of his father's sudden breakdown,--softening
-of the brain. When Eppie appeared, a little grave, but all clear
-composure, he was able to show her the letter and to tell her of his
-immediate departure with a composure as assured as her own, but he
-wondered, while he spoke, if to her also the parting would mean any form
-of relief. At all events, for her, it couldn't mean any form of wrench.
-
-Looking in swift glances at her face, while she questioned him about his
-father, suggested trains and nurses, and gave practical advice for his
-journey, he was conscious that the relief was the result of a pretty
-severe strain, and that though it was relieved it hadn't stopped aching.
-
-The very fact that Eppie's narrow face, the hair brushed back from brow
-and temples, showed, in the clear morning light, more of its oddity than
-its beauty, made its charm cling the more closely. Her eyes looked
-small, her features irregular; he saw the cliff-like modeling of her
-temples, the cheeks, a little flat, pale, freckled; the long, queer
-lines of her chin. Bare, exposed, without a flicker of sunlight on her
-delicate analogies of ruggedness, of weather-beaten strength, she might
-almost have been called ugly; and, with every glance, he was feeling her
-as sweetness, sweetness deep and reticent, embodied.
-
-The general and Miss Barbara were late. She poured out his coffee, saw
-him embarked on a sturdy breakfast, insisted, now with the irradiating
-smile that in a moment made her lovely, that he should eat a great deal
-before his journey, made him think anew of that maternal quality in
-her,--the tolerance, the tenderness. And in the ambiguous relief came
-the sharpened dismay of seeing how great was the cause for it.
-
-He wanted to say a word, only one, about their little drama of last
-night, but the time didn't really seem to come for it; perhaps she saw
-that it shouldn't come. But on the old stone steps with their yellow
-lichen spots, his farewells over to the uncle and aunt, and he and Eppie
-standing out there in a momentary solitude, she said, shaking his hand,
-"Friends, you know. Look me up when you are next in London." She had her
-one word to say, and she had said it when and how she wished. It wasn't
-anything so crude as reassurance; it was rather a sunny assurance, in
-which she wished him to share, that none was needed.
-
-He looked, like the boy of years ago, a real depth of gratitude into her
-eyes. She had given him his chance.
-
-"I'll never frighten you again; I'll never displease you again."
-
-"I know you won't. I won't let you," Eppie smiled.
-
-"I wish I were more worth your while--worth your being kind to me."
-
-"You think you are still--gloomy, tiresome, self-centered?"
-
-"That defines it well enough."
-
-"Well, you serve my purpose," said Eppie, "and that is to have you for
-my friend."
-
-She seemed in this parting to have effaced all memory of glamour, but
-Gavan knew that the deeper one was with him.
-
-It was with him, even while, in the long journey South, he was able to
-unwrap film after film of the mirage from its central core of reality,
-to see Eppie, in all her loveliness, in all her noblest aspects, as a
-sort of incarnation of the world, the flesh, and the devil. He could
-laugh over the grotesque analogy; it proved to him how far from life he
-was when its symbol could show in such unflattering terms, and yet it
-hurt him that he could find it in himself so to symbolize her. It was
-just because she was so lovely, so noble, that he must--he must--. For,
-under all, was the wrench that would take time to stop aching.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Captain Palairet had gone to pieces and was now as unpleasant an object
-as for years he had been a pleasant one.
-
-Gavan's atrophied selfishness felt only a slight shrinking from the
-revolting aspects of dissolution, and his father's condition rather
-interested him. The captain's childish clinging to his son was like an
-animal instinct suddenly asserting itself, an almost vegetable instinct,
-so little more than mere instinct was it. It affected Gavan much as the
-suddenly contracting tentacles of a sea-anemone upon his finger might
-have done. He was not at all touched; but he felt the claim of a
-possible pang of loneliness and desolation in the dimness of decay, and,
-methodically, with all the appearances of a solicitous kindness, he
-responded to the claim.
-
-The man, immersed in his rudimentary universe of sense, showed a host of
-atavistic fears; fears of the dark, of strange faces, fears of sudden
-noises or of long stillness. He often wept, leaning his swollen face on
-Gavan's shoulder, filled with an abject self-pity.
-
-"You know how I love you, Gavan," he would again and again repeat, his
-lax lips fumbling with the words, "always loved you, ever since you were
-a little fellow--out in India, you know. I and your dear mother loved
-you better than life," and, wagging his head, he would repeat, "better
-than life," and break into sobs--sobs that ceased when the nurse brought
-him his wine-jelly. Then it might be again the tone of feeble whining.
-"It doesn't taste right, Gavan. Can't you make it taste right? Do you
-want to starve me between you all?"
-
-Gavan, with scientific scrutiny, diagnosed and observed while he soothed
-him or engaged his vagrant mind in games.
-
-In his intervals of leisure he pursued his own work, and rode and walked
-with all his usual tempered athleticism. He did not feel the days as a
-strain, hardly as disagreeable; he was indifferent or interested. At the
-worst he was bored. The undercurrent of pity he was accustomed to living
-with.
-
-Only at night, in hours of rest, he would sink into a half-dazed
-disgust, find himself on edge, nearly worn out. So the winter passed.
-
-He was playing draughts with his father on a day in earliest spring,
-when he was told that Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford were below.
-
-Gavan was feeling dull and jaded. The conducting of the game needed a
-monotonous patience and tact. The captain would now pick up a draught
-and gaze curiously at it for long periods of time, now move in a
-direction contrary to all the rules of the game and to his own
-advantage. When such mistakes were pointed out to him he would either
-apologize humbly or break into sudden peevish wrath. To-day he was in a
-peculiarly excitable condition and had more than once wept.
-
-Gavan, after the servant's announcement, holding a quietly expectant
-draught in his thin, poised fingers, looked hard at the board that still
-waited for his father's move. He then felt that a deep flush had mounted
-to his face.
-
-In spite of the one or two laconic letters that they had interchanged,
-Eppie had been relegated for many months to her dream-place--a dream, in
-spite of its high coloring, more distant than this nearer dream of ugly
-illness. It was painful to look back at the queer turmoil she had roused
-in him during the autumnal fortnight, and more painful to realize, as in
-his sudden panic of reluctance now, that, though a dream, she was an
-abiding and constant one.
-
-Mrs. Arley he knew, and her motor-car had recently made her a next-door
-neighbor in spite of the thirty miles between them. She was a friend
-with whom Eppie had before stayed on the other side of the county.
-Nothing could be more natural than that she and Eppie should drop in
-upon a solitude that must, to their eyes, have all the finished elements
-of pathos. Yet he was a little vexed by the intrusion, as well as
-reluctant to meet it.
-
-His father broke into vehement protest when he heard that he was to be
-abandoned at an unusual hour, and it needed some time for Gavan and the
-nurse to quiet him. Twenty minutes had passed before he could go down to
-his guests, and he surmised that they would feel in this delay yet
-further grounds for pity.
-
-They were in the hall, before a roaring fire, Eppie standing with her
-back to it, in a familiar attitude, though her long, caped cloak and
-hooded motoring-cap, the folds of gray silk gathered under her chin and
-narrowly framing her face, gave her an unfamiliar aspect. Her eyes met
-his as he turned the spacious staircase and came down to them, and he
-felt that they watched his every movement and noted every trace in him
-of fatigue and dejection.
-
-Mrs. Arley, fluent, flexible, amazingly pretty, for all the light
-powdering and wrinkling of her fifty years, came rustling forward.
-
-"Eppie is staying with me for the week-end,--I wrench her from her slums
-now and then,--and we wanted to hear how you are, to see how you are.
-You look dreadfully fagged; doesn't he, Eppie? How is your father?"
-
-Eppie gave him her hand in silence.
-
-"My father will never be any better, you know," he said. "As for me, I'm
-all right. I should have come over to see you before this, and looked
-you up, too, Eppie, but I can't get away for more than an hour or so at
-a time."
-
-He led them into the library while he spoke,--Mrs. Arley exclaiming that
-such devotion was dear and good of him,--and Eppie looked gravely round
-at the room that he had described to her as the room that he really
-passed his life in. The great spaces of ranged books framed for her, he
-knew, pictures of his own existence. He knew, too, that her gravity was
-the involuntary result of the impression that he made upon her. She was
-sorry for him. Poor Eppie, their relationship since childhood seemed to
-have consisted in that--in the sense of her pursuing pity and in his
-retreat before it, for her sake. He retreated now, as he knew, in his
-determination to show her that pity was misplaced, uncalled for.
-
-Mrs. Arley had thrown off her wrap and loosened her hood in a manner
-that made it almost imperative to ask them to stay with him for
-lunch--an invitation accepted with an assurance showing that it had been
-expected, and it wasn't difficult, in conventional battledore and
-shuttlecock with her, to show a good humor and frivolity that
-discountenanced pathetic interpretations. What Mrs. Arley's
-interpretations were he didn't quite know; her eyes, fatigued yet fresh,
-were very acute behind their trivial meanings, and he could wonder if
-Eppie had shared with her her own sense of his "horribleness," and if,
-in consequence, her conception of Eppie's significance as the opponent
-of that quality was tinged with sentimental associations.
-
-Eppie's gaze, while they rattled on, lost something of its gravity, but
-he was startled, as if by an assurance deeper than any of Mrs. Arley's,
-when she rose to slip off her coat and went across the room to a small
-old mirror that hung near the door to take off her cap as well.
-
-In her manner of standing there with her back to them, untying her
-veils, pushing back her hair, was the assurance, indeed, of a person
-whose feet were firmly planted on certain rights, all the more firmly
-for "knowing her place" as it were, and for having repudiated mistaken
-assumptions. She might almost have been a new sick-nurse come to take up
-her duties by his side. She passed from the mirror to the writing-table,
-examining the books laid there, and then, until lunch was announced,
-stood looking out of the window. Quite the silent, capable, significant
-new nurse, with many theories of her own that might much affect the
-future.
-
-The dining-room at Cheylesford Lodge opened on a wonderful old lawn,
-centuries in its green. Bordered by beds, just alight with pale spring
-flowers, it swept in and out among shrubberies of rhododendron and
-laurel, the emerald nook set in a circle of trees, a high arabesque on
-the sky.
-
-Eppie from her seat at the table faced the sky, the trees, the lawn.
-What a beautiful place, she was thinking. A place for life, sheltered,
-embowered. How she would have loved, as a child, those delicious
-rivulets of green that ran into the thick mysteries of shadow. How she
-would have loved to play dolls on a hot summer afternoon in the shade of
-the great yew-tree that stretched its dark branches half across the sky.
-The house, the garden, made her think of children; she saw white
-pinafores and golden heads glancing in and out among the trees and
-shrubs, and the vision of young life, blossoming, growing in security
-and sunlight, filled her thought with its pictured songs of innocence,
-while, at the same time, under the vision, she was feeling it all--all
-the beauty and sheltered sweetness--as dreadful in its emptiness, its
-worse than emptiness: a casket holding a death's-head. She came back
-with something of a start to hear her work in the slums enthusiastically
-described by Mrs. Arley. "I thought it was only in novels that children
-clung to the heroine's skirts. I never believed they clung in real life
-until seeing Eppie with her ragamuffins; they adore her."
-
-This remark, to whose truth she assented by a vague smile, gave Eppie's
-thoughts a further push that sent them seeing herself among the golden
-heads and white pinafores on the lawn at Cheylesford Lodge; and though
-the vision maintained its loving aunt relationship of the slums, there
-was now a throb and flutter in it, as though she held under her hand a
-strange wild bird that only her own will not to look kept hidden.
-
-These dreams were followed by a nightmare little episode.
-
-In the library, again, the talk was still an airy dialogue, Eppie, her
-eyes on the flames as she drank her coffee, still maintaining her
-ruminating silence. In the midst of her thoughts and their chatter, the
-door opened suddenly and Captain Palairet appeared on the threshold.
-
-His head neatly brushed, a sumptuous dressing-gown of padded and
-embroidered silk girt about him, he stood there with moist eyes and
-lips, faintly and incessantly shaking through all his frame, a troubling
-and startling figure.
-
-Gavan had been wondering all through the visit how his father was
-bearing the abandonment, and his appearance, he saw now, must have been
-the triumphant fruit of contest with the nurse whose face of helpless
-disapprobation hovered outside.
-
-Gavan went to his side, and, leaning on his son's arm, the captain said
-that he had come to pay his respects to Mrs. Arley and to Miss Gifford.
-
-Taking Mrs. Arley's hand, he earnestly reiterated his pleasure in
-welcoming her to his home.
-
-"Gavan's in fact, you know; but he's a good son. Not very much in
-common, perhaps: Gavan was always a book-worm, a fellow of fads and
-theories; I love a broad life, men and things. No, not much in common,
-except our love for his mother, my dear, dead wife; that brought us
-together. We shook hands over her grave, so to speak," said the captain,
-but without his usual sentiment. An air of jaunty cheerfulness pervaded
-his manner. "She is buried near here, you know. You may have seen the
-grave. A very pretty stone; very pretty indeed. Gavan chose it. I was in
-India at the time. A great blow to me. I never recovered from it. I
-forget, for the moment, what the text is; but it's very pretty; very
-appropriate. I knew I could trust Gavan to do everything properly."
-
-Gavan's face had kept its pallid calm.
-
-"You will tire yourself, father," he said. "Let me take you up-stairs
-now. Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford will excuse us."
-
-The captain resisted his attempt to turn him to the door.
-
-"Miss Gifford. Yes, Miss Gifford," he repeated, turning to where Eppie
-stood attentively watching father and son, "But I want to see Miss
-Elspeth Gifford. It was that I came for." He took her hand and his
-wrecked and restless eyes went over her face. "So this is Miss Elspeth
-Gifford."
-
-"You have heard of me?" Eppie's composure was as successful as Gavan's
-own and lent to the scene a certain matter-of-fact convention.
-
-The captain bowed low. "Heard of you? Yes. I have often heard of you. I
-am glad, glad and proud, to meet at last so much goodness and wit and
-beauty. You have a name in the world, Miss Gifford. Yes, indeed, I have
-heard of you." Suddenly, while he held her hand and gazed at her, his
-look changed. Tears filled his eyes; a muscle in his lip began to shake;
-a flush of maudlin indignation purpled his face.
-
-"And you are the girl my son jilted! And you come to our house! It's a
-noble action. It's a generous action. It's worthy of you, my dear." He
-tightly squeezed her hand, Gavan's attempt--and now no gentle one--to
-draw him away only making his clutch the more determined.
-
-"No, Gavan, I will not go. I will speak my mind. This is my hour. The
-time has come for me to speak my mind. Let's have the truth; truth at
-all costs is my motto. A noble and generous action. But, my dear," he
-leaned his head toward her and spoke in a loud whisper, "you're well rid
-of him, you know--well rid of him. Don't try to patch it up. Don't come
-in that hope. So like a woman--I know, I know. But give it up; that's my
-advice. Give it up. He's a poor fellow--a very poor fellow. He wouldn't
-make you happy; just take that from me--a friend, a true friend. He
-wouldn't make any woman happy. He's a poor creature, and a false
-creature, and I'll say this," the captain, now trembling violently,
-burst into tears: "if he has been a false lover to you he has been a bad
-son to me."
-
-With both hands, sobbing, he clung to her, while, with a look of sick
-distress, Gavan tried, not too violently, to draw him from his hold on
-her.
-
-Eppie had not flushed. "Don't mind," she said, glancing at the helpless
-son, "he has mixed it up, you see." And, bending on the captain eyes
-severe in kindly intention, like the eyes of a nurse firmly
-administering a potion, "You are mistaken about Gavan. It was another
-man who jilted me. Now let him take you up-stairs. You are ill."
-
-But the captain still clung, she, erect in her spare young strength,
-showing no shrinking of repulsion. "No, no," he said; "you always try to
-shield him. A woman's way. He won your heart, and then he broke it, as
-he has mine. He has no heart, or he'd take you now. Give it up. Don't
-come after him. Sir, how dare you! I won't submit to this. How dare you,
-Sir!" Gavan had wrenched him away, and in a flare of silly passion he
-struck at him again and again, like a furious child. It was a wrestle
-with the animal, the vegetable thing, the pinioning of vicious
-tentacles. Mrs. Arley fluttered in helpless consternation, while Eppie,
-firm and adequate, assisted Gavan in securing the wildly striking hands.
-Caught, held, haled toward the door, the captain became, with amazing
-rapidity, all smiles and placidity.
-
-"Gently, gently, my dear boy. This is unseemly, you know, very childish
-indeed. Temper! Temper! You get it from me, no doubt--though your mother
-could be very spiteful at moments. I'll come now. I've said my say. Well
-rid of him, my dear, well rid of him," he nodded from the door.
-
-"Eppie! My dear!" cried Mrs. Arley, when father and son had disappeared.
-"How unutterably hateful. I am more sorry for him than for you, Eppie.
-His face!"
-
-Eppie was shrugging up her shoulders and straightening herself as though
-the captain's grasp still threatened her.
-
-"Hateful indeed; but trivial. Gavan understands that I understand. We
-must make him feel that it's nothing."
-
-"He's quite mad, horrible old man."
-
-"Not quite; more uncomfortably muddled than mad. We must make him see
-that we think nothing of it," Eppie repeated. She turned to Gavan, who
-entered as she spoke, still with his sick flush and showing a speechless
-inability to frame apologies.
-
-"This is what it is to have echoes, Gavan," she said. "My little
-misfortunes have reached your father's ears." She went to him, she took
-his hand, she smiled at him, all her radiance recovered, a garment of
-warmth and ease to cover the shivering the captain's words might have
-made. "Please don't mind. I wasn't a bit bothered, really."
-
-He could almost have wept for the relief of her smile, her sanity. The
-linking of their names in such an unthinkable connection had given him
-the nausea qualm of a terrifying obsession. He could find now only trite
-words in which to tell her that she was very kind and that he was more
-sorry than he could say.
-
-"But you mustn't be. It was such an obvious muddle for a twisted mind.
-He knew," said Eppie, still smiling with the healing radiance, "that I
-had been jilted, and he knew that I was very fond of you, and he put
-together the one and one make two that happened to be before him." She
-saw that his distress had been far greater than her own, that she now
-gave him relief.
-
-Afterward, as she and Mrs. Arley sped away, her own reaction from the
-healing attitude showed in a rather grim silence. She leaned back in the
-swift, keen air, her arms folded in the fullness of her capes.
-
-But Mrs. Arley could not repress her own accumulations of feeling. "My
-dear Eppie," she said, her hand on her shoulder, and with an almost more
-than maternal lack of reticence, "I want you to marry him. Don't glare
-Medusa at me. I hate tact and silences. Heaven knows I would have
-scouted the idea of such a match for you before seeing him to-day. But
-my hard old heart is touched. He is such a dear; so lonely. It's a nice
-little place, too, and there is some money. Jim Grainger is too
-drab-colored a person for you,--all his force, all his sheckles, can't
-gild him,--and Kenneth Langley is penniless. This dear creature is not a
-bit drab and not quite penniless. And you are big enough to marry a man
-who needs you rather than one you need. _Will_ you think of it, Eppie?"
-
-"Grace, you are worse than Captain Palairet," said Eppie, whose eyes
-were firmly fixed on the neat leather back of the chauffeur in front of
-them.
-
-"Don't be cross, Eppie. Why should you mind my prattle?"
-
-"Because I care for him so much."
-
-"Well, that's what I say."
-
-"No; not as I mean it."
-
-"_He_ of course cares, as I mean it."
-
-Eppie did not pause over this.
-
-"It's something different, quite different, from anything else in the
-world. It can't be talked about like that. Please, Grace, never, never
-be like Captain Palairet again. _You_ haven't softening of the brain. I
-shall lose Gavan if my friends and his father have such delusions too
-openly."
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-Gavan went down the noisy, dirty thoroughfare, looking for the turning
-which would lead him, so the last policeman consulted said, to Eppie's
-little square.
-
-It was a May day, suddenly clear after rain, liquid mud below, and above
-a sharply blue sky, looking its relentless contrast at the reeking,
-sordid streets, the ugly, hurrying life of the wide thoroughfare.
-
-All along the gutter was a vociferous fringe of dripping fruit-and
-food-barrows, these more haphazard conveniences faced by a line of
-gaudy, glaring shops.
-
-The blue above was laced with a tangle of tram-wires and cut with the
-jagged line of chimney-pots.
-
-The roaring trams, the glaring shops, seemed part of a cruel machinery
-creative of life, and the grim air of permanence, the width and solidity
-of the great thoroughfare, were more oppressive to Gavan's nerves, its
-ugliness fiercer, more menacing, than the narrower meanness of the
-streets where life seemed to huddle with more despondency.
-
-In one of these he found that he had, apparently, lost his way.
-
-A random turn brought him to a squalid court with sloping, wet pavement
-and open doors disgorging, from inner darkness, swarms of children. They
-ran; tottered on infantile, bandy legs; locked in scuffling groups,
-screaming shrilly, or squatted on the ground, absorbed in some game.
-
-Gavan surveyed them vaguely as he wandered seeking an outlet. His eye
-showed neither shrinking nor tenderness, rather a bleak, hard, unmoved
-pity, like that of the sky above. He was as alien from that swarming,
-vivid life as the sky; but, worn as he was with months of nervous
-overstrain, he felt rising within him now and then a faint sense of
-nausea such as one might feel in contemplating a writhing clot of
-maggots.
-
-He threaded his way among them all, and at a corner of the court found a
-narrow exit. This covered passage led, apparently, to another and fouler
-court, and emerging from it, coming suddenly face to face with him, was
-Eppie. She was as startling, seen here, as "a lily in the mouth of
-Tartarus," and he had a shock of delight in her mere aspect. For Eppie
-was as exquisite as a flower. Her garments had in no way adapted
-themselves to mud and misery. Her rough dress of Japanese blue showed at
-the open neck of its jacket a white linen blouse; her short, kilted
-skirt swung with the grace of petals; her little upturned cap of blue
-made her look like a Rosalind ready for a background of woodland glade,
-streams, and herds of deer.
-
-And here she stood, under that cruel sky, among the unimaginable
-ugliness of this City of Dreadful Night.
-
-In her great surprise she did not smile, saying, as she gave him her
-hand, "Gavan! by all that's wonderful!"
-
-"You asked me to come and see you when I was next in London."
-
-"So I did."
-
-"So here I am. I had a day off by chance; some business that had to be
-seen to."
-
-"And your father?"
-
-"Slowly going."
-
-"And you have come down here, for how long?"
-
-"For as long as you'll keep me. I needn't go back till night."
-
-Her eye now wandered away from him to the maggots, one of whom, Gavan
-observed, had attached itself to her skirt, while a sufficiently dense
-crowd surrounded them, staring.
-
-"You have a glimpse of our children," said Eppie, surveying them with,
-not exactly a maternal, but, as it were, a fraternal eye of affectionate
-familiarity.
-
-"What's that, Annie?" in answer to a husky whisper. "Do I expect you
-to-night? Rather! Is that the doll, Ada? Well, I can't say that you've
-kept it very tidy. Where's its pinafore?" She took the soiled object
-held up to her and examined its garments. "Where's its petticoat?"
-
-"Please, Miss, Hemly took them."
-
-"Took them away from you?"
-
-"Yes, Miss."
-
-"For her own doll, I suppose."
-
-"Yes, Miss."
-
-Eppie cogitated. "I'll speak to Emily about it presently. You shall have
-them back."
-
-"Please, Miss, I called her a thief."
-
-"You spoke the truth. How are you, Billy? You look decidedly better.
-Gavan, my hands are full for the next hour or so and I can't even offer
-to take you with me, for I'm going to sick people. But I shall be back
-and through with all my work by tea-time, if you don't mind going to my
-place and waiting. You'll find Maude Allen there. She lives down here,
-and with me when I am here. She is a nice girl, though she will talk
-your head off."
-
-"How do I find her? I don't mind waiting."
-
-"You follow this to the end, take the first turning to the right, and
-that will bring you to my place. I'll meet you there at five."
-
-Gavan, thus directed, made his way to the dingy little house occupied by
-the group of energetic women whom Eppie joined yearly for her three
-months of--dissipation? he asked himself, amused by her variegated
-vigor.
-
-The dingy little house looked on a dingy little square--shell of former
-respectable affluence from which the higher form of life had shriveled.
-The sooty trees were thickly powdered with young green, and uneven
-patches of rough, unkempt grass showed behind broken iron railings. A
-cat's-meat man called his dangling wares along the street, and Gavan,
-noticing a thin and furtive cat, that stole from a window-ledge, stopped
-him and bought a large three-penny-worth, upon which he left the cat
-regaling itself with an odd, fastidious ferocity.
-
-He entered another world when he entered Eppie's sitting-room. Here was
-life at its most austerely sweet. Books lined the walls, bowls of
-primroses and delicate Japanese bronzes set above their shelves;
-chintz-covered chairs were drawn before the fire; the latest reviews lay
-on a table, and on the piano stood open music; there were wide windows
-in the little room, and crocuses, growing in flat, earthenware dishes,
-blew out their narrow chalices against the sunlit muslin curtains.
-
-Miss Allen sat sewing near the crocuses, and, shy and voluble, rose to
-greet him. She was evidently accustomed to Eppie's guests--accustomed,
-too, perhaps, to taking them off her hands, for though she was shy her
-volubility showed a familiarity with the situation. She was almost as
-funny a contrast to Eppie as the slum children had been an ugly one. She
-wore a spare, drab-colored skirt and a cotton shirt, its high, hard
-collar girt about by a red tie that revealed bone buttons before and
-behind. Her sleek, fair hair, relentlessly drawn back, looked like a
-varnish laid upon her head. Her features, at once acute and kindly, were
-sharp and pink.
-
-She was sewing on solid and distressingly ugly materials.
-
-"Yes, I am usually at home. Miss Gifford is the head and I am the hands,
-you see," she smiled, casting quick, upward glances at the long, pale
-young man in his chair near the fire. "Miss Henderson, Miss Grey, and I
-live here all year round, and I do so look forward to Miss Gifford's
-coming. Oh, yes, it's a most interesting life. Do you do anything of the
-sort? Are you going to take up a club? Perhaps you are going into the
-Church?"
-
-Miss Allen asked her swift succession of questions as if in a mild
-desperateness.
-
-Gavan admitted that his interest was wholly in Miss Gifford.
-
-"She _is_ interesting," Miss Allen, all comprehension, agreed. "So many
-people find her inspiring. Do you know Mr. Grainger, the M.P.? He comes
-here constantly. He is a cousin, you know. He has known her, of course,
-ever since she was a child. I think it's very probable that she
-influences his political life--oh, quite in a right sense, I mean. He is
-such a conscientious man--everybody says that. And then she isn't at all
-eccentric, you know, as so many fashionable women who come down here
-are; they do give one so much trouble when they are like that,--all
-sorts of fads that one has to manage to get on with. She isn't at all
-faddish. And she isn't sentimental, either. I think the sentimental ones
-are worst--for the people, especially, giving them all sorts of foolish
-ideas. And it's not that she doesn't _care_. She cares such a lot.
-That's the secret of her not getting discouraged, you see. She never
-loses her spirit."
-
-"Is it such discouraging work?" Gavan questioned from his chair. With
-his legs crossed, his hat and stick held on his knee, he surveyed Miss
-Allen and the crocuses.
-
-"Well, not to me," she answered; "but that's very different, for I have
-religious faith. Miss Gifford hasn't that, so of course she must care a
-great deal to make up for it. When one hasn't a firm faith it is far
-more difficult, I always think, to see any hope in it all. I think she
-would find it far easier if she had that. She can't resign herself to
-things. She is rather hot-tempered at times," Miss Allen added, with one
-of her sharp, shy glances.
-
-Gavan, amused by the idea that Eppie lacked religious faith, inquired
-whether the settlement were religious in intention, and Miss Allen
-sighed a little in answering no,--Miss Grey, indeed, was a Positivist.
-"But we Anglicans are very broad, you know," she said. "I can work in
-perfectly with them all--better with Miss Grey and Miss Gifford than
-with Miss Henderson, who is very, very Low. Miss Gifford goes in more
-for social conditions and organization--trades-unions, all that sort of
-thing; that's where she finds Mr. Grainger so much of a help, I think."
-And he gathered from Miss Allen's further conversation, from its very
-manner of vague though admiring protest, a clearer conception of Eppie's
-importance down here. To Miss Allen, she evidently embodied a splendid,
-pagan force, ambiguous in its splendor. He saw her slightly shrinking
-vision of an intent combatant; no loving sister of charity, but a young
-Bellona, the latest weapons of sociological warfare in her hands, its
-latest battle-cry on her lips. And all for what? thought Gavan, while,
-with a sense of contrasting approval, he looked at Miss Allen's tidy
-little head against the sunlit crocuses and watched the harmless
-occupation of her hands. All for life, more life; the rousing of desire;
-the struggling to higher forms of consciousness. She was in it, the
-strife, the struggle. He had seen on her face to-day, with all its
-surprise, perhaps its gladness, that alien look of grave preoccupation
-that passed from him to the destinies she touched. In thinking of it all
-he felt particularly at peace, though there was the irony of his
-assurance that Eppie's efforts among this suffering life where he found
-her only resulted in a fiercer hold on suffering. Physical degradation
-and its resultant moral apathy were by no means the most unendurable of
-human calamities. Miss Allen's anodynes--the mere practical petting,
-soothing, telling of pretty tales--were, in their very short-sightedness,
-more fitted to the case.
-
-Miss Allen little thought to what a context her harmless prattle was
-being adjusted. She would have been paralyzed with horror could she have
-known that to the gentle young man, sitting there so unalarmingly, she
-herself was only a rather simple symptom of life that he was quietly
-studying. In so far from suspecting, her shyness went from her; he was
-so unalarming--differing in this from so many people--that she found it
-easy to talk to him. And she still had a happy little hope of a closer
-community of interest than he had owned to. He looked, she thought, very
-High Church. Perhaps he was in the last stages of conversion.
-
-She had talked on for nearly an hour when another visitor was announced.
-This proved to be a young man slightly known to Gavan, a graceful,
-mellifluous youth, whose artificiality of manner and great personal
-beauty suggested a mingling of absinthe and honey. People had rather
-bracketed Gavan and Basil Mayburn together; one could easily deal with
-both as lumped in the same category,--charming drifters, softly
-disdainful of worldly aims and efforts. Mayburn himself took sympathy
-for granted, though disconcerted at times by finding his grasp of the
-older man to be on a sliding, slippery surface. Palairet had, to be
-sure, altogether the proper appreciations of art and literature, the
-rhythm of highly evolved human intercourse; the aroma distilled for the
-esthete from the vast tragic comedy of life; so that he had never quite
-satisfied himself as to why he could get no nearer on this common
-footing. Palairet was always charming, always interested, always
-courteous; but one's hold did slip.
-
-And to Gavan, Basil Mayburn, with his fluent ecstasies, seemed a
-sojourner in a funny half-way house. To Mayburn the hallucination of
-life was worth while esthetically. His own initial appeal to life had
-been too fundamentally spiritual for the beautiful to be more to him
-than a second-rate illusion.
-
-Miss Allen greeted Mr. Mayburn with a coolness that at once
-discriminated for Gavan between her instinctive liking for himself and
-her shrinking from a man who perplexed and displeased her.
-
-Mayburn was all glad sweetness: delighted to see Miss Allen; delighted
-to see Palairet; delighted to wait in their company for the delightful
-Miss Gifford; and, turning to Miss Allen, he went on to say, as a thing
-that would engage her sympathies, that he had just come from a service
-at the Oratory.
-
-"I often go there," he said; "one gets, as nowhere else that I know of
-in London, the quintessence of aspiration--the age-long yearning of the
-world. How are your schemes for having that little church built down
-here succeeding? I do so believe in it. Don't let any ugly sect steal a
-march on you."
-
-Miss Allen primly replied that the plans for the church were prospering;
-and adding that Miss Gifford would be here in a moment and that she must
-leave them, she gathered up her work and departed with some emphasis.
-
-"Nice, dear little creature, that," said Mayburn, "though she does so
-dislike me. I hope I didn't say the wrong thing. I never quite know how
-far her Anglicanism goes; such a pity that it doesn't go a little
-further and carry her into a nunnery of the Catholic Church. She is the
-nun type. She ought to be done up in their delicious costume; it would
-lend her the flavor she lacks so distressingly now. Did you notice her
-collar and her hair? Astonishing the way that Eppie makes use of all
-these funny, _guinde_ creatures whom she gets hold of down here. Have
-you ever seen Miss Grey?--dogmatic, utilitarian, strangely ugly Miss
-Grey, another nun type corrupted by our silly modern conditions. She
-reeks of Comte and looks like a don. And all the rest of them,--the
-solemn humanitarians, the frothy socialists, the worldly, benign old
-ecclesiastics,--Eppie works them all; she has a genius for
-administration. It's an art in her. It almost consoles one for seeing
-her wasted down here for so much of the year."
-
-"Why wasted?" Gavan queried. "She enjoys it."
-
-"Exactly. That's the alleviation. Wasted for us, I mean. You have known
-her for a long time, haven't you, Palairet?"
-
-Gavan, irked by the question and by the familiarity of Mayburn's
-references to their absent hostess, answered dryly that he had known
-Miss Gifford since childhood; and Mayburn, all tact, passed at once to
-less personal topics, inquiring with a new earnestness whether Palairet
-had seen Selby's Goya, and expatiating on its exquisite horror until the
-turning of a key in the hall-door, quick steps on the stairs leading up
-past the sitting-room, announced Eppie's arrival.
-
-She was with them in a moment, cap and jacket doffed, her muddy shoes
-changed for slender patent-leather, fresh in her white blouse. She
-greeted Mayburn, turning to Gavan with, "I'm so glad you waited. You
-shall both have tea directly."
-
-With all her crisp kindliness, Gavan fancied a change in her since the
-greeting of an hour and a half before. Things hadn't gone well with her.
-And he could flatter himself, also, with the suspicion that she was
-vexed at finding their tte--tte interrupted.
-
-Mayburn loitered about the room after her while she straightened the
-shade on the student's lamp, just brought in, and made the tea, telling
-her about people, about what was going on in the only world that
-counted, telling her about Chrissie Bentworth's astounding elopement,
-and, finally, about the Goya. "You really must see it soon," he assured
-her.
-
-Eppie, adjusting the flame of her kettle, said that she didn't want to
-see it.
-
-"You don't care for Goya, dear lady?"
-
-"Not just now."
-
-"Well, of course I don't mean just now. I mean after you have burned out
-this particular flame. But, really, it's a sensation before you and you
-mustn't miss having it. An exquisite thing. Horror made beautiful."
-
-"I don't want to see it made beautiful," Eppie, with cheerful rudeness,
-objected.
-
-"Now that," said Mayburn, drawing up to the tea-table with an
-appreciative glance for the simple but inviting fare spread upon
-it--"now that is just where I always must argue with you. Don't you
-agree with me, Palairet, that life is beautiful--that it's only in terms
-of beauty that it has significance?"
-
-"If you happen to see it so," Gavan ambiguously assented.
-
-"Exactly; I accept your amendment--if you happen to have the good
-fortune to see it so; if you have the faculty that gives the vision; if,
-like Siegfried, the revealing dragon's-blood has touched your lips.
-Eppie has the gift and shouldn't wilfully atrophy it. She shouldn't
-refuse to share the vision of the Supreme Artist, to whom all horror and
-tragedy are parts of the picture that his eternal joy contemplates; she
-should not refuse to listen with the ear of the Supreme Musician, to
-whom all the discords that each one of us is, before we taste the
-dragon's-blood,--for what is man but a dissonance, as our admirable
-Nietzsche says,--to whom all these discords melt into the perfect
-phrase. All art, all truth is there. I'm rather dithyrambic, but, in
-your more reticent way, you agree with me, don't you, Palairet?"
-
-Eppie's eye, during this speech, had turned with observant irony upon
-Gavan.
-
-"How do you like your echo, Gavan?" she inquired, and she answered for
-him: "Of course he agrees, but in slightly different terms. He doesn't
-care a fig about the symphony or about the Eternal Goya. There isn't a
-touch of the 'lyric rapture' about him. Now pray don't ask him to define
-his own conceptions, and drink your tea. And don't say one word to me,
-either, about your gigantic, Bohemian deity. You have spoken of
-Nietzsche, and I know too well what you are coming to: the Apollonian
-spirit of the world of Appearances in which the Dionysiac spirit of
-Things-in-Themselves mirrors its vital ecstasy. Spare me, I'm not at all
-in the humor to see horror in terms of loveliness."
-
-"_Ay de mi!_" Mayburn murmured, "you make me feel that I'm still a
-dissonance when you talk like this."
-
-"A very wholesome realization."
-
-"You are cross with life to-day, and therefore with me, its poor little
-appreciator."
-
-"I'm never cross with life."
-
-"Only with me, then?"
-
-"Only with you, to-day."
-
-Mayburn, folding his slice of bread-and-butter, took her harshness with
-Apollonian serenity. "At least let me know that I've an ally in you," he
-appealed to Gavan, while Eppie refilled her cup with the business-like
-air of stoking an engine that paused for a moment near wayside
-trivialities.
-
-Gavan had listened to the dithyrambics with some uneasiness, conscious
-of Eppie's observation, and now owned that he felt little interest in
-the Eternal Goya.
-
-"Don't, don't, I pray of you, let him take the color out of life for
-you," Mayburn pleaded, turning from this rebuff, tea-cup in hand, to
-Eppie; and Eppie, with a rather grim smile, again full of reminiscences
-for Gavan, declared that neither of them could take anything out of it
-for her.
-
-She kept, after that, the talk in pleasant enough shallows; but Mayburn
-fancied, more than once, that he heard the grating of his keel on an
-unpropitious shore. Eppie didn't want him to-day, that was becoming
-evident; she wasn't going to push him off into decorative sailing. And
-presently, wondering a little if his tact had already been too long at
-fault, wondering anew about the degree of intimacy between the childhood
-friends, who had, evidently, secrets in which he did not share, he
-gracefully departed.
-
-Eppie leaned back in her chair, folded her arms, and closed her eyes as
-though to give herself the relief of a long silence.
-
-Her hair softly silhouetted against the green shade and the flickering
-illumination of the firelight upon her, her passive face showed a stern
-wistfulness. Things had gone wrong with her.
-
-Looking at her, Gavan's memory went back to the last time they had been
-together, alone, in firelight, to his impulse and her startlingly acute
-interpretation of it. Her very aspect now, her closed eyes and folded
-arms, seemed to show him how completely she disowned, for both of them,
-even the memory of such an unfitting episode. More keenly than ever he
-recognized the fineness in her, the generosity, the willingness to
-outlive trifles, to put them away forever; and the contagion of her
-somber peace enveloped him.
-
-She remarked presently, not opening her eyes: "I should like to make a
-bon-fire of all the pictures in the world, all the etchings, the
-carvings, the tapestries, the bric--brac in general,--and Basil
-Mayburn, in sackcloth and ashes, should light it."
-
-"What puritanic savagery, Eppie!"
-
-"I prefer the savage puritan to the Basil Mayburn type; at least I do
-just now."
-
-"What's the matter?" Gavan asked, after a little pause.
-
-"Do I show it so evidently?" she asked, with a faint smile. "Everything
-is the matter."
-
-"What, in particular, has gone wrong?"
-
-Eppie did not reply at first, and he guessed that she chose only to show
-him a lesser trouble when she said, "I've had a great quarrel with Miss
-Grey, for one thing."
-
-"The positivistic lady?"
-
-"Yes; did Maude tell you that? She really is a very first-rate
-person--and runs this place; but I lost my temper with her--a stupid
-thing to do, and not suddenly, either, which made it the less
-excusable."
-
-"Are your theories so different that you came to a clash?"
-
-"Of course they are different, though it was apparently only over a
-matter of practical administration that we fought." Eppie drew a long
-breath, opening her eyes. "I shall stay on here this spring--I usually
-go to my cousin Alicia for the season. But one can't expect things to go
-as one wants them unless one keeps one's hand on the engine most of the
-time. She has almost a right to consider me a meddling outsider, I
-suppose. I shall stay on till the end of the summer."
-
-"And smash Miss Grey?"
-
-Eppie, aware of his amusement, turned an unresentful glance upon him.
-
-"No, don't think me merely brutally dominant. I really like her. I only
-want to use her to the best advantage."
-
-At this he broke into a laugh. "Not brutally dominant, I know; but I'm
-sorry for Miss Grey."
-
-"Miss Grey can well take care of herself, I assure you."
-
-"What else has gone wrong?"
-
-Again Eppie chose something less wrong to show him. "The factory where
-some of my club-girls work has shut down half of its machinery. There
-will be a great deal of suffering. And we have pulled them above a
-flippant acceptance of state relief."
-
-"And because you have pulled them up, they are to suffer more?"
-
-"Exactly, if you choose to put it so," said Eppie.
-
-He saw that she had determined that he should not frighten her again,
-or, at all events, that he should never see it if he did frighten her;
-and he had himself determined that his mist should never again close
-round her. She should not see, even if she guessed at it pretty clearly,
-the interpretation that he put upon the afternoon's frictions and
-failures, and, on the plane of a matter-of-fact agreement as to
-practice, he drew her on to talk of her factory-girls, of the standards
-of wages, the organization of woman's labor, so that she presently said,
-"What a pleasure it is to hear you talking sense, Gavan!"
-
-"You have heard me talk a great deal of nonsense, I'm sure."
-
-"A great deal. Worse than Basil Mayburn's."
-
-"I saw too clearly to-day the sorry figure I must have cut in your eyes.
-I have learned to hold my tongue. When one can only say things that
-sound particularly silly that is an obvious duty."
-
-"I am glad to hear you use the word, my dear Gavan; use it, even though
-it means nothing to you. _Glissez mortel, n'appuyez pas_ should be your
-motto for a time; then, after some wholesome skating about on what seems
-the deceptive, glittering surface of things you will find, perhaps, that
-it isn't an abyss the ice stretches over, but a firm meadow, the ice
-melted off it and no more need of skates."
-
-He was quite willing that she should so see his case; he was easier to
-live with, no doubt, on this assumption of his curability.
-
-Eppie, still leaning back, still with folded arms, had once more closed
-her eyes, involuntarily sighing, as though under her own words the
-haunting echo of the abyss had sounded for her.
-
-She had not yet shown him what the real trouble was, and he asked her
-now, in this second lull of their talk, "What else is there besides the
-factory-girls and Miss Grey?"
-
-She was silent for a moment, then said, "You guess that there is
-something else."
-
-"I can see it."
-
-"And you are sorry?"
-
-"Sorry, dear Eppie? Of course."
-
-"It's a child, a cripple," said Eppie. "It had been ill for a long time,
-but we thought that we could save it. It died this morning. I didn't
-know. I didn't get there in time. I only found out after leaving you
-this afternoon. And it cried for me." She had turned her head from him
-as it leaned against the chair, but he saw the tears slowly rolling down
-her cheeks.
-
-"I am so sorry, dear Eppie," he said.
-
-"The most darling child, Gavan." His grave pity had brought him near and
-it gave her relief to speak. "It had such a wistful, dear little face. I
-used to spend hours with it; I never cared for any child so much. What I
-can't bear is to think that it cried for me." Her voice broke. Without a
-trace, now, of impulse or glamour, he took her hand, repeating his
-helpless phrase of sympathy. Yes, he thought, while she wept, here was
-the fatal flaw in any Tolstoian half-way house that promised peace. Love
-for others didn't help their suffering; suffering with them didn't stop
-it. Here was the brute fact of life that to all peace-mongers sternly
-said, Where there is love there is no peace.
-
-It was only after her hand had long lain in his fraternal clasp that she
-drew it away, drying her tears and trying to smile her thanks at him.
-Looking before her into the fire, and back into a retrospect of sadness,
-she said: "How often you and I meet death together, Gavan. The poor
-monkey, and Bobbie, and Elspeth even, ought to count."
-
-"You must think of me and death together," he said.
-
-He felt in a moment that the words had for her some significance that he
-had not intended. In her silence was a shock, and in her voice, when she
-spoke, a startled thing determinedly quieted.
-
-"Not more than you must think of me and it together."
-
-"You and death, dear Eppie! You are its very antithesis!"
-
-She did not look at him, and he could not see her eyes, but he knew,
-with the almost uncanny intuition that he so often had in regard to her,
-that a rising strength, a strength that threatened something, strove
-with a sudden terror.
-
-"Life conquers death," she said at last.
-
-He armed himself with lightness. "Of course, dear Eppie," he said; "of
-course it does; always and always. The poor baby dies, and--I wonder how
-many other babies are being born at this moment? Conquers death? I
-should think it did!"
-
-"I did not mean in that way," she answered. She had risen, and, looking
-at the clock, seemed to show him that their time was over. "But we won't
-discuss life and death now," she said.
-
-"You mean that it's late and that I must go?" he smiled.
-
-"Perhaps I mean only that I don't want to discuss," she smiled back.
-"Though--yes, indeed, it is late; almost seven. I have a great many
-things to do this evening, so that I must rest before dinner, and let
-you go."
-
-"I may come again?"
-
-"Whenever you will. Thank you for being so kind to-day."
-
-"Kind, dear Eppie?"
-
-"For being sorry, I mean."
-
-"Who but a brute would not have been?"
-
-"And you are not a brute."
-
-The shaded light cast soft upward shadows on her face, revealing sweet
-oddities of expression. In their shadow he could not fathom her eyes;
-but a tenderness, peaceful, benignant, even a recovered gaiety, hovered
-on her brow, her upper lip, her cheeks. It was like a reflection of
-sunlight in a deep pool, this dim smiling of gratitude and gaiety.
-
-He had a queer feeling, and a profounder one than in their former moment
-when she had repudiated his helpless emotion, that she spared him, that
-she restrained some force that might break upon this fraternal nearness.
-For an instant he wondered if he wanted to be spared, and with the
-wonder was once more the wrench at leaving her there, alone, in her
-fire-lit room. But it was her strength that carried them over all these
-dubious undercurrents, and he so relied on it that, holding her hand in
-good-by, he said, "I will come soon. I like it here."
-
-"And you are coming to Kirklands this summer. Uncle expects it. You
-mustn't disappoint him, and me. I shall be there for a month."
-
-"I'll come."
-
-"Jim Grainger will be there, too. You remember Jim. You can fight with
-him from morning till night, but you and I will fight about nothing,
-absolutely nothing, Gavan. We will--_glisser_. We will talk about Goya!
-We will be perfectly comfortable."
-
-He really believed that they might be, so happily convincing was her
-tone.
-
-"Grainger is a great chum of yours, isn't he?" he asked.
-
-"You remember, he and his brother were old playmates; Clarence has
-turned out a poor creature; he's a nobody in the church. I'm very fond
-of Jim. And I admire him tremendously. He is the conquering type, you
-know--the type that tries for the high grapes."
-
-"You won't set him at me, to mangle me for your recreation?"
-
-"Do I seem such a pitiless person?"
-
-"Oh, it would be for my good, of course."
-
-"You may come with no fear of manglings. You sha'n't be worried or
-reformed."
-
-They had spoken as if the captain were non-existent, but Gavan put the
-only qualifying touch to his assurance of seeing her at Kirklands. "I'll
-come--if I can get there by then."
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-But he did not go to her again in the slums. The final phases of his
-father's long illness kept him in Surrey, and he found, on thinking it
-over, that he was content to rest in the peace of that last seeing of
-her.
-
-It was clear to him that, were it not for that paralysis of the heart
-and will, he would have been her lover. Like a veiled, exquisite
-picture, the impossible love was with him always; he could lift the veil
-and look upon it with calmness. That he owed something of this calmness
-to Eppie he well knew. She loved him,--that, too, was evident,--but as a
-sister might love, perhaps as a mother might. He was her child, her sick
-child or brother, and he smiled over the simile, well content, and with
-an odd sense of safety in his assurance. Peace was to be their final
-word, and in the long months of a still, hot summer, this soft,
-persistent note of peace was with him and filled a lassitude greater
-than any he had known.
-
-Monotonously the days went by like darkly freighted boats on a sultry
-sea--low-lying boats, sliding with the current under sleepy sails.
-
-He watched consciousness fade from his father's body and found strange,
-sly analogies (they were like horrid nudges in the dark)--with his
-mother's death, the worthless man, the saintly woman, mingling in the
-sameness of their ending, the pitifulness, after all, of the final
-insignificance that overtook them both. And so glassy was the current,
-so sleepy the wind, that the analogy shook hardly a tremor of pain
-through him.
-
-In the hour of his father's death, a more trivial memory came--trivial,
-yet it lent a pathos, even a dignity, to the dying man. In the captain's
-eyes, turned wonderingly on him, in the automatic stretching out of his
-wasted hand for his,--Gavan held it to the end--was the reminiscence of
-the poor monkey's far-away death, the little tropical creature that had
-drooped and died at Kirklands.
-
-On the day of the funeral, Gavan sat in the library at dusk, and the
-lassitude had become so deep, partly through the breakdown of sheer
-exhaustion, that the thought of going on watching his own machinery
-work--toward that same end,--the end of the monkey, of his father, his
-mother,--was profoundly disgusting.
-
-It was a positively physical disgust, a nausea of fatigue, that had
-overtaken him as he watched the rooks, above the dark yet gilded woods,
-wheel against a sunset sky.
-
-Almost automatically, with no sense of choice or effort, he had unlocked
-a drawer of the writing-table beside him and taken out a case of
-pistols, merely wondering if the machine were going to take the final
-and only logical move of stopping itself.
-
-He was a little interested to observe, as he opened the case, that he
-felt no emotion at all. He had quite expected that at such a last moment
-life would concentrate, gather itself for a final leap on him, a final
-clinging. He had expected to have a bout with the elemental, the thing
-that some men called faith in life and some only desire of life, and,
-indeed, for a moment, his mind wandered in vague, Buddhistic fancies
-about the wheel of life to which all desire bound one, desire, the
-creator of life, so that as long as the individual felt any pulse of it
-life might always suck him back into the vortex. The fancy gave him his
-one stir of uneasiness. Suppose that the act of departure were but the
-final act of will. Could it be that such self-affirmation might tie him
-still to the wheel he strove to escape, and might the drama still go on
-for his unwilling spirit in some other dress of flesh? To see the fear
-as the final bout was to quiet it; it was a fear symptomatic of life, a
-lure to keep him going; and, besides, how meaningless such surmises, on
-their ethical basis of voluntary choice, as if in the final decision one
-would not be, as always, the puppet of the underlying will. His mind
-dropped from the thread-like interlacing of teasing metaphysical
-conjecture to a calm as quiet and deep as though he were about to turn
-on his pillow and fall asleep.
-
-Now, like the visions in a dreamy brain, the memories of the day trooped
-through the emptiness of thought. He was aware, while he watched the
-visions, of himself sitting there, to a spectator a tragic or a morbid
-figure. Morbid was of course the word that a frightened or merely stupid
-humanity would cast at him. And very morbid he was, to be sure, if life
-were desirable and to cease to desire it abnormal.
-
-He saw himself no longer in either guise. He was looking now at his
-father's coffin lowered into the earth of the little churchyard beside
-his mother's grave; the fat, genial face of the sexton, the decorous
-sadness on the little rector's features. Overhead had been the quietly
-stirring elms; sheep grazed beyond the churchyard wall and on the
-horizon was the pastoral blue of distant hills. He saw the raw, new
-grave and the heave of the older grave's green sod, the old stone, with
-its embroidery of yellow lichen and its text of eternal faith.
-
-And suddenly the thought of that heave of sod, that headstone, what it
-stood for in his life, the tragic memory, the love, the agony,--all
-sinking into mere dust, into the same dust as the father whom he had
-hated,--struck with such unendurable anguish upon him that, as if under
-heavy churchyard sod a long-dead heart strove up in a tormented
-resurrection, life rushed appallingly upon him and, involuntarily, as a
-drowning man's hand seizes a spar and clings, his hand closed on the
-pistol under it. Leave it, leave it,--this dream where such
-resurrections were possible.
-
-He had lifted the pistol, pausing for a moment in an uncertainty as to
-whether head or heart were the surer exit, when a quiet step at the
-door arrested him.
-
-"Shall I bring the lamps, sir?" asked Howson's quiet voice.
-
-Gavan could but admire his own deftness in tossing a newspaper over the
-pistol. He found himself perfectly prepared to keep up the last
-appearances. He said that he didn't want the lamps yet and that Howson
-could leave the curtains undrawn. "It's sultry this evening," he added.
-
-"It is, sir; I expect we'll have thunder in the night," said Howson,
-whose voice partook of the day's decorous gloom. He had brought in the
-evening mail and laid the letters and newspapers beside Gavan, slightly
-pushing aside the covered pistol to make room for them, an action that
-Gavan observed with some intentness. But Howson saw nothing.
-
-Left alone again, Gavan, not moving in his chair, glanced at the letters
-and papers neatly piled beside his elbow.
-
-After the rending agony of that moment of hideous realization, when, in
-every fiber, he had felt his own woeful humanity, an odd sleepiness
-almost overcame him.
-
-He felt much more like going to sleep than killing himself, and,
-yawning, stretching, he shivered a little from sheer fatigue.
-
-The edge of the newspaper that covered the pistol was weighted down by
-the pile of papers, and in putting out his hand for it, automatically,
-he pushed the letters aside, then, yawning again, picked them up instead
-of the pistol. He glanced over the envelops, not opening them,--the
-last hand at cards, that could hold no trumps for him. It was with as
-mechanical an interest as that of the condemned criminal who, on the way
-to the scaffold, turns his head to look at some unfamiliar sight. But at
-the last letter he paused. The post-mark was Scotch; the writing was
-Eppie's.
-
-He might have considered at that moment that the shock he felt was a
-warning that life was by no means done with him, and that his way of
-safety lay in swift retreat.
-
-But after the wrench of agony and the succeeding sliding languor, he did
-not consider anything. It was like a purely physical sensation, what he
-felt, as he held the letter and looked at Eppie's writing. Soft,
-recurrent thrills went through him, as though a living, vibrating thing
-were in his hands. Eppie; Kirklands; the heather under a summer sky. Was
-it desire, or a will-less drifting with a new current that the new
-vision brought? He could not have told.
-
-He opened the letter and read Eppie's matter-of-fact yet delicate
-sympathy.
-
-He must be worn out. She begged him to remember his promise and to come
-to them at once.
-
-At once, thought Gavan. It must be that, indeed, or not at all. He
-glanced at the clock. He could really go at once. He could catch the
-London train, the night express for Scotland, and he could be at
-Kirklands at noon next day. He rose and rang the bell, looking out at
-the darker pink of the sky, where the rooks no longer wheeled, until
-Howson appeared.
-
-"I'm going to Scotland to-night, at once." He found himself repeating
-the summons of the letter. "Pack up my things. Order the trap."
-
-Howson showed no surprise. A flight from the house of death was only
-natural.
-
-Gavan, when he was gone, went to the table and closed the box of pistols
-with a short, decisive snap--a decision in sharp contrast to the mist in
-which his mind was steeped.
-
-The peace the pistols promised, the peace of the northern sky and the
-heather: why did he choose the latter? But then he did not choose.
-Something had chosen for him. Something had called him back. Was it that
-he was too weary to resist? or did all his strength consist in yielding?
-He could not have told. Let the play go on. Its next act would be sweet
-to watch. Of that he was sure.
-
-
-
-
-PART III
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-The moor was like an amethyst under a radiant August sky, and the air,
-with its harmony of wind and sunlight, was like music.
-
-Eppie walked beside him and Peter trotted before. The forms were
-changed, but it might almost have been little Eppie, the boy Gavan, and
-Robbie himself who went together through the heather. The form was
-changed, but the sense of saneness so strong that it would have seemed
-perfectly natural to pass an arm about a child Eppie's neck and to talk
-of the morning's reading in the Odyssey.
-
-Never had the feeling of reality been so vague or the dream sense been
-so beautiful. His instinctive choice of this peace, instead of the
-other, had been altogether justified. It was all like a delightful game
-they had agreed to play, and the only rule of the game was to take each
-other's illusions for granted and, in so doing, to put them altogether
-aside.
-
-It was as if they went in a dream that tallied while, outside their
-dream, the sad life of waking slept. It was all limpid, all effortless,
-all clear sunlight and clear wind: limpid, like a happy dream, yet
-deliciously muddled too, as a happy dream is often muddled, with its
-mazed consciousness that, since it is a dream, ordinary impossibilities
-may become quite possible, that one only has to direct a little the
-turnings of the fairy-tale to have them lead one where one will, and yet
-that to all strange happenings there hovers a background of
-contradiction that makes them the more of an enchanted perplexity.
-
-In the old white house the general and Miss Barbara would soon be
-expecting them back to tea, both older, both vaguer, both, to Gavan's
-appreciation, more and more the tapestried figures, the background to
-the young life that still moved, felt, thought in the foreground until
-it, too, should sink and fade into a tapestry for other dramas, other
-fairy-tales.
-
-The general retold his favorite anecdotes with shorter intervals between
-the tellings; cared more openly, with an innocent greediness, about the
-exactitudes of his diet; was content to sit idly with an unremembering,
-indifferent benignancy of gaze. All the sturdier significances of life
-were fast slipping from him, all the old martial activities; it was like
-seeing the undressing of a child, the laying aside of the toy trumpet
-and the soldier's kilt preparatory to bed. Miss Barbara was sweeter than
-ever--a sweetness even less touched with variations than last year. And
-she was sillier, poor old darling; her laugh had in it at moments the
-tinkling, feeble foolishness of age.
-
-Gavan saw it all imperturbably--how, in boyhood, the apprehension of it
-would have cut into him!--and it all seemed really very good--as the
-furniture to a fairy-tale; the sweet, dim, silly tapestry was part of
-the peace. How Eppie saw it he didn't know; he didn't care; and she
-seemed willing not to care, either, about what he saw or thought. Eppie
-had for him in their fairy-tale all the unexacting loveliness of summer
-nature, healing, sunny, smiling. He had been really ill, he knew that
-now, and that the peace was in part the languor of convalescence, and,
-for the sake of his recovery, she seemed to have become a part of
-nature, to ask no questions and demand no dues.
-
-To have her so near, so tender, so untroubling, was like holding in his
-hands a soft, contented wild bird. He could, he thought, have held it
-against his heart, and the heart would not have throbbed the faster.
-
-There was nothing in her now of the young Valkyrie of mists and frosts,
-shaking spears and facing tragedy with stern eyes. She threatened
-nothing. She saw no tragedy. It was all again as if, in a bigger, more
-beautiful way, she gave him milk to drink from a silver cup. Together
-they drank, no potion, no enchanted, perilous potion, but, from the cup
-of innocent summer days, the long, sweet dream of an Eternal Now.
-
-To-day, for the first time, the hint of a cloud had crept into the sky.
-
-"And to-morrow, Eppie, ends our tte--tte," he said. "Or will Grainger
-make as little of a third as the general and Miss Barbara?"
-
-"He sha'n't spoil things, if that's what you mean," said Eppie.
-
-She wore a white dress and a white hat wreathed with green; the emerald
-drops trembled in the shadow of her hair. She made him think of some
-wandering princess in an Irish legend, with the white and green and the
-tranquil shining of her eyes.
-
-"Not our things, perhaps; but can't he interfere with them? He will want
-to talk with you about all the things we go on so happily without
-talking of."
-
-"I'll talk to him and go on happily with you."
-
-It was almost on his lips to ask her if she could marry Grainger and
-still go on happily, like this, with him, Gavan. That it should have
-seemed possible to ask it showed how far into fairy-land they had
-wandered; but it was one of the turnings that one didn't choose to take;
-one was warned in one's sleep of lurking dangers on that road. It might
-lead one straight out of fairy-land, straight into uncomfortable waking.
-
-"How happily we do go on, Eppie," was what he did choose to say. "More
-happily than ever before. What a contrast this--to East London."
-
-She glanced at him. "And to Surrey."
-
-"And to Surrey," he accepted.
-
-"Surrey was worse than East London," she said.
-
-"I didn't know how much of a strain it had been until I got away from
-it."
-
-"One saw it all in your face."
-
-"'One' meaning a clever Eppie, I suppose. But, yes, I had a bad moment
-there."
-
-The memory of that heave of sod had no place in fairy-land, even less
-place than the forecast of an Eppie married to Jim Grainger, and he
-didn't let his thought dwell on it even when he owned to the bad
-moment, and he was thinking, really with amusement over her
-unconsciousness, of the two means of escape from it that he had found to
-his hand,--the pistol and her letter,--when she took up his words with a
-quiet, "Yes, I knew you had."
-
-"Knew that I had had a strain, you mean?"
-
-"No, had a bad moment," she answered.
-
-"You saw it in my face?"
-
-"No. I knew. Before I saw you."
-
-He smiled at her. "You have a clairvoyant streak in your Scotch blood?"
-
-She smiled back. "Probably. I knew, you see."
-
-Her assurance, with its calm over what it knew, really puzzled him.
-
-"Well, what did you know?"
-
-She had kept on quietly smiling while she looked at him, and, though she
-now became grave, it was not as if for pain but for thankfulness. "It
-was in the evening, the day after I wrote to you, the day your father
-was buried. I went to my room to dress for dinner, my room next yours,
-you know. And I was looking out,--at the pine-tree, the summer-house
-where we played, and, in especial, I remember, at the white roses that I
-could smell in the evening so distinctly,--when I knew, or saw, I don't
-know which, that you were in great suffering. It was most of all as if I
-were in you, feeling it myself, rather than seeing or knowing. Then,"
-her voice went on in its unshaken quiet, "I did seem to see--a grave;
-not your father's grave. You were seeing it, too,--a green grave. And
-then I came back into myself and knew. You were in some way,--going. I
-stood there and looked at the roses and seemed only to wait intensely,
-to watch intensely. And after that came a great calm, and I knew that
-you were not going."
-
-She quietly looked at him again,--her eyes had not been on him while she
-spoke,--and, though he had paled a little, he looked as quietly back.
-
-He found himself accepting, almost as a matter of course, this deep,
-subconscious bond between them.
-
-But in another moment, another realization came. He took her hand and
-raised it to his lips.
-
-"I always make you suffer."
-
-"No," she answered, though she, now, was a little pale, "I didn't
-suffer. I was beyond, above all that. Whatever happened, we were really
-safe. That was another thing I knew."
-
-He relinquished the kissed hand. "Dear Eppie, dear, dear Eppie, I am
-glad that this happened."
-
-It had been, perhaps, to keep the dream safely around them that she had
-shown him only the calm; for now she asked, and he felt the echo of that
-suffering--that shared suffering--in it, "You had, then, chosen to go?"
-
-Somehow he knew that they were safe in the littler sense, that she would
-keep the dream unawakened, even if they spoke of the outside life.
-"Yes," he said, "you saw what was happening to me, Eppie. I had chosen
-to go. But your letter came, and, instead, I chose to come to you."
-
-She asked no further question, walking beside him with all her
-tranquillity.
-
-But, to her, it was not in a second childhood, not in a fairy-tale, that
-they went. She was tranquil, for him; a child, for him; healing,
-unexacting nature, for him. But she knew she had not needed his
-admission to know it, that it was life and death that went together.
-
-Sometimes, as they walked, the whole glory of the day melted into a
-phantasmagoria, unreal, specious, beside the intense reality of their
-unspoken thoughts, his thoughts and hers; those thoughts that left them
-only this little strip of fairy-land where they could meet in peace.
-Thoughts only, not dislikes, not indifferences, sundered them. Their
-natures, through all nature's gamut, chimed; they looked upon each
-other--when in fairy-land--with eyes of love. But above this accord was
-a region where her human breath froze in an icy airlessness, where her
-human flesh shattered itself against ghastly precipices. To see those
-thoughts of Gavan's was like having the lunar landscape suddenly glare
-at one through a telescope. His thoughts and hers were as real as life
-and death; they alone were real; only--and this was why, under its
-burden, Eppie's heart throbbed more deeply, more strongly,--only, life
-conquered death. No, more still,--for so the strange evening vision had
-borne its speechless, sightless witness,--life had already conquered
-death. She had not needed him to tell her that, either.
-
-And these days were life; not the dream he thought them, not the
-fairy-tale, but balmy dawn stealing in, fresh, revivifying, upon his
-long, arctic night; the flush of spring over the lunar landscape. So
-she saw it with her eyes of faith.
-
-The mother was strong in her. She could bide her time. She could see
-death near him and, so that he should not see her fear, smile at him.
-She could play games with him, and wait.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Jim Grainger arrived that evening, and Gavan was able to observe, at the
-closest sort of quarters, his quondam rival.
-
-His condition was so obvious that its very indifference to observation
-took everybody into its confidence. Nobody counted with Mr. Grainger
-except his cousin, and since he held open before her eyes--with angry
-constancy, gloomy patience--the page of his devotion, the rest of the
-company were almost forced to read with her. One couldn't see Mr.
-Grainger without seeing that page.
-
-He held it open, but the period of construing had evidently passed. All
-that there was to understand she understood long since, so that he was,
-for the most part, silent.
-
-In Eppie's presence he would wander aimlessly about, look with an oddly
-irate, unseeing eye at books or pictures, and fling himself into deep
-chairs, where he sat, his arms folded in a sort of clutch, his head bent
-forward, gazing at her with an air of dogged, somber resolve.
-
-He was not by nature so taciturn. It was amusing to see the vehemence of
-reaction that would overtake him in the smoking-room, where his
-volubility became almost as overbearing and oppressive as his silences.
-
-He was a man at once impatient and self-controlled. His face was all
-made up of short, resolute lines. His nose, chopped off at the tip; his
-lips, curled yet compressed; the energetic modeling of his brows with
-their muscular protuberances; the clefted chin; the crest of chestnut
-hair,--all expressed a wilful abruptness, an arrested force, the more
-vehement for its repression.
-
-And at present his appearance accurately expressed him as a determined
-but exasperated lover.
-
-"Of course," Miss Barbara said, in whispered confidence to Gavan,
-mingled pity and reprobation in her voice, "as her cousin he comes when
-he wishes to do so. But she has refused him twice already--he told me so
-himself; and, simply, he will not accept it. He only spoke of it once,
-and it was quite distressing. It really grieved me to hear him. He said
-that he would hang on till one or the other of them was dead."
-Grainger's words in Miss Barbara's voice were the more pathetic for
-their incongruity.
-
-"And you don't think she will have him,--if he does hang on?" Gavan
-asked.
-
-Miss Barbara glanced at him with a soft, scared look, as though his
-easy, colloquial question had turned a tawdry light on some tender,
-twilight dreaming of her own.
-
-He had wondered, anew of late, what Miss Barbara did think about him and
-Eppie, and what she had thought he now saw in her eyes, that showed
-their little shock, as at some rather graceless piece of pretence. He
-was quite willing that she should think him pretending, and quite
-willing that she should place him in Grainger's hopeless category, if
-future events would be most easily so interpreted for her; so that he
-remained silent, as if over his relief, when she assured him, "Oh, I am
-sure not. Eppie does not change her mind."
-
-Grainger's presence, for all its ineffectuality, thus witnessed to by
-Miss Barbara, was as menacing to peace and sunshine as a huge
-thunder-cloud that suddenly heaves itself up from the horizon and hangs
-over a darkened landscape. But Eppie ignored the thunder-cloud; and,
-hanging over fairy-land, it became as merely decorative as an enchanted
-giant tethered at a safe distance and almost amusing in his huge
-helplessness.
-
-Eppie continued to give most of her time to Gavan, coloring her manner
-with something of a hospital nurse's air of devotion to an obvious duty,
-and leaving Grainger largely to the general's care while she and Gavan
-sat reading for hours in the shade of the birch-woods.
-
-Grainger often came upon them so; Eppie in her white dress, her hat cast
-aside, a book open upon her knees, and Gavan, in his white flannels,
-lying beside her, frail and emaciated, not looking at her,--Grainger
-seldom saw him look at her,--but down at the heather that he softly
-pulled and wrenched at. They were as beautiful, seen thus together, as
-any fairy-tale couple; flakes of gold wavering over their whiteness,
-the golden day all about their illumined shade, and rivulets from the
-sea of purple that surrounded them running in among the birches, making
-purple pools and eddies.
-
-Very beautiful, very strange, very pathetic, with all their serenity;
-even the unimaginative Grainger so felt them when, emerging from the
-gold and purple, he would pause before them, swinging his stick and
-eying them oddly, like people in a fairy-tale upon whom some strange
-enchantment rested. One might imagine--but Grainger's imagination never
-took him so far--that they would always sit there among the birches,
-spellbound in their peace, their smiling, magic peace.
-
-"Come and listen to Faust, Jim. We are polishing up our German," Eppie
-would cheerfully suggest; but Grainger, remarking that he had none to
-polish, would pass on, carrying the memory of Gavan's impassive, upward
-glance at him and the meaning in Eppie's eyes--eyes in which, yes, he
-was sure of it, and it was there he felt the pathos, some consciousness
-seemed at once to hide from and to challenge him.
-
-"Is he ill, your young Palairet?" he asked her one day, when they were
-alone together in the library. His rare references to his own emotions
-made the old, cousinly intimacy a frequent meeting-ground.
-
-He noticed that a faint color drifted into Eppie's cheek when he named
-Gavan.
-
-"He is as old as you are, Jim," she remarked.
-
-"He looks like a person to be taken care of, all the same."
-
-"He has been ill. He took care of some one else, as it happens. He
-nursed his father for months."
-
-"Um," Grainger gave an inarticulate grunt, "just about what he's fit
-for, isn't it? to help dying people out of the world."
-
-Eppie received this in silence, and he went on: "He looks rather like a
-priest, or a poet--something decorative and useless."
-
-"Would you call Buddha decorative and useless?"
-
-"After all, Palairet isn't a Hindoo. One expects something more normal
-from a white man."
-
-His odd penetration was hurting her, but she laughed at his complacent
-Anglo-Saxondom. "If you want a white man, what do you make of the one
-who wrote the Imitation?"
-
-"Make of him? Nothing. Nor any one else, I fancy. What does your young
-Palairet do?" Grainger brought the subject firmly back from her
-digression.
-
-Eppie was sitting in the window-seat, and, leaning her head back, framed
-in an arabesque of creepers, she now owned, after a little pause, and as
-if with a weariness of evasion she was willing to let him see as she
-did: "Nothing, really."
-
-"Does he care about anything?" Grainger placed himself opposite her,
-folding his arms with an air of determined inquiry.
-
-And again Eppie owned, "He believes in nothing, so how can he care?"
-
-"Believes in nothing? What do you mean by that?"
-
-"Well," with a real sense of amusement over the inner icy weight, she
-was ready to put it in its crudest, most inclusive terms, "he doesn't
-believe in immortality."
-
-Grainger stared, taken aback by the ingenuous avowal.
-
-"Immortality? No more do I," he retorted.
-
-"Oh, yes, you do," said Eppie, looking not at him but out at the summer
-sky. "You believe in life and so you do believe in immortality, even
-though you don't know that you do. You are, like most energetic people,
-too much preoccupied with living to know what your life means, that's
-all."
-
-"My dear child,"--Grainger was fond of this form of appellation, an
-outlet for the pent-up forces of his baffled tenderness,--"any one who
-is alive finds life worth while without a Paradise to complete it, and
-any one who isn't a coward doesn't turn from it because it's also
-unhappy."
-
-"If you think that Gavan does that you mistake the very essence of his
-skepticism, or, if you like to call it so, of his faith. It's not
-because he finds it unhappy that he turns from it, but because he finds
-it meaningless."
-
-"Meaningless?--a place where one can work, achieve, love, suffer?"
-
-Grainger jerked out the words from an underlying growl of protest.
-
-Eppie now looked from the sky to him, her unconscious ally. "Dear old
-Jim, I like to hear you. You've got it, all. Every word you say implies
-immortality. It's all a question of being conscious of one's real needs
-and then of trusting them."
-
-"Life, here, now, could satisfy my needs," he said.
-
-She kept her eyes on his, at this, for a grave moment, letting it have
-its full stress as she took it up with, "Could it? With death at the end
-of it?" and without waiting for his answer she passed from the personal
-moment. "You said that life was worth while, and you meant, I suppose,
-that it was worth while because we were capable of making it good rather
-than evil."
-
-"Well, of course," said Grainger.
-
-"And a real choice between good and evil is only possible to a real
-identity, you'll own?"
-
-"If you are going to talk metaphysics I'll cut and run, I warn you.
-Socratic methods of tripping one up always infuriate me."
-
-"I'm only trying to talk common-sense."
-
-"Well, go on. I agree to what you say of a real identity. We've that, of
-course."
-
-"Well, then, can an identity destroyed at death by the destruction of
-the body be called real? It can't, Jim. It's either only a result of the
-body, a merely materialistic phenomenon, or else it is a transient,
-unreal aspect of some supremely real World-Self and its good and its
-evil just as fated by that Self's way of thinking it as the color of its
-hair and eyes is fated by nature. And if that were so the sense of
-freedom, of identity, that gives us our only sanction for goodness,
-truth, and worth, would be a mere illusion."
-
-Her earnestness, as she worked it out for him, held his eyes more than
-her words his thoughts. He was observing her with such a softening of
-expression as rarely showed itself on his virile countenance.
-
-"You've thought it all out, haven't you?" he said.
-
-"I've tried to. Knowing Gavan has made me. It has converted me," she
-smiled.
-
-"So that's your conversion."
-
-"Oh, more than that. I know that I'm _in_ life; _for_ it, and that's
-more than all such reasoning."
-
-"And you believe that you'll go on forever as you are now," he said. His
-eyes dwelt on her: "Young and beautiful."
-
-"_Forever_; what queer words we must use to try to express it. We are in
-Forever now. It's just that one casts in one's lot, open-eyed, with
-life."
-
-"And has Palairet cast in his with death?"
-
-Again the change of color was in her cheek, but it was to pallor now.
-
-"He thinks so."
-
-"And he doesn't frighten you?"
-
-She armed herself to smile over Gavan's old question. "Why should he?"
-
-Grainger left her for some moments of aimless, silent wandering. He came
-back and paused again before her. He did not answer her.
-
-"I throw in my lot with life, too, Eppie," he said, "and I ask no more
-of it than the here and the now of our human affair. But that I do ask
-with all my might, and if might can give it to me, I'll get it."
-
-She looked up at him gravely, without challenge, with a sympathy too
-deep for pity.
-
-"At all events," he added slowly, "at all events, in so far, our lots
-are cast together."
-
-"Yes," she assented.
-
-His eyes studied hers; his keen mind questioned itself: Could a woman
-look so steadily, with such a clear, untroubled sympathy, upon such a
-love as his, were there no great emotion within her, controlling her,
-absorbing her, making her indifferent to all lesser appeals? Had this
-negative, this aimless, this ambiguous man, captured, without any fight
-for it, her strong, her reckless heart? So he questioned, while Eppie
-still answered his gaze with eyes that showed him nothing but their
-grave, deep friendship.
-
-"So it's a contest between life and death?" he said at last.
-
-"Between me and Gavan you mean?"
-
-The shield of their personal question had dropped from her again, and
-the quick flush was in her cheek.
-
-"Oh, I come into it, too," he ventured.
-
-"You don't, in any way, depend on it, Jim."
-
-"So you say." His eyes still mercilessly perused her. "That remains to
-be seen. If you lose, perhaps I shall come into it."
-
-Eppie found no answer.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-It was night, and Eppie, Gavan, and Jim Grainger were on the lawn before
-the house waiting for a display of fireworks.
-
-Grainger was feeling sore for his own shutting-out from the happy
-child-world of games and confidences that the other two inhabited, for
-it had been to Gavan that she had spoken of her love for fireworks and
-he who had at once sent for them.
-
-Grainger was sore and his heart heavy, and not only it seemed to him, on
-his own account. Since the encounter in the library there had been a
-veil between him and Eppie, and through it he seemed to see her face as
-waiting the oncoming of some unknown fate. Grainger could not feel that
-fate, whatever the form it took, as a happy one.
-
-She stood between them now, in her white dress, wrapped around with a
-long, white Chinese shawl, and the light from the open window behind
-them fell upon her hair, her neck, her shoulders, and the shawl's soft,
-thick embroideries that were like frozen milk.
-
-Gavan and Grainger leaned against the deep creepers of the old walls,
-Gavan's cigarette a steady little point of light, the glow of
-Grainger's pipe, as he puffed, coming and going in sharp pulses of
-color.
-
-Aunt Barbara sat within at the open window, and beyond the gates, at the
-edge of the moor, the general and the gardener, dark figures fitfully
-revealed by the light of lanterns, superintended the preparations.
-
-The moment was like that in which one watches a poised orchestra, in
-which one waits, tense and expectant, for the fall of the conductor's
-bton and for the first, sweeping note.
-
-It seemed to break upon the stillness, sound made visible, when the
-herald rocket soared up from the dark earth, up to the sky of stars.
-
-Bizarre, exquisite, glorious, it caught one's breath with the swiftness,
-the strength, the shining, of its long, exultant flight; its languor of
-attainment; its curve and droop; the soft shock of its blossoming into
-an unearthly metamorphosis of splendor far and high on the zenith.
-
-The note was struck and after it the symphony followed.
-
-Like a ravished Ganymede, the sense of sight soared amazed among
-dazzling ecstasies of light and movement.
-
-Thin ribbons of fire streaked the sky; radiant sheaves showered drops of
-multitudinous gold; fierce constellations of color whirled themselves to
-stillness on the night's solemn permanence; a rain of stars drifted
-wonderfully, with the softness of falling snow, down gulfs of space. And
-then again the rockets, strong, suave, swift, and their blossoming
-lassitude.
-
-Eppie gazed, silent and motionless, her uplifted profile like a child's
-in its astonished joy. Once or twice she looked round at Gavan and at
-Grainger,--always first at Gavan,--smiling, and speechless with delight.
-Her folded arms had dropped to her sides and the shawl fell straightly
-from her shoulders. She made one think of some young knight, transfixed
-before a heavenly vision, a benediction of revealed beauty. The trivial
-occasion lent itself to splendid analogies. The strange light from above
-bathed her from head to foot in soft, intermittent, heavenly color.
-
-Suddenly, in darkness, Grainger seized her hand. She had hardly felt the
-pressure, short, sharp with all the exasperation of his worship, before
-it was gone.
-
-She did not turn to look at him. More than the unjustifiableness of the
-action, its unexpectedness, she felt a pain, a perplexity, as for
-something mocking, incongruous. And as if in instinctive seeking she
-turned her eyes on Gavan and found that he was looking at her.
-
-Was it, then, her eyes, seeking and perplexed, that compelled him; was
-it his own enfranchised impulse; was it only a continuation of
-fairy-land fitness, the child instinct of sharing in a unison of touch a
-mutual wonder? In the fringes of her shawl his hand sought and found her
-hand. Another rose of joy had expanded on the sky; and they stood so,
-hand in hand, looking up.
-
-Eppie looked up steadily; but now the outer vision was but a dim symbol,
-a reflection, vaguely seen, of the inner vision that, in a miracle of
-accomplished growth, broke upon her. She did not think or know. Her
-heart seemed to dilate, to breathe itself away in long throbs, that
-worshiped, that trembled, that prayed. Her strength was turned to
-weakness and her weakness rose to strength, and, as she looked up at the
-sky, the stars, the dream-like constellations that bloomed and drifted
-away, universes made and unmade on the void, her mind, her heart, her
-spirit were all one prayer and its strength and its humility were one.
-
-She had known that she loved him, but not till now that she loved him
-with a depth that passed beyond knowledge; she had known that he loved
-her, but not till now had she felt that all that lived in him was hers
-forever. His voice, his eyes, might hide, might deny, but the seeking,
-instinctive hand confessed, dumbly, to all.
-
-She had drawn him to her by her will; she had held him back from death
-by her love. His beloved hand clasped hers; she would never let him go.
-
-Looking up at the night, the stars, holding his hand, she gave herself
-to the new life, to all that it might mean of woe and tragedy. Let it
-lead her where it would, she was beside him forever.
-
-Yet, though her spirit held the sky, the stars, her heart, suffocated
-and appalled with love, seemed to lie at his feet, and the inarticulate
-prayer, running through all, said only, over and over, "O God, God."
-
-Meanwhile Grainger leaned against the wall, puffing doggedly at his
-pipe, unrepentant and unsatisfied.
-
-"There, that is the end," Miss Barbara sighed. "How very, very pretty.
-But they have made me quite sleepy."
-
-A few fumes still smoldered at the edge of the moor, and the night, like
-an obscure ocean, was engulfing the lights, the movements; after the
-radiance the darkness was thick, oppressive.
-
-Eppie knew, as Gavan released her hand, that his eyes again sought hers,
-but she would not look at him. What could they say, here and now?
-
-He went on into the house, and Grainger, lingering outside, detained her
-on the steps. "You forgive me?" he said.
-
-She had almost forgotten for what, but fixing her eyes and thoughts upon
-him, she said, "Yes, Jim, of course."
-
-"I couldn't stand it,--you were so lovely," said Grainger; "I didn't
-know that I was such a sentimental brute. But I had no business not to
-stand it. It's my business in life to stand it."
-
-"I am so sorry, Jim," Eppie murmured. "You know, I can do
-nothing--except forgive you."
-
-"I am not ungrateful. I know how good it is of you to put up with me. Do
-I bother you too much, Eppie?"
-
-"No, Jim dear; you don't."
-
-He stood aside for her to enter the house. He saw that, with all her
-effort to be kind, her thought passed from him. Pausing to knock the
-ashes of his pipe against the wall, he softly murmured, "Damn," before
-following her into the house.
-
-Eppie, in her own room, put out her candle and went to the window.
-
-Leaning out, she could see the soft maze of tree-tops emerge from the
-dim abyss beneath. The boughs of the pine-tree made the starlit sky pale
-with their blackness.
-
-This was the window where she and Gavan had stood on the morning of
-Robbie's death. Here Gavan had shuddered, sobbing, in her arms. He had
-suffered, he had been able to love and suffer then.
-
-The long past went before her, this purpose in it all, her purpose; in
-all the young, unconscious beginnings, in the reunion, in her growing
-consciousness of something to oppose, to conquer, to save. And to-night
-had consecrated her to that sacred trust. What lived in him was hers.
-But could she keep him in life? The memory, a dark shadow, of the deep
-indifference that she had seen in his contemplative eyes went with a
-chill over her.
-
-Leaning out, she conquered her own deep fear, looking up at the stars
-and still praying, "O God, God."
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-She could not read his face next day. It showed a change, but the
-significance of the change was hidden from her. He knew that she knew;
-was that it? or did he think that they could still pretend at the
-unchanged fairy-tale where one clasped hands simply, like children? Or
-did he trust her to spare them both, now that she knew?
-
-When they were alone, this, more than all, the pale, jaded face seemed
-to tell her, it would be able to hide nothing; but its strength was in
-evasion; he would not be alone with her.
-
-All the morning he spent with the general and in the afternoon he went
-away, a book under his arm, down to the burn.
-
-From the library window Eppie watched him go. She could see for a long
-time the flicker of his white figure among the distant birches.
-
-She sat in a low chair in the deep embrasure of the window-seat, silent
-and motionless. She felt, after the night's revelation, an apathy,
-mental and physical; a willing pause; a lull of the spirit, that rested
-in its accepted fate, should it be joyful or tragic. The very fact of
-such acceptance partook of both tragedy and joy.
-
-Grainger was with her, walking, as usual, up and down the room, glancing
-at her as he passed and repassed.
-
-He felt, all about him, within and without, the pressure of some crisis;
-and his ignorance, his intuitions, struggling within him, made a
-consciousness, oddly mingled, of sharp pain, deep dread, and,
-superficially, a suffocating irritation, continually rising and
-continually repressed.
-
-Eppie's aspect intensified the mingled consciousness. Her figure, in its
-thin dress of black and white, showed lassitude. With her head thrown
-back against the chair, her hands, long, white, inert, lying along the
-chair-arms, she looked out from the cool shadow of the room at the day,
-fierce in its blue and gold, its sunlight and its wind.
-
-He had seen Gavan pass, so strangely alone; he had watched her watching
-of him. She was languid; but she was patient, she was strong. That was
-part of the suffocation, that such strength, such patience, should be
-devoted to ends so undeserving. More than by mere jealousy, though that
-seethed in him, he was oppressed by the bitter sense of waste, of the
-futile spending of noble capacity; for, more than all, she was piteous;
-there came the part of pain and dread, the presage of doom that weighed
-on his heart.
-
-In her still figure, her steady look out at the empty, splendid vault of
-blue, the monotonous purple stretches of the moor, his unesthetic,
-accurate mind felt, with the sharp intuition that carried him so much
-further than any conscious appreciation, a symbol of the human soul
-contemplating the ominous enigma of its destiny. She made him dimly
-think of some old picture he had seen, a saint, courageous, calm,
-enraptured, in the luminous pause before a dark, accepted martyrdom. He
-did violence to the simile, shaking it off vehemently, with a clutch at
-the sane impatience of silly fancies.
-
-Stopping abruptly before her, though hardly knowing for what end, he
-found himself saying, and the decisive words, as he heard, rather than
-thought them, had indeed the effect of shattering foolish visions, "I
-shall go to-day, Eppie."
-
-In seeing her startled, pained, expostulatory, he saw her again, very
-sanely, as an unfortunate woman bent on doing for herself and unable to
-hide her situation from his keen-sightedness. For really he didn't know
-whether a hopeless love-affair or a hopeless marriage would the more
-completely "do" for her.
-
-"My dear Jim, why to-day?" Eppie asked in a tone of kindest protest.
-
-He was glad to have drawn her down to the solid ground of his own
-grievances. She hurt him less there.
-
-"Why not to-day?" he retorted.
-
-She replied that, if for no better reason, the weather was too lovely
-not to be enjoyed by them all together.
-
-"Thanks, but I don't care about the weather. Nor do I care," Grainger
-went on, taking the sorry comfort that his own mere ill-temper afforded
-him, "to watch other people's enjoyment--of more than weather. I'm not
-made of such selfless stuff as that."
-
-She understood, of course; perhaps she had all along understood what he
-was feeling more clearly than clumsy he had, and she met all that was
-beneath the mannerless words with her air of sad kindliness.
-
-"You can share it, Jim."
-
-"No, I can't share it. I share nothing--except the weather."
-
-She murmured, as she had the night before, that she was sorry, adding
-that she must have failed; but he interrupted her with: "It's not that.
-You are all right. You give me all you can. It's merely that you can't
-give me anything I want. I came to see if there was any chance for me,
-and all I do see is that I may as well be off. I do myself no good by
-staying on,--harm, rather; you may begin to resent my sulkiness and my
-boorish relapses from even rudimentary good manners."
-
-"I have resented nothing, Jim. I can't imagine ever resenting
-anything--from you."
-
-"Ah, that's just the worst of it," Grainger muttered.
-
-"For your own sake," Eppie went on, "you are perhaps wise to go. I own
-that I can't see what happiness you can find in being with me, while you
-feel as you do."
-
-"While I feel as I do," he repeated, not ironically, but as if weighing
-the words in a sort of wonder. "That 'while' is funny, Eppie. You are
-right. I don't find happiness, and I came to seek it." The "while" had
-cut deep. He paused, then added, eying her, "So I'll go, and leave
-Palairet to find the happiness."
-
-Eppie was silent. Paler than before, her eyes dropped, she seemed to
-accept with a helpless magnanimity whatever he might choose to say. "You
-find me impertinent,"--Grainger, standing before her, clutched his arms
-across his chest and put his own thought of himself into the
-words,--"brutal."
-
-Without looking up at him she answered: "I am so fond of you, so near
-you, that I suppose I give you the right."
-
-The patient words, so unlike Eppie in their patience, the downcast eyes,
-were a torch to his exasperation.
-
-"I can take it, then--the right?" he said. "I am near enough to say the
-truth and to ask it, Eppie?"
-
-She rose and walked away from him.
-
-With the sense of hot pursuit that sprang up in him he felt himself as
-ruthless as a boy, pushing through the thickets of reticence, through
-the very supplications of generosity, to the nest of her secret. It was
-not joy he sought, but his own pain, and to see it clearly, finally. He
-must see it. And when Eppie, her back to him, leaning her arm on the
-mantel and looking down into the empty cavern of the great
-chimney-place, answered, accepting all his implications, "Gavan hasn't
-found any happiness," he said, "He finds all that he asks for."
-
-It was as if he had wrenched away the last bough from the nest, and the
-words gave him, with their breathless determination, an ugly feeling of
-cruel, breaking malignity.
-
-Eppie's face was still turned from him so that he could not see how she
-bore the rifling, but in the same dulled and gentle voice she answered,
-"He doesn't ask what you do."
-
-At that Grainger's deepest resentment broke out.
-
-"Doesn't ask your love? No, I suppose not. The man's a mollusk,--a
-wretched, diseased creature."
-
-He had struck at last a flash from her persistent gentleness. She faced
-him, and he saw that she tried to smile over deep anger.
-
-"You say that because Gavan is not in love with me? It is a sick fancy
-that sees every man not in love with me as sick too."
-
-She had taken up a weapon at last, she really challenged him; and he
-felt, full on that quivering nerve of dread, that she defended at once
-herself and the man she loved from her own and from his unveiling.
-
-It made a sort of rage rise in him.
-
-"A man who cares for you,--a man who depends on you,--as he does,--a man
-whom you care for,--so much,--is a bloodless vampire if he
-doesn't--respond."
-
-When he had driven the knife in like that, straight up to the hilt, he
-hardly knew whether his anger or his adoration were the greater; for, as
-if over a disabling wound, she bent her head in utter surrender, quite
-still for a moment, and then saying only, while she looked at him as if
-more sorry for him than for herself, "You hurt me, Jim."
-
-Tears of fury stood in his eyes. "You hurt, too. My love for you--a
-disease. _My_ love, Eppie!"
-
-"Forgive me."
-
-"Forgive you! I worship everything you say or do!"
-
-"It was that it hurt too much to see--what you did, with your eyes."
-
-"Then--then--you don't deny it,--if I have eyes to see, he too must
-see--how much you care?"
-
-"I don't deny it."
-
-"And if I have courage enough to ask it, you have courage enough to
-answer me? You love him, Eppie?"
-
-He had come to her, his eyes threatening her, beseeching her, adoring
-her, all at once. She saw it all--all that he felt, and the furious pity
-that was deeper than his own deep pain. She could resent nothing, deny
-nothing. As she had said, he was so near.
-
-She put her hand on his shoulder, keeping him from her, yet accepting
-him as near, and then all that she found to say--but it was in a voice
-that brought a rapt pallor to his face--was, "Dear Jim."
-
-He understood her--all that she accepted, all that she avowed. Her hand
-was that of a comrade in misfortune. She forgave brutality from a heart
-as stricken as his. She forgave even his cruelly clear seeing of her own
-desperate case--a seeing that had revealed to her that it was indeed
-very desperate. But if she too was stricken, she too was resolute, and
-she could do no more for him than look with him at the truth. Their
-eyes recognized so many likenesses in each other.
-
-He took the hand at last in both his own, looking down at it, pressing
-it hard.
-
-"Poor darling," he said.
-
-"No, Jim."
-
-"Yes; even if he loves you."
-
-"Even if he doesn't love me--and he does love me in a strange, unwilling
-way; but even if he doesn't love me,--as you and I mean love,--I am not
-piteous."
-
-"Even if he loves you, you are piteous." All his savagery had fallen
-from him. His quiet was like the slow dropping of tears.
-
-"No, Jim. There is the joy of loving. You know that."
-
-"You are more piteous than I, Eppie. You, _you_, to sue to such a man.
-He is the negation of everything you mean. To live with him would be
-like fighting for breath. If you marry him,--if you bring him to
-it,--he'll suffocate you."
-
-"No, Jim," she repeated,--and now, looking up, he saw in those beloved
-eyes the deep wells of solemn joy,--"I am the stronger."
-
-"In fighting, yes, perhaps. Not in every-day, passive life. He'll kill
-you."
-
-"Even if he kills me he'll not conquer me."
-
-He shook away the transcendentalism with a gentle impatience, "Much good
-that would do to me, who would only know that you were gone. Oh,
-Eppie!--"
-
-He pressed and let fall her hand.
-
-The words of the crisis were over. Anything else would be only, as it
-were, the filling in of the grave.
-
-He had walked away from her to the window, and said presently, while he
-looked out: "And I thought that you were ambitious. I loved you for it,
-too. I didn't want a wife who would acquiesce in the common lot or make
-a virtue of incapacity. I wanted a woman who would rather fail,
-open-eyed, in a big venture than rest in security. You would have
-buckled the sword on a man and told him that he must conquer high places
-for you. You would have told him that he must crown you and make you
-shine in the world's eyes, as well as in his own. And I could do it. You
-are so worthy of all the biggest opportunities and so unfit for little
-places. It's so stupid, you know," he finished, "that you aren't in love
-with me."
-
-"It is stupid, I own it," Eppie acquiesced.
-
-He found a certain relief in following these bitterly comic aspects of
-their case and presently took it up again with: "I am so utterly the man
-for you and he is so utterly not the man. I don't mean that I'm big
-enough or enough worth your while, but at least I could give you
-something, and I could fight for you. He won't fight, for you, or for
-anything."
-
-"I shall have to do all the fighting if I get him."
-
-"You want him so that you don't mind anything else. I see that."
-
-"Exactly. For a long time I didn't know how I loved him just because I
-had always taken all that you are saying for granted, in the funniest,
-most navely conceited way; I took it for granted that I was a very big
-person and that the man I married must stand for big opportunities. Now,
-you see," she finished, "he is my big opportunity."
-
-He was accepting it all now with no protest. "Next to no money, I
-suppose?" he questioned simply.
-
-"Next to none, Jim."
-
-"It means obscurity, unless a man has ambition."
-
-"It means all the things I've always hated." She smiled a little over
-these strange old hatreds.
-
-Again a silence fell, and it was again Grainger who broke it.
-
-"You may as well let me have the last drop of gall," he said. "Own that
-if it hadn't been for him you might have come to care for me."
-
-Still he did not look at her, and it was easier, so, to let him have the
-last gulp.
-
-"I probably should."
-
-He meditated the mixed flavor for some moments; pure gall would have
-been easier to swallow. And he took refuge at last in school-boy
-phraseology. "I should like to break all the furniture in the room."
-
-"I should like to break some, too," she rejoined, but she laughed out
-suddenly at this anticlimax, and, even before the unbroken heaviness of
-the gaze now turned on her, that comic aspect of their talk, the dearly,
-sanely comic, carried her laugh into a peal as boyish as his words.
-
-Grainger still gazed at her. "I love that in you," he said--"your laugh.
-You could laugh at death."
-
-"Ah, Jim," she said, smiling on, though with the laughter tears had come
-to her eyes, "it's a good deal more difficult to laugh at life,
-sometimes. And we both have to do a lot of living before we can laugh at
-death."
-
-"A lot of living," he repeated. His stern, firm face had a queer grimace
-of pain at the prospect of it, and again she put out her hand to him.
-
-"Let me count for as much as I can, always," she said. "You will always
-count for so much with me."
-
-He had taken the hand, and he looked at her in a long silence that
-promised, accepted, everything.
-
-But an appeal, a demand, wistful yet insistent, came into his silence as
-he looked--looked at the odd, pale, dear face, the tawny, russet hair,
-the dear, deep eyes.
-
-"I'm going now," he said, holding to his breast the hand she had given
-him. "And I will ask one thing of you--a thing I've never had and never
-shall, I suppose, again."
-
-"What is it, Jim?" But before his look she almost guessed and the
-guessing made her blanch.
-
-"Let me take you in my arms and kiss you," said Grainger.
-
-"Ah, Jim!" Seeing herself as cruel, ungenerous, she yet, in a recoil of
-her whole nature, seemed to snatch from him a treasure, unclaimed, but
-no longer hers to give.
-
-Grainger eyed her. "You could. You would--if it weren't for him."
-
-"You understand that, too, Jim. I could and would."
-
-"He robs me of even that, then--your gift of courageous pity."
-
-His comprehension had arrested the recoil. And now the magnanimity she
-felt in him, the tragic force of the love he had seen barred from her
-forever, set free in her something greater than compassion and deeper
-than little loyalties, deeper than the lesser aspects of her own deep
-love. It was that love itself that seemed, with an expansion of power,
-to encircle all life, all need, all sorrow, and to find joy in
-sacrificing what was less to what was greater.
-
-He saw the change that, in its illumined tenderness, shut away his
-craving heart yet drew him near for the benison that it could grant, and
-as she said to him, "No, Jim, he shall not rob you," his arms went round
-her.
-
-She shut her eyes to the pain there must be in enduring his passion of
-gratitude; but, though he held her close, kissing her cheeks, her brow,
-her hair, it was with a surprising, an exquisite tenderness.
-
-The pain that came for her was when,--pausing to gaze long into her
-face, printing forever upon his mind the wonderful memory of what she
-could look like, for him--he kissed her lips; it came in a pang of
-personal longing; in a yearning, that rose and stifled her, for other
-arms, other kisses; and, opening her eyes, she saw, an ironic answer to
-the inner cry, Gavan's face outside, turned upon her in an instant of
-swift passing.
-
-Grainger had not seen. He did not speak another word to her. The kiss
-upon her lips had been in farewell. He had had his supreme moment. He
-let her go and left her.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-Gavan came up from the burn, restless and dissatisfied.
-
-He had wanted solitude, escape; but when he was alone, and walking
-beside the sun-dappled water, the loneliness weighed on him and he had
-seemed to himself walking with his own ghost, looking into eyes familiar
-yet alien, with curiosity and with fear. Was it he or that phantom of
-the solitude who smiled the long, still smile of mockery?
-
-How he wanted something and how he wanted not to want; to be freed from
-the intolerable stirring and striving within him, as of a maimed thing,
-with half-atrophied wings, that could never rise and fly to its goal. It
-was last night that had wakened this turmoil, and as he walked his
-thought turned and turned about those moments under the dazzling sky
-when he had found her hand in the fringes of her shawl.
-
-He knew that there had been a difference in the yielding of her hand, as
-he had known, in his own helpless stretching out for it in the darkness,
-another impulse than that of childlike tenderness. It had been as if
-some deep, primeval will beneath his own had stretched his hand out,
-searching in the dark; and with the strange blissfulness of so standing
-with her beneath the stars, there came a strange, new fear, as though he
-no longer knew himself and were become an automaton held by some
-incalculable force.
-
-Wandering through the woods in the hope of rentering nature's
-beneficent impersonality, he felt no anodynes--only that striving and
-stirring within him of maimed limbs and helpless wings.
-
-There was no refuge in nature, and there was none in himself. The
-thought of Eppie as refuge did not form itself, but it was again in
-seeking, as if through darkness for he knew not what, that he turned to
-the house. And then, on all his tangled mood, fell the vibrating shock
-of that vision at the window.
-
-With his quick looking away he did not know whether Eppie had seen him
-see. He went on, knowing nothing definite, until, suddenly, as if some
-fierce beast had seized him, he found himself struggling, choking, torn
-by a hideous, elemental jealousy.
-
-He stood still in the afternoon sunlight as he became aware of this
-phenomenon in himself, his hands involuntarily clenched, staring as if
-at a palpable enemy.
-
-The savage, rudimentary man had sprung up in him. He hated Grainger. He
-longed to beat him into the earth, to crush the breath out of him; and
-for a moment, most horrible of all,--a moment that seemed to set fangs
-in his throat,--he could not tell whether he more hated Eppie or more
-desired to tear her from the rival, to seize her and bear her away, with
-a passion untouched by any glamour.
-
-And Gavan was conscious, through it all, that only inhuman heights made
-possible such crumbling, crashing falls into savagedom; conscious that
-Grainger could not have known such thoughts. They were as ugly as those
-of a Saint Anthony. Wholesome manhood would recoil from their
-debasement. He, too, recoiled, but the debasement was within him, he
-could not flee from it. The moment of realization, helpless realization,
-was long. Ultra-civilization stood and watched barbarian hordes swarm
-over its devastated ruins. Then, with a feeling of horrible shame, a
-shame that was almost a nausea, he went on into the house.
-
-In his own room he sat down near the window, took his head in his hands,
-the gesture adding poignancy to his humiliation, and gazed at the truth.
-He had stripped himself of all illusion only to make himself the more
-helpless before its lowest forms. More than the realized love was the
-realized jealousy; more than the anguish at the thought of having lost
-her was the rage of the dispossessed, unsatisfied brute. Such love
-insulted the loved woman. He could not escape from it, but he could not
-feel the added grace and piety that, alone, could make it tolerable.
-From the fixed contemplation of his own sensations his mind dropped
-presently to the relief of more endurable thoughts. To feel the mere
-agony of loss was a dignifying and cleansing process. For, apparently,
-he had lost her. It was strange, almost unthinkable, that it should be
-so, and stranger the more he thought. He, who had never claimed, had no
-right to feel a loss. But he had not known till now how deep was his
-consciousness of their union.
-
-She had long ago guessed the secret of the voiceless, ambiguous love
-that could flutter only as far as pain, that could never rise to
-rapture. She had guessed that behind its half-tortured, momentary smile
-was the impersonal Buddha-gaze; and because she so understood its
-inevitable doom she had guarded herself from its avowal--guarded herself
-and him. He had trusted her not to forget the doom, and not to let him
-forget it, for a moment. But all the time he had known that in her eyes
-he was captive to some uncanny fate, and that could she release him from
-his chains her love would answer his. He had been sure of it. Hence his
-present perplexity.
-
-Perplexity began to resolve itself into a theory of commonplace
-expediency, and, feeling the irony of such resentment, he resented this
-tame sequel to their mute relationship.
-
-Unconsciously, he had assumed that had he been able to ask her to be his
-wife she would have been able to consent. Her courage, in a sense, would
-have been the reward of his weakness, for what he would see in himself
-as weakness she would see as strength. Courage on her part it certainly
-would have needed, for what a dubious offering would his have been:
-glamour, at its best,--a helpless, drugged glamour,--and, at its worst,
-the mere brute instinct that, blessedly, this winding path of thought
-led him away from.
-
-But she had probably come to despair of releasing him from chains, had
-come to see clearly that at the end of every avenue she walked with him
-the Buddha statue would be waiting in a serenity appalling and
-permanent; and, finding last night the child friendship dangerously
-threatened, discovering that the impossible love was dangerously real
-and menaced both their lives, she had swiftly drawn back, she had
-retreated to the obvious safeguards of an advantageous marriage. He
-couldn't but own that she was wise and right; more wise, more
-right,--there was the odd part of it, the unadjusted bit where
-perplexity stung him,--than he could have expected her to be. Ambition
-and the common-sense that is the very staff of life counted for much, of
-course; but he hadn't expected them to count so soon, so punctually, as
-it were.
-
-Perhaps,--and his mind, disentangled from the personal clutch where such
-an interpretation might have hurt or horrified, safe once more on its
-Stylites pillar, dwelt quite calmly on this final aspect,--perhaps, with
-her, too, sudden glamour and instinct had counted, answering the appeal
-of Grainger's passion. He suspected the whole fabric of the love between
-men and women to be woven of these blind, helpless impulses,--impulses
-that created their own objects. Her mind, with its recognition of
-danger, had chosen Grainger as a fitting mate, and, in his arms, she had
-felt that justification by the senses that people so funnily took for
-the final sanctification of choice.
-
-This monkish understanding of the snares of life was quite untouched by
-monkish reprobation; even the sense of resentment had faded. And it
-spoke much for the long training of his thought in the dissecting and
-destroying of transitory desires that he was presently able to
-contemplate his loss--as he still must absurdly term it--with an icy
-tranquillity.
-
-A breathlessness, as from some drastic surgical operation, was beneath
-it, but that was of the nature of a mere physical symptom, destined to
-readjust itself to lopped conditions; and with the full turning of his
-mind from himself came the fuller realization of how well it was with
-Eppie and a cold, acquiescent peace that, in his nature, was the
-equivalent for an upwelling of religious gratitude, for her salvation.
-
-But the stress of the whole strange seizure, wrench and renouncement had
-told on him mentally and physically. Every atom of his being, as if from
-some violent concussion, seemed altered, shifted.
-
-The change was in his face when, in the closing dusk of the day, he went
-down to the library. It was not steeled to the hearing of the news that
-must await him: such tension of endurance had passed swiftly into his
-habitual ease; but a look of death had crossed and marked it. It looked
-like a still, drowned face, sinking under deep waters, and Eppie, in her
-low chair near the window, where she had sat for many hours, saw in his
-eyes the awful, passionless detachment from life.
-
-After his pause at the unexpected sight of her, sitting there alone, a
-pause in which she did not speak, although he saw that her eyes were on
-him, he went on softly down the room, glancing out at each window as he
-passed it; and he looked, as he went, like an evening moth, drifting,
-aimless, uncanny.
-
-Outside, the moor stretched like a heavily sighing ocean, desolate and
-dark, to the horizon where, from behind the huge rim of the world, the
-sun's dim glow, a gloomy, ominous red, mounted far into the sky.
-
-Within the room, a soft, magical color pervaded the dusk, touching
-Eppie's hair, her hands, the vague folds and fallings of her dress.
-
-He waited for her to speak, though it seemed perfectly fitting that
-neither should. In the silence, the sadness of this radiant gloom, they
-needed no words to make more clear the accepted separation, and the
-silence, the sadness, were like a bleeding to quiet, desired death.
-
-The day was dying, and the instable, impossible love was dying, too.
-
-She had let go, and he quietly sank.
-
-But when she spoke her words were like sharp air cutting into drowned
-lungs.
-
-"I saw you pass this afternoon, Gavan."
-
-From the farthest window, where he had paused, he turned to her.
-
-"Did you, Eppie?"
-
-"Didn't you see that I did?"
-
-"I wasn't sure." He heard the flavor of helplessness in his own voice
-and felt in her a hard hostility, pleased to play with his helplessness.
-
-"Why did you not speak of what you saw?" Her anger against him was
-almost like a palpable presence between them in the dark, glowing room.
-He began to feel that through some ugly blunder he was very much at her
-mercy, and that, for the first time, he should find little mercy in her;
-and, for the first time, too, a quick hostility rose in him to answer
-hers. It was as if he had tasted too deeply of release; all his strength
-was with him to fight off the threat of the returning grasp.
-
-"Why should I?" he asked, letting her see in his gaze at her that just
-such a hard placidity would meet any interpretation she chose to give.
-
-"Didn't you care to understand?"
-
-"I thought that I did understand."
-
-"What did you think, then?" Eppie asked.
-
-He had to give her the helpless answer. "That you had accepted him."
-
-He knew, now, that she hadn't, and that for him to have thought so was
-to have cruelly wronged her; and she took it in a long silence, as
-though she must give herself time to see it clearly, to adjust herself
-to it and to all that it meant--in him, for her.
-
-What it meant, in her and for him, was filling his thoughts with a dizzy
-enough whirl of readjustment, and there mingled with it a strange
-after-flavor of the jealousy, and of the resentment against her; for,
-after all, though he had probably now an added reason for considering
-himself a warped wretch, there had been some reason for his mistake: if
-she hadn't accepted him, why had he seen her so?
-
-"Jim is gone," she said at last.
-
-"Because--It was unwillingly, then?"
-
-The full flame of her scorn blazed out at that, but he felt, like an
-echo of tears in himself, that she would have burst into tears of
-wretchedness if she had not been able so to scorn him.
-
-"Unwillingly! Why should you think him insolent and me helpless? Can
-you conceive of nothing noble?" she said.
-
-"I am sorry, Eppie. I have been stupid."
-
-"You have--more than stupid. He was going and he asked me for that. And
-I gave it--proudly."
-
-"I am sorry," Gavan repeated. "I see, of course. Of course it was
-noble."
-
-"You should be more than sorry. You knew that I did not love him."
-
-"I am more than sorry. I am ashamed," he answered gravely.
-
-He had the dignity of full contrition; but under it, unshaken after all,
-was the repudiation of the nearness that her explanation revealed. His
-heart throbbed heavily, for he saw, as never before, how near it was;
-yet he had never feared her less. He had learned too much that afternoon
-to fear her. He was sure of his power to save her from what he had so
-fully learned.
-
-He looked away from her and for long out at the ebbing red, and it was
-the unshaken resolve that spoke at last. "But all the same I am sorry
-that it was only that. He would have made you happy."
-
-"You knew that I did not love him," Eppie repeated.
-
-"With time, as his wife, you might love him." Facing her, now, folding
-his arms, he leaned back against the mantel at his far end of the room.
-"I know that I've seemed odiously to belittle and misunderstand you, and
-I am ashamed, Eppie--more ashamed than you can guess; but, in another
-way, it wasn't so belittling, either. I thought you very wise and
-courageous. I thought that you had determined to take the real thing
-that life offered you and to turn your back, for once and for all,
-on--on unreal things." He stopped at that, as though to let it have its
-full drop, and Eppie, her eyes still fixed on him from her distant
-chair, made no answer and no sign of dissent.
-
-As he spoke a queer, effervescent blitheness had come to him, a light
-indifference to his own cruelty; and the hateful callousness of his
-state gave him a pause of wonder and interest. However, he couldn't help
-it; it was the reaction, no doubt, from the deep disgust of his
-abasement, and it helped him, as nothing else would have done,
-thoroughly to accomplish his task.
-
-"He can give you all the things you need," he went on, echoing poor
-Grainger's _naf_ summing up of his own advantages. "He has any amount
-of money, and a very big future before him; and then, really above all,
-you do care for him so much. You see the same things in life. You
-believe in the same things; want the same things. If you would take him
-he would never fail you in anything."
-
-Still her heavy silence was unbroken. He waited in vain for a sign from
-her, and in the silence the vibration of her dumb agony seemed to reach
-him, so that, with all the callousness, he had to conquer an impulse to
-go to her and see if she wept. But when he said, "I wish you would take
-him, Eppie," and she at last answered him, there were no tears in her
-voice.
-
-"I will never take him."
-
-"Don't say that," he replied. "One changes."
-
-"Is that a taunt?"
-
-"Not a taunt--a reminder."
-
-She rose and came to him, walking down the long room, past the somber
-illuminations of the windows, straight to him. They stood face to face,
-bathed in the unearthly light. All their deep antagonism was there
-between them, almost a hatred, and the love that swords clashed over.
-
-"You do not believe that of me," she said.
-
-He was ready and unfaltering, and was able to smile at her, a bright,
-odd smile. "I believe it of any one."
-
-It was love that eyed him--love more stern, more relentless in its
-silence than if she had spoken it, and never had she been so near as
-when, sending her clarion of open warfare across the abyss, she said, "I
-will never change--to you."
-
-The words, the look,--a look of solemn defiance,--shattered forever the
-palace of pretence that they had dwelt in for so long. Till now, it
-might have stood for them. In its rainbow chambers they might still have
-smiled and sorrowed and eluded each other, only glanced through the
-glittering casements at the dark realities outside; but when the word of
-truth was spoken, casements, chambers, turrets, fell together and
-reality rushed in. She had spoken the word. After that it was impossible
-to pretend anything.
-
-Gavan, among the wreck, had grown pale; but he kept his smile fixed,
-even while he, too, spoke the new language of reality.
-
-"I am afraid of you, then."
-
-"Of course you are afraid of me."
-
-Still he smiled. "I am afraid _for_ you."
-
-"Of course you are. You have your moments of humanity."
-
-"I have. And so I shall go to-morrow," said Gavan.
-
-She looked at him in silence, her face taking on its haggard,
-unbeautiful aspect of strange, rocky endurance. And never had his mind
-been more alert, more mocking, more aloof from any entanglement of
-feeling than while he saw her love and his; saw her sorrow and his
-sorrow--his strange, strange sorrow that, like a sick, helpless child,
-longed, in its darkness, its loneliness, to hide its head on her breast
-and to feel her arms go round it. Love and sorrow were far, far away--so
-far that it was as if they had no part at all in himself, as if it were
-not he that felt them.
-
-"Are you so afraid as that?" Eppie asked.
-
-"After last night?" he answered. "After what I felt when I saw you here,
-with him? After this? Of course I am as afraid as that. I must flee--for
-your life, Eppie. I am its shadow--its fatal shadow."
-
-"No, I am yours. Life is the shadow to you."
-
-"Well, on both sides, then, we must be afraid," he assented.
-
-She made no gesture, no appeal. Her face was like a rock. It was only
-that deep endurance and, under it, that deep threat. Never, never would
-she allure; never draw him to her; never build in her cathedral a
-Venusberg for him. He must come to her. He must kneel, with her, before
-her altar. He must worship, with her, her God of suffering and triumph.
-And, the dying light making her face waver before his eyes with a
-visionary strangeness, stern and angelic, he seemed to see, deep in her
-eyes, the burning of high, sacramental candles.
-
-That was the last he saw. In silence she turned and went. And what she
-left with him was the sad, awed sense of beauty that he knew when
-watching kneeling multitudes bowed before the great myth of the
-Church,--in silence, beneath dim, soaring heights. He was near humanity
-in such moments of self-losing, when the cruder myth of the great world,
-built up by desire, slipped from it. And Eppie, in this symbolic seeing
-of her, was nearer than when he desired or feared her. Beauty, supreme
-and disenfranchising, he saw. He did not know what he felt.
-
-Far away, on the horizon, in the gloomy waste of embers, the sun's deep
-core still burned, and in his heart was a deep fatigue, like the sky's
-slow smoldering to gray.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Grainger had gone, and Gavan announced his departure for the next
-morning. The situation was simplified, he felt, by Eppie's somber
-preoccupation. He was very willing that she should be seen as a gloomy
-taker of scalps and that his own should be supposed to be hanging at her
-girdle. The resultant muteness and melancholy in the general and Miss
-Barbara were really a comfort. The dear old figures in the tapestry
-seemed fading to-night into mere plaintive shadows, fixing eyes of sad
-but unquestioning contemplation upon the latent tragedies of the
-foreground figures.
-
-It was a comfort to have the tapestry so reticent and so submissive,
-but, all the same, it made the foreground tragedy, for his eyes,
-painfully distinct. He could look at nothing else. Eppie seemed to
-stand, with her broken and bleeding heart, in the very center of the
-design. For the first time he saw what the design was--saw all of it,
-from the dim reaches of the past, as working to this end.
-
-The weaving of fate was accomplished. There she stood, suffering,
-speechless, and he, looking at her, fatal shuttle of her doom that he
-was, felt under all the ashes a dull throbbing.
-
-After dinner he smoked a cigar with the general, who, tactfully, as to
-one obviously maimed, spoke only of distant and impersonal matters.
-Gavan left him over some papers in the quiet light of the smoking-room
-and went to the library. Eppie, with her broken heart, was not there.
-The night was very hot. By an open window Miss Barbara sat dozing, her
-hands upturned with an appealing laxity on her knees, sad even in her
-sleep.
-
-Eppie was not there and she had not spoken one word to him since those
-last words of the afternoon. Perhaps she intended to speak no more, to
-see him no more. Pausing on the threshold, he was now conscious of a
-slow, rising misery.
-
-If he was to be spared the final wrench, he was also to be robbed of
-something. He hadn't known, till then, of how much. He hadn't known,
-while she stood there before him, this fully revealed Eppie, this Eppie
-who loved far beyond his imagining, far beyond prudence, ambition, even
-happiness, what it would be not to see her again, to part from her
-speechlessly, and with a sort of enmity unresolved between them.
-
-The cathedral simile was still with him, not in her interpretation of
-it, as the consecration of human love, but in his own, as a place of
-peace, where together they might still kneel in farewell.
-
-But she barred him out from that; she wouldn't accept such peace. He
-could only submit and own that she was perhaps altogether right in
-risking no more battles and in proudly denying to him the opportunity of
-any reconciling. She was right to have it end there; but the core among
-the embers ached.
-
-He wandered out into the dark, vague night, sorrowfully restless.
-
-It was not a radiant night. The trees and the long undulations of the
-moorland melted into the sky, making all about a sea of enveloping
-obscurity. The moor might have been the sky but for its starlessness;
-and there were few stars to-night, and these, large and soft, seemed to
-float like helpless expanded flowers on a still ocean.
-
-A night for wandering griefs to hide in, to feel at one with, and, with
-an instinct that knew that it sorrowed but hardly knew that it sought,
-Gavan went on around the house, through the low door in the garden wall,
-and into the garden.
-
-Here all the warmth and perfume of the summer day seemed still to exhale
-itself in a long sigh like that of a peaceful sleeper. Earth, trees,
-fruit, and flowers gave out their drowsy balms. Veiled beauty, dreaming
-life, were beneath, above, about him, and the high walls inclosed a
-place of magic, a shadow paradise.
-
-He walked on, past white phlox, white pansies, and white foxglove,
-through the little trellis where white jasmine starred its festoons of
-frail, melancholy foliage, and under the low boughs of the small,
-gnarled fruit-trees. Near the summer-house he paused, looking in at the
-darkness and seeing there the figures of the past--two children at play.
-His heart ached on dully, the smoldering sorrow rising neither to
-passionate regret nor to passionate longing, acquiescing in its own
-sorrow that was part of the vision. Moved by that retrospect, he stepped
-inside.
-
-The sweet old odor, so well remembered, half musty, half fresh, of
-cobwebbed wood, lichened along the lintels and doorway beams, assailed
-him while he groped lightly around the walls, automatically reaching out
-his hand to the doll's locker, the little row of shelves, the low,
-rustic bench and the table that, he remembered as it rocked slightly
-under his touch, had always been unsteady. All were in their old,
-accustomed places, and among them he saw himself a ghost, some
-sightless, soundless creature hovering in the darkness.
-
-The darkness and the familiar forms he evoked from it grew oppressive,
-and he stepped out again into the night, where, by contrast with the
-uncanny blindness, he found a new distinctness of form, almost of color,
-and where a memory, old and deep, seemed to seize him with gentle,
-compelling hands, in the fragrance of the white roses growing near the
-summer-house. Wine-like and intoxicating, it filled the air with magic;
-and he had gone but a few steps farther when, like a picture called up
-by the enchantment, he saw the present, the future too, it seemed, and,
-with a shock that for all its quiet violence was not unexpected, stood
-still to gaze, to feel in the one moment of memory and forecast all his
-life gathered into his contemplation.
-
-Eppie sat on a low garden bench in the garden's most hidden corner. With
-the fresh keenness of sight he could see the clustering white roses on
-the wall behind her, see against them the darkness of her hair, the
-whiter whiteness of her dress, as she sat there with head a little bent,
-looking down, the long white shawl folded about her.
-
-It was no longer the Eppie of the past, not even the Eppie of the
-present: the present was only that long pause. It was the future that
-waited there, silent, motionless, almost as if asleep; waited for the
-word and touch that would reveal it.
-
-She had not heard his light step, and it seemed to be in the very
-stillness of his pause that the sense of his presence came to her.
-Raising her head she looked round at him.
-
-He could only see the narrow oval of her face, but he felt her look; it
-seized him, compelling as the fragrance had been--compelling but not
-gentle. He felt it like firm hands upon him while he walked on slowly
-toward her, and not until he was near her, not until he had sat down
-beside her, did he see as well as feel her fixed and hostile gaze.
-
-All swathed and infolded as she was, impalpable and unsubstantial in the
-darkness, her warm and breathing loveliness was like the aroma of a
-midnight flower. She was so beautiful sitting there, a blossoming of the
-darkness, that her beauty seemed aware of itself and of its appeal; and
-it was as if her soul, gazing at him, dominated the appeal; menaced him
-should he yield to it; yet loved, ah, loved him with a love the greater
-for the courage, the will, that could discipline it into this set, stern
-stillness.
-
-Yes, here was the future, and what was he to do with it? or, rather,
-what was it to do with him? He was at her mercy.
-
-He had leaned near her, his hand on the bench, to look into her eyes,
-and in a shaken, supplicating voice he said, "Eppie, Eppie, what do you
-want?"
-
-Without change, looking deeply at him, she answered, "You."
-
-That crashed through him. He was lost, drowned, in the mere sense of
-beauty--the beauty of the courage that could so speak and so hold him at
-the point of a sword heroically drawn. And with the word the future
-seized him. He hid his face upon her shoulder and his arms went round
-her. Her breast heaved. For a moment she sat as if stricken with
-astonishment. Then, but with sternness, as of a just and angry mother,
-she clasped him, holding him closely but untenderly.
-
-"I did not mean this," she said.
-
-"No; but you _are_ it," Gavan murmured.
-
-She held him in the stern, untender clasp, her head drawn back from him,
-while, slowly, seeking her words over the tumult she subdued, she said:
-"It's _you_ I want--not your unwilling longing, not your unwilling love.
-I want you so that I can be really myself; I want you so that you can be
-really yourself."
-
-He strained her to him, hiding his face on her breast.
-
-"Can't you live? Can't you be--if I help you?" she asked him.
-
-For a long time he was silent, only pressing closely to her as though
-to hide himself from her questions--from his own thoughts.
-
-He said at last: "I can't think, Eppie. Your words go like birds over my
-head. Your suffering, my longing, hurt me; but it's like the memory of a
-hurt. I am apart from it, even while I feel it. Even while I love
-you--oh, Eppie! Eppie!--I don't care. But when we are like this--at last
-like this--I am caught back into it all, all that I thought I'd got over
-forever, this afternoon,--all the dreadful dream--the beautiful dream.
-It's for this I've longed--you have known it: to hold you, to feel your
-breath on me, to dream with you. How beautiful you are, how sweet! Kiss
-me, Eppie,--darling, darling Eppie!"
-
-"I will not kiss you. It would be real to me."
-
-He had raised his head and was seeing now the suffering of her shadowy
-eyes, the shadowy lips she refused him tragically compressed lest they
-should tremble. Behind her pale head and its heavy cloud of hair were
-the white roses giving out--how his mind reeled with the memory of
-it--the old, sweet, wine-like fragrance.
-
-He closed his eyes to the vision, bending his lips to her hand, saying:
-"Yes, that's why I wanted to spare you--wanted to run away."
-
-In the little distance now of his drawing from her, even while he still
-held her, his cheek on her hand, she could speak more easily.
-
-"It is that that enrages me,--your mystic sickness. I am awake, but you
-aren't even dreaming. You are drugged--drugged with thought not strong
-enough to find its real end. You have paralyzed yourself. No argument
-could cure you. No thought could cure you. Only life could cure you. You
-must get life, and to get it you must want it."
-
-"I don't want it. I can't want it. I only want you," said Gavan, with
-such a different echo.
-
-She understood, more fully than he, perhaps, the helpless words.
-
-Above his bowed head, her face set, she looked out into the night. Her
-mind measured, coldly it seemed to her, the strength of her own faith
-and of his negation.
-
-Her love, including but so far transcending all natural cravings, had
-its proud recoil from the abasement--oh, she saw it all!--that his
-limitation would bring to it. Yet, like the mother again, adapting truth
-to the child's dim apprehension, leading it on by symbols, she brooded
-over her deep thoughts of redemption and looked clearly at all dangers
-and all hopes. Faith must face even his unspiritual seeing. Faith must
-endure his worse than pagan love. Bound to her by every natural tie, her
-strength must lift him, through them, to their spiritual aspect, to
-their reality. Life was her ally. She must put her trust in life. She
-consecrated herself to it anew. Let it lead her where it would.
-
-The long moment of steady forecast had, after its agony of shame and
-fear, its triumph over both.
-
-He felt the deep sigh that lifted her breast--it was almost a sob; but
-now her arms took him closely, gently, to her and her voice had the
-steadfastness, no longer of rejection, but of acceptance.
-
-"Gavan, dream with me, then; that's better than being drugged. Perhaps
-you will wake some day. There, I kiss you."
-
-She said it, and with the words his lips were on hers.
-
-In the long moment of their embrace he had a strange intuition.
-Something was accomplished; some destiny that had led them to this hour
-was satisfied and would have no more to do with them. He seemed almost
-to hear this thought of finality, like the far, distant throbbing of a
-funeral bell, though the tolling only shut them the more closely into
-the silence of the wonderful moment.
-
-Drugged? No, he was not drugged. But was she really dragging him down
-again, poor child, into her own place of dreams?
-
-After the ecstasy, in the darkness of her breast and arms, he knew again
-the horrible surge of suffering that life had always meant to him. He
-saw, as though through deep waters, the love, the strife, the clinging
-to all that went; he saw the withering of dreams, and death, and the
-implacable, devouring thought that underlay all life and found its joy
-in the rending sorrow of the tragedy it triumphed over.
-
-It was like a wave catching him, sucking him down into a gulf of
-blackness. The dizziness of the whirlpool reeled its descending spiral
-through his brain. Eppie was the sweet, the magical, the sinister
-mermaid; she held him, triumphing, and he clung to her, helpless; while,
-like the music of rushing waters, the horror and enchantment of life
-rang in his ears. But the horror grew and grew. The music rang on to a
-multitudinous world-cry of despair,--the cry of all the torments of the
-world turning on their rack of consciousness,--and, in a crash of
-unendurable anguish, came the thought of what it all would mean; what it
-all might mean now--now--unless he could save her; for he guessed that
-her faith, put to the test, might accept any risk, might pay any price,
-to keep him. And the anguish was for her.
-
-He started from her, putting away her arms, yet pinioning her, holding
-her from him with a fierceness of final challenge and looking in the
-darkness into her darker eyes.
-
-"Suppose I do," he said. "Suppose I marry you,"--for he must show her
-that some tests she should not be put to. "Suppose I take you and
-renter the dream. Look at it, Eppie. Look at your life with me. It
-won't stay like this, you know. Look far, far ahead."
-
-"I do," she said.
-
-"No, no. You don't. You can't. It would, for a year, perhaps, perhaps
-only for a day, be dream and ecstasy,--ah, Eppie, don't imagine that I
-don't know what it would be,--the beauty, the joy, the forgetfulness, a
-radiant mist hanging over an abyss. Your will could keep me in it--for a
-year, perhaps. But then, the inevitable fading. See what comes. Eppie,
-don't you know, don't you feel, that I'm dead--dead?"
-
-"No; not while you suffer. You are suffering now--for me."
-
-"The shadow of a shadow. It will pass. No, don't speak; wait; as you
-said, we can't argue, we can't, now, go into the reasons of it. As you
-said, thought can't cure me; it's probably something far deeper than our
-little thought: it's probably the aspect we are fated to be by that one
-reality that makes and unmakes our dreams. And I'm not of the robust
-Western stuff that can work in its dream,--create more dream, and find
-it worth while. I've not enough life in me to create the illusion of
-realities to strive for. Action, to me, brings no proof of life's
-reality; it's merely a symptom of life, its result, not its cause or its
-sanction. And the power of action is dead in me because the desire of
-life is dead,--unless you are there to infect me with it."
-
-"I am here, Gavan."
-
-"Yes, you are,--can I forget it? And I'm yours--while you want me. But,
-Eppie, look at it; look at it straight. See the death that I will bring
-into the very heart of your life. See the children we may have; see what
-they would mean to you, and what they would mean to me: Transient
-appearances; creatures lovely and pathetic, perhaps, but empty of all
-the significance that you would find in them. I would have no love for
-our children, Eppie, as you understand love. We will grow old, and all
-the glamour will go--all the passion that holds us together now. I will
-be kind--and sorry; but you will know that, beside you, I watch you
-fading into listlessness, indifference, death, and know that even if I
-am to weep over you, dead, I will feel only that you have escaped
-forever, from me, from consciousness, from life. Eppie, don't delude
-yourself with one ray of hope. To me your faith is a mirage. And it all
-comes to that. Have you faith enough to foresee all the horror of
-emptiness that you'll find in me for the sake of one year of ecstasy?"
-
-She had not moved while he spoke--spoke with a passion, a vehemence,
-that was like a sudden rushing into flame of a forest fire. There was
-something lurid and terrible in such passion, such vehemence, from him.
-It shook him as the forest is shaken and was like the ruinous force of
-the flames. She sat, while he held her, looking at it, as he had told
-her, "straight." She knew that she looked at everything. Her eyes went
-back to his eyes as she gave him her answer.
-
-"Not for the sake of the year of ecstasy; in spite of it."
-
-"For what, then?" he asked, stammering suddenly.
-
-Her eyes, with their look of dedication, held him fast.
-
-"For the sake of life--the long life--together; the life without the
-glamour, when my faith may altogether infect you."
-
-"You believe, Eppie, that you are so much stronger than I?"
-
-"It's not that I'm strong; but life is stronger than anything; life is
-the only reality. I am on the winning side."
-
-"So you will hope?"
-
-"Hope! Of course I hope. You could never make me stop hoping--not even
-if you broke my heart. You may call it a mirage if you like--that's
-only a word. I'll fill your trance with my mirage, I'll flood your
-whiteness with my color, and, God grant, you will feel life and know
-that you are at last awake. You are right--life _is_ endless contest,
-endless pain; it's only at that price that we can have it; but you will
-know that it's worth the price. I see it all, Gavan, and I accept. I
-accept not only the certainty of my own suffering, but the certainty of
-yours."
-
-Through the night they gazed at each other, his infinite sadness, her
-infinite valor. Their faces were like strange, beautiful dreams--dreams
-holding in their dimness such deep, such vivid significance. They more
-saw the significance--that sadness, that valor--than its embodiment in
-eyes and lips.
-
-It was finally with a sense of realization so keen that it trembled on
-the border of oblivion, of the fainting from over-consciousness, that
-Gavan once more laid his head upon her breast. He, too, accepting, held
-her close,--held her and all that she signified, while, leaning above
-him, her cheek against his hair, she said in a voice that over its depth
-upon depth of steadiness trembled at last a little: "I see it all.
-Imagine what a faith it is that is willing to make the thing it loves
-most in the whole world suffer--suffer horribly--so that it may live."
-
-He gave a long sigh. At its height emotion dissolved into a rapt
-contemplation. "How beautiful," he said.
-
-"Beautiful?" she repeated, with almost a gentle mockery for the word.
-"Well, begin with beauty if you will. You will find that--and more
-besides--as an end of it all."
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-She left him in the garden. They had talked quietly, of the past, of
-their childhood, and, as quietly, of the future--their immediate
-marriage and departure for long, wonderful voyages together. His head
-lay on her breast, and often, while they spoke of that life together, of
-the homecoming to Cheylesford Lodge and when he heard her voice tremble
-a little, he kissed the dear hand he held.
-
-When she rose at last and stood before him, he said, still holding her
-hands, that he would sit on there in the darkness and think of her.
-
-She felt the languor of his voice and told him that he was very tired
-and would do much better to go to bed and forget about her till morning;
-but, looking up at her, he shook his head, smiling: "I couldn't sleep."
-
-So she left him; but, before she went, after the last gazing pause in
-which there seemed now no discord, no strife, nothing to hide or to
-threaten, she had suddenly put her arms around his neck, bending to him
-and murmuring, "Oh, I love you."
-
-"I seem to have loved you forever, Eppie," he said.
-
-But, once more, in all the strange oblivion of his acceptance, there had
-been for him in their kiss and their embrace the undertone of anguish,
-the distant tolling--as if for something accomplished, over forever--of
-a funeral bell.
-
-He watched her figure--white was not the word for it in this midnight
-world--pass away into the darkness. And, as she disappeared, the bell
-seemed still to toll, "Gone. Gone. Gone."
-
-So he was alone.
-
-He was alone. The hours went by and he still sat there. The white roses
-near him, they, too, only a strange blossoming of darkness, symbolized,
-in their almost aching sweetness, the departed presence. He breathed in
-their fragrance; and, as he listened to his own quiet breaths, they
-seemed those of the night made conscious in him. The roses remembered
-for him; the night breathed through him; it was an interchange, a
-mingling. Above were the deep vaults of heaven, the profundities of
-distance, the appalling vastness, strewn with its dust of stars. And it,
-too, was with him, in him, as the roses were, as his own breath came and
-went.
-
-The veils had now lifted from the night and it was radiant, all its
-stars visible; and veil after veil seemed drifting from before his soul.
-
-A cool, light breeze stirred his hair.
-
-Closing his eyes, at last, his thought plunged, as his sight had
-plunged, into gulf under gulf of vacancy.
-
-After the unutterable fatigue, like the sinking under ansthesia, of his
-final yielding, he could not know what was happening to him, nor care.
-It had often happened before, only never quite like this. It was, once
-more, the great peace, lapping wave after wave, slow, sliding,
-immeasurable waves, through and through him; dissolving thought and
-feeling; dissolving all discord, all pain, all joy and beauty.
-
-The hours went by, and, as they went, Eppie's face, like a drift of
-stars, sank, sank into the gulf. What had he said to her? what promised?
-Only the fragrance of the roses seemed to remember, nothing in himself.
-For what had he wanted? He wanted nothing now. Her will, her life, had
-seized him; but no, no, no,--the hours quietly, in their passing seemed
-to say it,--they had not kept him. He had at last, after a lifelong
-resistance, abandoned himself to her, and the abandonment had been the
-final step toward complete enfranchisement. For, with no effort now of
-his own at escape, no will at all to be free, he had left her far behind
-him, as if through the waters of the whirlpool his soul, like a light
-bubble, had softly, surely, risen to the air. It had lost itself, and
-her.
-
-He thought of her, but now with no fear, no anguish. A vast indifference
-filled him. It was no longer a question of tearing himself from her, no
-longer a question of saving himself and her. There was no question, nor
-any one to save. He was gone away, from her, from everything.
-
-When the dawn slowly stole into the garden, so that the ghosts of day
-began to take shape and color, Gavan rose among them. The earth was damp
-with dew; his hair and clothes were damp. Overhead the sky was white,
-and the hills upon it showed a flat, shadowless green. Between the
-night's enchantments of stillness, starriness, veiled, dreaming beauty
-and the sunlit, voluble enchantments of the day,--songs and flights of
-birds, ripple and shine of water, the fugitive, changing color of land
-and sky,--this hour was poor, bare, monotonous. There wasn't a ray of
-enchantment in it. It was like bleak canvas scenery waiting for the
-footlights and a decorated stage.
-
-Gavan looked before him, down the garden path, shivering a little. He
-was cold, and the sensation brought him back to the old fact of life,
-that, after all, was there as long as one saw it. The coming of the
-light seemed to retwist once more his own palely tinted prism of
-personality, and with the cold, with the conscious looking back at the
-night and forward to the day, came a long, dull ache of sadness. It was
-more physical than mental; hunger and chill played their part in it, he
-knew, while, as the prism twined its colors, the fatiguing faculty of
-analysis once more built up the world of change and diversity. He looked
-up at the pale walls of the old house, laced with their pattern of
-creepers. The pine-tree lay like an inky shadow across it, and, among
-the branches, were the windows of Eppie's room, the window where he and
-she had stood together on the morning of Robbie's death--a white,
-dew-drenched morning like this. There she slept, dear, beautiful, the
-shadow of life. And here he stood, still living, after all, in their
-mutual mirage; still to hurt her. He didn't think of her face, her
-voice, her aspect. The only image that came was of a shadow--something
-darkly beautiful that entranced and suffocated, something that,
-enveloping one, shut out peace and vacancy.
-
-His cold hands thrust into his pockets, he stood thinking for a moment,
-of how he would have to hurt her, and of how much less it was to be than
-if what they had seen in the night's glamour had been possible.
-
-He wondered why the mere fact of the night's revelation--all those
-passing-bell hours--had made it so impossible for him to go on, by sheer
-force of will, with the play. Why couldn't he, for her sake, act the
-lifelong part? In her arms he would know again the moments of glamour.
-But, at the mere question, a sickness shuddered through him. He saw now,
-clearly, what stood in the way: suffering, hideous suffering, for both
-of them--permanent, all-pervading suffering. The night had proved too
-irrevocably that any union between them was only momentary, only a
-seeming, and with her, feeling her faith, her hope, her love, he could
-know nothing but the undurable discord of their united and warring
-notes.
-
-Could life and death be made one flesh?
-
-The horror of the thought spurred him from his rigor of contemplation.
-That, at least, had been spared her. Destiny, then, had not meant for
-them that final, tragic consummation.
-
-He threaded his way rapidly among the paths, the flower-beds, under the
-low boughs of the old fruit-trees. She had left the little door near
-the morning-room open for him, and through it he entered the still
-house.
-
-It wasn't escape, now, from her, but from that pressing horror, as of
-something, that, unless he hastened, might still overtake them both. Yet
-outside her door he paused, bent his head, listened with a strange
-curiosity, helpless before the nearness of that loved, that dreaded
-being, the warring note that he sought yet fled from.
-
-She slept. Not a sound stirred in the room.
-
-He closed his eyes, seeing, with a vividness that was almost a
-hallucination, her face, her wonderful face, asleep, with the dark
-rivers of her hair flowing about it.
-
-And, fixed as he was in his frozen certainty of truth, he felt, once
-more like the striking of a hand across a harp, a longing, wild and
-passionate, to enter, to take her, sleeping, in his arms, to see her
-eyes open on him; to hide himself in life, as in the darkness of her
-breast and arms, and to forget forever the piercing of inexorable
-thought.
-
-He found that his hand was on the lock and that he was violently
-trembling.
-
-It was inexorable thought, the knowledge of the horror that would await
-them, that conquered the leap of blind instinct.
-
-Half an hour later a thin, intense light rimmed all the eastern hills,
-and a cold, clear cheerfulness spread over the earth. The moors were
-purple and the sky overhead palely, immaculately blue. About the tall
-lime-trees the rooks circled, cawing, and a skylark sang far and high,
-a floating atom of ecstasy.
-
-And in the clearness Gavan's figure showed, walking rapidly away from
-the white house, down the road that led through the heather and past the
-birch-woods, walking away from it forever.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Grainger stood in Eppie's little sitting-room, confronting, as Gavan had
-confronted the spring before, Miss Allen's placidly sewing figure.
-
-The flowers against which her uneventful head now bent were autumnal.
-Thickly growing Michaelmas daisies, white and purple, screened the lower
-section of the square outside. Above were the shabby tree-tops, that
-seemed heavily painted upon an equally solid sky. The square was dusty,
-the trees were dusty, the very blue of the sky looked grimed with dust.
-
-The hot air; the still flowers, not stirred by a breath of breeze; Miss
-Allen's figure, motionless but for its monotonously moving hand, were
-harmonious in their quiet, and in contrast to them Grainger's pervasive,
-restless, irritable presence was like a loud, incessant jangling.
-
-He walked back and forth; he picked up the photographs on the
-mantel-shelf, the books on the table, flinging them down in a succession
-of impatient claps. He threw himself heavily into chairs,--so heavily
-that Miss Allen glanced round, alarmed for the security of the
-furniture,--and he asked her half a dozen times if Miss Gifford would be
-in at five.
-
-"She is seldom late," or, "I expect her then," Miss Allen would answer
-in the tone of mild severity that one might employ toward an unseemly
-child over whom one had no authority.
-
-But though there was severity in Miss Allen's voice, the acute glances
-that she stole at the clamorous guest were not unsympathetic. She placed
-him. She pitied and she rather admired him. Even while emphasizing the
-dismay of her involuntary starts when the table rattled and the chairs
-groaned, she felt a satisfaction in these symptoms of passion; for that
-she was in the presence of a passion, a hopeless and rather magnificent
-passion, she made no doubt. She associated such passions with Eppie,--it
-was trailing such clouds of glory that she descended upon the arid life
-of the little square,--and none had so demonstrated itself, none had so
-performed its part for her benefit. She was sorry that it was hopeless;
-but she was glad that it was there, in all its Promethean wrathfulness,
-for her to observe. Miss Allen felt pretty sure that this was the
-nearest experience of passion she would ever know.
-
-"In at five, as a rule, you say?" Grainger repeated for the fourth time,
-springing from the chair where, with folded arms, he had sat for a few
-moments scowling unseeingly at the pansies.
-
-He stationed himself now beside her and, over her head, stared out at
-the square. It was at once alarming and delightful,--as if the Titan
-with his attendant vulture had risen from his rock to join her.
-
-"You've no idea from which direction she is coming?"
-
-"None," said Miss Allen, decisively but not unkindly. "It's really no
-good for you to think of going out to meet her. She is doing a lot of
-different things this afternoon and might come from any direction. You
-would almost certainly miss her." And she went on, unemphatically, but,
-for all the colorless quality of her voice, so significantly that
-Grainger, realizing for the first time the presence of an understanding
-sympathy, darted a quick look at her. "She gets in at five, just as I go
-out. She knows that I depend on her to be here by then."
-
-So she would not be in the way, this little individual. She made him
-think, now that he looked at her more attentively, as she sat there with
-her trimly, accurately moving hand, of a beaver he had once seen swiftly
-and automatically feeding itself; her sleek head, her large, smooth
-front teeth, were like a beaver's. It was really very decent of her to
-see that he wanted her out of the way; so decent that, conscious of the
-link it had made between them, he said presently, abruptly and rather
-roughly, "How is she?"
-
-"Well, of course she has not recovered," said Miss Allen.
-
-"Recovered? But she wasn't actually ill." Grainger had a retorting air.
-
-"No; I suppose not. It was nervous prostration, I suppose--if that's not
-an illness."
-
-"This isn't the place for her to recover from nervous prostration in."
-He seemed to fasten an accusation, but Miss Allen understood perfectly.
-
-"Of course not. I've tried to make her see that. But,"--she was making
-now quite a chain of links,--"she feels she must work, must lose herself
-in something. Of course she overdoes it. She overdoes everything."
-
-"Overwork, do you think? The cause, I mean?"
-
-Grainger jerked this out, keeping his eyes on the square.
-
-Miss Allen, not in any discreet hesitation, but in sincere uncertainty,
-paused over her answer.
-
-"It couldn't be, quite. She was well enough when she went away in the
-summer, though she really isn't at all strong,--not nearly so strong as
-she looks. She broke down, you know, at her uncle's, in Scotland"; and
-Miss Allen added, in a low-pitched and obviously confidential voice, "I
-think it was some shock that nobody knows anything about."
-
-Grainger stood still for some moments, and then plunging back into the
-little room, he crossed and re-crossed it with rapid strides. Her
-guessing and his knowledge came too near.
-
-Only after a long pause did Miss Allen say, "She's really frightfully
-changed." The clock was on the stroke. Rising, gathering up her work,
-dropping, with neat little clicks, her scissors, her thimble, into her
-work-box, she added, and she fixed her eyes on him for a moment as she
-spoke, "Do, if you can, make her--"
-
-"Well, what? Go away?" he demanded. "I've no authority--none. Her people
-ought to kidnap her. That's what I'd do. Lift her out of this hole."
-
-Miss Allen's eyes dwelt on his while she nerved herself to a height of
-adventurous courage that, in looking back at it, amazed her. "Here she
-is," she said, and almost whispering, "Well, kidnap her, then. That's
-what she needs--some one stronger than herself to kidnap her."
-
-She slid her hand through his, a panic of shyness overtaking her, and
-darted out, followed by the flutter of a long, white strip of muslin.
-
-Grainger stood looking at the open door, through which in a moment Eppie
-entered.
-
-His first feeling was one of relief. He did not, in that first moment,
-see that she was "frightfully changed." Even her voice seemed the same,
-as she said with all the frank kindness of her welcome and surprise,
-"Why, Jim, this is good of you," and all her tact was there, too, giving
-him an impression of the resource and flexibility of happy vitality, in
-her ignoring by glance or tone of their parting.
-
-She wore, on the hot autumn day, a white linen frock, the loose bodice
-belted with green, a knot of green at her throat, and, under the white
-and green of her little hat, her face showed color and its dear smile.
-
-Relief was so great, indeed, that Grainger found himself almost clinging
-to her hand in his sudden thankfulness.
-
-"You're not so ill, then," he brought out. "I heard it--that you had
-broken down--and I came back. I was in the Dolomites. I hadn't had news
-of you since I left."
-
-"So ill! Nonsense," said Eppie, giving his hand a reassuring shake and
-releasing her own to pull off her soft, loose gloves. "It was a
-breakdown I had, but nothing serious. I believe it to have been an
-attack of biliousness, myself. People don't like to own to liver when
-they can claim graceful maladies like nervous prostration,--so it was
-called. But liver, only, I fear it was. And I'm all right now, thank
-goodness, for I loathe being ill and am a horrid patient."
-
-She had taken off her hat, pushing back her hair from her forehead and
-sinking into a chair that was against the light. The Michaelmas daisies
-made a background for the bronze and white of her head, for, as she
-rested, the color that her surprise and her swift walking had given her
-died. She was glad to rest, her smile said that, and he saw, indeed,
-that she was utterly tired.
-
-Suddenly, as he looked at her, seeing the great fatigue, seeing the
-pallor, seeing the smile only stay as if with determination, the truth
-of Miss Allen's description was revealed to him. She was frightfully
-changed. Her smile, her courage, made him think of a _danse macabre_.
-The rhythm, the gaiety of life were there, but life itself was gone.
-
-The revelation came to him, but he felt himself clutch it silently, and
-he let her go on talking.
-
-She went on, indeed, very volubly, talking of her breakdown, of how good
-the general and her aunt had been to her, and of how getting back to her
-work had picked her up directly.
-
-"I think I'll finally pitch my tent here," she went on. "The interest
-grows all the time,--and the ties, the responsibility. One can't do
-things by half measures; you know that, thorough person that you are. I
-mustn't waste my mite of income by gadding about. I'm going to chuck all
-the rest and give myself altogether to this."
-
-"You used to think that the rest helped you in this," said Grainger.
-
-"To a certain extent it did, and will, for I've had so much that it will
-last me for a long time."
-
-"You intend to live permanently down here?"
-
-"I shall have my holidays, and I shall run up to civilization for a
-dinner or two now and then. It's not that I've any illusions about my
-usefulness or importance. It's that all this is so useful to me. It's
-something I can do with all my might and main, and I've such masses of
-energy you know, Jim, that need employment. And then, though of course
-one works at the wrong side of the tapestry and has to trust that the
-pattern is coming right, I do believe that, to a certain extent, it does
-need me."
-
-He leaned back in his chair opposite her, listening to the voice that
-rattled on so cheerfully. With his head bent, he kept that old gaze upon
-her and clutched the clearer and clearer revelation: Eppie--Eppie in
-torment; Eppie shattered;--Eppie--why, it was as if she sat there before
-him smiling and rattling over a huge hole in her chest. And, finally,
-the consciousness of the falsity in her own tone made her falter a
-little. She couldn't continue so glibly while his eyes were saying to
-her: "Yes; I see, I see. You are wounded to death." But if she faltered
-it was only, in the pause, to look about for another shield.
-
-"And you?" she said. "Have you done a great deal of climbing? Tell me
-about yourself, dear Jim."
-
-It was a dangerous note to strike and the "dear Jim" gave away her sense
-of insecurity. It was almost an appeal to him not to see, or, at all
-events, not to tell her that he saw.
-
-"Don't talk about me," he said very rudely. She knew the significance of
-his rudeness.
-
-"Let us talk of whatever you will."
-
-"Of you, then. Don't try to shut me out, Eppie."
-
-"Am I shutting you out?"
-
-"You are trying to. You have succeeded with the rest, I suppose; but, as
-of course you know, you can't succeed with me. I know too much. I care
-too much."
-
-His rough, tense voice beat down her barriers. She sat silent, oddly
-smiling.
-
-He rose and came to her and stood above her, pressing the tips of his
-fingers heavily down upon her shoulder.
-
-"You must tell me. I must know. I won't stand not knowing."
-
-Motionless, without looking up at him, she still smiled before her.
-
-"That--that coward has broken your heart," he said. There were tears in
-his voice, and, looking up now, the smile stiffened to a resolute
-grimace, she saw them running down his cheeks. But her own face did not
-soften. With a glib dryness she answered:
-
-"Yes, Jim; that's it."
-
-"Oh--" It was a long growl over her head.
-
-She had looked away again, and continued in the same crisp voice: "I'd
-lie if I could, you may be sure. But you put it so, you look so, that I
-can't. I'm at your mercy. You know what I feel, so I can't hide it from
-you. I hate any one, even you, to know what I feel. Help me to hide it."
-
-"What has he done?" Grainger asked on the muffled, growling note.
-
-"Gavan? Done? He's done nothing."
-
-"But something happened. You aren't where you were when I left you. You
-weren't breaking down then."
-
-"Hope deferred, Jim--"
-
-"It's not that. Don't fence, to shield him. It's not hope deferred. It's
-hope dead. Something happened. What was it?"
-
-"All that happened was that he went, when I thought that he was going to
-stay, forever."
-
-"He went, knowing--"
-
-"That I loved him? Yes; I told him."
-
-"And he told you that he didn't love you?"
-
-"No, there you were wrong. He told me that he did. But he saw what you
-saw. So what would you have asked of him?"
-
-"Saw what I saw? What do you mean?"
-
-"That he would suffocate me. That he was the negation of everything I
-believed in."
-
-"You mean to tell me," said Grainger, his fingers still pressing down
-upon her shoulder, "that it all came out,--that you had it there between
-you,--and then that he ran away?"
-
-"From the fear of hurting my life. Yes."
-
-"From the fear of life itself, you mean."
-
-"If that was it, wasn't it enough?"
-
-"The coward. The mean, bloodless coward," said Jim Grainger.
-
-"I let you say it because I understand; it's your relief. But he is not
-a coward. He is only--a saint. A saint without a saint's perquisites. A
-Spinoza without a God. An imitator of Christ without a Christ. I have
-been thinking, thinking it all out, seeing it all, ever since."
-
-"Spinoza! What has he to do with it! Don't talk rot, dear child, to
-comfort yourself."
-
-"Be patient, Jim. Perhaps I can help you. It calms one when one
-understands. I have been reading up all the symptoms. Listen to this, if
-you think that Spinoza has nothing to do with it. On the contrary, he
-knew all about it and would have seen very much as Gavan does."
-
-She took up one of the books that had been so frequently flung down by
-Grainger in his waiting and turned its pages while he watched her with
-the enduring look of a mother who humors a sick child's foolish fancies.
-
-"Listen to Spinoza, Jim," she said, and he obediently bent his lowering
-gaze to the task. "'When a thing is not loved, no strife arises about
-it; there is no pang if it perishes, no envy if another bears it away,
-no fear, no hate; yes, in a word, no tumult of soul. These things all
-come from loving that which perishes.' And now the Imitation: 'What
-canst thou see anywhere which can continue long under the sun? Thou
-believest, perchance, that thou shalt be satisfied, but thou wilt never
-be able to attain unto this. If thou shouldst see all things before thee
-at once, what would it be but a vain vision?' And this: 'Trust not thy
-feeling, for that which is now will be quickly changed into somewhat
-else.'"
-
-Her voice, as she read on to him,--and from page to page she went,
-plucking for him, it seemed, their cold, white blossoms, fit flowers to
-lay on the grave of love,--had lost the light dryness as of withered
-leaves rustling. It seemed now gravely to understand, to acquiesce. A
-chill went over the man, as though, under his hand, he felt her, too,
-sliding from warm life into that place of shadows where she must be to
-be near the one she loved.
-
-"Shut the books, for God's sake, Eppie," he said. "Don't tell me that
-you've come to see as he has."
-
-She looked up at him, and now, in the dear, deep eyes, he saw all the
-old Eppie, the Eppie of life and battle.
-
-"Can you think it, Jim? It's because I see so clearly what he sees that
-I hate it and repudiate it and fight it with every atom of my being.
-It's that hatred, that repudiation, that fight, that is life. I believe
-in it, I'm for it, as I never believed before, as I never was before."
-
-He was answering her look, seeing her as life's wounded champion,
-standing, shot through, on the ramparts of her beleaguered city. She
-would shake her banner high in the air as she fell. The pity, the fury,
-the love of his eyes dwelt on her.
-
-And suddenly, under that look, her eyes closed. She shrank together in
-her chair; she bowed down her head upon her knees, covering her face.
-
-"Oh, Jim," she said, "my heart is broken."
-
-He knew that he had brought her to this, that never before an onlooker
-had she so fallen into her own misery. He had forced her to show the
-final truth that, though she held the banner, she was shot through and
-through. And he could do nothing but stand on above her, his face set to
-a flintier, sharper endurance, as he heard the great sobs shake her.
-
-He left her presently and walked up and down the room while she wept,
-crouched over upon her knees. It was not for long. The tempest passed,
-and, when she sat in quiet, her head in her hands, her face still
-hidden, he said, "You must set about mending now, Eppie."
-
-"I can't mend. I'll live; but I can't mend."
-
-"Don't say it, Eppie. This may pass as--well--other things in your life
-have passed."
-
-"Do you, too, talk Spinoza to me, Jim?"
-
-"Damn Spinoza! I'm talking life to you--the life we both believe in. I'm
-not telling you to turn your back on it because it has crippled you. You
-won't, I know it. I know that you are brave. Eppie, Eppie,"--before her,
-now, he bent to her, then knelt beside her chair,--"let me be the
-crutch. Let me have the fragments. Let's try, together, to mend them. I
-ask nothing of you but that trying, with my help, to mend. He isn't for
-you. He's never for you. I'll say no more brutalities of him. I'll use
-your own words and say that he can't,--that his saintship can't. So
-won't you, simply, let me take you? Even if you're broken for life, let
-me have the broken Eppie."
-
-She had never, except in the moment of the kiss, seen this deepest thing
-in him, this gentleness, this reverent tenderness that, under the
-bullying, threatening, angry aspects of his love, now supplicated with a
-beauty that revealed all the angel in humanity. Strange--she could think
-it in all her sorrow--that the thing that held him to her was the thing
-that held her to Gavan, the deep, the mysterious, the unchangeable
-affinity. For him, as for her, there could be but one, and for that one
-alone could these depths and heights of the heart open themselves.
-
-"Jim, dear, dear Jim, never, never," she said. "I am his, only his,
-fragments, all of me, for as long as I am I."
-
-Grainger hid his face on the arm of her chair.
-
-"And he is mine," said Eppie. "He knows it, and that is why he fears me.
-He is mine forever."
-
-"I am glad for your sake that you can believe that," Grainger muttered,
-"and glad, for my own, that I don't."
-
-"Why, Jim?"
-
-"I could hardly live if I thought that you were going to love him in
-eternity and that I was, forever, to be shut away. Thank goodness that
-it's only for a lifetime that my tragedy lasts."
-
-She closed her eyes to these perplexities, laying her hand on his.
-
-"I don't know. We can only think and act for this life. It's this we
-have to shape. Perhaps in eternity, really in eternity, whatever that
-may mean, I won't need to shut you out. Dear, dear Jim, it's hard that
-it must seem that to you now. You know what I feel about you. And who
-could feel it as I do? We are in the same boat."
-
-"No, for he, at least, loves no one else. You haven't that to bear. As
-far as he goes,--and it isn't far,--he is yours. We are not at all in
-the same boat. But that's enough of me. I suppose I am done for, as you
-say, forever."
-
-He had got upon his feet, and, as if at their mutual wreckage, looked
-down with a face that had found again its old shield of grimness.
-
-"As for you," he went on, "I sha'n't, at all events, see you
-suffocating. You must mend alone, then, as best you can. Really, you're
-not as tragic as you might have been."
-
-Then, after this salutary harshness, and before he turned from her to
-go, he added, as once before, "Poor darling."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Grainger hardly knew why he had come and, as he walked up the deep
-Surrey lane from the drowsy village station, his common-sense warred
-with the instinct, almost the obsession, that was taking him to
-Cheylesford Lodge. Eppie had been persistently in his thoughts since
-their meeting of the week before, and from his own hopelessness had
-sprung the haunting of a hope for her. Turn from it as he would, accuse
-himself angrily of madness, morbidity, or a mere tendency to outrageous
-meddling,--symptomatic of shattered nerves,--he couldn't escape it. By
-day and night it was with him, until he saw himself, in a lurid vision,
-as responsible for Eppie's very life if he didn't test its validity. For
-where she had failed might not a man armed with the strength of his
-selfless love succeed?
-
-He had said, in his old anger, that as Gavan's wife Gavan would kill
-her; but he hadn't really meant that literally; now, literally, the new
-fear had come that she might die of Gavan's loss. Her will hadn't
-snapped, but her vitality was like the flare of the candle in its
-socket. To love, the eremite of Cheylesford Lodge wouldn't
-yield--perhaps for very pity's sake; but if he were made to see the
-other side of it?--Grainger found a grim amusement in the paradox--the
-lover, in spite of love, might yield to pity. Couldn't his own manliness
-strike some spark of manliness from Gavan? Couldn't he and Eppie between
-them, with their so different appeals,--she to what was soft, he to what
-was tough,--hoist his tragically absurd head above water, as it were,
-into the air of real life, that might, who knew? fill and sustain his
-aquatic lungs? It gave him a vindictive pleasure to see the drowning
-simile in the most ludicrous aspects--Gavan, draped in the dramatic
-robes of his twopenny-halfpenny philosophies, holding his head in a
-basin of water, there resolved to die. Grainger felt that as far as his
-own inclinations were concerned it would have given him some pleasure to
-help to hold him under, to see that, while he was about it, he did it
-thoroughly; but the question wasn't one of his own inclinations: it was
-for Eppie's sake that he must try to drag out the enraptured suicide. It
-was Eppie, bereft and dying,--so it seemed to him in moments of deep
-fear,--whose very life depended on the submerged life. And to see if he
-could fish it up for her he had come on this undignified, this
-ridiculous errand.
-
-Very undignified and very ridiculous he felt the errand to be, as he
-strode on through the lane, its high hedge-rows all dusty with the
-autumn drought; but he was indifferent enough to that side of it. He
-felt no confusion. He was completely prepared to speak his mind.
-
-Coming to a turning of the lane, where he stood for a moment,
-uncertain, at branching paths, he was joined by an alert little parson
-who asked him courteously if he could direct him on his way. They were
-both, it then appeared, going to Cheylesford Lodge; and the Reverend
-John Best, after introducing himself as the rector of Dittleworth
-parish, and receiving Grainger's name, which had its reverberations,
-with affable interest, surmised that it was to another friend of Mr.
-Palairet's that he spoke.
-
-"Yes. No. That is to say, I've known him after a fashion for years, but
-seen little of him. Has he been here all summer?" Grainger asked, as
-they walked on.
-
-It seemed that Gavan had only returned from the Continent the week
-before, but Mr. Best went on to say, with an evidently temperamental
-loquacity, that he was there for most of the time as a rule and was
-found a very charming neighbor and a very excellent parishioner.
-
-This last was a rle in which Gavan seemed extremely incongruous, and
-Grainger looked his perplexity, murmuring, "Parishioner?"
-
-"Not, I fear, that we can claim him as an altogether orthodox one," Mr.
-Best said, smiling tolerantly upon his companion's probable narrowness.
-"We ask for the spirit, rather than the letter, nowadays, Mr. Grainger;
-and Mr. Palairet is, at heart, as good a Christian as any of us, of that
-I am assured: better than many of us, as far as living the Christian
-life goes. Christianity, in its essence, is a life. Ah, if only you
-statesmen, you active men of the world, would realize that; would look
-past the symbols to the reality. We, who see life as a spiritual
-organization, are able to break down the limitations of the dry,
-self-centered individualism that, for so many years, has obscured the
-glorious features of our faith. And it is the spirit of the Church that
-Mr. Palairet has grasped. Time only is needed, I am convinced, to make
-him a partaker of her gifts."
-
-Grainger walked on in a sardonic silence, and Mr. Best, all
-unsuspecting, continued to embroider his congenial theme with
-illustrations: the village poor, to whom Mr. Palairet was so devoted;
-the village hospital, of which he was to talk over the plans to-day; the
-neighborly thoughtfulness and unfailing kindness and charity he showed
-toward high and low.
-
-"Palairet always seemed to me very ineffectual," said Grainger when, in
-a genial pause, he felt that something in the way of response was
-expected of him.
-
-"Ah, I fear you judge by the worldly standard of outward attainment, Mr.
-Grainger."
-
-"What other is there for us human beings to judge by?"
-
-"The standard of our unhappy modern plutocratic society is not that by
-which to measure the contemplative type of character."
-
-Grainger felt a slight stress of severity in the good little parson's
-affability.
-
-"Oh, I think its standards aren't at all unwholesome," he made reply. He
-could have justified anything, any standard, against Gavan and his
-standards.
-
-"Unwholesome, my dear Mr. Grainger? That is just what they are. See the
-beauty of a life like our friend's here. It judges your barbarous
-Christless civilization. He lives laborious, simple days. He does his
-work, he has his friends. His influence upon them counts for more than
-an outside observer could compute. Great men are among them. I met Lord
-Taunton at his house last Sunday. A most impressive personality. Even
-though Mr. Palairet has abandoned the political career, one can't call
-him ineffectual when such a man is among his intimates."
-
-"The monkish type doesn't appeal to me, I own."
-
-"Ah, there you touch the point that has troubled me. It is not good for
-a man to live alone. My chief wish for him is that he may marry. I often
-urge it on him."
-
-"Well done."
-
-"One did hear," Mr. Best went on, his small, ruddy face taking on a look
-of retrospective reprobation, "that there was an attachment to a certain
-young woman--the tale was public property--only as such do I allude to
-it--a very fashionable, very worldly young woman. I was relieved indeed
-when the rumor came to nothing. He escaped finally, I can't help
-fancying it, this summer. I was much relieved."
-
-"Why so, pray?"
-
-"I am rural, old-fashioned, my dear young man, and that type of young
-woman is one toward which, I own it, I find it difficult to feel
-charitably. She represents the pagan, the Christless element that I
-spoke of in our modern world. Her charm could not have been a noble
-one. Had our friend here succumbed to it, she could only have meant
-disaster in his life. She would have urged him into ambition,
-pleasure-seeking, dissipation. Of course I only cite what I have heard
-in my quiet corner, though I have had glimpses of her, passing with a
-friend, a very frivolous person, in a motor-car. She looked completely
-what I had imagined."
-
-"If you mean Miss Gifford," said Grainger, trying for temperateness, "I
-happen to know her. She is anything but a pleasure-seeker, anything but
-frivolous, anything, above all, but a pagan. If Palairet had been lucky
-enough to marry her it would have been the best thing that ever happened
-to him in his life, and a very dubious thing for her. She is a thousand
-times too good for him."
-
-"My dear Mr. Grainger, pardon me; I had no idea that you knew the lady.
-But," Mr. Best had flushed a little under this onslaught, "I cannot but
-think you a partisan."
-
-"Do you call a woman frivolous who spends half of her time working in
-the slums?"
-
-"That is a phase, I hear, of the ultra-smart young woman. But no doubt
-rumor has been unjust. I must beg you to pardon me."
-
-"Oh, don't mind that. You heard, no doubt, the surface things. But no
-one who knows Miss Gifford can think of them, that's all."
-
-"And if I have been betrayed into injustice, I hope that you will
-reconsider a little more charitably your impression of Mr. Palairet,"
-said Mr. Best, in whom, evidently, Grainger's roughness rankled.
-
-Grainger laughed grimly. "I can't consider him anything but a thousand
-times too bad for Miss Gifford."
-
-They had reached the entrance to Cheylesford Lodge on this final and
-discordant phrase. Mr. Best kept a grieved silence and Grainger's
-thoughts passed from him.
-
-He had had in his life no training in appreciation and was indifferent
-to things of the eye, but even to his insensible nature the whole aspect
-of the house that they approached between high yew hedges, its dreaming
-quiet, the tones of its dim old bricks, the shadowed white of paneled
-walls within, spoke of pensive beauty, of a secure content in things of
-the mind. He felt it suddenly as oppressive and ominous in its assured
-quietness. It had some secret against the probes of feeling. Its magic
-softly shut away suffering and encircled safely a treasure of
-tranquillity.
-
-That was the secret, that the magic; it flashed vaguely for
-Grainger--though by its light he saw more vividly his own errand as
-ridiculous--that a life of thought, pure thought, if one could only
-achieve it, was the only _safe_ life. Where, in this adjusted system of
-beauty and contemplation, would his appeals find foothold?
-
-He dashed back the crowding doubts, summoning his own crude forces.
-
-The man who admitted them said that Mr. Palairet was in the garden, and
-stepping from opened windows at the back of the house, they found
-themselves on the sunny spaces of the lawn with its encompassing trees
-and its wandering border of flowers.
-
-Gavan was sitting with a book in the shade of the great yew-tree. In
-summer flannels, a panama hat tilted over his eyes, he was very white,
-very tenuous, very exquisite. And he was the center of it all, the
-secret securely his, the magic all at his disposal.
-
-Seeing them he rose, dropping his book into his chair, strolling over
-the miraculous green to meet them, showing no haste, no hesitation, no
-surprise.
-
-"I've come on particular business," Grainger said, "and I'll stroll
-about until you and Mr. Best are done with the hospital."
-
-Mr. Best, still with sadness in his manner, promised not to keep Mr.
-Palairet long and they went inside.
-
-Grainger was left standing under the yew-tree. He took up Gavan's book,
-while the sense of frustration, and of rebellion against it, rose in
-him. The book was French and dealt with an obscure phase of Byzantine
-history. Gavan's neat notes marked passages concerning some contemporary
-religious phenomena.
-
-Grainger flung down the book, careless of crumpled leaves, and wandered
-off abruptly, among the hedges and into the garden. It was a very
-different garden from the old Scotch one where a sweet pensiveness
-seemed always to hover and where romance whispered and beckoned. This
-garden, steeped in sunlight, and where plums and pears on the hot rosy
-walls shone like jewels among their crisp green leaves, was unshadowed,
-unhaunted, smiling and decorous--the garden of placid wisdom and
-Epicurean calm. Grainger, as he walked, felt at his heart a tug of
-strange homesickness and yearning for that Northern garden, its dim
-gray walls and its disheveled nooks and corners. Were they all done with
-it forever?
-
-By the time he had returned to the lawn Gavan was just emerging from the
-house. They met in the shadow of the yew.
-
-"I'm glad to see you, Grainger," Gavan said, with a smile that struck
-Grainger as faded in quality. "This place is a sort of harbor for tired
-workers, you know. You should have looked me up before, or are you never
-tired enough for that?"
-
-"I don't feel the need of harbors, yet. One never sees you in London."
-
-"No, the lounging life down here suits me."
-
-"Your little parson doesn't see it in that light. He has been telling me
-how you live up to your duties as neighbor and parishioner."
-
-"It doesn't require much effort. Nice little fellow, isn't he, Best? He
-tells me that you walked up together."
-
-"We did," said Grainger, with his own inner sense of grim humor at the
-memory. "I should think you would find him rather limited."
-
-"But I'm limited, too," said Gavan, mildly. "I like being with people so
-neatly adapted to their functions. There are no loose ends about Best;
-nothing unfulfilled or uncomfortable. He's all there--all that there is
-of him to be there."
-
-"Not a very lively companion."
-
-"I'm not a lively companion, either," Gavan once more, with his mild
-gaiety, retorted.
-
-Grainger at this gave a harsh laugh. "No, you certainly aren't," he
-agreed.
-
-They had twice paced the length of the yew-tree shadow and Gavan had
-asked no question; and Grainger felt, as the pause grew, that Gavan
-never would ask questions. Any onus for a disturbance of the atmosphere
-must rest entirely on himself, and to disturb it he would have to be
-brutal.
-
-He jerked aside the veils of the placid dialogue with sudden violence.
-"I've seen Eppie," he said.
-
-He had intended to use her formal name only, but the nearer word rushed
-out and seemed to shatter the magic that held him off.
-
-Gavan's face grew a shade paler. "Have you?" he said.
-
-"You knew that she had been ill?"
-
-"I heard of it, recently, from General Carmichael. It was nothing
-serious, I think."
-
-"It will be serious." Grainger stood still and gazed into his eyes. "Do
-you want to kill her?"
-
-It struck him, when he had said it, and while Gavan received the words
-and seemed to reflect on them, that however artificial his atmosphere
-might be he would never evade any reality brought forcibly into it. He
-contemplated this one and did not pretend not to understand.
-
-"I want Eppie to be happy," he said presently.
-
-"Happy, yes. So do I," broke from Grainger with a groan.
-
-They stood now near the great trunk of the yew-tree, and turning away,
-striking the steel-gray bark monotonously with his fist, he went on: "I
-love her, as you know. And she loves you. She told me--I made her tell
-me. But any one with eyes could see it; even your gossiping little fool
-of a parson here had heard of it--was relieved for your escape. But who
-cares for the cackling? And you have crippled her, broken her. You have
-tossed aside that woman whose little finger is worth more to the world
-than your whole being. I wish to God she'd never seen you."
-
-"So do I," Gavan said.
-
-"I'd kill you with the greatest pleasure--if it could do her any good."
-
-There was relief for Grainger in getting out these fundamental things.
-
-"Yes,--I quite understand that. So would I," Gavan acquiesced,--"kill
-myself, I mean,--if it would do her any good."
-
-"Don't try that. It wouldn't. She's beyond all help but one. So I am
-here to put it to you."
-
-The still, hot day encompassed their shadow and with its quiet made more
-intense Grainger's sense of his own passion--passion and its negation,
-the stress between the two. Their words, though they spoke so quietly,
-seemed to fill the world.
-
-"I am sorry," Gavan said; "I can do nothing."
-
-Grainger beat at the tree.
-
-"You love her."
-
-"Not as she must be loved. I only want her, when I am selfish. When I
-think for her I have no want at all."
-
-"Give her your selfishness."
-
-"Ah, even that fades. That's what I found out. I can't count on my
-selfishness. I've tried to do it. It didn't work."
-
-Grainger turned his bloodshot eyes upon him; these moments under the
-yew-tree, that white figure with its pale smile, its comprehending
-gravity confronting him, would count in his life, he knew, among its
-most racking memories.
-
-"I consider you a madman," he now said.
-
-"Perhaps I am one. You don't think it for Eppie's happiness to marry a
-madman?"
-
-"My God, I don't know what to think! I want to save her."
-
-"But so do I," Gavan's voice had its first note of eagerness. "_I_ want
-to save her. And I want her to marry you. That's her chance, and
-yours--and mine, though mine really doesn't count. That's what I hope
-for."
-
-"There's no hope there."
-
-"Have patience. Wait. She will, perhaps, get over me."
-
-Grainger's eyes, with their hot, jaded look of baffled purpose, so
-selfless that it transcended jealousy and hatred, were still on him, and
-he thought now that he detected on the other's face the strain of some
-inner tension. He wasn't so dead, then. He was suffering. No, more yet,
-and the final insight came in another vague flash that darkly showed the
-trouble at the heart of all the magic, the beauty, he, too, more really
-than Eppie, perhaps, was dying for love. Madman, devoted madman that he
-was, he was dying for love of the woman from whom he must always flee.
-It was strange to feel one's sane, straightforward mind forced along
-this labyrinth of dazed comprehension, turning in the cruelly knotted
-paradox of this impossible love-story. Yet, against his very will, he
-was so forced to follow and almost to understand.
-
-There wasn't much more to say. And he had his own paradoxical
-satisfaction in the sight of the canker at the core of thought. So, at
-all events, one wasn't safe even so.
-
-"She won't get over you," he said. "It isn't a mere love-affair. It's
-her life. She may not die of it; that's a figure of speech that I had no
-right, I suppose, to use. At all events, she'll try her best not to die.
-But she won't get over you."
-
-"Not even if I get out of the way forever?"
-
-Gavan put the final proposition before him, but Grainger, staring at the
-sunlight, shook his head.
-
-"The very fact that you're alive makes her hold the tighter. No, you
-can't save her in that way. I wish you could."
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Grainger had had his insight, but, outwardly, in the year that followed,
-Gavan's life was one of peace, of achieved escape.
-
-The world soon ceased to pull at him, to plead or protest. With a kindly
-shrug of the shoulders the larger life passed him by as one more proved
-ineffectual. The little circle that clung about him, as the flotsam and
-jetsam of a river drift from the hurrying current around the stability
-and stillness of a green islet, was, in the main, composed of the
-defeated or the indifferent. One or two cynical fighters moored their
-boats, for a week-end, at his tranquil shores, and the powerful old
-statesman who believed nothing, hoped nothing, felt very little, and
-who, behind his show-life of patriotic and hard-working nobleman, smiled
-patiently at the whole foolish comedy, was his most intimate companion.
-To the world at large, Lord Taunton was the witty Tory, the devoted
-churchman, the wise upholder of all the hard-won props of civilization;
-to Gavan, he was the skeptical and pessimistic metaphysician; together
-they watched the wheels go round.
-
-Mayburn came down once or twice to see his poor, queer, dear old
-Palairet, and in London boasted much of the experience. "He's too, too
-wonderful," he said. "He has achieved a most delicate, recondite
-harmony. One never heard anything just like it before, and can't, for
-the life of one, tell just what the notes are. Effort, constant effort,
-amidst constant quiet and austerity. Work is his passion, and yet never
-was any creature so passionless. He's like a rower, rowing easily,
-indefatigably, down a long river, among lilies, while he looks up at the
-sky."
-
-But Mayburn felt the quiet and austerity a little disturbing. He didn't,
-after all, come to look at quiet and austerity unless some one were
-there to hear him talk about them; and his host, all affability, never
-seemed quite there.
-
-So a year, more than a year, went by.
-
-It was on an early spring morning that Gavan found on his
-breakfast-table a letter written in a faltering hand,--a hand that
-faltered with the weeping that shook it,--Miss Barbara's old, faint
-hand.
-
-He read, at first, hardly comprehending.
-
-It was of Eppie she wrote: of her overwork--they thought it must be
-that--in the winter, of the resultant fragility that had made her
-succumb suddenly to an illness contracted in some hotbed of epidemic in
-the slums. They had all thought that she would come through it. People
-had been very kind. Eppie had so many, many friends. Every one loved
-her. She had been moved to Lady Alicia's house in Grosvenor Street. She,
-Aunt Barbara, had come up to town at once, and the general was with
-her.
-
-It was with a fierce impatience that he went on through the phrases that
-were like the slow trickling of tear after tear, as if he knew, yet
-refused to know, the tragedy that the trivial tears flowed for, knew
-what was coming, resented its insufferable delay, yet spurned its bare
-possibility. At the end, and only then, it came. Her strength had
-suddenly failed. There was no hope. Eppie was dying and had asked to see
-him--at once.
-
-A bird, above the window open to the dew and sunlight, sang and whistled
-while he read, a phrase, not joyous, not happy, yet strangely full of
-triumph, of the innocent praise of life. Gavan, standing still, with the
-letter in his hand, listened, while again and again, monotonously,
-freshly, the bird repeated its song.
-
-He seemed at first to listen quietly, with pleasure, appreciative of
-this heraldry of spring; then memory, blind, numbed from some dark
-shock, stirred, stole out to meet it--the memory of Eppie's morning
-voice on the hillside, the voice monotonous yet triumphant with its
-sense of life; and at each reiteration, the phrase seemed a dagger
-plunged into his heart.
-
-Oh, memory! Oh, cruel thought! Cruel life!
-
-After he had ordered the trap, and while waiting for it, he walked out
-into the freshness and back and forth, over and over across the lawn,
-with the patient, steady swiftness of an animal caged and knowing that
-the bars are about it. So this was to be the end. But, though already he
-acquiesced, it seemed in some way a strange, inapt ending. He couldn't
-think of Eppie and death. He couldn't see her dead. He could only see
-her looking at death.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The early train he caught got him to London by eleven, and in twenty
-minutes he was in Grosvenor Street. He had wired from the country, and
-Miss Barbara met him in the drawing-room of the house, hushed in its
-springtime gaiety. She was the frail ghost of her shadowy old self, her
-voice tremulous, her face blurred with tears and sleepless nights. Yet
-he saw, under the woe, the essential listlessness of age, the placidity
-beneath the half-mechanical tears. "Oh, Gavan," she said, taking his
-hand and holding it in both her own--"Oh, Gavan, we couldn't have
-thought of this, could we, that she would go first." And that his own
-face showed some sharp fixity of woe he felt from its reflection on
-hers--like a sword-flash reflected in a shallow pool.
-
-She told him that it was now an affair of hours only. "I would have sent
-for you long ago, Gavan; I knew--I knew that you would want it. But she
-wouldn't--not while there was hope. I think she was afraid of hurting
-you. You know she had never been the same since--since--"
-
-"Since what?" he asked, knowing.
-
-"Since you went away. She was so ill then. Poor child! She never found
-herself, you see, Gavan. She did not know what she wanted. She has worn
-herself out in looking for it."
-
-Miss Barbara was very ignorant. He himself could not know, probably
-Eppie herself didn't know, what had killed her, though she had so well
-known what she wanted; but he suspected that Grainger had been right,
-and that it was on him that Eppie's life had shattered itself.
-
-Her will, evidently, still ruled those about her, for when Miss Barbara
-had led him up-stairs she said, pausing in the passage, that Eppie would
-see him alone; the nurse would leave them. She had insisted on that, and
-there was now no reason why she should not have her way. The nurse came
-out to them, telling him that Miss Gifford waited; and, just before she
-let him go, Miss Barbara drew his head down to hers and kissed him,
-murmuring to him to be brave. He really didn't know whether he were more
-the felon, or more the victim that she thought him. Then the door closed
-behind him and he was alone with Eppie.
-
-Eppie was propped high on pillows, her hair twisted up from her brows
-and neck and folded in heavy masses on her head.
-
-In the wide, white room, among her pillows, so white herself, and
-strange with a curious thinness, he had never received a more prodigious
-impression of life than in meeting her eyes, where all the forces of her
-soul looked out. So motionless, she was like music, like all that moves,
-that strives and is restless; so white, she was like skies at dawn, like
-deep seas under sunlight. In the stillness, the whiteness, the emptiness
-of the room she was illusion itself, life and beauty, a wonderful
-rainbow thing staining "the white radiance of eternity." And as if,
-before its final shattering, every color flamed, her whole being was
-concentrated in the mere fact of its existence--its existence that
-defied death. A deep, quiet excitement, almost a gaiety, breathed from
-her. In the tangled rivers of her hair, the intertwined currents of dark
-and gold winding in a lovely disorder,--in the white folds of lawn that
-lay so delicately about her; in the emerald slipping far down her
-finger, the emeralds in her ears, shaking faintly with her ebbing
-heart-beats, there was even a sort of wilful and heroic coquetry. She
-was, in her dying, triumphantly beautiful, yet, as always, through her
-beauty went the strength of her reliance on deeper significances.
-
-She lay motionless as Gavan approached her, and he guessed that she
-saved all her strength. Only as he took the chair beside her, horror at
-his heart, the old familiar horror, she put out her hand to him.
-
-He took it silently, looking up, after a little while, from its
-marvelous lightness and whiteness to her eyes, her smile. Then, at last,
-she spoke to him.
-
-"So you think that you have got the better of me at last, don't you,
-Gavan dear?" she said. Her voice was strange, as though familiar notes
-were played on some far-away flute, sweet and melancholy among the
-hills. The voice was strange and sad, but the words were not. In them
-was a caress, as though she pitied his pity for her; but the old
-antagonism, too, was there--a defiance, a willingness to be cruel to
-him. "I did play fair, you see," she went on. "I wouldn't have you come
-till there was no danger, for you, any more. And now this is the end of
-it all, you think. You will soon be able to say of me, Gavan,
-
- "her words to Scorn
- Are scattered, and her mouth is stopt with Dust!"
-
-His hand shut involuntarily, painfully, on hers, and as though his
-breath cut him, he said, "Don't--don't, Eppie."
-
-But with her gaiety she insisted: "Oh, but let us have the truth. You
-must think it. What else could you think?" and, again with the note of
-pity that would atone for the cruel lightness, "Poor Gavan! My poor,
-darling Gavan! And I must leave you with your thoughts--your empty
-thoughts, alone."
-
-He had taken a long breath over the physical pang her words had
-inflicted, and now he looked down at her hand, gently, one after the
-other, as though unseeingly, smoothing her fingers.
-
-"While I go on," she said.
-
-"Yes, dear," he assented.
-
-"You humor me with that. You are so glad, for me, that I go with all my
-illusions about me. Aren't you afraid that, because of them, I'll be
-caught in the mill again and ground round and round in incarnations
-until, only after such a long time, I come out all clean and white and
-selfless, not a scrap of dangerous life about me--Alone with the Alone."
-
-He felt now the fever in her clearness, the hovering on the border of
-hallucination. The colors flamed indeed, and her thoughts seemed to
-shoot up in strange flickerings, a medley of inconsequent memories and
-fancies strung on their chain of unnatural lucidity.
-
-He answered with patient gentleness, "I'm not afraid for you, Eppie. I
-don't think all that."
-
-"Nor I for myself," she retorted. "I love the mill and its grindings.
-But what you think,--I know perfectly what you think. You can't keep it
-from me, Gavan. You can't keep anything from me. And I found something
-that said it all. I can remember it. Shall I say it to you?"
-
-He bowed his head, smoothing her hand, not looking up at her while, in
-that voice of defiance, of fever, yet of such melancholy and echoing
-sweetness, she repeated:
-
- "Ne suis-je pas un faux accord
- Dans la divine symphonie,
- Grce la vorace Ironie
- Qui me secoue et qui me mord?
-
- "Elle est dans ma voix, la criarde!
- C'est tout mon sang, ce poison noir!
- Je suis le sinistre miroir
- O la mgre se regarde!
-
- "Je suis la plaie et le couteau!
- Je suis le soufflet et la joue!
- Je suis les membres et la roue,
- Et le victime et le bourreau!"
-
-She paused after it, smiling intently upon him, and he met the smile to
-say:
-
-"That's only one side of it, dear."
-
-"Ah, it's a side I know about, too! Didn't I see it, feel it? Haven't I
-been all through it--with you, for you, because of you? Ah, when you
-left me--when you left me, Gavan--"
-
-Still she smiled, with brilliant eyes, repeating,
-
- "Qui me secoue et qui me mord."
-
-He was silent, sitting with his pallid, drooping head; and suddenly she
-put her other hand on his, on the hand that gently, mechanically,
-smoothed her fingers.
-
-"You caress me, you try to comfort me,--while I am tormenting you. It's
-strange that I should want to torment you. Is it that I'm so afraid you
-sha'n't feel? I want you to feel. I want you to suffer. It is so
-horrible to leave you. It is so horrible to be afraid--sometimes
-afraid--that I shall never, never see you again. When you feel, when you
-suffer, I am not so lonely. But you feel nothing, do you?"
-
-He did not answer her.
-
-"Will you ever miss me, Gavan?"
-
-He did not answer.
-
-"Won't you even remember me?" she asked.
-
-And still he did not answer, sitting with downcast eyes. And she saw
-that he could not, and in his silence, of a dumb torture, was his reply.
-He looked the stricken saint, pierced through with arrows. And which of
-them was the victim, which the executioner?
-
-With her question a clearness, quieter, deeper, came to her, as though
-in the recoil of its engulfing anguish she pushed her way from among
-vibrating discords to a sudden harmony that, in holy peace, resolved
-them all in unison. Her eyelids fluttered down while, for an instant,
-she listened. Yes, under it all, above it all, holding them all about,
-there it was. She seemed to see the pain mounting, circling, flowing
-from its knotted root into strength and splendor. But though he was with
-her in it he was also far away,--he was blind, and deaf,--held fast by
-cruel bonds.
-
-"Look at me," she commanded him gently.
-
-And now, reluctantly, he looked up into her eyes.
-
-They held him, they drew him, they flooded him. With the keenness of
-life they cut into his heart, and like the surging up of blood his love
-answered hers. As helpless as he had ever been before her, he laid his
-head on her breast, his arms encircling her, while, with closed eyes, he
-said: "Don't think that I don't feel. Don't think that I don't suffer.
-It's only that;--I have only to see you;--something grasps me, and
-tortures me--"
-
-"Something," she said, her voice like the far flute echo of the voice
-that had spoken on that night in the old Scotch garden, "that brings you
-to life--to God."
-
-"Oh, Eppie, what can I say to you?" he murmured.
-
-"You can say nothing. But you will have to wake. It will have to
-come,--the sorrow, the joy of reality,--God--and me."
-
-It was his face, with closed eyes, with its stricken, ashen agony, that
-seemed the dying face. Hers, turned gently toward him, had all the
-beneficence, the radiance of life. But when she spoke again there was in
-her voice a tranced stillness as though already it spoke from another
-world.
-
-"You love me, Gavan."
-
-"I love you. You have that. That is yours, forever. I long for you,
-always, always,--even when I think that I am at peace. You are in
-everything: I hear a bird, and I think of your voice; I see a flower,
-or the sky, and it's of your face I think. I am yours, Eppie--yours
-forever."
-
-"You make me happy," she said.
-
-"Eppie, my darling Eppie, die now, die in my arms, dearest--in your
-happiness."
-
-"No, not yet; I can't go yet--though I wish it, too," she said. "There
-are still horrid bits--dreadful dark places--like the dreadful poem--the
-poem of you, Gavan--where I lose myself; burning places, edges of pain,
-where I fight to find myself again; long, dim places where I
-dream--dream--. I won't have you see me like that; you might think that
-you watched the scattering of the real me. I won't have you remember me
-all dim and broken."
-
-Her voice was sinking from her into an abyss of languor, and she felt
-the swirl of phantom thoughts blurring her mind even while she spoke.
-
-As on that far-away night when he held her hand and they stood together
-under the stars, she said, speaking now her prayer, "O God! God!"; and
-seeming in the effort of her will to lift a weight that softly,
-inexorably, like the lid of a tomb, pressed down upon her, "I am here,"
-she said. "You are mine. I will not be afraid. Remember me. So good-by,
-Gavan."
-
-"I will remember," he said.
-
-His arms still held her. And through his mind an army seemed to rush,
-galloping, with banners, with cries of lamentations, agony, regret,
-passionate rebellion. It crashed in conflict, blood beneath it, and
-above it tempests and torn banners. And the banners were desperate
-hopes riddled with bullets; and the blood was love poured out and the
-tempest was his heart. It was, he thought, even while he saw, listened,
-felt, the last onslaught upon his soul. She was going--the shadow of
-life was sliding from her--and from him, for she was life and its terror
-and beauty. Above the turmoil was the fated peace. He had won it,
-unwillingly. He could not be kept from it even by the memory that would
-stay.
-
-But though he knew, and, in knowing, saw his contemplative soul far from
-this scene of suffocating misery, Eppie, his dear, his beautiful, was in
-his arms, her eyes, her lips, her heart. He would never see her again.
-
-He raised his head to look his last, and, like a faint yet piercing
-perfume, her soul's smile still dwelt on him as she lay there
-speechless. For the moment--and was not the moment eternity?--the
-triumph was all hers. The moment, when long, long past, would still be
-part of him and her triumph in it eternal. To spare her the sight of his
-anguish would be to rob her. Anguish had been and was the only offering
-he could make her. He felt--felt unendurably, she would see that; he
-suffered, he loved her, unspeakably; she had that, too, while, in their
-last long silence, he held her hands against his heart. And her eyes,
-still smiling on him with their transcendent faith, showed that her
-triumph was shadowless.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He heard next day that she had died during the night.
-
-Peace did not come to him for long; the wounds of the warring interlude
-of life had been too deep. He forgot himself at last in the treadmill
-quiet of days all serene laboriousness, knowing that it could not be for
-many years that he should watch the drama. She had shattered herself on
-him; but he, too, had felt that in himself something had broken. And he
-forgot the wounds, except when some sight or sound, the song of a bird
-in Spring, a spray of heather, a sky of stars, startled them to deep
-throbbing. And then a hand, stretched out from the past, would seize
-him, a shudder, a pang, would shake him, and he would know that he was
-alone and that he remembered.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Shadow of Life
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: June 17, 2013 [EBook #42965]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SHADOW OF LIFE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-BY
-
-Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-AUTHOR OF "THE RESCUE," "THE CONFOUNDING OF
-CAMELIA," "PATHS OF JUDGEMENT," ETC.
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-NEW YORK
-
-The Century Co.
-
-1906
-
-Copyright, 1906, by
-The Century Co.
-
-_Published February, 1906_
-
-THE DE VINNE PRESS
-
-
-
-
-
-THE SHADOW OF LIFE
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-Elspeth Gifford was five years old when she went to live at Kirklands.
-Her father, an army officer, died in her babyhood, and her mother a few
-years later. The uncle and aunts in Scotland, all three much her
-mother's seniors, were the child's nearest relatives.
-
-To such a little girl death had meant no more than a bewildered
-loneliness, but the bewilderment was so sharp, the loneliness so aching,
-that she cried herself into an illness. She had seen her dead mother,
-the sweet, sightless, silent face, familiar yet amazing, and more than
-any fear or shrinking had been the suffocating mystery of feeling
-herself forgotten and left behind. Her uncle Nigel, sorrowful and grave,
-but so large and kind that his presence seemed to radiate a restoring
-warmth, came to London for her and a fond nurse went with her to the
-North, and after a few weeks the anxious affection of her aunts Rachel
-and Barbara built about her, again, a child's safe universe of love.
-
-Kirklands was a large white house and stood on a slope facing south,
-backed by a rise of thickly wooded hill and overlooking a sea of
-heathery moorland. It was a solitary but not a melancholy house. Lichens
-yellowed the high-pitched slate roof and creepers clung to the roughly
-"harled" walls. On sunny days the long rows of windows were golden
-squares in the illumined white, and, under a desolate winter sky, glowed
-with an inner radiance.
-
-In the tall limes to the west a vast colony of rooks made their nests;
-and to Eppie these high nests, so dark against the sky in the vaguely
-green boughs of spring or in the autumn's bare, swaying branches, had a
-weird, fairy-tale charm. They belonged neither to the earth nor to the
-sky, but seemed to float between, in a place of inaccessible romance,
-and the clamor, joyous yet irritable, at dawn and evening seemed full of
-quaint, strange secrets that only a wandering prince or princess would
-have understood.
-
-Before the house a round of vivid green was encircled by the drive that
-led through high stone gates to the moorland road. A stone wall, running
-from gate to gate, divided the lawn from the road, and upon each pillar
-a curiously carved old griffin, its back and head spotted with yellow
-lichens, held stiffly up, for the inspection of passers-by, the family
-escutcheon. From the windows at the back of the house one looked up at
-the hilltop, bare but for a group of pine-trees, and down into a deep
-garden. Here, among utilitarian squares of vegetable beds, went
-overgrown borders of flowers--bands of larkspurs, lupins, stocks, and
-columbines. The golden-gray of the walls was thickly embroidered with
-climbing fruit-trees, and was entirely covered, at one end of the
-garden, by a small snow-white rose, old-fashioned, closely petaled; and
-here in a corner stood a thatched summer-house, where Eppie played with
-her dolls, and where, on warm summer days, the white roses filled the
-air with a fragrance heavy yet fresh in its wine-like sweetness. All
-Eppie's early memories of Kirklands centered about the summer-house and
-were mingled with the fragrance of the roses. Old James, the gardener,
-put up there a little locker where her toys were stored, and shelves
-where she ranged her dolls' dishes. There were rustic seats, too, and a
-table--a table always rather unsteady on the uneven wooden floor. The
-sun basked in that sheltered, windless corner, and, when it rained, the
-low, projecting eaves ranged one safely about with a silvery fringe of
-drops through which one looked out over the wet garden and up at the
-white walls of the house, crossed by the boughs of a great, dark
-pine-tree.
-
-Inside the house the chief room was the fine old library, where, from
-long windows, one looked south over the purples and blues of the
-moorland. Books filled the shelves from floor to ceiling--old-fashioned
-tomes in leather bindings, shut away, many of them, behind brass
-gratings and with all the delightful sense of peril connected with the
-lofty upper ranges, only to be reached by a courageous use of the
-library steps.
-
-Here Uncle Nigel gave Eppie lessons in Greek and history every morning,
-aided in the minor matters of her education by a submissive nursery
-governess, an Englishwoman, High Church in doctrine and plaintive in a
-country of dissent.
-
-A door among the book-shelves led from the library into the morning-room
-or boudoir, where Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara sewed, read, dispensed
-small charities and lengthy advice to the village poor--a cheerful
-little room in spite of its northern aspect and the shadowing trunk of
-the great pine-tree just outside its windows. It was all faded chintzes,
-gilt carvings, porcelain ornaments in corner cabinets; its paper was
-white with a fine gilt line upon it; and even though to Eppie it had sad
-associations with Bible lessons and Sunday morning collects, it retained
-always its aspect of incongruous and delightful gaiety--almost of
-frivolity. Sitting there in their delicate caps and neatly appointed
-dresses, with their mild eyes and smoothly banded hair, Aunt Rachel and
-Aunt Barbara gathered a picture-book charm--seemed to count less as
-personalities and more as ornaments. On the other side of the hall,
-rather bare and bleak in its antlered spaciousness, were the dining-and
-smoking-rooms, the first paneled in slightly carved wood, painted white,
-the last a thoroughly modern room, redolent of shabby comforts, with
-deep leather chairs, massive mid-century furniture, and an aggressively
-cheerful paper.
-
-The drawing-room, above the library, was never used--a long, vacant
-room, into which Eppie would wander with a pleasant sense of
-trespassing and impertinence; a trivial room, for all the dignity of its
-shrouded shapes and huge, draped chandelier. Its silver-flecked gray
-paper and oval gilt picture-frames recalled an epoch nearer and uglier
-than that of the grave library and sprightly boudoir below, though even
-its ugliness had a charm. Eppie was fond of playing by herself there,
-and hid sundry secrets under the Chinese cabinet, a large, scowling
-piece of furniture, its black lacquered panels inlaid with
-mother-of-pearl. Once it was a quaintly cut cake, neatly sealed in a
-small jeweler's box, that she thrust far away under it; and once a
-minute china doll, offspring of a Christmas cracker and too minute for
-personality, was swaddled mummy fashion in a ribbon and placed beside
-the box. Much excitement was to be had by not looking to see if the
-secrets were still there and in hastily removing them when a cleaning
-threatened.
-
-The day-nursery, afterward the school-room, was over the dining-room,
-and the bedrooms were at the back of the house.
-
-The Carmichaels were of an ancient and impoverished family, their
-estates, shrunken as they were, only kept together by careful economy,
-but there was no touch of dreariness in Eppie's home. She was a happy
-child, filling her life with imaginative pastimes and finding on every
-side objects for her vigorous affections. Her aunts' mild disciplines
-weighed lightly on her. Love and discipline were sundered principles in
-the grandmotherly administration, and Eppie soon learned that the
-formalities of the first were easily evaded and to weigh the force of
-her own naughtiness against it. Corporal punishment formed part of the
-Misses Carmichael's conception of discipline, but though, on the rare
-occasions when it could not be escaped, Eppie bawled heart-rendingly
-during the very tremulous application, it was with little disturbance of
-spirit that she endured the reward of transgression.
-
-At an early age she understood very clearly the simple characters around
-her. Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara were both placid, both pious, both
-full of unsophisticated good works, both serenely acquiescent in their
-lots. In Aunt Barbara, indeed, placidity was touched with wistfulness;
-she was the gentler, the more yielding of the two. Aunt Rachel could be
-inspired with the greater ruthlessness of conscientious conviction. It
-was she who insisted upon the letter of the law in regard to the Sunday
-collect, the Sunday church-going, who mingled reproof with her village
-charities, who could criticize with such decision the short-comings,
-doctrinal and domestic, of Mr. MacNab, minister of the little
-established church that stood near the village. Aunt Barbara was far
-less assured of the forms of things; she seemed to search and fumble a
-little for further, fuller outlets, and yet to have found a greater
-serenity. Aunt Rachel was fond of pointing out to her niece such facts
-of geology, botany, and natural history in general as the country life
-and her own somewhat rudimentary knowledge suggested to her as useful;
-Aunt Barbara, on the contrary, told pretty, allegorical tales about
-birds and flowers--tales with a heavy cargo of moral insinuation, to
-which, it must be confessed, Eppie listened with an inner sense of
-stubborn realism. It was Aunt Barbara who sought to impress upon her
-that the inclusive attribute of Deity was love, and who, when Eppie
-asked her where God was, answered, "In your heart, dear child." Eppie
-was much puzzled by anatomical considerations in reflecting upon this
-information. Aunt Rachel, with clear-cut, objective facts from Genesis,
-was less mystifying to inquisitive, but pagan childhood. Eppie could not
-help thinking of God as somewhat like austere, gray-bearded old James,
-the gardener, whose vocation suggested that pictorial chapter in the
-Bible, and who, when he found her one day eating unripe fruit, warned
-her with such severity of painful retribution.
-
-The aunts spent year after year at Kirklands, with an infrequent trip to
-Edinburgh. Neither had been South since the death of the beloved younger
-sister. Uncle Nigel, the general, older than either, was russet-faced,
-white-haired, robust. He embodied a sound, well-nurtured type and
-brought to it hardly an individual variation. He taught his niece,
-re-read a few old books, followed current thought in the "Quarterly" and
-the "Scotsman," and wrote his memoirs, that moved with difficulty from
-boyhood, so detailed were his recollections and so painstaking his
-recording of inessential fact.
-
-For their few neighbors, life went on as slowly as for the Carmichaels.
-The Carstons of Carlowrie House were in touch with a larger outside
-life: Sir Alec Carston was member for the county; but the inmates of
-Brechin House, Crail Hill, and Newton Lowry were fixtures. These dim
-personages hardly counted at all in young Eppie's experience. She saw
-them gathered round the tea-table in the library when she was summoned
-to appear with tidy hair and fresh frock: stout, ruddy ladies in
-driving-gloves and boat-shaped hats; dry, thin young ladies in
-hard-looking muslins and with frizzed fringes; a solid laird or two.
-They were vague images in her world.
-
-People who really counted were the village people, and on the basis of
-her aunts' charitable relationship Eppie built up for herself with most
-of them a tyrannous friendship. The village was over two miles away; one
-reached it by the main road that ran along the moor, past the
-birch-woods, the tiny loch, and then down a steep bit of hill to the
-handful of huddled gray roofs. There was the post-office, the sweet-shop
-with its dim, small panes, behind which, to Eppie's imagination, the
-bull's-eyes and toffee and Edinburgh rock looked, in their jars, like
-odd fish in an aquarium; there was the carpenter's shop, the floor all
-heaped with scented shavings, through which one's feet shuffled in
-delightful, dry rustlings; there the public-house, a lurid corner
-building, past which Miss Grimsby always hurried her over-interested
-young charge, and there the little inn where one ordered the dusty,
-lurching, capacious old fly that conveyed one to the station, five miles
-away. Eppie was far more in the village than her share of her aunts'
-charities at all justified, and was often brought in disgrace from
-sheer truancy. The village babies, her dolls, and Robbie, her Aberdeen
-terrier, were the realities at once serious and radiant of life. She
-could do for them, love them as she would. Her uncle and aunts and the
-fond old nurse were included in an unquestioning tenderness, but they
-could not be brought under its laws, and their independence made them
-more remote.
-
-Remote, too, though by no means independent, and calling forth little
-tenderness, were her cousins, who spent part of their holidays each
-summer at Kirklands. They were English boys, coming from an English
-school, and Eppie was very stanchly Scotch. The Graingers, Jim and
-Clarence, were glad young animals. They brought from a home of small
-means and overflowing sisters uncouth though not bad manners and an
-assured tradition of facile bullying. The small Scotch cousin was at
-first seen only in the light of a convenience. She was to be ignored,
-save for her few and rudimentary uses. But Eppie, at eight years old,
-when the Graingers first came, had an opposed and firmly established
-tradition. In her own domain, she was absolute ruler, and not for a
-moment did her conception of her supremacy waver. Her assurance was so
-complete that it left no room for painful struggle or dispute. From
-helpless stupor to a submission as helpless, the cousins fell by degrees
-to a not unhappy dependence. Eppie ran, climbed, played, as good a boy
-as either; and it was she who organized games, she who invented
-wonderful new adventures, all illumined by thrilling recitatives while
-in progress, she who, though their ally, and a friendly one, was the
-brains of the alliance, and, as thinker, dominated. Brains, at their
-age, being rudimentary in the young male, Eppie had some ground for her
-consciousness of kindly disdain. She regarded Jim and Clarence as an
-animated form of toy, more amusing than other toys because of
-possibilities of unruliness, or as a mere audience, significant only as
-a means for adding to the zest of life. Clarence, the younger, even from
-the first dumb days of reconstruction, was the more malleable. He was
-formed for the part of dazzled subjection to a strong and splendid
-despotism. Eppie treated her subject races to plenty of pomp and glory.
-Clarence listened, tranced, to her heroic stories, followed her
-leadership with docile, eager fidelity, and finally, showing symptoms of
-extreme romanticism, declared himself forever in love with her. Eppie,
-like the ascendant race again, made prompt and shameless use of the
-avowed and very apparent weakness. She bartered rare and difficult
-favors for acts of service, and on one occasion--a patch of purple in
-young Clarence's maudlin days--submitted, with a stony grimace, to being
-kissed; for this treasure Clarence paid by stealing down to the
-forbidden public-house and there buying a bottle of beer which Eppie and
-Jim were to consume as robbers in a cave,--Clarence the seized and
-despoiled traveler. Eppie was made rather ill by her share of the beer,
-but, standing in a bed-gown at her window, she called to her cousins, in
-the garden below, such cheerful accounts of her malady, the slight
-chastisement that Aunt Rachel had inflicted, and her deft evasion of
-medicines, that her luster was heightened rather than dimmed by the
-disaster. Jim never owned, for a moment, to there being any luster. He
-was a square-faced boy, with abrupt nose, and lips funnily turning up at
-the corners, yet funnily grim,--most unsmiling of lips. He followed
-Eppie's lead with the half-surly look of a slave in bondage, and seemed
-dumbly to recognize that his own unfitness rather than Eppie's right
-gave her authority. He retaliated on Clarence for his sense of
-subjection and cruelly teased and scoffed at him. Clarence, when pushed
-too far, would appeal to Eppie for protection, and on these occasions,
-even while she sheltered him, a strange understanding seemed to pass
-between her and the tormentor as though, with him, she found Clarence
-ludicrous. Jim, before her stinging reproofs, would stand tongue-tied
-and furious, but, while she stung him, Eppie liked the sullen culprit
-better than the suppliant victim.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-When Eppie was ten years old, she heard one day that a boy, a new boy,
-was coming to spend the spring and summer--a boy from India, Gavan
-Palairet. His mother and her own had been dear friends, and his father,
-as hers had been, was in the army; and these points of contact mitigated
-for Eppie the sense of exotic strangeness.
-
-Eppie gathered that a cloud rested upon Mrs. Palairet, and the boy,
-though exotic, seemed to come from the far, brilliant country with his
-mother's cloud about him.
-
-"Ah, poor Fanny!" the general sighed over the letter he read at the
-breakfast-table. "How did she come to marry that brute! It will be a
-heart-breaking thing for her to send the boy from her."
-
-Eppie, listening with keen interest, gathered further, from the
-reminiscent talk that went on between the sisters and brother, that Mrs.
-Palairet, for some years of her boy's babyhood, lived in England; then
-it had been India and the effort to keep him near her in the hills, and
-now his delicacy and the definite necessity of schooling had braced her
-to the parting. The general said, glancing with fond pride at his
-niece, that Eppie would be a fine playmate for him and would be of great
-service in cheering him before his plunge into school. Fanny had begged
-for much gentleness and affection for him. Apparently the boy was as
-heartbroken as she.
-
-Eppie had very little diffidence about her own powers as either playmate
-or cheerer: she was well accustomed to both parts; but her eagerness to
-sustain and amuse the invalid was touched with a little shyness. The sad
-boy from India--her heart and mind rushed out in a hundred plans of
-welcome and consolation; but she suspected that a sad boy from India
-would require subtler methods than those sufficing for a Jim or a
-Clarence. From the first moment of hearing about him she had felt, as if
-instinctively, that he would not be at all like Jim and Clarence.
-
-He came on a still, sunny spring day. The general went to meet him at
-the station, and while he was gone Eppie made excitement endurable by
-vigorous action. Again and again she visited the fresh little room
-overlooking the hills, the garden, the pine-tree boughs, standing in a
-thoughtful surveyal of its beauties and comforts or darting off to add
-to them. She herself chose the delightful piece of green soap from the
-store-cupboard and the books for the table; and she gathered the
-daffodils in the birch-woods, filling every vase with them, so that the
-little room with its white walls and hangings of white dimity seemed
-lighted by clusters of pale, bright flames.
-
-When the old fly rumbled at last through the gates and around the drive,
-Miss Rachel and Miss Barbara were in the doorway, and Eppie stood
-before them on the broad stone step, Robbie beside her.
-
-Eppie was a lithe, sturdy, broad-shouldered child, with russet,
-sun-streaked hair, dark yet radiant, falling to her waist. She had a
-pale, freckled face and the woodland eyes of a gay, deep-hearted dog.
-To-day she wore a straight white frock, and her hair, her frock, dazzled
-with sunlight. No more invigorating figure could have greeted a jaded
-traveler.
-
-That it was a very jaded traveler she saw at once, while the general
-bundled out of the fly and handed rugs, dressing-cases, and cages to the
-maid, making a passage for Gavan's descent. The boy followed him,
-casting anxious glances at the cages, and Eppie's eyes, following his,
-saw tropical birds in one and in the other a quaint, pathetic little
-beast--a lemur-like monkey swaddled in flannel and motionless with fear.
-Its quick, shining eyes met hers for a moment, and she looked away from
-them with a sense of pity and repulsion.
-
-Gavan, as he ascended the steps, looked at once weary, frightened, and
-composed. He had a white, thin face and thick black hair--the sort of
-face and hair, Eppie thought, that the wandering prince of one of her
-own stories, the prince who understood the rooks' secrets, would have.
-He was dressed in a long gray traveling-cloak with capes. The eager
-welcome she had in readiness for him seemed out of place before his
-gentle air of self-possession, going as it did with the look of almost
-painful shrinking. She was a little at a loss and so were the aunts, as
-she saw. They took his hand in turn, they smiled, they murmured vague
-words of kindness; but they did not venture to kiss him. He did not seem
-as little a boy as they had expected. The same expression of restraint
-was on Uncle Nigel's hearty countenance. The sad boy was frozen and he
-chilled others.
-
-He was among them now, in the hall, his cages and rugs and boxes about
-him, and, with all the cheery bustling to and fro, he must feel himself
-dreadfully alone. Eppie, too, was chilled and knew, indeed, the
-childish, panic impulse to run away, but her imagination of his
-loneliness was so strong as to nerve quite another impulse. Once she saw
-him as so desolate she could not hesitate. With resolute gravity she
-took his hand, saying, "I am so glad that you have come, Gavan," and, as
-resolutely and as gravely, she kissed him on the cheek. He flushed so
-deeply that for a moment all her panic came back with the fear that she
-had wounded his pride; but in a moment he said, glancing at her, "You
-are very kind. I am glad to be here, too."
-
-His pride was not at all wounded. Eppie felt that at all events the
-worst of the ice was broken.
-
-"May I feed your animals for you while you rest?" she asked him, as,
-with Aunt Barbara, they went up-stairs to his room. Gavan carried the
-lemur himself. Eppie had the birds in their cage.
-
-"Thanks, so much. It only takes a moment; I can do it. My monkey would
-be afraid of any one else," he answered, adding, "The journey has been
-too much for him; he has been very strange all day."
-
-"He will soon get well here," said Eppie, encouragingly--"this is such a
-healthy place. But Scotland will be a great change from India for him,
-won't it?"
-
-"Very great. I am afraid he is going to be ill." And again Gavan's eye
-turned its look of weary anxiety upon the lemur.
-
-But his anxiety did not make him forget his courtesy. "What a beautiful
-view," he said, when they reached his room, "and what beautiful
-flowers!"
-
-"I have this view, too," said Eppie. "The school-room has the view of
-the moor; but I like this best, for early morning when one gets up. You
-will see how lovely it is to smell the pine-tree when it is all wet with
-dew."
-
-Gavan agreed that it must be lovely, and looked out with her at the
-blue-green boughs; but even while he looked and admired, she felt more
-courtesy than interest.
-
-They left him in his room to rest till tea-time, and in the library Aunt
-Rachel and Aunt Barbara exclaimed over his air of fragility.
-
-"He is fearfully tired, poor little fellow," said the general; "a day or
-two of rest will set him up."
-
-"He looks a very intelligent boy, Nigel," said Miss Rachel, "but not a
-cheerful disposition."
-
-"How could one expect that from him now, poor, dear child!" Aunt Barbara
-expostulated. "He has a beautiful nature, I am sure--such a sensitive
-mouth and such fine eyes."
-
-And the general said: "He is wonderfully like his mother. I am glad to
-see that he takes after Claude Palairet in nothing."
-
-Eppie asked if Captain Palairet were very horrid and was told that he
-was, with the warning that no intimation of such knowledge on her part
-was to be given to her new playmate; a warning that Eppie received with
-some indignation. No one, she was sure, could feel for Gavan as she did,
-or know so well what to say and what not to say to him.
-
-She was gratified to hear that he was not to go down to dinner but was
-to share the school-room high-tea with her and Miss Grimsby. But in the
-wide school-room, ruddy with the hues of sunset and hung with its maps
-and its childish decorations of Caldecott drawings and colored Christmas
-supplements from the "Graphic,"--little girls on stairs with dogs, and
-"Cherry Ripe,"--he was almost oppressively out of place. Not that he
-seemed to find himself so. He made, evidently, no claims to maturity.
-But Eppie felt a strange sense of shrunken importance as she listened to
-him politely answering Miss Grimsby's questions about his voyage and
-giving her all sorts of information about religious sects in India. She
-saw herself relegated to a humbler role than any she had conceived
-possible for herself. She would be lucky if she succeeded in cheering at
-all this remote person; it was doubtful if she could ever come near
-enough to console. She took this first blow to her self-assurance very
-wholesomely. Her interest in the sad boy was all the keener for it. She
-led him, next morning, about the garden, over a bit of the moor, and
-into the fairyland of the birch-woods--their young green all tremulous
-in the wind and sunlight. And she showed him, among the pines and
-heather, the winding path, its white, sandy soil laced with black
-tree-roots, that led to the hilltop. "When you are quite rested, we will
-go up there, if you like," she said. "The burn runs beside this path
-almost all the way--you can't think how pretty it is; and when you get
-to the top you can see for miles and miles all about, all over the
-moors, and the hills, away beyond there, and you can see two villages
-besides ours, and such a beautiful windmill."
-
-Gavan, hardly noticing the kind little girl, except to know that she was
-kind, assented to all her projects, indifferent to them and to her.
-
-A day or two after his arrival, he and Eppie were united in ministering
-to the dying lemur. The sad creature lay curled up in its basket,
-motionless, refusing food, only from time to time stretching out a
-languid little hand to its master; and when Gavan took it, the delicate
-animal miniature lay inert in his. Its eyes, seeming to grow larger and
-brighter as life went, had a strange look of question and wonder.
-
-Eppie wept loudly when it was dead; but Gavan had no tears. She
-suspected him of a suffering all the keener and that his self-control
-did not allow him the relief of emotion before her. She hoped, at least,
-to be near him in the formalities of grief, and proposed that they
-should bury the lemur together, suggesting a spot among birch-trees and
-heather where some rabbits of her own were interred. When she spoke of
-the ceremony, Gavan hesitated; to repulse her, or to have her with him
-in the task of burial, were perhaps equally painful to him. "If you
-don't mind, I think I would rather do it by myself," he said in his
-gentle, tentative way.
-
-Eppie felt her lack of delicacy unconsciously rebuked. She recognized
-that, in spite of her most genuine grief, the burial of the lemur had
-held out to her some of the satisfactory possibilities of a solemn game.
-She had been gross in imagining that Gavan could share in such divided
-instincts. Her tears fell for her own just abasement, as well as for the
-lemur, while she watched Gavan walking away into the woods--evidently
-avoiding the proximity of the rabbits--with the small white box under
-his arm.
-
-The day after this was Sunday, a day of doom to Eppie. It meant that
-morning recitation of hymn and collect in the chintz and gilt boudoir
-and then the bleak and barren hours in church. Even Aunt Barbara's
-mildness could, on this subject, become inflexible, and Aunt Rachel's
-aspect reminded Eppie of the stern angel with the flaming sword driving
-frail, reluctant humanity into the stony wilderness. A flaming sword was
-needed. Every Sunday saw the renewal of her protest, and there were
-occasions on which her submission was only extorted after disgraceful
-scenes. Eppie herself, on looking back, had to own that she had indeed
-disgraced herself when she had taken refuge under her bed and lain
-there, her hat all bent, her fresh dress all crumpled, fiercely
-shrieking her refusal; and disgrace had been deeper on another day when
-she had actually struck out at her aunts while they mutely and in pale
-indignation haled her toward the door. It was dreadful to remember that
-Aunt Barbara had burst into tears. Eppie could not forgive herself for
-that. She had a stoic satisfaction in the memory of the smart whipping
-that she had borne without a whimper, and perhaps did not altogether
-repent the heavier slap she had dealt Aunt Rachel; but the thought of
-Aunt Barbara's tears--they had continued so piteously to flow while Aunt
-Rachel whipped her--quelled physical revolt forever. She was older now,
-too, and protest only took the form of dejection and a hostile gloom.
-
-On this Sunday the gloom was shot with a new and, it seemed, a most
-legitimate hope. Boys were usually irreligious; the Grainger cousins
-certainly were so: they had once run away on Sunday morning. She could
-not, to be sure, build much upon possible analogies of behavior between
-Gavan and the Graingers; yet the facts of his age and sex were there:
-normal, youthful manliness might be relied upon. If Gavan wished to
-remain it seemed perfectly probable that the elders might yield as a
-matter of course, and as if to a grown-up guest. Gavan was hardly
-treated as a child by any of them.
-
-"You are fond of going to church, I hope, Gavan," Aunt Rachel said at
-breakfast. The question had its reproof for Eppie, who, with large eyes,
-over her porridge, listened for the reply.
-
-"Yes, very," was the doom that fell.
-
-Eppie flushed so deeply that Gavan noticed it. "I don't mind a bit not
-going if Eppie doesn't go and would like to have me stay at home with
-her," he hastened, with an almost uncanny intuition of her
-disappointment, to add.
-
-Aunt Rachel cast an eye of comprehension upon Eppie's discomfited
-visage. "That would be a most inappropriate generosity, my dear Gavan.
-Eppie comes with us always."
-
-Gavan still looked at Eppie, who, with downcast eyes, ate swiftly.
-
-"Now I'll be bound that she has been wheedling you to get her off,
-Gavan," said the general, with genial banter. "She is a little rebel to
-the bone. She knows that it's no good to rebel, so she put you up to
-pleading for her"; and, as Gavan protested, "Indeed, indeed, sir, she
-didn't," he still continued, "Oh, Eppie, you baggage, you! Isn't that
-it, eh? Didn't you hope that you could stay with him if he stayed
-behind?"
-
-"Yes, I did," Eppie said, without contrition.
-
-"She didn't tell me so," said Gavan, full of evident sympathy for
-Eppie's wounds under this false accusation.
-
-She repelled his defense with a curt, "I would have, if it would have
-done any good."
-
-"Ah, that's my brave lassie," laughed the general; but Aunt Rachel ended
-the unseemly exposure with a decisive, "Be still now, Eppie; we know too
-well what you feel about this subject. There is nothing brave in such
-naughtiness."
-
-Gavan said no more; from Eppie's unmoved expression he guessed that such
-reproofs did not cut deep. He joined her after breakfast as she stood
-in the open doorway, looking out at the squandered glories of the day.
-
-"Do you dislike going to church so much?" he asked her. The friendly
-bond of his sympathy at the table would have cheered her heart at
-another time; it could do no more for her now than make frankness easy
-and a relief.
-
-"I hate it," she answered.
-
-"But why?"
-
-"It's so long--so stupid."
-
-Gavan loitered about before her on the door-step, his hands in his
-pockets. Evidently he could find no ready comment for her accusation.
-
-"Every one looks so silly and so sleepy," she went on. "Mr. MacNab is so
-ugly. Besides, he is an unkind man: he whips his children all the time;
-not whippings when they deserve it--like mine,"--Gavan looked at her,
-startled by this impersonally just remark,--"he whips them because he is
-cross himself. Why should he tell us about being good if he is as
-ill-tempered as possible? And he has a horrid voice,--not like the
-village people, who talk in a dear, funny way,--he has a horrid, pretend
-voice. And you stand up and sit down and have nothing to do for ages and
-ages. I don't see how anybody _can_ like church."
-
-Gavan kicked vaguely at the lichen spots.
-
-"Do you really _like_ it?"
-
-"Yes," he answered, with his shy abruptness.
-
-"But why? It's different, I know, for old people--I don't suppose that
-they mind things any longer; but I don't see how a boy, a young
-boy"--and Eppie allowed herself a reproachful emphasis--"can possibly
-like it."
-
-"I'm used to it, you see, and I don't think of it in your way at all."
-Gavan could not speak to this funny child of its sacred associations. In
-church he had always felt that he and his mother had escaped to a place
-of reality and peace. He entered, through his love for her, into the
-love of the sense of sanctuary from an ominous and hostile world. And he
-was a boy with a deep, sad sense of God.
-
-"But you don't _like_ it," said the insistent Eppie.
-
-"I more than like it."
-
-She eyed him gravely. "I suppose it is because you are so grown up. Yet
-you are only four years older than I am. I wonder if I will ever get to
-like it. I hope not."
-
-"Well, it will be more comfortable for you if you do,--since you have to
-go," said Gavan, with his faint, wintry smile.
-
-She felt the kindness of his austere banter, and retorting, "I'd rather
-not be comfortable, then," joined him in the sunlight on the broad,
-stone step, going on with quite a sense of companionship: "Only one
-thing I don't so much mind--and that is the hymns. I am so glad when
-they come that I almost shout them. Sometimes--I'm telling you as quite
-a secret, you know--I shout as loud as I possibly can on purpose to
-disturb Aunt Rachel. I know it's wrong, so don't bother to tell me so;
-besides, it's partly because I really like to shout. But I always do
-hope that some day they may leave me at home rather than have me making
-such a noise. People often turn round to look."
-
-Gavan laughed.
-
-"You think that wicked no doubt?"
-
-"No, I think it funny, and quite useless, I'm sure."
-
-After all, Gavan wasn't a muff, as a boy fond of church might have been
-suspected of being.
-
-Yet after the walk through the birch-woods and over a corner of moor to
-the bare little common where the church stood, and when they were all
-installed in the hard, familiar pew, a new and still more alienating
-impression came to her--alienating yet fascinating. A sense of awe crept
-over her and she watched Gavan in an absorbed, a dreamy wonder.
-
-Eppie only associated prayers with a bedside; they were part of the
-toilet, so to speak--went in with the routine of hair-and tooth-brushing
-and having one's bath. To pray in church, if one were a young person,
-seemed a mystifying, almost an abnormal oddity. She was accustomed to
-seeing in the sodden faces of the village children an echo to her own
-wholesome vacuity. But Gavan really prayed; that was evident. He buried
-his face in his arms. He thought of no one near him.
-
-It was Eppie's custom to vary the long monotony of Mr. MacNab's dreary,
-nasal, burring voice by sundry surreptitious occupations, such as
-drawing imaginary pictures with her forefinger upon the lap of her
-frock, picking out in the Bible all the words of which her aunts said
-she could only know the meaning when she grew up, counting the number of
-times that Mr. MacNab stiffly raised his hand in speaking, seeing how
-often she could softly kick the pew in front of her before being told to
-stop; and then there was the favorite experiment suggested to her by the
-advertisement of a soap where, after fixing the eyes upon a red spot
-while one counted thirty, one found, on looking at a blank white space,
-that the spot appeared transformed, ghost-like and floating, to a vivid
-green. Eppie's fertile imagination had seen in Mr. MacNab's thin, red
-face a substitute for the spot, and most diverting results had followed
-when, after a fixed stare at his countenance, one transferred him, as it
-were, to the pages of one's prayer-book. To see Mr. MacNab dimly
-hovering there, a green emanation, made him less intolerable in reality:
-found, at least, a use for him. This discovery had been confided to the
-Graingers, and they had been grateful for it. And when all else failed
-and even Mr. MacNab's poor uses had palled, there was one bright moment
-to look forward to in the morning's suffocating tedium. Just before the
-sermon, Uncle Nigel, settling himself in his corner, would feel, as if
-absently, in his waistcoat pocket and then slip a lime-drop into her
-hand. The sharply sweet flavor filled her with balmy content, and could,
-with discretion in the use of the tongue, be prolonged for ten minutes.
-
-But to-day her eyes and thoughts were fixed on Gavan; and when the
-lime-drop was in her mouth she crunched it mechanically and heedlessly:
-how he held his prayer-book, his pallid, melancholy profile bent above
-it, how he sat gravely listening to Mr. MacNab, how he prayed and sang.
-Only toward the end of the sermon was the tension of her spirit relieved
-by seeing humanizing symptoms of weariness. She was sure that he was
-hearing as little as she was--his thoughts were far away; and when he
-put up a hand to hide a yawn her jaws stretched themselves in quick
-sympathy. Gavan's eyes at this turned on her and he smiled openly and
-delightfully at her. Delightfully; yet the very fact of his daring to
-smile made him more grown up than ever. Such maturity, such strange
-spiritual assurance, could afford lightnesses. He brought with him, into
-the fresh, living world outside, his aura of mystery.
-
-Eppie walked beside her uncle and still observed Gavan as he went before
-them with the aunts.
-
-"How do you like your playmate, Eppie?" the general asked.
-
-"He isn't a playmate," Eppie gravely corrected him.
-
-"Not very lively? But a nice boy, eh?"
-
-"I think he is very nice; but he is too big to care about me."
-
-"Nonsense; he's but three years older."
-
-"Four, Uncle Nigel. That makes a great deal of difference at our ages,"
-said Eppie, wisely.
-
-"Nonsense," the general repeated. "He is only a bit down on his luck;
-he's not had time to find you out yet. To-morrow he joins you in your
-Greek and history, and I fancy he'll see that four years' difference
-isn't such a difference when it comes to some things. Not many chits of
-your age are such excellent scholars."
-
-"But I think that we will always be very different," said Eppie, though
-at her uncle's commendation her spirits had risen.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Greek and history proved, indeed, a bond. The two children, during the
-hours in the library, met on a more equal footing, for Gavan was
-backward with his studies. But the question of inequality had not come
-up in Gavan's consciousness. "I'm only afraid that I shall bore her," he
-hastened, in all sincerity, to say when the general appealed to a
-possible vanity in him by hoping that he didn't mind being kind to a
-little girl and going about with her. "She's the only companion we have
-for you, you see. And we all find her very good company, in spite of her
-ten years."
-
-And at this Gavan said, with a smile that protested against any idea
-that he should not find her so: "I'm only afraid that I'm not good
-company for any one. She is a dear little girl."
-
-It was in the wanderings over the moors and in the birch-woods and up
-the hillside, where Eppie took him to see her views, that the bond
-really drew to closeness. Here nature and little Eppie seemed together
-to thaw him, to heal him, to make him unconsciously happy. A fugitive
-color dawned in his wasted cheeks; a fragile gaiety came to his manner.
-He began to find it easy to talk, easy to be quite a little boy. And
-once he did talk, Gavan talked a great deal, quickly, with a sort of
-nervous eagerness. There grew, in Eppie's mind, a vast mirage-like
-picture of the strange land he came from: the great mountains about
-their high summer home; the blue-shadowed verandas; the flowers he and
-his mother grew in the garden; the rides at dawn; the long, hot days;
-the gentle, softly moving servants, some of whom he loved and told her a
-great deal about. Then the crowds, the swarming colors of the bazaars in
-the great cities.
-
-"No, no; don't wish to go there," he said, taking his swift, light
-strides through the heather, his head bent, his eyes looking before
-him--he seldom looked at one, glanced only; "I hate it,--more than you
-do church!" and though his simile was humorous he didn't laugh with it.
-"I hate the thought of any one I care about being there." He had still,
-for Eppie, his mystery, and she dimly felt, too, that his greater ease
-with her made more apparent his underlying sadness; but the sense of
-being an outsider was gone, and she glowed now at the implication that
-she was one he cared about.
-
-"It's vast and meaningless," said Gavan, who often used terms curiously
-unboyish. "I can't describe it to you. It's like a dream; you expect all
-the time to wake up and find nothing."
-
-"I know that I should never love anything so much as Scotland--as
-heather and pines and sky with clouds. Still, I should like to see
-India. I should like to see everything that there is to be seen--if I
-could be sure of always coming back here."
-
-"Ah, yes, if one could be sure of that."
-
-"I shall always live here, Gavan," said Eppie, feeling the skepticism of
-his "if."
-
-"Well, that may be so," he returned, with the manner that made her
-realize so keenly the difference that was more than a matter of four
-years.
-
-She insisted now: "I shall live here until I am grown up. Then I shall
-travel everywhere, all over the world--India, Japan, America; then I
-shall marry and come back here to live and have twelve children. I don't
-believe you care for children as I do, Gavan. How they would enjoy
-themselves here, twelve of them all together--six boys and six girls."
-
-Gavan laughed. "Well, I hope all that will come true," he assented. "Why
-twelve?"
-
-"I don't know; but I've always thought of there being twelve. I would
-like as many as possible, and one could hardly remember the names of
-more. I don't believe that there are more than twelve names that I care
-for. But with twelve we should have a birthday-party once a month, one
-for each month. Did you have birthday-cakes in India, Gavan, with
-candles for your age?"
-
-"Yes; my mother always had a cake for my birthday." His voice, in
-speaking of his mother, seemed always to steel itself, as though to
-speak of her hurt him. Eppie had felt this directly, and now, regretting
-her allusion, said, "When is your birthday, Gavan?" thinking of a cake
-with fifteen candles--how splendid!--to hear disappointingly that the
-day was not till January, when he would have been gone--long since.
-
-On another time, as they walked up the hillside, beside the burn, she
-said: "I thought you were not going to like us at all, when you first
-came."
-
-"I was horribly afraid of you all," said Gavan. "Everything was so
-strange to me."
-
-"No, you weren't afraid," Eppie objected--"not really afraid. I don't
-believe you are ever really afraid of people."
-
-"Yes, I am--afraid of displeasing them, trying them in some way. And I
-was miserable on that day, too, with anxiety about my poor monkey. I'm
-sorry I seemed horrid."
-
-"Not a bit horrid, only very cold and polite."
-
-"I didn't realize things much. You see--" Gavan paused.
-
-"Yes, of course; you weren't thinking of us. You were thinking of--what
-you had left."
-
-"Yes," he assented, not looking at her.
-
-He went on presently, turning his eyes on her and smiling over a sort of
-alarm at his own advance to personalities: "_You_ weren't horrid. I
-remember that I thought you the nicest little girl I had ever seen. You
-were all that I did see--standing there in the sun, with a white dress
-like Alice in Wonderland and with your hair all shining. I never saw
-hair like it."
-
-"Do you think it pretty?" Eppie asked eagerly.
-
-"Very--all those rivers of gold in the dark."
-
-"I _am_ glad. I think it pretty, too, and nurse is afraid that I am
-vain, I think, for she always takes great pains to tell me that it is
-striped hair and that she hopes it may grow to be the same color when
-I'm older."
-
-"_I_ hope not," said Gavan, gallantly.
-
-Many long afternoons were spent in the garden, where Eppie initiated him
-into the sanctities of the summer-house. Gavan's sense of other people's
-sanctities was wonderful. She would never have dreamed of showing her
-dolls to her cousins; but she brought them out and displayed them to
-Gavan, and he looked at them and their appurtenances carefully, gravely
-assenting to all the characteristics that she pointed out. So kind,
-indeed, so comprehending was he, that Eppie, a delightful project
-dawning in her mind, asked: "Have you ever played with dolls? I mean
-when you were very little?"
-
-"No, never."
-
-"I've always had to play by myself," said Eppie, "and it's rather dull
-sometimes, having to carry on all the conversations alone." And with a
-rush she brought out, rather aghast at her own hardihood, "I suppose you
-couldn't think of playing with me?"
-
-Gavan, at this, showed something of the bashful air of a young bachelor
-asked to hold a baby, but in a moment he said, "I shouldn't mind at all,
-though I'm afraid I shall be stupid at it."
-
-Eppie flushed, incredulous of such good fortune, and almost reluctant to
-accept it. "You _really_ don't mind, Gavan? Boys hate dolls, as a rule,
-you know."
-
-"I don't mind in the least," he laughed. "I am sure I shall enjoy it.
-How do we begin? You must teach me."
-
-"I'll teach you everything. You are the very kindest person I ever knew,
-Gavan. Really, I wouldn't ask you to if I didn't believe you would like
-it when once you had tried it. It is such fun. And now we can make them
-do all sorts of things, have all sorts of adventures, that they never
-could have before." She suspected purest generosity, but so trusted in
-the enchantments he was to discover that she felt herself justified in
-profiting by it. She placed in his hand Agnes, the fairest of all the
-dolls, golden-haired, blue-eyed. Agnes was good, and her own daughter,
-Elspeth, named after herself, was bad. "As bad as possible," said Eppie.
-"I have to whip her a great deal."
-
-Gavan, holding his charge rather helplessly and looking at Elspeth, a
-doll of sturdier build, with short hair, dark eyes, and, for a doll, a
-mutinous face, remarked, with his touch of humor, "I thought you didn't
-approve of whipping."
-
-"I don't,--not real children, or dolls either, except when they are
-really bad. Mr. MacNab whips his all the time, and they are not a bit
-bad, really, as Elspeth is." And Elspeth proceeded to demonstrate how
-really bad she was by falling upon Agnes with such malicious kicks and
-blows that Gavan, in defense of his own doll, dealt her a vigorous slap.
-
-"Well done, Mr. Palairet; she richly deserves it! Come here directly,
-you naughty child," and after a scuffling flight around the
-summer-house, Elspeth was secured, and so soundly beaten that Gavan at
-last interceded for her with the ruthless mother.
-
-"Not until she says that she is sorry."
-
-"Oh, Elspeth, say that you are sorry," Gavan supplicated, while he
-laughed. "Really, Eppie, you are savage. I feel as if you were really
-hurting some one. Please forgive her now; Agnes has, I am sure."
-
-"I hurt her because I love her and want her to be a good child. She will
-come to no good end when she grows up if she cannot learn to control her
-temper. What is it I hear you say, Elspeth?"
-
-Elspeth, in a low, sullen voice that did not augur well for permanent
-amendment, whispered that she was sorry, and was led up, crestfallen, to
-beg Agnes's pardon and to receive a reconciling kiss.
-
-The table was then brought out and laid. Eppie had her small store of
-biscuits and raisins, and Elspeth and Agnes were sent into the garden to
-pick currants and flowers. To Agnes was given the task of making a
-nosegay for the place of each guest. There were four of these guests,
-bidden to the feast with great ceremony: three, pink and curly, of
-little individuality, and the fourth a dingy, armless old rag-doll,
-reverently wrapped in a fine shawl, and with a pathetic,
-half-obliterated face.
-
-"Very old and almost deaf," Eppie whispered to Gavan. "Everybody loves
-her. She lost her arms in a great fire, saving a baby's life."
-
-Gavan was entering into all the phases of the game with such spirit,
-keeping up Agnes's character for an irritating perfection so aptly that
-Eppie forgot to wonder if his enjoyment were as real as her own. But
-suddenly the doorway was darkened, and glancing up, she saw her uncle's
-face, long-drawn with jocular incredulity, looking in upon them. Then,
-and only then, under the eyes of an uncomprehending sex, did the true
-caliber of Gavan's self-immolation flash upon her. A boy, a big boy, he
-was playing dolls with a girl; it was monstrous; as monstrous as the
-general's eyes showed that he found it. Stooping in his tall slightness,
-as he assisted Agnes's steps across the floor, he seemed, suddenly, a
-fairy prince decoyed and flouted. What would Uncle Nigel think of him?
-She could almost have flung herself before him protectingly.
-
-The general had burst into laughter. "Now, upon my word, this is too bad
-of you, Eppie!" he cried, while Gavan, not abandoning his hold on
-Agnes's arm, turned his eyes upon the intruder with perfect serenity.
-"You are the most unconscionable little tyrant. You kept the Grainger
-boys under your thumb; but I didn't think you could carry wheedling or
-bullying as far as this. Gavan, my dear boy, you are too patient with
-her."
-
-Eppie stood at the table, scarlet with anger and compunction. Gavan had
-raised himself, and, still holding Agnes, looked from one to the other.
-
-"But she hasn't bullied me; she hasn't wheedled me," he said. "I like
-it."
-
-"At your age, my dear boy! Like doll-babies!"
-
-"Indeed I do."
-
-"This is the finest bit of chivalry I've come across for a long time.
-The gentleman who jumped into the lions' den for his mistress's glove
-was hardly pluckier. Drop that ridiculous thing and come away. I'll
-rescue you."
-
-"But I don't want to be rescued. I really am enjoying myself. It's not a
-case of courage at all," Gavan protested.
-
-This was too much. He should not tarnish himself to shield her, and
-Eppie burst out: "Nonsense, Gavan. I asked you to. You are only doing it
-because you are so kind, and to please me. It was very wrong of me. Put
-her down as Uncle Nigel says."
-
-"There, our little tyrant is honest, at all events. Drop it, Gavan. You
-should see the figure you cut with that popinjay in your arms. Come,
-you've won your spurs. Come away with me."
-
-But Gavan, smiling, shook his head. "No, I don't want to, thanks. I did
-it to please her, if you like; but now I do it to please myself. Playing
-with dolls is a most amusing game,--and you are interrupting us at a
-most interesting point," he added. He seemed, funnily, doll and all,
-older than the general as he said it. Incredulous but mystified, Uncle
-Nigel was forced to beat a retreat, and Gavan was left confronting his
-playmate.
-
-"Why did you tell him that you enjoyed it?" she cried. "He'll think you
-unmanly."
-
-"My dear Eppie, he won't think me unmanly at all. Besides, I don't care
-if he does."
-
-"_I_ care."
-
-"But, Eppie, you take it too hard. Why should you care? It's only funny.
-Why shouldn't we amuse ourselves as we like? We are only children."
-
-"You are much more than a child. Uncle Nigel thinks so, too, I am sure."
-
-"All the more reason, then, for my having a right to amuse myself as I
-please. And I am a child, for I do amuse myself."
-
-Eppie stood staring out rigidly at the blighted prospect, and he took
-her unyielding hand. "Poor Elspeth is lying on her face. Do let us go
-on. I want you to hear what Agnes has to say next."
-
-She turned to him now. "I don't believe a word you say. You only did it
-for me. You are only doing it for me now."
-
-"Well, what if I did? What if I do? Can't I enjoy doing things for you?
-And really, really, Eppie, I do think it fun. I assure you I do."
-
-"I think you are a hero," Eppie said solemnly, and at this absurdity he
-burst into his high, shrill laugh, and renewed his supplications; but
-supplications were in vain. She refused to let him play with her again.
-He might do things for the dolls,--yes, she reluctantly consented to
-that at last,--he might take the part of robber or of dangerous wild
-beast in the woods, but into domestic relations, as it were, he should
-not enter with them; and from this determination Gavan could not move
-her.
-
-As far as his dignity in the eyes of others went, he might have gone on
-playing dolls with her all summer; Eppie realized, with surprise and
-relief, that Gavan's assurance had been well founded. Uncle Nigel,
-evidently, did not think him unmanly, and there was no chaffing. It
-really was as he had said, he was so little a child that he could do as
-he chose. His dignity needed no defense.
-
-But though the doll episode was not to be repeated, other and more equal
-ties knit her friendship with Gavan. Wide vistas of talk opened from
-their lessons, from their readings together. As they rambled through the
-heather they would talk of the Odyssey, of Plutarch's Lives, of nearer
-great people and events in history. Gavan listened with smiling interest
-while Eppie expressed her hatreds and her loves, correcting her
-vehemence, now and then, by a reference to mitigatory circumstance.
-Penelope was one of the people she hated. "See, Gavan, how she neglected
-her husband's dog while he was away--let him starve to death on a
-dunghill."
-
-Gavan surmised that the Homeric Greeks had little sense of
-responsibility about dogs.
-
-"They were horrid, then," said Eppie. "Dear Argos! Think of him trying
-to wag his tail when he was dying and saw Ulysses; _he_ was horrid, too,
-for he surely might have just stopped for a moment and patted his head.
-I'm glad that Robbie didn't live in those times. You wouldn't let Robbie
-die on a dunghill if _I_ were to go away!"
-
-"No, indeed, Eppie!" Gavan smiled.
-
-"I think you really love Robbie as much as I do, Gavan. You love him
-more than Uncle Nigel does. One can always see in people's eyes how much
-they love a dog. That fat, red Miss Erskine simply feels nothing for
-them, though she always says 'Come, come,' to Robbie. But her eyes are
-like stones when she looks at him. She is really thinking about her
-tea, and watching to see that Aunt Rachel puts in plenty of cream. I
-suppose that Penelope looked like her, when she used to see Argos on the
-dunghill."
-
-Robbie was plunging through the heather before them and paused to look
-round at them, his delicate tongue lapping in little pants over his
-teeth.
-
-"Darling Robbie," said Gavan. "Our eyes aren't like stones when we look
-at you! See him smile, Eppie, when I speak to him. Wouldn't it be funny
-if we smiled with our ears instead of with our mouths."
-
-Gavan, after a moment, sighed involuntarily and deeply.
-
-"What is the matter?" Eppie asked quickly, for she had grown near enough
-to ask it. And how near they were was shown after a little silence, by
-Gavan saying: "I was only wishing that everything could be happy at
-once, Eppie. I was thinking about my mother and wishing that she might
-be here with you and me and Robbie." His voice was steadied to its cold
-quiet as he said it, though he knew how safe from any hurt he was with
-her. And she said nothing, and did not look at him, only, in silence,
-putting a hand of comradeship on his shoulder while they walked.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Once a week, on the days of the Indian mail, Eppie's understanding
-hovered helplessly about Gavan, seeing pain for him and powerless to
-shield him from it. Prayers took place in the dining-room ten minutes
-before breakfast, and with the breakfast the mail was brought in, so
-that Gavan's promptest descent could not secure him a solitary reading
-of the letter that, Eppie felt, he awaited with trembling eagerness.
-
-"A letter from India, Gavan dear," Miss Rachel, the distributer of the
-mail would say. "Tell us your news." And before them all, in the midst
-of the general's comments on politics, crops, and weather, the rustling
-of newspapers, the pouring of tea, he was forced to open and read his
-letter and to answer, even during the reading, the kindly triviality of
-the questions showered upon him. "Yes, thank you, very well indeed. Yes,
-in Calcutta. Yes, enjoying herself, I think, thanks." His pallor on
-these occasions, his look of hardened endurance, told Eppie all that it
-did not tell the others. And that his eagerness was too great for him to
-wait until after breakfast, she saw, too. A bright thought of rescue
-came to her at last. On the mornings when the Indian mail was due, she
-was up a good hour before her usual time. Long before the quaint,
-musical gong sounded its vague, blurred melody for prayers, she was out
-of the house and running through the birch-woods to the village road,
-where, just above the church, she met the postman. He was an old friend,
-glad to please the young lady's love of importance, and the mail was
-trusted to her care. Eppie saved all her speed for the return. Every
-moment counted for Gavan's sheltered reading. She felt as if, her back
-to its door, she stood before the sheltered chamber of their meeting,
-guarding their clasp and kiss, sweet and sorrowful, from alien eyes.
-Flushed, panting, she darted up to his room, handing his letter in to
-him, while she said in an easy, matter-of-fact tone, "Your mail, Gavan."
-
-Gavan, like the postman, attributed his good luck to Eppie's love of
-importance, and only on the third morning discovered her manoeuver.
-
-He came down early himself to get his own letter, found that the mail
-had not arrived, and, strolling disappointedly down the drive, was
-almost knocked down by Eppie rushing in at the gate. She fell back,
-dismayed at the revelation that must force the fullness of her sympathy
-upon him--almost as if she herself glanced in at the place of meeting.
-
-"I've got the letters," she said, leaning on the stone pillar and
-recovering her breath. "There's one for you." And she held it out.
-
-But for once Gavan's concentration seemed to be for her rather than for
-the letter. "My mother's letter?" he said.
-
-She nodded.
-
-"It was you, then. I wondered why they came so much earlier."
-
-"I met the postman; he likes to be saved that much of his walk."
-
-"You must have to go a long way to get them so early. You went on
-purpose for me, I think."
-
-Looking aside, she now had to own: "I saw that you hated reading them
-before us all. I would hate it, too."
-
-"Eppie, my dearest Eppie," said Gavan. Glancing at him, she saw tears in
-his eyes, and joy and pride flamed up in her. He opened the letter and
-read it, walking beside her, his hand on her shoulder, showing her that
-he did not count her among "us all."
-
-After that they went together to meet the postman, and, unasked, Gavan
-would read to her long pieces from what his mother said.
-
-It was a few weeks later, on one of these days, that she knew, from his
-face while he read, and from his silence, that bad news had come. He
-left her at the house, making no confidence, and at breakfast, when he
-came down to it later, she could see that he had been struggling for
-self-mastery. This pale, controlled face, at which she glanced furtively
-while they did their lessons in the library, made her think of the
-Spartan boy, calm over an agony. Even the general noticed the mechanical
-voice and the pallor and asked him if he were feeling tired this
-morning. Gavan owned to a headache.
-
-"Off to the moors directly, then," said the general; "and you, too,
-Eppie. Have a morning together."
-
-Eppie sat over her book and said that perhaps Gavan would rather go
-without her; but Gavan, who had risen, said quickly that he wanted her
-to come. "Let us go to the hilltop," he said, when they were outside in
-the warm, scented sunlight.
-
-They went through the woods, where the burn ran, rippling loudly, and
-the shadows were blue on the little, sandy path that wound among pines
-and birches. Neither spoke while they climbed the gradual ascent. They
-came out upon the height that ran in a long undulation to the far lift
-of mountain ranges. Under a solitary group of pines they sat down.
-
-The woods of Kirklands were below them, and then the vast sea of purple,
-heaving in broad, long waves to the azure, intense and clear, of the
-horizon. The wind sighed, soft and shrill, through the pines above them,
-and far away they heard a sheep-bell tinkle. Beyond the delicate
-miniature of the village a wind-mill turned slow, gray sails. The whole
-world, seemed a sunlit island floating in the circling blue. Robbie sat
-at their feet, alert, upright, silhouetted against the sky.
-
-"Robbie, Robbie," said Gavan, gently, as he leaned forward and stroked
-the dog's back. Eppie, too, stroked with him. The silence of his unknown
-grief weighed heavily on her heart and she guessed that though for him
-the pain of silence was great, the pain of speech seemed greater.
-
-He presently raised himself again, clasping both hands about his knees
-and looking away into the vast distance. His head, with its thick hair,
-its fine, aquiline nose and delicately jutting chin, made Eppie think,
-vaguely, of a picture she had seen of a young Saint Sebastian, mutely
-enduring arrows, on a background of serene sky. With the thought, the
-silence became unendurable; she strung herself to speak. "Tell me,
-Gavan," she said, "have you had bad news?"
-
-He cast her a frightened glance, and, looking down, began to pull at the
-heather. "No, not bad news, exactly."
-
-Eppie drew a breath of dubious relief. "But you are so unhappy about
-something."
-
-Gavan nodded.
-
-"But why, if it's not bad news?"
-
-After a pause he said, and she knew, with all the pain of it, what the
-relief of speaking must be: "I guess at things. I always feel if she is
-hiding things."
-
-"Perhaps you are only imagining."
-
-"I wish I could think it; but I know not. I know what is happening to
-her."
-
-He was still wrenching away at the heather, tossing aside the purple
-sprays with their finely tangled sandy roots. Suddenly he put his head
-on his knees, hiding his face.
-
-"Oh, Gavan! Oh, don't be so unhappy," Eppie whispered, drawing near him,
-helpless and awe-struck.
-
-"How can I be anything but unhappy when the person I care most for is
-miserable--miserable, and I am so far from her?" His shoulders heaved;
-she saw that he was weeping.
-
-Eppie, at first, gazed, motionless, silent, frozen with a child's quick
-fear of demonstrated grief. A child's quick response followed. Throwing
-her arms around him, she too burst into tears.
-
-It was strange to see how the boy's reserves melted in the onslaught of
-this hot, simple sympathy. He turned to her, hiding his face on her
-shoulder, and they cried together.
-
-"I didn't want to make you unhappy, too," Gavan said at last in a
-weakened voice. His tears were over first and he faintly smiled as he
-met Robbie's alarmed, beseeching eyes. Robbie had been scrambling over
-them, scratching, whining, licking their hands and cheeks in an
-exasperation of shut-out pity.
-
-"I'm not nearly so unhappy as when you don't say anything and I know
-that you are keeping things back," Eppie choked, pushing Robbie away
-blindly. "I'd much rather _be_ unhappy if you are."
-
-It was Gavan, one arm around the rejected Robbie, who had to dry her
-tears, trying to console her with: "Perhaps I did imagine more than
-there actually is. One can't help imagining--at this distance." He
-smiled at her, as he had smiled at Robbie, and holding her hand, he went
-on: "She is so gentle, and so lonely, and so unhappy. I could help her
-out there. Here, I am so helpless."
-
-"Make her come here!" Eppie cried. "Write at once and make her come.
-Send a wire, Gavan. Couldn't she be here very soon, if you wired that
-she must--_must_ come? I wouldn't bear it if I were you."
-
-"She can't come. She must stay with my father."
-
-All the barriers were down now, so that Eppie could insist: "She would
-rather be with you. You want her most."
-
-"Yes, I want her most. But he needs her most," said Gavan. "He is
-extravagant and weak and bad. He drinks and he gambles, and if she left
-him he would probably soon ruin himself--and us; for my mother has no
-money. She could not leave him if she would. And though he is often very
-cruel to her, he wants her with him." Gavan spoke with all his quiet,
-but he had flushed as if from a still anger. "Money is an odious thing,
-Eppie. That's what I want to do, as soon as I can: make money for her."
-He added presently: "I pray for strength to help her."
-
-There was a long silence after this. Gavan lay back on the heather, his
-hat tilted over his tired eyes. Eppie sat above him, staring out at the
-empty blue. Her longing, her pity, her revolt from this suffering,--for
-herself and for him,--her vague but vehement desires, flew out--out; she
-almost seemed to see them, like strong, bright birds flying so far at
-last that the blue engulfed them. The idea hurt her. She turned away
-from the dissolving vastness before which it was impossible to think or
-feel, turned her head to look down at the long, white form beside her,
-exhausted and inert. Darling Gavan. How he suffered. His poor mother,
-too. She saw Gavan's mother in a sort of padlocked palanquin under a
-burning sky, surrounded by dazzling deserts, a Blue-beard, bristling
-with swords, reeling in a drunken sentinelship round her prison.
-Considering Gavan, with his hidden face, the thought of his last words
-came more distinctly to her. A long time had passed, and his breast was
-rising quietly, almost as if he slept. Conjecture grew as to the odd
-form of action in which he evidently trusted. "Do you pray a great deal,
-Gavan?" she asked.
-
-He nodded under the hat.
-
-"Do you feel as if there was a God--quite near you--who listened?"
-
-"I wouldn't want to live unless I could feel that."
-
-Eppie paused at this, perplexed, and asked presently, with a slight
-embarrassment, "Why not?"
-
-"Nothing would have any meaning," said Gavan.
-
-"No meaning, Gavan? You would still care for your mother and want to
-help her, wouldn't you?"
-
-"Yes, but without God there would be no hope of helping her, no hope of
-strength. Why, Eppie," came the voice from behind the hat, "without God
-life would be death."
-
-Eppie retired to another discomfited silence. "I am afraid I don't think
-much about God," she confessed at last. "I always feel as if I had
-strength already--I suppose, heaps and heaps of strength.
-Only--to-day--I do know more what you mean. If only God would do
-something for you and your mother. You want something so big to help you
-if you are very, very unhappy."
-
-"Yes, and some one to turn to when you are lonely."
-
-Again Eppie hesitated. "Well, but, Gavan, while you're here you have me,
-you know."
-
-At this Gavan pushed aside his hat almost to laugh at her. "What a
-funny little girl you are, Eppie! What a dear little girl! Yes, of
-course, I have you. But when I go away? And even while I'm here,--what
-if we were both lonely together? Can't you imagine that? The feeling of
-being lost in a great forest at night. You have such quaint ideas about
-God."
-
-"I've never had any ideas at all. I've only thought of Some One who was
-there,--Some One I didn't need yet. I've always thought of God as being
-more for grown-up people. Lost in a forest together? I don't think I
-would mind that so much, Gavan. I don't think I would be frightened, if
-we were together."
-
-"I didn't exactly mean it literally,--not a real forest, perhaps." He
-had looked away from her, and, his thin, white face sunken among the
-heather, his eyes were on the blue immensities where her thoughts had
-lost themselves. "I am so often frightened. I get so lost sometimes that
-I can hardly believe that that Some One is near me. And then the fear
-becomes a sort of numbness, so that I hardly seem there myself; it's
-only loneliness, while I melt and melt away into nothing. Even now, when
-I look at that sky, the feeling creeps and creeps, that dreadful
-loneliness, where there isn't any I left to know that it's lonely--only
-a feeling." He shut his eyes resolutely. "My mother always says that it
-is when one has such fancies that one must pray and have faith."
-
-Eppie hardly felt that he spoke to her, and she groped among his strange
-thoughts, seizing the most concrete of them, imitating his shutting out
-of the emptiness by closing her own eyes. "Yes," she said, reflecting in
-the odd, glowing dimness, "I am quite sure that you have much more
-feeling about God when you think hard, inside yourself, than when you
-look at the sky."
-
-"Only then, there are chasms inside, too." Gavan's hand beside him was
-once more restlessly pulling at the heather. "Even inside, one can fall,
-and fall, and fall."
-
-The strange tone of his voice--it was indeed like the far note of a
-falling bell, dying in an abyss--roused Eppie from her experiments. She
-shook his shoulder. "Open your eyes, Gavan; please, at once. You make me
-feel horridly. I would rather have you look at the sky than fall inside
-like that."
-
-He raised himself on an arm now, with a gaze, for a moment, vague,
-deadened, blank, then sprang to his feet. "Don't let's look. Don't let's
-fall. We must pray and have faith. Eppie, I have made you so pale. Dear
-Eppie, to care so much. Please forgive me for going to pieces like
-that."
-
-Eppie was on her feet, too. "But I want you to. You know what I mean:
-never hide things. Oh, Gavan, if I could only help you."
-
-"You do. It is because you care, just in the way you do, that I _could_
-go to pieces,--and it has helped me to be so selfish."
-
-"Please be selfish, often, often, then. I always am caring. And just
-wait till I am grown up. I shall do something for you then. _I'll_ make
-money, too, Gavan."
-
-"Eppie, you are the dearest little girl," he repeated, in a shaken
-voice; and at that she put her arms around his neck and kissed him. The
-boy's eyes filled with tears. They stood under the sighing pines, high
-in the blue, and the scent of the heather was strong, sweet, in the
-sunny air. Gavan did not return the kiss, but holding her face between
-his hands, stammering, he said, "Eppie, how can I bear ever to leave
-you?"
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-In looking back, after long years, at their summer, Eppie could see,
-more clearly than when she lived in it, that sadness and Gavan had
-always gone together. He had, as it were, initiated her into suffering.
-Sadness was the undertone of their sweet comradeship. Their happy
-stories came to tragic endings. Death and disaster, though in trivial
-forms, followed him.
-
-With his returning strength, and perhaps with a sense of atonement to
-her for what he had called his selfishness, Gavan plunged eagerly into
-any outer interest that would please her. He spent hours in building for
-her a little hut on the banks of the brae among the birches: the dolls'
-Petit Trianon he called it, as the summer-house was their Versailles.
-They had been reading about the French Revolution. Eppie objected to the
-analogy. "I should always imagine that Elspeth's head were going to be
-cut off if I called it that."
-
-Gavan said that Elspeth need not be the queen, but a less exalted, more
-fortunate court lady. "We'll imagine that she escaped early from France
-with all her family, saw none of the horrors, was a happy _emigree_ in
-England and married there," he said; and he went on, while he hammered
-at the pine boughs, with a desultory and reassuring account of Elspeth's
-English adventures. But poor Elspeth came to as sad an end as any victim
-of the guillotine. Eppie was carrying her one day when she and Gavan had
-followed Aunt Barbara on some housewifely errand up to the highest attic
-rooms. Outside the low sills of the dormer-windows ran a narrow stone
-gallery looking down over the pine-tree and the garden. The children
-squeezed out through the window to hang in delighted contemplation over
-the birds'-eye view, and then Eppie crawled to a farther corner where
-one could see round to the moorland and find oneself on a level, almost,
-with the rooks' nests in the lime-trees. She handed Elspeth to Gavan to
-hold for her while she went on this adventure.
-
-He had just risen to his feet, looking down from where he stood over the
-low parapet, when a sudden cry from Eppie--a great bird sailing by that
-she called to him to look at--made him start, almost losing his balance
-on the narrow ledge. Elspeth fell from his arms.
-
-She was picked up on the garden path, far, far beneath, with a shattered
-head. Gavan, perhaps, suffered more from the disaster than Eppie
-herself. He was sick with dismay and self-reproach. She was forced to
-make light of her grief to soothe his. But she did not feel that her
-soothing hoodwinked or comforted him. Indeed, after that hour on the
-hilltop, when he showed her his sorrow and his fear, Eppie felt that
-though near, very near him, she was also held away. It was as if he felt
-a discomfort in the nearness, or a dread that through it he might hurt
-again or be hurt. He was at once more loving and more reticent. His
-resolute cheerfulness, when they could be cheerful, was a wall between
-them.
-
-Once more, and only once, before their childhood together ended, was she
-to see all, feel all, suffer all with him. Toward the end of the summer
-Robbie sickened and died. For three nights the children sat up with him,
-taking turns at sleep, refusing alien help. By candle-light, in Eppie's
-room, they bent over Robbie's basket, listening to his laboring breath.
-The general, protesting against the folly of the sleepless nights, yet
-tiptoed in and out, gruffly kind, moved by the pathos of the young
-figures. He gave medical advice and superintended the administering of
-teaspoonfuls of milk and brandy. That he thought Robbie's case a
-hopeless one the children knew, for all his air of reassuring good
-cheer.
-
-Robbie died early on the morning of the fourth day. A little while
-before, he faintly wagged his tail when they spoke to him, raising eyes
-unendurably sad.
-
-Eppie, during the illness, had been constantly in tears; Gavan had shown
-a stoic fortitude. But when all was over and Eppie was covering Robbie
-with the white towel that was to be his shroud, Gavan suddenly broke
-down. Casting his arms around her, hiding his face against her, he burst
-into sobs, saying in a shuddering voice, while he clung to her, shaken
-all through with the violence of his weeping: "Oh, I can't bear it,
-Eppie! I can't bear it!"
-
-Before this absolute shattering Eppie found her own self-control.
-Holding him to her,--and she almost thought that he would have fallen if
-she had not so held him,--she murmured, "Gavan, darling Gavan, I know, I
-know."
-
-"Oh, Eppie," he gasped, "we will never see him again."
-
-She had drawn him down to the window-seat, where they leaned together,
-and she was silent for a moment at his last words. But suddenly her arms
-tightened around him with an almost vindictive tenderness. "We _will_,"
-she said.
-
-"Never! Never!" Gavan gasped. "His eyes, Eppie,--his eyes seemed to know
-it; they were saying good-by forever. And, oh, Eppie, they were so
-astonished--so astonished," he repeated, while the sobs shook him.
-
-"We will," Eppie said again, pressing the boy's head to hers, while she
-shut her eyes over the poignant memory. "Why, Gavan, I don't know much
-about God, but I do know about heaven. Animals will go to heaven; it
-wouldn't be heaven unless they were there."
-
-That memory of the astonishment in Robbie's eyes seemed to put knives in
-her heart, but over the sharpness she grasped her conviction.
-
-In all the despair of his grief, the boy had, in answering her, the
-disciplined logic of his more formal faith, more clearly seen fact.
-
-"Dear Eppie, animals have no souls."
-
-"How do you know?" she retorted, almost with anger.
-
-"One only has to think. They stop, as Robbie has."
-
-"How do you know he has stopped? It's only," said Eppie, groping, "that
-he doesn't want his body any longer."
-
-"But it's Robbie in his body that we want. It's his body, with Robbie in
-it, that we know. God has done with wanting him--that's it, perhaps; but
-we want him. Oh, Eppie, it's no good: as we know him, as we want him, he
-is dead--dead forever. Besides,"--in speaking this Gavan straightened
-himself,--"we shall forget him." He turned, in speaking, from her
-consolations, as though their inefficiency hurt him.
-
-"I won't forget him," said Eppie.
-
-Gavan made no reply. He had risen, and standing now at the widely opened
-window, looked out over the chill, misty dawn. Beneath was the garden,
-its golden-gray walls rippling with green traceries, the clotted color
-of the hanging fruit among them. Over the hilltop, the solitary group of
-pines, the running wave of mountain, was a great piece of palest blue,
-streaked with milky filaments. The boughs of the pine-tree were just
-below the window, drenched with dew through all their fragrant darkness.
-
-Eppie, too, rose, and stood beside him.
-
-The hardened misery on his young face hurt her childish, yet
-comprehending heart even more than Robbie's supplicating and astonished
-eyes had done. She could imagine that look of steeled endurance freezing
-through it forever, and an answering hardness of opposition rose in her
-to resist and break it. "We won't forget him."
-
-"People do forget," Gavan answered.
-
-She found a cruel courage. "Could you forget your mother?"
-
-Gavan continued to look stonily out of the window and did not answer
-her.
-
-"Could you?" she repeated.
-
-"Don't, Eppie, don't," he said.
-
-She saw that she had stirred some black terror in him, and her ignorant,
-responsive fear made her pitiless: "Could you forget her if she died?
-Never. Never as long as you lived."
-
-"Already," he said, as though the words were forced from him by her
-will, "I haven't remembered her all the time."
-
-"She is there. You haven't forgotten her."
-
-"Years and years come. New things come. Old things fade and fade,--all
-but the deepest things. They couldn't fade. No," he repeated, "they
-couldn't. Only, even they might get dimmer."
-
-She saw that he spoke from an agony of doubt, and he seemed to wrench
-the knife she had stabbed him with from his heart as he added: "But
-Robbie is such a little thing. And little things people do forget, I am
-sure of it. It's that that makes them so sad."
-
-"Well, then,"--Eppie, too, felt the relief of the lesser pain,--"they
-will remember again. When you see Robbie in heaven you will remember all
-about him. But I won't forget him," she repeated once more, swallowing
-the sob that rose chokingly at the thought of how long it would be till
-they should see Robbie in heaven.
-
-Gavan had now a vague, chill smile for the pertinacity of her faith.
-Something had broken in him, as if, with Robbie's passing, a veil had
-been drawn from reality, an illusion of confidence dispelled forever. He
-leaned out of the window and breathed in the scent of the wet pine-tree,
-looking, with an odd detachment and clearness of observation,--as if
-through that acceptation of tragedy all his senses had grown keener,--at
-the bluish bloom the dew made upon the pine-needles; at the flowers and
-fruit in the garden below, the thatched roof of the summer-house, the
-fragile whiteness of the roses growing near it, like a bridal veil blown
-against the ancient wall. It was, in a moment of strange, suspended
-vision, as if he had often and often seen tragic dawn in the garden
-before and was often to see it again. What was he? Where was he? All the
-world was like a dream and he seemed to see to its farthest ends and
-back to its beginnings.
-
-Eppie stood silent beside him.
-
-He was presently conscious of her silence, and then, the uncanny
-crystal, gazing sense slipping from him, of a possible unkindness in his
-repudiating grief. He looked round at her. The poor child's eyes, heavy
-with weeping and all the weight of the dark, encompassing woe he had
-shown her, dwelt on him with a somber compassionateness.
-
-"Poor, darling little Eppie," he said, putting an arm about her, "what a
-brute, a selfish brute, I am."
-
-"Why a brute, Gavan?"
-
-"Making you suffer--more. I'm always making you suffer, Eppie, always;
-and you are really such a happy person. Come, let us go out for a walk.
-Let us go out on the moor. It will be delicious in the heather now. I
-want to see it and smell it. It will do us good."
-
-She resented his wisdom. "But you won't forget Robbie, while we walk."
-
-For a moment, as if in great weariness, Gavan leaned his head against
-her shoulder. "Don't talk of Robbie, please. We must forget him--just
-now, or try to, or else we can't go on at all."
-
-Still she persisted, for she could not let it go like that: "I can think
-of him and go on too. I don't want to run away from Robbie because he
-makes me unhappy."
-
-Gavan sighed, raising his head. "You are stronger than I am, Eppie. I
-must--I must run away." He took her hand and drew her to the door, and
-she followed him, though glancing back, as she went, at the little form
-under the shroud.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Robbie's death overshadowed the last days of Gavan's stay. Eppie did not
-feel, after it, after his avowed and helpless breakdown, the barrier
-sense so strongly. He didn't attempt to hide dejection; but that was
-probably because she too was dejected and there was no necessity for
-keeping up appearances that would only jar and hurt. Eppie gave herself
-whole-heartedly to her griefs, and this was her grief as well as his. He
-could share it. It was no longer the holding her at arm's length from a
-private woe. Yet the grief was not really shared, Eppie knew, for it was
-not the same grief that they felt. Of the difference they did not speak
-again. Then there came the sadness of the parting, so near now and for
-the first time realized in all its aspects.
-
-Eppie gathered, from chance remarks of the general's, that this parting
-was to be indefinite. The summer at Kirklands was no precedent for
-future summers, as she and Gavan had quite taken for granted. An uncle
-of Gavan's, his father's eldest brother, was to give him his home in
-England. This uncle had been traveling in the East this summer, and
-Gavan did not formally come under his jurisdiction until autumn. But the
-general conjectured that the jurisdiction would be well defined and
-tolerably stringent. Sir James Palairet had clearly cut projects for
-Gavan; they would, perhaps, not include holidays at Kirklands. The
-realization was, for Gavan, too, a new one.
-
-"Am I not to come back here next summer?" he asked.
-
-"I'm afraid not, Gavan; we haven't first claim, you see. Perhaps Sir
-James will lend you to us now and then; but from what I know of him I
-imagine that he will want to do a lot with you, to put you through a
-great deal. There won't be much time for this sort of thing. You will
-probably travel with him."
-
-They were in the library and, speaking from the depths of her fear,
-Eppie asked: "Do you like Sir James, Uncle Nigel?" She suspected a
-pitying quality in the cogitating look that the general bent upon Gavan.
-
-"I hardly know him, my dear. He is quite an eminent man. A little
-severe, perhaps,--something of a martinet,--but just, conscientious. It
-is a great thing for Gavan," the general continued, making the best of a
-rather bleak prospect, "to have such an uncle to give him a start in
-life. It means the best sort of start."
-
-Directly the two children were alone, both sitting in the deep
-window-seat, Gavan said, "Don't worry, Eppie. Of course I'll come
-back--soon." His face took on the hardness that its delicacy could so
-oddly express. He was confronting his ambiguous fate in an attitude of
-cold resolution. For his sake, Eppie controlled useless outcries. "You
-have seen your uncle, Gavan?"
-
-"Yes, once; in India. He came up to Darjeeling one summer."
-
-"Is he nice--nicer than Uncle Nigel made out, I mean?"
-
-"He isn't like my father," said Gavan, after a moment.
-
-"You mean that he isn't wicked?" Eppie asked baldly.
-
-"Oh, a good deal more than that. He is just and conscientious, as the
-general said. That's what my mother felt; that's why she could bear it,
-my going to him. And the general is right, you know, Eppie, about its
-being a great thing for me. He is a very important person, in his way,
-and he is going to put me through. He is determined that my father
-sha'n't spoil my life. And, as you know, Eppie, my mother's life, any
-chance for her, depends on me. To make her life, to atone to her in any
-way for all she has had to bear, I must make my own. My uncle will help
-me."
-
-The steeliness of his resolves made his face almost alien. Eppie felt
-this unknown future, where he must fight alone, for objects in which she
-had no share, shutting her out, and a child's sick misery of desolation
-filled her, bringing back the distant memory of her mother's death, that
-suffocating sense of being left behind and forgotten; but, keeping her
-eyes on his prospect, she managed in a firm voice to question him about
-the arid uncle, learned that he was married, childless, had a house in
-the country and one in London, and sat in Parliament. He was vastly
-busy, traveled a great deal, and wrote books of travel; not books about
-foreign people and the things they ate and wore, as Eppie with her
-courageous interest hopefully surmised, but books of dry, colorless
-fact, with lots of statistics in them, Gavan said.
-
-"He wants me to go in for the same sort of thing--politics and public
-life."
-
-"You are going to be a Pitt--make laws, Gavan, like Pitt?" Eppie kept up
-her dispassionate tone.
-
-He smiled at the magnified conception. "I'll try for a seat, probably,
-or some governmental office; that is, if I turn out to be worth
-anything."
-
-How the vague vastness shut her out! What should she do, meanwhile? How
-carve for herself a future that would keep her near him in the great
-outside world? And would he want her near him in it when he was to be so
-great, too? This question brought the irrepressible tears to her eyes at
-last, though she turned away her head and would not let them fall. But
-Gavan glanced at her and leaned forward to look, and then she saw, as
-her eyes met his, that the hard resolve was for her, too, and did not
-shut her out, but in.
-
-"I'm coming back, Eppie," he said, taking her hand and holding it
-tightly. "Next to my mother, it's _you_,--you know it."
-
-"I haven't any mother," said Eppie, keeping up the bravery, though it
-was really harder not to cry now. He understood where she placed him.
-
-Eppie was glad that it was raining on the last morning. Sunshine would
-have been a mockery, and this tranquilly falling rain, that turned the
-hills to pale, substanceless ghosts and brought the end of the moor,
-where it disappeared into the white, so near, was not tragic. Gavan was
-coming back. She would think only of that. She would not--would not cry.
-He should see how brave she could be. When he was gone--well, she
-allowed herself a swift thought of the Petit Trianon, its hidden refuge.
-There, all alone, she would, of course, howl. There was a grim comfort
-in this vision of herself, rolling upon the pine-needle carpet of the
-Petit Trianon and shrieking her woes aloud.
-
-At breakfast Gavan showed a tense, calm face. She was impressed anew
-with the sense of his strength, for, in spite of his resolves, he was
-suffering, perhaps more keenly than herself. Suffering, with him,
-partook of horror. She could live in hopes, and on them. To Gavan, this
-parting was the going into a dark cavern that he must march through in
-fear. And then, he would never roll and shriek.
-
-After breakfast, they hardly spoke to each other. Indeed, what was there
-to say? Eppie filled the moments in superintending the placing of fruit
-and sandwiches in his dressing-case. The carriage was a little late, so
-that when the final moment came, there was a hurried conventionality of
-farewell. Gavan was kissed by the aunts and shook hands with Miss
-Grimsby, while the general called out that there was no time to lose.
-
-"Come back to us, dear boy; keep your feet dry on the journey," said
-Miss Rachel, while Miss Barbara, holding his hand, whispered gently
-that she would always pray for him.
-
-Eppie and Gavan had not looked at each other, and when the moment came
-for their farewell, beneath the eyes of aunts, uncle, Miss Grimsby, and
-the servants, it seemed the least significant of all, was the shortest,
-the most formal. They looked, they held hands for a moment, and Gavan
-faltered out some words. Eppie did not speak and kept her firm smile.
-Only when he had followed the general into the carriage and it was
-slowly grinding over the gravel did something hot, stinging, choking,
-flare up in her, something that made her know this smooth parting to be
-intolerable--not to be borne.
-
-She darted out into the rain. Bobbie was dead; Gavan was gone; why, she
-was alone--alone--and a question was beating through her as she ran down
-the drive and, with a leap to its step, caught the heavy old carriage in
-its careful turning at the gate. Gavan saw, at the window, her white,
-freckled face, her startled eyes, her tossed hair all beaded with the
-finely falling rain--like an apparition on the ghostly background of
-mist.
-
-"Oh, Gavan, don't forget me!" That had been the flaring terror.
-
-He had just time to catch her hand, to lean to her, to kiss her. He did
-not speak. Mutely he looked at the little comrade all the things he
-could not say: what she was to him, what he felt for her, what he would
-always feel,--always, always, always, his eyes said to hers as she
-stepped back to the road and was gone.
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-He had never seen Eppie again, and sixteen years had passed.
-
-It was of this that Gavan was thinking as the Scotch express bore him
-northward on a dark October night.
-
-A yellow-bound, half-cut volume of French essays lay beside him. He had
-lighted a cigar and, his feet warmly ensconced on the hot-water tin, his
-legs enfolded in rugs, the fur collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears, he leaned back, well fortified against the sharp air that struck
-in from the half-opened window.
-
-Gavan, at thirty, had oddly maintained all the more obvious
-characteristics of his boyhood. He was long, pale, emaciated, as he had
-been at fourteen. His clean-shaved face was the boy's face, matured, but
-unchanged in essentials. The broad, steep brow, the clear, aquiline jut
-of nose and chin, the fineness and strength of the jaw, sculptured now
-by the light overhead into vehement relief and shadow, were more
-emphatic, only, than they had been.
-
-At fourteen his face had surprised with its maturity and at thirty it
-surprised with its quality of wistful boyishness. This was the obvious.
-The changes were there, but they were subtle, consisting more in a
-certain hardening of youth's hesitancy into austerity; as though the
-fine metal of the countenance had been tempered by time into a fixed,
-enduring type. His pallor was the scholar's, but his emaciation the
-athlete's; the fragility, now, was a braced and disciplined fragility.
-No sedentary softness was in him. In his body, as in his face, one felt
-a delicacy as strong as it was fine. The great change was that hardening
-to fixity.
-
-To-night, he was feeling the change himself. The journey to Kirklands,
-after the long gap that lay between it and his farewell, made something
-of an epoch for his thoughts. He did not find it significant, but the
-mere sense of comparison was arresting.
-
-The darkness of the October night, speeding by outside, the solitude of
-the bright railway carriage, London two hours behind and, before, the
-many hours of his lonely journey,--time and place were like empty
-goblets, only waiting to be filled with the still wine of memory.
-
-Gavan had not cast aside his book, lighted his cigar, and, leaning back,
-drawn his rugs about him with the conscious intention of yielding
-himself to retrospect. On the contrary, he had, at first, pushed aside
-the thoughts that, softly, persistently, pressed round him. Then the
-languor, the opportunity of the hour seized him. He allowed himself to
-drift hither and thither, as first one eddy lapped over him and then
-another. And finally he abandoned himself to the full current and, once
-it had him, it carried him far.
-
-It was, at the beginning, as far back as Eppie and childhood that it
-carried him, to the sunny summer days and to the speechless parting of
-the rainy autumn morning. And, with all that sense of change, he was
-surprised to find how very much one thing had held firm. He had never
-forgotten. He had kept the mute promise of that misty morning. How well
-he had kept it he hadn't known until he found the chain of memory hold
-so firm as he pulled upon it. The promise had been made to himself as
-well as to her, given in solemn hostage to his own childish fears. Even
-then what an intuitive dread had been upon him of the impermanence of
-things. But it wasn't impermanent after all, that vision.
-
-Dear little Eppie. It was astonishing now to find how well he
-remembered, how clearly he could see, in looking back,--more clearly
-than even his acute child's perception had made evident to him,--what a
-dear little Eppie she had been. She lived in his memory, and probably
-nowhere else: in the present Eppie he didn't fancy that he should find
-much trace of the child Eppie, and it was sad, in its funny way, to
-think that he, who had, with all his forebodings, so felt the need of a
-promise, should so well remember her who, undoubtedly, had long ago
-forgotten him. He took little interest in the present Eppie. But the
-child wore perfectly with time.
-
-Dear child Eppie and strange, distant boy, groping toward the present
-Gavan; unhappy little boy, of deep, inarticulate, passionate affections
-and of deep hopes and dreads. There they walked, knee-deep in heather;
-he smelled it, the sun warm upon it, Eppie in her white,
-Alice-in-Wonderland frock and her "striped" hair. And there went Robbie,
-plunging through the heather before them.
-
-Robbie. Eppie had been right, then. He had not forgotten him at all. He
-and Eppie stood at the window looking out at the dawn; the scent of the
-wet pine-tree was in the air, and their eyes were heavy with weeping.
-How near they had been. Had any one, in all his life, ever been nearer
-him than Eppie?
-
-Curious, when he had so well kept the promise never to forget, that the
-other promise, the promise to return, he had not been able to keep. In
-making it, he had not imagined, even with his foreboding, what manacles
-of routine and theory were to be locked upon him for the rest of his
-boyhood. He had soon learned that protest, pleading, rebellion, were
-equally vain, and that outward conformity was the preservative of inner
-freedom. He could not jeopardize the purpose of his life--his mother's
-rescue--by a persistence that, in his uncle's not unkind and not
-unhumorous eyes, was merely foolish. He was forced to swallow his own
-longings and to endure, as best he could, his pangs of fear lest Eppie
-should think him slack, or even faithless. He submitted to the treadmill
-of a highly organized education, that could spare no time for
-insignificant summers in Scotland. Every moment in Gavan's youth was to
-be made significant by tangible achievement. The distilled knowledge of
-the past, the intellectual trophies of civilization, were to be his; if
-he didn't want them, they, in the finished and effective figure of his
-uncle, wanted him, and, in the sense of the fulfilment of his uncle's
-hopes, they got him.
-
-During those years Gavan wrote to Eppie, tried to make her share with
-him in all the lonely and rather abstract interests of his life. But he
-found that the four years of difference, counting for nothing in the
-actual intercourse of word and look, counted for everything against any
-reality of intercourse in writing. Translated into that formality, the
-childish affection became as unlike itself as a pressed flower is unlike
-a fresh one. Eppie's letters, punctual and very fond, were far more
-immature than she herself. These letters gave accounts of animals,
-walks, lessons, very bald and concise, and of the Grainger cousins and
-their doings, and then of her new relation, cousin Alicia, whose
-daughters, children of Eppie's own age, soon seemed to poor Gavan, in
-his distant prison, to fill his place. Eppie went away with these
-cousins to Germany, where they all heard wonderful music, and after that
-they came to Kirklands for the summer. Altogether, when Gavan's
-opportunity came and, with the dignity of seventeen to back his request,
-he had his uncle's consent to his spending of a month in Scotland, he
-felt himself, even as he made it, rather silly in his determination to
-cling at all costs to something precious but vanishing. Then it was that
-Eppie had been swept away by the engulfing relative. At the very moment
-of his own release, she was taken to the Continent for three years of
-travel and study. The final effort of childhood to hold to its own
-meaning was frustrated. The letters, after that, soon ceased. Silence
-ended the first chapter.
-
-Gavan glanced out at the rushing darkness on either side. It was like
-the sliding of a curtain before the first act of a drama. His cigar was
-done and he did not light another. His eyes on that darkness that passed
-and passed, he gave himself up to the long vision of the nearer years.
-Through them went always the link with childhood, the haunting phrase
-that sounded in every scene--that fear of life, that deep dread of its
-evil and its pain that he had tried to hide from Eppie, but that,
-together, they had glanced at.
-
-In that first chapter, whose page he had just turned, he had seen
-himself as a very unhappy boy--unhappy from causes as apparent as a cage
-about a pining bird. His youth had been weighted with an over-mature
-understanding of wrong and sorrow. His childish faith in supreme good
-had shaped itself to a conception of life as a place of probation where
-oneself and, far worse, those one loved were burned continually in the
-fiery furnace of inexplicable affliction. One couldn't say what God
-might not demand of one in the way of endurance. He had, helpless, seen
-his fragile, shrinking mother hatefully bullied and abused or more
-hatefully caressed. He had been parted from her to brood and tremble
-over her distant fate. Loved things had died; loved things had all, it
-seemed, been taken from him; the soulless machinery of his uncle's
-system had ground and polished at his stiffening heart. No wonder that
-the boy of that first chapter had been very unhappy. But in the later
-chapters, to which he had now come, the causes for unhappiness were not
-so obvious, yet the gloom that overhung them deepened. He saw himself at
-Eton in the hedged-round world of buoyant youth, standing apart,
-preoccupied, indifferent. He had been oddly popular there. His
-selflessness, his gentle candor, his capacity for a highly keyed
-joy,--strung, though it was, over an incapacity for peace,--endeared
-him; but even to his friends he remained a veiled and ambiguous
-personality. He seemed to himself to stand on the confines of that
-artificially happy domain, listening always for the sound of sorrow in
-the greater world outside. History, growing before his growing mind,
-loomed blood-stained, cruel, disastrous. The defeat of goodness, its
-degradation by the triumphant forces of evil, haunted him. The
-dependence of mind, of soul, on body opened new and ominous vistas. For
-months he was pursued by morbid fears of what a jostled brain-cell or a
-diseased body might do to one. One might become a fiend, it seemed, or
-an imbecile, if one's atoms were disarranged too much. Life was a tragic
-duty,--he held to that blindly, fiercely at times; but what if life's
-chances made even goodness impossible? what if it were to rob one of
-one's very selfhood? It became to him a thing dangerous, uncertain, like
-an insecurely chained wild beast that one must lie down with and rise
-with and that might spring at one's throat at any moment.
-
-Under the pressure of this new knowledge, crude enough in its
-materialistic forms, and keen, new thought, already subtle, already
-passing from youthful crudity, the skeptical crash of his religious
-faith came at last upon him. Religion had meant too much to him for its
-loss to be the merely disturbing epoch of readjustment that it is in
-much young development. He found himself in a reeling horror of darkness
-where the only lights were the dim beacons of science and the fantastic
-will-o'-the-wisps of estheticism. In the midst of the chaos he saw his
-mother again. He dreaded the longed-for meeting. How could he see her
-and hide from her the inner desolation? And when she came, at last,
-after all these years, a desperate pity nerved him to act a part. She
-was changed; the years had told on her more than even his imagination
-had feared. She drooped like a tired, fading flower. She was fading,
-that he saw at the first glance. Mentally as well as physically, there
-was an air of withering about her, and the look of sorrow was stamped
-ineffaceably upon her aging features. To know that he had lost his
-faith, his hold on life, his trust in good, would have been, he thought,
-to kill her. He kept from her a whisper of his desolation; and to a
-fundamental skepticism like his, acting was facile. But when she was
-gone, back to her parched life, he knew that to her, as well as to him,
-something essential had lacked. Her love, again and again, must have
-fluttered, however blindly, against that barrier between them. The years
-of separation had been sad, but, in looking back at it, the summer of
-meeting was saddest of all.
-
-The experience put an edge to his hardening strength. He must fail her
-in essentials; they could never meet in the blessed nearness of shared
-hopes; but he wouldn't fail her in all the lesser things of life. The
-time of her deliverance was near. Love and beauty would soon be about
-her. He worked at Oxford with the inner passion of a larger purpose than
-mere scholarship that is the soul of true scholarship. He felt the
-sharp, cold joy of high achievement, the Alpine, precipitous scaling of
-the mind. And here he embarked upon the conscious quest for truth, his
-skepticism grown to a doubt of its own premises.
-
-Gavan looked quietly back upon the turmoil of that quest.
-
-He watched himself in those young years pressing restlessly, eagerly,
-pursued by the phantoms of death and nothingness, through spiral after
-spiral of human thought: through Spinoza's horror of the meaninglessness
-of life and through Spinoza's barren peace; through Kant's skepticism
-that would not let him rest in Kant's super-rational assurance;
-precipitated from Hegel's dialectics--building their pyramid of paradox
-to the apex of an impersonal Absolute--into Schopenhauer's petulant
-despair. And more and more clearly he saw, through all the forms of
-thought, that the finite self dissolved like mist in the one
-all-embracing, all-transcending Subject. Science, philosophy, religion,
-seemed, in their final development, to merge in a Monism that conceived
-reality as spirit, but as impersonal spirit, a conception that, if in
-western thought it did not reduce to illusion every phase of
-experience, yet reduced the finite self to a contradiction and its sense
-of moral freedom, upon which were built all the valuations of life and
-all its sanctions, to a self-deception. His own dual life deepened his
-abiding intuition of unreality. There was the Gavan of the river, the
-debate, the dinner, popular among his fellows, gentle, debonair; already
-the man of the world through the fineness of his perception, his
-instinct for the fitting, his perfection of mannerless manner that was
-the flower of selflessness. And there was the Gavan of the inner
-thought, fixed, always, in its knot of torturing perplexity. To the
-inner Gavan, the Gavan of human relations was a wraith-like figure. Now
-began for him the strange experience at which childish terrors had
-hinted. It was in the exhaustions that followed a long wrench of
-thought, or after an illness, a shock of sorrow that left one pulseless
-and inert, that these pauses of an awful peace would come to him. One
-faced, then, the dread vision, and it seized one, as when, in the deep
-stillness of the night, the world drops from one and only a
-consciousness, dispassionate and contemplative, seeing all life as
-dream, remains. It was when life was thus stilled, its desires quenched
-by weakness or great sorrow, that this peace stole into the empty
-chambers, and whispered that all pain, all evil, all life were dreams
-and that the dreams were made by the strife and restlessness of the
-fragmentary self in its endless discord. See oneself as discord, as part
-of the whole, every thought, every act, every feeling determined by it,
-and one entered, as it were, into the unwilling redemption. Desire,
-striving, hope, and fear fell from one. One found the secret of the
-Eternal Now, holding in its timelessness the vast vision of a world of
-change. But to Gavan, in these moments, the sorrow, the striving, the
-agony of life was sweet and desirable; for, to the finite life that
-strove, and hoped, and suffered the vision became the sightless gaze of
-death, and nothingness was the guerdon of such attainment. To turn, with
-an almost physical sickness of horror, from the hypnotic spell, to
-forcibly forget thought, to clasp life about him like a loved
-Nessus-robe, was a frequent solution during these years of struggle; to
-reenter the place of joy and sorrow, taking it, so to speak, at its own
-terms. But the specter was never far from the inner Gavan, who more and
-more suspected that the longing for reality, for significance, that
-flamed up in him with each renewal of personal force and energy, was the
-mere result of life, not its sanction. And more and more, when, in such
-renewals, his nature turned with a desperate trust to action, as a
-possible test of worth, he saw that it was not action, not faith, that
-created life and the trust in life, but life, the force and will
-incarnated in one, that created faith and action. The very will to act
-was the will to live, and the will to live was the will of the Whole
-that the particular discord of one's personal self should continue to
-strive and suffer.
-
-Life, indeed, clutched him, and that quite without any artificial effort
-of his own, when his mother came home to England to die.
-
-Gavan had just left Oxford. He was exquisitely equipped for the best
-things of life, and, with the achievement, his long dependence on his
-uncle suddenly ceased. An eccentric old cousin, a scholarly recluse, who
-had taken a fancy to him, died, leaving him a small estate in Surrey and
-fifteen hundred pounds a year.
-
-With the good fortune came the bitter irony that turned it to dust and
-ashes. All his life he had longed to help his mother, to smooth her
-rough path and put power over fate into her hand. Now he could only help
-her to die in peace.
-
-He took her to the quiet old house, among its lawns, its hedges, its
-high-walled gardens and deep woods. He gave her all that it was now too
-late to give--beauty, ease, and love.
-
-She was changed by disease, more changed than by life and sorrow;
-gentle, very patient, but only by an effort showing her appreciation of
-the loveliness, only by an effort answering his love.
-
-Of all his fears the worst had been the fear that, with the conviction
-of the worthlessness of life, the capacity for love had left him. Now,
-as with intolerable anguish, her life ebbed from her, there was almost
-relief in his own despair; in feeling it to the full; in seeing the
-heartlessness of thought wither in the fierce flame of his agony.
-
-It seemed to him that he had never before known what it was to love. It
-was as if he were more her than himself. He relived her life and its
-sorrows. He relived her miserable married years, the long loneliness,
-parted from her child, her terror of the final parting, coming so
-cruelly upon them; and he lived the pains of her dissolution. He
-understood as he had never understood, all that she was and felt; he
-yearned as he had never yearned, to hold and keep her with him in joy
-and security; he suffered as he had never suffered.
-
-Such passionate rebellion filled him that he would walk for hours about
-the country, while merciful anesthetics gave her oblivion, in a blind
-rage of mere feeling--feeling at a white heat, a core of tormented life.
-And the worst was that her life of martyrdom was not to be crowned by a
-martyr's happy death; the worst was that her own light died away from
-before her feet, that she groped in darkness, and that, since he was to
-lose her, he might not even have her to the end.
-
-For months he watched the slow fading of all that had made her herself,
-her relapse into the instinctive, almost into the animal. Her lips, for
-many days, kept the courage of their smile, but it was at last only an
-automatic courage, showing no sweetness, no caress. Her eyes, in the
-first tragic joy of their reunion, had longed, grieved, yearned over the
-son who hid his sorrow for her sake. Afterward, all feeling, except a
-sort of chill resentment, died from her look. For the last days of her
-life, when, in great anguish, she never spoke at all, these eyes would
-turn on him with a strange immensity of indifference. It was as if
-already his mother were gone and as if a ghost had stolen into his life.
-She died at last, after a long night of unconsciousness, without a word
-or look that brought them near.
-
-Gavan lived through all that followed in a stupor.
-
-On the day of her funeral, when all was over, he walked out into the
-spring woods.
-
-The day was sweet and mild. Pools of shallow water shone here and there
-in the hollows, among the slender tree-stems. Pale slips of blue were
-seen among the fine, gray branches, and pushing up from last year's
-leaves were snowdrops growing everywhere, white and green among the
-russet leaves, lovely, lovely snowdrops. Seeing them, in his swift,
-aimless wandering, Gavan paused.
-
-The long nights and days had worn him to that last stage of exhaustion
-where every sense is stretched fine and sharp as the highest string of a
-musical instrument. Leaning against a tree, his arms folded, he looked
-at the snowdrops, at their vivid green, and their white, as fresh, as
-delicate as flakes of newly fallen snow.
-
-"Lovely, lovely," he said, and, looking all about him, at the fretwork
-of gray branches on the blue, the pale, shining water,--a little bird
-just hopping to its edge among the shorter grass to drink,--he repeated,
-"Lovely," while the anguish in his heart and the sweet beauty without
-combined in the sharp, exquisite tension of a mood about to snap, the
-fineness of a note, unendurably high, held to an unendurable length.
-
-A dimness overtook him: as if the note, no longer keenly singing, sank
-to an insect-like buzz, a chaos of minute, whirring vibrations that made
-a queer, dizzy rhythm; and, in a daze of sudden indifference, both to
-beauty and anguish, he seemed to see himself standing there, collapsed
-against the tree, his frail figure outworn with misery,--to see himself,
-and the trees, the pools of water, the drinking bird, and the snowy
-flowers,--like a picture held before calm, dying eyes.
-
-"Yes," he thought, "she saw it like this,--me, herself, life; that is
-why she didn't care any longer."
-
-He continued to look, and from the dimness and the buzzing the calm grew
-clear--clear as a sharply cut hallucination. He knew the experience, he
-had often before known it; but he had never yet felt it so unutterably,
-so finally. Something in him had done struggling forever; something was
-relinquished; he had accepted something. "Yes, it is like that," he
-thought on; "they are all of them right."
-
-With the cold eye of contemplation he gazed on the illusion of life:
-joy, suffering, beauty, good and evil. His individual life, enfranchised
-from its dream of a separate self, drifted into the life about him. He
-was part of it all; in him, as in those other freed ones, the self
-suddenly knew itself as fleeting and unsubstantial as a dream, knew its
-own profound irrationality and the suffering that its striving to be
-must always mean.
-
-He was perfectly at peace, he who had never known peace. "I am as dead
-as she is," he thought.
-
-In his peace he was conscious of no emotion, yet he found himself
-suddenly leaning his head against the tree and weeping. He wept, but he
-knew that it was no longer with grief or longing. He watched the
-exhausted machine give way, and noted its piteous desolation of
-attitude,--not pitying it,--while he thought, "I shall feel, perhaps
-suffer, perhaps enjoy again; but I shall always watch myself from above
-it all."
-
-The mystic experience had come overwhelmingly to him and his mind was
-never to lose the effect of that immediacy of consciousness,
-untransmissible, unspeakable, ineffaceable. And that with which he found
-himself one was far from any human thoughts or emotions; rather it was
-the negation of them, the infinite negation of finite restlessness.
-
-He went back to the house, to the darkened, empty room. The memories
-that crowded there, of pity and love and terror, were now part of the
-picture he looked at, as near and yet as far, as the vision of the
-snowdrops, the bird, and the spring sky.
-
-All was quiet. She was gone as he would go. The laboring breath was
-stilled forever.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Gavan did not address himself to an ascetic remodeling of his life. He
-pursued the path traced out before him. He yielded placidly to the calls
-of life, willing to work, to accomplish, willing even to indulge his
-passions, since there could lurk for him no trap among the shows of
-life. His taste soon drew back, disdainful and delicate, from his
-experience of youthful dissipation; his ironic indifference made him
-deaf to the lures of ambition; but he was an accurate and steady worker
-and a tolerably interested observer of existence.
-
-As he had ceased to have value for himself, so others had no value in
-his eyes. Social effort and self-realization were, as ideals, equally
-meaningless to him; and though pity was always with him, it was a pity
-gentle and meditative, hopeless of alleviation: for suffering was life,
-and to cure one, one must abolish the other. Material remedies seemed to
-him worse than useless; they merely renewed the craving forces. The
-Imitation of Christ was a fitter panacea than organized charities and
-progressive legislation.
-
-Physical pain in the helpless, the dumbly conscious, in children or
-animals, hurt him and made him know that he, too, lived; and he would
-spend himself to give relief to any suffering thing. He sought no
-further in metaphysical systems; he desired no further insight. Now and
-then, finding their pensive pastures pleasant, he would read some Hindoo
-or medieval mystic; but ecstasies were as alien to him as materialism:
-both were curious forms of self-deception--one the inflation of the
-illusory self into the loss of any sense of relation, and the other the
-self's painful concentration into imbecilely selfish aims. The people
-most pleasing to him were the people who, without self-doubt and without
-self-consciousness, performed some inherited function in the state; the
-simply great in life; or those who, by natural gift, the fortunately
-finished, the inevitably distinguished, followed some beautifully
-complex calling. The mediocre and the pretentious were unpleasing
-phenomena, and the ideals of democracy mere barbarous nonsense.
-
-His own pursuits were those of a fashionable and ambitious man, and, to
-the casual observer, the utter absence of any of the pose of
-disillusionized youth made all the more apparent what seemed to be a man
-of the world cynicism. Those who knew him better found him charming and
-perplexing. He seemed to have no barriers, yet one could not come near
-him. His center receded before pursuit. And he was much pursued. He
-aroused conjecture, interest, attachment. His exquisite head, the chill
-sweetness of his manner, the strange, piercing charm of his smile, drew
-eyes and hearts to him. Idly amused, he saw himself, all inert, boosted
-from step to step, saw friends swarm about him and hardly an enemy's
-face.
-
-It was rare for him to meet dislike. One young man, vaguely known at
-Oxford, noticed with interest as a relative of Eppie's, he had, indeed,
-by merely being, it seemed, antagonized. Gavan had really felt something
-of a shy, derivative affection for this Jim Grainger, a dogged, sullen,
-strenuous youth; because of the dear old memory, he had made one or two
-delicate, diffident approaches--approaches repulsed with bull-dog
-defiance. Gavan, who understood most things, quite understood that to
-the serious, the plain, the obviously laborious son of an impecunious
-barrister, he might have given the impression, so funnily erroneous, of
-a sauntering dilettantism, an aristocratic _flanerie_. At all events,
-Grainger was intrenched in a resolute disapproval, colored, perhaps,
-with some tinge of reminiscent childish jealousy. When their paths again
-crossed in London and Gavan found his suavity encountered by an even
-more scowling sarcasm, jealousy, of another type, was an obvious cause.
-Grainger, scornful of social dexterities and weapons, had worked himself
-to skin and bone in preparation for a career, and a career that he
-intended to be of serious significance. And at its outset he found
-himself in apparent competition with Gavan for a post that, significant
-indeed to him, as the first rung on the political ladder, could only be
-decorative to his rival--the post of secretary to a prominent
-cabinet-minister. Grainger had his justified hopes, and he was, except
-for outward graces, absolutely fitted for the place.
-
-In his path he found the listless figure of the well-remembered and
-heartily disliked Gavan--a gilded youth, pure and simple, and as such
-being lifted, by all accounts, onto the coveted rung of the coveted
-ladder. Gavan's scholarly fitness for the post Grainger only half
-credited. Of the sturdy professional class, with a streak of the easily
-suspicious bourgeois about him, he was glad to believe tales of
-drawing-room influence. He expressed himself with disgusted openness as
-to the fatal effect of a type like Palairet's on public life. Gavan
-heard a little and guessed more. He found himself sympathizing with
-Grainger; he had always liked him. With an effort that he had never used
-on his own behalf, he managed to get him fitted into the pair of shoes
-that were standing waiting for his own feet. It had been, indeed, though
-in superficial ways, an affair of drawing-room influence. The wife of
-the great statesman, as well as that high personage himself, was one of
-Gavan's devoted and baffled friends. She said that he made her think of
-a half-frozen bird that one longed to take in one's hands and warm, and
-she hopefully communed with her husband as to the invigorating effect of
-a career upon him. She suspected Gavan--his influence over her
-husband--when she found that an alien candidate was being foisted upon
-her.
-
-"Grainger!" she exclaimed, vexed and incredulous. "Why Grainger? Why not
-anybody as well as Grainger? Yes, I've seen the young man. He looks
-like a pugilistic Broad-Church parson. All he wants is to climb and to
-reform everything."
-
-"Exactly the type for British politics," Gavan rejoined. "He is in
-earnest about politics, and I'm not; you know I'm not." His friend
-helplessly owned that he was exasperating. Grainger, had he known to
-whom he was indebted for his lift, would have felt, perhaps, a
-heightened wrath against "drawing-room influence."
-
-Happily and justifiably unconscious, he proceeded to climb.
-
-Meanwhile another pair of shoes was swiftly found for Gavan. He went out
-to India as secretary to the viceroy.
-
-Here, in the surroundings of his early youth, the second great moral
-upheaval of his life came to him. Three years had passed since his
-mother's death. He was twenty-six years old.
-
-During a long summer among the mountains of Simla, he met Alice Grafton.
-She was married, a year older than himself, but a girl still in mind and
-appearance--fragile, hesitant, exquisite. Gavan at his very first seeing
-of her felt something knocking in his heart. It seemed like pity,
-instinctive pity, the bond between him and life, and for some time he
-deluded himself with this comparatively safe interpretation. He did not
-quite know why he should pity Mrs. Grafton. That she should look like a
-girl was hardly a reason, nor that her husband, large, masterful,
-embossed with decorations, was uninteresting. She had been married to
-him--by all accounts the phrase applied--at nineteen and could not find
-him sympathetic; but, after all, many cheerful women were in that
-situation. He was a kindly, an admiring husband, and her life was set in
-luxurious beauty. Yet piteousness was there. She was all promise and
-unfulfilment; and dimly, mutely, she seemed to feel that the promise
-would never be fulfilled, as though a too-early primrose smiled
-wistfully through a veil of ice. Should she never become consciously
-unhappy that would be but another symptom of permanent immaturity.
-
-Gavan rode with her and talked with her, and read with her in her fresh,
-flower-filled drawing-room. Their tastes were not at all alike; but he
-did not in the least mind that when she lifted her lovely eyes to him
-over poor poetry; and when she played and sang to him her very
-ineffectuality added a pathos, full of charm, to the obvious ballads
-that she liked. It was sweet, too, and endearing, to watch her, by
-degrees, molding her taste to his until it became a delightful and
-intuitive echo.
-
-He almost wondered if it was also in echo that she began to feel for
-herself his own appreciation of her. Certainly she matured to
-consciousness of lack. She began to confide; not with an open frankness,
-but vaguely, as though she groped toward the causes of her sadness. She
-shrank, and knew now why she shrank, when her loud-voiced, cheerful
-husband came tramping into the room. Then she began to see that she was
-horribly lonely. Unconsciously, in the confidences now, she plead for
-help, for reassurance. She probed him constantly as to religious hopes
-and the real significance of life. Her soft voice, with its endearing
-little stammer, grew to Gavan nearer and dearer than all the voices of
-the world. At first it appealed, and then it possessed him. He had
-thought that what he felt for her was only pity. He had thought himself
-too dead to all earthly pangs for the rudimentary one of love to reach
-him. But when, one day, he found her weeping, alone, among her flowers,
-he took her into his arms and the great illusion seized him once more.
-
-It seized him, though he knew it for illusion. He laughed at the specter
-of nothingness and gloried in the beauty of the rainbow moment. This
-human creature needed him and he her: that was, for them, the only
-reality; who cared for the blank background where their lives flashed
-and vanished? The flash was what mattered. He sprang from the dead self,
-as from a tomb, when he kissed her lips. Life might mean sorrow and
-defeat, but its tragedy was atoned for by a moment of such joy.
-
-"Gavan, Gavan, do we love each other? Do we?" she wept.
-
-He saw illusion and joy where her woman's heart felt only reality and
-terror in the joy.
-
-They obviously loved each other, though it was without a word of love
-that they found themselves in each other's arms. Had ever two beings so
-lonely so needed love? Her sweet, stunned eyes were a rapture of
-awakening to him, and though, under all, ran the deep, buried river of
-knowledge, whispering forever, "Vanity of vanities," he was far above it
-in the sunlight of the upper air. He felt himself, knew himself only as
-the longing to look forever into her eyes, to hold her to him forever.
-That, on the day of awakening, seemed all that life meant.
-
-Later on he found that more fundamental things had clutched him through
-the broken barriers of thought--jealousies and desires that showed him
-his partaking of the common life of humanity.
-
-Gavan's skepticism had not come face to face with a moral test as yet,
-and he could but contemplate curiously in himself the strong,
-instinctive revolt of all the man of hereditary custom and conscience
-from any dishonorable form of illegal love. He couldn't justify it, but
-it was there, as strong as his longing for the woman.
-
-It was not that he cared a rap, so he analyzed it, for laws or
-conventions: it was merely that he could not do anything that he felt as
-dishonorable.
-
-He told Alice that she must leave her husband and come openly to him.
-They would go back to Europe; live in Italy--the land of happy outcasts
-from unhappy forms; there they would study and travel and make beauty
-grow about them. Holding her hands gently, he put it all before her with
-a reverent devotion that gave the proposal a matrimonial dignity.
-
-"You know me well enough, dear Alice," he said, "to know that you need
-fear none of the usual dangers in such cases. I don't care about
-anything but you; I never will--ambition, country, family. Nothing
-outside me, or inside me, could make me fail you. All I want, or shall
-ever want, is to make you happy, and to be happy with you."
-
-But the things he put away as meaningless dreams the poor woman with the
-girl's mind saw as grim realities. It was easy for Gavan to barter a
-mirage for the one thing he cared to have; the world was not a mirage to
-her, and even her love could not make it so. Her thin young nature knew
-only the craving to keep and not the revulsion from a hidden wrong.
-Every fiber in her shrank from the facing of a hostile order of things,
-the bearing through life of a public dishonor. It was as if it were he
-who purposed the worse disgrace, not she.
-
-She wept and wept in his arms, hoping, perhaps, to weaken him by her
-feebleness and her abandonment, so that an open avowal of cowardice, an
-open appeal that he should yield to it, might be needless; but at last,
-since he would not speak, only stroking her hair, her hand, sharing her
-sorrow, she moaned out, "Oh, Gavan, I can't, I can't."
-
-He only half understood, feeling his heart freeze in the renunciation
-that she might demand. But when she sobbed on brokenly, "Don't leave me.
-Stay with me. I can't live without you. No one need ever know," he
-understood.
-
-Standing white and motionless, it was he now who repeated, "I can't. I
-can't. I can't."
-
-She wept on, incredulous, supplicating, reproachful. "You will not leave
-me! You will not abandon me!"
-
-"I cannot--stay with you."
-
-"You win my heart--humiliate me,--see that I'm yours--only yours,--and
-then cast me off!"
-
-"Don't speak so cruelly, Alice. Cast you off? I, who only pray you to
-let me take you with me?"
-
-"A target for the world!"
-
-"Darling, poor darling, I know that I ask all--all; but what else is
-there--unless I leave you?"
-
-She hid her face on his shoulder, sobbing miserably, her sobs her only
-answer, and to it he rejoined: "We can't go on, you know that; and to
-stay, to deceive your husband, to drag you through all the baseness, the
-ugliness, the degradation, Alice, of a hidden intrigue--I can't do that;
-it's the only thing I can't do for you."
-
-"You despise me; you think me wicked--because I can't have such horrible
-courage. I think what you ask is more wicked; I think it hurts everybody
-more; I think that it would degrade us more. People can't live like
-that--cut off from everything--and not be degraded in the end."
-
-It was a new species of torture that now tore at Gavan's heart and mind.
-He saw too clearly the force of the arguments that underlay her specious
-appeal--more clearly, far, than she could see. It was horribly true that
-the life of happy outlawry he proposed might wither and debase more than
-a conscious sin. The organized, crafty wisdom of life was on her side.
-And on his was a mere matter of taste. He could find no sanction for his
-resistance to her and to himself except in that instinctive recoil from
-what he felt as dishonor. He was sacrificing them both to a silly,
-subjective figment. The lurid realization, that burned and froze, went
-through him, and with it the unanswerable necessity. He must, he must,
-sacrifice them. And he must talk the language of right and wrong as
-though he believed in it. He acted as if he did, yet nothing was further
-from him than such belief; that was the strange agony that wrenched his
-brain as he said: "You are blind, not wicked. Some day you will thank me
-if I make it possible for you to let me go." And, he too incredulous, he
-cried, "Alice, Alice, will you really let me go without you?"
-
-She would not consent to the final alternative, and the struggle lasted
-for a week, through their daily meetings--the dream-like, deft meetings
-under the eyes of others,--and while they rode alone over the
-hills--long, sad rides, when both, often in a moody silence, showed at
-once their hope and their resistance.
-
-Her fear won at last. "And I can't even pretend that it's goodness," she
-said, her voice trembling with self-scorn. "You've abased me to the
-dust, Gavan. Yes, it's true, if you like--my fear is greater than my
-love." Irony, a half-felt anger, helped her to bear the blow, for, to
-the end, she could not believe that he would find strength to leave her.
-
-The parting came suddenly. Wringing her hands, looking hard into her
-face, where he saw still a fawning hope and a half-stupefied despair, he
-left her, and felt that he had torn his heart up by the very roots.
-
-And he had sacrificed her and himself, to what? Gavan could ask himself
-the question at leisure during the following year.
-
-Yet, from the irrational sacrifice was born a timid, trembling trust, a
-dim hope that the unbannered combat had not been in vain, that even the
-blind holding to the ambiguous right might blossom in a better life for
-her than if he had taken the joy held out to him. The trust was as
-irrational as the sacrifice, but it was dear to him. He cherished it,
-and it fluttered in him, sweet, intangible, during all the desolate
-year. Then, at the year's end, he met Alice, suddenly, unexpectedly, and
-found her ominously changed. Her girlhood was gone. A hard, glittering
-surface, competent, resourceful, hid something.
-
-The strength of his renouncement was so rooted that he felt no personal
-fear, and for her, too, he no longer felt fear in his nearness. What he
-felt was a new pity--a pity suffocating and horrible. Whispers of
-discreet scandal enlightened him. Alice was in no danger of what she
-most shrank from--a public pillory; but she was among those of whom the
-world whispers, with a half-condoning smile and shrug.
-
-Gavan saw her riding one morning with a famous soldier, a Nietzschian
-type of strength, splendor, and high indifference. And now he understood
-all. He knew the man. He was one who would have stared light irony at
-Gavan's chivalrous willingness to sacrifice his life to a woman; to such
-a charming triviality as an intrigue he would sacrifice just enough and
-no more. He knew the rules of the game and with him Alice was safe from
-any open pillory. People would never do more than whisper.
-
-A bitter daylight flooded for Gavan that sweet, false dawn, and once
-again the cruelty, the caprice at the heart of all things were revealed
-to him. He knew the flame of impotent remorse. He had tossed the
-miserable child to this fate, and though remorse, like all else, was
-meaningless, he loathed himself for his futile, empty magnanimity.
-
-She had seen his eyes upon her as she rode. She sent for him, and, alone
-with him, the glitter, the hardness, broke to dreadful despair.
-
-She confessed all at his knees. Hardness and glitter had been the shield
-of the racked, terror-stricken heart. The girl was a woman and knew the
-use of shields.
-
-"And Gavan, Gavan, worst of all,--far worst,--I don't love him; I never
-loved him. It was simply--simply"--she could hardly speak--"that he
-frightened and flattered me. It was vanity--recklessness--I don't know
-what it was."
-
-After the confession, she waited, her face hidden, for his reproach or
-anger. Neither came. Instead, she felt, in the long silence, that
-something quiet enveloped her.
-
-She looked up to see his eyes far from her.
-
-"Gavan, can you forgive me?" she whispered.
-
-Once more he was looking at it all--all the cruel, the meaningless drama
-in which he had been enmeshed for a little while. Once more his thought
-had risen far above it, and the old peace, the old, dead peace, with no
-trembling of the hopes that meant only a deeper delusion, was regained.
-He knew how deep must be the reattained tranquillity, when, the woman he
-had loved at his feet, he felt no shrinking, no reproach, no desire,
-only an immense, an indifferent pity.
-
-"Forgive you, Alice? Poor, poor Alice. Perhaps you should forgive me;
-but it isn't a question of that. Don't cry; don't cry," he repeated
-mechanically, gently stroking her hair--hair whose profuse, wonderful
-gold he had once kissed with a lover's awed delight.
-
-"You forgive me--you do forgive me, Gavan?"
-
-"It isn't a question of forgiveness; but of course I forgive you, dear
-Alice."
-
-"Gavan, tell me that you love me still. Can you love me? Oh, say that I
-haven't lost that."
-
-He did not reply, looking away and lifting his hand from her hair.
-
-The woman, leaning on his knees, felt a stealing sense of awe, worse
-than any fear of his anger. And worse than a vehement disavowal of love,
-worse than a spurning of her from him, were his words: "I want you not
-to suffer, dear Alice; I want you to find peace."
-
-"Peace! What peace can I find?"
-
-He looked at her now, wondering if she would understand and willing to
-put it before her as he himself saw it: "The peace of seeing it all, and
-letting it all go."
-
-"Gavan, I swear to you that I will never see him again. Oh, Gavan, what
-do you mean? If you would forgive me--really forgive me--and take me
-now, I would follow you anywhere. I am not afraid any longer. I have
-found out that the only thing to be afraid of is oneself. If I have you,
-nothing else matters."
-
-He looked steadily at her, no longer touching her. "You have said what I
-mean. You have found it out. The only thing to be afraid of is
-ourselves. You will not see this man again? You will keep that promise
-to me?"
-
-"Any promise! Anything you ask! And, indeed, indeed, I could not see him
-now," she shuddered. "Gavan, you will take me away with you?"
-
-He wondered at her that she did not see how far he was from her--how
-far, and yet how one with her, how merged in her through his
-comprehension of the essential unity that bound all life together, that
-made her suffering part of him, even while he looked down upon it from
-an almost musing height.
-
-He felt unutterable gentleness and unutterable ruthlessness. "I don't
-mean that, Alice. You won't lose yourself by clinging to me, by clinging
-to what you want."
-
-"You don't love me! Oh, you don't love me! I have killed your love!" she
-wailed out, rising to her feet, pierced by her full realization. She
-stepped back from him to gaze at him with a sort of horror. "You talk as
-if you had become a priest."
-
-He appreciated what his attitude must seem to her--priestly indeed,
-almost sleek in its lack of personal emotion, its trite recourse to the
-preaching of renunciation. And, almost with a sense of humor, that he
-felt as hateful at such a moment, the perception came that he might
-serve her through the very erroneousness of her seeing of him. The sense
-of humor was hateful, and his skilful seizing of her suggestion had a
-grotesque aspect as well. Even in his weariness, he was aware that the
-cup of contemplation was full when it could hold its drop of realized
-irony.
-
-"I think that I have become a priest, Alice," he said. "I see everything
-differently. And weren't you brought up in a religious way--to go to
-church, seek props, say your prayers, sacrifice yourself and live for
-others? Can't you take hold of that again? It's the only way."
-
-Her quick flaming was justified, he knew; one shouldn't speak of help
-when one was so far away; he had exaggerated the sacerdotal note. "Oh,
-you despise me! It is because of that, and you are trying to hide it
-from me! What is religion to me, what is anything--anything in the world
-to me--if I have lost you, Gavan? Why are you so cruel, so horrible? I
-can't understand it! I can't bear it! Oh, I can't! Why are our lives
-wrecked like this? Why did you leave me? Why have I become wicked? I was
-never, never meant to be wicked." Tears, not of abasement, not of
-appeal, but of pure anguish ran down her face.
-
-He was nearer to that elemental sadness and could speak with a more
-human tone. "You are not wicked--no more--no less--than any one. I don't
-despise you. Believe me, Alice. If I hadn't changed, this would have
-drawn me to you; I should have felt a deeper tenderness because you
-needed me more. But think of me as a priest: I have changed as much as
-that. And remember that what you have yourself found out is true--the
-only thing to be afraid of is oneself, and the only escape from fear is
-to--is to"--he paused, hearing the triteness of his own words and
-wondering with a new wonder at their truth, their gray antiquity, their
-ever-verdant youth--"is to renounce," he finished.
-
-He was standing now, ready for departure. In her eyes he saw at last the
-dignity of hopelessness, of an accepted doom, a pain far above panic.
-
-"Dear Alice," he said, taking her hand--"dear Alice." And, with all the
-delicacy of his shrinking from a too great directness, his eyes had a
-steadiness of demand that sank into the poor woman's tossed, unstable
-soul, he added, "Don't ever do anything ugly--or foolish--again."
-
-Her lover lost,--the very slightness of the words "ugly," "foolish,"
-told her how utterly lost,--a deep thrill of emotional exaltation went
-through the emptiness he left. She longed to clasp the lost lover and to
-sink at the knees of the priest.
-
-"I will be good. I will renounce myself," she said, as though it were a
-creed before an altar; and hurriedly she whispered, poor child, "Perhaps
-in heaven--we will find each other."
-
-Gavan often thought of that pathetic human clutch. So was the dream of
-an atoning heaven built. It kept its pathos, even its beauty, for him,
-when the whole tale ended in the world's shrug and smile. He heard first
-that Alice had become an emotionally devout churchwoman;--that lasted
-for a year;--and then, alas! alas!--but, after all, the smile and shrug
-was the best philosophy,--that she rode once more with the Nietzschian
-lover. He had one short note from her: he would have heard--perhaps, at
-any rate, he would know what to think when he did hear that she saw the
-man again. And she wanted him to know from her that it was not as he
-might think: she really loved him now--the other; not as she had loved
-Gavan,--that would always be first,--but very much; and she needed love,
-she must have it in her life, and she was lifting this man who loved
-her, was helping his life, and she had broader views now and did not
-believe in creeds or in the shibboleths that guided the vulgar. And she
-was harming no one, no one knew. Life was far too complicated, the
-intricacies of modern civilization far too enmeshing, for duty to be
-seen in plain black and white. The whole question of marriage was an
-open one, and one had a right to interpret one's duty according to one's
-own lights. Gavan saw the hand of the new master through it all. Shortly
-after, the death of Alice's husband, killed while tiger-shooting, set
-her free, and the new master proved himself at all events a fond one by
-promptly marrying her. So ended Alice in his life.
-
-There was not much more to look back on after that. His return to
-England; his entering the political arena, with neither desire nor
-reluctance; his standing for the town his uncle's influence marked out
-for him; the fight and the very gallant failure,--there had been, for
-him, an amused interest in the game of it all. The last year he had
-spent in his Surrey home, usually in company with a really pathetic
-effigy of the past--his father, poor and broken in health, the old
-serpent of Gavan's childhood basking now in torpid insignificance, its
-fangs drawn.
-
-People probably thought that he had been soured by an initial defeat.
-Gavan knew that the game had merely ceased to amuse him. What amused him
-most was concentrated and accurate scholarship. He was writing a book on
-some of the obscurer phases of religious enthusiasm, studying from a
-historical and psychological point of view the origin and formation of
-queer little sects,--failures in the struggle for survival,--their
-brief, ambiguous triumphs and their disintegrations.
-
-His unruffled stepping-back from the arena of political activity was to
-the more congenial activity of understanding and observation. But there
-burned in him none of the observer's, the thinker's passion. He worked
-as he rode or ate his breakfast. Work was part of the necessary fuel
-that kept life's flame bright. While he lived he didn't want a feeble,
-flickering flame. But at his heart, he was profoundly indifferent to
-work, as to all else.
-
- * * * * *
-
-GAVAN'S mind, as he leaned back in the railway carriage, had passed over
-the visual aspect of this long retrospect, not in meditation, but in a
-passive seeing of its scenes and faces. Eppie's face, fading in the
-mist; Robbie, silhouetted on the sky; the sulky Grainger; his uncle; his
-mother, and the vision of the spring day where he had wandered in the
-old dream of pain and into its cessation; finally, Alice, her pale hair
-and wistful eyes and her look when, at parting, she had said that they
-might be together in heaven.
-
-He had rarely known a greater lucidity than in those swift, lonely
-hours of night. It was like a queer, long pause between a past
-accomplished and a future not yet begun--as though one should sunder
-time and stand between its cloven waves. The figures crossed the stage,
-and he seemed to see them all in the infinite leisure of an eternal
-moment.
-
-This future, its figures just about to emerge from the wings into full
-view, slightly troubled his reverie. It was at dawn that his mind again
-turned to it with a conjecture half amused and half reluctant. There was
-something disturbing in the linkage he must make between that child's
-face on the mist and the Miss Gifford he was so soon to see. That she
-would, at all events in her own conception, dominate the stage, he felt
-sure; she might even expect a special attention from a spectator whose
-memory could join hers in that far first act. He was pretty sure that
-his memory would have to do service for both; and quite sure that memory
-would not hold for her, as it did for him, a distinct tincture of pain,
-of restlessness, as though there strove in it something shackled and
-unfulfilled.
-
-One's thoughts, at four o'clock in the morning, after hours of
-sleeplessness, became fantastic, and Gavan found himself watching, with
-some shrinking, this image of the past, suddenly released, brought
-gasping and half stupefied to the air, to freedom, to new, strong
-activity, after having been, for so long, bound and gagged and thrust
-into an underground prison.
-
-He turned to a forecast of what Eppie would probably be like. He had
-heard a good deal about her, and he had not cared for what he had
-heard. The fact that one did hear a good deal was not pleasing. Every
-one, in describing her, used the word charming; he had gathered that it
-meant, as applied to her, more than mere prettiness, wit, or social
-deftness; and it was precisely for the more that it meant that he did
-not care.
-
-Apparently what really distinguished her was her energy. She traveled
-with her cousin, Lady Alicia Waring, a worldly, kindly dabbler in art
-and politics; she rushed from country-house to country-house; she worked
-in the slums; she sat on committees; she canvassed for parliamentary
-friends; she hunted, she yachted, she sang, she broke hearts, and, by
-all accounts, had high and resolute matrimonial ambitions. Would Eppie
-Gifford "get" So-and-so was a question that Gavan had heard more than
-once repeated, with the graceless terseness of our modern colloquialism,
-and it spoke much for Eppie's popularity that it was usually asked in
-sympathy.
-
-This reputation for a direct and vigorous worldliness was only thrown
-into more pungent relief by the startling tale of her love-affair. She
-had fallen in love, helplessly in love, with an impecunious younger son,
-an officer in the Guards--a lazy, lovable, petulant nobody, the last
-type one would have expected her to lose her head over. He was not
-stupid, but he didn't count and never would. The match would have been a
-reckless one, for Eppie had, practically, only enough to pay for her
-clothes and her traveling expenses. The handsome guardsman had not even
-prospects. Yet, deliberately sacrificing all her chances, she had fallen
-in love, been radiantly engaged, and then, from the radiance, flung into
-stupefying humiliation. He had thrown her over, quite openly, for an
-ugly little heiress from Liverpool. Poor Eppie had carried off her
-broken heart--and she didn't deny that it was broken--for a year or so
-of travel. This had happened four years ago. She had mended as bravely
-as possible,--it wasn't a deep break after all,--and on the thrilling
-occasion of her first meeting with the faithless lover and his bride was
-magnificently sweet and regal to the ugly heiress. It was surmised that
-the husband was as uncomfortable as he deserved to be. But this capacity
-for recklessness, this picture of one so dauntless, dazed and
-discomfited, hardly redeemed the other, the probably fundamental aspect.
-She had lost her head; but that didn't prove that when she had it she
-would not make the best possible use of it. There was talk now--Eppie's
-was the publicity of popularity--of Gavan's old-time rival, Grainger,
-who had inherited an immense fortune and, unvarnished and defiantly
-undecorative on his lustrous background, was one of the world's prizes.
-All that he had was at Eppie's feet, and some more brilliant alternative
-could be the only cause for hesitation in a young woman seared by
-misfortune and cured forever of folly.
-
-So the talk went, and Gavan took such gabble with a large pinch of
-ironic incredulity; but at the same time the gossip left its trail. The
-impetuous and devastating young lady, with her assurance and her aim at
-large successes, was to him a distasteful figure. There was pain in
-linking it with little Eppie. It stood waiting in the wings and was
-altogether novel and a little menacing to one's peace of mind. He really
-did not want to see Miss Gilford; she belonged to a modern type
-intensely wearisome to him. But she was staying with her uncle and
-aunt--only Miss Barbara was left--at Kirklands, and the general, after a
-meeting in London, had written begging him to pay them all a visit, and,
-since there had seemed no reason for not going, here he was.
-
-Here he was, and round the corner of the wing the new Eppie stood
-waiting. Poor little Eppie of childhood--she was lost forever.
-
-But all the clearness of the night concentrated, at dawn, into that
-vivid memory of the past where they had wandered together, sharing joy
-and sorrow.
-
-That was long, long over. To-morrow was already here, and to-morrow
-belonged to the new Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Gavan spent the morning in Edinburgh, seeing an old relative, and
-reached Kirklands at six.
-
-It was a cold October evening, the moors like a dark, sullenly heaving
-ocean and a heavy bar of sunset lying along the horizon.
-
-The windows of the old white house mirrored the dying color, and here
-and there the inner light of fire and candle seemed like laughter on a
-grave face. With all its loneliness it was a happy-looking house; he
-remembered that; and in the stillness of the vast moors and the coming
-night it made him think of a warmly throbbing heart filling with courage
-and significance a desolate life.
-
-The general came from the long oak library, book in hand, to welcome
-him. Gavan was almost automatically observant of physical processes and
-noted now the pronounced limp, the touch of garrulity--symptoms of the
-fine old organism's placid disintegration. Life was leaving it
-unreluctantly, and the mild indifference of age made his cordiality at
-once warmer and more impersonal than of old.
-
-As he led Gavan to his room, the room of boyhood, near Eppie's,
-overlooking the garden and the wooded hills, he told him that Eppie and
-Miss Barbara were dressing and that he would have time for a talk with
-them before dinner at eight.
-
-"It's changed since you were here, Gavan. Ah! time goes--it goes. Poor
-Rachel! we lost her five years ago. If Eppie didn't look after us so
-well we should be lonely, Barbara and I. We seldom get away now. Too old
-to care for change. But Eppie always gives us three or four months, and
-a letter once a week while she's away. She puts us first. This is home,
-she says. She sees clever people at Alicia Waring's, has the world at
-her feet,--you've heard, no doubt,--but she loves Kirklands best. She
-gardens with me--a great gardener Eppie, but she is good at anything she
-sets herself to; she drives her aunt about, she reads to us and sings to
-us,--you have heard of her singing, too,--keeps us in touch with life.
-Eppie is a wonderful person for sharing happiness," the general
-monologued, looking about the fire-lit room; and Gavan felt that, from
-this point of view, some of the little Eppie might still have survived.
-
-"So you have given up the idea of the House?" the general went on.
-
-"I'm no good at it," said Gavan; "I've proved it."
-
-"Proved it? Nonsense. Wait till you are fifty before saying that. Why,
-you've everything in your favor. You weren't enough in earnest; that was
-the trouble. You didn't care enough; you played into your opponents'
-hands. The British public doesn't understand idealism or irony. Eppie
-told us all about it."
-
-"Eppie? How did Eppie know?" He found himself using her little name as a
-matter of course.
-
-"She knows everything," the general rejoined, with his air of happy,
-derived complacency; "even when she's not in England, she never loses
-touch. Eppie is very much behind the scenes."
-
-The simile recalled to Gavan his own vision of the stage and the waiting
-figure. "Even behind my scenes!" he ejaculated, smiling at so much
-omniscience.
-
-"From the moment you came into public life, yes."
-
-"And she knows why I failed at it? Idealism and irony?"
-
-"That's what she says; and I usually find Eppie right." The general,
-after the half-humorous declaration, had a pause, and before leaving his
-guest, he added, "Right, except about her own affairs. She is a child
-there yet."
-
-Eppie's disaster must have been keenly felt and keenly resented at
-Kirklands. The general made no further reference to it and Gavan asked
-no question.
-
-There was a fire, a lamp, and several clusters of candles in the long,
-dark library when Gavan entered it an hour later, so that the darkness
-was full of light; yet he had wandered slowly down its length, looking
-about him at the faded tan, russet, and gilt of well-remembered books,
-at the massive chairs and tables, all in their old places, all so
-intimately familiar, before seeing that he was not alone in the room.
-
-Some one in white was sitting, half submerged in a deep chair, behind
-the table with its lamp--some one who had been watching him as he
-wandered, and who now rose to meet him, taking him so unawares that she
-startled him, all the light in the dim room seeming suddenly to center
-upon her and she herself to throw everything, even his former thoughts
-of her, into the background.
-
-It was Eppie, of course, and all that he had heard of her, all that he
-had conjectured, fell back before the impression that held him in a
-moment, long, really dazzled, yet very acute.
-
-Her face was narrow, pale, faintly freckled; the jaw long, the nose
-high-bridged, the lips a little prominent; and, as he now saw, a clear
-flush sprang easily to her cheeks. Eyes, lips, and hair were vivid with
-color: the hair, with its remembered rivulets of russet and gold, piled
-high on her head, framing the narrow face and the long throat; the eyes
-gray or green or gold, like the depths of a mountain stream.
-
-He had heard many analogies for the haunting and fugitive charm of Miss
-Gifford's face--a charm that could only, apparently, be caught with the
-subtleties of antithesis. One appreciator had said that she was like an
-angelic jockey; another, that with a statesman's gaze she had a baby's
-smile; another, that she was a Flying Victory done by Velasquez. And
-with his own dominant impression of strength, sweetness, and daring,
-there crowded other similes. Her eyes had the steeplechaser's hard,
-smiling scrutiny of the next jump; the halloo of the hunt under a
-morning sky was in them, the joyous shouts of Spartan boys at play; yet,
-though eyes of heroism and laughter, they were eyes sad and almost
-tragically benignant.
-
-She was tall, with the spare lightness of a runner poised for a race,
-and the firm, ample breast of a hardy nymph. She suggested these pagan,
-outdoor similes while, at the same time, luxuriously feminine in her
-more than fashionable aspect, the last touches of modernity were upon
-her: her dress, the eighteenth-century, interpreted by Paris, her
-decorations all discretion and distinction--a knot of silver-green at
-her breast, an emerald ring on her finger, and emerald earrings, two
-drops of smooth, green light, trembling in the shadows of her hair.
-
-Altogether Gavan was able to grasp the impression even further, to
-simplify it, to express at once its dazzled quality and its acuteness,
-as various and almost violent, as if, suddenly, every instrument in an
-orchestra were to strike one long, clear, vibrating note.
-
-His gaze had been prolonged, and hers had answered it with as open an
-intentness. And it was at last she who took both his hands, shook them a
-little, holding them while, not shyly, but with that vivid flush on her
-cheek, "_You_," she said.
-
-For she was startled, too. It _was_ he. She remembered, as if she had
-seen them yesterday, his air of quick response, surface-shrinking, deep
-composure, the old delicious smile, and the glance swiftly looking and
-swiftly averted.
-
-"And _you_," Gavan repeated. "I haven't changed so much, though," he
-said.
-
-"And I have? Really much? Long skirts and turned up hair are a
-transformation. It's wonderful to see you, Gavan. It makes one get hold
-of the past and of oneself in it."
-
-"Does it?"
-
-"_Doesn't_ it?" She let go his hands, and moving to the fire and
-standing before it while she surveyed him, she went on, not waiting for
-an answer:
-
-"But I don't suppose that you have my keenness of memory. It all rushes
-back--our walks, our games, our lessons, the smell of the heather, the
-very taste of the heather-honey we ate at tea, and all the things you
-did and said and looked; your building the Petit Trianon, and your
-playing dolls with me that day; your Agnes, in her pink dress, and my
-Elspeth, whom I used to whip so."
-
-"I remember it all," said Gavan, "and I remember how I broke poor
-Elspeth."
-
-"Do you?"
-
-"All of it: the attic windows and the pine-tree under them, and the
-great white bird, and the dreadful, soft little thud on the garden
-path."
-
-"Yes, I can see your face looking down. You were quite silent and
-frozen. I screamed and screamed. Aunt Barbara thought that _you_ had
-fallen at first from the way I screamed."
-
-"Poor little Eppie. Yes, I remember; it was horrid."
-
-Their eyes, smiling, quizzical, yet sad, watched, measured each other,
-while they exchanged these trophies from the past. He had joined her
-beside the fire, and, turning, she leaned her hands on the mantel and
-looked into the flames. So looking, her face had its aspect of almost
-tragic brooding. It was as if, Gavan thought, under the light memories,
-all those visions of his night were there before her, as if,
-astonishingly, and in almost uncanny measure, she shared them.
-
-"And do you remember Robbie?" she asked presently.
-
-"I was just thinking of Robbie," Gavan answered. It was her face that
-had brought back the old sorrow, and that memory, more than any, linked
-them over all that was new and strange. They glanced at each other.
-
-"I am so glad," said Eppie.
-
-"Because I remember?"
-
-"Yes, that you haven't forgotten. You said you would."
-
-"Did I?" he asked, though he quite remembered that, too.
-
-"Yes; and I should have felt Robbie more dead if you had forgotten him."
-
-This was wonderfully not the Miss Gifford, and wonderfully the old
-Eppie. She saw that thought, too, answering it with, "Things haven't
-really changed so much, have they? It's all so very near--all of that."
-
-So near, that its sudden sharing was making Gavan a little
-uncomfortable, with the discomfort of the night before justified,
-intensified.
-
-He hadn't imagined such familiar closeness with a woman really unknown,
-nor that, sweeping away all the formalities that might have grown up
-between them, she should call him Gavan and make it natural for him to
-call her Eppie. He didn't really mind. It was amusing, charming perhaps,
-perhaps even touching--yes, of course it was that; but she was rather
-out of place: much nearer than where he had imagined she would be, on
-the stage before him.
-
-Passing to another memory, she now said, "I clung for years, you know,
-to your promise to come back."
-
-"I couldn't come--really and simply could not."
-
-"I never for a moment thought you could, any more than I thought you
-could forget Robbie."
-
-"And when I could come, you were gone."
-
-"How miserable that made me! I was in Rome when I had the news from
-Uncle Nigel."
-
-He felt bound fully to exonerate the past. "I had the life, during my
-boyhood, of a sumptuous galley-slave. I had everything except liberty
-and leisure. I was put into a system and left there until it had had its
-will of me. And when I was free I imagined that you had forgotten all
-about me. To a shy, warped boy, a grown-up Eppie was an alarming idea."
-
-"I never thought you had forgotten _me_!" said Eppie, smiling.
-
-Again she actually disturbed him; but, lightly, he replied with the
-truth, feeling a certain satisfaction in its lightness: "Never, never;
-though, of course, you fell into a background. You can't deny that _I_
-did."
-
-"Oh, no, I don't deny it." Her smile met his, seemed placidly to
-perceive its meaning. She did not for a moment imply, by her admissions,
-any more than he did; the only question was, What did his admissions
-imply?
-
-She left them there, going on in an apparent sequence, "Have you heard
-much about me, Gavan?"
-
-"A good deal," he owned.
-
-"I ask because I want to pick up threads; I want to know how many
-stitches are dropped, so to speak. Since you have heard, I want to know
-just what; I often seem to leave reverberations behind me. Some rather
-ugly ones, I fear. You heard, perhaps, that I was that rather ambiguous
-being, the young woman of fashion, materialistic, ambitious, hard." Her
-gaze, with its cool scrutiny, was now upon him.
-
-"Those are really too ugly names for what I heard. I gathered, on the
-whole, that you were merely very vigorous and that you had more
-opportunities than most people for vigor."
-
-"I'm glad that you saw it so; but all the same, the truth, at times,
-hasn't been beautiful. I have, often, been too indifferent toward people
-who didn't count for me, and too diplomatic toward those who did. You
-see, Gavan," she put it placidly before him, not at all as if drawing
-near in confidence,--she was much further in her confidences than in her
-memories,--but merely as if she unrolled a map before him so that he
-might clearly see where, at present, they found themselves, "you see, I
-am a nearly penniless girl--just enough to dress and go about. Of course
-if I didn't dress and didn't go about I could keep body and soul
-together; but to the shrewd eyes of the world, a girl living on her
-friends, making capital of her personality, while she seeks a husband
-who will give her the sort of place she wants--oh, yes, the world isn't
-so unfair, either, when one takes off the veils. And this girl, with the
-personality that pays, was put early in a place from where she could see
-all sorts of paths at once, see the world, in its ladder aspect, before
-her--all the horridness of low rungs and all the satisfaction of high
-ones. I have been tempted through complexity of understanding; perhaps I
-still am. One wants the best; and when one doesn't see clearly what the
-best is, one is in danger of becoming ugly. But echoes are often
-distorting."
-
-Miss Gifford was now very fully before him, as she had evidently
-intended to be. It was as if she herself had drawn between them the
-barrier of the footlights and as if, on her chosen stage, she swept a
-really splendid curtsey. And this frank and panoplied young woman of the
-world was far easier to deal with than the reminiscent Eppie. He could
-comfortably smile and applaud from his stall, once more the mere
-spectator--easiest of attitudes.
-
-"The echoes, on the whole, were rather magnificent, as if an Amazon had
-galloped across mountains and left them calling her prowess from peak to
-peak."
-
-Her eyes, quickly on his, seemed to measure the conscious artificiality,
-to compare it with what he had already, more helplessly, shown her. He
-felt his rather silly deftness penetrated and that she guessed that the
-mountain calls had not at all enchanted him. She owned to her own
-acuteness in her next words:
-
-"And you don't like young ladies to gallop across mountains. Well, I
-love galloping, though I'm sorry that I leave over-loud echoes. You, at
-all events, are noiseless. You seem to have sailed over my head in an
-air-boat. It was hard for me to keep any trace of you."
-
-"But I don't at all mean that I dislike Amazons to have their rides."
-
-"Let us talk of you now. I have had an eye on you, you know, even when
-you disappeared into the Indian haze; you had just disappeared when I
-first came to London. I only heard of lofty things--scholarly
-distinction, diplomatic grace, exquisite indifference to the world's
-prizes and to noisy things in general. It's all true, I can see."
-
-"Well, I'm not indifferent to you," said Gavan, smiling, tossing his
-appropriate bouquet.
-
-She had at this another, but a sharper, of her penetrative pauses. It
-was pretty to see her, rather like a deer arrested in its careless
-speed, suddenly wary, its head high. And, in another moment, he saw that
-the quick flush, almost violently, sprang to her cheek. Turning her head
-a little from him, she looked away, almost as if his glib acceptance of
-a frivolous meaning in her words abashed her--and more for him than for
-herself; as if she suddenly suspected him of being stupid enough to
-accept her at the uglier valuation of those echoes he had heard. She had
-not meant to say that she was one of the world's prizes, and she had
-perhaps meant to say, generously, that if he found her noisy she
-wouldn't resent indifference. Perhaps she had meant to say nothing of
-herself at all. She certainly wasn't on the stage, and in thinking her
-so he felt that he had shown himself disloyal to something that she,
-more nobly, had taken for granted. The flush, so vivid, that stayed made
-him feel himself a blunderer.
-
-But, in a moment, she went on with a lightness of allusion to his speech
-that yet oddly answered the last turn of his self-reproach. "Oh, you are
-loyal, I am sure, even to a memory. I wasn't thinking of particulars,
-but of universals. My whole impression of you was of something fragrant,
-elusive, impalpable. I never felt that I had a glimpse of really _you_.
-It was almost gross in comparison actually to see your name in the
-papers, to read of your fight for Camley, to think of you in that
-earthly scuffle. It was like roast-beef after roses; and I was glad,
-because I'm gross. I like roast-beef."
-
-He was grateful to her for the lightness that carried him so kindly over
-his own blunder.
-
-"It was only the fragrance of the roast, too, you see, since I was
-defeated," he said.
-
-"You didn't mind a bit, did you?"
-
-"It would sound, wouldn't it, rather like sour grapes to say it?"
-
-"You can say it. It was so obvious that you might have had the bunch by
-merely stretching out your hand--they were under it, not over your head.
-You simply wouldn't play the game." She left him now, reaching her chair
-with a long stride and a curving, gleaming turn of her white skirts,
-suggesting a graceful adaptation of some outdoor dexterity. As she
-leaned back in her chair, fixing him with that look of cheerful
-hardness, she made him think so strongly of the resolute, winning type,
-that almost involuntarily he said, "You would have played it, wouldn't
-you?"
-
-"I should think so! I care for the grapes, you see. It's what I
-said--you didn't care enough."
-
-"Well, it's kind of you to see ineffectuality in that light." Still
-examining the steeplechaser quality, he added, "You do care, don't you,
-a lot?"
-
-"Yes, a lot. I am worldly to my finger-tips." Her eyes challenged
-him--gaily, not defiantly--to misunderstand her again.
-
-"What do you mean, exactly, by worldly?" he asked.
-
-"I mean by it that I believe in the world, that I love the world; I
-believe that its grapes are worth while,--and by grapes I mean the
-things that people strive for and that the strong attain. The higher
-they hang and the harder the climb, the more I like them."
-
-Gavan received these interpretations without comment. "A seat in the
-House isn't very high, though, is it?" he remarked.
-
-"That depends on the sitter. It might be a splendid or a trivial thing."
-
-"And in my case, if I'd got it, what would it have been? Can you see
-that, too, you very clear-sighted young woman?"
-
-He stood above her, smiling, but now without suavity or artificiality;
-looking at her as though she were a pretty gipsy whose palm he had
-crossed with silver. And Eppie answered, quite like a good-natured
-gipsy, conscious of an admiring but skeptical questioner, "I think it
-would have been neither."
-
-"But what then? What would this sitter have made of it?"
-
-"A distraction? An experiment upon himself? I'm sure I don't know.
-Indeed, I don't pretend to know you at all yet. Perhaps I will in time."
-
-Once more he was conscious of the discomfort, slight and stealing, as
-though the gipsy knew too much already. But he protested, and with
-sincerity: "If there is anything to find you will certainly find it. I
-hope that you will find it worth your while. I hope that we shall be
-great friends."
-
-She smiled up at him, clearly and quietly: "I have always been your
-great friend."
-
-"Always? All this while?"
-
-"All this while. Never mind if you haven't felt it; I have. I will do
-for both."
-
-Her smile, her look, made him finally and completely understand the
-application of the well-worn word to her. She was charming. She could be
-lavish, pour out unasked bounty upon one, and yet, in no way
-undervaluing it, be full of delicacy, of humor, in her generosity.
-
-"I thought I hadn't any right to feel it," said Gavan. "I thought you
-would not have remembered."
-
-"Well, you will find out--I always remember, it's my strong point," said
-Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Next morning at breakfast he had quite a new impression of her.
-
-Pale sunlight flooded the square, white room where, in all its dignified
-complexity of appurtenance, the simple meal was laid out. From the
-windows one saw the clear sky, the moor, its summer purple turned to
-rich browns and golds, and, nearer, the griffins with their shields.
-
-Eppie was a little late in coming, and Gavan, while he and the general
-finished their wandering consumption of porridge and sat down to bacon
-and eggs, had time to observe by daylight in Miss Barbara, behind her
-high silver urn, the changes that in her were even more emphatic than in
-her brother. She was sweeter than ever, more appealing, more
-affirmative, with all manner of futile, fluttering little gestures and
-gentle, half-inarticulate little ejaculations of pleasure, approbation,
-or distress. Her smile, rather silly, worked too continually, as though
-moved by slackened wires. Her hands defined, described, ejaculated;
-over-expression had become automatic with her.
-
-Eppie, when she appeared, said that she had had a walk, stooping to
-kiss her aunt and giving Gavan a firm, chill hand on her way to the same
-office for the general. She took her seat opposite Gavan, whistling an
-Irish-terrier to her from the door and, before she began to eat,
-dropping large fragments of bannock into his mouth. Her loose, frieze
-clothes smelled of peat and sunshine; her hair seemed to have the
-sparkle of the dew on it; she suggested mountain tarns, skylarks,
-morning gladness: but, with all this, Gavan, for the first time, now
-that she faced the hard, high light, saw how deeply, too, she suggested
-sadness.
-
-Her face had moments of looking older than his own. It was fresh, it was
-young, but it had lived a great deal, and felt things to the bone, as it
-were.
-
-There were little wrinkles about her eyes; her white brow, under its
-sweep of hair, was faintly lined; the oval of her cheek, long and fine,
-took, at certain angles, an almost haggard sharpness. It was not a faded
-face, nor a face to wither with years: every line of it spoke of a
-permanent beauty; but, with all the color that the chill morning air had
-brought into it, it yet made one think of bleak uplands, of
-weather-beaten cliffs. Life had engraved it with ineffaceable symbols.
-Storms had left their mark, bitter conflicts and bitter endurances.
-
-While she ate, with great appetite, she talked incessantly, to the
-general, to Miss Barbara, to Gavan, but not so much to him, tossing, in
-the intervals of her knife and fork and cup, bits of food to the
-attentive terrier. He saw why the old people adored her. She was the
-light, the movement of their monotonous days. Not only did she bring
-them her life: it was their own that she vivified with her interest. The
-interest was not assumed, dutiful. There was no touch of the conscious
-being kind. She questioned as eagerly as she told. She knew and cared
-for every inch of the country, every individual in the country-side. She
-was full of sagacity and suggestion, full of anecdote and a nipping
-Scotch humor. And one felt strongly in her the quality of old race.
-Experience was in her blood, an inheritance of instinct, and, that so
-significant symptom, the power of playfulness--the intellectual
-detachment that, toward firm convictions, could afford a lightness
-scandalous to more crudely compacted natures, could afford gaieties and
-audacities, like the flights of a bird tethered by an invisible thread
-to a strong hand.
-
-Miss Barbara, plaintively repining over village delinquencies, was lured
-to see comedy lurking in the cases of insubordination and
-thriftlessness, though at the mention of Archie MacHendrie, the local
-drunkard and wife-beater, Eppie's brow grew black--with a blackness
-beside which Miss Barbara's gloom was pallid. Eppie said that she wished
-some one would give Archie a thrashing, and Gavan could almost see her
-doing it herself.
-
-From local topics she followed the general to politics, while he glanced
-down the columns of the "Scotsman," so absorbed and so vehement that,
-meeting at last Gavan's meditative eye, she seemed to become aware of an
-irony he had not at all intended, and said, "A crackling of thorns under
-a pot, all this, Gavan thinks, and, what does it all matter? You have
-become a philosopher, Gavan; I can see that."
-
-"Well, my dear, from Plato down philosophers have thought that politics
-did matter," said the general, incredulous of indifference to such a
-topic.
-
-"Unless they were of a school that thought that nothing did," said
-Eppie.
-
-"Gavan's not of that weak-kneed persuasion."
-
-"Oh, he isn't weak-kneed!" laughed Eppie.
-
-She drove her aunt all morning in the little pony-cart and wrote letters
-after lunch, Gavan being left to the general's care. It was not until
-later that she assumed toward him the more personal offices of deputy
-hostess, meeting him in the hall as she emerged from the morning-room,
-her thick sheaf of letters in her hand, and proposing a walk before tea.
-She took him up the well-remembered path beside the burn; but now, in
-the clear autumnal afternoon, he seemed further from her than last night
-before the fire. Already he had seen that the sense of nearness or
-distance depended on her will rather than his own; so that it was now
-she who chose to talk of trivial things, not referring by word or look
-to the old memories, deepest of all, that crowded about him on the
-hilltop, not even when, breasting the wind, they passed the solitary
-group of pine-trees, where she had so deeply shared his suffering, so
-wonderfully comprehended his fears.
-
-She strode against the twisted flappings of her skirt, tawny strands of
-hair whipping across her throat, her hands deeply thrust into her
-pockets, her head unbowed before the enormous buffets of the wind, and
-he felt anew the hardy energy that would make tender, lingering touches
-upon the notes of the past rare things with her.
-
-In the uproar of air, any sequence of talk was difficult. Her clear
-voice seemed to shout to him, like the cold shocks of a mountain stream
-leaping from ledge to ledge, and the trivial things she said were like
-the tossing of spray upon that current of deep, joyful energy.
-
-"Isn't it splendid!" she exclaimed at last. They had walked two miles
-along the crest of the hill, and, smiling in looking round at him, her
-face, all the sky behind it, all the wind around it, made the word match
-his own appreciation.
-
-"Splendid," he assented, thinking of her glance and poise.
-
-Still bending her smile upon him, she said, "You already look
-different."
-
-"Different from what?" he asked, amused by her expression, as of a
-kindly, diagnosing young doctor.
-
-"From last night. From what I felt of you. One might have thought that
-you had lost the capacity for feeling splendor."
-
-"Why should you have imagined me so deadened?" He kept his cheerful
-curiosity.
-
-"I don't know. I did. There,"--she paused to point,--"do you remember
-the wind-mill, Gavan? The old miller is dead and his son is the miller
-now; but the mill looks just as it did when we were little. It makes one
-think of birds and ships, doesn't it?--with the beauty that it stays and
-doesn't pass. When I was a child--did I ever confide it to you?--my
-dream was to catch one of the sails as it came down and let it carry me
-up, up, and right around. What fun it would have been! I suppose that
-one could have held on."
-
-"In pretty grim earnest, after the first fun."
-
-"It would be the sense of coming grimness that would make the desperate
-thrill of it."
-
-"You are fond of thrills and perils."
-
-"Not fond, exactly; the love of risk is a deeper thing--something
-fundamental in us, I suppose."
-
-She had walked on, down the hillside, where gorse bushes pulled at her
-skirts, and he was putting together last night's impressions with
-to-day's, and thinking that if she embodied the instinctive, the
-life-loving, it wasn't in the simple, unreflecting forms that the words
-usually implied. She was simple, but not in the least guileless, and her
-directness was a choice among recognized complexities. It was no
-spontaneous child of nature who, on the quieter hillside, where they
-could talk, talked of India, now, of his life there, the people he had
-known, many of whom she too knew. He knew that he was being managed,
-being made to talk of what she wanted to hear, that she was still
-engaged in penetrating. He was quite willing to be managed,
-penetrated,--for as far as she could get; he could rely on his own
-deftness in retreat before too deep a probe, though, should she discover
-that for him the lessons of life had resulted in an outlook perhaps the
-antipodes from her own, he guessed that her own would show no wavering.
-Still, she should run, if possible, no such risk. They were to be
-friends, good friends: that was, as she had said, not only an
-accomplished, but a long-accomplished fact; but, even more than in
-childhood, she would be a friend held at arm's-length.
-
-Meanwhile, unconscious, no doubt, of these barriers, Eppie walked beside
-him and made him talk about himself. She knew, of course, of his
-mother's death; she did not speak of that: many barriers were her
-own--she was capable of most delicate avoidances. But she asked after
-his father. "He is still alive, I hear."
-
-"Yes, indeed, and gives me a good deal of his company."
-
-"Oh." She was a little at a loss. He could guess at what she had heard
-of his father. He went on, though choosing his words in a way that
-showed a slight wincing behind his wish to be very frank and friendly
-with her, for even yet his father made him wince, standing, as he did,
-for the tragedy of his mother's life: "He is very much alive for a
-person so gone to pieces. But I can put up with him far more comfortably
-than when he was less pitiable."
-
-"How much do you have to put up with him?" she asked, trying to image,
-as he saw, his menage in Surrey, in the house he had just been
-describing to her, its old bricks all vague pinks and mauves, its
-high-walled gardens clustering near it, its wonderful hedges, that, he
-said, it ruined him to keep up to their reputation of exquisite
-formality; and, within, its vast library--all the house a brain,
-practically, the other rooms like mere places for life's renewal before
-centering in the intellectual workshop. She evidently found it difficult
-to place, among the hedges, the lawns, the long walls of the library, a
-father, gone to pieces perhaps, but displaying all the more helplessly
-his general unworthiness. Even in lenient circles, Captain Palairet was
-thought to have an undignified record.
-
-"Oh, he is there for most of the time. He is there now," said Gavan,
-without pathos. "He has no money left, and now that I've a little I'm
-the obvious thing to retire to."
-
-"I hope that it's not very horrid for you."
-
-"I can't say that it's horrid at all. I don't see much of him, and, in
-many respects, he has remained, for the onlooker, rather a charming
-creature. He gives me very little trouble--smokes, eats, plays
-billiards. When we meet, we are very affable."
-
-Eppie did not say, "You tolerate him because he is piteous," but he
-imagined that she guessed it.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-He was awakened early next morning by the sound of singing in the garden
-below.
-
-His windows were widely opened and a cold, pure air filled the room. He
-lay dreamily listening for some moments before recognizing Eppie's
-voice--recognizing it, though he had never heard her sing.
-
-Fresh and strong, it put a new vitality into the simple sadness of an
-old Scotch ballad, as though in the very sorrow it found joy. It was not
-an emotional voice. Clearly and firmly it sounded, and seemed a part of
-the frosty, sunny morning, part of the sky that was like a great chalice
-filled with light, of the whitened hills, the aromatic pine-woods, and
-the distant, rushing burn. He had sprung up after the first dreamy
-listening and looked out at it all, and at her walking through the
-garden, her dog at her heels. She went out by the little gate sunken
-deep in the wall, and disappeared in the woods; and still the voice
-reached him, singing on, and at each repetition of the monotonous,
-departing melody, a sadder, sweeter sense of pain strove in his heart.
-
-He listened, looking down at the pine-tree beneath the window, at the
-garden, the summer-house, the withered tangle of the rose upon the wall,
-and up at the hilltop, at the crystalline sky; and such a sudden pang of
-recollection pierced him that tears came to his eyes.
-
-What was it that he remembered? or, rather, what did he not? Things deep
-and things trivial, idle smiles, wrenching despairs, youth, sorrow,
-laughter,--all the past was in the pang, all the future, too, it seemed,
-and he could not have said whether his mother, Alice, Eppie with her
-dolls, and little Robbie, or the clairvoyant intuition of a future
-waiting for him here--whether presage or remembrance--were its greater
-part.
-
-Not until the voice had died, in faintest filaments of sound, far away
-among the woods, did the pain fade, leaving him shaken. Such moods were
-like dead things starting to life, and reminded him too vividly of the
-fact that as long as one was alive, one was, indeed, in danger from
-life; and though his thought was soon able to disentangle itself from
-the knot of awakened emotions that had entwined it for a moment, a vague
-sense of fear remained with him. Something had been demanded of
-him--something that he had, involuntarily, found himself giving. This it
-was to have still a young nature, sensitive to impressions. He
-understood. Yet it was with a slight, a foolishly boyish reluctance, as
-he told himself, that he went down some hours later to meet Eppie at
-breakfast.
-
-There was an unlooked-for refuge for him when he found her hardly
-noticing him, and very angry over some village misdemeanor. The anger
-held her far away. She dilated on the subject all during breakfast,
-pouring forth her wrath, without excitement, but with a steady
-vehemence. It was an affair of a public-house, and Eppie accused the
-publican of enticing his clients to drink, of corrupting the village
-sobriety, and she urged the general, as local magistrate, to take
-immediate action, showing a very minute knowledge of the technicalities
-of the case.
-
-"My dear," the general expostulated, "indeed I don't think that the man
-has done anything illegal; we are powerless about the license in such a
-case. You must get more evidence."
-
-"I have any amount of evidence. The man is a public nuisance. Poor Mrs.
-MacHendrie was crying to me about it this morning. Archie is hardly ever
-sober now. I shall drive over to Carlowrie and see Sir Alec about it; as
-the wretch's landlord he can make it uncomfortable for him, and I'll see
-that he makes it as uncomfortable as possible."
-
-Laughingly, but slightly harassed, the general said: "You see, we have a
-tyrant here. Eppie is really a bit too hard on the man. He is an
-unpleasant fellow, I own, a most unpleasant manner--a beast, if you
-will, but a legal beast."
-
-"The most unpleasant form of animal, isn't it? It's very good of Eppie
-to care so much," said Gavan.
-
-"You don't care, I suppose," she said, turning her eyes on him, as
-though she saw him for the first time that morning.
-
-"I should feel more hopeless about it, perhaps."
-
-"Why, pray?"
-
-"At all events, I shouldn't be able to feel so much righteous
-indignation."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"He is pretty much of a product, isn't he?--not worse, I suppose, than
-the men whose weakness enriches him. It's a pity, of course, that one
-can't painlessly pinch such people out of existence, as one would
-offensive insects."
-
-Eppie, across the table, eyed him, her anger quieted. "He is a product
-of a good many things," she said, now in her most reasonable manner,
-"and he is going to be a product of some more before I'm done with
-him,--a product of my hatred for him and his kind, for one thing. That
-will be a new factor in his development. Gavan," she smiled, "you and I
-are going to quarrel."
-
-"Dear Eppie!" Miss Barbara interposed. "Gavan, you must not take her
-seriously; she so often says extravagant things just to tease one."
-Really dismayed, alternately nodding and shaking her head in reassurance
-and protest, she looked from one to the other. "And don't, dear, say
-such unchristian things of anybody. She is not so hard and unforgiving
-as she sounds, Gavan."
-
-"Aunt Barbara! Aunt Barbara!" laughed Eppie, leaning her elbows on the
-table, her eyes still on Gavan, "my hatred for Macdougall isn't nearly
-as unchristian as Gavan's indifference. I don't want to pinch him
-painlessly out of life at all. I think that life has room for us both. I
-want to have him whipped, or made uncomfortable in some way, until he
-becomes less horrid."
-
-"Whipped, dear! People are never whipped nowadays! It was a very
-barbarous punishment indeed, and, thank God, we have outgrown it. We
-will outgrow it all some day. And as to any punishment, I don't know, I
-really don't. Resist not evil," Miss Barbara finished in a vague,
-helpless murmur, uncertain as to what course would at once best apply to
-Macdougall's case and satisfy the needs of public sobriety.
-
-"Perhaps one owes it to people to resist them," Eppie answered.
-
-"Oh, Eppie dear, if only you cared a little more for Maeterlinck!"
-sighed Miss Barbara, the more complex readings of whose later years had
-been somewhat incongruously adapted to her early simple faiths. "Do you
-remember that beautiful thing he says,--and Gavan's attitude reminds me
-of it,--'_Le sage qui passe interrompt mille drames'?_"
-
-"You will be quoting Tolstoi to me next, Aunt Barbara. I suspect that
-such sages would interrupt a good deal more than dramas."
-
-"I hope that you care for Tolstoi, Gavan," said Miss Barbara, not
-forgetful of his boyish pieties. "Not the novels,--they are very, very
-sad, and so long, and the characters have such a number of names it is
-most confusing,--but the dear little books on religion. It is all there:
-love of all men, and non-resistance of evil, and self-renunciation."
-
-"Yes," Gavan assented, while Eppie looked rather gravely at him.
-
-"How beautiful this world would be if we could see it so--no hatred, no
-strife, no evil."
-
-Again Gavan assented with, "None."
-
-"None; and no life either," Eppie finished for them.
-
-She rose, thrusting her hands into alternate pockets looking for a
-note-book, which she found and consulted. "I'm off for the fray, Uncle
-Nigel, for hatred and strife. You and Gavan are going to shoot, so I'll
-bring you your lunch at the corner of the Carlowrie woods."
-
-"So that you and Gavan may continue your quarrel there. Very well. I
-prefer listening."
-
-"Gavan understands that Eppie must not be taken seriously," Miss Barbara
-interposed; but Eppie rejoined, drawing on her gloves, "Indeed, I intend
-to be taken seriously. I quarrel with people I like as well as with
-those I hate."
-
-"You are going to be a factor in my development, too?" said Gavan.
-
-"Of course, as you are in mine, as we all are in one another's. We can't
-help that. And my attack on you shall be conscious."
-
-These open threats didn't at all alarm him. It was what was unconscious
-in her that stirred disquiet.
-
-When Eppie had departed and the general had gone off to see to
-preparations for the morning's shoot, Miss Barbara, still sitting rather
-wistfully behind her urn, said: "I hope, dear Gavan, that you will be
-able to influence Eppie a little. I am so thankful to find you unchanged
-about all the deeper things of life. You could help her, I am sure. She
-needs guidance. She is so loving, so clever, a joy to Nigel and to me;
-but she is very headstrong, very reckless and wilful,--a will in
-subjection to nothing but her own sense of right. It's not that she is
-altogether irreligious,--thank Heaven for that,--but she hasn't any of
-the happiness of religion. There is no happiness, is there, Gavan--I
-feel sure that you see it as I do,--but in having our lives stayed on
-the Eternal?"
-
-Gavan, as it was very easy to do, assented again.
-
-He spent the morning with the general in shooting over the rather scant
-covers, and at two, in a sheltered bend of the woods, where the sunlight
-lay still and bright, Eppie joined them, bringing the lunch-basket in
-her dog-cart.
-
-She was in a very good humor, and while, sitting above them, she
-dispensed rations, announced to her uncle the result of her visit to Sir
-Alec.
-
-"He thinks he can turn him out if any flagrant ease of drunkenness
-occurs again. We talked over the conditions of his lease."
-
-"Carston, I am sure, doesn't care a snap of his fingers about it."
-
-"Of course not; but he cares that I care."
-
-"You see, Gavan, by what strings the world is pulled. Carston hasn't two
-ideas in his head."
-
-"Luckily I am here to use his empty head to advantage. I wheedled Lady
-Carston, too,--the bad influence Macdougall had on church-going. Lady
-Carston's one idea, Gavan, is the keeping of the Sabbath. Altogether it
-was an excellent morning's work." Eppie was cheerful and triumphant. She
-was eating from a plate on her knees and drinking milk out of a little
-silver cup. "Do you think me a tiresome, managing busybody, Gavan?" She
-smiled down at him, and her lashes catching the sunlight, an odd, misty
-glitter half veiled her eyes. "You look," she added, "as you used to
-look when you were a little boy. The years collapsed just then."
-
-He was conscious that, under her sudden glance, he had, indeed, looked
-shy. It was not her light question, but the strange depth of her
-half-closed eyes.
-
-"I find a great deal of the old Eppie in you: I remember that you used
-to want to bully the village people for their good."
-
-"I'm still a bully, I think, but a more discreet one. Won't you have
-some milk, Gavan? You used to love milk when you were a little boy. Have
-you outgrown that?"
-
-"Not at all. I should still love some; but don't rob yourself."
-
-"There 's heaps here. I've no spare glass. Do you mind?" She held out to
-him the silver cup, turning its untouched edge to him, something
-maternal in the gesture, in the down-looking of her sun-dazed eyes.
-
-He felt himself foolishly flushing while he drank the milk; and when,
-really seized by a silly childish shyness, he protested that he wanted
-no more, she placidly, with an emphasizing of her air of sweet,
-comprehending authority, said, "Oh, but you must; it holds almost
-nothing."
-
-For the second time that day, as he obediently took from her hand the
-innocent little cup, Gavan had the unreasoning impulse of tears.
-
-The sunny afternoon was silent. Overhead, the sky had its chalice look,
-clear, benignant, brimmed with light. The general, the lolling dogs,
-were part of the background, with the heather and the wood of larches,
-the finely falling sprays delicately blurred upon the sky.
-
-It was again something sweet, sweet, simple and profound, that brought
-again that pang of presage and of pain. But the pain was like a joy, and
-the tears like tears of happiness in the sunny stillness, where her firm
-and gentle hand gave him milk in a silver cup.
-
-The actual physical sensation of a rising saltness was an alarm signal
-that, with a swift reversal of mental wheels, brought a revulsion of
-consciousness. He saw himself threatened once more by nature's
-enchantments: wily nature, luring one always back to life with looks
-from comrade eyes, touches from comrade fingers, pastoral drinks all
-seeming innocence, and embracing sunlight. Wily Circe. With a long
-breath, the mirage was seen as mirage and the moment's dangerous
-blossoming withered as if dust had been strewn over it.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-To see his own susceptibility so plainly was, he told himself, to be
-safe from it; not safe from its pang, perhaps, but safe from its power,
-and that was the essential thing.
-
-It was not to Eppie, as he further assured himself, that he was
-susceptible. Eppie stood for life, personified its appeals; he could
-feel, yet be unmoved, by all life's blandishments.
-
-Meanwhile on a very different plane--the after all remote plane of
-mental encounters and skirmishes--he felt, with relief, that he was
-entirely master of his own meaning. There were many of these skirmishes,
-and though he did not believe any of them planned, believe that she was
-carrying out her threat of conscious attack, he was aware that she was
-alert and inquisitive, and dexterously quick at taking any occasion that
-offered for further penetration.
-
-The first of these occasions was on Sunday evening when, after tea and
-in the gloaming, they sat together in the deep window-seat of one of the
-library windows and listened to Miss Barbara softly touching the chords
-of a hymn on the plaintive old piano and softly singing--a most
-unobtrusive accompaniment, at her distance and with her softness, for
-any talk or any thoughts of theirs. They had talked very little,
-watching the sunset burn itself out over the frosty moorland, and Gavan
-presently, while he listened, closed his eyes and leaned his head back
-upon the oak recess. Eppie, looking now from the sunset to him, observed
-him with an open, musing curiosity. His head, leaning back in the dusk,
-was like the ivory carving of a dead saint--a saint young, beautiful, at
-peace after long sorrow. Peace; that was the quality that his whole
-being expressed, though, with opened eyes, his face had the more human
-look of patience, verging now and then on a quiet dejection that would
-overspread his features like a veil. In boyhood, the peace, the placid
-dejection, had not been there; his face then had shown the tension of
-struggle and endurance.
-
- "Till in the ocean of thy love
- We lose ourselves in heaven above,"
-
-Miss Barbara quavered, and Gavan, opening his eyes at the closing
-cadence, found Eppie's bent upon him. He smiled, and looked still more,
-she thought, the sad saint, all benediction and indifference, and an
-impulse of antagonism to such sainthood made her say, though smiling
-back, "How I dislike those words."
-
-"Do you?" said Gavan.
-
-"Hate them? Why, dear child?" asked Miss Barbara, who had heard through
-the sigh of her held-down pedal.
-
-"I don't want to lose myself," said Eppie. "But I didn't mean that I
-wanted you to stop, Aunt Barbara. Do go on. I love to hear you sing,
-however much I disapprove of the words."
-
-But Miss Barbara, clasping and unclasping her hands a little nervously,
-and evidently finding the moment too propitious to be passed over,
-backed as she was by an ally, rose and came to them.
-
-"That is the very point you are so mistaken about, dear. It's the self,
-you know, that keeps us from love."
-
-"It's the self that makes love possible," said Eppie, taking her hand
-and looking up at her. "Do you want to lose me, Aunt Barbara? If you
-lose yourself you will have to lose me too, you know."
-
-Miss Barbara stood perplexed but not at all convinced by these
-subtleties, turning mild eyes of query upon Gavan and evidently
-expecting him to furnish the obvious retort.
-
-"We will all be at one with God," she reverently said at length, finding
-that her ally left the defense to her.
-
-Eppie met this large retort cheerfully. "You can't love God unless you
-have a self to love him with. I know what you mean, and perhaps I agree
-with what you really mean; but I want to correct your Buddhistic
-tendencies and to keep you a good Christian."
-
-"I humbly hope I'm that. You shouldn't jest on such subjects, Eppie
-dear."
-
-"I'm not one bit jesting," Eppie protested. And now Gavan asked, while
-Miss Barbara looked gratefully at him, sure of his backing, though she
-might not quite be able to understand his methods, "Are they such
-different creeds?"
-
-Still holding her aunt's hand and still looking up into her face, Eppie
-answered: "One is despair of life, the other trust in life. One takes
-all meaning out of life and the other fills it with meaning. The secret
-of one is to lose life, and the secret of the other to gain it. There is
-all the difference in the world between them; all the difference between
-life and death."
-
-"As interpreted by Western youth and vigor, yes; but what of the
-mystics? I suppose you would call them Christians?"
-
-"Yes, dear, they are Christians. What of them?" Miss Barbara echoed,
-though slightly perturbed by this alliance with heathendom.
-
-"Buddhists, not Christians," Eppie retorted.
-
-"That's what I mean; in essentials they are the same creed: the
-differences are only the differences of the races or individuals who
-hold them."
-
-At this Miss Barbara's free hand began to flutter and protest. "Oh, but,
-Gavan dear, there I'm quite sure that you are wrong. Buddhism is, I
-don't doubt, a very noble religion, but it's not the true one. Indeed
-they are not the same, Gavan, though Christianity, of course, is founded
-on the renunciation of self. 'Lose your life to gain it,' Eppie dear."
-
-"Yes, to gain it, that's just the point. One renounces, and one wins a
-realer self."
-
-"What is real? What is life?" Gavan asked, really curious to hear her
-definition.
-
-She only needed a moment to find it, and, with her answer, gave him her
-first glance during their battledore colloquy with innocent Aunt Barbara
-as the shuttlecock. "Selves and love."
-
-"Well, of course, dear," Miss Barbara cried. "That's what heaven will
-be. All love and peace and rest."
-
-"But you have left out the selves; you won't get love without them. And
-as for rest and peace--Love is made by difference, so that as long as
-there is love there must be restlessness."
-
-"Isn't it made by sameness?" Gavan asked.
-
-"No, by incompleteness: one loves what could complete oneself and what
-one could complete; or so it seems to me."
-
-"And as long as there are selves, will there be suffering, too?"
-
-Her eyes met his thought fearlessly.
-
-"That question, I am sure, is the basis for all the religions of
-cowardice, religions that deny life because of their craving for peace."
-
-"Isn't the craving for peace as legitimate as the craving for life?"
-
-"Nothing that denies life can be legitimate. Life is the one arbitrator.
-And restlessness need not mean suffering. A symphony is all
-restlessness--a restlessness made by difference in harmony; forgive the
-well-worn metaphor, but it is a good one. And, suppose that it did mean
-suffering, all of it. Isn't it worth it?" Her eyes measured him, not in
-challenge, but quietly.
-
-"What a lover of life you are," he said. It was like seeing him go into
-his house and, not hastily, but very firmly, shut the door. And as if,
-rather rudely, she hurled a stone at the shut door, she asked, "Do you
-love anything?"
-
-He smiled. "Please don't quarrel with me."
-
-"I wish I could make you quarrel. I suspect you of loving everything,"
-Eppie declared.
-
-She didn't pursue him further on this occasion, when, indeed, he might
-accuse himself of having given her every chance; but on the next day, as
-they sat out at the edge of the birch-wood in a wonderfully warm
-afternoon sun, he, she, and Peter the dog (what a strange, changed echo
-it was), she returned, very lightly, to their discussion, tossing merely
-a few reconnoitering flowers in at his open window.
-
-She had never, since their remeeting, seemed to him so young. Holding a
-little branch of birch, she broke off and aimed bits of its bark at a
-tall gorse-bush near them. Peter basked, full length, in the sunlight at
-their feet. The day had almost the indolent quiet of summer.
-
-Eppie said, irrelevantly, for they had not been talking of that, but of
-people again, gossiping pleasantly, with gossip tempered to the day's
-mildness: "I can't bear the religions of peace, you see--any faith that
-takes the fight out of people. That Molly Carruthers I was telling you
-about has become a Christian Scientist, and she is in an imbecile
-condition of beatitude all the time. 'Isn't the happiness that comes of
-such a faith proof enough?' she says to me. As if happiness were a
-proof! A drunkard is happy. Some people seem to me spiritually tipsy,
-and as unfit for usefulness as the drunkard. I think I distrust anything
-that gives a final satisfaction."
-
-She amused him in her playing with half-apprehended thoughts. Her
-assurance was as light as though they were the bits of birch-bark she
-tossed.
-
-"You make me think a little of Nietzsche," he said.
-
-"I should rather like Nietzsche right side up, I think. As he is
-standing on his head most of the time, it's rather confusing. If it is a
-blind, unconscious force that has got hold of us, we get hold of it, and
-of ourselves, when we consciously use it for our own ends. But I'm not a
-bit a Nietzschian, Gavan, for, as an end, an Overman doesn't at all
-appeal to me and I don't intend to make myself a bridge for him to march
-across. Of course Nietzsche might reply, 'You are the bridge, whether
-you want to be or not.' He might say, 'It's better to walk willingly to
-your inevitable holocaust than to be rebelliously haled along; whatever
-you do, you are only the refuse whose burning makes the flame.' I reply
-to that, that if the Overman is sure to come, why should I bother about
-him? I wouldn't lift my finger for a distant perfection in which I
-myself, and all those I loved, only counted as fuel. But, on the other
-hand, I do believe that each one of us is going to grow into an
-Overman--in a quite different sense. Peter, too, will be an Overdog, and
-will, no doubt, sometime be more conscious than we are now."
-
-Gavan glanced at her and at Peter with his vague, half-unseeing glance.
-
-"Why don't you smile?" Eppie asked. "Not that you don't smile, often.
-But you haven't a scrap of gaiety, Gavan. Do stop soaring in the sky and
-come down to real things, to the earth, to me, to dear little
-rudimentary Overdogs."
-
-"Do you think that dear little rudimentary dogs are nearer reality than
-the sky?" He did smile now.
-
-"Much nearer. The sky is only a background, an emptiness that shows up
-their meaning."
-
-She had brought him down, for his eyes lingered on her as she leaned to
-Peter and pulled him up from his sun-baked recumbency. "Come, sit up,
-Peter; don't be so comfortable. Watch how well I've trained him, Gavan.
-Now, Peter, sit up nicely. A dog on all fours is a darling heathen; but
-a dog sitting up on his hind legs is an ethical creature, and well on
-his way to Overdogdom. Peter on his hind legs is worth all your tiresome
-Hindoos--aren't you, dear, Occidental dog?"
-
-He knew that through her gaiety she was searching him, feeling her way,
-with a merry hostility that she didn't intend him to answer. It was as
-if she wouldn't take seriously, not for a moment, the implications of
-his thought--implications that he suspected her of already pretty
-sharply guessing at. To herself, and to him, she pretended that such
-thoughts were a game he played at, until she should see just how
-seriously she might be forced to take them.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-For the next few days he found himself involved in Eppie's sleuth-hound
-pursuit of the transgressing publican, amused, but quite
-willing,--somewhat, he saw, to her surprise,--to help her in her
-crusade. Not only did he tramp over the country with her in search of
-evidence, and expound the Gothenberg system to Sir Alec, to the general,
-to the rather alarmed quarry himself,--not unwilling to come to
-terms,--but the application of his extraordinarily practical good-sense
-to the situation was, she couldn't help seeing, far more effective than
-her own not altogether temperate zeal.
-
-She was surprised and she was pleased; and at the same time, throughout
-all the little drama, she had the suspicion that it meant for him what
-that playing of dolls with her in childhood had meant--mere kindliness,
-and a selfless disposition to do what was agreeable to anybody.
-
-It was on the Saturday following the talk in the library that an
-incident occurred that made her vision of his passivity flame into
-something more ambiguous--an incident that gave margins for
-possibilities in him, for whose bare potentiality she had begun to
-fear.
-
-They were at evening in the gray, bleak village street, and outside one
-of the public-houses found a small crowd collected, watching, with the
-apathy of custom, the efforts of Archie MacHendrie's wife to lead him
-home. Archie, a large, lurching man, was only slightly drunk, but his
-head, the massive granite of its Scotch peasant type, had been
-brutalized by years of hard drinking. It showed, as if the granite were
-crumbling into earth, sodden depressions and protuberances; his eye was
-lurid, heavy, yet alert. Mrs. MacHendrie's face, looking as though
-scantily molded in tallow as the full glare of the bar-room lights beat
-upon it, was piteously patient. The group, under the cold evening sky,
-in the cold, steep street, seemed a little epitome of life's
-degradation; the sordid glare of debasing pleasure lit it; the mean
-monotony of its daily routine surrounded it in the gaunt stone cottages;
-above it was the blank, hard sky.
-
-Gavan saw all the unpleasing picture, placed it, its past, its future,
-as he and Eppie approached; saw more, too, than degradation: for the
-wife's face, in its patience, symbolized humanity's heroism. Both
-heroism and degradation were results as necessary as the changes in a
-chemical demonstration; neither had value: one was a toadstool growth,
-the other, a flower; this was the fact to him, though the flower touched
-him and the toadstool made him shrink.
-
-"There, there, Archie mon," Mrs. MacHendrie was pleading, "come awa
-hame, do."
-
-Archie was declaiming on some wrong he had suffered and threatened to do
-for an enemy.
-
-That these flowers and toadstools were of vital significance to Eppie,
-Gavan realized as she left him in the middle of the street and strode to
-the center of the group. It fell aside for her air of facile, friendly
-authority, and in answer to her decisive, "What's the matter?" one of
-the apathetic onlookers explained in his deliberate Scotch: "It's nobbut
-Archie, Miss Eppie; he's swearin' he'll na go hame na sleep gin he's
-lickit Tam Donel'. He's a wee bit the waur for the drink and Tam'll soon
-be alang, and the dei'll be in it gar his gudewife gets him ben."
-
-"Well, she must get him ben," said Eppie, her eye measuring Archie, who
-shook a menacing fist in the direction of his expected antagonist.
-
-"We must get him home between us, Mrs. MacHendrie. He'll think better of
-it in the morning."
-
-"Fech, an' it's that I'm aye tellin' him, Miss Eppie; it's the mornin'
-he'll hae the sair head. Ay, Miss Eppie, he's an awfu' chiel when he's a
-wee bittie fou." Mrs. MacHendrie put the fringe of her shawl to her
-eyes.
-
-Archie's low thunder had continued during this dialogue without a pause,
-and Eppie now addressed herself to him in authoritative tones. "Come on,
-Archie. Go home and get a sleep, at all events, before you fight Tom."
-
-"It's that I'm aye tellin' you, Archie mon," Mrs. MacHendrie wept.
-
-Archie now brought his eye round to the speakers and observed them in an
-ominous silence, his thoughts turned from more distant grievances. From
-his wife his eye traveled back to Eppie, who met it with a firm
-severity.
-
-"Damn ye for an interferin' fishwife!" suddenly and with startling force
-he burst out. "Ye're no but a meddlesome besom. Awa wi' ye!" and from
-this broadside he swung round to his wife with uplifted fists. Flinging
-herself between them, Eppie found herself swept aside. Gavan was in the
-midst of the sudden uproar. Like a David before Goliath, he confronted
-Archie with a quelling eye. Mrs. MacHendrie had slipped into the dusk,
-and the bald, ugly light now fell on Gavan's contrasting head.
-
-"_Un sage qui passe interrompt mille drames_," flashed in Eppie's mind.
-But on this occasion, the sage had to do more than pass--was forced,
-indeed, to provide the drama. He was speaking in a voice so
-dispassionately firm that had Archie been a little less drunk or a
-little less sober it must have exerted an almost hypnotic effect upon
-him. But the command to go home reached a brain inflamed and hardly
-dazed. Goliath fell upon David, and Eppie, with a curious mingling of
-exultation and panic, saw the two men locked in an animal struggle. For
-a moment Gavan's cool alertness and scientific resource were overborne
-by sheer brute force; in another he had recovered himself, and Archie's
-face streamed suddenly with blood. Another blow, couched like a lance,
-it seemed, was in readiness, wary and direct, when Mrs. MacHendrie, from
-behind, seized Gavan around the neck and, with a shrill scream, hung to
-him and dragged him back. Helpless and enmeshed, he received a savage
-blow from her husband, and, still held in the wife's strangling clutch,
-he and she reeled back together. At this flagrant violation of fair play
-the onlookers interposed. Archie was dragged off, and Eppie, catching
-Gavan as he staggered free of his encumbrance, turned, while she held
-him by the shoulders, fiercely on Mrs. MacHendrie. "You well deserve
-every thrashing you get," she said, her voice stilled by the very force
-of its intense anger.
-
-Mrs. MacHendrie had covered her face with her shawl. "My mon was a'
-bluid," she sobbed. "I couldna stan' an' see him done to death."
-
-"Of course you couldn't; it was most natural of you," said Gavan. The
-blood trickled over his brow and cheek as, gently freeing himself from
-Eppie, he straightened his collar and looked at Mrs. MacHendrie with
-sympathetic curiosity.
-
-"Natural!" said Eppie. "It was dastardly. You deserve every thrashing
-you get. I hope no one will interfere for you next time."
-
-"My dear Eppie!" Gavan murmured, while Mrs. MacHendrie continued to weep
-humbly.
-
-"Why shouldn't I say it? I am disgusted with her." Eppie turned almost
-as fierce a stillness of look and tone upon him as upon Mrs. MacHendrie.
-"Let me tie up your head, Gavan. Yes, indeed, you are covered with
-blood. I suppose you never thought, Mrs. MacHendrie, that your husband
-might kill Mr. Palairet." She passed her handkerchief around Gavan's
-forehead as she spoke, knotting it with fingers at once tender and
-vindictive.
-
-"I canna say, Miss Eppie," came Mrs. MacHendrie's muffled voice from
-the shawl. "The wan's my ain mon. It juist cam' ower me, seein' him a'
-bluid."
-
-"Well, you have the satisfaction now of seeing Mr. Palairet a' bluid."
-Eppie tied her knots, and Gavan, submitting a bowed head to her
-ministrations, still kept his look of cogitating pity upon Mrs.
-MacHendrie. "You see how your husband has wounded him," Eppie went on;
-"the handkerchief is red already. Come on, Gavan; lean on me, please.
-Let her get her husband home now as best she can."
-
-But Gavan ignored his angry champion. Mrs. MacHendrie's sorrow, most
-evidently, interested him more than Eppie's indignation. He went to her,
-putting down the hand that held the shawl to the poor, disfigured,
-tallow face, and made her look at him, while he said with a gentle
-reasonableness: "Don't mind what Miss Gifford says; she is angry on my
-account and doesn't really mean to be so hard on you. I'm not at all
-badly hurt,--I can perfectly stand alone, Eppie,--and I'm sorry I had to
-hurt your husband. It was perfectly natural, what you did. Don't cry;
-please don't cry." He smiled at her, comforted her, encouraged her.
-"They are taking your husband home, you see; he is going quite quietly.
-And now we will take you home. Take my arm. You are the worst off of us
-all, Mrs. MacHendrie."
-
-Eppie, in silence, stalked beside him while he led Mrs. MacHendrie,
-dazed and submissive, up the village street. A neighbor's wife was in
-kindly waiting and Archie already slumbering heavily on his bed. Eppie
-suspected, as they went, that she saw a gold piece slipped from Gavan's
-hand to Mrs. MacHendrie's.
-
-"Poor thing," he said, when they were once more climbing the steep
-street, "I 'm afraid I only made things worse for her"; and laughing a
-little, irrepressibly, he looked round at Eppie from under his oddly
-becoming bandage. "My dear Eppie, what a perfect brute you were to her!"
-
-"My dear Gavan, I can't feel pity for such a fool. Oh, yes I can, but I
-don't want to. Please remember that I, too, have impulses, and that I
-saw you 'a' bluid.'"
-
-"Well, then, I'm the brute for scolding you, and you are another poor
-thing."
-
-"Are you incapable of righteous indignation, Gavan?"
-
-"Surely I showed enough to please you in my treatment of Archie."
-
-"You showed none. You looked supremely indifferent as to whether he
-killed you or you him."
-
-"Oh, I think I was quite anxious to do for him."
-
-They were past the village now and upon the country road, and in the
-darkness their contrasting voices rang oddly--hers deep with its
-resentful affection, his light with its amusement. It was as if the
-little drama, that he had made instead of interrupting, struck his sense
-of the ridiculous. Yet, angry with him as she was, a thrill of
-exultation remained, for Eppie, in the thought of his calm, deliberate
-face, beautiful before its foe, and with blood upon it.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Gavan's hurt soon healed, though it made him languid for a day or
-two--days of semi-invalidism, the unemphatic hours, seemingly so
-colorless, when she read to him or merely sat silently at hand occupied
-with her letters or a book, drawing still closer their odd intimacy; it
-could hardly be called sudden, for it had merely skipped intervening
-years, and it couldn't be called a proved intimacy, the intervening
-years were too full, too many for that. But they were very near in their
-almost solitude--a solitude surrounded by gentle reminders of the closer
-past, reminders, in the case of living personalities, who seemed to find
-the intimacy altogether natural and needing no comment. What the general
-and Miss Barbara might really be thinking was a wonder that at moments
-occupied both Gavan and Eppie's ruminations; but it wasn't a wonder that
-needed to go far or deep. What they thought, the dear old people, made
-very little difference--not even the difference of awkwardness or
-self-consciousness under too cogitating eyes. Even if they thought the
-crude and obvious thing it didn't matter, they would so peacefully
-relapse from their false inference once time had set it straight for
-them. Eppie couldn't quite have told herself why its obviousness was so
-crude; in all her former experience such obviousness had never been so
-almost funnily out of the question. But Gavan made so many things almost
-funnily out of the question.
-
-It was this quality in him, of difference from usual things, that drew
-intimacy so near. To talk to him with a wonderful openness, to tell him
-about herself, about her troubles, was like sinking down in a pale,
-peaceful church and sighing out everything that lay heavily on one's
-heart--the things that lay lightly, too, for little things as well as
-great, were understood by that compassionate, musing presence--to the
-downlooking face of an imaged saint.
-
-No claim upon one remained after it; one was freed of the load of
-silence and one hadn't in the least been shackled by retributory
-penances. And if one felt some strange lack in the saint, if his
-sacerdotal quality was more than his humanity, it was just because of
-that that one was able to say anything one liked.
-
-At moments, it is true, she had an odd, fetish-worshiper's impulse to
-smash her saint, and perhaps the reason why she never yielded to it was
-because, under all the seeing him as image, was the deep hoping that he
-was more. If he was more, much more, it might be unwise to smash him,
-for then she would have no pale church in which to take refuge, and,
-above all, if he were more he mustn't find it out--and she
-mustn't--through any act of her own. The saint himself must breathe into
-life and himself step down from his high pedestal. That he cared to
-listen, that he listened lovingly,--just as he had listened lovingly to
-Mrs. MacHendrie,--she knew.
-
-One day when he was again able to be out and when they were again upon
-the hilltop, walking in a mist that enshrouded them, she told him all
-about the wretched drama of her love-affair.
-
-She had never spoken of it to a human being.
-
-It was as if she led him into an empty room, dusty and dark and still,
-with dreary cobwebs stretching over its once festal furniture, and there
-pointed out to him faded blood-stains on the floor. No eyes but his had
-ever seen them.
-
-She told him all, analyzing the man, herself, unflinchingly, putting
-before him her distracted heart, distorted in its distraction. She had
-appalled herself. Her part had not been mere piteous nobility. She would
-have dragged herself through any humiliation to have had him back, the
-man she had helplessly adored. She would have taken him back on almost
-any terms. Only the semblance of pride had been left to her; beneath it,
-with all her scorn of him, was a craving that had been base in its
-despair.
-
-"But that wasn't the worst," said Eppie; "that very baseness had its
-pathos. Worst of all were my mean regrets. I had sacrificed my ambitions
-for him; I had refused a man who would have given me the life I wanted,
-a high place in the world, a great name, power, wide issues,--and I love
-high places, Gavan, I love power. When I refused him, he too married
-some one else, and it was after that that my crash came. Love and faith
-were thrown back at me, and I hadn't in it all even my dignity. I was
-torn by mingled despairs. I loathed myself. Oh, it was too horrible!"
-
-His utter lack of sympathetic emotion, even when she spoke with the
-indignant tears on her cheeks, made it all the easier to say these
-fundamental things, and more than ever like the saint of ebony and ivory
-in the pale church was his head against the great wash of mist about
-them.
-
-"And now it has all dropped from you," he said.
-
-"Yes, all--the love, the regret certainly, even the shame. The ambition,
-certainly not; but in that ugly form of a loveless marriage it's no
-longer a possible temptation for me. My disappointment hasn't driven me
-to worldly materialism. It's a sane thing in nature, that outgrowing of
-griefs, though it's bad for one's pride to see them fade and one's heart
-mend, solidly mend, once more."
-
-"They do go, when one really sees them."
-
-"Some do."
-
-"All, when one really sees them," he repeated unemphatically. "I know
-all about it, Eppie. I've been through the fire, too. Now that it's
-gone, you see that it's only a dream, that love, don't you?"
-
-Eppie gazed before her into the mist, narrowing her eyes as though she
-concentrated her thoughts upon his exact meaning, and she received his
-casual confidence with some moments of silence.
-
-"That would imply that seeing destroyed feeling, wouldn't it?" she said
-at last. "I see that _such_ love is a dream, if you will; but dreams may
-be mirrors of life, not delusions; hints of an awakened reality."
-
-He showed only his unmoved face. This talk, so impersonal, with all its
-revealment of human pathos and weakness, so much a picture that they
-both looked at it together,--a picture of outlived woe,--claimed no more
-than his contemplation; but when her voice seemed to grope toward him,
-questioning in its very clearness of declaration, he felt again the
-flitting fear that he had already recognized, not as danger, but as
-discomfort. It flitted only, hardly stirred the calm he showed her, as
-the wings of a flying bird just skim and ruffle the surface of still,
-deep waters. That restless bird, always hovering, circling near, its
-shadow passing, repassing over the limpid water--he saw and knew it as
-the water might reflect in its stillness the bird's flight. Life; the
-will to live, the will to want, and to strive, and to suffer in
-striving. All the waters of Eppie's soul were broken by the flight of
-this bird of life; its wings, cruel and beautiful, furrowed and cut; its
-plumage, darkly bright, was reflected in every wave.
-
-He said nothing after her last words.
-
-"You think all feelings delusions, Gavan?"
-
-"Not that, perhaps, but very transitory; and to be tied to the
-transitory is to suffer."
-
-"On that plan one ends with nothingness."
-
-"Do you think so?"
-
-"Do _you_ think so?" She turned his question on him and her eyes, with
-the question, fixed hard on his face.
-
-He felt suddenly that after all the parrying and thrusting she had
-struck up his foil and faced him with no mask of gaiety--in deadly
-earnest. There was the click of steel in the question.
-
-He did not know whether he were the more irritated, for her sake, by her
-persistency, or the more fearful that, unwillingly, he should do her
-faith some injury.
-
-"I think," he said, "more or less as Tolstoi thinks. You understood all
-that very well the other evening; so why go into it?"
-
-"You think that our human identity is unreal--an appearance?"
-
-"Most certainly."
-
-"And that the separation between us is the illusion that makes hatred
-and evil, and that with the recognition of the illusion, love would come
-and all selfish effort cease?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And don't you see that what that results in is the Hindoo thing, the
-abolishing of consciousness, the abolishing of life--of individual
-life?"
-
-"Yes, I see that," Gavan smiled, "but I'm a little surprised to see that
-you do. So many people are like Aunt Barbara."
-
-But Eppie was pushing, pushing against the closed doors and would not be
-lured away by lightness. "Above all, Gavan, do you see that he is merely
-an illogical Hindoo when he tries to bridge his abyss with ethics? On
-his own premises he is utterly fatalistic, so that the very turning from
-the evil illusion, the very breaking down of the barrier of self, is
-never, with him, the result of an effort of the will, never a conscious
-choice, but something deep and rudimentary, subconscious, an influx of
-revelation, a vision that sets one free, perhaps, but that can only
-leave one with emptiness."
-
-Above all, as she had said, he saw it; and now he was silent, seeking
-words that might rid him of pursuit, yet not infect her.
-
-She had stopped short before his silence. Smiling, now, on the
-background of mist, her eyes, her lips, her poise challenged him,
-incredulous, actually amused. "Don't you think that _I_ have an
-identity?" she asked.
-
-He was willing at that to face her, for he saw suddenly and clearly,--it
-seemed to radiate from her in the smile, the look,--that he, apparently,
-couldn't hurt her. She was too full of life to be in any danger from
-him, and perhaps the only way of ending pursuit was to fling wide the
-doors and, since she had said the word, show her the emptiness within.
-
-"You force me to talk cheap metaphysics to you, Eppie, but I'll try to
-say what I do think," he said. "I believe that the illusion of a
-separate identity, self-directing and permanent, is the deepest and most
-tenacious of all illusions--the illusion that makes the wheels go round,
-the common illusion that makes the common mirage. The abolishing of the
-identity, of the self, is the final word of science, and of philosophy,
-and of religion, too. The determinism of science, the ecstatic immediacy
-of the mystic consciousness, the monistic systems of the Absolutists,
-all tend toward the final discovery that,--now I'm going to be very glib
-indeed,--but one must use the technical jargon,--that under all the
-transitory appearance is a unity in which, for which, diversity
-vanishes."
-
-Eppie no longer smiled. She had walked on while he spoke, her eyes on
-him, no longer amused or incredulous, with an air now of almost stern
-security.
-
-"Odd," she said presently, "that such a perverse and meaningless Whole
-should be made up of such significant fragments."
-
-"Ah, but I didn't say that Reality was meaningless. It has all possible
-meaning for itself, no doubt; it's our meaning for it that is so
-unpleasantly ambiguous. We are in it and for it, as if we were the
-kaleidoscope it turned, the picture it looked at; and we are and must be
-what it thinks or sees. Your musical simile expressed it very nicely:
-Reality an eternal symphony and our personalities the notes in
-it--discords to our own limited consciousness, but to Reality necessary
-parts of the perfect whole. Reality is just that will to contemplate, to
-think, the infinite variety of life, and it usually thinks us as wanting
-to live. All ethics, all religions, are merely records of the ceasing of
-this want. A man comes to see himself as discord, and with the seeing
-the discord is resolved to silence. One comes to see as the Reality
-sees, and since it is perfectly satisfied, although it is perhaps quite
-unconscious,--or so some people who think a great deal about it
-say,--we, in partaking of its vision, find in unconsciousness the goal,
-and are satisfied."
-
-"You are satisfied with such a death in life?" Eppie asked in her steady
-voice.
-
-"What you call life is what I call death, perhaps, Eppie."
-
-"Your metaphysics may be very cheap; I know very little about them. But
-if all that were true, I should still say that the illusion is more real
-than that nothingness--for to us such a reality would be nothingness.
-And I should say, let us live our reality all the more intensely, since,
-for us, there is no other."
-
-"How you care for life," said Gavan, as he had said it once before. He
-looked at her marching through the mist like a defiant Valkyrie.
-
-"Care for it? I've hated it at times, the bits that came to me."
-
-"Yet you want it, always."
-
-"Always," she repeated. "Always. I have passed a great part of my life
-in being very unhappy--that is to say, in wanting badly something I've
-not got. Yet I am more glad than I can say to have lived."
-
-"Probably because you still expect to get what you want."
-
-"Of course." She smiled a little now, though a veiled, ambiguous smile.
-And as they began the steep descent, the mist infolding them more
-closely, even the semblance of the smile faded, leaving a new sadness.
-
-"Poor Gavan," she said.
-
-He just hesitated. "Why?"
-
-"Your religion is a hatred, a distrust of life; mine is trust in it,
-love of it. You see it as a sort of murderous uncle, beckoning to the
-babes in the wood; I own that I wouldn't stir a step to follow it if I
-suspected it of such a character. And I see life--" She paused here,
-looking down, musing, it seemed, on what she saw, and the pause grew
-long. In it, suddenly, Gavan knew again the invasion of emotion. Her
-downcast, musing face pervaded his consciousness with that sense of
-trembling. "You see life as what?" he asked her, not because he wanted
-to know, but because her words were always less to him than her
-silences.
-
-Eppie, unconscious, was finding words.
-
-"As something mysterious, beautiful. Something strange, yet near, like
-the thought of a mother about her unborn child, but, more still, like
-the thought of an unborn child about its unknown mother. We are such
-unborn children. And this something mysterious and beautiful says: Come;
-through thorns, over chasms, past terrors, and in darkness. So, one
-goes."
-
-Gavan was silent. Looking up at him, her eyes full of her own vision,
-she saw tears in his.
-
-For a moment the full benignity, sweet, austere, of a maternal thing in
-her rested on him, so that it might have been she who said "Come." Then,
-looking away from him again, knowing that she had seen more than he had
-meant to show, she said, "Own that if it's all illusion, mine's the best
-to live with."
-
-He had never seen her so beautiful as at this moment when she did not
-pursue, but looked away, quiet in her strength, and he answered
-mechanically, conscious only of that beauty, that more than beauty,
-alluring when it no longer pursued: "No; there are no thorns, nor
-chasms, nor terrors any longer for me. I am satisfied, Eppie."
-
-She was walking now, a little ahead of him, down the thread-like path
-that wound among phantom bracken. The islet of space where they could
-see seemed like a tiny ship gliding forward with them into a white,
-boundless ocean. Such, thought Gavan, was human life.
-
-In a long silence he felt that her mood had changed. Over her shoulder
-she looked round at him at last with her eyes of the spiritual
-steeplechaser. "It's war to the knife, Gavan."
-
-She hurt him in saying it. "You only have the knife," he answered, and
-his gentleness might have reproached the sudden challenge.
-
-"You have poison."
-
-"I never put it to your lips, dear."
-
-She saw his pain. "Oh, don't be afraid for me," she said. "I drink your
-poison, and it is a tonic, a wine, that fills me with greater ardor for
-the fight."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-They were on the path that led to the deeply sunken garden gate, and
-they had not spoken another word while they followed it, while they
-stooped a little under the tangle of ivy that drooped from the stone
-lintel, while they went past the summer-house and on between the rows of
-withered plants and the empty, wintry spaces of the garden; only when
-they were nearly at the house, under the great pine-tree, did Eppie
-cheerfully surmise that they would be exactly on time for tea, and by
-her manner imply that tea was far more present to her thoughts than
-daggers or poison.
-
-He felt that in some sense matters had been left in the lurch. He didn't
-quite know where he stood for her with his disastrous darkness about
-him--whether she had really taken up a weapon for open warfare or
-whether she hadn't wisely fallen back upon the mere pleasantness of
-friendly intercourse, turning her eyes away from his accompanying gloom.
-
-He was glad to find her alone that evening after dinner when he had left
-the general in the smoking-room over a review and a cigar. Miss Barbara
-had gone early to bed, so that Eppie, in her white dress, as on the
-night of his arrival, had the dark brightness of the firelit room all to
-herself. He was glad, because the sense of uncertainty needed defining,
-and uncertainty, since that last moment of trembling, had been so acute
-that any sort of definition would be a relief.
-
-An evening alone with her, now that they were really on the plane of
-mutual understanding, would put his vague fears to the test. He would
-learn whether they must be fled from or whether, as mere superficial
-tremors, tricks of the emotions, they could not be outfaced smilingly.
-He really didn't want to run away, especially not until he clearly knew
-from what he ran.
-
-Eppie sat before the fire on the low settle, laying down a book as he
-came in. In her aspect of exquisite worldliness, the white dress
-displaying her arms and shoulders with fashionable frankness, she struck
-him anew as being her most perfectly armed and panoplied self. Out on
-the windy hillside or singing among the woods, nature seemed partially
-to absorb and possess her, so that she became a part of the winds and
-woods; but indoors, finished and fine from head to foot, her mastered
-conventionality made her the more emphatically personal. She embodied
-civilization in her dress, her smile, her speech, her very being; the
-loose coils of her hair and the cut of her satin shoe were both
-significant of choice, of distinctive simplicity; and the very bareness
-of her shoulders--Gavan gave an amused thought to the ferociously
-sensitive Tolstoi--symbolized the armor of the world-lover, the
-world-user. It was she who possessed the charms and weapons of the
-civilization that crumbled to dust in the hand of the Russian mystic. He
-could see her confronting the ascetic's eye with the challenge of her
-radiant and righteous self-assurance. Her whole aspect rebuilt that
-shattered world, its pomp and vanity, perhaps, its towering scale of
-values; each tier narrowing in its elimination of the lower, cruder,
-less conscious, more usual; each pinnacle a finely fretted flowering of
-the rare; a dazzling palace of foam. She embodied all that; but, more
-than all for Gavan, she embodied the deep currents of trust that flowed
-beneath the foam.
-
-Her look welcomed him, though without a smile, as he drew a deep chair
-to the fire and sat down near her, and for a little while they said
-nothing, he watching her and she with gravely downcast eyes.
-
-"What are you thinking of?" he asked at last.
-
-"Of you, of course," she answered. "About our talk this afternoon; we
-haven't finished it yet."
-
-She, too, then, had felt uncertainty that needed relief.
-
-"Are you sharpening your knife?"
-
-She put aside his lightness. "Gavan, we are friends. May I talk as I
-like to you?"
-
-"Of course you may. I've always shown you that."
-
-"No, you have tried to prevent me from talking. But now I will. I have
-been thinking. It seems to me that it is your life that has so twisted
-your mind; it has been so joyless."
-
-"Does that make it unusual?"
-
-"You must love life before you can know it."
-
-"You must love it, and lose it, before you can know it. I have had joy,
-Eppie; I have loved life. My experience has not been peculiarly
-personal; it is merely the history of all thought, pushed far enough."
-
-"Of all mere thought, yes."
-
-She rested her head on her hand as she looked at him, seeming to wonder
-over him and his thought, his mere thought, dispassionately. "Don't be
-shy, or afraid, for me. Why should you mind? I've given you my story;
-give me yours. Tell me about your life."
-
-He felt, suddenly, sunken there in his deep chair, passive and peaceful
-in the firelight, that it would be very easy to tell her. Why shouldn't
-she see it all and understand it all? He couldn't hurt her; it would be
-only a strange, a sorrowful picture to her; and to him, yes, there would
-be a relief in the telling. To speak, for the first time in his life--it
-would be like the strewing of rosemary on a grave, a commemoration that
-would have its sweetness and its balm.
-
-But he hesitated, feeling the helplessness of his race before verbal
-self-expression.
-
-Eppie lent him a hand.
-
-"Begin with when you left me."
-
-"What was I then? I hardly remember. A tiresome, self-centered boy."
-
-"No; you weren't self-centered. You believed in God, then, and you loved
-your mother. Why have both of them, as personalities, become illusions
-to you?"
-
-She saw facts clearly and terribly. She was really inside the doors at
-last, and though it would be all the easier to make her understand the
-facts she saw, Gavan paled a little before the sudden, swift presence.
-
-For, yes, God was gone, and yes,--worse, far worse, as he knew she felt
-it,--his mother, too--except as that ghost, that pang of memory.
-
-She saw his pallor and helped him again, to the first and easier avowal.
-
-"How did you lose your faith? What happened to you when you left me?"
-
-"It's a commonplace enough story, that."
-
-"Of course it is. But when loss of faith becomes permanent and
-permanently means a loss of feeling, it's not so commonplace."
-
-"Oh, I think it is--more commonplace than people know, in temperaments
-as unvital and as logical as mine."
-
-"You are not unvital."
-
-"My reason isn't often blurred by my instincts."
-
-"That is because you are strong--terribly strong. It's not that your
-vitality is so little as that your thought is so abnormal."
-
-"No, no; it's merely that I understand my own experience."
-
-But she had put his feet upon the road, and, turning his eyes from her
-as he looked, he contemplated its vista.
-
-It was easy enough, after all, to gather into words that retrospect of
-the train; it was easy to be brief and lucid with such a comprehending
-listener,--to be very impersonal, too; simply to hold up before her eyes
-the picture that he saw.
-
-His eyes met hers seldom while he told her all that was essential to her
-true seeing. It was wonderful, the sense of her secure, strong life that
-made it possible to tell her all.
-
-The stages of his young, restless, tortured thought were swiftly
-sketched for an intelligence so quick, and the growing intuition of the
-capriciousness, the suffering of life. He only hesitated when it came to
-the reunion with his mother, the change that had crept between them; and
-her illness, her death; choosing his words with a reticence that bit
-them the more deeply into the listening mind.
-
-But, in the days that followed the death,--days ghost-like, yet
-sharp,--he lingered, so that she paused with him in that pause of
-stillness in his life, that morning in the spring woods when everything
-had softly, gently shown an abiding strangeness. He told her all about
-that: about the look of the day, not knowing why he so wanted her to see
-it, too, but it seemed to explain more than anything else--the pale,
-high sky, the gray branches, the shining water and the little bird that
-hopped to drink. He himself looked ghost-like while he spoke--sunken,
-long, dark, impalpable, in the deep chair, his thin white fingers
-lightly interlocked, his face showing only the oddity of its strange yet
-beautiful oval and its shadowy eyes and lips. All whiteness and shadow,
-he might have been a projection from the thought of the woman, who,
-before him, leaned her head on her hand, warm, breathing, vivid with
-color, her steady eyes seeing phantoms unafraid.
-
-After that there wasn't much left to explain, it seemed--except Alice,
-that last convulsive effort of life to seize and keep him; and that
-didn't take long--made, as it were, a little allegory, with nameless
-abstractions to symbolize the old drama of the soul entrameled and
-finally set free again. The experience of the spring woods had really
-been the decisive one. He came back to that again, at the end of his
-story. "It's really, that experience, what in another kind of
-temperament is called conversion."
-
-Her eyes had looked away from him at last. "No," she said, "conversion
-is something that gives life."
-
-"No," he rejoined, "it's something that lifts one above it."
-
-The fundamental contest spoke again, and after that they were both
-silent. He, too, had looked away from her when the story was over, and
-he knew, from her deep, slow breathing, that the story had meant a great
-deal to her. It was not a laboring breath, nor broken by pain to sighs;
-but it seemed, in its steady rhythm, to accept and then to conquer what
-he had put before her. That he should so hear it, not looking at her,
-filled the silence with more than words; and, as in the afternoon, he
-sought the relief of words.
-
-"So you see," he said, in his lighter voice, "thorns and precipices and
-terrors dissolve like dreams." She had seen everything and he was
-ushering her out. But his eyes now met hers, looking across the little
-space at him.
-
-"And I? Do I, too, dissolve like a dream?" she said.
-
-His smile now was lighter than his voice had been. "Absolutely. Though I
-own that you are a highly colored phantom. Your color is very vivid
-indeed. Sometimes it almost masters my thought."
-
-He had not, in his mere wish for ease, quite known what he meant to say,
-and now her look did not show him any deepened consciousness; but,
-suddenly, he felt that under his lightness and her quiet the current ran
-deeply.
-
-"I master your thought?" she repeated. "Doesn't that make you distrust
-thought sometimes?"
-
-"No," he laughed. "It makes me distrust you, dear Eppie."
-
-There were all sorts of things before them now. What they were he really
-didn't know; perhaps she didn't, either. At all events he kept his eyes
-off them, and shaking his crossed foot a little, he still looked at her,
-smiling.
-
-"Why?" she asked.
-
-He felt that he must now answer her, and himself, in words that wouldn't
-imply more than he could face.
-
-"Well, the very force of your craving for life, the very force of your
-will, might sweep me along for a bit. I might be caught up for a whirl
-on the wheel of illusion; not that you could ever bind me to it: it
-would need my own will, blind again, for that."
-
-Her eyes had met his so steadily that he had imagined only contemplation
-or perhaps that maternal severity behind the steadiness. But the way in
-which they received these last tossed pebbles of metaphor showed him
-unrealized profundities. They deepened, they darkened, they widened on
-him. They seemed to engulf him in a sudden abyss of pain. And pain in
-her was indeed a color that could infect him.
-
-"How horrible you are, Gavan," she said, and her voice went with the
-words and with the look.
-
-"Eppie!" he exclaimed on a tense, indrawn breath, as if over the sudden
-stab of a knife. "Have I hurt you?"
-
-Her eyes turned from him. "Not what you say, or do. What you are."
-
-"You didn't see, before, what I am?"
-
-"Never--like this."
-
-He leaned toward her. "Dear Eppie, why do you make me talk? Let me be
-still. I only ask to be still."
-
-"You are worse still. Don't you think I see what stillness means?"
-
-She had pushed her low seat from him,--for he stretched his hands to her
-with his supplication,--and, rising to her feet, stepping back, she
-stood before the fire, somberly looking down at him.
-
-Gavan, too, rose. Compunction, supplication, a twist of perplexity and
-suffering, made him careless of discretion. Face to face, laying his
-hands on her shoulders, he said: "Don't let me frighten you. It would be
-horrible if I could convince you, shatter you."
-
-Standing erect under his hands, she looked hard into his face.
-
-"You could frighten me, horribly; but you couldn't shatter me. You are
-ambiguous, veiled, all in mists. I am as clear, as sharp--."
-
-Her dauntlessness, the old defiance, were a relief--a really delicious
-relief. He was able to smile at her, a smile that pled for reassurance.
-"How can I frighten you, then?"
-
-Her somber gaze did not soften. "Your mists come round me, chill,
-suffocating. They corrode my clearness."
-
-"No; no; it's you who come into them. Don't. Don't. Keep away from me."
-
-"I'm not so afraid of you as that," she answered.
-
-His hands were still on her shoulders and their eyes on each other--his
-with their appealing, uncertain smile, and hers unmoved, unsmiling; and
-suddenly that sense of danger came upon him: as if, in the mist, he felt
-upon him the breathing, warm, sweet, ominous, of some unseen creature.
-And in the fear was a strange delight, and like a hand drawn, with slow,
-deep pressure, across a harp, the nearness drew across his heart,
-stirring its one sad note--its dumb, its aching note--to a sudden
-ascending murmur of melody.
-
-He was caught swiftly from this inner tumult by its reflection in her
-face. She flushed, deeply, painfully. She drew back sharply, pushing
-his hands from her.
-
-Gavan sought his own equilibrium in an ignoring of that undercurrent.
-
-"Now you are not frightened; but why are you angry?" he asked.
-
-For a moment she did not speak.
-
-"Eppie, I am so sorry. What is it? You are really angry, Eppie!"
-
-Then, after that pause of speechlessness, she found words.
-
-"If I think of you as mist you must not think of me as glamour." This
-she gave him straight.
-
-Only after disengaging her train from the settle, from his feet, after
-wheeling aside his chair to make a clear passage for her departure, did
-she add: "I have read your priggish Schopenhauer."
-
-She gave him no time for reply or protestation. Quite mistress of
-herself, leaving him with all the awkwardness of the situation--if he
-chose to consider it awkward--upon his hands, very fully the finished
-mondaine and very beautifully the fearless and assured nymph of the
-hillside, she went to the piano, turned and rejected, in looking over
-it, some music, and sitting down, striking a long, full chord, she began
-to sing, in her voice of frosty dawn, the old Scotch ballad.
-
-He might go or listen as he liked. She had put him away, him and his
-mists, his ambiguous hold upon her, his ambiguous look at her. She sang
-to please herself as much as when she had gone up through the woodlands.
-And if the note of anger still thrilled in her voice she turned it to
-the uses of her song and made a higher triumph of sadness.
-
-She was still singing when the general came in.
-
- * * * * *
-
-SHE had been quite right; she had seen with her perfect sharpness and
-clearness indeed, and no wonder that she had been angry. He himself saw
-clearly, directly the hand was off the harp. It was laughably simple. He
-was a man, she a woman; they were both young and she was beautiful. That
-summed it up, sufficiently and brutally; and no wonder, again, that she
-had felt such summing an offense. It wasn't in the light of such
-summings that she regarded herself.
-
-With him she had never, for a moment, made use of glamour. His was the
-rudimentary impulse, and Gavan's sensitive cheek echoed her flush when
-he thought of it. Never again, he promised himself, after this full
-comprehension of it, should such an impulse dim their friendship. He
-would make it up to her by helping her to forget it.
-
-But for all that, it was with the strangest mixture of relief and dismay
-that he found upon the breakfast-table next morning an urgent summons
-for his return home. It was the affable little rector of the parish in
-Surrey who wrote to tell him of his father's sudden breakdown,--softening
-of the brain. When Eppie appeared, a little grave, but all clear
-composure, he was able to show her the letter and to tell her of his
-immediate departure with a composure as assured as her own, but he
-wondered, while he spoke, if to her also the parting would mean any form
-of relief. At all events, for her, it couldn't mean any form of wrench.
-
-Looking in swift glances at her face, while she questioned him about his
-father, suggested trains and nurses, and gave practical advice for his
-journey, he was conscious that the relief was the result of a pretty
-severe strain, and that though it was relieved it hadn't stopped aching.
-
-The very fact that Eppie's narrow face, the hair brushed back from brow
-and temples, showed, in the clear morning light, more of its oddity than
-its beauty, made its charm cling the more closely. Her eyes looked
-small, her features irregular; he saw the cliff-like modeling of her
-temples, the cheeks, a little flat, pale, freckled; the long, queer
-lines of her chin. Bare, exposed, without a flicker of sunlight on her
-delicate analogies of ruggedness, of weather-beaten strength, she might
-almost have been called ugly; and, with every glance, he was feeling her
-as sweetness, sweetness deep and reticent, embodied.
-
-The general and Miss Barbara were late. She poured out his coffee, saw
-him embarked on a sturdy breakfast, insisted, now with the irradiating
-smile that in a moment made her lovely, that he should eat a great deal
-before his journey, made him think anew of that maternal quality in
-her,--the tolerance, the tenderness. And in the ambiguous relief came
-the sharpened dismay of seeing how great was the cause for it.
-
-He wanted to say a word, only one, about their little drama of last
-night, but the time didn't really seem to come for it; perhaps she saw
-that it shouldn't come. But on the old stone steps with their yellow
-lichen spots, his farewells over to the uncle and aunt, and he and Eppie
-standing out there in a momentary solitude, she said, shaking his hand,
-"Friends, you know. Look me up when you are next in London." She had her
-one word to say, and she had said it when and how she wished. It wasn't
-anything so crude as reassurance; it was rather a sunny assurance, in
-which she wished him to share, that none was needed.
-
-He looked, like the boy of years ago, a real depth of gratitude into her
-eyes. She had given him his chance.
-
-"I'll never frighten you again; I'll never displease you again."
-
-"I know you won't. I won't let you," Eppie smiled.
-
-"I wish I were more worth your while--worth your being kind to me."
-
-"You think you are still--gloomy, tiresome, self-centered?"
-
-"That defines it well enough."
-
-"Well, you serve my purpose," said Eppie, "and that is to have you for
-my friend."
-
-She seemed in this parting to have effaced all memory of glamour, but
-Gavan knew that the deeper one was with him.
-
-It was with him, even while, in the long journey South, he was able to
-unwrap film after film of the mirage from its central core of reality,
-to see Eppie, in all her loveliness, in all her noblest aspects, as a
-sort of incarnation of the world, the flesh, and the devil. He could
-laugh over the grotesque analogy; it proved to him how far from life he
-was when its symbol could show in such unflattering terms, and yet it
-hurt him that he could find it in himself so to symbolize her. It was
-just because she was so lovely, so noble, that he must--he must--. For,
-under all, was the wrench that would take time to stop aching.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Captain Palairet had gone to pieces and was now as unpleasant an object
-as for years he had been a pleasant one.
-
-Gavan's atrophied selfishness felt only a slight shrinking from the
-revolting aspects of dissolution, and his father's condition rather
-interested him. The captain's childish clinging to his son was like an
-animal instinct suddenly asserting itself, an almost vegetable instinct,
-so little more than mere instinct was it. It affected Gavan much as the
-suddenly contracting tentacles of a sea-anemone upon his finger might
-have done. He was not at all touched; but he felt the claim of a
-possible pang of loneliness and desolation in the dimness of decay, and,
-methodically, with all the appearances of a solicitous kindness, he
-responded to the claim.
-
-The man, immersed in his rudimentary universe of sense, showed a host of
-atavistic fears; fears of the dark, of strange faces, fears of sudden
-noises or of long stillness. He often wept, leaning his swollen face on
-Gavan's shoulder, filled with an abject self-pity.
-
-"You know how I love you, Gavan," he would again and again repeat, his
-lax lips fumbling with the words, "always loved you, ever since you were
-a little fellow--out in India, you know. I and your dear mother loved
-you better than life," and, wagging his head, he would repeat, "better
-than life," and break into sobs--sobs that ceased when the nurse brought
-him his wine-jelly. Then it might be again the tone of feeble whining.
-"It doesn't taste right, Gavan. Can't you make it taste right? Do you
-want to starve me between you all?"
-
-Gavan, with scientific scrutiny, diagnosed and observed while he soothed
-him or engaged his vagrant mind in games.
-
-In his intervals of leisure he pursued his own work, and rode and walked
-with all his usual tempered athleticism. He did not feel the days as a
-strain, hardly as disagreeable; he was indifferent or interested. At the
-worst he was bored. The undercurrent of pity he was accustomed to living
-with.
-
-Only at night, in hours of rest, he would sink into a half-dazed
-disgust, find himself on edge, nearly worn out. So the winter passed.
-
-He was playing draughts with his father on a day in earliest spring,
-when he was told that Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford were below.
-
-Gavan was feeling dull and jaded. The conducting of the game needed a
-monotonous patience and tact. The captain would now pick up a draught
-and gaze curiously at it for long periods of time, now move in a
-direction contrary to all the rules of the game and to his own
-advantage. When such mistakes were pointed out to him he would either
-apologize humbly or break into sudden peevish wrath. To-day he was in a
-peculiarly excitable condition and had more than once wept.
-
-Gavan, after the servant's announcement, holding a quietly expectant
-draught in his thin, poised fingers, looked hard at the board that still
-waited for his father's move. He then felt that a deep flush had mounted
-to his face.
-
-In spite of the one or two laconic letters that they had interchanged,
-Eppie had been relegated for many months to her dream-place--a dream, in
-spite of its high coloring, more distant than this nearer dream of ugly
-illness. It was painful to look back at the queer turmoil she had roused
-in him during the autumnal fortnight, and more painful to realize, as in
-his sudden panic of reluctance now, that, though a dream, she was an
-abiding and constant one.
-
-Mrs. Arley he knew, and her motor-car had recently made her a next-door
-neighbor in spite of the thirty miles between them. She was a friend
-with whom Eppie had before stayed on the other side of the county.
-Nothing could be more natural than that she and Eppie should drop in
-upon a solitude that must, to their eyes, have all the finished elements
-of pathos. Yet he was a little vexed by the intrusion, as well as
-reluctant to meet it.
-
-His father broke into vehement protest when he heard that he was to be
-abandoned at an unusual hour, and it needed some time for Gavan and the
-nurse to quiet him. Twenty minutes had passed before he could go down to
-his guests, and he surmised that they would feel in this delay yet
-further grounds for pity.
-
-They were in the hall, before a roaring fire, Eppie standing with her
-back to it, in a familiar attitude, though her long, caped cloak and
-hooded motoring-cap, the folds of gray silk gathered under her chin and
-narrowly framing her face, gave her an unfamiliar aspect. Her eyes met
-his as he turned the spacious staircase and came down to them, and he
-felt that they watched his every movement and noted every trace in him
-of fatigue and dejection.
-
-Mrs. Arley, fluent, flexible, amazingly pretty, for all the light
-powdering and wrinkling of her fifty years, came rustling forward.
-
-"Eppie is staying with me for the week-end,--I wrench her from her slums
-now and then,--and we wanted to hear how you are, to see how you are.
-You look dreadfully fagged; doesn't he, Eppie? How is your father?"
-
-Eppie gave him her hand in silence.
-
-"My father will never be any better, you know," he said. "As for me, I'm
-all right. I should have come over to see you before this, and looked
-you up, too, Eppie, but I can't get away for more than an hour or so at
-a time."
-
-He led them into the library while he spoke,--Mrs. Arley exclaiming that
-such devotion was dear and good of him,--and Eppie looked gravely round
-at the room that he had described to her as the room that he really
-passed his life in. The great spaces of ranged books framed for her, he
-knew, pictures of his own existence. He knew, too, that her gravity was
-the involuntary result of the impression that he made upon her. She was
-sorry for him. Poor Eppie, their relationship since childhood seemed to
-have consisted in that--in the sense of her pursuing pity and in his
-retreat before it, for her sake. He retreated now, as he knew, in his
-determination to show her that pity was misplaced, uncalled for.
-
-Mrs. Arley had thrown off her wrap and loosened her hood in a manner
-that made it almost imperative to ask them to stay with him for
-lunch--an invitation accepted with an assurance showing that it had been
-expected, and it wasn't difficult, in conventional battledore and
-shuttlecock with her, to show a good humor and frivolity that
-discountenanced pathetic interpretations. What Mrs. Arley's
-interpretations were he didn't quite know; her eyes, fatigued yet fresh,
-were very acute behind their trivial meanings, and he could wonder if
-Eppie had shared with her her own sense of his "horribleness," and if,
-in consequence, her conception of Eppie's significance as the opponent
-of that quality was tinged with sentimental associations.
-
-Eppie's gaze, while they rattled on, lost something of its gravity, but
-he was startled, as if by an assurance deeper than any of Mrs. Arley's,
-when she rose to slip off her coat and went across the room to a small
-old mirror that hung near the door to take off her cap as well.
-
-In her manner of standing there with her back to them, untying her
-veils, pushing back her hair, was the assurance, indeed, of a person
-whose feet were firmly planted on certain rights, all the more firmly
-for "knowing her place" as it were, and for having repudiated mistaken
-assumptions. She might almost have been a new sick-nurse come to take up
-her duties by his side. She passed from the mirror to the writing-table,
-examining the books laid there, and then, until lunch was announced,
-stood looking out of the window. Quite the silent, capable, significant
-new nurse, with many theories of her own that might much affect the
-future.
-
-The dining-room at Cheylesford Lodge opened on a wonderful old lawn,
-centuries in its green. Bordered by beds, just alight with pale spring
-flowers, it swept in and out among shrubberies of rhododendron and
-laurel, the emerald nook set in a circle of trees, a high arabesque on
-the sky.
-
-Eppie from her seat at the table faced the sky, the trees, the lawn.
-What a beautiful place, she was thinking. A place for life, sheltered,
-embowered. How she would have loved, as a child, those delicious
-rivulets of green that ran into the thick mysteries of shadow. How she
-would have loved to play dolls on a hot summer afternoon in the shade of
-the great yew-tree that stretched its dark branches half across the sky.
-The house, the garden, made her think of children; she saw white
-pinafores and golden heads glancing in and out among the trees and
-shrubs, and the vision of young life, blossoming, growing in security
-and sunlight, filled her thought with its pictured songs of innocence,
-while, at the same time, under the vision, she was feeling it all--all
-the beauty and sheltered sweetness--as dreadful in its emptiness, its
-worse than emptiness: a casket holding a death's-head. She came back
-with something of a start to hear her work in the slums enthusiastically
-described by Mrs. Arley. "I thought it was only in novels that children
-clung to the heroine's skirts. I never believed they clung in real life
-until seeing Eppie with her ragamuffins; they adore her."
-
-This remark, to whose truth she assented by a vague smile, gave Eppie's
-thoughts a further push that sent them seeing herself among the golden
-heads and white pinafores on the lawn at Cheylesford Lodge; and though
-the vision maintained its loving aunt relationship of the slums, there
-was now a throb and flutter in it, as though she held under her hand a
-strange wild bird that only her own will not to look kept hidden.
-
-These dreams were followed by a nightmare little episode.
-
-In the library, again, the talk was still an airy dialogue, Eppie, her
-eyes on the flames as she drank her coffee, still maintaining her
-ruminating silence. In the midst of her thoughts and their chatter, the
-door opened suddenly and Captain Palairet appeared on the threshold.
-
-His head neatly brushed, a sumptuous dressing-gown of padded and
-embroidered silk girt about him, he stood there with moist eyes and
-lips, faintly and incessantly shaking through all his frame, a troubling
-and startling figure.
-
-Gavan had been wondering all through the visit how his father was
-bearing the abandonment, and his appearance, he saw now, must have been
-the triumphant fruit of contest with the nurse whose face of helpless
-disapprobation hovered outside.
-
-Gavan went to his side, and, leaning on his son's arm, the captain said
-that he had come to pay his respects to Mrs. Arley and to Miss Gifford.
-
-Taking Mrs. Arley's hand, he earnestly reiterated his pleasure in
-welcoming her to his home.
-
-"Gavan's in fact, you know; but he's a good son. Not very much in
-common, perhaps: Gavan was always a book-worm, a fellow of fads and
-theories; I love a broad life, men and things. No, not much in common,
-except our love for his mother, my dear, dead wife; that brought us
-together. We shook hands over her grave, so to speak," said the captain,
-but without his usual sentiment. An air of jaunty cheerfulness pervaded
-his manner. "She is buried near here, you know. You may have seen the
-grave. A very pretty stone; very pretty indeed. Gavan chose it. I was in
-India at the time. A great blow to me. I never recovered from it. I
-forget, for the moment, what the text is; but it's very pretty; very
-appropriate. I knew I could trust Gavan to do everything properly."
-
-Gavan's face had kept its pallid calm.
-
-"You will tire yourself, father," he said. "Let me take you up-stairs
-now. Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford will excuse us."
-
-The captain resisted his attempt to turn him to the door.
-
-"Miss Gifford. Yes, Miss Gifford," he repeated, turning to where Eppie
-stood attentively watching father and son, "But I want to see Miss
-Elspeth Gifford. It was that I came for." He took her hand and his
-wrecked and restless eyes went over her face. "So this is Miss Elspeth
-Gifford."
-
-"You have heard of me?" Eppie's composure was as successful as Gavan's
-own and lent to the scene a certain matter-of-fact convention.
-
-The captain bowed low. "Heard of you? Yes. I have often heard of you. I
-am glad, glad and proud, to meet at last so much goodness and wit and
-beauty. You have a name in the world, Miss Gifford. Yes, indeed, I have
-heard of you." Suddenly, while he held her hand and gazed at her, his
-look changed. Tears filled his eyes; a muscle in his lip began to shake;
-a flush of maudlin indignation purpled his face.
-
-"And you are the girl my son jilted! And you come to our house! It's a
-noble action. It's a generous action. It's worthy of you, my dear." He
-tightly squeezed her hand, Gavan's attempt--and now no gentle one--to
-draw him away only making his clutch the more determined.
-
-"No, Gavan, I will not go. I will speak my mind. This is my hour. The
-time has come for me to speak my mind. Let's have the truth; truth at
-all costs is my motto. A noble and generous action. But, my dear," he
-leaned his head toward her and spoke in a loud whisper, "you're well rid
-of him, you know--well rid of him. Don't try to patch it up. Don't come
-in that hope. So like a woman--I know, I know. But give it up; that's my
-advice. Give it up. He's a poor fellow--a very poor fellow. He wouldn't
-make you happy; just take that from me--a friend, a true friend. He
-wouldn't make any woman happy. He's a poor creature, and a false
-creature, and I'll say this," the captain, now trembling violently,
-burst into tears: "if he has been a false lover to you he has been a bad
-son to me."
-
-With both hands, sobbing, he clung to her, while, with a look of sick
-distress, Gavan tried, not too violently, to draw him from his hold on
-her.
-
-Eppie had not flushed. "Don't mind," she said, glancing at the helpless
-son, "he has mixed it up, you see." And, bending on the captain eyes
-severe in kindly intention, like the eyes of a nurse firmly
-administering a potion, "You are mistaken about Gavan. It was another
-man who jilted me. Now let him take you up-stairs. You are ill."
-
-But the captain still clung, she, erect in her spare young strength,
-showing no shrinking of repulsion. "No, no," he said; "you always try to
-shield him. A woman's way. He won your heart, and then he broke it, as
-he has mine. He has no heart, or he'd take you now. Give it up. Don't
-come after him. Sir, how dare you! I won't submit to this. How dare you,
-Sir!" Gavan had wrenched him away, and in a flare of silly passion he
-struck at him again and again, like a furious child. It was a wrestle
-with the animal, the vegetable thing, the pinioning of vicious
-tentacles. Mrs. Arley fluttered in helpless consternation, while Eppie,
-firm and adequate, assisted Gavan in securing the wildly striking hands.
-Caught, held, haled toward the door, the captain became, with amazing
-rapidity, all smiles and placidity.
-
-"Gently, gently, my dear boy. This is unseemly, you know, very childish
-indeed. Temper! Temper! You get it from me, no doubt--though your mother
-could be very spiteful at moments. I'll come now. I've said my say. Well
-rid of him, my dear, well rid of him," he nodded from the door.
-
-"Eppie! My dear!" cried Mrs. Arley, when father and son had disappeared.
-"How unutterably hateful. I am more sorry for him than for you, Eppie.
-His face!"
-
-Eppie was shrugging up her shoulders and straightening herself as though
-the captain's grasp still threatened her.
-
-"Hateful indeed; but trivial. Gavan understands that I understand. We
-must make him feel that it's nothing."
-
-"He's quite mad, horrible old man."
-
-"Not quite; more uncomfortably muddled than mad. We must make him see
-that we think nothing of it," Eppie repeated. She turned to Gavan, who
-entered as she spoke, still with his sick flush and showing a speechless
-inability to frame apologies.
-
-"This is what it is to have echoes, Gavan," she said. "My little
-misfortunes have reached your father's ears." She went to him, she took
-his hand, she smiled at him, all her radiance recovered, a garment of
-warmth and ease to cover the shivering the captain's words might have
-made. "Please don't mind. I wasn't a bit bothered, really."
-
-He could almost have wept for the relief of her smile, her sanity. The
-linking of their names in such an unthinkable connection had given him
-the nausea qualm of a terrifying obsession. He could find now only trite
-words in which to tell her that she was very kind and that he was more
-sorry than he could say.
-
-"But you mustn't be. It was such an obvious muddle for a twisted mind.
-He knew," said Eppie, still smiling with the healing radiance, "that I
-had been jilted, and he knew that I was very fond of you, and he put
-together the one and one make two that happened to be before him." She
-saw that his distress had been far greater than her own, that she now
-gave him relief.
-
-Afterward, as she and Mrs. Arley sped away, her own reaction from the
-healing attitude showed in a rather grim silence. She leaned back in the
-swift, keen air, her arms folded in the fullness of her capes.
-
-But Mrs. Arley could not repress her own accumulations of feeling. "My
-dear Eppie," she said, her hand on her shoulder, and with an almost more
-than maternal lack of reticence, "I want you to marry him. Don't glare
-Medusa at me. I hate tact and silences. Heaven knows I would have
-scouted the idea of such a match for you before seeing him to-day. But
-my hard old heart is touched. He is such a dear; so lonely. It's a nice
-little place, too, and there is some money. Jim Grainger is too
-drab-colored a person for you,--all his force, all his sheckles, can't
-gild him,--and Kenneth Langley is penniless. This dear creature is not a
-bit drab and not quite penniless. And you are big enough to marry a man
-who needs you rather than one you need. _Will_ you think of it, Eppie?"
-
-"Grace, you are worse than Captain Palairet," said Eppie, whose eyes
-were firmly fixed on the neat leather back of the chauffeur in front of
-them.
-
-"Don't be cross, Eppie. Why should you mind my prattle?"
-
-"Because I care for him so much."
-
-"Well, that's what I say."
-
-"No; not as I mean it."
-
-"_He_ of course cares, as I mean it."
-
-Eppie did not pause over this.
-
-"It's something different, quite different, from anything else in the
-world. It can't be talked about like that. Please, Grace, never, never
-be like Captain Palairet again. _You_ haven't softening of the brain. I
-shall lose Gavan if my friends and his father have such delusions too
-openly."
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-Gavan went down the noisy, dirty thoroughfare, looking for the turning
-which would lead him, so the last policeman consulted said, to Eppie's
-little square.
-
-It was a May day, suddenly clear after rain, liquid mud below, and above
-a sharply blue sky, looking its relentless contrast at the reeking,
-sordid streets, the ugly, hurrying life of the wide thoroughfare.
-
-All along the gutter was a vociferous fringe of dripping fruit-and
-food-barrows, these more haphazard conveniences faced by a line of
-gaudy, glaring shops.
-
-The blue above was laced with a tangle of tram-wires and cut with the
-jagged line of chimney-pots.
-
-The roaring trams, the glaring shops, seemed part of a cruel machinery
-creative of life, and the grim air of permanence, the width and solidity
-of the great thoroughfare, were more oppressive to Gavan's nerves, its
-ugliness fiercer, more menacing, than the narrower meanness of the
-streets where life seemed to huddle with more despondency.
-
-In one of these he found that he had, apparently, lost his way.
-
-A random turn brought him to a squalid court with sloping, wet pavement
-and open doors disgorging, from inner darkness, swarms of children. They
-ran; tottered on infantile, bandy legs; locked in scuffling groups,
-screaming shrilly, or squatted on the ground, absorbed in some game.
-
-Gavan surveyed them vaguely as he wandered seeking an outlet. His eye
-showed neither shrinking nor tenderness, rather a bleak, hard, unmoved
-pity, like that of the sky above. He was as alien from that swarming,
-vivid life as the sky; but, worn as he was with months of nervous
-overstrain, he felt rising within him now and then a faint sense of
-nausea such as one might feel in contemplating a writhing clot of
-maggots.
-
-He threaded his way among them all, and at a corner of the court found a
-narrow exit. This covered passage led, apparently, to another and fouler
-court, and emerging from it, coming suddenly face to face with him, was
-Eppie. She was as startling, seen here, as "a lily in the mouth of
-Tartarus," and he had a shock of delight in her mere aspect. For Eppie
-was as exquisite as a flower. Her garments had in no way adapted
-themselves to mud and misery. Her rough dress of Japanese blue showed at
-the open neck of its jacket a white linen blouse; her short, kilted
-skirt swung with the grace of petals; her little upturned cap of blue
-made her look like a Rosalind ready for a background of woodland glade,
-streams, and herds of deer.
-
-And here she stood, under that cruel sky, among the unimaginable
-ugliness of this City of Dreadful Night.
-
-In her great surprise she did not smile, saying, as she gave him her
-hand, "Gavan! by all that's wonderful!"
-
-"You asked me to come and see you when I was next in London."
-
-"So I did."
-
-"So here I am. I had a day off by chance; some business that had to be
-seen to."
-
-"And your father?"
-
-"Slowly going."
-
-"And you have come down here, for how long?"
-
-"For as long as you'll keep me. I needn't go back till night."
-
-Her eye now wandered away from him to the maggots, one of whom, Gavan
-observed, had attached itself to her skirt, while a sufficiently dense
-crowd surrounded them, staring.
-
-"You have a glimpse of our children," said Eppie, surveying them with,
-not exactly a maternal, but, as it were, a fraternal eye of affectionate
-familiarity.
-
-"What's that, Annie?" in answer to a husky whisper. "Do I expect you
-to-night? Rather! Is that the doll, Ada? Well, I can't say that you've
-kept it very tidy. Where's its pinafore?" She took the soiled object
-held up to her and examined its garments. "Where's its petticoat?"
-
-"Please, Miss, Hemly took them."
-
-"Took them away from you?"
-
-"Yes, Miss."
-
-"For her own doll, I suppose."
-
-"Yes, Miss."
-
-Eppie cogitated. "I'll speak to Emily about it presently. You shall have
-them back."
-
-"Please, Miss, I called her a thief."
-
-"You spoke the truth. How are you, Billy? You look decidedly better.
-Gavan, my hands are full for the next hour or so and I can't even offer
-to take you with me, for I'm going to sick people. But I shall be back
-and through with all my work by tea-time, if you don't mind going to my
-place and waiting. You'll find Maude Allen there. She lives down here,
-and with me when I am here. She is a nice girl, though she will talk
-your head off."
-
-"How do I find her? I don't mind waiting."
-
-"You follow this to the end, take the first turning to the right, and
-that will bring you to my place. I'll meet you there at five."
-
-Gavan, thus directed, made his way to the dingy little house occupied by
-the group of energetic women whom Eppie joined yearly for her three
-months of--dissipation? he asked himself, amused by her variegated
-vigor.
-
-The dingy little house looked on a dingy little square--shell of former
-respectable affluence from which the higher form of life had shriveled.
-The sooty trees were thickly powdered with young green, and uneven
-patches of rough, unkempt grass showed behind broken iron railings. A
-cat's-meat man called his dangling wares along the street, and Gavan,
-noticing a thin and furtive cat, that stole from a window-ledge, stopped
-him and bought a large three-penny-worth, upon which he left the cat
-regaling itself with an odd, fastidious ferocity.
-
-He entered another world when he entered Eppie's sitting-room. Here was
-life at its most austerely sweet. Books lined the walls, bowls of
-primroses and delicate Japanese bronzes set above their shelves;
-chintz-covered chairs were drawn before the fire; the latest reviews lay
-on a table, and on the piano stood open music; there were wide windows
-in the little room, and crocuses, growing in flat, earthenware dishes,
-blew out their narrow chalices against the sunlit muslin curtains.
-
-Miss Allen sat sewing near the crocuses, and, shy and voluble, rose to
-greet him. She was evidently accustomed to Eppie's guests--accustomed,
-too, perhaps, to taking them off her hands, for though she was shy her
-volubility showed a familiarity with the situation. She was almost as
-funny a contrast to Eppie as the slum children had been an ugly one. She
-wore a spare, drab-colored skirt and a cotton shirt, its high, hard
-collar girt about by a red tie that revealed bone buttons before and
-behind. Her sleek, fair hair, relentlessly drawn back, looked like a
-varnish laid upon her head. Her features, at once acute and kindly, were
-sharp and pink.
-
-She was sewing on solid and distressingly ugly materials.
-
-"Yes, I am usually at home. Miss Gifford is the head and I am the hands,
-you see," she smiled, casting quick, upward glances at the long, pale
-young man in his chair near the fire. "Miss Henderson, Miss Grey, and I
-live here all year round, and I do so look forward to Miss Gifford's
-coming. Oh, yes, it's a most interesting life. Do you do anything of the
-sort? Are you going to take up a club? Perhaps you are going into the
-Church?"
-
-Miss Allen asked her swift succession of questions as if in a mild
-desperateness.
-
-Gavan admitted that his interest was wholly in Miss Gifford.
-
-"She _is_ interesting," Miss Allen, all comprehension, agreed. "So many
-people find her inspiring. Do you know Mr. Grainger, the M.P.? He comes
-here constantly. He is a cousin, you know. He has known her, of course,
-ever since she was a child. I think it's very probable that she
-influences his political life--oh, quite in a right sense, I mean. He is
-such a conscientious man--everybody says that. And then she isn't at all
-eccentric, you know, as so many fashionable women who come down here
-are; they do give one so much trouble when they are like that,--all
-sorts of fads that one has to manage to get on with. She isn't at all
-faddish. And she isn't sentimental, either. I think the sentimental ones
-are worst--for the people, especially, giving them all sorts of foolish
-ideas. And it's not that she doesn't _care_. She cares such a lot.
-That's the secret of her not getting discouraged, you see. She never
-loses her spirit."
-
-"Is it such discouraging work?" Gavan questioned from his chair. With
-his legs crossed, his hat and stick held on his knee, he surveyed Miss
-Allen and the crocuses.
-
-"Well, not to me," she answered; "but that's very different, for I have
-religious faith. Miss Gifford hasn't that, so of course she must care a
-great deal to make up for it. When one hasn't a firm faith it is far
-more difficult, I always think, to see any hope in it all. I think she
-would find it far easier if she had that. She can't resign herself to
-things. She is rather hot-tempered at times," Miss Allen added, with one
-of her sharp, shy glances.
-
-Gavan, amused by the idea that Eppie lacked religious faith, inquired
-whether the settlement were religious in intention, and Miss Allen
-sighed a little in answering no,--Miss Grey, indeed, was a Positivist.
-"But we Anglicans are very broad, you know," she said. "I can work in
-perfectly with them all--better with Miss Grey and Miss Gifford than
-with Miss Henderson, who is very, very Low. Miss Gifford goes in more
-for social conditions and organization--trades-unions, all that sort of
-thing; that's where she finds Mr. Grainger so much of a help, I think."
-And he gathered from Miss Allen's further conversation, from its very
-manner of vague though admiring protest, a clearer conception of Eppie's
-importance down here. To Miss Allen, she evidently embodied a splendid,
-pagan force, ambiguous in its splendor. He saw her slightly shrinking
-vision of an intent combatant; no loving sister of charity, but a young
-Bellona, the latest weapons of sociological warfare in her hands, its
-latest battle-cry on her lips. And all for what? thought Gavan, while,
-with a sense of contrasting approval, he looked at Miss Allen's tidy
-little head against the sunlit crocuses and watched the harmless
-occupation of her hands. All for life, more life; the rousing of desire;
-the struggling to higher forms of consciousness. She was in it, the
-strife, the struggle. He had seen on her face to-day, with all its
-surprise, perhaps its gladness, that alien look of grave preoccupation
-that passed from him to the destinies she touched. In thinking of it all
-he felt particularly at peace, though there was the irony of his
-assurance that Eppie's efforts among this suffering life where he found
-her only resulted in a fiercer hold on suffering. Physical degradation
-and its resultant moral apathy were by no means the most unendurable of
-human calamities. Miss Allen's anodynes--the mere practical petting,
-soothing, telling of pretty tales--were, in their very short-sightedness,
-more fitted to the case.
-
-Miss Allen little thought to what a context her harmless prattle was
-being adjusted. She would have been paralyzed with horror could she have
-known that to the gentle young man, sitting there so unalarmingly, she
-herself was only a rather simple symptom of life that he was quietly
-studying. In so far from suspecting, her shyness went from her; he was
-so unalarming--differing in this from so many people--that she found it
-easy to talk to him. And she still had a happy little hope of a closer
-community of interest than he had owned to. He looked, she thought, very
-High Church. Perhaps he was in the last stages of conversion.
-
-She had talked on for nearly an hour when another visitor was announced.
-This proved to be a young man slightly known to Gavan, a graceful,
-mellifluous youth, whose artificiality of manner and great personal
-beauty suggested a mingling of absinthe and honey. People had rather
-bracketed Gavan and Basil Mayburn together; one could easily deal with
-both as lumped in the same category,--charming drifters, softly
-disdainful of worldly aims and efforts. Mayburn himself took sympathy
-for granted, though disconcerted at times by finding his grasp of the
-older man to be on a sliding, slippery surface. Palairet had, to be
-sure, altogether the proper appreciations of art and literature, the
-rhythm of highly evolved human intercourse; the aroma distilled for the
-esthete from the vast tragic comedy of life; so that he had never quite
-satisfied himself as to why he could get no nearer on this common
-footing. Palairet was always charming, always interested, always
-courteous; but one's hold did slip.
-
-And to Gavan, Basil Mayburn, with his fluent ecstasies, seemed a
-sojourner in a funny half-way house. To Mayburn the hallucination of
-life was worth while esthetically. His own initial appeal to life had
-been too fundamentally spiritual for the beautiful to be more to him
-than a second-rate illusion.
-
-Miss Allen greeted Mr. Mayburn with a coolness that at once
-discriminated for Gavan between her instinctive liking for himself and
-her shrinking from a man who perplexed and displeased her.
-
-Mayburn was all glad sweetness: delighted to see Miss Allen; delighted
-to see Palairet; delighted to wait in their company for the delightful
-Miss Gifford; and, turning to Miss Allen, he went on to say, as a thing
-that would engage her sympathies, that he had just come from a service
-at the Oratory.
-
-"I often go there," he said; "one gets, as nowhere else that I know of
-in London, the quintessence of aspiration--the age-long yearning of the
-world. How are your schemes for having that little church built down
-here succeeding? I do so believe in it. Don't let any ugly sect steal a
-march on you."
-
-Miss Allen primly replied that the plans for the church were prospering;
-and adding that Miss Gifford would be here in a moment and that she must
-leave them, she gathered up her work and departed with some emphasis.
-
-"Nice, dear little creature, that," said Mayburn, "though she does so
-dislike me. I hope I didn't say the wrong thing. I never quite know how
-far her Anglicanism goes; such a pity that it doesn't go a little
-further and carry her into a nunnery of the Catholic Church. She is the
-nun type. She ought to be done up in their delicious costume; it would
-lend her the flavor she lacks so distressingly now. Did you notice her
-collar and her hair? Astonishing the way that Eppie makes use of all
-these funny, _guindee_ creatures whom she gets hold of down here. Have
-you ever seen Miss Grey?--dogmatic, utilitarian, strangely ugly Miss
-Grey, another nun type corrupted by our silly modern conditions. She
-reeks of Comte and looks like a don. And all the rest of them,--the
-solemn humanitarians, the frothy socialists, the worldly, benign old
-ecclesiastics,--Eppie works them all; she has a genius for
-administration. It's an art in her. It almost consoles one for seeing
-her wasted down here for so much of the year."
-
-"Why wasted?" Gavan queried. "She enjoys it."
-
-"Exactly. That's the alleviation. Wasted for us, I mean. You have known
-her for a long time, haven't you, Palairet?"
-
-Gavan, irked by the question and by the familiarity of Mayburn's
-references to their absent hostess, answered dryly that he had known
-Miss Gifford since childhood; and Mayburn, all tact, passed at once to
-less personal topics, inquiring with a new earnestness whether Palairet
-had seen Selby's Goya, and expatiating on its exquisite horror until the
-turning of a key in the hall-door, quick steps on the stairs leading up
-past the sitting-room, announced Eppie's arrival.
-
-She was with them in a moment, cap and jacket doffed, her muddy shoes
-changed for slender patent-leather, fresh in her white blouse. She
-greeted Mayburn, turning to Gavan with, "I'm so glad you waited. You
-shall both have tea directly."
-
-With all her crisp kindliness, Gavan fancied a change in her since the
-greeting of an hour and a half before. Things hadn't gone well with her.
-And he could flatter himself, also, with the suspicion that she was
-vexed at finding their tete-a-tete interrupted.
-
-Mayburn loitered about the room after her while she straightened the
-shade on the student's lamp, just brought in, and made the tea, telling
-her about people, about what was going on in the only world that
-counted, telling her about Chrissie Bentworth's astounding elopement,
-and, finally, about the Goya. "You really must see it soon," he assured
-her.
-
-Eppie, adjusting the flame of her kettle, said that she didn't want to
-see it.
-
-"You don't care for Goya, dear lady?"
-
-"Not just now."
-
-"Well, of course I don't mean just now. I mean after you have burned out
-this particular flame. But, really, it's a sensation before you and you
-mustn't miss having it. An exquisite thing. Horror made beautiful."
-
-"I don't want to see it made beautiful," Eppie, with cheerful rudeness,
-objected.
-
-"Now that," said Mayburn, drawing up to the tea-table with an
-appreciative glance for the simple but inviting fare spread upon
-it--"now that is just where I always must argue with you. Don't you
-agree with me, Palairet, that life is beautiful--that it's only in terms
-of beauty that it has significance?"
-
-"If you happen to see it so," Gavan ambiguously assented.
-
-"Exactly; I accept your amendment--if you happen to have the good
-fortune to see it so; if you have the faculty that gives the vision; if,
-like Siegfried, the revealing dragon's-blood has touched your lips.
-Eppie has the gift and shouldn't wilfully atrophy it. She shouldn't
-refuse to share the vision of the Supreme Artist, to whom all horror and
-tragedy are parts of the picture that his eternal joy contemplates; she
-should not refuse to listen with the ear of the Supreme Musician, to
-whom all the discords that each one of us is, before we taste the
-dragon's-blood,--for what is man but a dissonance, as our admirable
-Nietzsche says,--to whom all these discords melt into the perfect
-phrase. All art, all truth is there. I'm rather dithyrambic, but, in
-your more reticent way, you agree with me, don't you, Palairet?"
-
-Eppie's eye, during this speech, had turned with observant irony upon
-Gavan.
-
-"How do you like your echo, Gavan?" she inquired, and she answered for
-him: "Of course he agrees, but in slightly different terms. He doesn't
-care a fig about the symphony or about the Eternal Goya. There isn't a
-touch of the 'lyric rapture' about him. Now pray don't ask him to define
-his own conceptions, and drink your tea. And don't say one word to me,
-either, about your gigantic, Bohemian deity. You have spoken of
-Nietzsche, and I know too well what you are coming to: the Apollonian
-spirit of the world of Appearances in which the Dionysiac spirit of
-Things-in-Themselves mirrors its vital ecstasy. Spare me, I'm not at all
-in the humor to see horror in terms of loveliness."
-
-"_Ay de mi!_" Mayburn murmured, "you make me feel that I'm still a
-dissonance when you talk like this."
-
-"A very wholesome realization."
-
-"You are cross with life to-day, and therefore with me, its poor little
-appreciator."
-
-"I'm never cross with life."
-
-"Only with me, then?"
-
-"Only with you, to-day."
-
-Mayburn, folding his slice of bread-and-butter, took her harshness with
-Apollonian serenity. "At least let me know that I've an ally in you," he
-appealed to Gavan, while Eppie refilled her cup with the business-like
-air of stoking an engine that paused for a moment near wayside
-trivialities.
-
-Gavan had listened to the dithyrambics with some uneasiness, conscious
-of Eppie's observation, and now owned that he felt little interest in
-the Eternal Goya.
-
-"Don't, don't, I pray of you, let him take the color out of life for
-you," Mayburn pleaded, turning from this rebuff, tea-cup in hand, to
-Eppie; and Eppie, with a rather grim smile, again full of reminiscences
-for Gavan, declared that neither of them could take anything out of it
-for her.
-
-She kept, after that, the talk in pleasant enough shallows; but Mayburn
-fancied, more than once, that he heard the grating of his keel on an
-unpropitious shore. Eppie didn't want him to-day, that was becoming
-evident; she wasn't going to push him off into decorative sailing. And
-presently, wondering a little if his tact had already been too long at
-fault, wondering anew about the degree of intimacy between the childhood
-friends, who had, evidently, secrets in which he did not share, he
-gracefully departed.
-
-Eppie leaned back in her chair, folded her arms, and closed her eyes as
-though to give herself the relief of a long silence.
-
-Her hair softly silhouetted against the green shade and the flickering
-illumination of the firelight upon her, her passive face showed a stern
-wistfulness. Things had gone wrong with her.
-
-Looking at her, Gavan's memory went back to the last time they had been
-together, alone, in firelight, to his impulse and her startlingly acute
-interpretation of it. Her very aspect now, her closed eyes and folded
-arms, seemed to show him how completely she disowned, for both of them,
-even the memory of such an unfitting episode. More keenly than ever he
-recognized the fineness in her, the generosity, the willingness to
-outlive trifles, to put them away forever; and the contagion of her
-somber peace enveloped him.
-
-She remarked presently, not opening her eyes: "I should like to make a
-bon-fire of all the pictures in the world, all the etchings, the
-carvings, the tapestries, the bric-a-brac in general,--and Basil
-Mayburn, in sackcloth and ashes, should light it."
-
-"What puritanic savagery, Eppie!"
-
-"I prefer the savage puritan to the Basil Mayburn type; at least I do
-just now."
-
-"What's the matter?" Gavan asked, after a little pause.
-
-"Do I show it so evidently?" she asked, with a faint smile. "Everything
-is the matter."
-
-"What, in particular, has gone wrong?"
-
-Eppie did not reply at first, and he guessed that she chose only to show
-him a lesser trouble when she said, "I've had a great quarrel with Miss
-Grey, for one thing."
-
-"The positivistic lady?"
-
-"Yes; did Maude tell you that? She really is a very first-rate
-person--and runs this place; but I lost my temper with her--a stupid
-thing to do, and not suddenly, either, which made it the less
-excusable."
-
-"Are your theories so different that you came to a clash?"
-
-"Of course they are different, though it was apparently only over a
-matter of practical administration that we fought." Eppie drew a long
-breath, opening her eyes. "I shall stay on here this spring--I usually
-go to my cousin Alicia for the season. But one can't expect things to go
-as one wants them unless one keeps one's hand on the engine most of the
-time. She has almost a right to consider me a meddling outsider, I
-suppose. I shall stay on till the end of the summer."
-
-"And smash Miss Grey?"
-
-Eppie, aware of his amusement, turned an unresentful glance upon him.
-
-"No, don't think me merely brutally dominant. I really like her. I only
-want to use her to the best advantage."
-
-At this he broke into a laugh. "Not brutally dominant, I know; but I'm
-sorry for Miss Grey."
-
-"Miss Grey can well take care of herself, I assure you."
-
-"What else has gone wrong?"
-
-Again Eppie chose something less wrong to show him. "The factory where
-some of my club-girls work has shut down half of its machinery. There
-will be a great deal of suffering. And we have pulled them above a
-flippant acceptance of state relief."
-
-"And because you have pulled them up, they are to suffer more?"
-
-"Exactly, if you choose to put it so," said Eppie.
-
-He saw that she had determined that he should not frighten her again,
-or, at all events, that he should never see it if he did frighten her;
-and he had himself determined that his mist should never again close
-round her. She should not see, even if she guessed at it pretty clearly,
-the interpretation that he put upon the afternoon's frictions and
-failures, and, on the plane of a matter-of-fact agreement as to
-practice, he drew her on to talk of her factory-girls, of the standards
-of wages, the organization of woman's labor, so that she presently said,
-"What a pleasure it is to hear you talking sense, Gavan!"
-
-"You have heard me talk a great deal of nonsense, I'm sure."
-
-"A great deal. Worse than Basil Mayburn's."
-
-"I saw too clearly to-day the sorry figure I must have cut in your eyes.
-I have learned to hold my tongue. When one can only say things that
-sound particularly silly that is an obvious duty."
-
-"I am glad to hear you use the word, my dear Gavan; use it, even though
-it means nothing to you. _Glissez mortel, n'appuyez pas_ should be your
-motto for a time; then, after some wholesome skating about on what seems
-the deceptive, glittering surface of things you will find, perhaps, that
-it isn't an abyss the ice stretches over, but a firm meadow, the ice
-melted off it and no more need of skates."
-
-He was quite willing that she should so see his case; he was easier to
-live with, no doubt, on this assumption of his curability.
-
-Eppie, still leaning back, still with folded arms, had once more closed
-her eyes, involuntarily sighing, as though under her own words the
-haunting echo of the abyss had sounded for her.
-
-She had not yet shown him what the real trouble was, and he asked her
-now, in this second lull of their talk, "What else is there besides the
-factory-girls and Miss Grey?"
-
-She was silent for a moment, then said, "You guess that there is
-something else."
-
-"I can see it."
-
-"And you are sorry?"
-
-"Sorry, dear Eppie? Of course."
-
-"It's a child, a cripple," said Eppie. "It had been ill for a long time,
-but we thought that we could save it. It died this morning. I didn't
-know. I didn't get there in time. I only found out after leaving you
-this afternoon. And it cried for me." She had turned her head from him
-as it leaned against the chair, but he saw the tears slowly rolling down
-her cheeks.
-
-"I am so sorry, dear Eppie," he said.
-
-"The most darling child, Gavan." His grave pity had brought him near and
-it gave her relief to speak. "It had such a wistful, dear little face. I
-used to spend hours with it; I never cared for any child so much. What I
-can't bear is to think that it cried for me." Her voice broke. Without a
-trace, now, of impulse or glamour, he took her hand, repeating his
-helpless phrase of sympathy. Yes, he thought, while she wept, here was
-the fatal flaw in any Tolstoian half-way house that promised peace. Love
-for others didn't help their suffering; suffering with them didn't stop
-it. Here was the brute fact of life that to all peace-mongers sternly
-said, Where there is love there is no peace.
-
-It was only after her hand had long lain in his fraternal clasp that she
-drew it away, drying her tears and trying to smile her thanks at him.
-Looking before her into the fire, and back into a retrospect of sadness,
-she said: "How often you and I meet death together, Gavan. The poor
-monkey, and Bobbie, and Elspeth even, ought to count."
-
-"You must think of me and death together," he said.
-
-He felt in a moment that the words had for her some significance that he
-had not intended. In her silence was a shock, and in her voice, when she
-spoke, a startled thing determinedly quieted.
-
-"Not more than you must think of me and it together."
-
-"You and death, dear Eppie! You are its very antithesis!"
-
-She did not look at him, and he could not see her eyes, but he knew,
-with the almost uncanny intuition that he so often had in regard to her,
-that a rising strength, a strength that threatened something, strove
-with a sudden terror.
-
-"Life conquers death," she said at last.
-
-He armed himself with lightness. "Of course, dear Eppie," he said; "of
-course it does; always and always. The poor baby dies, and--I wonder how
-many other babies are being born at this moment? Conquers death? I
-should think it did!"
-
-"I did not mean in that way," she answered. She had risen, and, looking
-at the clock, seemed to show him that their time was over. "But we won't
-discuss life and death now," she said.
-
-"You mean that it's late and that I must go?" he smiled.
-
-"Perhaps I mean only that I don't want to discuss," she smiled back.
-"Though--yes, indeed, it is late; almost seven. I have a great many
-things to do this evening, so that I must rest before dinner, and let
-you go."
-
-"I may come again?"
-
-"Whenever you will. Thank you for being so kind to-day."
-
-"Kind, dear Eppie?"
-
-"For being sorry, I mean."
-
-"Who but a brute would not have been?"
-
-"And you are not a brute."
-
-The shaded light cast soft upward shadows on her face, revealing sweet
-oddities of expression. In their shadow he could not fathom her eyes;
-but a tenderness, peaceful, benignant, even a recovered gaiety, hovered
-on her brow, her upper lip, her cheeks. It was like a reflection of
-sunlight in a deep pool, this dim smiling of gratitude and gaiety.
-
-He had a queer feeling, and a profounder one than in their former moment
-when she had repudiated his helpless emotion, that she spared him, that
-she restrained some force that might break upon this fraternal nearness.
-For an instant he wondered if he wanted to be spared, and with the
-wonder was once more the wrench at leaving her there, alone, in her
-fire-lit room. But it was her strength that carried them over all these
-dubious undercurrents, and he so relied on it that, holding her hand in
-good-by, he said, "I will come soon. I like it here."
-
-"And you are coming to Kirklands this summer. Uncle expects it. You
-mustn't disappoint him, and me. I shall be there for a month."
-
-"I'll come."
-
-"Jim Grainger will be there, too. You remember Jim. You can fight with
-him from morning till night, but you and I will fight about nothing,
-absolutely nothing, Gavan. We will--_glisser_. We will talk about Goya!
-We will be perfectly comfortable."
-
-He really believed that they might be, so happily convincing was her
-tone.
-
-"Grainger is a great chum of yours, isn't he?" he asked.
-
-"You remember, he and his brother were old playmates; Clarence has
-turned out a poor creature; he's a nobody in the church. I'm very fond
-of Jim. And I admire him tremendously. He is the conquering type, you
-know--the type that tries for the high grapes."
-
-"You won't set him at me, to mangle me for your recreation?"
-
-"Do I seem such a pitiless person?"
-
-"Oh, it would be for my good, of course."
-
-"You may come with no fear of manglings. You sha'n't be worried or
-reformed."
-
-They had spoken as if the captain were non-existent, but Gavan put the
-only qualifying touch to his assurance of seeing her at Kirklands. "I'll
-come--if I can get there by then."
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-But he did not go to her again in the slums. The final phases of his
-father's long illness kept him in Surrey, and he found, on thinking it
-over, that he was content to rest in the peace of that last seeing of
-her.
-
-It was clear to him that, were it not for that paralysis of the heart
-and will, he would have been her lover. Like a veiled, exquisite
-picture, the impossible love was with him always; he could lift the veil
-and look upon it with calmness. That he owed something of this calmness
-to Eppie he well knew. She loved him,--that, too, was evident,--but as a
-sister might love, perhaps as a mother might. He was her child, her sick
-child or brother, and he smiled over the simile, well content, and with
-an odd sense of safety in his assurance. Peace was to be their final
-word, and in the long months of a still, hot summer, this soft,
-persistent note of peace was with him and filled a lassitude greater
-than any he had known.
-
-Monotonously the days went by like darkly freighted boats on a sultry
-sea--low-lying boats, sliding with the current under sleepy sails.
-
-He watched consciousness fade from his father's body and found strange,
-sly analogies (they were like horrid nudges in the dark)--with his
-mother's death, the worthless man, the saintly woman, mingling in the
-sameness of their ending, the pitifulness, after all, of the final
-insignificance that overtook them both. And so glassy was the current,
-so sleepy the wind, that the analogy shook hardly a tremor of pain
-through him.
-
-In the hour of his father's death, a more trivial memory came--trivial,
-yet it lent a pathos, even a dignity, to the dying man. In the captain's
-eyes, turned wonderingly on him, in the automatic stretching out of his
-wasted hand for his,--Gavan held it to the end--was the reminiscence of
-the poor monkey's far-away death, the little tropical creature that had
-drooped and died at Kirklands.
-
-On the day of the funeral, Gavan sat in the library at dusk, and the
-lassitude had become so deep, partly through the breakdown of sheer
-exhaustion, that the thought of going on watching his own machinery
-work--toward that same end,--the end of the monkey, of his father, his
-mother,--was profoundly disgusting.
-
-It was a positively physical disgust, a nausea of fatigue, that had
-overtaken him as he watched the rooks, above the dark yet gilded woods,
-wheel against a sunset sky.
-
-Almost automatically, with no sense of choice or effort, he had unlocked
-a drawer of the writing-table beside him and taken out a case of
-pistols, merely wondering if the machine were going to take the final
-and only logical move of stopping itself.
-
-He was a little interested to observe, as he opened the case, that he
-felt no emotion at all. He had quite expected that at such a last moment
-life would concentrate, gather itself for a final leap on him, a final
-clinging. He had expected to have a bout with the elemental, the thing
-that some men called faith in life and some only desire of life, and,
-indeed, for a moment, his mind wandered in vague, Buddhistic fancies
-about the wheel of life to which all desire bound one, desire, the
-creator of life, so that as long as the individual felt any pulse of it
-life might always suck him back into the vortex. The fancy gave him his
-one stir of uneasiness. Suppose that the act of departure were but the
-final act of will. Could it be that such self-affirmation might tie him
-still to the wheel he strove to escape, and might the drama still go on
-for his unwilling spirit in some other dress of flesh? To see the fear
-as the final bout was to quiet it; it was a fear symptomatic of life, a
-lure to keep him going; and, besides, how meaningless such surmises, on
-their ethical basis of voluntary choice, as if in the final decision one
-would not be, as always, the puppet of the underlying will. His mind
-dropped from the thread-like interlacing of teasing metaphysical
-conjecture to a calm as quiet and deep as though he were about to turn
-on his pillow and fall asleep.
-
-Now, like the visions in a dreamy brain, the memories of the day trooped
-through the emptiness of thought. He was aware, while he watched the
-visions, of himself sitting there, to a spectator a tragic or a morbid
-figure. Morbid was of course the word that a frightened or merely stupid
-humanity would cast at him. And very morbid he was, to be sure, if life
-were desirable and to cease to desire it abnormal.
-
-He saw himself no longer in either guise. He was looking now at his
-father's coffin lowered into the earth of the little churchyard beside
-his mother's grave; the fat, genial face of the sexton, the decorous
-sadness on the little rector's features. Overhead had been the quietly
-stirring elms; sheep grazed beyond the churchyard wall and on the
-horizon was the pastoral blue of distant hills. He saw the raw, new
-grave and the heave of the older grave's green sod, the old stone, with
-its embroidery of yellow lichen and its text of eternal faith.
-
-And suddenly the thought of that heave of sod, that headstone, what it
-stood for in his life, the tragic memory, the love, the agony,--all
-sinking into mere dust, into the same dust as the father whom he had
-hated,--struck with such unendurable anguish upon him that, as if under
-heavy churchyard sod a long-dead heart strove up in a tormented
-resurrection, life rushed appallingly upon him and, involuntarily, as a
-drowning man's hand seizes a spar and clings, his hand closed on the
-pistol under it. Leave it, leave it,--this dream where such
-resurrections were possible.
-
-He had lifted the pistol, pausing for a moment in an uncertainty as to
-whether head or heart were the surer exit, when a quiet step at the
-door arrested him.
-
-"Shall I bring the lamps, sir?" asked Howson's quiet voice.
-
-Gavan could but admire his own deftness in tossing a newspaper over the
-pistol. He found himself perfectly prepared to keep up the last
-appearances. He said that he didn't want the lamps yet and that Howson
-could leave the curtains undrawn. "It's sultry this evening," he added.
-
-"It is, sir; I expect we'll have thunder in the night," said Howson,
-whose voice partook of the day's decorous gloom. He had brought in the
-evening mail and laid the letters and newspapers beside Gavan, slightly
-pushing aside the covered pistol to make room for them, an action that
-Gavan observed with some intentness. But Howson saw nothing.
-
-Left alone again, Gavan, not moving in his chair, glanced at the letters
-and papers neatly piled beside his elbow.
-
-After the rending agony of that moment of hideous realization, when, in
-every fiber, he had felt his own woeful humanity, an odd sleepiness
-almost overcame him.
-
-He felt much more like going to sleep than killing himself, and,
-yawning, stretching, he shivered a little from sheer fatigue.
-
-The edge of the newspaper that covered the pistol was weighted down by
-the pile of papers, and in putting out his hand for it, automatically,
-he pushed the letters aside, then, yawning again, picked them up instead
-of the pistol. He glanced over the envelops, not opening them,--the
-last hand at cards, that could hold no trumps for him. It was with as
-mechanical an interest as that of the condemned criminal who, on the way
-to the scaffold, turns his head to look at some unfamiliar sight. But at
-the last letter he paused. The post-mark was Scotch; the writing was
-Eppie's.
-
-He might have considered at that moment that the shock he felt was a
-warning that life was by no means done with him, and that his way of
-safety lay in swift retreat.
-
-But after the wrench of agony and the succeeding sliding languor, he did
-not consider anything. It was like a purely physical sensation, what he
-felt, as he held the letter and looked at Eppie's writing. Soft,
-recurrent thrills went through him, as though a living, vibrating thing
-were in his hands. Eppie; Kirklands; the heather under a summer sky. Was
-it desire, or a will-less drifting with a new current that the new
-vision brought? He could not have told.
-
-He opened the letter and read Eppie's matter-of-fact yet delicate
-sympathy.
-
-He must be worn out. She begged him to remember his promise and to come
-to them at once.
-
-At once, thought Gavan. It must be that, indeed, or not at all. He
-glanced at the clock. He could really go at once. He could catch the
-London train, the night express for Scotland, and he could be at
-Kirklands at noon next day. He rose and rang the bell, looking out at
-the darker pink of the sky, where the rooks no longer wheeled, until
-Howson appeared.
-
-"I'm going to Scotland to-night, at once." He found himself repeating
-the summons of the letter. "Pack up my things. Order the trap."
-
-Howson showed no surprise. A flight from the house of death was only
-natural.
-
-Gavan, when he was gone, went to the table and closed the box of pistols
-with a short, decisive snap--a decision in sharp contrast to the mist in
-which his mind was steeped.
-
-The peace the pistols promised, the peace of the northern sky and the
-heather: why did he choose the latter? But then he did not choose.
-Something had chosen for him. Something had called him back. Was it that
-he was too weary to resist? or did all his strength consist in yielding?
-He could not have told. Let the play go on. Its next act would be sweet
-to watch. Of that he was sure.
-
-
-
-
-PART III
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-The moor was like an amethyst under a radiant August sky, and the air,
-with its harmony of wind and sunlight, was like music.
-
-Eppie walked beside him and Peter trotted before. The forms were
-changed, but it might almost have been little Eppie, the boy Gavan, and
-Robbie himself who went together through the heather. The form was
-changed, but the sense of saneness so strong that it would have seemed
-perfectly natural to pass an arm about a child Eppie's neck and to talk
-of the morning's reading in the Odyssey.
-
-Never had the feeling of reality been so vague or the dream sense been
-so beautiful. His instinctive choice of this peace, instead of the
-other, had been altogether justified. It was all like a delightful game
-they had agreed to play, and the only rule of the game was to take each
-other's illusions for granted and, in so doing, to put them altogether
-aside.
-
-It was as if they went in a dream that tallied while, outside their
-dream, the sad life of waking slept. It was all limpid, all effortless,
-all clear sunlight and clear wind: limpid, like a happy dream, yet
-deliciously muddled too, as a happy dream is often muddled, with its
-mazed consciousness that, since it is a dream, ordinary impossibilities
-may become quite possible, that one only has to direct a little the
-turnings of the fairy-tale to have them lead one where one will, and yet
-that to all strange happenings there hovers a background of
-contradiction that makes them the more of an enchanted perplexity.
-
-In the old white house the general and Miss Barbara would soon be
-expecting them back to tea, both older, both vaguer, both, to Gavan's
-appreciation, more and more the tapestried figures, the background to
-the young life that still moved, felt, thought in the foreground until
-it, too, should sink and fade into a tapestry for other dramas, other
-fairy-tales.
-
-The general retold his favorite anecdotes with shorter intervals between
-the tellings; cared more openly, with an innocent greediness, about the
-exactitudes of his diet; was content to sit idly with an unremembering,
-indifferent benignancy of gaze. All the sturdier significances of life
-were fast slipping from him, all the old martial activities; it was like
-seeing the undressing of a child, the laying aside of the toy trumpet
-and the soldier's kilt preparatory to bed. Miss Barbara was sweeter than
-ever--a sweetness even less touched with variations than last year. And
-she was sillier, poor old darling; her laugh had in it at moments the
-tinkling, feeble foolishness of age.
-
-Gavan saw it all imperturbably--how, in boyhood, the apprehension of it
-would have cut into him!--and it all seemed really very good--as the
-furniture to a fairy-tale; the sweet, dim, silly tapestry was part of
-the peace. How Eppie saw it he didn't know; he didn't care; and she
-seemed willing not to care, either, about what he saw or thought. Eppie
-had for him in their fairy-tale all the unexacting loveliness of summer
-nature, healing, sunny, smiling. He had been really ill, he knew that
-now, and that the peace was in part the languor of convalescence, and,
-for the sake of his recovery, she seemed to have become a part of
-nature, to ask no questions and demand no dues.
-
-To have her so near, so tender, so untroubling, was like holding in his
-hands a soft, contented wild bird. He could, he thought, have held it
-against his heart, and the heart would not have throbbed the faster.
-
-There was nothing in her now of the young Valkyrie of mists and frosts,
-shaking spears and facing tragedy with stern eyes. She threatened
-nothing. She saw no tragedy. It was all again as if, in a bigger, more
-beautiful way, she gave him milk to drink from a silver cup. Together
-they drank, no potion, no enchanted, perilous potion, but, from the cup
-of innocent summer days, the long, sweet dream of an Eternal Now.
-
-To-day, for the first time, the hint of a cloud had crept into the sky.
-
-"And to-morrow, Eppie, ends our tete-a-tete," he said. "Or will Grainger
-make as little of a third as the general and Miss Barbara?"
-
-"He sha'n't spoil things, if that's what you mean," said Eppie.
-
-She wore a white dress and a white hat wreathed with green; the emerald
-drops trembled in the shadow of her hair. She made him think of some
-wandering princess in an Irish legend, with the white and green and the
-tranquil shining of her eyes.
-
-"Not our things, perhaps; but can't he interfere with them? He will want
-to talk with you about all the things we go on so happily without
-talking of."
-
-"I'll talk to him and go on happily with you."
-
-It was almost on his lips to ask her if she could marry Grainger and
-still go on happily, like this, with him, Gavan. That it should have
-seemed possible to ask it showed how far into fairy-land they had
-wandered; but it was one of the turnings that one didn't choose to take;
-one was warned in one's sleep of lurking dangers on that road. It might
-lead one straight out of fairy-land, straight into uncomfortable waking.
-
-"How happily we do go on, Eppie," was what he did choose to say. "More
-happily than ever before. What a contrast this--to East London."
-
-She glanced at him. "And to Surrey."
-
-"And to Surrey," he accepted.
-
-"Surrey was worse than East London," she said.
-
-"I didn't know how much of a strain it had been until I got away from
-it."
-
-"One saw it all in your face."
-
-"'One' meaning a clever Eppie, I suppose. But, yes, I had a bad moment
-there."
-
-The memory of that heave of sod had no place in fairy-land, even less
-place than the forecast of an Eppie married to Jim Grainger, and he
-didn't let his thought dwell on it even when he owned to the bad
-moment, and he was thinking, really with amusement over her
-unconsciousness, of the two means of escape from it that he had found to
-his hand,--the pistol and her letter,--when she took up his words with a
-quiet, "Yes, I knew you had."
-
-"Knew that I had had a strain, you mean?"
-
-"No, had a bad moment," she answered.
-
-"You saw it in my face?"
-
-"No. I knew. Before I saw you."
-
-He smiled at her. "You have a clairvoyant streak in your Scotch blood?"
-
-She smiled back. "Probably. I knew, you see."
-
-Her assurance, with its calm over what it knew, really puzzled him.
-
-"Well, what did you know?"
-
-She had kept on quietly smiling while she looked at him, and, though she
-now became grave, it was not as if for pain but for thankfulness. "It
-was in the evening, the day after I wrote to you, the day your father
-was buried. I went to my room to dress for dinner, my room next yours,
-you know. And I was looking out,--at the pine-tree, the summer-house
-where we played, and, in especial, I remember, at the white roses that I
-could smell in the evening so distinctly,--when I knew, or saw, I don't
-know which, that you were in great suffering. It was most of all as if I
-were in you, feeling it myself, rather than seeing or knowing. Then,"
-her voice went on in its unshaken quiet, "I did seem to see--a grave;
-not your father's grave. You were seeing it, too,--a green grave. And
-then I came back into myself and knew. You were in some way,--going. I
-stood there and looked at the roses and seemed only to wait intensely,
-to watch intensely. And after that came a great calm, and I knew that
-you were not going."
-
-She quietly looked at him again,--her eyes had not been on him while she
-spoke,--and, though he had paled a little, he looked as quietly back.
-
-He found himself accepting, almost as a matter of course, this deep,
-subconscious bond between them.
-
-But in another moment, another realization came. He took her hand and
-raised it to his lips.
-
-"I always make you suffer."
-
-"No," she answered, though she, now, was a little pale, "I didn't
-suffer. I was beyond, above all that. Whatever happened, we were really
-safe. That was another thing I knew."
-
-He relinquished the kissed hand. "Dear Eppie, dear, dear Eppie, I am
-glad that this happened."
-
-It had been, perhaps, to keep the dream safely around them that she had
-shown him only the calm; for now she asked, and he felt the echo of that
-suffering--that shared suffering--in it, "You had, then, chosen to go?"
-
-Somehow he knew that they were safe in the littler sense, that she would
-keep the dream unawakened, even if they spoke of the outside life.
-"Yes," he said, "you saw what was happening to me, Eppie. I had chosen
-to go. But your letter came, and, instead, I chose to come to you."
-
-She asked no further question, walking beside him with all her
-tranquillity.
-
-But, to her, it was not in a second childhood, not in a fairy-tale, that
-they went. She was tranquil, for him; a child, for him; healing,
-unexacting nature, for him. But she knew she had not needed his
-admission to know it, that it was life and death that went together.
-
-Sometimes, as they walked, the whole glory of the day melted into a
-phantasmagoria, unreal, specious, beside the intense reality of their
-unspoken thoughts, his thoughts and hers; those thoughts that left them
-only this little strip of fairy-land where they could meet in peace.
-Thoughts only, not dislikes, not indifferences, sundered them. Their
-natures, through all nature's gamut, chimed; they looked upon each
-other--when in fairy-land--with eyes of love. But above this accord was
-a region where her human breath froze in an icy airlessness, where her
-human flesh shattered itself against ghastly precipices. To see those
-thoughts of Gavan's was like having the lunar landscape suddenly glare
-at one through a telescope. His thoughts and hers were as real as life
-and death; they alone were real; only--and this was why, under its
-burden, Eppie's heart throbbed more deeply, more strongly,--only, life
-conquered death. No, more still,--for so the strange evening vision had
-borne its speechless, sightless witness,--life had already conquered
-death. She had not needed him to tell her that, either.
-
-And these days were life; not the dream he thought them, not the
-fairy-tale, but balmy dawn stealing in, fresh, revivifying, upon his
-long, arctic night; the flush of spring over the lunar landscape. So
-she saw it with her eyes of faith.
-
-The mother was strong in her. She could bide her time. She could see
-death near him and, so that he should not see her fear, smile at him.
-She could play games with him, and wait.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Jim Grainger arrived that evening, and Gavan was able to observe, at the
-closest sort of quarters, his quondam rival.
-
-His condition was so obvious that its very indifference to observation
-took everybody into its confidence. Nobody counted with Mr. Grainger
-except his cousin, and since he held open before her eyes--with angry
-constancy, gloomy patience--the page of his devotion, the rest of the
-company were almost forced to read with her. One couldn't see Mr.
-Grainger without seeing that page.
-
-He held it open, but the period of construing had evidently passed. All
-that there was to understand she understood long since, so that he was,
-for the most part, silent.
-
-In Eppie's presence he would wander aimlessly about, look with an oddly
-irate, unseeing eye at books or pictures, and fling himself into deep
-chairs, where he sat, his arms folded in a sort of clutch, his head bent
-forward, gazing at her with an air of dogged, somber resolve.
-
-He was not by nature so taciturn. It was amusing to see the vehemence of
-reaction that would overtake him in the smoking-room, where his
-volubility became almost as overbearing and oppressive as his silences.
-
-He was a man at once impatient and self-controlled. His face was all
-made up of short, resolute lines. His nose, chopped off at the tip; his
-lips, curled yet compressed; the energetic modeling of his brows with
-their muscular protuberances; the clefted chin; the crest of chestnut
-hair,--all expressed a wilful abruptness, an arrested force, the more
-vehement for its repression.
-
-And at present his appearance accurately expressed him as a determined
-but exasperated lover.
-
-"Of course," Miss Barbara said, in whispered confidence to Gavan,
-mingled pity and reprobation in her voice, "as her cousin he comes when
-he wishes to do so. But she has refused him twice already--he told me so
-himself; and, simply, he will not accept it. He only spoke of it once,
-and it was quite distressing. It really grieved me to hear him. He said
-that he would hang on till one or the other of them was dead."
-Grainger's words in Miss Barbara's voice were the more pathetic for
-their incongruity.
-
-"And you don't think she will have him,--if he does hang on?" Gavan
-asked.
-
-Miss Barbara glanced at him with a soft, scared look, as though his
-easy, colloquial question had turned a tawdry light on some tender,
-twilight dreaming of her own.
-
-He had wondered, anew of late, what Miss Barbara did think about him and
-Eppie, and what she had thought he now saw in her eyes, that showed
-their little shock, as at some rather graceless piece of pretence. He
-was quite willing that she should think him pretending, and quite
-willing that she should place him in Grainger's hopeless category, if
-future events would be most easily so interpreted for her; so that he
-remained silent, as if over his relief, when she assured him, "Oh, I am
-sure not. Eppie does not change her mind."
-
-Grainger's presence, for all its ineffectuality, thus witnessed to by
-Miss Barbara, was as menacing to peace and sunshine as a huge
-thunder-cloud that suddenly heaves itself up from the horizon and hangs
-over a darkened landscape. But Eppie ignored the thunder-cloud; and,
-hanging over fairy-land, it became as merely decorative as an enchanted
-giant tethered at a safe distance and almost amusing in his huge
-helplessness.
-
-Eppie continued to give most of her time to Gavan, coloring her manner
-with something of a hospital nurse's air of devotion to an obvious duty,
-and leaving Grainger largely to the general's care while she and Gavan
-sat reading for hours in the shade of the birch-woods.
-
-Grainger often came upon them so; Eppie in her white dress, her hat cast
-aside, a book open upon her knees, and Gavan, in his white flannels,
-lying beside her, frail and emaciated, not looking at her,--Grainger
-seldom saw him look at her,--but down at the heather that he softly
-pulled and wrenched at. They were as beautiful, seen thus together, as
-any fairy-tale couple; flakes of gold wavering over their whiteness,
-the golden day all about their illumined shade, and rivulets from the
-sea of purple that surrounded them running in among the birches, making
-purple pools and eddies.
-
-Very beautiful, very strange, very pathetic, with all their serenity;
-even the unimaginative Grainger so felt them when, emerging from the
-gold and purple, he would pause before them, swinging his stick and
-eying them oddly, like people in a fairy-tale upon whom some strange
-enchantment rested. One might imagine--but Grainger's imagination never
-took him so far--that they would always sit there among the birches,
-spellbound in their peace, their smiling, magic peace.
-
-"Come and listen to Faust, Jim. We are polishing up our German," Eppie
-would cheerfully suggest; but Grainger, remarking that he had none to
-polish, would pass on, carrying the memory of Gavan's impassive, upward
-glance at him and the meaning in Eppie's eyes--eyes in which, yes, he
-was sure of it, and it was there he felt the pathos, some consciousness
-seemed at once to hide from and to challenge him.
-
-"Is he ill, your young Palairet?" he asked her one day, when they were
-alone together in the library. His rare references to his own emotions
-made the old, cousinly intimacy a frequent meeting-ground.
-
-He noticed that a faint color drifted into Eppie's cheek when he named
-Gavan.
-
-"He is as old as you are, Jim," she remarked.
-
-"He looks like a person to be taken care of, all the same."
-
-"He has been ill. He took care of some one else, as it happens. He
-nursed his father for months."
-
-"Um," Grainger gave an inarticulate grunt, "just about what he's fit
-for, isn't it? to help dying people out of the world."
-
-Eppie received this in silence, and he went on: "He looks rather like a
-priest, or a poet--something decorative and useless."
-
-"Would you call Buddha decorative and useless?"
-
-"After all, Palairet isn't a Hindoo. One expects something more normal
-from a white man."
-
-His odd penetration was hurting her, but she laughed at his complacent
-Anglo-Saxondom. "If you want a white man, what do you make of the one
-who wrote the Imitation?"
-
-"Make of him? Nothing. Nor any one else, I fancy. What does your young
-Palairet do?" Grainger brought the subject firmly back from her
-digression.
-
-Eppie was sitting in the window-seat, and, leaning her head back, framed
-in an arabesque of creepers, she now owned, after a little pause, and as
-if with a weariness of evasion she was willing to let him see as she
-did: "Nothing, really."
-
-"Does he care about anything?" Grainger placed himself opposite her,
-folding his arms with an air of determined inquiry.
-
-And again Eppie owned, "He believes in nothing, so how can he care?"
-
-"Believes in nothing? What do you mean by that?"
-
-"Well," with a real sense of amusement over the inner icy weight, she
-was ready to put it in its crudest, most inclusive terms, "he doesn't
-believe in immortality."
-
-Grainger stared, taken aback by the ingenuous avowal.
-
-"Immortality? No more do I," he retorted.
-
-"Oh, yes, you do," said Eppie, looking not at him but out at the summer
-sky. "You believe in life and so you do believe in immortality, even
-though you don't know that you do. You are, like most energetic people,
-too much preoccupied with living to know what your life means, that's
-all."
-
-"My dear child,"--Grainger was fond of this form of appellation, an
-outlet for the pent-up forces of his baffled tenderness,--"any one who
-is alive finds life worth while without a Paradise to complete it, and
-any one who isn't a coward doesn't turn from it because it's also
-unhappy."
-
-"If you think that Gavan does that you mistake the very essence of his
-skepticism, or, if you like to call it so, of his faith. It's not
-because he finds it unhappy that he turns from it, but because he finds
-it meaningless."
-
-"Meaningless?--a place where one can work, achieve, love, suffer?"
-
-Grainger jerked out the words from an underlying growl of protest.
-
-Eppie now looked from the sky to him, her unconscious ally. "Dear old
-Jim, I like to hear you. You've got it, all. Every word you say implies
-immortality. It's all a question of being conscious of one's real needs
-and then of trusting them."
-
-"Life, here, now, could satisfy my needs," he said.
-
-She kept her eyes on his, at this, for a grave moment, letting it have
-its full stress as she took it up with, "Could it? With death at the end
-of it?" and without waiting for his answer she passed from the personal
-moment. "You said that life was worth while, and you meant, I suppose,
-that it was worth while because we were capable of making it good rather
-than evil."
-
-"Well, of course," said Grainger.
-
-"And a real choice between good and evil is only possible to a real
-identity, you'll own?"
-
-"If you are going to talk metaphysics I'll cut and run, I warn you.
-Socratic methods of tripping one up always infuriate me."
-
-"I'm only trying to talk common-sense."
-
-"Well, go on. I agree to what you say of a real identity. We've that, of
-course."
-
-"Well, then, can an identity destroyed at death by the destruction of
-the body be called real? It can't, Jim. It's either only a result of the
-body, a merely materialistic phenomenon, or else it is a transient,
-unreal aspect of some supremely real World-Self and its good and its
-evil just as fated by that Self's way of thinking it as the color of its
-hair and eyes is fated by nature. And if that were so the sense of
-freedom, of identity, that gives us our only sanction for goodness,
-truth, and worth, would be a mere illusion."
-
-Her earnestness, as she worked it out for him, held his eyes more than
-her words his thoughts. He was observing her with such a softening of
-expression as rarely showed itself on his virile countenance.
-
-"You've thought it all out, haven't you?" he said.
-
-"I've tried to. Knowing Gavan has made me. It has converted me," she
-smiled.
-
-"So that's your conversion."
-
-"Oh, more than that. I know that I'm _in_ life; _for_ it, and that's
-more than all such reasoning."
-
-"And you believe that you'll go on forever as you are now," he said. His
-eyes dwelt on her: "Young and beautiful."
-
-"_Forever_; what queer words we must use to try to express it. We are in
-Forever now. It's just that one casts in one's lot, open-eyed, with
-life."
-
-"And has Palairet cast in his with death?"
-
-Again the change of color was in her cheek, but it was to pallor now.
-
-"He thinks so."
-
-"And he doesn't frighten you?"
-
-She armed herself to smile over Gavan's old question. "Why should he?"
-
-Grainger left her for some moments of aimless, silent wandering. He came
-back and paused again before her. He did not answer her.
-
-"I throw in my lot with life, too, Eppie," he said, "and I ask no more
-of it than the here and the now of our human affair. But that I do ask
-with all my might, and if might can give it to me, I'll get it."
-
-She looked up at him gravely, without challenge, with a sympathy too
-deep for pity.
-
-"At all events," he added slowly, "at all events, in so far, our lots
-are cast together."
-
-"Yes," she assented.
-
-His eyes studied hers; his keen mind questioned itself: Could a woman
-look so steadily, with such a clear, untroubled sympathy, upon such a
-love as his, were there no great emotion within her, controlling her,
-absorbing her, making her indifferent to all lesser appeals? Had this
-negative, this aimless, this ambiguous man, captured, without any fight
-for it, her strong, her reckless heart? So he questioned, while Eppie
-still answered his gaze with eyes that showed him nothing but their
-grave, deep friendship.
-
-"So it's a contest between life and death?" he said at last.
-
-"Between me and Gavan you mean?"
-
-The shield of their personal question had dropped from her again, and
-the quick flush was in her cheek.
-
-"Oh, I come into it, too," he ventured.
-
-"You don't, in any way, depend on it, Jim."
-
-"So you say." His eyes still mercilessly perused her. "That remains to
-be seen. If you lose, perhaps I shall come into it."
-
-Eppie found no answer.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-It was night, and Eppie, Gavan, and Jim Grainger were on the lawn before
-the house waiting for a display of fireworks.
-
-Grainger was feeling sore for his own shutting-out from the happy
-child-world of games and confidences that the other two inhabited, for
-it had been to Gavan that she had spoken of her love for fireworks and
-he who had at once sent for them.
-
-Grainger was sore and his heart heavy, and not only it seemed to him, on
-his own account. Since the encounter in the library there had been a
-veil between him and Eppie, and through it he seemed to see her face as
-waiting the oncoming of some unknown fate. Grainger could not feel that
-fate, whatever the form it took, as a happy one.
-
-She stood between them now, in her white dress, wrapped around with a
-long, white Chinese shawl, and the light from the open window behind
-them fell upon her hair, her neck, her shoulders, and the shawl's soft,
-thick embroideries that were like frozen milk.
-
-Gavan and Grainger leaned against the deep creepers of the old walls,
-Gavan's cigarette a steady little point of light, the glow of
-Grainger's pipe, as he puffed, coming and going in sharp pulses of
-color.
-
-Aunt Barbara sat within at the open window, and beyond the gates, at the
-edge of the moor, the general and the gardener, dark figures fitfully
-revealed by the light of lanterns, superintended the preparations.
-
-The moment was like that in which one watches a poised orchestra, in
-which one waits, tense and expectant, for the fall of the conductor's
-baton and for the first, sweeping note.
-
-It seemed to break upon the stillness, sound made visible, when the
-herald rocket soared up from the dark earth, up to the sky of stars.
-
-Bizarre, exquisite, glorious, it caught one's breath with the swiftness,
-the strength, the shining, of its long, exultant flight; its languor of
-attainment; its curve and droop; the soft shock of its blossoming into
-an unearthly metamorphosis of splendor far and high on the zenith.
-
-The note was struck and after it the symphony followed.
-
-Like a ravished Ganymede, the sense of sight soared amazed among
-dazzling ecstasies of light and movement.
-
-Thin ribbons of fire streaked the sky; radiant sheaves showered drops of
-multitudinous gold; fierce constellations of color whirled themselves to
-stillness on the night's solemn permanence; a rain of stars drifted
-wonderfully, with the softness of falling snow, down gulfs of space. And
-then again the rockets, strong, suave, swift, and their blossoming
-lassitude.
-
-Eppie gazed, silent and motionless, her uplifted profile like a child's
-in its astonished joy. Once or twice she looked round at Gavan and at
-Grainger,--always first at Gavan,--smiling, and speechless with delight.
-Her folded arms had dropped to her sides and the shawl fell straightly
-from her shoulders. She made one think of some young knight, transfixed
-before a heavenly vision, a benediction of revealed beauty. The trivial
-occasion lent itself to splendid analogies. The strange light from above
-bathed her from head to foot in soft, intermittent, heavenly color.
-
-Suddenly, in darkness, Grainger seized her hand. She had hardly felt the
-pressure, short, sharp with all the exasperation of his worship, before
-it was gone.
-
-She did not turn to look at him. More than the unjustifiableness of the
-action, its unexpectedness, she felt a pain, a perplexity, as for
-something mocking, incongruous. And as if in instinctive seeking she
-turned her eyes on Gavan and found that he was looking at her.
-
-Was it, then, her eyes, seeking and perplexed, that compelled him; was
-it his own enfranchised impulse; was it only a continuation of
-fairy-land fitness, the child instinct of sharing in a unison of touch a
-mutual wonder? In the fringes of her shawl his hand sought and found her
-hand. Another rose of joy had expanded on the sky; and they stood so,
-hand in hand, looking up.
-
-Eppie looked up steadily; but now the outer vision was but a dim symbol,
-a reflection, vaguely seen, of the inner vision that, in a miracle of
-accomplished growth, broke upon her. She did not think or know. Her
-heart seemed to dilate, to breathe itself away in long throbs, that
-worshiped, that trembled, that prayed. Her strength was turned to
-weakness and her weakness rose to strength, and, as she looked up at the
-sky, the stars, the dream-like constellations that bloomed and drifted
-away, universes made and unmade on the void, her mind, her heart, her
-spirit were all one prayer and its strength and its humility were one.
-
-She had known that she loved him, but not till now that she loved him
-with a depth that passed beyond knowledge; she had known that he loved
-her, but not till now had she felt that all that lived in him was hers
-forever. His voice, his eyes, might hide, might deny, but the seeking,
-instinctive hand confessed, dumbly, to all.
-
-She had drawn him to her by her will; she had held him back from death
-by her love. His beloved hand clasped hers; she would never let him go.
-
-Looking up at the night, the stars, holding his hand, she gave herself
-to the new life, to all that it might mean of woe and tragedy. Let it
-lead her where it would, she was beside him forever.
-
-Yet, though her spirit held the sky, the stars, her heart, suffocated
-and appalled with love, seemed to lie at his feet, and the inarticulate
-prayer, running through all, said only, over and over, "O God, God."
-
-Meanwhile Grainger leaned against the wall, puffing doggedly at his
-pipe, unrepentant and unsatisfied.
-
-"There, that is the end," Miss Barbara sighed. "How very, very pretty.
-But they have made me quite sleepy."
-
-A few fumes still smoldered at the edge of the moor, and the night, like
-an obscure ocean, was engulfing the lights, the movements; after the
-radiance the darkness was thick, oppressive.
-
-Eppie knew, as Gavan released her hand, that his eyes again sought hers,
-but she would not look at him. What could they say, here and now?
-
-He went on into the house, and Grainger, lingering outside, detained her
-on the steps. "You forgive me?" he said.
-
-She had almost forgotten for what, but fixing her eyes and thoughts upon
-him, she said, "Yes, Jim, of course."
-
-"I couldn't stand it,--you were so lovely," said Grainger; "I didn't
-know that I was such a sentimental brute. But I had no business not to
-stand it. It's my business in life to stand it."
-
-"I am so sorry, Jim," Eppie murmured. "You know, I can do
-nothing--except forgive you."
-
-"I am not ungrateful. I know how good it is of you to put up with me. Do
-I bother you too much, Eppie?"
-
-"No, Jim dear; you don't."
-
-He stood aside for her to enter the house. He saw that, with all her
-effort to be kind, her thought passed from him. Pausing to knock the
-ashes of his pipe against the wall, he softly murmured, "Damn," before
-following her into the house.
-
-Eppie, in her own room, put out her candle and went to the window.
-
-Leaning out, she could see the soft maze of tree-tops emerge from the
-dim abyss beneath. The boughs of the pine-tree made the starlit sky pale
-with their blackness.
-
-This was the window where she and Gavan had stood on the morning of
-Robbie's death. Here Gavan had shuddered, sobbing, in her arms. He had
-suffered, he had been able to love and suffer then.
-
-The long past went before her, this purpose in it all, her purpose; in
-all the young, unconscious beginnings, in the reunion, in her growing
-consciousness of something to oppose, to conquer, to save. And to-night
-had consecrated her to that sacred trust. What lived in him was hers.
-But could she keep him in life? The memory, a dark shadow, of the deep
-indifference that she had seen in his contemplative eyes went with a
-chill over her.
-
-Leaning out, she conquered her own deep fear, looking up at the stars
-and still praying, "O God, God."
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-She could not read his face next day. It showed a change, but the
-significance of the change was hidden from her. He knew that she knew;
-was that it? or did he think that they could still pretend at the
-unchanged fairy-tale where one clasped hands simply, like children? Or
-did he trust her to spare them both, now that she knew?
-
-When they were alone, this, more than all, the pale, jaded face seemed
-to tell her, it would be able to hide nothing; but its strength was in
-evasion; he would not be alone with her.
-
-All the morning he spent with the general and in the afternoon he went
-away, a book under his arm, down to the burn.
-
-From the library window Eppie watched him go. She could see for a long
-time the flicker of his white figure among the distant birches.
-
-She sat in a low chair in the deep embrasure of the window-seat, silent
-and motionless. She felt, after the night's revelation, an apathy,
-mental and physical; a willing pause; a lull of the spirit, that rested
-in its accepted fate, should it be joyful or tragic. The very fact of
-such acceptance partook of both tragedy and joy.
-
-Grainger was with her, walking, as usual, up and down the room, glancing
-at her as he passed and repassed.
-
-He felt, all about him, within and without, the pressure of some crisis;
-and his ignorance, his intuitions, struggling within him, made a
-consciousness, oddly mingled, of sharp pain, deep dread, and,
-superficially, a suffocating irritation, continually rising and
-continually repressed.
-
-Eppie's aspect intensified the mingled consciousness. Her figure, in its
-thin dress of black and white, showed lassitude. With her head thrown
-back against the chair, her hands, long, white, inert, lying along the
-chair-arms, she looked out from the cool shadow of the room at the day,
-fierce in its blue and gold, its sunlight and its wind.
-
-He had seen Gavan pass, so strangely alone; he had watched her watching
-of him. She was languid; but she was patient, she was strong. That was
-part of the suffocation, that such strength, such patience, should be
-devoted to ends so undeserving. More than by mere jealousy, though that
-seethed in him, he was oppressed by the bitter sense of waste, of the
-futile spending of noble capacity; for, more than all, she was piteous;
-there came the part of pain and dread, the presage of doom that weighed
-on his heart.
-
-In her still figure, her steady look out at the empty, splendid vault of
-blue, the monotonous purple stretches of the moor, his unesthetic,
-accurate mind felt, with the sharp intuition that carried him so much
-further than any conscious appreciation, a symbol of the human soul
-contemplating the ominous enigma of its destiny. She made him dimly
-think of some old picture he had seen, a saint, courageous, calm,
-enraptured, in the luminous pause before a dark, accepted martyrdom. He
-did violence to the simile, shaking it off vehemently, with a clutch at
-the sane impatience of silly fancies.
-
-Stopping abruptly before her, though hardly knowing for what end, he
-found himself saying, and the decisive words, as he heard, rather than
-thought them, had indeed the effect of shattering foolish visions, "I
-shall go to-day, Eppie."
-
-In seeing her startled, pained, expostulatory, he saw her again, very
-sanely, as an unfortunate woman bent on doing for herself and unable to
-hide her situation from his keen-sightedness. For really he didn't know
-whether a hopeless love-affair or a hopeless marriage would the more
-completely "do" for her.
-
-"My dear Jim, why to-day?" Eppie asked in a tone of kindest protest.
-
-He was glad to have drawn her down to the solid ground of his own
-grievances. She hurt him less there.
-
-"Why not to-day?" he retorted.
-
-She replied that, if for no better reason, the weather was too lovely
-not to be enjoyed by them all together.
-
-"Thanks, but I don't care about the weather. Nor do I care," Grainger
-went on, taking the sorry comfort that his own mere ill-temper afforded
-him, "to watch other people's enjoyment--of more than weather. I'm not
-made of such selfless stuff as that."
-
-She understood, of course; perhaps she had all along understood what he
-was feeling more clearly than clumsy he had, and she met all that was
-beneath the mannerless words with her air of sad kindliness.
-
-"You can share it, Jim."
-
-"No, I can't share it. I share nothing--except the weather."
-
-She murmured, as she had the night before, that she was sorry, adding
-that she must have failed; but he interrupted her with: "It's not that.
-You are all right. You give me all you can. It's merely that you can't
-give me anything I want. I came to see if there was any chance for me,
-and all I do see is that I may as well be off. I do myself no good by
-staying on,--harm, rather; you may begin to resent my sulkiness and my
-boorish relapses from even rudimentary good manners."
-
-"I have resented nothing, Jim. I can't imagine ever resenting
-anything--from you."
-
-"Ah, that's just the worst of it," Grainger muttered.
-
-"For your own sake," Eppie went on, "you are perhaps wise to go. I own
-that I can't see what happiness you can find in being with me, while you
-feel as you do."
-
-"While I feel as I do," he repeated, not ironically, but as if weighing
-the words in a sort of wonder. "That 'while' is funny, Eppie. You are
-right. I don't find happiness, and I came to seek it." The "while" had
-cut deep. He paused, then added, eying her, "So I'll go, and leave
-Palairet to find the happiness."
-
-Eppie was silent. Paler than before, her eyes dropped, she seemed to
-accept with a helpless magnanimity whatever he might choose to say. "You
-find me impertinent,"--Grainger, standing before her, clutched his arms
-across his chest and put his own thought of himself into the
-words,--"brutal."
-
-Without looking up at him she answered: "I am so fond of you, so near
-you, that I suppose I give you the right."
-
-The patient words, so unlike Eppie in their patience, the downcast eyes,
-were a torch to his exasperation.
-
-"I can take it, then--the right?" he said. "I am near enough to say the
-truth and to ask it, Eppie?"
-
-She rose and walked away from him.
-
-With the sense of hot pursuit that sprang up in him he felt himself as
-ruthless as a boy, pushing through the thickets of reticence, through
-the very supplications of generosity, to the nest of her secret. It was
-not joy he sought, but his own pain, and to see it clearly, finally. He
-must see it. And when Eppie, her back to him, leaning her arm on the
-mantel and looking down into the empty cavern of the great
-chimney-place, answered, accepting all his implications, "Gavan hasn't
-found any happiness," he said, "He finds all that he asks for."
-
-It was as if he had wrenched away the last bough from the nest, and the
-words gave him, with their breathless determination, an ugly feeling of
-cruel, breaking malignity.
-
-Eppie's face was still turned from him so that he could not see how she
-bore the rifling, but in the same dulled and gentle voice she answered,
-"He doesn't ask what you do."
-
-At that Grainger's deepest resentment broke out.
-
-"Doesn't ask your love? No, I suppose not. The man's a mollusk,--a
-wretched, diseased creature."
-
-He had struck at last a flash from her persistent gentleness. She faced
-him, and he saw that she tried to smile over deep anger.
-
-"You say that because Gavan is not in love with me? It is a sick fancy
-that sees every man not in love with me as sick too."
-
-She had taken up a weapon at last, she really challenged him; and he
-felt, full on that quivering nerve of dread, that she defended at once
-herself and the man she loved from her own and from his unveiling.
-
-It made a sort of rage rise in him.
-
-"A man who cares for you,--a man who depends on you,--as he does,--a man
-whom you care for,--so much,--is a bloodless vampire if he
-doesn't--respond."
-
-When he had driven the knife in like that, straight up to the hilt, he
-hardly knew whether his anger or his adoration were the greater; for, as
-if over a disabling wound, she bent her head in utter surrender, quite
-still for a moment, and then saying only, while she looked at him as if
-more sorry for him than for herself, "You hurt me, Jim."
-
-Tears of fury stood in his eyes. "You hurt, too. My love for you--a
-disease. _My_ love, Eppie!"
-
-"Forgive me."
-
-"Forgive you! I worship everything you say or do!"
-
-"It was that it hurt too much to see--what you did, with your eyes."
-
-"Then--then--you don't deny it,--if I have eyes to see, he too must
-see--how much you care?"
-
-"I don't deny it."
-
-"And if I have courage enough to ask it, you have courage enough to
-answer me? You love him, Eppie?"
-
-He had come to her, his eyes threatening her, beseeching her, adoring
-her, all at once. She saw it all--all that he felt, and the furious pity
-that was deeper than his own deep pain. She could resent nothing, deny
-nothing. As she had said, he was so near.
-
-She put her hand on his shoulder, keeping him from her, yet accepting
-him as near, and then all that she found to say--but it was in a voice
-that brought a rapt pallor to his face--was, "Dear Jim."
-
-He understood her--all that she accepted, all that she avowed. Her hand
-was that of a comrade in misfortune. She forgave brutality from a heart
-as stricken as his. She forgave even his cruelly clear seeing of her own
-desperate case--a seeing that had revealed to her that it was indeed
-very desperate. But if she too was stricken, she too was resolute, and
-she could do no more for him than look with him at the truth. Their
-eyes recognized so many likenesses in each other.
-
-He took the hand at last in both his own, looking down at it, pressing
-it hard.
-
-"Poor darling," he said.
-
-"No, Jim."
-
-"Yes; even if he loves you."
-
-"Even if he doesn't love me--and he does love me in a strange, unwilling
-way; but even if he doesn't love me,--as you and I mean love,--I am not
-piteous."
-
-"Even if he loves you, you are piteous." All his savagery had fallen
-from him. His quiet was like the slow dropping of tears.
-
-"No, Jim. There is the joy of loving. You know that."
-
-"You are more piteous than I, Eppie. You, _you_, to sue to such a man.
-He is the negation of everything you mean. To live with him would be
-like fighting for breath. If you marry him,--if you bring him to
-it,--he'll suffocate you."
-
-"No, Jim," she repeated,--and now, looking up, he saw in those beloved
-eyes the deep wells of solemn joy,--"I am the stronger."
-
-"In fighting, yes, perhaps. Not in every-day, passive life. He'll kill
-you."
-
-"Even if he kills me he'll not conquer me."
-
-He shook away the transcendentalism with a gentle impatience, "Much good
-that would do to me, who would only know that you were gone. Oh,
-Eppie!--"
-
-He pressed and let fall her hand.
-
-The words of the crisis were over. Anything else would be only, as it
-were, the filling in of the grave.
-
-He had walked away from her to the window, and said presently, while he
-looked out: "And I thought that you were ambitious. I loved you for it,
-too. I didn't want a wife who would acquiesce in the common lot or make
-a virtue of incapacity. I wanted a woman who would rather fail,
-open-eyed, in a big venture than rest in security. You would have
-buckled the sword on a man and told him that he must conquer high places
-for you. You would have told him that he must crown you and make you
-shine in the world's eyes, as well as in his own. And I could do it. You
-are so worthy of all the biggest opportunities and so unfit for little
-places. It's so stupid, you know," he finished, "that you aren't in love
-with me."
-
-"It is stupid, I own it," Eppie acquiesced.
-
-He found a certain relief in following these bitterly comic aspects of
-their case and presently took it up again with: "I am so utterly the man
-for you and he is so utterly not the man. I don't mean that I'm big
-enough or enough worth your while, but at least I could give you
-something, and I could fight for you. He won't fight, for you, or for
-anything."
-
-"I shall have to do all the fighting if I get him."
-
-"You want him so that you don't mind anything else. I see that."
-
-"Exactly. For a long time I didn't know how I loved him just because I
-had always taken all that you are saying for granted, in the funniest,
-most naively conceited way; I took it for granted that I was a very big
-person and that the man I married must stand for big opportunities. Now,
-you see," she finished, "he is my big opportunity."
-
-He was accepting it all now with no protest. "Next to no money, I
-suppose?" he questioned simply.
-
-"Next to none, Jim."
-
-"It means obscurity, unless a man has ambition."
-
-"It means all the things I've always hated." She smiled a little over
-these strange old hatreds.
-
-Again a silence fell, and it was again Grainger who broke it.
-
-"You may as well let me have the last drop of gall," he said. "Own that
-if it hadn't been for him you might have come to care for me."
-
-Still he did not look at her, and it was easier, so, to let him have the
-last gulp.
-
-"I probably should."
-
-He meditated the mixed flavor for some moments; pure gall would have
-been easier to swallow. And he took refuge at last in school-boy
-phraseology. "I should like to break all the furniture in the room."
-
-"I should like to break some, too," she rejoined, but she laughed out
-suddenly at this anticlimax, and, even before the unbroken heaviness of
-the gaze now turned on her, that comic aspect of their talk, the dearly,
-sanely comic, carried her laugh into a peal as boyish as his words.
-
-Grainger still gazed at her. "I love that in you," he said--"your laugh.
-You could laugh at death."
-
-"Ah, Jim," she said, smiling on, though with the laughter tears had come
-to her eyes, "it's a good deal more difficult to laugh at life,
-sometimes. And we both have to do a lot of living before we can laugh at
-death."
-
-"A lot of living," he repeated. His stern, firm face had a queer grimace
-of pain at the prospect of it, and again she put out her hand to him.
-
-"Let me count for as much as I can, always," she said. "You will always
-count for so much with me."
-
-He had taken the hand, and he looked at her in a long silence that
-promised, accepted, everything.
-
-But an appeal, a demand, wistful yet insistent, came into his silence as
-he looked--looked at the odd, pale, dear face, the tawny, russet hair,
-the dear, deep eyes.
-
-"I'm going now," he said, holding to his breast the hand she had given
-him. "And I will ask one thing of you--a thing I've never had and never
-shall, I suppose, again."
-
-"What is it, Jim?" But before his look she almost guessed and the
-guessing made her blanch.
-
-"Let me take you in my arms and kiss you," said Grainger.
-
-"Ah, Jim!" Seeing herself as cruel, ungenerous, she yet, in a recoil of
-her whole nature, seemed to snatch from him a treasure, unclaimed, but
-no longer hers to give.
-
-Grainger eyed her. "You could. You would--if it weren't for him."
-
-"You understand that, too, Jim. I could and would."
-
-"He robs me of even that, then--your gift of courageous pity."
-
-His comprehension had arrested the recoil. And now the magnanimity she
-felt in him, the tragic force of the love he had seen barred from her
-forever, set free in her something greater than compassion and deeper
-than little loyalties, deeper than the lesser aspects of her own deep
-love. It was that love itself that seemed, with an expansion of power,
-to encircle all life, all need, all sorrow, and to find joy in
-sacrificing what was less to what was greater.
-
-He saw the change that, in its illumined tenderness, shut away his
-craving heart yet drew him near for the benison that it could grant, and
-as she said to him, "No, Jim, he shall not rob you," his arms went round
-her.
-
-She shut her eyes to the pain there must be in enduring his passion of
-gratitude; but, though he held her close, kissing her cheeks, her brow,
-her hair, it was with a surprising, an exquisite tenderness.
-
-The pain that came for her was when,--pausing to gaze long into her
-face, printing forever upon his mind the wonderful memory of what she
-could look like, for him--he kissed her lips; it came in a pang of
-personal longing; in a yearning, that rose and stifled her, for other
-arms, other kisses; and, opening her eyes, she saw, an ironic answer to
-the inner cry, Gavan's face outside, turned upon her in an instant of
-swift passing.
-
-Grainger had not seen. He did not speak another word to her. The kiss
-upon her lips had been in farewell. He had had his supreme moment. He
-let her go and left her.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-Gavan came up from the burn, restless and dissatisfied.
-
-He had wanted solitude, escape; but when he was alone, and walking
-beside the sun-dappled water, the loneliness weighed on him and he had
-seemed to himself walking with his own ghost, looking into eyes familiar
-yet alien, with curiosity and with fear. Was it he or that phantom of
-the solitude who smiled the long, still smile of mockery?
-
-How he wanted something and how he wanted not to want; to be freed from
-the intolerable stirring and striving within him, as of a maimed thing,
-with half-atrophied wings, that could never rise and fly to its goal. It
-was last night that had wakened this turmoil, and as he walked his
-thought turned and turned about those moments under the dazzling sky
-when he had found her hand in the fringes of her shawl.
-
-He knew that there had been a difference in the yielding of her hand, as
-he had known, in his own helpless stretching out for it in the darkness,
-another impulse than that of childlike tenderness. It had been as if
-some deep, primeval will beneath his own had stretched his hand out,
-searching in the dark; and with the strange blissfulness of so standing
-with her beneath the stars, there came a strange, new fear, as though he
-no longer knew himself and were become an automaton held by some
-incalculable force.
-
-Wandering through the woods in the hope of reentering nature's
-beneficent impersonality, he felt no anodynes--only that striving and
-stirring within him of maimed limbs and helpless wings.
-
-There was no refuge in nature, and there was none in himself. The
-thought of Eppie as refuge did not form itself, but it was again in
-seeking, as if through darkness for he knew not what, that he turned to
-the house. And then, on all his tangled mood, fell the vibrating shock
-of that vision at the window.
-
-With his quick looking away he did not know whether Eppie had seen him
-see. He went on, knowing nothing definite, until, suddenly, as if some
-fierce beast had seized him, he found himself struggling, choking, torn
-by a hideous, elemental jealousy.
-
-He stood still in the afternoon sunlight as he became aware of this
-phenomenon in himself, his hands involuntarily clenched, staring as if
-at a palpable enemy.
-
-The savage, rudimentary man had sprung up in him. He hated Grainger. He
-longed to beat him into the earth, to crush the breath out of him; and
-for a moment, most horrible of all,--a moment that seemed to set fangs
-in his throat,--he could not tell whether he more hated Eppie or more
-desired to tear her from the rival, to seize her and bear her away, with
-a passion untouched by any glamour.
-
-And Gavan was conscious, through it all, that only inhuman heights made
-possible such crumbling, crashing falls into savagedom; conscious that
-Grainger could not have known such thoughts. They were as ugly as those
-of a Saint Anthony. Wholesome manhood would recoil from their
-debasement. He, too, recoiled, but the debasement was within him, he
-could not flee from it. The moment of realization, helpless realization,
-was long. Ultra-civilization stood and watched barbarian hordes swarm
-over its devastated ruins. Then, with a feeling of horrible shame, a
-shame that was almost a nausea, he went on into the house.
-
-In his own room he sat down near the window, took his head in his hands,
-the gesture adding poignancy to his humiliation, and gazed at the truth.
-He had stripped himself of all illusion only to make himself the more
-helpless before its lowest forms. More than the realized love was the
-realized jealousy; more than the anguish at the thought of having lost
-her was the rage of the dispossessed, unsatisfied brute. Such love
-insulted the loved woman. He could not escape from it, but he could not
-feel the added grace and piety that, alone, could make it tolerable.
-From the fixed contemplation of his own sensations his mind dropped
-presently to the relief of more endurable thoughts. To feel the mere
-agony of loss was a dignifying and cleansing process. For, apparently,
-he had lost her. It was strange, almost unthinkable, that it should be
-so, and stranger the more he thought. He, who had never claimed, had no
-right to feel a loss. But he had not known till now how deep was his
-consciousness of their union.
-
-She had long ago guessed the secret of the voiceless, ambiguous love
-that could flutter only as far as pain, that could never rise to
-rapture. She had guessed that behind its half-tortured, momentary smile
-was the impersonal Buddha-gaze; and because she so understood its
-inevitable doom she had guarded herself from its avowal--guarded herself
-and him. He had trusted her not to forget the doom, and not to let him
-forget it, for a moment. But all the time he had known that in her eyes
-he was captive to some uncanny fate, and that could she release him from
-his chains her love would answer his. He had been sure of it. Hence his
-present perplexity.
-
-Perplexity began to resolve itself into a theory of commonplace
-expediency, and, feeling the irony of such resentment, he resented this
-tame sequel to their mute relationship.
-
-Unconsciously, he had assumed that had he been able to ask her to be his
-wife she would have been able to consent. Her courage, in a sense, would
-have been the reward of his weakness, for what he would see in himself
-as weakness she would see as strength. Courage on her part it certainly
-would have needed, for what a dubious offering would his have been:
-glamour, at its best,--a helpless, drugged glamour,--and, at its worst,
-the mere brute instinct that, blessedly, this winding path of thought
-led him away from.
-
-But she had probably come to despair of releasing him from chains, had
-come to see clearly that at the end of every avenue she walked with him
-the Buddha statue would be waiting in a serenity appalling and
-permanent; and, finding last night the child friendship dangerously
-threatened, discovering that the impossible love was dangerously real
-and menaced both their lives, she had swiftly drawn back, she had
-retreated to the obvious safeguards of an advantageous marriage. He
-couldn't but own that she was wise and right; more wise, more
-right,--there was the odd part of it, the unadjusted bit where
-perplexity stung him,--than he could have expected her to be. Ambition
-and the common-sense that is the very staff of life counted for much, of
-course; but he hadn't expected them to count so soon, so punctually, as
-it were.
-
-Perhaps,--and his mind, disentangled from the personal clutch where such
-an interpretation might have hurt or horrified, safe once more on its
-Stylites pillar, dwelt quite calmly on this final aspect,--perhaps, with
-her, too, sudden glamour and instinct had counted, answering the appeal
-of Grainger's passion. He suspected the whole fabric of the love between
-men and women to be woven of these blind, helpless impulses,--impulses
-that created their own objects. Her mind, with its recognition of
-danger, had chosen Grainger as a fitting mate, and, in his arms, she had
-felt that justification by the senses that people so funnily took for
-the final sanctification of choice.
-
-This monkish understanding of the snares of life was quite untouched by
-monkish reprobation; even the sense of resentment had faded. And it
-spoke much for the long training of his thought in the dissecting and
-destroying of transitory desires that he was presently able to
-contemplate his loss--as he still must absurdly term it--with an icy
-tranquillity.
-
-A breathlessness, as from some drastic surgical operation, was beneath
-it, but that was of the nature of a mere physical symptom, destined to
-readjust itself to lopped conditions; and with the full turning of his
-mind from himself came the fuller realization of how well it was with
-Eppie and a cold, acquiescent peace that, in his nature, was the
-equivalent for an upwelling of religious gratitude, for her salvation.
-
-But the stress of the whole strange seizure, wrench and renouncement had
-told on him mentally and physically. Every atom of his being, as if from
-some violent concussion, seemed altered, shifted.
-
-The change was in his face when, in the closing dusk of the day, he went
-down to the library. It was not steeled to the hearing of the news that
-must await him: such tension of endurance had passed swiftly into his
-habitual ease; but a look of death had crossed and marked it. It looked
-like a still, drowned face, sinking under deep waters, and Eppie, in her
-low chair near the window, where she had sat for many hours, saw in his
-eyes the awful, passionless detachment from life.
-
-After his pause at the unexpected sight of her, sitting there alone, a
-pause in which she did not speak, although he saw that her eyes were on
-him, he went on softly down the room, glancing out at each window as he
-passed it; and he looked, as he went, like an evening moth, drifting,
-aimless, uncanny.
-
-Outside, the moor stretched like a heavily sighing ocean, desolate and
-dark, to the horizon where, from behind the huge rim of the world, the
-sun's dim glow, a gloomy, ominous red, mounted far into the sky.
-
-Within the room, a soft, magical color pervaded the dusk, touching
-Eppie's hair, her hands, the vague folds and fallings of her dress.
-
-He waited for her to speak, though it seemed perfectly fitting that
-neither should. In the silence, the sadness of this radiant gloom, they
-needed no words to make more clear the accepted separation, and the
-silence, the sadness, were like a bleeding to quiet, desired death.
-
-The day was dying, and the instable, impossible love was dying, too.
-
-She had let go, and he quietly sank.
-
-But when she spoke her words were like sharp air cutting into drowned
-lungs.
-
-"I saw you pass this afternoon, Gavan."
-
-From the farthest window, where he had paused, he turned to her.
-
-"Did you, Eppie?"
-
-"Didn't you see that I did?"
-
-"I wasn't sure." He heard the flavor of helplessness in his own voice
-and felt in her a hard hostility, pleased to play with his helplessness.
-
-"Why did you not speak of what you saw?" Her anger against him was
-almost like a palpable presence between them in the dark, glowing room.
-He began to feel that through some ugly blunder he was very much at her
-mercy, and that, for the first time, he should find little mercy in her;
-and, for the first time, too, a quick hostility rose in him to answer
-hers. It was as if he had tasted too deeply of release; all his strength
-was with him to fight off the threat of the returning grasp.
-
-"Why should I?" he asked, letting her see in his gaze at her that just
-such a hard placidity would meet any interpretation she chose to give.
-
-"Didn't you care to understand?"
-
-"I thought that I did understand."
-
-"What did you think, then?" Eppie asked.
-
-He had to give her the helpless answer. "That you had accepted him."
-
-He knew, now, that she hadn't, and that for him to have thought so was
-to have cruelly wronged her; and she took it in a long silence, as
-though she must give herself time to see it clearly, to adjust herself
-to it and to all that it meant--in him, for her.
-
-What it meant, in her and for him, was filling his thoughts with a dizzy
-enough whirl of readjustment, and there mingled with it a strange
-after-flavor of the jealousy, and of the resentment against her; for,
-after all, though he had probably now an added reason for considering
-himself a warped wretch, there had been some reason for his mistake: if
-she hadn't accepted him, why had he seen her so?
-
-"Jim is gone," she said at last.
-
-"Because--It was unwillingly, then?"
-
-The full flame of her scorn blazed out at that, but he felt, like an
-echo of tears in himself, that she would have burst into tears of
-wretchedness if she had not been able so to scorn him.
-
-"Unwillingly! Why should you think him insolent and me helpless? Can
-you conceive of nothing noble?" she said.
-
-"I am sorry, Eppie. I have been stupid."
-
-"You have--more than stupid. He was going and he asked me for that. And
-I gave it--proudly."
-
-"I am sorry," Gavan repeated. "I see, of course. Of course it was
-noble."
-
-"You should be more than sorry. You knew that I did not love him."
-
-"I am more than sorry. I am ashamed," he answered gravely.
-
-He had the dignity of full contrition; but under it, unshaken after all,
-was the repudiation of the nearness that her explanation revealed. His
-heart throbbed heavily, for he saw, as never before, how near it was;
-yet he had never feared her less. He had learned too much that afternoon
-to fear her. He was sure of his power to save her from what he had so
-fully learned.
-
-He looked away from her and for long out at the ebbing red, and it was
-the unshaken resolve that spoke at last. "But all the same I am sorry
-that it was only that. He would have made you happy."
-
-"You knew that I did not love him," Eppie repeated.
-
-"With time, as his wife, you might love him." Facing her, now, folding
-his arms, he leaned back against the mantel at his far end of the room.
-"I know that I've seemed odiously to belittle and misunderstand you, and
-I am ashamed, Eppie--more ashamed than you can guess; but, in another
-way, it wasn't so belittling, either. I thought you very wise and
-courageous. I thought that you had determined to take the real thing
-that life offered you and to turn your back, for once and for all,
-on--on unreal things." He stopped at that, as though to let it have its
-full drop, and Eppie, her eyes still fixed on him from her distant
-chair, made no answer and no sign of dissent.
-
-As he spoke a queer, effervescent blitheness had come to him, a light
-indifference to his own cruelty; and the hateful callousness of his
-state gave him a pause of wonder and interest. However, he couldn't help
-it; it was the reaction, no doubt, from the deep disgust of his
-abasement, and it helped him, as nothing else would have done,
-thoroughly to accomplish his task.
-
-"He can give you all the things you need," he went on, echoing poor
-Grainger's _naif_ summing up of his own advantages. "He has any amount
-of money, and a very big future before him; and then, really above all,
-you do care for him so much. You see the same things in life. You
-believe in the same things; want the same things. If you would take him
-he would never fail you in anything."
-
-Still her heavy silence was unbroken. He waited in vain for a sign from
-her, and in the silence the vibration of her dumb agony seemed to reach
-him, so that, with all the callousness, he had to conquer an impulse to
-go to her and see if she wept. But when he said, "I wish you would take
-him, Eppie," and she at last answered him, there were no tears in her
-voice.
-
-"I will never take him."
-
-"Don't say that," he replied. "One changes."
-
-"Is that a taunt?"
-
-"Not a taunt--a reminder."
-
-She rose and came to him, walking down the long room, past the somber
-illuminations of the windows, straight to him. They stood face to face,
-bathed in the unearthly light. All their deep antagonism was there
-between them, almost a hatred, and the love that swords clashed over.
-
-"You do not believe that of me," she said.
-
-He was ready and unfaltering, and was able to smile at her, a bright,
-odd smile. "I believe it of any one."
-
-It was love that eyed him--love more stern, more relentless in its
-silence than if she had spoken it, and never had she been so near as
-when, sending her clarion of open warfare across the abyss, she said, "I
-will never change--to you."
-
-The words, the look,--a look of solemn defiance,--shattered forever the
-palace of pretence that they had dwelt in for so long. Till now, it
-might have stood for them. In its rainbow chambers they might still have
-smiled and sorrowed and eluded each other, only glanced through the
-glittering casements at the dark realities outside; but when the word of
-truth was spoken, casements, chambers, turrets, fell together and
-reality rushed in. She had spoken the word. After that it was impossible
-to pretend anything.
-
-Gavan, among the wreck, had grown pale; but he kept his smile fixed,
-even while he, too, spoke the new language of reality.
-
-"I am afraid of you, then."
-
-"Of course you are afraid of me."
-
-Still he smiled. "I am afraid _for_ you."
-
-"Of course you are. You have your moments of humanity."
-
-"I have. And so I shall go to-morrow," said Gavan.
-
-She looked at him in silence, her face taking on its haggard,
-unbeautiful aspect of strange, rocky endurance. And never had his mind
-been more alert, more mocking, more aloof from any entanglement of
-feeling than while he saw her love and his; saw her sorrow and his
-sorrow--his strange, strange sorrow that, like a sick, helpless child,
-longed, in its darkness, its loneliness, to hide its head on her breast
-and to feel her arms go round it. Love and sorrow were far, far away--so
-far that it was as if they had no part at all in himself, as if it were
-not he that felt them.
-
-"Are you so afraid as that?" Eppie asked.
-
-"After last night?" he answered. "After what I felt when I saw you here,
-with him? After this? Of course I am as afraid as that. I must flee--for
-your life, Eppie. I am its shadow--its fatal shadow."
-
-"No, I am yours. Life is the shadow to you."
-
-"Well, on both sides, then, we must be afraid," he assented.
-
-She made no gesture, no appeal. Her face was like a rock. It was only
-that deep endurance and, under it, that deep threat. Never, never would
-she allure; never draw him to her; never build in her cathedral a
-Venusberg for him. He must come to her. He must kneel, with her, before
-her altar. He must worship, with her, her God of suffering and triumph.
-And, the dying light making her face waver before his eyes with a
-visionary strangeness, stern and angelic, he seemed to see, deep in her
-eyes, the burning of high, sacramental candles.
-
-That was the last he saw. In silence she turned and went. And what she
-left with him was the sad, awed sense of beauty that he knew when
-watching kneeling multitudes bowed before the great myth of the
-Church,--in silence, beneath dim, soaring heights. He was near humanity
-in such moments of self-losing, when the cruder myth of the great world,
-built up by desire, slipped from it. And Eppie, in this symbolic seeing
-of her, was nearer than when he desired or feared her. Beauty, supreme
-and disenfranchising, he saw. He did not know what he felt.
-
-Far away, on the horizon, in the gloomy waste of embers, the sun's deep
-core still burned, and in his heart was a deep fatigue, like the sky's
-slow smoldering to gray.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Grainger had gone, and Gavan announced his departure for the next
-morning. The situation was simplified, he felt, by Eppie's somber
-preoccupation. He was very willing that she should be seen as a gloomy
-taker of scalps and that his own should be supposed to be hanging at her
-girdle. The resultant muteness and melancholy in the general and Miss
-Barbara were really a comfort. The dear old figures in the tapestry
-seemed fading to-night into mere plaintive shadows, fixing eyes of sad
-but unquestioning contemplation upon the latent tragedies of the
-foreground figures.
-
-It was a comfort to have the tapestry so reticent and so submissive,
-but, all the same, it made the foreground tragedy, for his eyes,
-painfully distinct. He could look at nothing else. Eppie seemed to
-stand, with her broken and bleeding heart, in the very center of the
-design. For the first time he saw what the design was--saw all of it,
-from the dim reaches of the past, as working to this end.
-
-The weaving of fate was accomplished. There she stood, suffering,
-speechless, and he, looking at her, fatal shuttle of her doom that he
-was, felt under all the ashes a dull throbbing.
-
-After dinner he smoked a cigar with the general, who, tactfully, as to
-one obviously maimed, spoke only of distant and impersonal matters.
-Gavan left him over some papers in the quiet light of the smoking-room
-and went to the library. Eppie, with her broken heart, was not there.
-The night was very hot. By an open window Miss Barbara sat dozing, her
-hands upturned with an appealing laxity on her knees, sad even in her
-sleep.
-
-Eppie was not there and she had not spoken one word to him since those
-last words of the afternoon. Perhaps she intended to speak no more, to
-see him no more. Pausing on the threshold, he was now conscious of a
-slow, rising misery.
-
-If he was to be spared the final wrench, he was also to be robbed of
-something. He hadn't known, till then, of how much. He hadn't known,
-while she stood there before him, this fully revealed Eppie, this Eppie
-who loved far beyond his imagining, far beyond prudence, ambition, even
-happiness, what it would be not to see her again, to part from her
-speechlessly, and with a sort of enmity unresolved between them.
-
-The cathedral simile was still with him, not in her interpretation of
-it, as the consecration of human love, but in his own, as a place of
-peace, where together they might still kneel in farewell.
-
-But she barred him out from that; she wouldn't accept such peace. He
-could only submit and own that she was perhaps altogether right in
-risking no more battles and in proudly denying to him the opportunity of
-any reconciling. She was right to have it end there; but the core among
-the embers ached.
-
-He wandered out into the dark, vague night, sorrowfully restless.
-
-It was not a radiant night. The trees and the long undulations of the
-moorland melted into the sky, making all about a sea of enveloping
-obscurity. The moor might have been the sky but for its starlessness;
-and there were few stars to-night, and these, large and soft, seemed to
-float like helpless expanded flowers on a still ocean.
-
-A night for wandering griefs to hide in, to feel at one with, and, with
-an instinct that knew that it sorrowed but hardly knew that it sought,
-Gavan went on around the house, through the low door in the garden wall,
-and into the garden.
-
-Here all the warmth and perfume of the summer day seemed still to exhale
-itself in a long sigh like that of a peaceful sleeper. Earth, trees,
-fruit, and flowers gave out their drowsy balms. Veiled beauty, dreaming
-life, were beneath, above, about him, and the high walls inclosed a
-place of magic, a shadow paradise.
-
-He walked on, past white phlox, white pansies, and white foxglove,
-through the little trellis where white jasmine starred its festoons of
-frail, melancholy foliage, and under the low boughs of the small,
-gnarled fruit-trees. Near the summer-house he paused, looking in at the
-darkness and seeing there the figures of the past--two children at play.
-His heart ached on dully, the smoldering sorrow rising neither to
-passionate regret nor to passionate longing, acquiescing in its own
-sorrow that was part of the vision. Moved by that retrospect, he stepped
-inside.
-
-The sweet old odor, so well remembered, half musty, half fresh, of
-cobwebbed wood, lichened along the lintels and doorway beams, assailed
-him while he groped lightly around the walls, automatically reaching out
-his hand to the doll's locker, the little row of shelves, the low,
-rustic bench and the table that, he remembered as it rocked slightly
-under his touch, had always been unsteady. All were in their old,
-accustomed places, and among them he saw himself a ghost, some
-sightless, soundless creature hovering in the darkness.
-
-The darkness and the familiar forms he evoked from it grew oppressive,
-and he stepped out again into the night, where, by contrast with the
-uncanny blindness, he found a new distinctness of form, almost of color,
-and where a memory, old and deep, seemed to seize him with gentle,
-compelling hands, in the fragrance of the white roses growing near the
-summer-house. Wine-like and intoxicating, it filled the air with magic;
-and he had gone but a few steps farther when, like a picture called up
-by the enchantment, he saw the present, the future too, it seemed, and,
-with a shock that for all its quiet violence was not unexpected, stood
-still to gaze, to feel in the one moment of memory and forecast all his
-life gathered into his contemplation.
-
-Eppie sat on a low garden bench in the garden's most hidden corner. With
-the fresh keenness of sight he could see the clustering white roses on
-the wall behind her, see against them the darkness of her hair, the
-whiter whiteness of her dress, as she sat there with head a little bent,
-looking down, the long white shawl folded about her.
-
-It was no longer the Eppie of the past, not even the Eppie of the
-present: the present was only that long pause. It was the future that
-waited there, silent, motionless, almost as if asleep; waited for the
-word and touch that would reveal it.
-
-She had not heard his light step, and it seemed to be in the very
-stillness of his pause that the sense of his presence came to her.
-Raising her head she looked round at him.
-
-He could only see the narrow oval of her face, but he felt her look; it
-seized him, compelling as the fragrance had been--compelling but not
-gentle. He felt it like firm hands upon him while he walked on slowly
-toward her, and not until he was near her, not until he had sat down
-beside her, did he see as well as feel her fixed and hostile gaze.
-
-All swathed and infolded as she was, impalpable and unsubstantial in the
-darkness, her warm and breathing loveliness was like the aroma of a
-midnight flower. She was so beautiful sitting there, a blossoming of the
-darkness, that her beauty seemed aware of itself and of its appeal; and
-it was as if her soul, gazing at him, dominated the appeal; menaced him
-should he yield to it; yet loved, ah, loved him with a love the greater
-for the courage, the will, that could discipline it into this set, stern
-stillness.
-
-Yes, here was the future, and what was he to do with it? or, rather,
-what was it to do with him? He was at her mercy.
-
-He had leaned near her, his hand on the bench, to look into her eyes,
-and in a shaken, supplicating voice he said, "Eppie, Eppie, what do you
-want?"
-
-Without change, looking deeply at him, she answered, "You."
-
-That crashed through him. He was lost, drowned, in the mere sense of
-beauty--the beauty of the courage that could so speak and so hold him at
-the point of a sword heroically drawn. And with the word the future
-seized him. He hid his face upon her shoulder and his arms went round
-her. Her breast heaved. For a moment she sat as if stricken with
-astonishment. Then, but with sternness, as of a just and angry mother,
-she clasped him, holding him closely but untenderly.
-
-"I did not mean this," she said.
-
-"No; but you _are_ it," Gavan murmured.
-
-She held him in the stern, untender clasp, her head drawn back from him,
-while, slowly, seeking her words over the tumult she subdued, she said:
-"It's _you_ I want--not your unwilling longing, not your unwilling love.
-I want you so that I can be really myself; I want you so that you can be
-really yourself."
-
-He strained her to him, hiding his face on her breast.
-
-"Can't you live? Can't you be--if I help you?" she asked him.
-
-For a long time he was silent, only pressing closely to her as though
-to hide himself from her questions--from his own thoughts.
-
-He said at last: "I can't think, Eppie. Your words go like birds over my
-head. Your suffering, my longing, hurt me; but it's like the memory of a
-hurt. I am apart from it, even while I feel it. Even while I love
-you--oh, Eppie! Eppie!--I don't care. But when we are like this--at last
-like this--I am caught back into it all, all that I thought I'd got over
-forever, this afternoon,--all the dreadful dream--the beautiful dream.
-It's for this I've longed--you have known it: to hold you, to feel your
-breath on me, to dream with you. How beautiful you are, how sweet! Kiss
-me, Eppie,--darling, darling Eppie!"
-
-"I will not kiss you. It would be real to me."
-
-He had raised his head and was seeing now the suffering of her shadowy
-eyes, the shadowy lips she refused him tragically compressed lest they
-should tremble. Behind her pale head and its heavy cloud of hair were
-the white roses giving out--how his mind reeled with the memory of
-it--the old, sweet, wine-like fragrance.
-
-He closed his eyes to the vision, bending his lips to her hand, saying:
-"Yes, that's why I wanted to spare you--wanted to run away."
-
-In the little distance now of his drawing from her, even while he still
-held her, his cheek on her hand, she could speak more easily.
-
-"It is that that enrages me,--your mystic sickness. I am awake, but you
-aren't even dreaming. You are drugged--drugged with thought not strong
-enough to find its real end. You have paralyzed yourself. No argument
-could cure you. No thought could cure you. Only life could cure you. You
-must get life, and to get it you must want it."
-
-"I don't want it. I can't want it. I only want you," said Gavan, with
-such a different echo.
-
-She understood, more fully than he, perhaps, the helpless words.
-
-Above his bowed head, her face set, she looked out into the night. Her
-mind measured, coldly it seemed to her, the strength of her own faith
-and of his negation.
-
-Her love, including but so far transcending all natural cravings, had
-its proud recoil from the abasement--oh, she saw it all!--that his
-limitation would bring to it. Yet, like the mother again, adapting truth
-to the child's dim apprehension, leading it on by symbols, she brooded
-over her deep thoughts of redemption and looked clearly at all dangers
-and all hopes. Faith must face even his unspiritual seeing. Faith must
-endure his worse than pagan love. Bound to her by every natural tie, her
-strength must lift him, through them, to their spiritual aspect, to
-their reality. Life was her ally. She must put her trust in life. She
-consecrated herself to it anew. Let it lead her where it would.
-
-The long moment of steady forecast had, after its agony of shame and
-fear, its triumph over both.
-
-He felt the deep sigh that lifted her breast--it was almost a sob; but
-now her arms took him closely, gently, to her and her voice had the
-steadfastness, no longer of rejection, but of acceptance.
-
-"Gavan, dream with me, then; that's better than being drugged. Perhaps
-you will wake some day. There, I kiss you."
-
-She said it, and with the words his lips were on hers.
-
-In the long moment of their embrace he had a strange intuition.
-Something was accomplished; some destiny that had led them to this hour
-was satisfied and would have no more to do with them. He seemed almost
-to hear this thought of finality, like the far, distant throbbing of a
-funeral bell, though the tolling only shut them the more closely into
-the silence of the wonderful moment.
-
-Drugged? No, he was not drugged. But was she really dragging him down
-again, poor child, into her own place of dreams?
-
-After the ecstasy, in the darkness of her breast and arms, he knew again
-the horrible surge of suffering that life had always meant to him. He
-saw, as though through deep waters, the love, the strife, the clinging
-to all that went; he saw the withering of dreams, and death, and the
-implacable, devouring thought that underlay all life and found its joy
-in the rending sorrow of the tragedy it triumphed over.
-
-It was like a wave catching him, sucking him down into a gulf of
-blackness. The dizziness of the whirlpool reeled its descending spiral
-through his brain. Eppie was the sweet, the magical, the sinister
-mermaid; she held him, triumphing, and he clung to her, helpless; while,
-like the music of rushing waters, the horror and enchantment of life
-rang in his ears. But the horror grew and grew. The music rang on to a
-multitudinous world-cry of despair,--the cry of all the torments of the
-world turning on their rack of consciousness,--and, in a crash of
-unendurable anguish, came the thought of what it all would mean; what it
-all might mean now--now--unless he could save her; for he guessed that
-her faith, put to the test, might accept any risk, might pay any price,
-to keep him. And the anguish was for her.
-
-He started from her, putting away her arms, yet pinioning her, holding
-her from him with a fierceness of final challenge and looking in the
-darkness into her darker eyes.
-
-"Suppose I do," he said. "Suppose I marry you,"--for he must show her
-that some tests she should not be put to. "Suppose I take you and
-reenter the dream. Look at it, Eppie. Look at your life with me. It
-won't stay like this, you know. Look far, far ahead."
-
-"I do," she said.
-
-"No, no. You don't. You can't. It would, for a year, perhaps, perhaps
-only for a day, be dream and ecstasy,--ah, Eppie, don't imagine that I
-don't know what it would be,--the beauty, the joy, the forgetfulness, a
-radiant mist hanging over an abyss. Your will could keep me in it--for a
-year, perhaps. But then, the inevitable fading. See what comes. Eppie,
-don't you know, don't you feel, that I'm dead--dead?"
-
-"No; not while you suffer. You are suffering now--for me."
-
-"The shadow of a shadow. It will pass. No, don't speak; wait; as you
-said, we can't argue, we can't, now, go into the reasons of it. As you
-said, thought can't cure me; it's probably something far deeper than our
-little thought: it's probably the aspect we are fated to be by that one
-reality that makes and unmakes our dreams. And I'm not of the robust
-Western stuff that can work in its dream,--create more dream, and find
-it worth while. I've not enough life in me to create the illusion of
-realities to strive for. Action, to me, brings no proof of life's
-reality; it's merely a symptom of life, its result, not its cause or its
-sanction. And the power of action is dead in me because the desire of
-life is dead,--unless you are there to infect me with it."
-
-"I am here, Gavan."
-
-"Yes, you are,--can I forget it? And I'm yours--while you want me. But,
-Eppie, look at it; look at it straight. See the death that I will bring
-into the very heart of your life. See the children we may have; see what
-they would mean to you, and what they would mean to me: Transient
-appearances; creatures lovely and pathetic, perhaps, but empty of all
-the significance that you would find in them. I would have no love for
-our children, Eppie, as you understand love. We will grow old, and all
-the glamour will go--all the passion that holds us together now. I will
-be kind--and sorry; but you will know that, beside you, I watch you
-fading into listlessness, indifference, death, and know that even if I
-am to weep over you, dead, I will feel only that you have escaped
-forever, from me, from consciousness, from life. Eppie, don't delude
-yourself with one ray of hope. To me your faith is a mirage. And it all
-comes to that. Have you faith enough to foresee all the horror of
-emptiness that you'll find in me for the sake of one year of ecstasy?"
-
-She had not moved while he spoke--spoke with a passion, a vehemence,
-that was like a sudden rushing into flame of a forest fire. There was
-something lurid and terrible in such passion, such vehemence, from him.
-It shook him as the forest is shaken and was like the ruinous force of
-the flames. She sat, while he held her, looking at it, as he had told
-her, "straight." She knew that she looked at everything. Her eyes went
-back to his eyes as she gave him her answer.
-
-"Not for the sake of the year of ecstasy; in spite of it."
-
-"For what, then?" he asked, stammering suddenly.
-
-Her eyes, with their look of dedication, held him fast.
-
-"For the sake of life--the long life--together; the life without the
-glamour, when my faith may altogether infect you."
-
-"You believe, Eppie, that you are so much stronger than I?"
-
-"It's not that I'm strong; but life is stronger than anything; life is
-the only reality. I am on the winning side."
-
-"So you will hope?"
-
-"Hope! Of course I hope. You could never make me stop hoping--not even
-if you broke my heart. You may call it a mirage if you like--that's
-only a word. I'll fill your trance with my mirage, I'll flood your
-whiteness with my color, and, God grant, you will feel life and know
-that you are at last awake. You are right--life _is_ endless contest,
-endless pain; it's only at that price that we can have it; but you will
-know that it's worth the price. I see it all, Gavan, and I accept. I
-accept not only the certainty of my own suffering, but the certainty of
-yours."
-
-Through the night they gazed at each other, his infinite sadness, her
-infinite valor. Their faces were like strange, beautiful dreams--dreams
-holding in their dimness such deep, such vivid significance. They more
-saw the significance--that sadness, that valor--than its embodiment in
-eyes and lips.
-
-It was finally with a sense of realization so keen that it trembled on
-the border of oblivion, of the fainting from over-consciousness, that
-Gavan once more laid his head upon her breast. He, too, accepting, held
-her close,--held her and all that she signified, while, leaning above
-him, her cheek against his hair, she said in a voice that over its depth
-upon depth of steadiness trembled at last a little: "I see it all.
-Imagine what a faith it is that is willing to make the thing it loves
-most in the whole world suffer--suffer horribly--so that it may live."
-
-He gave a long sigh. At its height emotion dissolved into a rapt
-contemplation. "How beautiful," he said.
-
-"Beautiful?" she repeated, with almost a gentle mockery for the word.
-"Well, begin with beauty if you will. You will find that--and more
-besides--as an end of it all."
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-She left him in the garden. They had talked quietly, of the past, of
-their childhood, and, as quietly, of the future--their immediate
-marriage and departure for long, wonderful voyages together. His head
-lay on her breast, and often, while they spoke of that life together, of
-the homecoming to Cheylesford Lodge and when he heard her voice tremble
-a little, he kissed the dear hand he held.
-
-When she rose at last and stood before him, he said, still holding her
-hands, that he would sit on there in the darkness and think of her.
-
-She felt the languor of his voice and told him that he was very tired
-and would do much better to go to bed and forget about her till morning;
-but, looking up at her, he shook his head, smiling: "I couldn't sleep."
-
-So she left him; but, before she went, after the last gazing pause in
-which there seemed now no discord, no strife, nothing to hide or to
-threaten, she had suddenly put her arms around his neck, bending to him
-and murmuring, "Oh, I love you."
-
-"I seem to have loved you forever, Eppie," he said.
-
-But, once more, in all the strange oblivion of his acceptance, there had
-been for him in their kiss and their embrace the undertone of anguish,
-the distant tolling--as if for something accomplished, over forever--of
-a funeral bell.
-
-He watched her figure--white was not the word for it in this midnight
-world--pass away into the darkness. And, as she disappeared, the bell
-seemed still to toll, "Gone. Gone. Gone."
-
-So he was alone.
-
-He was alone. The hours went by and he still sat there. The white roses
-near him, they, too, only a strange blossoming of darkness, symbolized,
-in their almost aching sweetness, the departed presence. He breathed in
-their fragrance; and, as he listened to his own quiet breaths, they
-seemed those of the night made conscious in him. The roses remembered
-for him; the night breathed through him; it was an interchange, a
-mingling. Above were the deep vaults of heaven, the profundities of
-distance, the appalling vastness, strewn with its dust of stars. And it,
-too, was with him, in him, as the roses were, as his own breath came and
-went.
-
-The veils had now lifted from the night and it was radiant, all its
-stars visible; and veil after veil seemed drifting from before his soul.
-
-A cool, light breeze stirred his hair.
-
-Closing his eyes, at last, his thought plunged, as his sight had
-plunged, into gulf under gulf of vacancy.
-
-After the unutterable fatigue, like the sinking under anaesthesia, of his
-final yielding, he could not know what was happening to him, nor care.
-It had often happened before, only never quite like this. It was, once
-more, the great peace, lapping wave after wave, slow, sliding,
-immeasurable waves, through and through him; dissolving thought and
-feeling; dissolving all discord, all pain, all joy and beauty.
-
-The hours went by, and, as they went, Eppie's face, like a drift of
-stars, sank, sank into the gulf. What had he said to her? what promised?
-Only the fragrance of the roses seemed to remember, nothing in himself.
-For what had he wanted? He wanted nothing now. Her will, her life, had
-seized him; but no, no, no,--the hours quietly, in their passing seemed
-to say it,--they had not kept him. He had at last, after a lifelong
-resistance, abandoned himself to her, and the abandonment had been the
-final step toward complete enfranchisement. For, with no effort now of
-his own at escape, no will at all to be free, he had left her far behind
-him, as if through the waters of the whirlpool his soul, like a light
-bubble, had softly, surely, risen to the air. It had lost itself, and
-her.
-
-He thought of her, but now with no fear, no anguish. A vast indifference
-filled him. It was no longer a question of tearing himself from her, no
-longer a question of saving himself and her. There was no question, nor
-any one to save. He was gone away, from her, from everything.
-
-When the dawn slowly stole into the garden, so that the ghosts of day
-began to take shape and color, Gavan rose among them. The earth was damp
-with dew; his hair and clothes were damp. Overhead the sky was white,
-and the hills upon it showed a flat, shadowless green. Between the
-night's enchantments of stillness, starriness, veiled, dreaming beauty
-and the sunlit, voluble enchantments of the day,--songs and flights of
-birds, ripple and shine of water, the fugitive, changing color of land
-and sky,--this hour was poor, bare, monotonous. There wasn't a ray of
-enchantment in it. It was like bleak canvas scenery waiting for the
-footlights and a decorated stage.
-
-Gavan looked before him, down the garden path, shivering a little. He
-was cold, and the sensation brought him back to the old fact of life,
-that, after all, was there as long as one saw it. The coming of the
-light seemed to retwist once more his own palely tinted prism of
-personality, and with the cold, with the conscious looking back at the
-night and forward to the day, came a long, dull ache of sadness. It was
-more physical than mental; hunger and chill played their part in it, he
-knew, while, as the prism twined its colors, the fatiguing faculty of
-analysis once more built up the world of change and diversity. He looked
-up at the pale walls of the old house, laced with their pattern of
-creepers. The pine-tree lay like an inky shadow across it, and, among
-the branches, were the windows of Eppie's room, the window where he and
-she had stood together on the morning of Robbie's death--a white,
-dew-drenched morning like this. There she slept, dear, beautiful, the
-shadow of life. And here he stood, still living, after all, in their
-mutual mirage; still to hurt her. He didn't think of her face, her
-voice, her aspect. The only image that came was of a shadow--something
-darkly beautiful that entranced and suffocated, something that,
-enveloping one, shut out peace and vacancy.
-
-His cold hands thrust into his pockets, he stood thinking for a moment,
-of how he would have to hurt her, and of how much less it was to be than
-if what they had seen in the night's glamour had been possible.
-
-He wondered why the mere fact of the night's revelation--all those
-passing-bell hours--had made it so impossible for him to go on, by sheer
-force of will, with the play. Why couldn't he, for her sake, act the
-lifelong part? In her arms he would know again the moments of glamour.
-But, at the mere question, a sickness shuddered through him. He saw now,
-clearly, what stood in the way: suffering, hideous suffering, for both
-of them--permanent, all-pervading suffering. The night had proved too
-irrevocably that any union between them was only momentary, only a
-seeming, and with her, feeling her faith, her hope, her love, he could
-know nothing but the undurable discord of their united and warring
-notes.
-
-Could life and death be made one flesh?
-
-The horror of the thought spurred him from his rigor of contemplation.
-That, at least, had been spared her. Destiny, then, had not meant for
-them that final, tragic consummation.
-
-He threaded his way rapidly among the paths, the flower-beds, under the
-low boughs of the old fruit-trees. She had left the little door near
-the morning-room open for him, and through it he entered the still
-house.
-
-It wasn't escape, now, from her, but from that pressing horror, as of
-something, that, unless he hastened, might still overtake them both. Yet
-outside her door he paused, bent his head, listened with a strange
-curiosity, helpless before the nearness of that loved, that dreaded
-being, the warring note that he sought yet fled from.
-
-She slept. Not a sound stirred in the room.
-
-He closed his eyes, seeing, with a vividness that was almost a
-hallucination, her face, her wonderful face, asleep, with the dark
-rivers of her hair flowing about it.
-
-And, fixed as he was in his frozen certainty of truth, he felt, once
-more like the striking of a hand across a harp, a longing, wild and
-passionate, to enter, to take her, sleeping, in his arms, to see her
-eyes open on him; to hide himself in life, as in the darkness of her
-breast and arms, and to forget forever the piercing of inexorable
-thought.
-
-He found that his hand was on the lock and that he was violently
-trembling.
-
-It was inexorable thought, the knowledge of the horror that would await
-them, that conquered the leap of blind instinct.
-
-Half an hour later a thin, intense light rimmed all the eastern hills,
-and a cold, clear cheerfulness spread over the earth. The moors were
-purple and the sky overhead palely, immaculately blue. About the tall
-lime-trees the rooks circled, cawing, and a skylark sang far and high,
-a floating atom of ecstasy.
-
-And in the clearness Gavan's figure showed, walking rapidly away from
-the white house, down the road that led through the heather and past the
-birch-woods, walking away from it forever.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Grainger stood in Eppie's little sitting-room, confronting, as Gavan had
-confronted the spring before, Miss Allen's placidly sewing figure.
-
-The flowers against which her uneventful head now bent were autumnal.
-Thickly growing Michaelmas daisies, white and purple, screened the lower
-section of the square outside. Above were the shabby tree-tops, that
-seemed heavily painted upon an equally solid sky. The square was dusty,
-the trees were dusty, the very blue of the sky looked grimed with dust.
-
-The hot air; the still flowers, not stirred by a breath of breeze; Miss
-Allen's figure, motionless but for its monotonously moving hand, were
-harmonious in their quiet, and in contrast to them Grainger's pervasive,
-restless, irritable presence was like a loud, incessant jangling.
-
-He walked back and forth; he picked up the photographs on the
-mantel-shelf, the books on the table, flinging them down in a succession
-of impatient claps. He threw himself heavily into chairs,--so heavily
-that Miss Allen glanced round, alarmed for the security of the
-furniture,--and he asked her half a dozen times if Miss Gifford would be
-in at five.
-
-"She is seldom late," or, "I expect her then," Miss Allen would answer
-in the tone of mild severity that one might employ toward an unseemly
-child over whom one had no authority.
-
-But though there was severity in Miss Allen's voice, the acute glances
-that she stole at the clamorous guest were not unsympathetic. She placed
-him. She pitied and she rather admired him. Even while emphasizing the
-dismay of her involuntary starts when the table rattled and the chairs
-groaned, she felt a satisfaction in these symptoms of passion; for that
-she was in the presence of a passion, a hopeless and rather magnificent
-passion, she made no doubt. She associated such passions with Eppie,--it
-was trailing such clouds of glory that she descended upon the arid life
-of the little square,--and none had so demonstrated itself, none had so
-performed its part for her benefit. She was sorry that it was hopeless;
-but she was glad that it was there, in all its Promethean wrathfulness,
-for her to observe. Miss Allen felt pretty sure that this was the
-nearest experience of passion she would ever know.
-
-"In at five, as a rule, you say?" Grainger repeated for the fourth time,
-springing from the chair where, with folded arms, he had sat for a few
-moments scowling unseeingly at the pansies.
-
-He stationed himself now beside her and, over her head, stared out at
-the square. It was at once alarming and delightful,--as if the Titan
-with his attendant vulture had risen from his rock to join her.
-
-"You've no idea from which direction she is coming?"
-
-"None," said Miss Allen, decisively but not unkindly. "It's really no
-good for you to think of going out to meet her. She is doing a lot of
-different things this afternoon and might come from any direction. You
-would almost certainly miss her." And she went on, unemphatically, but,
-for all the colorless quality of her voice, so significantly that
-Grainger, realizing for the first time the presence of an understanding
-sympathy, darted a quick look at her. "She gets in at five, just as I go
-out. She knows that I depend on her to be here by then."
-
-So she would not be in the way, this little individual. She made him
-think, now that he looked at her more attentively, as she sat there with
-her trimly, accurately moving hand, of a beaver he had once seen swiftly
-and automatically feeding itself; her sleek head, her large, smooth
-front teeth, were like a beaver's. It was really very decent of her to
-see that he wanted her out of the way; so decent that, conscious of the
-link it had made between them, he said presently, abruptly and rather
-roughly, "How is she?"
-
-"Well, of course she has not recovered," said Miss Allen.
-
-"Recovered? But she wasn't actually ill." Grainger had a retorting air.
-
-"No; I suppose not. It was nervous prostration, I suppose--if that's not
-an illness."
-
-"This isn't the place for her to recover from nervous prostration in."
-He seemed to fasten an accusation, but Miss Allen understood perfectly.
-
-"Of course not. I've tried to make her see that. But,"--she was making
-now quite a chain of links,--"she feels she must work, must lose herself
-in something. Of course she overdoes it. She overdoes everything."
-
-"Overwork, do you think? The cause, I mean?"
-
-Grainger jerked this out, keeping his eyes on the square.
-
-Miss Allen, not in any discreet hesitation, but in sincere uncertainty,
-paused over her answer.
-
-"It couldn't be, quite. She was well enough when she went away in the
-summer, though she really isn't at all strong,--not nearly so strong as
-she looks. She broke down, you know, at her uncle's, in Scotland"; and
-Miss Allen added, in a low-pitched and obviously confidential voice, "I
-think it was some shock that nobody knows anything about."
-
-Grainger stood still for some moments, and then plunging back into the
-little room, he crossed and re-crossed it with rapid strides. Her
-guessing and his knowledge came too near.
-
-Only after a long pause did Miss Allen say, "She's really frightfully
-changed." The clock was on the stroke. Rising, gathering up her work,
-dropping, with neat little clicks, her scissors, her thimble, into her
-work-box, she added, and she fixed her eyes on him for a moment as she
-spoke, "Do, if you can, make her--"
-
-"Well, what? Go away?" he demanded. "I've no authority--none. Her people
-ought to kidnap her. That's what I'd do. Lift her out of this hole."
-
-Miss Allen's eyes dwelt on his while she nerved herself to a height of
-adventurous courage that, in looking back at it, amazed her. "Here she
-is," she said, and almost whispering, "Well, kidnap her, then. That's
-what she needs--some one stronger than herself to kidnap her."
-
-She slid her hand through his, a panic of shyness overtaking her, and
-darted out, followed by the flutter of a long, white strip of muslin.
-
-Grainger stood looking at the open door, through which in a moment Eppie
-entered.
-
-His first feeling was one of relief. He did not, in that first moment,
-see that she was "frightfully changed." Even her voice seemed the same,
-as she said with all the frank kindness of her welcome and surprise,
-"Why, Jim, this is good of you," and all her tact was there, too, giving
-him an impression of the resource and flexibility of happy vitality, in
-her ignoring by glance or tone of their parting.
-
-She wore, on the hot autumn day, a white linen frock, the loose bodice
-belted with green, a knot of green at her throat, and, under the white
-and green of her little hat, her face showed color and its dear smile.
-
-Relief was so great, indeed, that Grainger found himself almost clinging
-to her hand in his sudden thankfulness.
-
-"You're not so ill, then," he brought out. "I heard it--that you had
-broken down--and I came back. I was in the Dolomites. I hadn't had news
-of you since I left."
-
-"So ill! Nonsense," said Eppie, giving his hand a reassuring shake and
-releasing her own to pull off her soft, loose gloves. "It was a
-breakdown I had, but nothing serious. I believe it to have been an
-attack of biliousness, myself. People don't like to own to liver when
-they can claim graceful maladies like nervous prostration,--so it was
-called. But liver, only, I fear it was. And I'm all right now, thank
-goodness, for I loathe being ill and am a horrid patient."
-
-She had taken off her hat, pushing back her hair from her forehead and
-sinking into a chair that was against the light. The Michaelmas daisies
-made a background for the bronze and white of her head, for, as she
-rested, the color that her surprise and her swift walking had given her
-died. She was glad to rest, her smile said that, and he saw, indeed,
-that she was utterly tired.
-
-Suddenly, as he looked at her, seeing the great fatigue, seeing the
-pallor, seeing the smile only stay as if with determination, the truth
-of Miss Allen's description was revealed to him. She was frightfully
-changed. Her smile, her courage, made him think of a _danse macabre_.
-The rhythm, the gaiety of life were there, but life itself was gone.
-
-The revelation came to him, but he felt himself clutch it silently, and
-he let her go on talking.
-
-She went on, indeed, very volubly, talking of her breakdown, of how good
-the general and her aunt had been to her, and of how getting back to her
-work had picked her up directly.
-
-"I think I'll finally pitch my tent here," she went on. "The interest
-grows all the time,--and the ties, the responsibility. One can't do
-things by half measures; you know that, thorough person that you are. I
-mustn't waste my mite of income by gadding about. I'm going to chuck all
-the rest and give myself altogether to this."
-
-"You used to think that the rest helped you in this," said Grainger.
-
-"To a certain extent it did, and will, for I've had so much that it will
-last me for a long time."
-
-"You intend to live permanently down here?"
-
-"I shall have my holidays, and I shall run up to civilization for a
-dinner or two now and then. It's not that I've any illusions about my
-usefulness or importance. It's that all this is so useful to me. It's
-something I can do with all my might and main, and I've such masses of
-energy you know, Jim, that need employment. And then, though of course
-one works at the wrong side of the tapestry and has to trust that the
-pattern is coming right, I do believe that, to a certain extent, it does
-need me."
-
-He leaned back in his chair opposite her, listening to the voice that
-rattled on so cheerfully. With his head bent, he kept that old gaze upon
-her and clutched the clearer and clearer revelation: Eppie--Eppie in
-torment; Eppie shattered;--Eppie--why, it was as if she sat there before
-him smiling and rattling over a huge hole in her chest. And, finally,
-the consciousness of the falsity in her own tone made her falter a
-little. She couldn't continue so glibly while his eyes were saying to
-her: "Yes; I see, I see. You are wounded to death." But if she faltered
-it was only, in the pause, to look about for another shield.
-
-"And you?" she said. "Have you done a great deal of climbing? Tell me
-about yourself, dear Jim."
-
-It was a dangerous note to strike and the "dear Jim" gave away her sense
-of insecurity. It was almost an appeal to him not to see, or, at all
-events, not to tell her that he saw.
-
-"Don't talk about me," he said very rudely. She knew the significance of
-his rudeness.
-
-"Let us talk of whatever you will."
-
-"Of you, then. Don't try to shut me out, Eppie."
-
-"Am I shutting you out?"
-
-"You are trying to. You have succeeded with the rest, I suppose; but, as
-of course you know, you can't succeed with me. I know too much. I care
-too much."
-
-His rough, tense voice beat down her barriers. She sat silent, oddly
-smiling.
-
-He rose and came to her and stood above her, pressing the tips of his
-fingers heavily down upon her shoulder.
-
-"You must tell me. I must know. I won't stand not knowing."
-
-Motionless, without looking up at him, she still smiled before her.
-
-"That--that coward has broken your heart," he said. There were tears in
-his voice, and, looking up now, the smile stiffened to a resolute
-grimace, she saw them running down his cheeks. But her own face did not
-soften. With a glib dryness she answered:
-
-"Yes, Jim; that's it."
-
-"Oh--" It was a long growl over her head.
-
-She had looked away again, and continued in the same crisp voice: "I'd
-lie if I could, you may be sure. But you put it so, you look so, that I
-can't. I'm at your mercy. You know what I feel, so I can't hide it from
-you. I hate any one, even you, to know what I feel. Help me to hide it."
-
-"What has he done?" Grainger asked on the muffled, growling note.
-
-"Gavan? Done? He's done nothing."
-
-"But something happened. You aren't where you were when I left you. You
-weren't breaking down then."
-
-"Hope deferred, Jim--"
-
-"It's not that. Don't fence, to shield him. It's not hope deferred. It's
-hope dead. Something happened. What was it?"
-
-"All that happened was that he went, when I thought that he was going to
-stay, forever."
-
-"He went, knowing--"
-
-"That I loved him? Yes; I told him."
-
-"And he told you that he didn't love you?"
-
-"No, there you were wrong. He told me that he did. But he saw what you
-saw. So what would you have asked of him?"
-
-"Saw what I saw? What do you mean?"
-
-"That he would suffocate me. That he was the negation of everything I
-believed in."
-
-"You mean to tell me," said Grainger, his fingers still pressing down
-upon her shoulder, "that it all came out,--that you had it there between
-you,--and then that he ran away?"
-
-"From the fear of hurting my life. Yes."
-
-"From the fear of life itself, you mean."
-
-"If that was it, wasn't it enough?"
-
-"The coward. The mean, bloodless coward," said Jim Grainger.
-
-"I let you say it because I understand; it's your relief. But he is not
-a coward. He is only--a saint. A saint without a saint's perquisites. A
-Spinoza without a God. An imitator of Christ without a Christ. I have
-been thinking, thinking it all out, seeing it all, ever since."
-
-"Spinoza! What has he to do with it! Don't talk rot, dear child, to
-comfort yourself."
-
-"Be patient, Jim. Perhaps I can help you. It calms one when one
-understands. I have been reading up all the symptoms. Listen to this, if
-you think that Spinoza has nothing to do with it. On the contrary, he
-knew all about it and would have seen very much as Gavan does."
-
-She took up one of the books that had been so frequently flung down by
-Grainger in his waiting and turned its pages while he watched her with
-the enduring look of a mother who humors a sick child's foolish fancies.
-
-"Listen to Spinoza, Jim," she said, and he obediently bent his lowering
-gaze to the task. "'When a thing is not loved, no strife arises about
-it; there is no pang if it perishes, no envy if another bears it away,
-no fear, no hate; yes, in a word, no tumult of soul. These things all
-come from loving that which perishes.' And now the Imitation: 'What
-canst thou see anywhere which can continue long under the sun? Thou
-believest, perchance, that thou shalt be satisfied, but thou wilt never
-be able to attain unto this. If thou shouldst see all things before thee
-at once, what would it be but a vain vision?' And this: 'Trust not thy
-feeling, for that which is now will be quickly changed into somewhat
-else.'"
-
-Her voice, as she read on to him,--and from page to page she went,
-plucking for him, it seemed, their cold, white blossoms, fit flowers to
-lay on the grave of love,--had lost the light dryness as of withered
-leaves rustling. It seemed now gravely to understand, to acquiesce. A
-chill went over the man, as though, under his hand, he felt her, too,
-sliding from warm life into that place of shadows where she must be to
-be near the one she loved.
-
-"Shut the books, for God's sake, Eppie," he said. "Don't tell me that
-you've come to see as he has."
-
-She looked up at him, and now, in the dear, deep eyes, he saw all the
-old Eppie, the Eppie of life and battle.
-
-"Can you think it, Jim? It's because I see so clearly what he sees that
-I hate it and repudiate it and fight it with every atom of my being.
-It's that hatred, that repudiation, that fight, that is life. I believe
-in it, I'm for it, as I never believed before, as I never was before."
-
-He was answering her look, seeing her as life's wounded champion,
-standing, shot through, on the ramparts of her beleaguered city. She
-would shake her banner high in the air as she fell. The pity, the fury,
-the love of his eyes dwelt on her.
-
-And suddenly, under that look, her eyes closed. She shrank together in
-her chair; she bowed down her head upon her knees, covering her face.
-
-"Oh, Jim," she said, "my heart is broken."
-
-He knew that he had brought her to this, that never before an onlooker
-had she so fallen into her own misery. He had forced her to show the
-final truth that, though she held the banner, she was shot through and
-through. And he could do nothing but stand on above her, his face set to
-a flintier, sharper endurance, as he heard the great sobs shake her.
-
-He left her presently and walked up and down the room while she wept,
-crouched over upon her knees. It was not for long. The tempest passed,
-and, when she sat in quiet, her head in her hands, her face still
-hidden, he said, "You must set about mending now, Eppie."
-
-"I can't mend. I'll live; but I can't mend."
-
-"Don't say it, Eppie. This may pass as--well--other things in your life
-have passed."
-
-"Do you, too, talk Spinoza to me, Jim?"
-
-"Damn Spinoza! I'm talking life to you--the life we both believe in. I'm
-not telling you to turn your back on it because it has crippled you. You
-won't, I know it. I know that you are brave. Eppie, Eppie,"--before her,
-now, he bent to her, then knelt beside her chair,--"let me be the
-crutch. Let me have the fragments. Let's try, together, to mend them. I
-ask nothing of you but that trying, with my help, to mend. He isn't for
-you. He's never for you. I'll say no more brutalities of him. I'll use
-your own words and say that he can't,--that his saintship can't. So
-won't you, simply, let me take you? Even if you're broken for life, let
-me have the broken Eppie."
-
-She had never, except in the moment of the kiss, seen this deepest thing
-in him, this gentleness, this reverent tenderness that, under the
-bullying, threatening, angry aspects of his love, now supplicated with a
-beauty that revealed all the angel in humanity. Strange--she could think
-it in all her sorrow--that the thing that held him to her was the thing
-that held her to Gavan, the deep, the mysterious, the unchangeable
-affinity. For him, as for her, there could be but one, and for that one
-alone could these depths and heights of the heart open themselves.
-
-"Jim, dear, dear Jim, never, never," she said. "I am his, only his,
-fragments, all of me, for as long as I am I."
-
-Grainger hid his face on the arm of her chair.
-
-"And he is mine," said Eppie. "He knows it, and that is why he fears me.
-He is mine forever."
-
-"I am glad for your sake that you can believe that," Grainger muttered,
-"and glad, for my own, that I don't."
-
-"Why, Jim?"
-
-"I could hardly live if I thought that you were going to love him in
-eternity and that I was, forever, to be shut away. Thank goodness that
-it's only for a lifetime that my tragedy lasts."
-
-She closed her eyes to these perplexities, laying her hand on his.
-
-"I don't know. We can only think and act for this life. It's this we
-have to shape. Perhaps in eternity, really in eternity, whatever that
-may mean, I won't need to shut you out. Dear, dear Jim, it's hard that
-it must seem that to you now. You know what I feel about you. And who
-could feel it as I do? We are in the same boat."
-
-"No, for he, at least, loves no one else. You haven't that to bear. As
-far as he goes,--and it isn't far,--he is yours. We are not at all in
-the same boat. But that's enough of me. I suppose I am done for, as you
-say, forever."
-
-He had got upon his feet, and, as if at their mutual wreckage, looked
-down with a face that had found again its old shield of grimness.
-
-"As for you," he went on, "I sha'n't, at all events, see you
-suffocating. You must mend alone, then, as best you can. Really, you're
-not as tragic as you might have been."
-
-Then, after this salutary harshness, and before he turned from her to
-go, he added, as once before, "Poor darling."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Grainger hardly knew why he had come and, as he walked up the deep
-Surrey lane from the drowsy village station, his common-sense warred
-with the instinct, almost the obsession, that was taking him to
-Cheylesford Lodge. Eppie had been persistently in his thoughts since
-their meeting of the week before, and from his own hopelessness had
-sprung the haunting of a hope for her. Turn from it as he would, accuse
-himself angrily of madness, morbidity, or a mere tendency to outrageous
-meddling,--symptomatic of shattered nerves,--he couldn't escape it. By
-day and night it was with him, until he saw himself, in a lurid vision,
-as responsible for Eppie's very life if he didn't test its validity. For
-where she had failed might not a man armed with the strength of his
-selfless love succeed?
-
-He had said, in his old anger, that as Gavan's wife Gavan would kill
-her; but he hadn't really meant that literally; now, literally, the new
-fear had come that she might die of Gavan's loss. Her will hadn't
-snapped, but her vitality was like the flare of the candle in its
-socket. To love, the eremite of Cheylesford Lodge wouldn't
-yield--perhaps for very pity's sake; but if he were made to see the
-other side of it?--Grainger found a grim amusement in the paradox--the
-lover, in spite of love, might yield to pity. Couldn't his own manliness
-strike some spark of manliness from Gavan? Couldn't he and Eppie between
-them, with their so different appeals,--she to what was soft, he to what
-was tough,--hoist his tragically absurd head above water, as it were,
-into the air of real life, that might, who knew? fill and sustain his
-aquatic lungs? It gave him a vindictive pleasure to see the drowning
-simile in the most ludicrous aspects--Gavan, draped in the dramatic
-robes of his twopenny-halfpenny philosophies, holding his head in a
-basin of water, there resolved to die. Grainger felt that as far as his
-own inclinations were concerned it would have given him some pleasure to
-help to hold him under, to see that, while he was about it, he did it
-thoroughly; but the question wasn't one of his own inclinations: it was
-for Eppie's sake that he must try to drag out the enraptured suicide. It
-was Eppie, bereft and dying,--so it seemed to him in moments of deep
-fear,--whose very life depended on the submerged life. And to see if he
-could fish it up for her he had come on this undignified, this
-ridiculous errand.
-
-Very undignified and very ridiculous he felt the errand to be, as he
-strode on through the lane, its high hedge-rows all dusty with the
-autumn drought; but he was indifferent enough to that side of it. He
-felt no confusion. He was completely prepared to speak his mind.
-
-Coming to a turning of the lane, where he stood for a moment,
-uncertain, at branching paths, he was joined by an alert little parson
-who asked him courteously if he could direct him on his way. They were
-both, it then appeared, going to Cheylesford Lodge; and the Reverend
-John Best, after introducing himself as the rector of Dittleworth
-parish, and receiving Grainger's name, which had its reverberations,
-with affable interest, surmised that it was to another friend of Mr.
-Palairet's that he spoke.
-
-"Yes. No. That is to say, I've known him after a fashion for years, but
-seen little of him. Has he been here all summer?" Grainger asked, as
-they walked on.
-
-It seemed that Gavan had only returned from the Continent the week
-before, but Mr. Best went on to say, with an evidently temperamental
-loquacity, that he was there for most of the time as a rule and was
-found a very charming neighbor and a very excellent parishioner.
-
-This last was a role in which Gavan seemed extremely incongruous, and
-Grainger looked his perplexity, murmuring, "Parishioner?"
-
-"Not, I fear, that we can claim him as an altogether orthodox one," Mr.
-Best said, smiling tolerantly upon his companion's probable narrowness.
-"We ask for the spirit, rather than the letter, nowadays, Mr. Grainger;
-and Mr. Palairet is, at heart, as good a Christian as any of us, of that
-I am assured: better than many of us, as far as living the Christian
-life goes. Christianity, in its essence, is a life. Ah, if only you
-statesmen, you active men of the world, would realize that; would look
-past the symbols to the reality. We, who see life as a spiritual
-organization, are able to break down the limitations of the dry,
-self-centered individualism that, for so many years, has obscured the
-glorious features of our faith. And it is the spirit of the Church that
-Mr. Palairet has grasped. Time only is needed, I am convinced, to make
-him a partaker of her gifts."
-
-Grainger walked on in a sardonic silence, and Mr. Best, all
-unsuspecting, continued to embroider his congenial theme with
-illustrations: the village poor, to whom Mr. Palairet was so devoted;
-the village hospital, of which he was to talk over the plans to-day; the
-neighborly thoughtfulness and unfailing kindness and charity he showed
-toward high and low.
-
-"Palairet always seemed to me very ineffectual," said Grainger when, in
-a genial pause, he felt that something in the way of response was
-expected of him.
-
-"Ah, I fear you judge by the worldly standard of outward attainment, Mr.
-Grainger."
-
-"What other is there for us human beings to judge by?"
-
-"The standard of our unhappy modern plutocratic society is not that by
-which to measure the contemplative type of character."
-
-Grainger felt a slight stress of severity in the good little parson's
-affability.
-
-"Oh, I think its standards aren't at all unwholesome," he made reply. He
-could have justified anything, any standard, against Gavan and his
-standards.
-
-"Unwholesome, my dear Mr. Grainger? That is just what they are. See the
-beauty of a life like our friend's here. It judges your barbarous
-Christless civilization. He lives laborious, simple days. He does his
-work, he has his friends. His influence upon them counts for more than
-an outside observer could compute. Great men are among them. I met Lord
-Taunton at his house last Sunday. A most impressive personality. Even
-though Mr. Palairet has abandoned the political career, one can't call
-him ineffectual when such a man is among his intimates."
-
-"The monkish type doesn't appeal to me, I own."
-
-"Ah, there you touch the point that has troubled me. It is not good for
-a man to live alone. My chief wish for him is that he may marry. I often
-urge it on him."
-
-"Well done."
-
-"One did hear," Mr. Best went on, his small, ruddy face taking on a look
-of retrospective reprobation, "that there was an attachment to a certain
-young woman--the tale was public property--only as such do I allude to
-it--a very fashionable, very worldly young woman. I was relieved indeed
-when the rumor came to nothing. He escaped finally, I can't help
-fancying it, this summer. I was much relieved."
-
-"Why so, pray?"
-
-"I am rural, old-fashioned, my dear young man, and that type of young
-woman is one toward which, I own it, I find it difficult to feel
-charitably. She represents the pagan, the Christless element that I
-spoke of in our modern world. Her charm could not have been a noble
-one. Had our friend here succumbed to it, she could only have meant
-disaster in his life. She would have urged him into ambition,
-pleasure-seeking, dissipation. Of course I only cite what I have heard
-in my quiet corner, though I have had glimpses of her, passing with a
-friend, a very frivolous person, in a motor-car. She looked completely
-what I had imagined."
-
-"If you mean Miss Gifford," said Grainger, trying for temperateness, "I
-happen to know her. She is anything but a pleasure-seeker, anything but
-frivolous, anything, above all, but a pagan. If Palairet had been lucky
-enough to marry her it would have been the best thing that ever happened
-to him in his life, and a very dubious thing for her. She is a thousand
-times too good for him."
-
-"My dear Mr. Grainger, pardon me; I had no idea that you knew the lady.
-But," Mr. Best had flushed a little under this onslaught, "I cannot but
-think you a partisan."
-
-"Do you call a woman frivolous who spends half of her time working in
-the slums?"
-
-"That is a phase, I hear, of the ultra-smart young woman. But no doubt
-rumor has been unjust. I must beg you to pardon me."
-
-"Oh, don't mind that. You heard, no doubt, the surface things. But no
-one who knows Miss Gifford can think of them, that's all."
-
-"And if I have been betrayed into injustice, I hope that you will
-reconsider a little more charitably your impression of Mr. Palairet,"
-said Mr. Best, in whom, evidently, Grainger's roughness rankled.
-
-Grainger laughed grimly. "I can't consider him anything but a thousand
-times too bad for Miss Gifford."
-
-They had reached the entrance to Cheylesford Lodge on this final and
-discordant phrase. Mr. Best kept a grieved silence and Grainger's
-thoughts passed from him.
-
-He had had in his life no training in appreciation and was indifferent
-to things of the eye, but even to his insensible nature the whole aspect
-of the house that they approached between high yew hedges, its dreaming
-quiet, the tones of its dim old bricks, the shadowed white of paneled
-walls within, spoke of pensive beauty, of a secure content in things of
-the mind. He felt it suddenly as oppressive and ominous in its assured
-quietness. It had some secret against the probes of feeling. Its magic
-softly shut away suffering and encircled safely a treasure of
-tranquillity.
-
-That was the secret, that the magic; it flashed vaguely for
-Grainger--though by its light he saw more vividly his own errand as
-ridiculous--that a life of thought, pure thought, if one could only
-achieve it, was the only _safe_ life. Where, in this adjusted system of
-beauty and contemplation, would his appeals find foothold?
-
-He dashed back the crowding doubts, summoning his own crude forces.
-
-The man who admitted them said that Mr. Palairet was in the garden, and
-stepping from opened windows at the back of the house, they found
-themselves on the sunny spaces of the lawn with its encompassing trees
-and its wandering border of flowers.
-
-Gavan was sitting with a book in the shade of the great yew-tree. In
-summer flannels, a panama hat tilted over his eyes, he was very white,
-very tenuous, very exquisite. And he was the center of it all, the
-secret securely his, the magic all at his disposal.
-
-Seeing them he rose, dropping his book into his chair, strolling over
-the miraculous green to meet them, showing no haste, no hesitation, no
-surprise.
-
-"I've come on particular business," Grainger said, "and I'll stroll
-about until you and Mr. Best are done with the hospital."
-
-Mr. Best, still with sadness in his manner, promised not to keep Mr.
-Palairet long and they went inside.
-
-Grainger was left standing under the yew-tree. He took up Gavan's book,
-while the sense of frustration, and of rebellion against it, rose in
-him. The book was French and dealt with an obscure phase of Byzantine
-history. Gavan's neat notes marked passages concerning some contemporary
-religious phenomena.
-
-Grainger flung down the book, careless of crumpled leaves, and wandered
-off abruptly, among the hedges and into the garden. It was a very
-different garden from the old Scotch one where a sweet pensiveness
-seemed always to hover and where romance whispered and beckoned. This
-garden, steeped in sunlight, and where plums and pears on the hot rosy
-walls shone like jewels among their crisp green leaves, was unshadowed,
-unhaunted, smiling and decorous--the garden of placid wisdom and
-Epicurean calm. Grainger, as he walked, felt at his heart a tug of
-strange homesickness and yearning for that Northern garden, its dim
-gray walls and its disheveled nooks and corners. Were they all done with
-it forever?
-
-By the time he had returned to the lawn Gavan was just emerging from the
-house. They met in the shadow of the yew.
-
-"I'm glad to see you, Grainger," Gavan said, with a smile that struck
-Grainger as faded in quality. "This place is a sort of harbor for tired
-workers, you know. You should have looked me up before, or are you never
-tired enough for that?"
-
-"I don't feel the need of harbors, yet. One never sees you in London."
-
-"No, the lounging life down here suits me."
-
-"Your little parson doesn't see it in that light. He has been telling me
-how you live up to your duties as neighbor and parishioner."
-
-"It doesn't require much effort. Nice little fellow, isn't he, Best? He
-tells me that you walked up together."
-
-"We did," said Grainger, with his own inner sense of grim humor at the
-memory. "I should think you would find him rather limited."
-
-"But I'm limited, too," said Gavan, mildly. "I like being with people so
-neatly adapted to their functions. There are no loose ends about Best;
-nothing unfulfilled or uncomfortable. He's all there--all that there is
-of him to be there."
-
-"Not a very lively companion."
-
-"I'm not a lively companion, either," Gavan once more, with his mild
-gaiety, retorted.
-
-Grainger at this gave a harsh laugh. "No, you certainly aren't," he
-agreed.
-
-They had twice paced the length of the yew-tree shadow and Gavan had
-asked no question; and Grainger felt, as the pause grew, that Gavan
-never would ask questions. Any onus for a disturbance of the atmosphere
-must rest entirely on himself, and to disturb it he would have to be
-brutal.
-
-He jerked aside the veils of the placid dialogue with sudden violence.
-"I've seen Eppie," he said.
-
-He had intended to use her formal name only, but the nearer word rushed
-out and seemed to shatter the magic that held him off.
-
-Gavan's face grew a shade paler. "Have you?" he said.
-
-"You knew that she had been ill?"
-
-"I heard of it, recently, from General Carmichael. It was nothing
-serious, I think."
-
-"It will be serious." Grainger stood still and gazed into his eyes. "Do
-you want to kill her?"
-
-It struck him, when he had said it, and while Gavan received the words
-and seemed to reflect on them, that however artificial his atmosphere
-might be he would never evade any reality brought forcibly into it. He
-contemplated this one and did not pretend not to understand.
-
-"I want Eppie to be happy," he said presently.
-
-"Happy, yes. So do I," broke from Grainger with a groan.
-
-They stood now near the great trunk of the yew-tree, and turning away,
-striking the steel-gray bark monotonously with his fist, he went on: "I
-love her, as you know. And she loves you. She told me--I made her tell
-me. But any one with eyes could see it; even your gossiping little fool
-of a parson here had heard of it--was relieved for your escape. But who
-cares for the cackling? And you have crippled her, broken her. You have
-tossed aside that woman whose little finger is worth more to the world
-than your whole being. I wish to God she'd never seen you."
-
-"So do I," Gavan said.
-
-"I'd kill you with the greatest pleasure--if it could do her any good."
-
-There was relief for Grainger in getting out these fundamental things.
-
-"Yes,--I quite understand that. So would I," Gavan acquiesced,--"kill
-myself, I mean,--if it would do her any good."
-
-"Don't try that. It wouldn't. She's beyond all help but one. So I am
-here to put it to you."
-
-The still, hot day encompassed their shadow and with its quiet made more
-intense Grainger's sense of his own passion--passion and its negation,
-the stress between the two. Their words, though they spoke so quietly,
-seemed to fill the world.
-
-"I am sorry," Gavan said; "I can do nothing."
-
-Grainger beat at the tree.
-
-"You love her."
-
-"Not as she must be loved. I only want her, when I am selfish. When I
-think for her I have no want at all."
-
-"Give her your selfishness."
-
-"Ah, even that fades. That's what I found out. I can't count on my
-selfishness. I've tried to do it. It didn't work."
-
-Grainger turned his bloodshot eyes upon him; these moments under the
-yew-tree, that white figure with its pale smile, its comprehending
-gravity confronting him, would count in his life, he knew, among its
-most racking memories.
-
-"I consider you a madman," he now said.
-
-"Perhaps I am one. You don't think it for Eppie's happiness to marry a
-madman?"
-
-"My God, I don't know what to think! I want to save her."
-
-"But so do I," Gavan's voice had its first note of eagerness. "_I_ want
-to save her. And I want her to marry you. That's her chance, and
-yours--and mine, though mine really doesn't count. That's what I hope
-for."
-
-"There's no hope there."
-
-"Have patience. Wait. She will, perhaps, get over me."
-
-Grainger's eyes, with their hot, jaded look of baffled purpose, so
-selfless that it transcended jealousy and hatred, were still on him, and
-he thought now that he detected on the other's face the strain of some
-inner tension. He wasn't so dead, then. He was suffering. No, more yet,
-and the final insight came in another vague flash that darkly showed the
-trouble at the heart of all the magic, the beauty, he, too, more really
-than Eppie, perhaps, was dying for love. Madman, devoted madman that he
-was, he was dying for love of the woman from whom he must always flee.
-It was strange to feel one's sane, straightforward mind forced along
-this labyrinth of dazed comprehension, turning in the cruelly knotted
-paradox of this impossible love-story. Yet, against his very will, he
-was so forced to follow and almost to understand.
-
-There wasn't much more to say. And he had his own paradoxical
-satisfaction in the sight of the canker at the core of thought. So, at
-all events, one wasn't safe even so.
-
-"She won't get over you," he said. "It isn't a mere love-affair. It's
-her life. She may not die of it; that's a figure of speech that I had no
-right, I suppose, to use. At all events, she'll try her best not to die.
-But she won't get over you."
-
-"Not even if I get out of the way forever?"
-
-Gavan put the final proposition before him, but Grainger, staring at the
-sunlight, shook his head.
-
-"The very fact that you're alive makes her hold the tighter. No, you
-can't save her in that way. I wish you could."
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Grainger had had his insight, but, outwardly, in the year that followed,
-Gavan's life was one of peace, of achieved escape.
-
-The world soon ceased to pull at him, to plead or protest. With a kindly
-shrug of the shoulders the larger life passed him by as one more proved
-ineffectual. The little circle that clung about him, as the flotsam and
-jetsam of a river drift from the hurrying current around the stability
-and stillness of a green islet, was, in the main, composed of the
-defeated or the indifferent. One or two cynical fighters moored their
-boats, for a week-end, at his tranquil shores, and the powerful old
-statesman who believed nothing, hoped nothing, felt very little, and
-who, behind his show-life of patriotic and hard-working nobleman, smiled
-patiently at the whole foolish comedy, was his most intimate companion.
-To the world at large, Lord Taunton was the witty Tory, the devoted
-churchman, the wise upholder of all the hard-won props of civilization;
-to Gavan, he was the skeptical and pessimistic metaphysician; together
-they watched the wheels go round.
-
-Mayburn came down once or twice to see his poor, queer, dear old
-Palairet, and in London boasted much of the experience. "He's too, too
-wonderful," he said. "He has achieved a most delicate, recondite
-harmony. One never heard anything just like it before, and can't, for
-the life of one, tell just what the notes are. Effort, constant effort,
-amidst constant quiet and austerity. Work is his passion, and yet never
-was any creature so passionless. He's like a rower, rowing easily,
-indefatigably, down a long river, among lilies, while he looks up at the
-sky."
-
-But Mayburn felt the quiet and austerity a little disturbing. He didn't,
-after all, come to look at quiet and austerity unless some one were
-there to hear him talk about them; and his host, all affability, never
-seemed quite there.
-
-So a year, more than a year, went by.
-
-It was on an early spring morning that Gavan found on his
-breakfast-table a letter written in a faltering hand,--a hand that
-faltered with the weeping that shook it,--Miss Barbara's old, faint
-hand.
-
-He read, at first, hardly comprehending.
-
-It was of Eppie she wrote: of her overwork--they thought it must be
-that--in the winter, of the resultant fragility that had made her
-succumb suddenly to an illness contracted in some hotbed of epidemic in
-the slums. They had all thought that she would come through it. People
-had been very kind. Eppie had so many, many friends. Every one loved
-her. She had been moved to Lady Alicia's house in Grosvenor Street. She,
-Aunt Barbara, had come up to town at once, and the general was with
-her.
-
-It was with a fierce impatience that he went on through the phrases that
-were like the slow trickling of tear after tear, as if he knew, yet
-refused to know, the tragedy that the trivial tears flowed for, knew
-what was coming, resented its insufferable delay, yet spurned its bare
-possibility. At the end, and only then, it came. Her strength had
-suddenly failed. There was no hope. Eppie was dying and had asked to see
-him--at once.
-
-A bird, above the window open to the dew and sunlight, sang and whistled
-while he read, a phrase, not joyous, not happy, yet strangely full of
-triumph, of the innocent praise of life. Gavan, standing still, with the
-letter in his hand, listened, while again and again, monotonously,
-freshly, the bird repeated its song.
-
-He seemed at first to listen quietly, with pleasure, appreciative of
-this heraldry of spring; then memory, blind, numbed from some dark
-shock, stirred, stole out to meet it--the memory of Eppie's morning
-voice on the hillside, the voice monotonous yet triumphant with its
-sense of life; and at each reiteration, the phrase seemed a dagger
-plunged into his heart.
-
-Oh, memory! Oh, cruel thought! Cruel life!
-
-After he had ordered the trap, and while waiting for it, he walked out
-into the freshness and back and forth, over and over across the lawn,
-with the patient, steady swiftness of an animal caged and knowing that
-the bars are about it. So this was to be the end. But, though already he
-acquiesced, it seemed in some way a strange, inapt ending. He couldn't
-think of Eppie and death. He couldn't see her dead. He could only see
-her looking at death.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The early train he caught got him to London by eleven, and in twenty
-minutes he was in Grosvenor Street. He had wired from the country, and
-Miss Barbara met him in the drawing-room of the house, hushed in its
-springtime gaiety. She was the frail ghost of her shadowy old self, her
-voice tremulous, her face blurred with tears and sleepless nights. Yet
-he saw, under the woe, the essential listlessness of age, the placidity
-beneath the half-mechanical tears. "Oh, Gavan," she said, taking his
-hand and holding it in both her own--"Oh, Gavan, we couldn't have
-thought of this, could we, that she would go first." And that his own
-face showed some sharp fixity of woe he felt from its reflection on
-hers--like a sword-flash reflected in a shallow pool.
-
-She told him that it was now an affair of hours only. "I would have sent
-for you long ago, Gavan; I knew--I knew that you would want it. But she
-wouldn't--not while there was hope. I think she was afraid of hurting
-you. You know she had never been the same since--since--"
-
-"Since what?" he asked, knowing.
-
-"Since you went away. She was so ill then. Poor child! She never found
-herself, you see, Gavan. She did not know what she wanted. She has worn
-herself out in looking for it."
-
-Miss Barbara was very ignorant. He himself could not know, probably
-Eppie herself didn't know, what had killed her, though she had so well
-known what she wanted; but he suspected that Grainger had been right,
-and that it was on him that Eppie's life had shattered itself.
-
-Her will, evidently, still ruled those about her, for when Miss Barbara
-had led him up-stairs she said, pausing in the passage, that Eppie would
-see him alone; the nurse would leave them. She had insisted on that, and
-there was now no reason why she should not have her way. The nurse came
-out to them, telling him that Miss Gifford waited; and, just before she
-let him go, Miss Barbara drew his head down to hers and kissed him,
-murmuring to him to be brave. He really didn't know whether he were more
-the felon, or more the victim that she thought him. Then the door closed
-behind him and he was alone with Eppie.
-
-Eppie was propped high on pillows, her hair twisted up from her brows
-and neck and folded in heavy masses on her head.
-
-In the wide, white room, among her pillows, so white herself, and
-strange with a curious thinness, he had never received a more prodigious
-impression of life than in meeting her eyes, where all the forces of her
-soul looked out. So motionless, she was like music, like all that moves,
-that strives and is restless; so white, she was like skies at dawn, like
-deep seas under sunlight. In the stillness, the whiteness, the emptiness
-of the room she was illusion itself, life and beauty, a wonderful
-rainbow thing staining "the white radiance of eternity." And as if,
-before its final shattering, every color flamed, her whole being was
-concentrated in the mere fact of its existence--its existence that
-defied death. A deep, quiet excitement, almost a gaiety, breathed from
-her. In the tangled rivers of her hair, the intertwined currents of dark
-and gold winding in a lovely disorder,--in the white folds of lawn that
-lay so delicately about her; in the emerald slipping far down her
-finger, the emeralds in her ears, shaking faintly with her ebbing
-heart-beats, there was even a sort of wilful and heroic coquetry. She
-was, in her dying, triumphantly beautiful, yet, as always, through her
-beauty went the strength of her reliance on deeper significances.
-
-She lay motionless as Gavan approached her, and he guessed that she
-saved all her strength. Only as he took the chair beside her, horror at
-his heart, the old familiar horror, she put out her hand to him.
-
-He took it silently, looking up, after a little while, from its
-marvelous lightness and whiteness to her eyes, her smile. Then, at last,
-she spoke to him.
-
-"So you think that you have got the better of me at last, don't you,
-Gavan dear?" she said. Her voice was strange, as though familiar notes
-were played on some far-away flute, sweet and melancholy among the
-hills. The voice was strange and sad, but the words were not. In them
-was a caress, as though she pitied his pity for her; but the old
-antagonism, too, was there--a defiance, a willingness to be cruel to
-him. "I did play fair, you see," she went on. "I wouldn't have you come
-till there was no danger, for you, any more. And now this is the end of
-it all, you think. You will soon be able to say of me, Gavan,
-
- "her words to Scorn
- Are scattered, and her mouth is stopt with Dust!"
-
-His hand shut involuntarily, painfully, on hers, and as though his
-breath cut him, he said, "Don't--don't, Eppie."
-
-But with her gaiety she insisted: "Oh, but let us have the truth. You
-must think it. What else could you think?" and, again with the note of
-pity that would atone for the cruel lightness, "Poor Gavan! My poor,
-darling Gavan! And I must leave you with your thoughts--your empty
-thoughts, alone."
-
-He had taken a long breath over the physical pang her words had
-inflicted, and now he looked down at her hand, gently, one after the
-other, as though unseeingly, smoothing her fingers.
-
-"While I go on," she said.
-
-"Yes, dear," he assented.
-
-"You humor me with that. You are so glad, for me, that I go with all my
-illusions about me. Aren't you afraid that, because of them, I'll be
-caught in the mill again and ground round and round in incarnations
-until, only after such a long time, I come out all clean and white and
-selfless, not a scrap of dangerous life about me--Alone with the Alone."
-
-He felt now the fever in her clearness, the hovering on the border of
-hallucination. The colors flamed indeed, and her thoughts seemed to
-shoot up in strange flickerings, a medley of inconsequent memories and
-fancies strung on their chain of unnatural lucidity.
-
-He answered with patient gentleness, "I'm not afraid for you, Eppie. I
-don't think all that."
-
-"Nor I for myself," she retorted. "I love the mill and its grindings.
-But what you think,--I know perfectly what you think. You can't keep it
-from me, Gavan. You can't keep anything from me. And I found something
-that said it all. I can remember it. Shall I say it to you?"
-
-He bowed his head, smoothing her hand, not looking up at her while, in
-that voice of defiance, of fever, yet of such melancholy and echoing
-sweetness, she repeated:
-
- "Ne suis-je pas un faux accord
- Dans la divine symphonie,
- Grace a la vorace Ironie
- Qui me secoue et qui me mord?
-
- "Elle est dans ma voix, la criarde!
- C'est tout mon sang, ce poison noir!
- Je suis le sinistre miroir
- Ou la megere se regarde!
-
- "Je suis la plaie et le couteau!
- Je suis le soufflet et la joue!
- Je suis les membres et la roue,
- Et le victime et le bourreau!"
-
-She paused after it, smiling intently upon him, and he met the smile to
-say:
-
-"That's only one side of it, dear."
-
-"Ah, it's a side I know about, too! Didn't I see it, feel it? Haven't I
-been all through it--with you, for you, because of you? Ah, when you
-left me--when you left me, Gavan--"
-
-Still she smiled, with brilliant eyes, repeating,
-
- "Qui me secoue et qui me mord."
-
-He was silent, sitting with his pallid, drooping head; and suddenly she
-put her other hand on his, on the hand that gently, mechanically,
-smoothed her fingers.
-
-"You caress me, you try to comfort me,--while I am tormenting you. It's
-strange that I should want to torment you. Is it that I'm so afraid you
-sha'n't feel? I want you to feel. I want you to suffer. It is so
-horrible to leave you. It is so horrible to be afraid--sometimes
-afraid--that I shall never, never see you again. When you feel, when you
-suffer, I am not so lonely. But you feel nothing, do you?"
-
-He did not answer her.
-
-"Will you ever miss me, Gavan?"
-
-He did not answer.
-
-"Won't you even remember me?" she asked.
-
-And still he did not answer, sitting with downcast eyes. And she saw
-that he could not, and in his silence, of a dumb torture, was his reply.
-He looked the stricken saint, pierced through with arrows. And which of
-them was the victim, which the executioner?
-
-With her question a clearness, quieter, deeper, came to her, as though
-in the recoil of its engulfing anguish she pushed her way from among
-vibrating discords to a sudden harmony that, in holy peace, resolved
-them all in unison. Her eyelids fluttered down while, for an instant,
-she listened. Yes, under it all, above it all, holding them all about,
-there it was. She seemed to see the pain mounting, circling, flowing
-from its knotted root into strength and splendor. But though he was with
-her in it he was also far away,--he was blind, and deaf,--held fast by
-cruel bonds.
-
-"Look at me," she commanded him gently.
-
-And now, reluctantly, he looked up into her eyes.
-
-They held him, they drew him, they flooded him. With the keenness of
-life they cut into his heart, and like the surging up of blood his love
-answered hers. As helpless as he had ever been before her, he laid his
-head on her breast, his arms encircling her, while, with closed eyes, he
-said: "Don't think that I don't feel. Don't think that I don't suffer.
-It's only that;--I have only to see you;--something grasps me, and
-tortures me--"
-
-"Something," she said, her voice like the far flute echo of the voice
-that had spoken on that night in the old Scotch garden, "that brings you
-to life--to God."
-
-"Oh, Eppie, what can I say to you?" he murmured.
-
-"You can say nothing. But you will have to wake. It will have to
-come,--the sorrow, the joy of reality,--God--and me."
-
-It was his face, with closed eyes, with its stricken, ashen agony, that
-seemed the dying face. Hers, turned gently toward him, had all the
-beneficence, the radiance of life. But when she spoke again there was in
-her voice a tranced stillness as though already it spoke from another
-world.
-
-"You love me, Gavan."
-
-"I love you. You have that. That is yours, forever. I long for you,
-always, always,--even when I think that I am at peace. You are in
-everything: I hear a bird, and I think of your voice; I see a flower,
-or the sky, and it's of your face I think. I am yours, Eppie--yours
-forever."
-
-"You make me happy," she said.
-
-"Eppie, my darling Eppie, die now, die in my arms, dearest--in your
-happiness."
-
-"No, not yet; I can't go yet--though I wish it, too," she said. "There
-are still horrid bits--dreadful dark places--like the dreadful poem--the
-poem of you, Gavan--where I lose myself; burning places, edges of pain,
-where I fight to find myself again; long, dim places where I
-dream--dream--. I won't have you see me like that; you might think that
-you watched the scattering of the real me. I won't have you remember me
-all dim and broken."
-
-Her voice was sinking from her into an abyss of languor, and she felt
-the swirl of phantom thoughts blurring her mind even while she spoke.
-
-As on that far-away night when he held her hand and they stood together
-under the stars, she said, speaking now her prayer, "O God! God!"; and
-seeming in the effort of her will to lift a weight that softly,
-inexorably, like the lid of a tomb, pressed down upon her, "I am here,"
-she said. "You are mine. I will not be afraid. Remember me. So good-by,
-Gavan."
-
-"I will remember," he said.
-
-His arms still held her. And through his mind an army seemed to rush,
-galloping, with banners, with cries of lamentations, agony, regret,
-passionate rebellion. It crashed in conflict, blood beneath it, and
-above it tempests and torn banners. And the banners were desperate
-hopes riddled with bullets; and the blood was love poured out and the
-tempest was his heart. It was, he thought, even while he saw, listened,
-felt, the last onslaught upon his soul. She was going--the shadow of
-life was sliding from her--and from him, for she was life and its terror
-and beauty. Above the turmoil was the fated peace. He had won it,
-unwillingly. He could not be kept from it even by the memory that would
-stay.
-
-But though he knew, and, in knowing, saw his contemplative soul far from
-this scene of suffocating misery, Eppie, his dear, his beautiful, was in
-his arms, her eyes, her lips, her heart. He would never see her again.
-
-He raised his head to look his last, and, like a faint yet piercing
-perfume, her soul's smile still dwelt on him as she lay there
-speechless. For the moment--and was not the moment eternity?--the
-triumph was all hers. The moment, when long, long past, would still be
-part of him and her triumph in it eternal. To spare her the sight of his
-anguish would be to rob her. Anguish had been and was the only offering
-he could make her. He felt--felt unendurably, she would see that; he
-suffered, he loved her, unspeakably; she had that, too, while, in their
-last long silence, he held her hands against his heart. And her eyes,
-still smiling on him with their transcendent faith, showed that her
-triumph was shadowless.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He heard next day that she had died during the night.
-
-Peace did not come to him for long; the wounds of the warring interlude
-of life had been too deep. He forgot himself at last in the treadmill
-quiet of days all serene laboriousness, knowing that it could not be for
-many years that he should watch the drama. She had shattered herself on
-him; but he, too, had felt that in himself something had broken. And he
-forgot the wounds, except when some sight or sound, the song of a bird
-in Spring, a spray of heather, a sky of stars, startled them to deep
-throbbing. And then a hand, stretched out from the past, would seize
-him, a shudder, a pang, would shake him, and he would know that he was
-alone and that he remembered.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Shadow of Life
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: June 17, 2013 [EBook #42965]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SHADOW OF LIFE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-BY
-
-Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-AUTHOR OF “THE RESCUE,” “THE CONFOUNDING OF
-CAMELIA,” “PATHS OF JUDGEMENT,” ETC.
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-NEW YORK
-
-The Century Co.
-
-1906
-
-Copyright, 1906, by
-The Century Co.
-
-_Published February, 1906_
-
-THE DE VINNE PRESS
-
-
-
-
-
-THE SHADOW OF LIFE
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-Elspeth Gifford was five years old when she went to live at Kirklands.
-Her father, an army officer, died in her babyhood, and her mother a few
-years later. The uncle and aunts in Scotland, all three much her
-mother’s seniors, were the child’s nearest relatives.
-
-To such a little girl death had meant no more than a bewildered
-loneliness, but the bewilderment was so sharp, the loneliness so aching,
-that she cried herself into an illness. She had seen her dead mother,
-the sweet, sightless, silent face, familiar yet amazing, and more than
-any fear or shrinking had been the suffocating mystery of feeling
-herself forgotten and left behind. Her uncle Nigel, sorrowful and grave,
-but so large and kind that his presence seemed to radiate a restoring
-warmth, came to London for her and a fond nurse went with her to the
-North, and after a few weeks the anxious affection of her aunts Rachel
-and Barbara built about her, again, a child’s safe universe of love.
-
-Kirklands was a large white house and stood on a slope facing south,
-backed by a rise of thickly wooded hill and overlooking a sea of
-heathery moorland. It was a solitary but not a melancholy house. Lichens
-yellowed the high-pitched slate roof and creepers clung to the roughly
-“harled” walls. On sunny days the long rows of windows were golden
-squares in the illumined white, and, under a desolate winter sky, glowed
-with an inner radiance.
-
-In the tall limes to the west a vast colony of rooks made their nests;
-and to Eppie these high nests, so dark against the sky in the vaguely
-green boughs of spring or in the autumn’s bare, swaying branches, had a
-weird, fairy-tale charm. They belonged neither to the earth nor to the
-sky, but seemed to float between, in a place of inaccessible romance,
-and the clamor, joyous yet irritable, at dawn and evening seemed full of
-quaint, strange secrets that only a wandering prince or princess would
-have understood.
-
-Before the house a round of vivid green was encircled by the drive that
-led through high stone gates to the moorland road. A stone wall, running
-from gate to gate, divided the lawn from the road, and upon each pillar
-a curiously carved old griffin, its back and head spotted with yellow
-lichens, held stiffly up, for the inspection of passers-by, the family
-escutcheon. From the windows at the back of the house one looked up at
-the hilltop, bare but for a group of pine-trees, and down into a deep
-garden. Here, among utilitarian squares of vegetable beds, went
-overgrown borders of flowers--bands of larkspurs, lupins, stocks, and
-columbines. The golden-gray of the walls was thickly embroidered with
-climbing fruit-trees, and was entirely covered, at one end of the
-garden, by a small snow-white rose, old-fashioned, closely petaled; and
-here in a corner stood a thatched summer-house, where Eppie played with
-her dolls, and where, on warm summer days, the white roses filled the
-air with a fragrance heavy yet fresh in its wine-like sweetness. All
-Eppie’s early memories of Kirklands centered about the summer-house and
-were mingled with the fragrance of the roses. Old James, the gardener,
-put up there a little locker where her toys were stored, and shelves
-where she ranged her dolls’ dishes. There were rustic seats, too, and a
-table--a table always rather unsteady on the uneven wooden floor. The
-sun basked in that sheltered, windless corner, and, when it rained, the
-low, projecting eaves ranged one safely about with a silvery fringe of
-drops through which one looked out over the wet garden and up at the
-white walls of the house, crossed by the boughs of a great, dark
-pine-tree.
-
-Inside the house the chief room was the fine old library, where, from
-long windows, one looked south over the purples and blues of the
-moorland. Books filled the shelves from floor to ceiling--old-fashioned
-tomes in leather bindings, shut away, many of them, behind brass
-gratings and with all the delightful sense of peril connected with the
-lofty upper ranges, only to be reached by a courageous use of the
-library steps.
-
-Here Uncle Nigel gave Eppie lessons in Greek and history every morning,
-aided in the minor matters of her education by a submissive nursery
-governess, an Englishwoman, High Church in doctrine and plaintive in a
-country of dissent.
-
-A door among the book-shelves led from the library into the morning-room
-or boudoir, where Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara sewed, read, dispensed
-small charities and lengthy advice to the village poor--a cheerful
-little room in spite of its northern aspect and the shadowing trunk of
-the great pine-tree just outside its windows. It was all faded chintzes,
-gilt carvings, porcelain ornaments in corner cabinets; its paper was
-white with a fine gilt line upon it; and even though to Eppie it had sad
-associations with Bible lessons and Sunday morning collects, it retained
-always its aspect of incongruous and delightful gaiety--almost of
-frivolity. Sitting there in their delicate caps and neatly appointed
-dresses, with their mild eyes and smoothly banded hair, Aunt Rachel and
-Aunt Barbara gathered a picture-book charm--seemed to count less as
-personalities and more as ornaments. On the other side of the hall,
-rather bare and bleak in its antlered spaciousness, were the dining-and
-smoking-rooms, the first paneled in slightly carved wood, painted white,
-the last a thoroughly modern room, redolent of shabby comforts, with
-deep leather chairs, massive mid-century furniture, and an aggressively
-cheerful paper.
-
-The drawing-room, above the library, was never used--a long, vacant
-room, into which Eppie would wander with a pleasant sense of
-trespassing and impertinence; a trivial room, for all the dignity of its
-shrouded shapes and huge, draped chandelier. Its silver-flecked gray
-paper and oval gilt picture-frames recalled an epoch nearer and uglier
-than that of the grave library and sprightly boudoir below, though even
-its ugliness had a charm. Eppie was fond of playing by herself there,
-and hid sundry secrets under the Chinese cabinet, a large, scowling
-piece of furniture, its black lacquered panels inlaid with
-mother-of-pearl. Once it was a quaintly cut cake, neatly sealed in a
-small jeweler’s box, that she thrust far away under it; and once a
-minute china doll, offspring of a Christmas cracker and too minute for
-personality, was swaddled mummy fashion in a ribbon and placed beside
-the box. Much excitement was to be had by not looking to see if the
-secrets were still there and in hastily removing them when a cleaning
-threatened.
-
-The day-nursery, afterward the school-room, was over the dining-room,
-and the bedrooms were at the back of the house.
-
-The Carmichaels were of an ancient and impoverished family, their
-estates, shrunken as they were, only kept together by careful economy,
-but there was no touch of dreariness in Eppie’s home. She was a happy
-child, filling her life with imaginative pastimes and finding on every
-side objects for her vigorous affections. Her aunts’ mild disciplines
-weighed lightly on her. Love and discipline were sundered principles in
-the grandmotherly administration, and Eppie soon learned that the
-formalities of the first were easily evaded and to weigh the force of
-her own naughtiness against it. Corporal punishment formed part of the
-Misses Carmichael’s conception of discipline, but though, on the rare
-occasions when it could not be escaped, Eppie bawled heart-rendingly
-during the very tremulous application, it was with little disturbance of
-spirit that she endured the reward of transgression.
-
-At an early age she understood very clearly the simple characters around
-her. Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara were both placid, both pious, both
-full of unsophisticated good works, both serenely acquiescent in their
-lots. In Aunt Barbara, indeed, placidity was touched with wistfulness;
-she was the gentler, the more yielding of the two. Aunt Rachel could be
-inspired with the greater ruthlessness of conscientious conviction. It
-was she who insisted upon the letter of the law in regard to the Sunday
-collect, the Sunday church-going, who mingled reproof with her village
-charities, who could criticize with such decision the short-comings,
-doctrinal and domestic, of Mr. MacNab, minister of the little
-established church that stood near the village. Aunt Barbara was far
-less assured of the forms of things; she seemed to search and fumble a
-little for further, fuller outlets, and yet to have found a greater
-serenity. Aunt Rachel was fond of pointing out to her niece such facts
-of geology, botany, and natural history in general as the country life
-and her own somewhat rudimentary knowledge suggested to her as useful;
-Aunt Barbara, on the contrary, told pretty, allegorical tales about
-birds and flowers--tales with a heavy cargo of moral insinuation, to
-which, it must be confessed, Eppie listened with an inner sense of
-stubborn realism. It was Aunt Barbara who sought to impress upon her
-that the inclusive attribute of Deity was love, and who, when Eppie
-asked her where God was, answered, “In your heart, dear child.” Eppie
-was much puzzled by anatomical considerations in reflecting upon this
-information. Aunt Rachel, with clear-cut, objective facts from Genesis,
-was less mystifying to inquisitive, but pagan childhood. Eppie could not
-help thinking of God as somewhat like austere, gray-bearded old James,
-the gardener, whose vocation suggested that pictorial chapter in the
-Bible, and who, when he found her one day eating unripe fruit, warned
-her with such severity of painful retribution.
-
-The aunts spent year after year at Kirklands, with an infrequent trip to
-Edinburgh. Neither had been South since the death of the beloved younger
-sister. Uncle Nigel, the general, older than either, was russet-faced,
-white-haired, robust. He embodied a sound, well-nurtured type and
-brought to it hardly an individual variation. He taught his niece,
-re-read a few old books, followed current thought in the “Quarterly” and
-the “Scotsman,” and wrote his memoirs, that moved with difficulty from
-boyhood, so detailed were his recollections and so painstaking his
-recording of inessential fact.
-
-For their few neighbors, life went on as slowly as for the Carmichaels.
-The Carstons of Carlowrie House were in touch with a larger outside
-life: Sir Alec Carston was member for the county; but the inmates of
-Brechin House, Crail Hill, and Newton Lowry were fixtures. These dim
-personages hardly counted at all in young Eppie’s experience. She saw
-them gathered round the tea-table in the library when she was summoned
-to appear with tidy hair and fresh frock: stout, ruddy ladies in
-driving-gloves and boat-shaped hats; dry, thin young ladies in
-hard-looking muslins and with frizzed fringes; a solid laird or two.
-They were vague images in her world.
-
-People who really counted were the village people, and on the basis of
-her aunts’ charitable relationship Eppie built up for herself with most
-of them a tyrannous friendship. The village was over two miles away; one
-reached it by the main road that ran along the moor, past the
-birch-woods, the tiny loch, and then down a steep bit of hill to the
-handful of huddled gray roofs. There was the post-office, the sweet-shop
-with its dim, small panes, behind which, to Eppie’s imagination, the
-bull’s-eyes and toffee and Edinburgh rock looked, in their jars, like
-odd fish in an aquarium; there was the carpenter’s shop, the floor all
-heaped with scented shavings, through which one’s feet shuffled in
-delightful, dry rustlings; there the public-house, a lurid corner
-building, past which Miss Grimsby always hurried her over-interested
-young charge, and there the little inn where one ordered the dusty,
-lurching, capacious old fly that conveyed one to the station, five miles
-away. Eppie was far more in the village than her share of her aunts’
-charities at all justified, and was often brought in disgrace from
-sheer truancy. The village babies, her dolls, and Robbie, her Aberdeen
-terrier, were the realities at once serious and radiant of life. She
-could do for them, love them as she would. Her uncle and aunts and the
-fond old nurse were included in an unquestioning tenderness, but they
-could not be brought under its laws, and their independence made them
-more remote.
-
-Remote, too, though by no means independent, and calling forth little
-tenderness, were her cousins, who spent part of their holidays each
-summer at Kirklands. They were English boys, coming from an English
-school, and Eppie was very stanchly Scotch. The Graingers, Jim and
-Clarence, were glad young animals. They brought from a home of small
-means and overflowing sisters uncouth though not bad manners and an
-assured tradition of facile bullying. The small Scotch cousin was at
-first seen only in the light of a convenience. She was to be ignored,
-save for her few and rudimentary uses. But Eppie, at eight years old,
-when the Graingers first came, had an opposed and firmly established
-tradition. In her own domain, she was absolute ruler, and not for a
-moment did her conception of her supremacy waver. Her assurance was so
-complete that it left no room for painful struggle or dispute. From
-helpless stupor to a submission as helpless, the cousins fell by degrees
-to a not unhappy dependence. Eppie ran, climbed, played, as good a boy
-as either; and it was she who organized games, she who invented
-wonderful new adventures, all illumined by thrilling recitatives while
-in progress, she who, though their ally, and a friendly one, was the
-brains of the alliance, and, as thinker, dominated. Brains, at their
-age, being rudimentary in the young male, Eppie had some ground for her
-consciousness of kindly disdain. She regarded Jim and Clarence as an
-animated form of toy, more amusing than other toys because of
-possibilities of unruliness, or as a mere audience, significant only as
-a means for adding to the zest of life. Clarence, the younger, even from
-the first dumb days of reconstruction, was the more malleable. He was
-formed for the part of dazzled subjection to a strong and splendid
-despotism. Eppie treated her subject races to plenty of pomp and glory.
-Clarence listened, tranced, to her heroic stories, followed her
-leadership with docile, eager fidelity, and finally, showing symptoms of
-extreme romanticism, declared himself forever in love with her. Eppie,
-like the ascendant race again, made prompt and shameless use of the
-avowed and very apparent weakness. She bartered rare and difficult
-favors for acts of service, and on one occasion--a patch of purple in
-young Clarence’s maudlin days--submitted, with a stony grimace, to being
-kissed; for this treasure Clarence paid by stealing down to the
-forbidden public-house and there buying a bottle of beer which Eppie and
-Jim were to consume as robbers in a cave,--Clarence the seized and
-despoiled traveler. Eppie was made rather ill by her share of the beer,
-but, standing in a bed-gown at her window, she called to her cousins, in
-the garden below, such cheerful accounts of her malady, the slight
-chastisement that Aunt Rachel had inflicted, and her deft evasion of
-medicines, that her luster was heightened rather than dimmed by the
-disaster. Jim never owned, for a moment, to there being any luster. He
-was a square-faced boy, with abrupt nose, and lips funnily turning up at
-the corners, yet funnily grim,--most unsmiling of lips. He followed
-Eppie’s lead with the half-surly look of a slave in bondage, and seemed
-dumbly to recognize that his own unfitness rather than Eppie’s right
-gave her authority. He retaliated on Clarence for his sense of
-subjection and cruelly teased and scoffed at him. Clarence, when pushed
-too far, would appeal to Eppie for protection, and on these occasions,
-even while she sheltered him, a strange understanding seemed to pass
-between her and the tormentor as though, with him, she found Clarence
-ludicrous. Jim, before her stinging reproofs, would stand tongue-tied
-and furious, but, while she stung him, Eppie liked the sullen culprit
-better than the suppliant victim.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-When Eppie was ten years old, she heard one day that a boy, a new boy,
-was coming to spend the spring and summer--a boy from India, Gavan
-Palairet. His mother and her own had been dear friends, and his father,
-as hers had been, was in the army; and these points of contact mitigated
-for Eppie the sense of exotic strangeness.
-
-Eppie gathered that a cloud rested upon Mrs. Palairet, and the boy,
-though exotic, seemed to come from the far, brilliant country with his
-mother’s cloud about him.
-
-“Ah, poor Fanny!” the general sighed over the letter he read at the
-breakfast-table. “How did she come to marry that brute! It will be a
-heart-breaking thing for her to send the boy from her.”
-
-Eppie, listening with keen interest, gathered further, from the
-reminiscent talk that went on between the sisters and brother, that Mrs.
-Palairet, for some years of her boy’s babyhood, lived in England; then
-it had been India and the effort to keep him near her in the hills, and
-now his delicacy and the definite necessity of schooling had braced her
-to the parting. The general said, glancing with fond pride at his
-niece, that Eppie would be a fine playmate for him and would be of great
-service in cheering him before his plunge into school. Fanny had begged
-for much gentleness and affection for him. Apparently the boy was as
-heartbroken as she.
-
-Eppie had very little diffidence about her own powers as either playmate
-or cheerer: she was well accustomed to both parts; but her eagerness to
-sustain and amuse the invalid was touched with a little shyness. The sad
-boy from India--her heart and mind rushed out in a hundred plans of
-welcome and consolation; but she suspected that a sad boy from India
-would require subtler methods than those sufficing for a Jim or a
-Clarence. From the first moment of hearing about him she had felt, as if
-instinctively, that he would not be at all like Jim and Clarence.
-
-He came on a still, sunny spring day. The general went to meet him at
-the station, and while he was gone Eppie made excitement endurable by
-vigorous action. Again and again she visited the fresh little room
-overlooking the hills, the garden, the pine-tree boughs, standing in a
-thoughtful surveyal of its beauties and comforts or darting off to add
-to them. She herself chose the delightful piece of green soap from the
-store-cupboard and the books for the table; and she gathered the
-daffodils in the birch-woods, filling every vase with them, so that the
-little room with its white walls and hangings of white dimity seemed
-lighted by clusters of pale, bright flames.
-
-When the old fly rumbled at last through the gates and around the drive,
-Miss Rachel and Miss Barbara were in the doorway, and Eppie stood
-before them on the broad stone step, Robbie beside her.
-
-Eppie was a lithe, sturdy, broad-shouldered child, with russet,
-sun-streaked hair, dark yet radiant, falling to her waist. She had a
-pale, freckled face and the woodland eyes of a gay, deep-hearted dog.
-To-day she wore a straight white frock, and her hair, her frock, dazzled
-with sunlight. No more invigorating figure could have greeted a jaded
-traveler.
-
-That it was a very jaded traveler she saw at once, while the general
-bundled out of the fly and handed rugs, dressing-cases, and cages to the
-maid, making a passage for Gavan’s descent. The boy followed him,
-casting anxious glances at the cages, and Eppie’s eyes, following his,
-saw tropical birds in one and in the other a quaint, pathetic little
-beast--a lemur-like monkey swaddled in flannel and motionless with fear.
-Its quick, shining eyes met hers for a moment, and she looked away from
-them with a sense of pity and repulsion.
-
-Gavan, as he ascended the steps, looked at once weary, frightened, and
-composed. He had a white, thin face and thick black hair--the sort of
-face and hair, Eppie thought, that the wandering prince of one of her
-own stories, the prince who understood the rooks’ secrets, would have.
-He was dressed in a long gray traveling-cloak with capes. The eager
-welcome she had in readiness for him seemed out of place before his
-gentle air of self-possession, going as it did with the look of almost
-painful shrinking. She was a little at a loss and so were the aunts, as
-she saw. They took his hand in turn, they smiled, they murmured vague
-words of kindness; but they did not venture to kiss him. He did not seem
-as little a boy as they had expected. The same expression of restraint
-was on Uncle Nigel’s hearty countenance. The sad boy was frozen and he
-chilled others.
-
-He was among them now, in the hall, his cages and rugs and boxes about
-him, and, with all the cheery bustling to and fro, he must feel himself
-dreadfully alone. Eppie, too, was chilled and knew, indeed, the
-childish, panic impulse to run away, but her imagination of his
-loneliness was so strong as to nerve quite another impulse. Once she saw
-him as so desolate she could not hesitate. With resolute gravity she
-took his hand, saying, “I am so glad that you have come, Gavan,” and, as
-resolutely and as gravely, she kissed him on the cheek. He flushed so
-deeply that for a moment all her panic came back with the fear that she
-had wounded his pride; but in a moment he said, glancing at her, “You
-are very kind. I am glad to be here, too.”
-
-His pride was not at all wounded. Eppie felt that at all events the
-worst of the ice was broken.
-
-“May I feed your animals for you while you rest?” she asked him, as,
-with Aunt Barbara, they went up-stairs to his room. Gavan carried the
-lemur himself. Eppie had the birds in their cage.
-
-“Thanks, so much. It only takes a moment; I can do it. My monkey would
-be afraid of any one else,” he answered, adding, “The journey has been
-too much for him; he has been very strange all day.”
-
-“He will soon get well here,” said Eppie, encouragingly--“this is such a
-healthy place. But Scotland will be a great change from India for him,
-won’t it?”
-
-“Very great. I am afraid he is going to be ill.” And again Gavan’s eye
-turned its look of weary anxiety upon the lemur.
-
-But his anxiety did not make him forget his courtesy. “What a beautiful
-view,” he said, when they reached his room, “and what beautiful
-flowers!”
-
-“I have this view, too,” said Eppie. “The school-room has the view of
-the moor; but I like this best, for early morning when one gets up. You
-will see how lovely it is to smell the pine-tree when it is all wet with
-dew.”
-
-Gavan agreed that it must be lovely, and looked out with her at the
-blue-green boughs; but even while he looked and admired, she felt more
-courtesy than interest.
-
-They left him in his room to rest till tea-time, and in the library Aunt
-Rachel and Aunt Barbara exclaimed over his air of fragility.
-
-“He is fearfully tired, poor little fellow,” said the general; “a day or
-two of rest will set him up.”
-
-“He looks a very intelligent boy, Nigel,” said Miss Rachel, “but not a
-cheerful disposition.”
-
-“How could one expect that from him now, poor, dear child!” Aunt Barbara
-expostulated. “He has a beautiful nature, I am sure--such a sensitive
-mouth and such fine eyes.”
-
-And the general said: “He is wonderfully like his mother. I am glad to
-see that he takes after Claude Palairet in nothing.”
-
-Eppie asked if Captain Palairet were very horrid and was told that he
-was, with the warning that no intimation of such knowledge on her part
-was to be given to her new playmate; a warning that Eppie received with
-some indignation. No one, she was sure, could feel for Gavan as she did,
-or know so well what to say and what not to say to him.
-
-She was gratified to hear that he was not to go down to dinner but was
-to share the school-room high-tea with her and Miss Grimsby. But in the
-wide school-room, ruddy with the hues of sunset and hung with its maps
-and its childish decorations of Caldecott drawings and colored Christmas
-supplements from the “Graphic,”--little girls on stairs with dogs, and
-“Cherry Ripe,”--he was almost oppressively out of place. Not that he
-seemed to find himself so. He made, evidently, no claims to maturity.
-But Eppie felt a strange sense of shrunken importance as she listened to
-him politely answering Miss Grimsby’s questions about his voyage and
-giving her all sorts of information about religious sects in India. She
-saw herself relegated to a humbler rôle than any she had conceived
-possible for herself. She would be lucky if she succeeded in cheering at
-all this remote person; it was doubtful if she could ever come near
-enough to console. She took this first blow to her self-assurance very
-wholesomely. Her interest in the sad boy was all the keener for it. She
-led him, next morning, about the garden, over a bit of the moor, and
-into the fairyland of the birch-woods--their young green all tremulous
-in the wind and sunlight. And she showed him, among the pines and
-heather, the winding path, its white, sandy soil laced with black
-tree-roots, that led to the hilltop. “When you are quite rested, we will
-go up there, if you like,” she said. “The burn runs beside this path
-almost all the way--you can’t think how pretty it is; and when you get
-to the top you can see for miles and miles all about, all over the
-moors, and the hills, away beyond there, and you can see two villages
-besides ours, and such a beautiful windmill.”
-
-Gavan, hardly noticing the kind little girl, except to know that she was
-kind, assented to all her projects, indifferent to them and to her.
-
-A day or two after his arrival, he and Eppie were united in ministering
-to the dying lemur. The sad creature lay curled up in its basket,
-motionless, refusing food, only from time to time stretching out a
-languid little hand to its master; and when Gavan took it, the delicate
-animal miniature lay inert in his. Its eyes, seeming to grow larger and
-brighter as life went, had a strange look of question and wonder.
-
-Eppie wept loudly when it was dead; but Gavan had no tears. She
-suspected him of a suffering all the keener and that his self-control
-did not allow him the relief of emotion before her. She hoped, at least,
-to be near him in the formalities of grief, and proposed that they
-should bury the lemur together, suggesting a spot among birch-trees and
-heather where some rabbits of her own were interred. When she spoke of
-the ceremony, Gavan hesitated; to repulse her, or to have her with him
-in the task of burial, were perhaps equally painful to him. “If you
-don’t mind, I think I would rather do it by myself,” he said in his
-gentle, tentative way.
-
-Eppie felt her lack of delicacy unconsciously rebuked. She recognized
-that, in spite of her most genuine grief, the burial of the lemur had
-held out to her some of the satisfactory possibilities of a solemn game.
-She had been gross in imagining that Gavan could share in such divided
-instincts. Her tears fell for her own just abasement, as well as for the
-lemur, while she watched Gavan walking away into the woods--evidently
-avoiding the proximity of the rabbits--with the small white box under
-his arm.
-
-The day after this was Sunday, a day of doom to Eppie. It meant that
-morning recitation of hymn and collect in the chintz and gilt boudoir
-and then the bleak and barren hours in church. Even Aunt Barbara’s
-mildness could, on this subject, become inflexible, and Aunt Rachel’s
-aspect reminded Eppie of the stern angel with the flaming sword driving
-frail, reluctant humanity into the stony wilderness. A flaming sword was
-needed. Every Sunday saw the renewal of her protest, and there were
-occasions on which her submission was only extorted after disgraceful
-scenes. Eppie herself, on looking back, had to own that she had indeed
-disgraced herself when she had taken refuge under her bed and lain
-there, her hat all bent, her fresh dress all crumpled, fiercely
-shrieking her refusal; and disgrace had been deeper on another day when
-she had actually struck out at her aunts while they mutely and in pale
-indignation haled her toward the door. It was dreadful to remember that
-Aunt Barbara had burst into tears. Eppie could not forgive herself for
-that. She had a stoic satisfaction in the memory of the smart whipping
-that she had borne without a whimper, and perhaps did not altogether
-repent the heavier slap she had dealt Aunt Rachel; but the thought of
-Aunt Barbara’s tears--they had continued so piteously to flow while Aunt
-Rachel whipped her--quelled physical revolt forever. She was older now,
-too, and protest only took the form of dejection and a hostile gloom.
-
-On this Sunday the gloom was shot with a new and, it seemed, a most
-legitimate hope. Boys were usually irreligious; the Grainger cousins
-certainly were so: they had once run away on Sunday morning. She could
-not, to be sure, build much upon possible analogies of behavior between
-Gavan and the Graingers; yet the facts of his age and sex were there:
-normal, youthful manliness might be relied upon. If Gavan wished to
-remain it seemed perfectly probable that the elders might yield as a
-matter of course, and as if to a grown-up guest. Gavan was hardly
-treated as a child by any of them.
-
-“You are fond of going to church, I hope, Gavan,” Aunt Rachel said at
-breakfast. The question had its reproof for Eppie, who, with large eyes,
-over her porridge, listened for the reply.
-
-“Yes, very,” was the doom that fell.
-
-Eppie flushed so deeply that Gavan noticed it. “I don’t mind a bit not
-going if Eppie doesn’t go and would like to have me stay at home with
-her,” he hastened, with an almost uncanny intuition of her
-disappointment, to add.
-
-Aunt Rachel cast an eye of comprehension upon Eppie’s discomfited
-visage. “That would be a most inappropriate generosity, my dear Gavan.
-Eppie comes with us always.”
-
-Gavan still looked at Eppie, who, with downcast eyes, ate swiftly.
-
-“Now I’ll be bound that she has been wheedling you to get her off,
-Gavan,” said the general, with genial banter. “She is a little rebel to
-the bone. She knows that it’s no good to rebel, so she put you up to
-pleading for her”; and, as Gavan protested, “Indeed, indeed, sir, she
-didn’t,” he still continued, “Oh, Eppie, you baggage, you! Isn’t that
-it, eh? Didn’t you hope that you could stay with him if he stayed
-behind?”
-
-“Yes, I did,” Eppie said, without contrition.
-
-“She didn’t tell me so,” said Gavan, full of evident sympathy for
-Eppie’s wounds under this false accusation.
-
-She repelled his defense with a curt, “I would have, if it would have
-done any good.”
-
-“Ah, that’s my brave lassie,” laughed the general; but Aunt Rachel ended
-the unseemly exposure with a decisive, “Be still now, Eppie; we know too
-well what you feel about this subject. There is nothing brave in such
-naughtiness.”
-
-Gavan said no more; from Eppie’s unmoved expression he guessed that such
-reproofs did not cut deep. He joined her after breakfast as she stood
-in the open doorway, looking out at the squandered glories of the day.
-
-“Do you dislike going to church so much?” he asked her. The friendly
-bond of his sympathy at the table would have cheered her heart at
-another time; it could do no more for her now than make frankness easy
-and a relief.
-
-“I hate it,” she answered.
-
-“But why?”
-
-“It’s so long--so stupid.”
-
-Gavan loitered about before her on the door-step, his hands in his
-pockets. Evidently he could find no ready comment for her accusation.
-
-“Every one looks so silly and so sleepy,” she went on. “Mr. MacNab is so
-ugly. Besides, he is an unkind man: he whips his children all the time;
-not whippings when they deserve it--like mine,”--Gavan looked at her,
-startled by this impersonally just remark,--“he whips them because he is
-cross himself. Why should he tell us about being good if he is as
-ill-tempered as possible? And he has a horrid voice,--not like the
-village people, who talk in a dear, funny way,--he has a horrid, pretend
-voice. And you stand up and sit down and have nothing to do for ages and
-ages. I don’t see how anybody _can_ like church.”
-
-Gavan kicked vaguely at the lichen spots.
-
-“Do you really _like_ it?”
-
-“Yes,” he answered, with his shy abruptness.
-
-“But why? It’s different, I know, for old people--I don’t suppose that
-they mind things any longer; but I don’t see how a boy, a young
-boy”--and Eppie allowed herself a reproachful emphasis--“can possibly
-like it.”
-
-“I’m used to it, you see, and I don’t think of it in your way at all.”
-Gavan could not speak to this funny child of its sacred associations. In
-church he had always felt that he and his mother had escaped to a place
-of reality and peace. He entered, through his love for her, into the
-love of the sense of sanctuary from an ominous and hostile world. And he
-was a boy with a deep, sad sense of God.
-
-“But you don’t _like_ it,” said the insistent Eppie.
-
-“I more than like it.”
-
-She eyed him gravely. “I suppose it is because you are so grown up. Yet
-you are only four years older than I am. I wonder if I will ever get to
-like it. I hope not.”
-
-“Well, it will be more comfortable for you if you do,--since you have to
-go,” said Gavan, with his faint, wintry smile.
-
-She felt the kindness of his austere banter, and retorting, “I’d rather
-not be comfortable, then,” joined him in the sunlight on the broad,
-stone step, going on with quite a sense of companionship: “Only one
-thing I don’t so much mind--and that is the hymns. I am so glad when
-they come that I almost shout them. Sometimes--I’m telling you as quite
-a secret, you know--I shout as loud as I possibly can on purpose to
-disturb Aunt Rachel. I know it’s wrong, so don’t bother to tell me so;
-besides, it’s partly because I really like to shout. But I always do
-hope that some day they may leave me at home rather than have me making
-such a noise. People often turn round to look.”
-
-Gavan laughed.
-
-“You think that wicked no doubt?”
-
-“No, I think it funny, and quite useless, I’m sure.”
-
-After all, Gavan wasn’t a muff, as a boy fond of church might have been
-suspected of being.
-
-Yet after the walk through the birch-woods and over a corner of moor to
-the bare little common where the church stood, and when they were all
-installed in the hard, familiar pew, a new and still more alienating
-impression came to her--alienating yet fascinating. A sense of awe crept
-over her and she watched Gavan in an absorbed, a dreamy wonder.
-
-Eppie only associated prayers with a bedside; they were part of the
-toilet, so to speak--went in with the routine of hair-and tooth-brushing
-and having one’s bath. To pray in church, if one were a young person,
-seemed a mystifying, almost an abnormal oddity. She was accustomed to
-seeing in the sodden faces of the village children an echo to her own
-wholesome vacuity. But Gavan really prayed; that was evident. He buried
-his face in his arms. He thought of no one near him.
-
-It was Eppie’s custom to vary the long monotony of Mr. MacNab’s dreary,
-nasal, burring voice by sundry surreptitious occupations, such as
-drawing imaginary pictures with her forefinger upon the lap of her
-frock, picking out in the Bible all the words of which her aunts said
-she could only know the meaning when she grew up, counting the number of
-times that Mr. MacNab stiffly raised his hand in speaking, seeing how
-often she could softly kick the pew in front of her before being told to
-stop; and then there was the favorite experiment suggested to her by the
-advertisement of a soap where, after fixing the eyes upon a red spot
-while one counted thirty, one found, on looking at a blank white space,
-that the spot appeared transformed, ghost-like and floating, to a vivid
-green. Eppie’s fertile imagination had seen in Mr. MacNab’s thin, red
-face a substitute for the spot, and most diverting results had followed
-when, after a fixed stare at his countenance, one transferred him, as it
-were, to the pages of one’s prayer-book. To see Mr. MacNab dimly
-hovering there, a green emanation, made him less intolerable in reality:
-found, at least, a use for him. This discovery had been confided to the
-Graingers, and they had been grateful for it. And when all else failed
-and even Mr. MacNab’s poor uses had palled, there was one bright moment
-to look forward to in the morning’s suffocating tedium. Just before the
-sermon, Uncle Nigel, settling himself in his corner, would feel, as if
-absently, in his waistcoat pocket and then slip a lime-drop into her
-hand. The sharply sweet flavor filled her with balmy content, and could,
-with discretion in the use of the tongue, be prolonged for ten minutes.
-
-But to-day her eyes and thoughts were fixed on Gavan; and when the
-lime-drop was in her mouth she crunched it mechanically and heedlessly:
-how he held his prayer-book, his pallid, melancholy profile bent above
-it, how he sat gravely listening to Mr. MacNab, how he prayed and sang.
-Only toward the end of the sermon was the tension of her spirit relieved
-by seeing humanizing symptoms of weariness. She was sure that he was
-hearing as little as she was--his thoughts were far away; and when he
-put up a hand to hide a yawn her jaws stretched themselves in quick
-sympathy. Gavan’s eyes at this turned on her and he smiled openly and
-delightfully at her. Delightfully; yet the very fact of his daring to
-smile made him more grown up than ever. Such maturity, such strange
-spiritual assurance, could afford lightnesses. He brought with him, into
-the fresh, living world outside, his aura of mystery.
-
-Eppie walked beside her uncle and still observed Gavan as he went before
-them with the aunts.
-
-“How do you like your playmate, Eppie?” the general asked.
-
-“He isn’t a playmate,” Eppie gravely corrected him.
-
-“Not very lively? But a nice boy, eh?”
-
-“I think he is very nice; but he is too big to care about me.”
-
-“Nonsense; he’s but three years older.”
-
-“Four, Uncle Nigel. That makes a great deal of difference at our ages,”
-said Eppie, wisely.
-
-“Nonsense,” the general repeated. “He is only a bit down on his luck;
-he’s not had time to find you out yet. To-morrow he joins you in your
-Greek and history, and I fancy he’ll see that four years’ difference
-isn’t such a difference when it comes to some things. Not many chits of
-your age are such excellent scholars.”
-
-“But I think that we will always be very different,” said Eppie, though
-at her uncle’s commendation her spirits had risen.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Greek and history proved, indeed, a bond. The two children, during the
-hours in the library, met on a more equal footing, for Gavan was
-backward with his studies. But the question of inequality had not come
-up in Gavan’s consciousness. “I’m only afraid that I shall bore her,” he
-hastened, in all sincerity, to say when the general appealed to a
-possible vanity in him by hoping that he didn’t mind being kind to a
-little girl and going about with her. “She’s the only companion we have
-for you, you see. And we all find her very good company, in spite of her
-ten years.”
-
-And at this Gavan said, with a smile that protested against any idea
-that he should not find her so: “I’m only afraid that I’m not good
-company for any one. She is a dear little girl.”
-
-It was in the wanderings over the moors and in the birch-woods and up
-the hillside, where Eppie took him to see her views, that the bond
-really drew to closeness. Here nature and little Eppie seemed together
-to thaw him, to heal him, to make him unconsciously happy. A fugitive
-color dawned in his wasted cheeks; a fragile gaiety came to his manner.
-He began to find it easy to talk, easy to be quite a little boy. And
-once he did talk, Gavan talked a great deal, quickly, with a sort of
-nervous eagerness. There grew, in Eppie’s mind, a vast mirage-like
-picture of the strange land he came from: the great mountains about
-their high summer home; the blue-shadowed verandas; the flowers he and
-his mother grew in the garden; the rides at dawn; the long, hot days;
-the gentle, softly moving servants, some of whom he loved and told her a
-great deal about. Then the crowds, the swarming colors of the bazaars in
-the great cities.
-
-“No, no; don’t wish to go there,” he said, taking his swift, light
-strides through the heather, his head bent, his eyes looking before
-him--he seldom looked at one, glanced only; “I hate it,--more than you
-do church!” and though his simile was humorous he didn’t laugh with it.
-“I hate the thought of any one I care about being there.” He had still,
-for Eppie, his mystery, and she dimly felt, too, that his greater ease
-with her made more apparent his underlying sadness; but the sense of
-being an outsider was gone, and she glowed now at the implication that
-she was one he cared about.
-
-“It’s vast and meaningless,” said Gavan, who often used terms curiously
-unboyish. “I can’t describe it to you. It’s like a dream; you expect all
-the time to wake up and find nothing.”
-
-“I know that I should never love anything so much as Scotland--as
-heather and pines and sky with clouds. Still, I should like to see
-India. I should like to see everything that there is to be seen--if I
-could be sure of always coming back here.”
-
-“Ah, yes, if one could be sure of that.”
-
-“I shall always live here, Gavan,” said Eppie, feeling the skepticism of
-his “if.”
-
-“Well, that may be so,” he returned, with the manner that made her
-realize so keenly the difference that was more than a matter of four
-years.
-
-She insisted now: “I shall live here until I am grown up. Then I shall
-travel everywhere, all over the world--India, Japan, America; then I
-shall marry and come back here to live and have twelve children. I don’t
-believe you care for children as I do, Gavan. How they would enjoy
-themselves here, twelve of them all together--six boys and six girls.”
-
-Gavan laughed. “Well, I hope all that will come true,” he assented. “Why
-twelve?”
-
-“I don’t know; but I’ve always thought of there being twelve. I would
-like as many as possible, and one could hardly remember the names of
-more. I don’t believe that there are more than twelve names that I care
-for. But with twelve we should have a birthday-party once a month, one
-for each month. Did you have birthday-cakes in India, Gavan, with
-candles for your age?”
-
-“Yes; my mother always had a cake for my birthday.” His voice, in
-speaking of his mother, seemed always to steel itself, as though to
-speak of her hurt him. Eppie had felt this directly, and now, regretting
-her allusion, said, “When is your birthday, Gavan?” thinking of a cake
-with fifteen candles--how splendid!--to hear disappointingly that the
-day was not till January, when he would have been gone--long since.
-
-On another time, as they walked up the hillside, beside the burn, she
-said: “I thought you were not going to like us at all, when you first
-came.”
-
-“I was horribly afraid of you all,” said Gavan. “Everything was so
-strange to me.”
-
-“No, you weren’t afraid,” Eppie objected--“not really afraid. I don’t
-believe you are ever really afraid of people.”
-
-“Yes, I am--afraid of displeasing them, trying them in some way. And I
-was miserable on that day, too, with anxiety about my poor monkey. I’m
-sorry I seemed horrid.”
-
-“Not a bit horrid, only very cold and polite.”
-
-“I didn’t realize things much. You see--“ Gavan paused.
-
-“Yes, of course; you weren’t thinking of us. You were thinking of--what
-you had left.”
-
-“Yes,” he assented, not looking at her.
-
-He went on presently, turning his eyes on her and smiling over a sort of
-alarm at his own advance to personalities: “_You_ weren’t horrid. I
-remember that I thought you the nicest little girl I had ever seen. You
-were all that I did see--standing there in the sun, with a white dress
-like Alice in Wonderland and with your hair all shining. I never saw
-hair like it.”
-
-“Do you think it pretty?” Eppie asked eagerly.
-
-“Very--all those rivers of gold in the dark.”
-
-“I _am_ glad. I think it pretty, too, and nurse is afraid that I am
-vain, I think, for she always takes great pains to tell me that it is
-striped hair and that she hopes it may grow to be the same color when
-I’m older.”
-
-“_I_ hope not,” said Gavan, gallantly.
-
-Many long afternoons were spent in the garden, where Eppie initiated him
-into the sanctities of the summer-house. Gavan’s sense of other people’s
-sanctities was wonderful. She would never have dreamed of showing her
-dolls to her cousins; but she brought them out and displayed them to
-Gavan, and he looked at them and their appurtenances carefully, gravely
-assenting to all the characteristics that she pointed out. So kind,
-indeed, so comprehending was he, that Eppie, a delightful project
-dawning in her mind, asked: “Have you ever played with dolls? I mean
-when you were very little?”
-
-“No, never.”
-
-“I’ve always had to play by myself,” said Eppie, “and it’s rather dull
-sometimes, having to carry on all the conversations alone.” And with a
-rush she brought out, rather aghast at her own hardihood, “I suppose you
-couldn’t think of playing with me?”
-
-Gavan, at this, showed something of the bashful air of a young bachelor
-asked to hold a baby, but in a moment he said, “I shouldn’t mind at all,
-though I’m afraid I shall be stupid at it.”
-
-Eppie flushed, incredulous of such good fortune, and almost reluctant to
-accept it. “You _really_ don’t mind, Gavan? Boys hate dolls, as a rule,
-you know.”
-
-“I don’t mind in the least,” he laughed. “I am sure I shall enjoy it.
-How do we begin? You must teach me.”
-
-“I’ll teach you everything. You are the very kindest person I ever knew,
-Gavan. Really, I wouldn’t ask you to if I didn’t believe you would like
-it when once you had tried it. It is such fun. And now we can make them
-do all sorts of things, have all sorts of adventures, that they never
-could have before.” She suspected purest generosity, but so trusted in
-the enchantments he was to discover that she felt herself justified in
-profiting by it. She placed in his hand Agnes, the fairest of all the
-dolls, golden-haired, blue-eyed. Agnes was good, and her own daughter,
-Elspeth, named after herself, was bad. “As bad as possible,” said Eppie.
-“I have to whip her a great deal.”
-
-Gavan, holding his charge rather helplessly and looking at Elspeth, a
-doll of sturdier build, with short hair, dark eyes, and, for a doll, a
-mutinous face, remarked, with his touch of humor, “I thought you didn’t
-approve of whipping.”
-
-“I don’t,--not real children, or dolls either, except when they are
-really bad. Mr. MacNab whips his all the time, and they are not a bit
-bad, really, as Elspeth is.” And Elspeth proceeded to demonstrate how
-really bad she was by falling upon Agnes with such malicious kicks and
-blows that Gavan, in defense of his own doll, dealt her a vigorous slap.
-
-“Well done, Mr. Palairet; she richly deserves it! Come here directly,
-you naughty child,” and after a scuffling flight around the
-summer-house, Elspeth was secured, and so soundly beaten that Gavan at
-last interceded for her with the ruthless mother.
-
-“Not until she says that she is sorry.”
-
-“Oh, Elspeth, say that you are sorry,” Gavan supplicated, while he
-laughed. “Really, Eppie, you are savage. I feel as if you were really
-hurting some one. Please forgive her now; Agnes has, I am sure.”
-
-“I hurt her because I love her and want her to be a good child. She will
-come to no good end when she grows up if she cannot learn to control her
-temper. What is it I hear you say, Elspeth?”
-
-Elspeth, in a low, sullen voice that did not augur well for permanent
-amendment, whispered that she was sorry, and was led up, crestfallen, to
-beg Agnes’s pardon and to receive a reconciling kiss.
-
-The table was then brought out and laid. Eppie had her small store of
-biscuits and raisins, and Elspeth and Agnes were sent into the garden to
-pick currants and flowers. To Agnes was given the task of making a
-nosegay for the place of each guest. There were four of these guests,
-bidden to the feast with great ceremony: three, pink and curly, of
-little individuality, and the fourth a dingy, armless old rag-doll,
-reverently wrapped in a fine shawl, and with a pathetic,
-half-obliterated face.
-
-“Very old and almost deaf,” Eppie whispered to Gavan. “Everybody loves
-her. She lost her arms in a great fire, saving a baby’s life.”
-
-Gavan was entering into all the phases of the game with such spirit,
-keeping up Agnes’s character for an irritating perfection so aptly that
-Eppie forgot to wonder if his enjoyment were as real as her own. But
-suddenly the doorway was darkened, and glancing up, she saw her uncle’s
-face, long-drawn with jocular incredulity, looking in upon them. Then,
-and only then, under the eyes of an uncomprehending sex, did the true
-caliber of Gavan’s self-immolation flash upon her. A boy, a big boy, he
-was playing dolls with a girl; it was monstrous; as monstrous as the
-general’s eyes showed that he found it. Stooping in his tall slightness,
-as he assisted Agnes’s steps across the floor, he seemed, suddenly, a
-fairy prince decoyed and flouted. What would Uncle Nigel think of him?
-She could almost have flung herself before him protectingly.
-
-The general had burst into laughter. “Now, upon my word, this is too bad
-of you, Eppie!” he cried, while Gavan, not abandoning his hold on
-Agnes’s arm, turned his eyes upon the intruder with perfect serenity.
-“You are the most unconscionable little tyrant. You kept the Grainger
-boys under your thumb; but I didn’t think you could carry wheedling or
-bullying as far as this. Gavan, my dear boy, you are too patient with
-her.”
-
-Eppie stood at the table, scarlet with anger and compunction. Gavan had
-raised himself, and, still holding Agnes, looked from one to the other.
-
-“But she hasn’t bullied me; she hasn’t wheedled me,” he said. “I like
-it.”
-
-“At your age, my dear boy! Like doll-babies!”
-
-“Indeed I do.”
-
-“This is the finest bit of chivalry I’ve come across for a long time.
-The gentleman who jumped into the lions’ den for his mistress’s glove
-was hardly pluckier. Drop that ridiculous thing and come away. I’ll
-rescue you.”
-
-“But I don’t want to be rescued. I really am enjoying myself. It’s not a
-case of courage at all,” Gavan protested.
-
-This was too much. He should not tarnish himself to shield her, and
-Eppie burst out: “Nonsense, Gavan. I asked you to. You are only doing it
-because you are so kind, and to please me. It was very wrong of me. Put
-her down as Uncle Nigel says.”
-
-“There, our little tyrant is honest, at all events. Drop it, Gavan. You
-should see the figure you cut with that popinjay in your arms. Come,
-you’ve won your spurs. Come away with me.”
-
-But Gavan, smiling, shook his head. “No, I don’t want to, thanks. I did
-it to please her, if you like; but now I do it to please myself. Playing
-with dolls is a most amusing game,--and you are interrupting us at a
-most interesting point,” he added. He seemed, funnily, doll and all,
-older than the general as he said it. Incredulous but mystified, Uncle
-Nigel was forced to beat a retreat, and Gavan was left confronting his
-playmate.
-
-“Why did you tell him that you enjoyed it?” she cried. “He’ll think you
-unmanly.”
-
-“My dear Eppie, he won’t think me unmanly at all. Besides, I don’t care
-if he does.”
-
-“_I_ care.”
-
-“But, Eppie, you take it too hard. Why should you care? It’s only funny.
-Why shouldn’t we amuse ourselves as we like? We are only children.”
-
-“You are much more than a child. Uncle Nigel thinks so, too, I am sure.”
-
-“All the more reason, then, for my having a right to amuse myself as I
-please. And I am a child, for I do amuse myself.”
-
-Eppie stood staring out rigidly at the blighted prospect, and he took
-her unyielding hand. “Poor Elspeth is lying on her face. Do let us go
-on. I want you to hear what Agnes has to say next.”
-
-She turned to him now. “I don’t believe a word you say. You only did it
-for me. You are only doing it for me now.”
-
-“Well, what if I did? What if I do? Can’t I enjoy doing things for you?
-And really, really, Eppie, I do think it fun. I assure you I do.”
-
-“I think you are a hero,” Eppie said solemnly, and at this absurdity he
-burst into his high, shrill laugh, and renewed his supplications; but
-supplications were in vain. She refused to let him play with her again.
-He might do things for the dolls,--yes, she reluctantly consented to
-that at last,--he might take the part of robber or of dangerous wild
-beast in the woods, but into domestic relations, as it were, he should
-not enter with them; and from this determination Gavan could not move
-her.
-
-As far as his dignity in the eyes of others went, he might have gone on
-playing dolls with her all summer; Eppie realized, with surprise and
-relief, that Gavan’s assurance had been well founded. Uncle Nigel,
-evidently, did not think him unmanly, and there was no chaffing. It
-really was as he had said, he was so little a child that he could do as
-he chose. His dignity needed no defense.
-
-But though the doll episode was not to be repeated, other and more equal
-ties knit her friendship with Gavan. Wide vistas of talk opened from
-their lessons, from their readings together. As they rambled through the
-heather they would talk of the Odyssey, of Plutarch’s Lives, of nearer
-great people and events in history. Gavan listened with smiling interest
-while Eppie expressed her hatreds and her loves, correcting her
-vehemence, now and then, by a reference to mitigatory circumstance.
-Penelope was one of the people she hated. “See, Gavan, how she neglected
-her husband’s dog while he was away--let him starve to death on a
-dunghill.”
-
-Gavan surmised that the Homeric Greeks had little sense of
-responsibility about dogs.
-
-“They were horrid, then,” said Eppie. “Dear Argos! Think of him trying
-to wag his tail when he was dying and saw Ulysses; _he_ was horrid, too,
-for he surely might have just stopped for a moment and patted his head.
-I’m glad that Robbie didn’t live in those times. You wouldn’t let Robbie
-die on a dunghill if _I_ were to go away!”
-
-“No, indeed, Eppie!” Gavan smiled.
-
-“I think you really love Robbie as much as I do, Gavan. You love him
-more than Uncle Nigel does. One can always see in people’s eyes how much
-they love a dog. That fat, red Miss Erskine simply feels nothing for
-them, though she always says ‘Come, come,’ to Robbie. But her eyes are
-like stones when she looks at him. She is really thinking about her
-tea, and watching to see that Aunt Rachel puts in plenty of cream. I
-suppose that Penelope looked like her, when she used to see Argos on the
-dunghill.”
-
-Robbie was plunging through the heather before them and paused to look
-round at them, his delicate tongue lapping in little pants over his
-teeth.
-
-“Darling Robbie,” said Gavan. “Our eyes aren’t like stones when we look
-at you! See him smile, Eppie, when I speak to him. Wouldn’t it be funny
-if we smiled with our ears instead of with our mouths.”
-
-Gavan, after a moment, sighed involuntarily and deeply.
-
-“What is the matter?” Eppie asked quickly, for she had grown near enough
-to ask it. And how near they were was shown after a little silence, by
-Gavan saying: “I was only wishing that everything could be happy at
-once, Eppie. I was thinking about my mother and wishing that she might
-be here with you and me and Robbie.” His voice was steadied to its cold
-quiet as he said it, though he knew how safe from any hurt he was with
-her. And she said nothing, and did not look at him, only, in silence,
-putting a hand of comradeship on his shoulder while they walked.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Once a week, on the days of the Indian mail, Eppie’s understanding
-hovered helplessly about Gavan, seeing pain for him and powerless to
-shield him from it. Prayers took place in the dining-room ten minutes
-before breakfast, and with the breakfast the mail was brought in, so
-that Gavan’s promptest descent could not secure him a solitary reading
-of the letter that, Eppie felt, he awaited with trembling eagerness.
-
-“A letter from India, Gavan dear,” Miss Rachel, the distributer of the
-mail would say. “Tell us your news.” And before them all, in the midst
-of the general’s comments on politics, crops, and weather, the rustling
-of newspapers, the pouring of tea, he was forced to open and read his
-letter and to answer, even during the reading, the kindly triviality of
-the questions showered upon him. “Yes, thank you, very well indeed. Yes,
-in Calcutta. Yes, enjoying herself, I think, thanks.” His pallor on
-these occasions, his look of hardened endurance, told Eppie all that it
-did not tell the others. And that his eagerness was too great for him to
-wait until after breakfast, she saw, too. A bright thought of rescue
-came to her at last. On the mornings when the Indian mail was due, she
-was up a good hour before her usual time. Long before the quaint,
-musical gong sounded its vague, blurred melody for prayers, she was out
-of the house and running through the birch-woods to the village road,
-where, just above the church, she met the postman. He was an old friend,
-glad to please the young lady’s love of importance, and the mail was
-trusted to her care. Eppie saved all her speed for the return. Every
-moment counted for Gavan’s sheltered reading. She felt as if, her back
-to its door, she stood before the sheltered chamber of their meeting,
-guarding their clasp and kiss, sweet and sorrowful, from alien eyes.
-Flushed, panting, she darted up to his room, handing his letter in to
-him, while she said in an easy, matter-of-fact tone, “Your mail, Gavan.”
-
-Gavan, like the postman, attributed his good luck to Eppie’s love of
-importance, and only on the third morning discovered her manœuver.
-
-He came down early himself to get his own letter, found that the mail
-had not arrived, and, strolling disappointedly down the drive, was
-almost knocked down by Eppie rushing in at the gate. She fell back,
-dismayed at the revelation that must force the fullness of her sympathy
-upon him--almost as if she herself glanced in at the place of meeting.
-
-“I’ve got the letters,” she said, leaning on the stone pillar and
-recovering her breath. “There’s one for you.” And she held it out.
-
-But for once Gavan’s concentration seemed to be for her rather than for
-the letter. “My mother’s letter?” he said.
-
-She nodded.
-
-“It was you, then. I wondered why they came so much earlier.”
-
-“I met the postman; he likes to be saved that much of his walk.”
-
-“You must have to go a long way to get them so early. You went on
-purpose for me, I think.”
-
-Looking aside, she now had to own: “I saw that you hated reading them
-before us all. I would hate it, too.”
-
-“Eppie, my dearest Eppie,” said Gavan. Glancing at him, she saw tears in
-his eyes, and joy and pride flamed up in her. He opened the letter and
-read it, walking beside her, his hand on her shoulder, showing her that
-he did not count her among “us all.”
-
-After that they went together to meet the postman, and, unasked, Gavan
-would read to her long pieces from what his mother said.
-
-It was a few weeks later, on one of these days, that she knew, from his
-face while he read, and from his silence, that bad news had come. He
-left her at the house, making no confidence, and at breakfast, when he
-came down to it later, she could see that he had been struggling for
-self-mastery. This pale, controlled face, at which she glanced furtively
-while they did their lessons in the library, made her think of the
-Spartan boy, calm over an agony. Even the general noticed the mechanical
-voice and the pallor and asked him if he were feeling tired this
-morning. Gavan owned to a headache.
-
-“Off to the moors directly, then,” said the general; “and you, too,
-Eppie. Have a morning together.”
-
-Eppie sat over her book and said that perhaps Gavan would rather go
-without her; but Gavan, who had risen, said quickly that he wanted her
-to come. “Let us go to the hilltop,” he said, when they were outside in
-the warm, scented sunlight.
-
-They went through the woods, where the burn ran, rippling loudly, and
-the shadows were blue on the little, sandy path that wound among pines
-and birches. Neither spoke while they climbed the gradual ascent. They
-came out upon the height that ran in a long undulation to the far lift
-of mountain ranges. Under a solitary group of pines they sat down.
-
-The woods of Kirklands were below them, and then the vast sea of purple,
-heaving in broad, long waves to the azure, intense and clear, of the
-horizon. The wind sighed, soft and shrill, through the pines above them,
-and far away they heard a sheep-bell tinkle. Beyond the delicate
-miniature of the village a wind-mill turned slow, gray sails. The whole
-world, seemed a sunlit island floating in the circling blue. Robbie sat
-at their feet, alert, upright, silhouetted against the sky.
-
-“Robbie, Robbie,” said Gavan, gently, as he leaned forward and stroked
-the dog’s back. Eppie, too, stroked with him. The silence of his unknown
-grief weighed heavily on her heart and she guessed that though for him
-the pain of silence was great, the pain of speech seemed greater.
-
-He presently raised himself again, clasping both hands about his knees
-and looking away into the vast distance. His head, with its thick hair,
-its fine, aquiline nose and delicately jutting chin, made Eppie think,
-vaguely, of a picture she had seen of a young Saint Sebastian, mutely
-enduring arrows, on a background of serene sky. With the thought, the
-silence became unendurable; she strung herself to speak. “Tell me,
-Gavan,” she said, “have you had bad news?”
-
-He cast her a frightened glance, and, looking down, began to pull at the
-heather. “No, not bad news, exactly.”
-
-Eppie drew a breath of dubious relief. “But you are so unhappy about
-something.”
-
-Gavan nodded.
-
-“But why, if it’s not bad news?”
-
-After a pause he said, and she knew, with all the pain of it, what the
-relief of speaking must be: “I guess at things. I always feel if she is
-hiding things.”
-
-“Perhaps you are only imagining.”
-
-“I wish I could think it; but I know not. I know what is happening to
-her.”
-
-He was still wrenching away at the heather, tossing aside the purple
-sprays with their finely tangled sandy roots. Suddenly he put his head
-on his knees, hiding his face.
-
-“Oh, Gavan! Oh, don’t be so unhappy,” Eppie whispered, drawing near him,
-helpless and awe-struck.
-
-“How can I be anything but unhappy when the person I care most for is
-miserable--miserable, and I am so far from her?” His shoulders heaved;
-she saw that he was weeping.
-
-Eppie, at first, gazed, motionless, silent, frozen with a child’s quick
-fear of demonstrated grief. A child’s quick response followed. Throwing
-her arms around him, she too burst into tears.
-
-It was strange to see how the boy’s reserves melted in the onslaught of
-this hot, simple sympathy. He turned to her, hiding his face on her
-shoulder, and they cried together.
-
-“I didn’t want to make you unhappy, too,” Gavan said at last in a
-weakened voice. His tears were over first and he faintly smiled as he
-met Robbie’s alarmed, beseeching eyes. Robbie had been scrambling over
-them, scratching, whining, licking their hands and cheeks in an
-exasperation of shut-out pity.
-
-“I’m not nearly so unhappy as when you don’t say anything and I know
-that you are keeping things back,” Eppie choked, pushing Robbie away
-blindly. “I’d much rather _be_ unhappy if you are.”
-
-It was Gavan, one arm around the rejected Robbie, who had to dry her
-tears, trying to console her with: “Perhaps I did imagine more than
-there actually is. One can’t help imagining--at this distance.” He
-smiled at her, as he had smiled at Robbie, and holding her hand, he went
-on: “She is so gentle, and so lonely, and so unhappy. I could help her
-out there. Here, I am so helpless.”
-
-“Make her come here!” Eppie cried. “Write at once and make her come.
-Send a wire, Gavan. Couldn’t she be here very soon, if you wired that
-she must--_must_ come? I wouldn’t bear it if I were you.”
-
-“She can’t come. She must stay with my father.”
-
-All the barriers were down now, so that Eppie could insist: “She would
-rather be with you. You want her most.”
-
-“Yes, I want her most. But he needs her most,” said Gavan. “He is
-extravagant and weak and bad. He drinks and he gambles, and if she left
-him he would probably soon ruin himself--and us; for my mother has no
-money. She could not leave him if she would. And though he is often very
-cruel to her, he wants her with him.” Gavan spoke with all his quiet,
-but he had flushed as if from a still anger. “Money is an odious thing,
-Eppie. That’s what I want to do, as soon as I can: make money for her.”
-He added presently: “I pray for strength to help her.”
-
-There was a long silence after this. Gavan lay back on the heather, his
-hat tilted over his tired eyes. Eppie sat above him, staring out at the
-empty blue. Her longing, her pity, her revolt from this suffering,--for
-herself and for him,--her vague but vehement desires, flew out--out; she
-almost seemed to see them, like strong, bright birds flying so far at
-last that the blue engulfed them. The idea hurt her. She turned away
-from the dissolving vastness before which it was impossible to think or
-feel, turned her head to look down at the long, white form beside her,
-exhausted and inert. Darling Gavan. How he suffered. His poor mother,
-too. She saw Gavan’s mother in a sort of padlocked palanquin under a
-burning sky, surrounded by dazzling deserts, a Blue-beard, bristling
-with swords, reeling in a drunken sentinelship round her prison.
-Considering Gavan, with his hidden face, the thought of his last words
-came more distinctly to her. A long time had passed, and his breast was
-rising quietly, almost as if he slept. Conjecture grew as to the odd
-form of action in which he evidently trusted. “Do you pray a great deal,
-Gavan?” she asked.
-
-He nodded under the hat.
-
-“Do you feel as if there was a God--quite near you--who listened?”
-
-“I wouldn’t want to live unless I could feel that.”
-
-Eppie paused at this, perplexed, and asked presently, with a slight
-embarrassment, “Why not?”
-
-“Nothing would have any meaning,” said Gavan.
-
-“No meaning, Gavan? You would still care for your mother and want to
-help her, wouldn’t you?”
-
-“Yes, but without God there would be no hope of helping her, no hope of
-strength. Why, Eppie,” came the voice from behind the hat, “without God
-life would be death.”
-
-Eppie retired to another discomfited silence. “I am afraid I don’t think
-much about God,” she confessed at last. “I always feel as if I had
-strength already--I suppose, heaps and heaps of strength.
-Only--to-day--I do know more what you mean. If only God would do
-something for you and your mother. You want something so big to help you
-if you are very, very unhappy.”
-
-“Yes, and some one to turn to when you are lonely.”
-
-Again Eppie hesitated. “Well, but, Gavan, while you’re here you have me,
-you know.”
-
-At this Gavan pushed aside his hat almost to laugh at her. “What a
-funny little girl you are, Eppie! What a dear little girl! Yes, of
-course, I have you. But when I go away? And even while I’m here,--what
-if we were both lonely together? Can’t you imagine that? The feeling of
-being lost in a great forest at night. You have such quaint ideas about
-God.”
-
-“I’ve never had any ideas at all. I’ve only thought of Some One who was
-there,--Some One I didn’t need yet. I’ve always thought of God as being
-more for grown-up people. Lost in a forest together? I don’t think I
-would mind that so much, Gavan. I don’t think I would be frightened, if
-we were together.”
-
-“I didn’t exactly mean it literally,--not a real forest, perhaps.” He
-had looked away from her, and, his thin, white face sunken among the
-heather, his eyes were on the blue immensities where her thoughts had
-lost themselves. “I am so often frightened. I get so lost sometimes that
-I can hardly believe that that Some One is near me. And then the fear
-becomes a sort of numbness, so that I hardly seem there myself; it’s
-only loneliness, while I melt and melt away into nothing. Even now, when
-I look at that sky, the feeling creeps and creeps, that dreadful
-loneliness, where there isn’t any I left to know that it’s lonely--only
-a feeling.” He shut his eyes resolutely. “My mother always says that it
-is when one has such fancies that one must pray and have faith.”
-
-Eppie hardly felt that he spoke to her, and she groped among his strange
-thoughts, seizing the most concrete of them, imitating his shutting out
-of the emptiness by closing her own eyes. “Yes,” she said, reflecting in
-the odd, glowing dimness, “I am quite sure that you have much more
-feeling about God when you think hard, inside yourself, than when you
-look at the sky.”
-
-“Only then, there are chasms inside, too.” Gavan’s hand beside him was
-once more restlessly pulling at the heather. “Even inside, one can fall,
-and fall, and fall.”
-
-The strange tone of his voice--it was indeed like the far note of a
-falling bell, dying in an abyss--roused Eppie from her experiments. She
-shook his shoulder. “Open your eyes, Gavan; please, at once. You make me
-feel horridly. I would rather have you look at the sky than fall inside
-like that.”
-
-He raised himself on an arm now, with a gaze, for a moment, vague,
-deadened, blank, then sprang to his feet. “Don’t let’s look. Don’t let’s
-fall. We must pray and have faith. Eppie, I have made you so pale. Dear
-Eppie, to care so much. Please forgive me for going to pieces like
-that.”
-
-Eppie was on her feet, too. “But I want you to. You know what I mean:
-never hide things. Oh, Gavan, if I could only help you.”
-
-“You do. It is because you care, just in the way you do, that I _could_
-go to pieces,--and it has helped me to be so selfish.”
-
-“Please be selfish, often, often, then. I always am caring. And just
-wait till I am grown up. I shall do something for you then. _I’ll_ make
-money, too, Gavan.”
-
-“Eppie, you are the dearest little girl,” he repeated, in a shaken
-voice; and at that she put her arms around his neck and kissed him. The
-boy’s eyes filled with tears. They stood under the sighing pines, high
-in the blue, and the scent of the heather was strong, sweet, in the
-sunny air. Gavan did not return the kiss, but holding her face between
-his hands, stammering, he said, “Eppie, how can I bear ever to leave
-you?”
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-In looking back, after long years, at their summer, Eppie could see,
-more clearly than when she lived in it, that sadness and Gavan had
-always gone together. He had, as it were, initiated her into suffering.
-Sadness was the undertone of their sweet comradeship. Their happy
-stories came to tragic endings. Death and disaster, though in trivial
-forms, followed him.
-
-With his returning strength, and perhaps with a sense of atonement to
-her for what he had called his selfishness, Gavan plunged eagerly into
-any outer interest that would please her. He spent hours in building for
-her a little hut on the banks of the brae among the birches: the dolls’
-Petit Trianon he called it, as the summer-house was their Versailles.
-They had been reading about the French Revolution. Eppie objected to the
-analogy. “I should always imagine that Elspeth’s head were going to be
-cut off if I called it that.”
-
-Gavan said that Elspeth need not be the queen, but a less exalted, more
-fortunate court lady. “We’ll imagine that she escaped early from France
-with all her family, saw none of the horrors, was a happy _émigrée_ in
-England and married there,” he said; and he went on, while he hammered
-at the pine boughs, with a desultory and reassuring account of Elspeth’s
-English adventures. But poor Elspeth came to as sad an end as any victim
-of the guillotine. Eppie was carrying her one day when she and Gavan had
-followed Aunt Barbara on some housewifely errand up to the highest attic
-rooms. Outside the low sills of the dormer-windows ran a narrow stone
-gallery looking down over the pine-tree and the garden. The children
-squeezed out through the window to hang in delighted contemplation over
-the birds’-eye view, and then Eppie crawled to a farther corner where
-one could see round to the moorland and find oneself on a level, almost,
-with the rooks’ nests in the lime-trees. She handed Elspeth to Gavan to
-hold for her while she went on this adventure.
-
-He had just risen to his feet, looking down from where he stood over the
-low parapet, when a sudden cry from Eppie--a great bird sailing by that
-she called to him to look at--made him start, almost losing his balance
-on the narrow ledge. Elspeth fell from his arms.
-
-She was picked up on the garden path, far, far beneath, with a shattered
-head. Gavan, perhaps, suffered more from the disaster than Eppie
-herself. He was sick with dismay and self-reproach. She was forced to
-make light of her grief to soothe his. But she did not feel that her
-soothing hoodwinked or comforted him. Indeed, after that hour on the
-hilltop, when he showed her his sorrow and his fear, Eppie felt that
-though near, very near him, she was also held away. It was as if he felt
-a discomfort in the nearness, or a dread that through it he might hurt
-again or be hurt. He was at once more loving and more reticent. His
-resolute cheerfulness, when they could be cheerful, was a wall between
-them.
-
-Once more, and only once, before their childhood together ended, was she
-to see all, feel all, suffer all with him. Toward the end of the summer
-Robbie sickened and died. For three nights the children sat up with him,
-taking turns at sleep, refusing alien help. By candle-light, in Eppie’s
-room, they bent over Robbie’s basket, listening to his laboring breath.
-The general, protesting against the folly of the sleepless nights, yet
-tiptoed in and out, gruffly kind, moved by the pathos of the young
-figures. He gave medical advice and superintended the administering of
-teaspoonfuls of milk and brandy. That he thought Robbie’s case a
-hopeless one the children knew, for all his air of reassuring good
-cheer.
-
-Robbie died early on the morning of the fourth day. A little while
-before, he faintly wagged his tail when they spoke to him, raising eyes
-unendurably sad.
-
-Eppie, during the illness, had been constantly in tears; Gavan had shown
-a stoic fortitude. But when all was over and Eppie was covering Robbie
-with the white towel that was to be his shroud, Gavan suddenly broke
-down. Casting his arms around her, hiding his face against her, he burst
-into sobs, saying in a shuddering voice, while he clung to her, shaken
-all through with the violence of his weeping: “Oh, I can’t bear it,
-Eppie! I can’t bear it!”
-
-Before this absolute shattering Eppie found her own self-control.
-Holding him to her,--and she almost thought that he would have fallen if
-she had not so held him,--she murmured, “Gavan, darling Gavan, I know, I
-know.”
-
-“Oh, Eppie,” he gasped, “we will never see him again.”
-
-She had drawn him down to the window-seat, where they leaned together,
-and she was silent for a moment at his last words. But suddenly her arms
-tightened around him with an almost vindictive tenderness. “We _will_,”
-she said.
-
-“Never! Never!” Gavan gasped. “His eyes, Eppie,--his eyes seemed to know
-it; they were saying good-by forever. And, oh, Eppie, they were so
-astonished--so astonished,” he repeated, while the sobs shook him.
-
-“We will,” Eppie said again, pressing the boy’s head to hers, while she
-shut her eyes over the poignant memory. “Why, Gavan, I don’t know much
-about God, but I do know about heaven. Animals will go to heaven; it
-wouldn’t be heaven unless they were there.”
-
-That memory of the astonishment in Robbie’s eyes seemed to put knives in
-her heart, but over the sharpness she grasped her conviction.
-
-In all the despair of his grief, the boy had, in answering her, the
-disciplined logic of his more formal faith, more clearly seen fact.
-
-“Dear Eppie, animals have no souls.”
-
-“How do you know?” she retorted, almost with anger.
-
-“One only has to think. They stop, as Robbie has.”
-
-“How do you know he has stopped? It’s only,” said Eppie, groping, “that
-he doesn’t want his body any longer.”
-
-“But it’s Robbie in his body that we want. It’s his body, with Robbie in
-it, that we know. God has done with wanting him--that’s it, perhaps; but
-we want him. Oh, Eppie, it’s no good: as we know him, as we want him, he
-is dead--dead forever. Besides,”--in speaking this Gavan straightened
-himself,--“we shall forget him.” He turned, in speaking, from her
-consolations, as though their inefficiency hurt him.
-
-“I won’t forget him,” said Eppie.
-
-Gavan made no reply. He had risen, and standing now at the widely opened
-window, looked out over the chill, misty dawn. Beneath was the garden,
-its golden-gray walls rippling with green traceries, the clotted color
-of the hanging fruit among them. Over the hilltop, the solitary group of
-pines, the running wave of mountain, was a great piece of palest blue,
-streaked with milky filaments. The boughs of the pine-tree were just
-below the window, drenched with dew through all their fragrant darkness.
-
-Eppie, too, rose, and stood beside him.
-
-The hardened misery on his young face hurt her childish, yet
-comprehending heart even more than Robbie’s supplicating and astonished
-eyes had done. She could imagine that look of steeled endurance freezing
-through it forever, and an answering hardness of opposition rose in her
-to resist and break it. “We won’t forget him.”
-
-“People do forget,” Gavan answered.
-
-She found a cruel courage. “Could you forget your mother?”
-
-Gavan continued to look stonily out of the window and did not answer
-her.
-
-“Could you?” she repeated.
-
-“Don’t, Eppie, don’t,” he said.
-
-She saw that she had stirred some black terror in him, and her ignorant,
-responsive fear made her pitiless: “Could you forget her if she died?
-Never. Never as long as you lived.”
-
-“Already,” he said, as though the words were forced from him by her
-will, “I haven’t remembered her all the time.”
-
-“She is there. You haven’t forgotten her.”
-
-“Years and years come. New things come. Old things fade and fade,--all
-but the deepest things. They couldn’t fade. No,” he repeated, “they
-couldn’t. Only, even they might get dimmer.”
-
-She saw that he spoke from an agony of doubt, and he seemed to wrench
-the knife she had stabbed him with from his heart as he added: “But
-Robbie is such a little thing. And little things people do forget, I am
-sure of it. It’s that that makes them so sad.”
-
-“Well, then,”--Eppie, too, felt the relief of the lesser pain,--“they
-will remember again. When you see Robbie in heaven you will remember all
-about him. But I won’t forget him,” she repeated once more, swallowing
-the sob that rose chokingly at the thought of how long it would be till
-they should see Robbie in heaven.
-
-Gavan had now a vague, chill smile for the pertinacity of her faith.
-Something had broken in him, as if, with Robbie’s passing, a veil had
-been drawn from reality, an illusion of confidence dispelled forever. He
-leaned out of the window and breathed in the scent of the wet pine-tree,
-looking, with an odd detachment and clearness of observation,--as if
-through that acceptation of tragedy all his senses had grown keener,--at
-the bluish bloom the dew made upon the pine-needles; at the flowers and
-fruit in the garden below, the thatched roof of the summer-house, the
-fragile whiteness of the roses growing near it, like a bridal veil blown
-against the ancient wall. It was, in a moment of strange, suspended
-vision, as if he had often and often seen tragic dawn in the garden
-before and was often to see it again. What was he? Where was he? All the
-world was like a dream and he seemed to see to its farthest ends and
-back to its beginnings.
-
-Eppie stood silent beside him.
-
-He was presently conscious of her silence, and then, the uncanny
-crystal, gazing sense slipping from him, of a possible unkindness in his
-repudiating grief. He looked round at her. The poor child’s eyes, heavy
-with weeping and all the weight of the dark, encompassing woe he had
-shown her, dwelt on him with a somber compassionateness.
-
-“Poor, darling little Eppie,” he said, putting an arm about her, “what a
-brute, a selfish brute, I am.”
-
-“Why a brute, Gavan?”
-
-“Making you suffer--more. I’m always making you suffer, Eppie, always;
-and you are really such a happy person. Come, let us go out for a walk.
-Let us go out on the moor. It will be delicious in the heather now. I
-want to see it and smell it. It will do us good.”
-
-She resented his wisdom. “But you won’t forget Robbie, while we walk.”
-
-For a moment, as if in great weariness, Gavan leaned his head against
-her shoulder. “Don’t talk of Robbie, please. We must forget him--just
-now, or try to, or else we can’t go on at all.”
-
-Still she persisted, for she could not let it go like that: “I can think
-of him and go on too. I don’t want to run away from Robbie because he
-makes me unhappy.”
-
-Gavan sighed, raising his head. “You are stronger than I am, Eppie. I
-must--I must run away.” He took her hand and drew her to the door, and
-she followed him, though glancing back, as she went, at the little form
-under the shroud.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Robbie’s death overshadowed the last days of Gavan’s stay. Eppie did not
-feel, after it, after his avowed and helpless breakdown, the barrier
-sense so strongly. He didn’t attempt to hide dejection; but that was
-probably because she too was dejected and there was no necessity for
-keeping up appearances that would only jar and hurt. Eppie gave herself
-whole-heartedly to her griefs, and this was her grief as well as his. He
-could share it. It was no longer the holding her at arm’s length from a
-private woe. Yet the grief was not really shared, Eppie knew, for it was
-not the same grief that they felt. Of the difference they did not speak
-again. Then there came the sadness of the parting, so near now and for
-the first time realized in all its aspects.
-
-Eppie gathered, from chance remarks of the general’s, that this parting
-was to be indefinite. The summer at Kirklands was no precedent for
-future summers, as she and Gavan had quite taken for granted. An uncle
-of Gavan’s, his father’s eldest brother, was to give him his home in
-England. This uncle had been traveling in the East this summer, and
-Gavan did not formally come under his jurisdiction until autumn. But the
-general conjectured that the jurisdiction would be well defined and
-tolerably stringent. Sir James Palairet had clearly cut projects for
-Gavan; they would, perhaps, not include holidays at Kirklands. The
-realization was, for Gavan, too, a new one.
-
-“Am I not to come back here next summer?” he asked.
-
-“I’m afraid not, Gavan; we haven’t first claim, you see. Perhaps Sir
-James will lend you to us now and then; but from what I know of him I
-imagine that he will want to do a lot with you, to put you through a
-great deal. There won’t be much time for this sort of thing. You will
-probably travel with him.”
-
-They were in the library and, speaking from the depths of her fear,
-Eppie asked: “Do you like Sir James, Uncle Nigel?” She suspected a
-pitying quality in the cogitating look that the general bent upon Gavan.
-
-“I hardly know him, my dear. He is quite an eminent man. A little
-severe, perhaps,--something of a martinet,--but just, conscientious. It
-is a great thing for Gavan,” the general continued, making the best of a
-rather bleak prospect, “to have such an uncle to give him a start in
-life. It means the best sort of start.”
-
-Directly the two children were alone, both sitting in the deep
-window-seat, Gavan said, “Don’t worry, Eppie. Of course I’ll come
-back--soon.” His face took on the hardness that its delicacy could so
-oddly express. He was confronting his ambiguous fate in an attitude of
-cold resolution. For his sake, Eppie controlled useless outcries. “You
-have seen your uncle, Gavan?”
-
-“Yes, once; in India. He came up to Darjeeling one summer.”
-
-“Is he nice--nicer than Uncle Nigel made out, I mean?”
-
-“He isn’t like my father,” said Gavan, after a moment.
-
-“You mean that he isn’t wicked?” Eppie asked baldly.
-
-“Oh, a good deal more than that. He is just and conscientious, as the
-general said. That’s what my mother felt; that’s why she could bear it,
-my going to him. And the general is right, you know, Eppie, about its
-being a great thing for me. He is a very important person, in his way,
-and he is going to put me through. He is determined that my father
-sha’n’t spoil my life. And, as you know, Eppie, my mother’s life, any
-chance for her, depends on me. To make her life, to atone to her in any
-way for all she has had to bear, I must make my own. My uncle will help
-me.”
-
-The steeliness of his resolves made his face almost alien. Eppie felt
-this unknown future, where he must fight alone, for objects in which she
-had no share, shutting her out, and a child’s sick misery of desolation
-filled her, bringing back the distant memory of her mother’s death, that
-suffocating sense of being left behind and forgotten; but, keeping her
-eyes on his prospect, she managed in a firm voice to question him about
-the arid uncle, learned that he was married, childless, had a house in
-the country and one in London, and sat in Parliament. He was vastly
-busy, traveled a great deal, and wrote books of travel; not books about
-foreign people and the things they ate and wore, as Eppie with her
-courageous interest hopefully surmised, but books of dry, colorless
-fact, with lots of statistics in them, Gavan said.
-
-“He wants me to go in for the same sort of thing--politics and public
-life.”
-
-“You are going to be a Pitt--make laws, Gavan, like Pitt?” Eppie kept up
-her dispassionate tone.
-
-He smiled at the magnified conception. “I’ll try for a seat, probably,
-or some governmental office; that is, if I turn out to be worth
-anything.”
-
-How the vague vastness shut her out! What should she do, meanwhile? How
-carve for herself a future that would keep her near him in the great
-outside world? And would he want her near him in it when he was to be so
-great, too? This question brought the irrepressible tears to her eyes at
-last, though she turned away her head and would not let them fall. But
-Gavan glanced at her and leaned forward to look, and then she saw, as
-her eyes met his, that the hard resolve was for her, too, and did not
-shut her out, but in.
-
-“I’m coming back, Eppie,” he said, taking her hand and holding it
-tightly. “Next to my mother, it’s _you_,--you know it.”
-
-“I haven’t any mother,” said Eppie, keeping up the bravery, though it
-was really harder not to cry now. He understood where she placed him.
-
-Eppie was glad that it was raining on the last morning. Sunshine would
-have been a mockery, and this tranquilly falling rain, that turned the
-hills to pale, substanceless ghosts and brought the end of the moor,
-where it disappeared into the white, so near, was not tragic. Gavan was
-coming back. She would think only of that. She would not--would not cry.
-He should see how brave she could be. When he was gone--well, she
-allowed herself a swift thought of the Petit Trianon, its hidden refuge.
-There, all alone, she would, of course, howl. There was a grim comfort
-in this vision of herself, rolling upon the pine-needle carpet of the
-Petit Trianon and shrieking her woes aloud.
-
-At breakfast Gavan showed a tense, calm face. She was impressed anew
-with the sense of his strength, for, in spite of his resolves, he was
-suffering, perhaps more keenly than herself. Suffering, with him,
-partook of horror. She could live in hopes, and on them. To Gavan, this
-parting was the going into a dark cavern that he must march through in
-fear. And then, he would never roll and shriek.
-
-After breakfast, they hardly spoke to each other. Indeed, what was there
-to say? Eppie filled the moments in superintending the placing of fruit
-and sandwiches in his dressing-case. The carriage was a little late, so
-that when the final moment came, there was a hurried conventionality of
-farewell. Gavan was kissed by the aunts and shook hands with Miss
-Grimsby, while the general called out that there was no time to lose.
-
-“Come back to us, dear boy; keep your feet dry on the journey,” said
-Miss Rachel, while Miss Barbara, holding his hand, whispered gently
-that she would always pray for him.
-
-Eppie and Gavan had not looked at each other, and when the moment came
-for their farewell, beneath the eyes of aunts, uncle, Miss Grimsby, and
-the servants, it seemed the least significant of all, was the shortest,
-the most formal. They looked, they held hands for a moment, and Gavan
-faltered out some words. Eppie did not speak and kept her firm smile.
-Only when he had followed the general into the carriage and it was
-slowly grinding over the gravel did something hot, stinging, choking,
-flare up in her, something that made her know this smooth parting to be
-intolerable--not to be borne.
-
-She darted out into the rain. Bobbie was dead; Gavan was gone; why, she
-was alone--alone--and a question was beating through her as she ran down
-the drive and, with a leap to its step, caught the heavy old carriage in
-its careful turning at the gate. Gavan saw, at the window, her white,
-freckled face, her startled eyes, her tossed hair all beaded with the
-finely falling rain--like an apparition on the ghostly background of
-mist.
-
-“Oh, Gavan, don’t forget me!” That had been the flaring terror.
-
-He had just time to catch her hand, to lean to her, to kiss her. He did
-not speak. Mutely he looked at the little comrade all the things he
-could not say: what she was to him, what he felt for her, what he would
-always feel,--always, always, always, his eyes said to hers as she
-stepped back to the road and was gone.
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-He had never seen Eppie again, and sixteen years had passed.
-
-It was of this that Gavan was thinking as the Scotch express bore him
-northward on a dark October night.
-
-A yellow-bound, half-cut volume of French essays lay beside him. He had
-lighted a cigar and, his feet warmly ensconced on the hot-water tin, his
-legs enfolded in rugs, the fur collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears, he leaned back, well fortified against the sharp air that struck
-in from the half-opened window.
-
-Gavan, at thirty, had oddly maintained all the more obvious
-characteristics of his boyhood. He was long, pale, emaciated, as he had
-been at fourteen. His clean-shaved face was the boy’s face, matured, but
-unchanged in essentials. The broad, steep brow, the clear, aquiline jut
-of nose and chin, the fineness and strength of the jaw, sculptured now
-by the light overhead into vehement relief and shadow, were more
-emphatic, only, than they had been.
-
-At fourteen his face had surprised with its maturity and at thirty it
-surprised with its quality of wistful boyishness. This was the obvious.
-The changes were there, but they were subtle, consisting more in a
-certain hardening of youth’s hesitancy into austerity; as though the
-fine metal of the countenance had been tempered by time into a fixed,
-enduring type. His pallor was the scholar’s, but his emaciation the
-athlete’s; the fragility, now, was a braced and disciplined fragility.
-No sedentary softness was in him. In his body, as in his face, one felt
-a delicacy as strong as it was fine. The great change was that hardening
-to fixity.
-
-To-night, he was feeling the change himself. The journey to Kirklands,
-after the long gap that lay between it and his farewell, made something
-of an epoch for his thoughts. He did not find it significant, but the
-mere sense of comparison was arresting.
-
-The darkness of the October night, speeding by outside, the solitude of
-the bright railway carriage, London two hours behind and, before, the
-many hours of his lonely journey,--time and place were like empty
-goblets, only waiting to be filled with the still wine of memory.
-
-Gavan had not cast aside his book, lighted his cigar, and, leaning back,
-drawn his rugs about him with the conscious intention of yielding
-himself to retrospect. On the contrary, he had, at first, pushed aside
-the thoughts that, softly, persistently, pressed round him. Then the
-languor, the opportunity of the hour seized him. He allowed himself to
-drift hither and thither, as first one eddy lapped over him and then
-another. And finally he abandoned himself to the full current and, once
-it had him, it carried him far.
-
-It was, at the beginning, as far back as Eppie and childhood that it
-carried him, to the sunny summer days and to the speechless parting of
-the rainy autumn morning. And, with all that sense of change, he was
-surprised to find how very much one thing had held firm. He had never
-forgotten. He had kept the mute promise of that misty morning. How well
-he had kept it he hadn’t known until he found the chain of memory hold
-so firm as he pulled upon it. The promise had been made to himself as
-well as to her, given in solemn hostage to his own childish fears. Even
-then what an intuitive dread had been upon him of the impermanence of
-things. But it wasn’t impermanent after all, that vision.
-
-Dear little Eppie. It was astonishing now to find how well he
-remembered, how clearly he could see, in looking back,--more clearly
-than even his acute child’s perception had made evident to him,--what a
-dear little Eppie she had been. She lived in his memory, and probably
-nowhere else: in the present Eppie he didn’t fancy that he should find
-much trace of the child Eppie, and it was sad, in its funny way, to
-think that he, who had, with all his forebodings, so felt the need of a
-promise, should so well remember her who, undoubtedly, had long ago
-forgotten him. He took little interest in the present Eppie. But the
-child wore perfectly with time.
-
-Dear child Eppie and strange, distant boy, groping toward the present
-Gavan; unhappy little boy, of deep, inarticulate, passionate affections
-and of deep hopes and dreads. There they walked, knee-deep in heather;
-he smelled it, the sun warm upon it, Eppie in her white,
-Alice-in-Wonderland frock and her “striped” hair. And there went Robbie,
-plunging through the heather before them.
-
-Robbie. Eppie had been right, then. He had not forgotten him at all. He
-and Eppie stood at the window looking out at the dawn; the scent of the
-wet pine-tree was in the air, and their eyes were heavy with weeping.
-How near they had been. Had any one, in all his life, ever been nearer
-him than Eppie?
-
-Curious, when he had so well kept the promise never to forget, that the
-other promise, the promise to return, he had not been able to keep. In
-making it, he had not imagined, even with his foreboding, what manacles
-of routine and theory were to be locked upon him for the rest of his
-boyhood. He had soon learned that protest, pleading, rebellion, were
-equally vain, and that outward conformity was the preservative of inner
-freedom. He could not jeopardize the purpose of his life--his mother’s
-rescue--by a persistence that, in his uncle’s not unkind and not
-unhumorous eyes, was merely foolish. He was forced to swallow his own
-longings and to endure, as best he could, his pangs of fear lest Eppie
-should think him slack, or even faithless. He submitted to the treadmill
-of a highly organized education, that could spare no time for
-insignificant summers in Scotland. Every moment in Gavan’s youth was to
-be made significant by tangible achievement. The distilled knowledge of
-the past, the intellectual trophies of civilization, were to be his; if
-he didn’t want them, they, in the finished and effective figure of his
-uncle, wanted him, and, in the sense of the fulfilment of his uncle’s
-hopes, they got him.
-
-During those years Gavan wrote to Eppie, tried to make her share with
-him in all the lonely and rather abstract interests of his life. But he
-found that the four years of difference, counting for nothing in the
-actual intercourse of word and look, counted for everything against any
-reality of intercourse in writing. Translated into that formality, the
-childish affection became as unlike itself as a pressed flower is unlike
-a fresh one. Eppie’s letters, punctual and very fond, were far more
-immature than she herself. These letters gave accounts of animals,
-walks, lessons, very bald and concise, and of the Grainger cousins and
-their doings, and then of her new relation, cousin Alicia, whose
-daughters, children of Eppie’s own age, soon seemed to poor Gavan, in
-his distant prison, to fill his place. Eppie went away with these
-cousins to Germany, where they all heard wonderful music, and after that
-they came to Kirklands for the summer. Altogether, when Gavan’s
-opportunity came and, with the dignity of seventeen to back his request,
-he had his uncle’s consent to his spending of a month in Scotland, he
-felt himself, even as he made it, rather silly in his determination to
-cling at all costs to something precious but vanishing. Then it was that
-Eppie had been swept away by the engulfing relative. At the very moment
-of his own release, she was taken to the Continent for three years of
-travel and study. The final effort of childhood to hold to its own
-meaning was frustrated. The letters, after that, soon ceased. Silence
-ended the first chapter.
-
-Gavan glanced out at the rushing darkness on either side. It was like
-the sliding of a curtain before the first act of a drama. His cigar was
-done and he did not light another. His eyes on that darkness that passed
-and passed, he gave himself up to the long vision of the nearer years.
-Through them went always the link with childhood, the haunting phrase
-that sounded in every scene--that fear of life, that deep dread of its
-evil and its pain that he had tried to hide from Eppie, but that,
-together, they had glanced at.
-
-In that first chapter, whose page he had just turned, he had seen
-himself as a very unhappy boy--unhappy from causes as apparent as a cage
-about a pining bird. His youth had been weighted with an over-mature
-understanding of wrong and sorrow. His childish faith in supreme good
-had shaped itself to a conception of life as a place of probation where
-oneself and, far worse, those one loved were burned continually in the
-fiery furnace of inexplicable affliction. One couldn’t say what God
-might not demand of one in the way of endurance. He had, helpless, seen
-his fragile, shrinking mother hatefully bullied and abused or more
-hatefully caressed. He had been parted from her to brood and tremble
-over her distant fate. Loved things had died; loved things had all, it
-seemed, been taken from him; the soulless machinery of his uncle’s
-system had ground and polished at his stiffening heart. No wonder that
-the boy of that first chapter had been very unhappy. But in the later
-chapters, to which he had now come, the causes for unhappiness were not
-so obvious, yet the gloom that overhung them deepened. He saw himself at
-Eton in the hedged-round world of buoyant youth, standing apart,
-preoccupied, indifferent. He had been oddly popular there. His
-selflessness, his gentle candor, his capacity for a highly keyed
-joy,--strung, though it was, over an incapacity for peace,--endeared
-him; but even to his friends he remained a veiled and ambiguous
-personality. He seemed to himself to stand on the confines of that
-artificially happy domain, listening always for the sound of sorrow in
-the greater world outside. History, growing before his growing mind,
-loomed blood-stained, cruel, disastrous. The defeat of goodness, its
-degradation by the triumphant forces of evil, haunted him. The
-dependence of mind, of soul, on body opened new and ominous vistas. For
-months he was pursued by morbid fears of what a jostled brain-cell or a
-diseased body might do to one. One might become a fiend, it seemed, or
-an imbecile, if one’s atoms were disarranged too much. Life was a tragic
-duty,--he held to that blindly, fiercely at times; but what if life’s
-chances made even goodness impossible? what if it were to rob one of
-one’s very selfhood? It became to him a thing dangerous, uncertain, like
-an insecurely chained wild beast that one must lie down with and rise
-with and that might spring at one’s throat at any moment.
-
-Under the pressure of this new knowledge, crude enough in its
-materialistic forms, and keen, new thought, already subtle, already
-passing from youthful crudity, the skeptical crash of his religious
-faith came at last upon him. Religion had meant too much to him for its
-loss to be the merely disturbing epoch of readjustment that it is in
-much young development. He found himself in a reeling horror of darkness
-where the only lights were the dim beacons of science and the fantastic
-will-o’-the-wisps of estheticism. In the midst of the chaos he saw his
-mother again. He dreaded the longed-for meeting. How could he see her
-and hide from her the inner desolation? And when she came, at last,
-after all these years, a desperate pity nerved him to act a part. She
-was changed; the years had told on her more than even his imagination
-had feared. She drooped like a tired, fading flower. She was fading,
-that he saw at the first glance. Mentally as well as physically, there
-was an air of withering about her, and the look of sorrow was stamped
-ineffaceably upon her aging features. To know that he had lost his
-faith, his hold on life, his trust in good, would have been, he thought,
-to kill her. He kept from her a whisper of his desolation; and to a
-fundamental skepticism like his, acting was facile. But when she was
-gone, back to her parched life, he knew that to her, as well as to him,
-something essential had lacked. Her love, again and again, must have
-fluttered, however blindly, against that barrier between them. The years
-of separation had been sad, but, in looking back at it, the summer of
-meeting was saddest of all.
-
-The experience put an edge to his hardening strength. He must fail her
-in essentials; they could never meet in the blessed nearness of shared
-hopes; but he wouldn’t fail her in all the lesser things of life. The
-time of her deliverance was near. Love and beauty would soon be about
-her. He worked at Oxford with the inner passion of a larger purpose than
-mere scholarship that is the soul of true scholarship. He felt the
-sharp, cold joy of high achievement, the Alpine, precipitous scaling of
-the mind. And here he embarked upon the conscious quest for truth, his
-skepticism grown to a doubt of its own premises.
-
-Gavan looked quietly back upon the turmoil of that quest.
-
-He watched himself in those young years pressing restlessly, eagerly,
-pursued by the phantoms of death and nothingness, through spiral after
-spiral of human thought: through Spinoza’s horror of the meaninglessness
-of life and through Spinoza’s barren peace; through Kant’s skepticism
-that would not let him rest in Kant’s super-rational assurance;
-precipitated from Hegel’s dialectics--building their pyramid of paradox
-to the apex of an impersonal Absolute--into Schopenhauer’s petulant
-despair. And more and more clearly he saw, through all the forms of
-thought, that the finite self dissolved like mist in the one
-all-embracing, all-transcending Subject. Science, philosophy, religion,
-seemed, in their final development, to merge in a Monism that conceived
-reality as spirit, but as impersonal spirit, a conception that, if in
-western thought it did not reduce to illusion every phase of
-experience, yet reduced the finite self to a contradiction and its sense
-of moral freedom, upon which were built all the valuations of life and
-all its sanctions, to a self-deception. His own dual life deepened his
-abiding intuition of unreality. There was the Gavan of the river, the
-debate, the dinner, popular among his fellows, gentle, debonair; already
-the man of the world through the fineness of his perception, his
-instinct for the fitting, his perfection of mannerless manner that was
-the flower of selflessness. And there was the Gavan of the inner
-thought, fixed, always, in its knot of torturing perplexity. To the
-inner Gavan, the Gavan of human relations was a wraith-like figure. Now
-began for him the strange experience at which childish terrors had
-hinted. It was in the exhaustions that followed a long wrench of
-thought, or after an illness, a shock of sorrow that left one pulseless
-and inert, that these pauses of an awful peace would come to him. One
-faced, then, the dread vision, and it seized one, as when, in the deep
-stillness of the night, the world drops from one and only a
-consciousness, dispassionate and contemplative, seeing all life as
-dream, remains. It was when life was thus stilled, its desires quenched
-by weakness or great sorrow, that this peace stole into the empty
-chambers, and whispered that all pain, all evil, all life were dreams
-and that the dreams were made by the strife and restlessness of the
-fragmentary self in its endless discord. See oneself as discord, as part
-of the whole, every thought, every act, every feeling determined by it,
-and one entered, as it were, into the unwilling redemption. Desire,
-striving, hope, and fear fell from one. One found the secret of the
-Eternal Now, holding in its timelessness the vast vision of a world of
-change. But to Gavan, in these moments, the sorrow, the striving, the
-agony of life was sweet and desirable; for, to the finite life that
-strove, and hoped, and suffered the vision became the sightless gaze of
-death, and nothingness was the guerdon of such attainment. To turn, with
-an almost physical sickness of horror, from the hypnotic spell, to
-forcibly forget thought, to clasp life about him like a loved
-Nessus-robe, was a frequent solution during these years of struggle; to
-reënter the place of joy and sorrow, taking it, so to speak, at its own
-terms. But the specter was never far from the inner Gavan, who more and
-more suspected that the longing for reality, for significance, that
-flamed up in him with each renewal of personal force and energy, was the
-mere result of life, not its sanction. And more and more, when, in such
-renewals, his nature turned with a desperate trust to action, as a
-possible test of worth, he saw that it was not action, not faith, that
-created life and the trust in life, but life, the force and will
-incarnated in one, that created faith and action. The very will to act
-was the will to live, and the will to live was the will of the Whole
-that the particular discord of one’s personal self should continue to
-strive and suffer.
-
-Life, indeed, clutched him, and that quite without any artificial effort
-of his own, when his mother came home to England to die.
-
-Gavan had just left Oxford. He was exquisitely equipped for the best
-things of life, and, with the achievement, his long dependence on his
-uncle suddenly ceased. An eccentric old cousin, a scholarly recluse, who
-had taken a fancy to him, died, leaving him a small estate in Surrey and
-fifteen hundred pounds a year.
-
-With the good fortune came the bitter irony that turned it to dust and
-ashes. All his life he had longed to help his mother, to smooth her
-rough path and put power over fate into her hand. Now he could only help
-her to die in peace.
-
-He took her to the quiet old house, among its lawns, its hedges, its
-high-walled gardens and deep woods. He gave her all that it was now too
-late to give--beauty, ease, and love.
-
-She was changed by disease, more changed than by life and sorrow;
-gentle, very patient, but only by an effort showing her appreciation of
-the loveliness, only by an effort answering his love.
-
-Of all his fears the worst had been the fear that, with the conviction
-of the worthlessness of life, the capacity for love had left him. Now,
-as with intolerable anguish, her life ebbed from her, there was almost
-relief in his own despair; in feeling it to the full; in seeing the
-heartlessness of thought wither in the fierce flame of his agony.
-
-It seemed to him that he had never before known what it was to love. It
-was as if he were more her than himself. He relived her life and its
-sorrows. He relived her miserable married years, the long loneliness,
-parted from her child, her terror of the final parting, coming so
-cruelly upon them; and he lived the pains of her dissolution. He
-understood as he had never understood, all that she was and felt; he
-yearned as he had never yearned, to hold and keep her with him in joy
-and security; he suffered as he had never suffered.
-
-Such passionate rebellion filled him that he would walk for hours about
-the country, while merciful anesthetics gave her oblivion, in a blind
-rage of mere feeling--feeling at a white heat, a core of tormented life.
-And the worst was that her life of martyrdom was not to be crowned by a
-martyr’s happy death; the worst was that her own light died away from
-before her feet, that she groped in darkness, and that, since he was to
-lose her, he might not even have her to the end.
-
-For months he watched the slow fading of all that had made her herself,
-her relapse into the instinctive, almost into the animal. Her lips, for
-many days, kept the courage of their smile, but it was at last only an
-automatic courage, showing no sweetness, no caress. Her eyes, in the
-first tragic joy of their reunion, had longed, grieved, yearned over the
-son who hid his sorrow for her sake. Afterward, all feeling, except a
-sort of chill resentment, died from her look. For the last days of her
-life, when, in great anguish, she never spoke at all, these eyes would
-turn on him with a strange immensity of indifference. It was as if
-already his mother were gone and as if a ghost had stolen into his life.
-She died at last, after a long night of unconsciousness, without a word
-or look that brought them near.
-
-Gavan lived through all that followed in a stupor.
-
-On the day of her funeral, when all was over, he walked out into the
-spring woods.
-
-The day was sweet and mild. Pools of shallow water shone here and there
-in the hollows, among the slender tree-stems. Pale slips of blue were
-seen among the fine, gray branches, and pushing up from last year’s
-leaves were snowdrops growing everywhere, white and green among the
-russet leaves, lovely, lovely snowdrops. Seeing them, in his swift,
-aimless wandering, Gavan paused.
-
-The long nights and days had worn him to that last stage of exhaustion
-where every sense is stretched fine and sharp as the highest string of a
-musical instrument. Leaning against a tree, his arms folded, he looked
-at the snowdrops, at their vivid green, and their white, as fresh, as
-delicate as flakes of newly fallen snow.
-
-“Lovely, lovely,” he said, and, looking all about him, at the fretwork
-of gray branches on the blue, the pale, shining water,--a little bird
-just hopping to its edge among the shorter grass to drink,--he repeated,
-“Lovely,” while the anguish in his heart and the sweet beauty without
-combined in the sharp, exquisite tension of a mood about to snap, the
-fineness of a note, unendurably high, held to an unendurable length.
-
-A dimness overtook him: as if the note, no longer keenly singing, sank
-to an insect-like buzz, a chaos of minute, whirring vibrations that made
-a queer, dizzy rhythm; and, in a daze of sudden indifference, both to
-beauty and anguish, he seemed to see himself standing there, collapsed
-against the tree, his frail figure outworn with misery,--to see himself,
-and the trees, the pools of water, the drinking bird, and the snowy
-flowers,--like a picture held before calm, dying eyes.
-
-“Yes,” he thought, “she saw it like this,--me, herself, life; that is
-why she didn’t care any longer.”
-
-He continued to look, and from the dimness and the buzzing the calm grew
-clear--clear as a sharply cut hallucination. He knew the experience, he
-had often before known it; but he had never yet felt it so unutterably,
-so finally. Something in him had done struggling forever; something was
-relinquished; he had accepted something. “Yes, it is like that,” he
-thought on; “they are all of them right.”
-
-With the cold eye of contemplation he gazed on the illusion of life:
-joy, suffering, beauty, good and evil. His individual life, enfranchised
-from its dream of a separate self, drifted into the life about him. He
-was part of it all; in him, as in those other freed ones, the self
-suddenly knew itself as fleeting and unsubstantial as a dream, knew its
-own profound irrationality and the suffering that its striving to be
-must always mean.
-
-He was perfectly at peace, he who had never known peace. “I am as dead
-as she is,” he thought.
-
-In his peace he was conscious of no emotion, yet he found himself
-suddenly leaning his head against the tree and weeping. He wept, but he
-knew that it was no longer with grief or longing. He watched the
-exhausted machine give way, and noted its piteous desolation of
-attitude,--not pitying it,--while he thought, “I shall feel, perhaps
-suffer, perhaps enjoy again; but I shall always watch myself from above
-it all.”
-
-The mystic experience had come overwhelmingly to him and his mind was
-never to lose the effect of that immediacy of consciousness,
-untransmissible, unspeakable, ineffaceable. And that with which he found
-himself one was far from any human thoughts or emotions; rather it was
-the negation of them, the infinite negation of finite restlessness.
-
-He went back to the house, to the darkened, empty room. The memories
-that crowded there, of pity and love and terror, were now part of the
-picture he looked at, as near and yet as far, as the vision of the
-snowdrops, the bird, and the spring sky.
-
-All was quiet. She was gone as he would go. The laboring breath was
-stilled forever.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Gavan did not address himself to an ascetic remodeling of his life. He
-pursued the path traced out before him. He yielded placidly to the calls
-of life, willing to work, to accomplish, willing even to indulge his
-passions, since there could lurk for him no trap among the shows of
-life. His taste soon drew back, disdainful and delicate, from his
-experience of youthful dissipation; his ironic indifference made him
-deaf to the lures of ambition; but he was an accurate and steady worker
-and a tolerably interested observer of existence.
-
-As he had ceased to have value for himself, so others had no value in
-his eyes. Social effort and self-realization were, as ideals, equally
-meaningless to him; and though pity was always with him, it was a pity
-gentle and meditative, hopeless of alleviation: for suffering was life,
-and to cure one, one must abolish the other. Material remedies seemed to
-him worse than useless; they merely renewed the craving forces. The
-Imitation of Christ was a fitter panacea than organized charities and
-progressive legislation.
-
-Physical pain in the helpless, the dumbly conscious, in children or
-animals, hurt him and made him know that he, too, lived; and he would
-spend himself to give relief to any suffering thing. He sought no
-further in metaphysical systems; he desired no further insight. Now and
-then, finding their pensive pastures pleasant, he would read some Hindoo
-or medieval mystic; but ecstasies were as alien to him as materialism:
-both were curious forms of self-deception--one the inflation of the
-illusory self into the loss of any sense of relation, and the other the
-self’s painful concentration into imbecilely selfish aims. The people
-most pleasing to him were the people who, without self-doubt and without
-self-consciousness, performed some inherited function in the state; the
-simply great in life; or those who, by natural gift, the fortunately
-finished, the inevitably distinguished, followed some beautifully
-complex calling. The mediocre and the pretentious were unpleasing
-phenomena, and the ideals of democracy mere barbarous nonsense.
-
-His own pursuits were those of a fashionable and ambitious man, and, to
-the casual observer, the utter absence of any of the pose of
-disillusionized youth made all the more apparent what seemed to be a man
-of the world cynicism. Those who knew him better found him charming and
-perplexing. He seemed to have no barriers, yet one could not come near
-him. His center receded before pursuit. And he was much pursued. He
-aroused conjecture, interest, attachment. His exquisite head, the chill
-sweetness of his manner, the strange, piercing charm of his smile, drew
-eyes and hearts to him. Idly amused, he saw himself, all inert, boosted
-from step to step, saw friends swarm about him and hardly an enemy’s
-face.
-
-It was rare for him to meet dislike. One young man, vaguely known at
-Oxford, noticed with interest as a relative of Eppie’s, he had, indeed,
-by merely being, it seemed, antagonized. Gavan had really felt something
-of a shy, derivative affection for this Jim Grainger, a dogged, sullen,
-strenuous youth; because of the dear old memory, he had made one or two
-delicate, diffident approaches--approaches repulsed with bull-dog
-defiance. Gavan, who understood most things, quite understood that to
-the serious, the plain, the obviously laborious son of an impecunious
-barrister, he might have given the impression, so funnily erroneous, of
-a sauntering dilettantism, an aristocratic _flânerie_. At all events,
-Grainger was intrenched in a resolute disapproval, colored, perhaps,
-with some tinge of reminiscent childish jealousy. When their paths again
-crossed in London and Gavan found his suavity encountered by an even
-more scowling sarcasm, jealousy, of another type, was an obvious cause.
-Grainger, scornful of social dexterities and weapons, had worked himself
-to skin and bone in preparation for a career, and a career that he
-intended to be of serious significance. And at its outset he found
-himself in apparent competition with Gavan for a post that, significant
-indeed to him, as the first rung on the political ladder, could only be
-decorative to his rival--the post of secretary to a prominent
-cabinet-minister. Grainger had his justified hopes, and he was, except
-for outward graces, absolutely fitted for the place.
-
-In his path he found the listless figure of the well-remembered and
-heartily disliked Gavan--a gilded youth, pure and simple, and as such
-being lifted, by all accounts, onto the coveted rung of the coveted
-ladder. Gavan’s scholarly fitness for the post Grainger only half
-credited. Of the sturdy professional class, with a streak of the easily
-suspicious bourgeois about him, he was glad to believe tales of
-drawing-room influence. He expressed himself with disgusted openness as
-to the fatal effect of a type like Palairet’s on public life. Gavan
-heard a little and guessed more. He found himself sympathizing with
-Grainger; he had always liked him. With an effort that he had never used
-on his own behalf, he managed to get him fitted into the pair of shoes
-that were standing waiting for his own feet. It had been, indeed, though
-in superficial ways, an affair of drawing-room influence. The wife of
-the great statesman, as well as that high personage himself, was one of
-Gavan’s devoted and baffled friends. She said that he made her think of
-a half-frozen bird that one longed to take in one’s hands and warm, and
-she hopefully communed with her husband as to the invigorating effect of
-a career upon him. She suspected Gavan--his influence over her
-husband--when she found that an alien candidate was being foisted upon
-her.
-
-“Grainger!” she exclaimed, vexed and incredulous. “Why Grainger? Why not
-anybody as well as Grainger? Yes, I’ve seen the young man. He looks
-like a pugilistic Broad-Church parson. All he wants is to climb and to
-reform everything.”
-
-“Exactly the type for British politics,” Gavan rejoined. “He is in
-earnest about politics, and I’m not; you know I’m not.” His friend
-helplessly owned that he was exasperating. Grainger, had he known to
-whom he was indebted for his lift, would have felt, perhaps, a
-heightened wrath against “drawing-room influence.”
-
-Happily and justifiably unconscious, he proceeded to climb.
-
-Meanwhile another pair of shoes was swiftly found for Gavan. He went out
-to India as secretary to the viceroy.
-
-Here, in the surroundings of his early youth, the second great moral
-upheaval of his life came to him. Three years had passed since his
-mother’s death. He was twenty-six years old.
-
-During a long summer among the mountains of Simla, he met Alice Grafton.
-She was married, a year older than himself, but a girl still in mind and
-appearance--fragile, hesitant, exquisite. Gavan at his very first seeing
-of her felt something knocking in his heart. It seemed like pity,
-instinctive pity, the bond between him and life, and for some time he
-deluded himself with this comparatively safe interpretation. He did not
-quite know why he should pity Mrs. Grafton. That she should look like a
-girl was hardly a reason, nor that her husband, large, masterful,
-embossed with decorations, was uninteresting. She had been married to
-him--by all accounts the phrase applied--at nineteen and could not find
-him sympathetic; but, after all, many cheerful women were in that
-situation. He was a kindly, an admiring husband, and her life was set in
-luxurious beauty. Yet piteousness was there. She was all promise and
-unfulfilment; and dimly, mutely, she seemed to feel that the promise
-would never be fulfilled, as though a too-early primrose smiled
-wistfully through a veil of ice. Should she never become consciously
-unhappy that would be but another symptom of permanent immaturity.
-
-Gavan rode with her and talked with her, and read with her in her fresh,
-flower-filled drawing-room. Their tastes were not at all alike; but he
-did not in the least mind that when she lifted her lovely eyes to him
-over poor poetry; and when she played and sang to him her very
-ineffectuality added a pathos, full of charm, to the obvious ballads
-that she liked. It was sweet, too, and endearing, to watch her, by
-degrees, molding her taste to his until it became a delightful and
-intuitive echo.
-
-He almost wondered if it was also in echo that she began to feel for
-herself his own appreciation of her. Certainly she matured to
-consciousness of lack. She began to confide; not with an open frankness,
-but vaguely, as though she groped toward the causes of her sadness. She
-shrank, and knew now why she shrank, when her loud-voiced, cheerful
-husband came tramping into the room. Then she began to see that she was
-horribly lonely. Unconsciously, in the confidences now, she plead for
-help, for reassurance. She probed him constantly as to religious hopes
-and the real significance of life. Her soft voice, with its endearing
-little stammer, grew to Gavan nearer and dearer than all the voices of
-the world. At first it appealed, and then it possessed him. He had
-thought that what he felt for her was only pity. He had thought himself
-too dead to all earthly pangs for the rudimentary one of love to reach
-him. But when, one day, he found her weeping, alone, among her flowers,
-he took her into his arms and the great illusion seized him once more.
-
-It seized him, though he knew it for illusion. He laughed at the specter
-of nothingness and gloried in the beauty of the rainbow moment. This
-human creature needed him and he her: that was, for them, the only
-reality; who cared for the blank background where their lives flashed
-and vanished? The flash was what mattered. He sprang from the dead self,
-as from a tomb, when he kissed her lips. Life might mean sorrow and
-defeat, but its tragedy was atoned for by a moment of such joy.
-
-“Gavan, Gavan, do we love each other? Do we?” she wept.
-
-He saw illusion and joy where her woman’s heart felt only reality and
-terror in the joy.
-
-They obviously loved each other, though it was without a word of love
-that they found themselves in each other’s arms. Had ever two beings so
-lonely so needed love? Her sweet, stunned eyes were a rapture of
-awakening to him, and though, under all, ran the deep, buried river of
-knowledge, whispering forever, “Vanity of vanities,” he was far above it
-in the sunlight of the upper air. He felt himself, knew himself only as
-the longing to look forever into her eyes, to hold her to him forever.
-That, on the day of awakening, seemed all that life meant.
-
-Later on he found that more fundamental things had clutched him through
-the broken barriers of thought--jealousies and desires that showed him
-his partaking of the common life of humanity.
-
-Gavan’s skepticism had not come face to face with a moral test as yet,
-and he could but contemplate curiously in himself the strong,
-instinctive revolt of all the man of hereditary custom and conscience
-from any dishonorable form of illegal love. He couldn’t justify it, but
-it was there, as strong as his longing for the woman.
-
-It was not that he cared a rap, so he analyzed it, for laws or
-conventions: it was merely that he could not do anything that he felt as
-dishonorable.
-
-He told Alice that she must leave her husband and come openly to him.
-They would go back to Europe; live in Italy--the land of happy outcasts
-from unhappy forms; there they would study and travel and make beauty
-grow about them. Holding her hands gently, he put it all before her with
-a reverent devotion that gave the proposal a matrimonial dignity.
-
-“You know me well enough, dear Alice,” he said, “to know that you need
-fear none of the usual dangers in such cases. I don’t care about
-anything but you; I never will--ambition, country, family. Nothing
-outside me, or inside me, could make me fail you. All I want, or shall
-ever want, is to make you happy, and to be happy with you.”
-
-But the things he put away as meaningless dreams the poor woman with the
-girl’s mind saw as grim realities. It was easy for Gavan to barter a
-mirage for the one thing he cared to have; the world was not a mirage to
-her, and even her love could not make it so. Her thin young nature knew
-only the craving to keep and not the revulsion from a hidden wrong.
-Every fiber in her shrank from the facing of a hostile order of things,
-the bearing through life of a public dishonor. It was as if it were he
-who purposed the worse disgrace, not she.
-
-She wept and wept in his arms, hoping, perhaps, to weaken him by her
-feebleness and her abandonment, so that an open avowal of cowardice, an
-open appeal that he should yield to it, might be needless; but at last,
-since he would not speak, only stroking her hair, her hand, sharing her
-sorrow, she moaned out, “Oh, Gavan, I can’t, I can’t.”
-
-He only half understood, feeling his heart freeze in the renunciation
-that she might demand. But when she sobbed on brokenly, “Don’t leave me.
-Stay with me. I can’t live without you. No one need ever know,” he
-understood.
-
-Standing white and motionless, it was he now who repeated, “I can’t. I
-can’t. I can’t.”
-
-She wept on, incredulous, supplicating, reproachful. “You will not leave
-me! You will not abandon me!”
-
-“I cannot--stay with you.”
-
-“You win my heart--humiliate me,--see that I’m yours--only yours,--and
-then cast me off!”
-
-“Don’t speak so cruelly, Alice. Cast you off? I, who only pray you to
-let me take you with me?”
-
-“A target for the world!”
-
-“Darling, poor darling, I know that I ask all--all; but what else is
-there--unless I leave you?”
-
-She hid her face on his shoulder, sobbing miserably, her sobs her only
-answer, and to it he rejoined: “We can’t go on, you know that; and to
-stay, to deceive your husband, to drag you through all the baseness, the
-ugliness, the degradation, Alice, of a hidden intrigue--I can’t do that;
-it’s the only thing I can’t do for you.”
-
-“You despise me; you think me wicked--because I can’t have such horrible
-courage. I think what you ask is more wicked; I think it hurts everybody
-more; I think that it would degrade us more. People can’t live like
-that--cut off from everything--and not be degraded in the end.”
-
-It was a new species of torture that now tore at Gavan’s heart and mind.
-He saw too clearly the force of the arguments that underlay her specious
-appeal--more clearly, far, than she could see. It was horribly true that
-the life of happy outlawry he proposed might wither and debase more than
-a conscious sin. The organized, crafty wisdom of life was on her side.
-And on his was a mere matter of taste. He could find no sanction for his
-resistance to her and to himself except in that instinctive recoil from
-what he felt as dishonor. He was sacrificing them both to a silly,
-subjective figment. The lurid realization, that burned and froze, went
-through him, and with it the unanswerable necessity. He must, he must,
-sacrifice them. And he must talk the language of right and wrong as
-though he believed in it. He acted as if he did, yet nothing was further
-from him than such belief; that was the strange agony that wrenched his
-brain as he said: “You are blind, not wicked. Some day you will thank me
-if I make it possible for you to let me go.” And, he too incredulous, he
-cried, “Alice, Alice, will you really let me go without you?”
-
-She would not consent to the final alternative, and the struggle lasted
-for a week, through their daily meetings--the dream-like, deft meetings
-under the eyes of others,--and while they rode alone over the
-hills--long, sad rides, when both, often in a moody silence, showed at
-once their hope and their resistance.
-
-Her fear won at last. “And I can’t even pretend that it’s goodness,” she
-said, her voice trembling with self-scorn. “You’ve abased me to the
-dust, Gavan. Yes, it’s true, if you like--my fear is greater than my
-love.” Irony, a half-felt anger, helped her to bear the blow, for, to
-the end, she could not believe that he would find strength to leave her.
-
-The parting came suddenly. Wringing her hands, looking hard into her
-face, where he saw still a fawning hope and a half-stupefied despair, he
-left her, and felt that he had torn his heart up by the very roots.
-
-And he had sacrificed her and himself, to what? Gavan could ask himself
-the question at leisure during the following year.
-
-Yet, from the irrational sacrifice was born a timid, trembling trust, a
-dim hope that the unbannered combat had not been in vain, that even the
-blind holding to the ambiguous right might blossom in a better life for
-her than if he had taken the joy held out to him. The trust was as
-irrational as the sacrifice, but it was dear to him. He cherished it,
-and it fluttered in him, sweet, intangible, during all the desolate
-year. Then, at the year’s end, he met Alice, suddenly, unexpectedly, and
-found her ominously changed. Her girlhood was gone. A hard, glittering
-surface, competent, resourceful, hid something.
-
-The strength of his renouncement was so rooted that he felt no personal
-fear, and for her, too, he no longer felt fear in his nearness. What he
-felt was a new pity--a pity suffocating and horrible. Whispers of
-discreet scandal enlightened him. Alice was in no danger of what she
-most shrank from--a public pillory; but she was among those of whom the
-world whispers, with a half-condoning smile and shrug.
-
-Gavan saw her riding one morning with a famous soldier, a Nietzschian
-type of strength, splendor, and high indifference. And now he understood
-all. He knew the man. He was one who would have stared light irony at
-Gavan’s chivalrous willingness to sacrifice his life to a woman; to such
-a charming triviality as an intrigue he would sacrifice just enough and
-no more. He knew the rules of the game and with him Alice was safe from
-any open pillory. People would never do more than whisper.
-
-A bitter daylight flooded for Gavan that sweet, false dawn, and once
-again the cruelty, the caprice at the heart of all things were revealed
-to him. He knew the flame of impotent remorse. He had tossed the
-miserable child to this fate, and though remorse, like all else, was
-meaningless, he loathed himself for his futile, empty magnanimity.
-
-She had seen his eyes upon her as she rode. She sent for him, and, alone
-with him, the glitter, the hardness, broke to dreadful despair.
-
-She confessed all at his knees. Hardness and glitter had been the shield
-of the racked, terror-stricken heart. The girl was a woman and knew the
-use of shields.
-
-“And Gavan, Gavan, worst of all,--far worst,--I don’t love him; I never
-loved him. It was simply--simply”--she could hardly speak--“that he
-frightened and flattered me. It was vanity--recklessness--I don’t know
-what it was.”
-
-After the confession, she waited, her face hidden, for his reproach or
-anger. Neither came. Instead, she felt, in the long silence, that
-something quiet enveloped her.
-
-She looked up to see his eyes far from her.
-
-“Gavan, can you forgive me?” she whispered.
-
-Once more he was looking at it all--all the cruel, the meaningless drama
-in which he had been enmeshed for a little while. Once more his thought
-had risen far above it, and the old peace, the old, dead peace, with no
-trembling of the hopes that meant only a deeper delusion, was regained.
-He knew how deep must be the reattained tranquillity, when, the woman he
-had loved at his feet, he felt no shrinking, no reproach, no desire,
-only an immense, an indifferent pity.
-
-“Forgive you, Alice? Poor, poor Alice. Perhaps you should forgive me;
-but it isn’t a question of that. Don’t cry; don’t cry,” he repeated
-mechanically, gently stroking her hair--hair whose profuse, wonderful
-gold he had once kissed with a lover’s awed delight.
-
-“You forgive me--you do forgive me, Gavan?”
-
-“It isn’t a question of forgiveness; but of course I forgive you, dear
-Alice.”
-
-“Gavan, tell me that you love me still. Can you love me? Oh, say that I
-haven’t lost that.”
-
-He did not reply, looking away and lifting his hand from her hair.
-
-The woman, leaning on his knees, felt a stealing sense of awe, worse
-than any fear of his anger. And worse than a vehement disavowal of love,
-worse than a spurning of her from him, were his words: “I want you not
-to suffer, dear Alice; I want you to find peace.”
-
-“Peace! What peace can I find?”
-
-He looked at her now, wondering if she would understand and willing to
-put it before her as he himself saw it: “The peace of seeing it all, and
-letting it all go.”
-
-“Gavan, I swear to you that I will never see him again. Oh, Gavan, what
-do you mean? If you would forgive me--really forgive me--and take me
-now, I would follow you anywhere. I am not afraid any longer. I have
-found out that the only thing to be afraid of is oneself. If I have you,
-nothing else matters.”
-
-He looked steadily at her, no longer touching her. “You have said what I
-mean. You have found it out. The only thing to be afraid of is
-ourselves. You will not see this man again? You will keep that promise
-to me?”
-
-“Any promise! Anything you ask! And, indeed, indeed, I could not see him
-now,” she shuddered. “Gavan, you will take me away with you?”
-
-He wondered at her that she did not see how far he was from her--how
-far, and yet how one with her, how merged in her through his
-comprehension of the essential unity that bound all life together, that
-made her suffering part of him, even while he looked down upon it from
-an almost musing height.
-
-He felt unutterable gentleness and unutterable ruthlessness. “I don’t
-mean that, Alice. You won’t lose yourself by clinging to me, by clinging
-to what you want.”
-
-“You don’t love me! Oh, you don’t love me! I have killed your love!” she
-wailed out, rising to her feet, pierced by her full realization. She
-stepped back from him to gaze at him with a sort of horror. “You talk as
-if you had become a priest.”
-
-He appreciated what his attitude must seem to her--priestly indeed,
-almost sleek in its lack of personal emotion, its trite recourse to the
-preaching of renunciation. And, almost with a sense of humor, that he
-felt as hateful at such a moment, the perception came that he might
-serve her through the very erroneousness of her seeing of him. The sense
-of humor was hateful, and his skilful seizing of her suggestion had a
-grotesque aspect as well. Even in his weariness, he was aware that the
-cup of contemplation was full when it could hold its drop of realized
-irony.
-
-“I think that I have become a priest, Alice,” he said. “I see everything
-differently. And weren’t you brought up in a religious way--to go to
-church, seek props, say your prayers, sacrifice yourself and live for
-others? Can’t you take hold of that again? It’s the only way.”
-
-Her quick flaming was justified, he knew; one shouldn’t speak of help
-when one was so far away; he had exaggerated the sacerdotal note. “Oh,
-you despise me! It is because of that, and you are trying to hide it
-from me! What is religion to me, what is anything--anything in the world
-to me--if I have lost you, Gavan? Why are you so cruel, so horrible? I
-can’t understand it! I can’t bear it! Oh, I can’t! Why are our lives
-wrecked like this? Why did you leave me? Why have I become wicked? I was
-never, never meant to be wicked.” Tears, not of abasement, not of
-appeal, but of pure anguish ran down her face.
-
-He was nearer to that elemental sadness and could speak with a more
-human tone. “You are not wicked--no more--no less--than any one. I don’t
-despise you. Believe me, Alice. If I hadn’t changed, this would have
-drawn me to you; I should have felt a deeper tenderness because you
-needed me more. But think of me as a priest: I have changed as much as
-that. And remember that what you have yourself found out is true--the
-only thing to be afraid of is oneself, and the only escape from fear is
-to--is to”--he paused, hearing the triteness of his own words and
-wondering with a new wonder at their truth, their gray antiquity, their
-ever-verdant youth--“is to renounce,” he finished.
-
-He was standing now, ready for departure. In her eyes he saw at last the
-dignity of hopelessness, of an accepted doom, a pain far above panic.
-
-“Dear Alice,” he said, taking her hand--“dear Alice.” And, with all the
-delicacy of his shrinking from a too great directness, his eyes had a
-steadiness of demand that sank into the poor woman’s tossed, unstable
-soul, he added, “Don’t ever do anything ugly--or foolish--again.”
-
-Her lover lost,--the very slightness of the words “ugly,” “foolish,”
-told her how utterly lost,--a deep thrill of emotional exaltation went
-through the emptiness he left. She longed to clasp the lost lover and to
-sink at the knees of the priest.
-
-“I will be good. I will renounce myself,” she said, as though it were a
-creed before an altar; and hurriedly she whispered, poor child, “Perhaps
-in heaven--we will find each other.”
-
-Gavan often thought of that pathetic human clutch. So was the dream of
-an atoning heaven built. It kept its pathos, even its beauty, for him,
-when the whole tale ended in the world’s shrug and smile. He heard first
-that Alice had become an emotionally devout churchwoman;--that lasted
-for a year;--and then, alas! alas!--but, after all, the smile and shrug
-was the best philosophy,--that she rode once more with the Nietzschian
-lover. He had one short note from her: he would have heard--perhaps, at
-any rate, he would know what to think when he did hear that she saw the
-man again. And she wanted him to know from her that it was not as he
-might think: she really loved him now--the other; not as she had loved
-Gavan,--that would always be first,--but very much; and she needed love,
-she must have it in her life, and she was lifting this man who loved
-her, was helping his life, and she had broader views now and did not
-believe in creeds or in the shibboleths that guided the vulgar. And she
-was harming no one, no one knew. Life was far too complicated, the
-intricacies of modern civilization far too enmeshing, for duty to be
-seen in plain black and white. The whole question of marriage was an
-open one, and one had a right to interpret one’s duty according to one’s
-own lights. Gavan saw the hand of the new master through it all. Shortly
-after, the death of Alice’s husband, killed while tiger-shooting, set
-her free, and the new master proved himself at all events a fond one by
-promptly marrying her. So ended Alice in his life.
-
-There was not much more to look back on after that. His return to
-England; his entering the political arena, with neither desire nor
-reluctance; his standing for the town his uncle’s influence marked out
-for him; the fight and the very gallant failure,--there had been, for
-him, an amused interest in the game of it all. The last year he had
-spent in his Surrey home, usually in company with a really pathetic
-effigy of the past--his father, poor and broken in health, the old
-serpent of Gavan’s childhood basking now in torpid insignificance, its
-fangs drawn.
-
-People probably thought that he had been soured by an initial defeat.
-Gavan knew that the game had merely ceased to amuse him. What amused him
-most was concentrated and accurate scholarship. He was writing a book on
-some of the obscurer phases of religious enthusiasm, studying from a
-historical and psychological point of view the origin and formation of
-queer little sects,--failures in the struggle for survival,--their
-brief, ambiguous triumphs and their disintegrations.
-
-His unruffled stepping-back from the arena of political activity was to
-the more congenial activity of understanding and observation. But there
-burned in him none of the observer’s, the thinker’s passion. He worked
-as he rode or ate his breakfast. Work was part of the necessary fuel
-that kept life’s flame bright. While he lived he didn’t want a feeble,
-flickering flame. But at his heart, he was profoundly indifferent to
-work, as to all else.
-
- * * * * *
-
-GAVAN’S mind, as he leaned back in the railway carriage, had passed over
-the visual aspect of this long retrospect, not in meditation, but in a
-passive seeing of its scenes and faces. Eppie’s face, fading in the
-mist; Robbie, silhouetted on the sky; the sulky Grainger; his uncle; his
-mother, and the vision of the spring day where he had wandered in the
-old dream of pain and into its cessation; finally, Alice, her pale hair
-and wistful eyes and her look when, at parting, she had said that they
-might be together in heaven.
-
-He had rarely known a greater lucidity than in those swift, lonely
-hours of night. It was like a queer, long pause between a past
-accomplished and a future not yet begun--as though one should sunder
-time and stand between its cloven waves. The figures crossed the stage,
-and he seemed to see them all in the infinite leisure of an eternal
-moment.
-
-This future, its figures just about to emerge from the wings into full
-view, slightly troubled his reverie. It was at dawn that his mind again
-turned to it with a conjecture half amused and half reluctant. There was
-something disturbing in the linkage he must make between that child’s
-face on the mist and the Miss Gifford he was so soon to see. That she
-would, at all events in her own conception, dominate the stage, he felt
-sure; she might even expect a special attention from a spectator whose
-memory could join hers in that far first act. He was pretty sure that
-his memory would have to do service for both; and quite sure that memory
-would not hold for her, as it did for him, a distinct tincture of pain,
-of restlessness, as though there strove in it something shackled and
-unfulfilled.
-
-One’s thoughts, at four o’clock in the morning, after hours of
-sleeplessness, became fantastic, and Gavan found himself watching, with
-some shrinking, this image of the past, suddenly released, brought
-gasping and half stupefied to the air, to freedom, to new, strong
-activity, after having been, for so long, bound and gagged and thrust
-into an underground prison.
-
-He turned to a forecast of what Eppie would probably be like. He had
-heard a good deal about her, and he had not cared for what he had
-heard. The fact that one did hear a good deal was not pleasing. Every
-one, in describing her, used the word charming; he had gathered that it
-meant, as applied to her, more than mere prettiness, wit, or social
-deftness; and it was precisely for the more that it meant that he did
-not care.
-
-Apparently what really distinguished her was her energy. She traveled
-with her cousin, Lady Alicia Waring, a worldly, kindly dabbler in art
-and politics; she rushed from country-house to country-house; she worked
-in the slums; she sat on committees; she canvassed for parliamentary
-friends; she hunted, she yachted, she sang, she broke hearts, and, by
-all accounts, had high and resolute matrimonial ambitions. Would Eppie
-Gifford “get” So-and-so was a question that Gavan had heard more than
-once repeated, with the graceless terseness of our modern colloquialism,
-and it spoke much for Eppie’s popularity that it was usually asked in
-sympathy.
-
-This reputation for a direct and vigorous worldliness was only thrown
-into more pungent relief by the startling tale of her love-affair. She
-had fallen in love, helplessly in love, with an impecunious younger son,
-an officer in the Guards--a lazy, lovable, petulant nobody, the last
-type one would have expected her to lose her head over. He was not
-stupid, but he didn’t count and never would. The match would have been a
-reckless one, for Eppie had, practically, only enough to pay for her
-clothes and her traveling expenses. The handsome guardsman had not even
-prospects. Yet, deliberately sacrificing all her chances, she had fallen
-in love, been radiantly engaged, and then, from the radiance, flung into
-stupefying humiliation. He had thrown her over, quite openly, for an
-ugly little heiress from Liverpool. Poor Eppie had carried off her
-broken heart--and she didn’t deny that it was broken--for a year or so
-of travel. This had happened four years ago. She had mended as bravely
-as possible,--it wasn’t a deep break after all,--and on the thrilling
-occasion of her first meeting with the faithless lover and his bride was
-magnificently sweet and regal to the ugly heiress. It was surmised that
-the husband was as uncomfortable as he deserved to be. But this capacity
-for recklessness, this picture of one so dauntless, dazed and
-discomfited, hardly redeemed the other, the probably fundamental aspect.
-She had lost her head; but that didn’t prove that when she had it she
-would not make the best possible use of it. There was talk now--Eppie’s
-was the publicity of popularity--of Gavan’s old-time rival, Grainger,
-who had inherited an immense fortune and, unvarnished and defiantly
-undecorative on his lustrous background, was one of the world’s prizes.
-All that he had was at Eppie’s feet, and some more brilliant alternative
-could be the only cause for hesitation in a young woman seared by
-misfortune and cured forever of folly.
-
-So the talk went, and Gavan took such gabble with a large pinch of
-ironic incredulity; but at the same time the gossip left its trail. The
-impetuous and devastating young lady, with her assurance and her aim at
-large successes, was to him a distasteful figure. There was pain in
-linking it with little Eppie. It stood waiting in the wings and was
-altogether novel and a little menacing to one’s peace of mind. He really
-did not want to see Miss Gilford; she belonged to a modern type
-intensely wearisome to him. But she was staying with her uncle and
-aunt--only Miss Barbara was left--at Kirklands, and the general, after a
-meeting in London, had written begging him to pay them all a visit, and,
-since there had seemed no reason for not going, here he was.
-
-Here he was, and round the corner of the wing the new Eppie stood
-waiting. Poor little Eppie of childhood--she was lost forever.
-
-But all the clearness of the night concentrated, at dawn, into that
-vivid memory of the past where they had wandered together, sharing joy
-and sorrow.
-
-That was long, long over. To-morrow was already here, and to-morrow
-belonged to the new Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Gavan spent the morning in Edinburgh, seeing an old relative, and
-reached Kirklands at six.
-
-It was a cold October evening, the moors like a dark, sullenly heaving
-ocean and a heavy bar of sunset lying along the horizon.
-
-The windows of the old white house mirrored the dying color, and here
-and there the inner light of fire and candle seemed like laughter on a
-grave face. With all its loneliness it was a happy-looking house; he
-remembered that; and in the stillness of the vast moors and the coming
-night it made him think of a warmly throbbing heart filling with courage
-and significance a desolate life.
-
-The general came from the long oak library, book in hand, to welcome
-him. Gavan was almost automatically observant of physical processes and
-noted now the pronounced limp, the touch of garrulity--symptoms of the
-fine old organism’s placid disintegration. Life was leaving it
-unreluctantly, and the mild indifference of age made his cordiality at
-once warmer and more impersonal than of old.
-
-As he led Gavan to his room, the room of boyhood, near Eppie’s,
-overlooking the garden and the wooded hills, he told him that Eppie and
-Miss Barbara were dressing and that he would have time for a talk with
-them before dinner at eight.
-
-“It’s changed since you were here, Gavan. Ah! time goes--it goes. Poor
-Rachel! we lost her five years ago. If Eppie didn’t look after us so
-well we should be lonely, Barbara and I. We seldom get away now. Too old
-to care for change. But Eppie always gives us three or four months, and
-a letter once a week while she’s away. She puts us first. This is home,
-she says. She sees clever people at Alicia Waring’s, has the world at
-her feet,--you’ve heard, no doubt,--but she loves Kirklands best. She
-gardens with me--a great gardener Eppie, but she is good at anything she
-sets herself to; she drives her aunt about, she reads to us and sings to
-us,--you have heard of her singing, too,--keeps us in touch with life.
-Eppie is a wonderful person for sharing happiness,” the general
-monologued, looking about the fire-lit room; and Gavan felt that, from
-this point of view, some of the little Eppie might still have survived.
-
-“So you have given up the idea of the House?” the general went on.
-
-“I’m no good at it,” said Gavan; “I’ve proved it.”
-
-“Proved it? Nonsense. Wait till you are fifty before saying that. Why,
-you’ve everything in your favor. You weren’t enough in earnest; that was
-the trouble. You didn’t care enough; you played into your opponents’
-hands. The British public doesn’t understand idealism or irony. Eppie
-told us all about it.”
-
-“Eppie? How did Eppie know?” He found himself using her little name as a
-matter of course.
-
-“She knows everything,” the general rejoined, with his air of happy,
-derived complacency; “even when she’s not in England, she never loses
-touch. Eppie is very much behind the scenes.”
-
-The simile recalled to Gavan his own vision of the stage and the waiting
-figure. “Even behind my scenes!” he ejaculated, smiling at so much
-omniscience.
-
-“From the moment you came into public life, yes.”
-
-“And she knows why I failed at it? Idealism and irony?”
-
-“That’s what she says; and I usually find Eppie right.” The general,
-after the half-humorous declaration, had a pause, and before leaving his
-guest, he added, “Right, except about her own affairs. She is a child
-there yet.”
-
-Eppie’s disaster must have been keenly felt and keenly resented at
-Kirklands. The general made no further reference to it and Gavan asked
-no question.
-
-There was a fire, a lamp, and several clusters of candles in the long,
-dark library when Gavan entered it an hour later, so that the darkness
-was full of light; yet he had wandered slowly down its length, looking
-about him at the faded tan, russet, and gilt of well-remembered books,
-at the massive chairs and tables, all in their old places, all so
-intimately familiar, before seeing that he was not alone in the room.
-
-Some one in white was sitting, half submerged in a deep chair, behind
-the table with its lamp--some one who had been watching him as he
-wandered, and who now rose to meet him, taking him so unawares that she
-startled him, all the light in the dim room seeming suddenly to center
-upon her and she herself to throw everything, even his former thoughts
-of her, into the background.
-
-It was Eppie, of course, and all that he had heard of her, all that he
-had conjectured, fell back before the impression that held him in a
-moment, long, really dazzled, yet very acute.
-
-Her face was narrow, pale, faintly freckled; the jaw long, the nose
-high-bridged, the lips a little prominent; and, as he now saw, a clear
-flush sprang easily to her cheeks. Eyes, lips, and hair were vivid with
-color: the hair, with its remembered rivulets of russet and gold, piled
-high on her head, framing the narrow face and the long throat; the eyes
-gray or green or gold, like the depths of a mountain stream.
-
-He had heard many analogies for the haunting and fugitive charm of Miss
-Gifford’s face--a charm that could only, apparently, be caught with the
-subtleties of antithesis. One appreciator had said that she was like an
-angelic jockey; another, that with a statesman’s gaze she had a baby’s
-smile; another, that she was a Flying Victory done by Velasquez. And
-with his own dominant impression of strength, sweetness, and daring,
-there crowded other similes. Her eyes had the steeplechaser’s hard,
-smiling scrutiny of the next jump; the halloo of the hunt under a
-morning sky was in them, the joyous shouts of Spartan boys at play; yet,
-though eyes of heroism and laughter, they were eyes sad and almost
-tragically benignant.
-
-She was tall, with the spare lightness of a runner poised for a race,
-and the firm, ample breast of a hardy nymph. She suggested these pagan,
-outdoor similes while, at the same time, luxuriously feminine in her
-more than fashionable aspect, the last touches of modernity were upon
-her: her dress, the eighteenth-century, interpreted by Paris, her
-decorations all discretion and distinction--a knot of silver-green at
-her breast, an emerald ring on her finger, and emerald earrings, two
-drops of smooth, green light, trembling in the shadows of her hair.
-
-Altogether Gavan was able to grasp the impression even further, to
-simplify it, to express at once its dazzled quality and its acuteness,
-as various and almost violent, as if, suddenly, every instrument in an
-orchestra were to strike one long, clear, vibrating note.
-
-His gaze had been prolonged, and hers had answered it with as open an
-intentness. And it was at last she who took both his hands, shook them a
-little, holding them while, not shyly, but with that vivid flush on her
-cheek, “_You_,” she said.
-
-For she was startled, too. It _was_ he. She remembered, as if she had
-seen them yesterday, his air of quick response, surface-shrinking, deep
-composure, the old delicious smile, and the glance swiftly looking and
-swiftly averted.
-
-“And _you_,” Gavan repeated. “I haven’t changed so much, though,” he
-said.
-
-“And I have? Really much? Long skirts and turned up hair are a
-transformation. It’s wonderful to see you, Gavan. It makes one get hold
-of the past and of oneself in it.”
-
-“Does it?”
-
-“_Doesn’t_ it?” She let go his hands, and moving to the fire and
-standing before it while she surveyed him, she went on, not waiting for
-an answer:
-
-“But I don’t suppose that you have my keenness of memory. It all rushes
-back--our walks, our games, our lessons, the smell of the heather, the
-very taste of the heather-honey we ate at tea, and all the things you
-did and said and looked; your building the Petit Trianon, and your
-playing dolls with me that day; your Agnes, in her pink dress, and my
-Elspeth, whom I used to whip so.”
-
-“I remember it all,” said Gavan, “and I remember how I broke poor
-Elspeth.”
-
-“Do you?”
-
-“All of it: the attic windows and the pine-tree under them, and the
-great white bird, and the dreadful, soft little thud on the garden
-path.”
-
-“Yes, I can see your face looking down. You were quite silent and
-frozen. I screamed and screamed. Aunt Barbara thought that _you_ had
-fallen at first from the way I screamed.”
-
-“Poor little Eppie. Yes, I remember; it was horrid.”
-
-Their eyes, smiling, quizzical, yet sad, watched, measured each other,
-while they exchanged these trophies from the past. He had joined her
-beside the fire, and, turning, she leaned her hands on the mantel and
-looked into the flames. So looking, her face had its aspect of almost
-tragic brooding. It was as if, Gavan thought, under the light memories,
-all those visions of his night were there before her, as if,
-astonishingly, and in almost uncanny measure, she shared them.
-
-“And do you remember Robbie?” she asked presently.
-
-“I was just thinking of Robbie,” Gavan answered. It was her face that
-had brought back the old sorrow, and that memory, more than any, linked
-them over all that was new and strange. They glanced at each other.
-
-“I am so glad,” said Eppie.
-
-“Because I remember?”
-
-“Yes, that you haven’t forgotten. You said you would.”
-
-“Did I?” he asked, though he quite remembered that, too.
-
-“Yes; and I should have felt Robbie more dead if you had forgotten him.”
-
-This was wonderfully not the Miss Gifford, and wonderfully the old
-Eppie. She saw that thought, too, answering it with, “Things haven’t
-really changed so much, have they? It’s all so very near--all of that.”
-
-So near, that its sudden sharing was making Gavan a little
-uncomfortable, with the discomfort of the night before justified,
-intensified.
-
-He hadn’t imagined such familiar closeness with a woman really unknown,
-nor that, sweeping away all the formalities that might have grown up
-between them, she should call him Gavan and make it natural for him to
-call her Eppie. He didn’t really mind. It was amusing, charming perhaps,
-perhaps even touching--yes, of course it was that; but she was rather
-out of place: much nearer than where he had imagined she would be, on
-the stage before him.
-
-Passing to another memory, she now said, “I clung for years, you know,
-to your promise to come back.”
-
-“I couldn’t come--really and simply could not.”
-
-“I never for a moment thought you could, any more than I thought you
-could forget Robbie.”
-
-“And when I could come, you were gone.”
-
-“How miserable that made me! I was in Rome when I had the news from
-Uncle Nigel.”
-
-He felt bound fully to exonerate the past. “I had the life, during my
-boyhood, of a sumptuous galley-slave. I had everything except liberty
-and leisure. I was put into a system and left there until it had had its
-will of me. And when I was free I imagined that you had forgotten all
-about me. To a shy, warped boy, a grown-up Eppie was an alarming idea.”
-
-“I never thought you had forgotten _me_!” said Eppie, smiling.
-
-Again she actually disturbed him; but, lightly, he replied with the
-truth, feeling a certain satisfaction in its lightness: “Never, never;
-though, of course, you fell into a background. You can’t deny that _I_
-did.”
-
-“Oh, no, I don’t deny it.” Her smile met his, seemed placidly to
-perceive its meaning. She did not for a moment imply, by her admissions,
-any more than he did; the only question was, What did his admissions
-imply?
-
-She left them there, going on in an apparent sequence, “Have you heard
-much about me, Gavan?”
-
-“A good deal,” he owned.
-
-“I ask because I want to pick up threads; I want to know how many
-stitches are dropped, so to speak. Since you have heard, I want to know
-just what; I often seem to leave reverberations behind me. Some rather
-ugly ones, I fear. You heard, perhaps, that I was that rather ambiguous
-being, the young woman of fashion, materialistic, ambitious, hard.” Her
-gaze, with its cool scrutiny, was now upon him.
-
-“Those are really too ugly names for what I heard. I gathered, on the
-whole, that you were merely very vigorous and that you had more
-opportunities than most people for vigor.”
-
-“I’m glad that you saw it so; but all the same, the truth, at times,
-hasn’t been beautiful. I have, often, been too indifferent toward people
-who didn’t count for me, and too diplomatic toward those who did. You
-see, Gavan,” she put it placidly before him, not at all as if drawing
-near in confidence,--she was much further in her confidences than in her
-memories,--but merely as if she unrolled a map before him so that he
-might clearly see where, at present, they found themselves, “you see, I
-am a nearly penniless girl--just enough to dress and go about. Of course
-if I didn’t dress and didn’t go about I could keep body and soul
-together; but to the shrewd eyes of the world, a girl living on her
-friends, making capital of her personality, while she seeks a husband
-who will give her the sort of place she wants--oh, yes, the world isn’t
-so unfair, either, when one takes off the veils. And this girl, with the
-personality that pays, was put early in a place from where she could see
-all sorts of paths at once, see the world, in its ladder aspect, before
-her--all the horridness of low rungs and all the satisfaction of high
-ones. I have been tempted through complexity of understanding; perhaps I
-still am. One wants the best; and when one doesn’t see clearly what the
-best is, one is in danger of becoming ugly. But echoes are often
-distorting.”
-
-Miss Gifford was now very fully before him, as she had evidently
-intended to be. It was as if she herself had drawn between them the
-barrier of the footlights and as if, on her chosen stage, she swept a
-really splendid curtsey. And this frank and panoplied young woman of the
-world was far easier to deal with than the reminiscent Eppie. He could
-comfortably smile and applaud from his stall, once more the mere
-spectator--easiest of attitudes.
-
-“The echoes, on the whole, were rather magnificent, as if an Amazon had
-galloped across mountains and left them calling her prowess from peak to
-peak.”
-
-Her eyes, quickly on his, seemed to measure the conscious artificiality,
-to compare it with what he had already, more helplessly, shown her. He
-felt his rather silly deftness penetrated and that she guessed that the
-mountain calls had not at all enchanted him. She owned to her own
-acuteness in her next words:
-
-“And you don’t like young ladies to gallop across mountains. Well, I
-love galloping, though I’m sorry that I leave over-loud echoes. You, at
-all events, are noiseless. You seem to have sailed over my head in an
-air-boat. It was hard for me to keep any trace of you.”
-
-“But I don’t at all mean that I dislike Amazons to have their rides.”
-
-“Let us talk of you now. I have had an eye on you, you know, even when
-you disappeared into the Indian haze; you had just disappeared when I
-first came to London. I only heard of lofty things--scholarly
-distinction, diplomatic grace, exquisite indifference to the world’s
-prizes and to noisy things in general. It’s all true, I can see.”
-
-“Well, I’m not indifferent to you,” said Gavan, smiling, tossing his
-appropriate bouquet.
-
-She had at this another, but a sharper, of her penetrative pauses. It
-was pretty to see her, rather like a deer arrested in its careless
-speed, suddenly wary, its head high. And, in another moment, he saw that
-the quick flush, almost violently, sprang to her cheek. Turning her head
-a little from him, she looked away, almost as if his glib acceptance of
-a frivolous meaning in her words abashed her--and more for him than for
-herself; as if she suddenly suspected him of being stupid enough to
-accept her at the uglier valuation of those echoes he had heard. She had
-not meant to say that she was one of the world’s prizes, and she had
-perhaps meant to say, generously, that if he found her noisy she
-wouldn’t resent indifference. Perhaps she had meant to say nothing of
-herself at all. She certainly wasn’t on the stage, and in thinking her
-so he felt that he had shown himself disloyal to something that she,
-more nobly, had taken for granted. The flush, so vivid, that stayed made
-him feel himself a blunderer.
-
-But, in a moment, she went on with a lightness of allusion to his speech
-that yet oddly answered the last turn of his self-reproach. “Oh, you are
-loyal, I am sure, even to a memory. I wasn’t thinking of particulars,
-but of universals. My whole impression of you was of something fragrant,
-elusive, impalpable. I never felt that I had a glimpse of really _you_.
-It was almost gross in comparison actually to see your name in the
-papers, to read of your fight for Camley, to think of you in that
-earthly scuffle. It was like roast-beef after roses; and I was glad,
-because I’m gross. I like roast-beef.”
-
-He was grateful to her for the lightness that carried him so kindly over
-his own blunder.
-
-“It was only the fragrance of the roast, too, you see, since I was
-defeated,” he said.
-
-“You didn’t mind a bit, did you?”
-
-“It would sound, wouldn’t it, rather like sour grapes to say it?”
-
-“You can say it. It was so obvious that you might have had the bunch by
-merely stretching out your hand--they were under it, not over your head.
-You simply wouldn’t play the game.” She left him now, reaching her chair
-with a long stride and a curving, gleaming turn of her white skirts,
-suggesting a graceful adaptation of some outdoor dexterity. As she
-leaned back in her chair, fixing him with that look of cheerful
-hardness, she made him think so strongly of the resolute, winning type,
-that almost involuntarily he said, “You would have played it, wouldn’t
-you?”
-
-“I should think so! I care for the grapes, you see. It’s what I
-said--you didn’t care enough.”
-
-“Well, it’s kind of you to see ineffectuality in that light.” Still
-examining the steeplechaser quality, he added, “You do care, don’t you,
-a lot?”
-
-“Yes, a lot. I am worldly to my finger-tips.” Her eyes challenged
-him--gaily, not defiantly--to misunderstand her again.
-
-“What do you mean, exactly, by worldly?” he asked.
-
-“I mean by it that I believe in the world, that I love the world; I
-believe that its grapes are worth while,--and by grapes I mean the
-things that people strive for and that the strong attain. The higher
-they hang and the harder the climb, the more I like them.”
-
-Gavan received these interpretations without comment. “A seat in the
-House isn’t very high, though, is it?” he remarked.
-
-“That depends on the sitter. It might be a splendid or a trivial thing.”
-
-“And in my case, if I’d got it, what would it have been? Can you see
-that, too, you very clear-sighted young woman?”
-
-He stood above her, smiling, but now without suavity or artificiality;
-looking at her as though she were a pretty gipsy whose palm he had
-crossed with silver. And Eppie answered, quite like a good-natured
-gipsy, conscious of an admiring but skeptical questioner, “I think it
-would have been neither.”
-
-“But what then? What would this sitter have made of it?”
-
-“A distraction? An experiment upon himself? I’m sure I don’t know.
-Indeed, I don’t pretend to know you at all yet. Perhaps I will in time.”
-
-Once more he was conscious of the discomfort, slight and stealing, as
-though the gipsy knew too much already. But he protested, and with
-sincerity: “If there is anything to find you will certainly find it. I
-hope that you will find it worth your while. I hope that we shall be
-great friends.”
-
-She smiled up at him, clearly and quietly: “I have always been your
-great friend.”
-
-“Always? All this while?”
-
-“All this while. Never mind if you haven’t felt it; I have. I will do
-for both.”
-
-Her smile, her look, made him finally and completely understand the
-application of the well-worn word to her. She was charming. She could be
-lavish, pour out unasked bounty upon one, and yet, in no way
-undervaluing it, be full of delicacy, of humor, in her generosity.
-
-“I thought I hadn’t any right to feel it,” said Gavan. “I thought you
-would not have remembered.”
-
-“Well, you will find out--I always remember, it’s my strong point,” said
-Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Next morning at breakfast he had quite a new impression of her.
-
-Pale sunlight flooded the square, white room where, in all its dignified
-complexity of appurtenance, the simple meal was laid out. From the
-windows one saw the clear sky, the moor, its summer purple turned to
-rich browns and golds, and, nearer, the griffins with their shields.
-
-Eppie was a little late in coming, and Gavan, while he and the general
-finished their wandering consumption of porridge and sat down to bacon
-and eggs, had time to observe by daylight in Miss Barbara, behind her
-high silver urn, the changes that in her were even more emphatic than in
-her brother. She was sweeter than ever, more appealing, more
-affirmative, with all manner of futile, fluttering little gestures and
-gentle, half-inarticulate little ejaculations of pleasure, approbation,
-or distress. Her smile, rather silly, worked too continually, as though
-moved by slackened wires. Her hands defined, described, ejaculated;
-over-expression had become automatic with her.
-
-Eppie, when she appeared, said that she had had a walk, stooping to
-kiss her aunt and giving Gavan a firm, chill hand on her way to the same
-office for the general. She took her seat opposite Gavan, whistling an
-Irish-terrier to her from the door and, before she began to eat,
-dropping large fragments of bannock into his mouth. Her loose, frieze
-clothes smelled of peat and sunshine; her hair seemed to have the
-sparkle of the dew on it; she suggested mountain tarns, skylarks,
-morning gladness: but, with all this, Gavan, for the first time, now
-that she faced the hard, high light, saw how deeply, too, she suggested
-sadness.
-
-Her face had moments of looking older than his own. It was fresh, it was
-young, but it had lived a great deal, and felt things to the bone, as it
-were.
-
-There were little wrinkles about her eyes; her white brow, under its
-sweep of hair, was faintly lined; the oval of her cheek, long and fine,
-took, at certain angles, an almost haggard sharpness. It was not a faded
-face, nor a face to wither with years: every line of it spoke of a
-permanent beauty; but, with all the color that the chill morning air had
-brought into it, it yet made one think of bleak uplands, of
-weather-beaten cliffs. Life had engraved it with ineffaceable symbols.
-Storms had left their mark, bitter conflicts and bitter endurances.
-
-While she ate, with great appetite, she talked incessantly, to the
-general, to Miss Barbara, to Gavan, but not so much to him, tossing, in
-the intervals of her knife and fork and cup, bits of food to the
-attentive terrier. He saw why the old people adored her. She was the
-light, the movement of their monotonous days. Not only did she bring
-them her life: it was their own that she vivified with her interest. The
-interest was not assumed, dutiful. There was no touch of the conscious
-being kind. She questioned as eagerly as she told. She knew and cared
-for every inch of the country, every individual in the country-side. She
-was full of sagacity and suggestion, full of anecdote and a nipping
-Scotch humor. And one felt strongly in her the quality of old race.
-Experience was in her blood, an inheritance of instinct, and, that so
-significant symptom, the power of playfulness--the intellectual
-detachment that, toward firm convictions, could afford a lightness
-scandalous to more crudely compacted natures, could afford gaieties and
-audacities, like the flights of a bird tethered by an invisible thread
-to a strong hand.
-
-Miss Barbara, plaintively repining over village delinquencies, was lured
-to see comedy lurking in the cases of insubordination and
-thriftlessness, though at the mention of Archie MacHendrie, the local
-drunkard and wife-beater, Eppie’s brow grew black--with a blackness
-beside which Miss Barbara’s gloom was pallid. Eppie said that she wished
-some one would give Archie a thrashing, and Gavan could almost see her
-doing it herself.
-
-From local topics she followed the general to politics, while he glanced
-down the columns of the “Scotsman,” so absorbed and so vehement that,
-meeting at last Gavan’s meditative eye, she seemed to become aware of an
-irony he had not at all intended, and said, “A crackling of thorns under
-a pot, all this, Gavan thinks, and, what does it all matter? You have
-become a philosopher, Gavan; I can see that.”
-
-“Well, my dear, from Plato down philosophers have thought that politics
-did matter,” said the general, incredulous of indifference to such a
-topic.
-
-“Unless they were of a school that thought that nothing did,” said
-Eppie.
-
-“Gavan’s not of that weak-kneed persuasion.”
-
-“Oh, he isn’t weak-kneed!” laughed Eppie.
-
-She drove her aunt all morning in the little pony-cart and wrote letters
-after lunch, Gavan being left to the general’s care. It was not until
-later that she assumed toward him the more personal offices of deputy
-hostess, meeting him in the hall as she emerged from the morning-room,
-her thick sheaf of letters in her hand, and proposing a walk before tea.
-She took him up the well-remembered path beside the burn; but now, in
-the clear autumnal afternoon, he seemed further from her than last night
-before the fire. Already he had seen that the sense of nearness or
-distance depended on her will rather than his own; so that it was now
-she who chose to talk of trivial things, not referring by word or look
-to the old memories, deepest of all, that crowded about him on the
-hilltop, not even when, breasting the wind, they passed the solitary
-group of pine-trees, where she had so deeply shared his suffering, so
-wonderfully comprehended his fears.
-
-She strode against the twisted flappings of her skirt, tawny strands of
-hair whipping across her throat, her hands deeply thrust into her
-pockets, her head unbowed before the enormous buffets of the wind, and
-he felt anew the hardy energy that would make tender, lingering touches
-upon the notes of the past rare things with her.
-
-In the uproar of air, any sequence of talk was difficult. Her clear
-voice seemed to shout to him, like the cold shocks of a mountain stream
-leaping from ledge to ledge, and the trivial things she said were like
-the tossing of spray upon that current of deep, joyful energy.
-
-“Isn’t it splendid!” she exclaimed at last. They had walked two miles
-along the crest of the hill, and, smiling in looking round at him, her
-face, all the sky behind it, all the wind around it, made the word match
-his own appreciation.
-
-“Splendid,” he assented, thinking of her glance and poise.
-
-Still bending her smile upon him, she said, “You already look
-different.”
-
-“Different from what?” he asked, amused by her expression, as of a
-kindly, diagnosing young doctor.
-
-“From last night. From what I felt of you. One might have thought that
-you had lost the capacity for feeling splendor.”
-
-“Why should you have imagined me so deadened?” He kept his cheerful
-curiosity.
-
-“I don’t know. I did. There,”--she paused to point,--“do you remember
-the wind-mill, Gavan? The old miller is dead and his son is the miller
-now; but the mill looks just as it did when we were little. It makes one
-think of birds and ships, doesn’t it?--with the beauty that it stays and
-doesn’t pass. When I was a child--did I ever confide it to you?--my
-dream was to catch one of the sails as it came down and let it carry me
-up, up, and right around. What fun it would have been! I suppose that
-one could have held on.”
-
-“In pretty grim earnest, after the first fun.”
-
-“It would be the sense of coming grimness that would make the desperate
-thrill of it.”
-
-“You are fond of thrills and perils.”
-
-“Not fond, exactly; the love of risk is a deeper thing--something
-fundamental in us, I suppose.”
-
-She had walked on, down the hillside, where gorse bushes pulled at her
-skirts, and he was putting together last night’s impressions with
-to-day’s, and thinking that if she embodied the instinctive, the
-life-loving, it wasn’t in the simple, unreflecting forms that the words
-usually implied. She was simple, but not in the least guileless, and her
-directness was a choice among recognized complexities. It was no
-spontaneous child of nature who, on the quieter hillside, where they
-could talk, talked of India, now, of his life there, the people he had
-known, many of whom she too knew. He knew that he was being managed,
-being made to talk of what she wanted to hear, that she was still
-engaged in penetrating. He was quite willing to be managed,
-penetrated,--for as far as she could get; he could rely on his own
-deftness in retreat before too deep a probe, though, should she discover
-that for him the lessons of life had resulted in an outlook perhaps the
-antipodes from her own, he guessed that her own would show no wavering.
-Still, she should run, if possible, no such risk. They were to be
-friends, good friends: that was, as she had said, not only an
-accomplished, but a long-accomplished fact; but, even more than in
-childhood, she would be a friend held at arm’s-length.
-
-Meanwhile, unconscious, no doubt, of these barriers, Eppie walked beside
-him and made him talk about himself. She knew, of course, of his
-mother’s death; she did not speak of that: many barriers were her
-own--she was capable of most delicate avoidances. But she asked after
-his father. “He is still alive, I hear.”
-
-“Yes, indeed, and gives me a good deal of his company.”
-
-“Oh.” She was a little at a loss. He could guess at what she had heard
-of his father. He went on, though choosing his words in a way that
-showed a slight wincing behind his wish to be very frank and friendly
-with her, for even yet his father made him wince, standing, as he did,
-for the tragedy of his mother’s life: “He is very much alive for a
-person so gone to pieces. But I can put up with him far more comfortably
-than when he was less pitiable.”
-
-“How much do you have to put up with him?” she asked, trying to image,
-as he saw, his ménage in Surrey, in the house he had just been
-describing to her, its old bricks all vague pinks and mauves, its
-high-walled gardens clustering near it, its wonderful hedges, that, he
-said, it ruined him to keep up to their reputation of exquisite
-formality; and, within, its vast library--all the house a brain,
-practically, the other rooms like mere places for life’s renewal before
-centering in the intellectual workshop. She evidently found it difficult
-to place, among the hedges, the lawns, the long walls of the library, a
-father, gone to pieces perhaps, but displaying all the more helplessly
-his general unworthiness. Even in lenient circles, Captain Palairet was
-thought to have an undignified record.
-
-“Oh, he is there for most of the time. He is there now,” said Gavan,
-without pathos. “He has no money left, and now that I’ve a little I’m
-the obvious thing to retire to.”
-
-“I hope that it’s not very horrid for you.”
-
-“I can’t say that it’s horrid at all. I don’t see much of him, and, in
-many respects, he has remained, for the onlooker, rather a charming
-creature. He gives me very little trouble--smokes, eats, plays
-billiards. When we meet, we are very affable.”
-
-Eppie did not say, “You tolerate him because he is piteous,” but he
-imagined that she guessed it.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-He was awakened early next morning by the sound of singing in the garden
-below.
-
-His windows were widely opened and a cold, pure air filled the room. He
-lay dreamily listening for some moments before recognizing Eppie’s
-voice--recognizing it, though he had never heard her sing.
-
-Fresh and strong, it put a new vitality into the simple sadness of an
-old Scotch ballad, as though in the very sorrow it found joy. It was not
-an emotional voice. Clearly and firmly it sounded, and seemed a part of
-the frosty, sunny morning, part of the sky that was like a great chalice
-filled with light, of the whitened hills, the aromatic pine-woods, and
-the distant, rushing burn. He had sprung up after the first dreamy
-listening and looked out at it all, and at her walking through the
-garden, her dog at her heels. She went out by the little gate sunken
-deep in the wall, and disappeared in the woods; and still the voice
-reached him, singing on, and at each repetition of the monotonous,
-departing melody, a sadder, sweeter sense of pain strove in his heart.
-
-He listened, looking down at the pine-tree beneath the window, at the
-garden, the summer-house, the withered tangle of the rose upon the wall,
-and up at the hilltop, at the crystalline sky; and such a sudden pang of
-recollection pierced him that tears came to his eyes.
-
-What was it that he remembered? or, rather, what did he not? Things deep
-and things trivial, idle smiles, wrenching despairs, youth, sorrow,
-laughter,--all the past was in the pang, all the future, too, it seemed,
-and he could not have said whether his mother, Alice, Eppie with her
-dolls, and little Robbie, or the clairvoyant intuition of a future
-waiting for him here--whether presage or remembrance--were its greater
-part.
-
-Not until the voice had died, in faintest filaments of sound, far away
-among the woods, did the pain fade, leaving him shaken. Such moods were
-like dead things starting to life, and reminded him too vividly of the
-fact that as long as one was alive, one was, indeed, in danger from
-life; and though his thought was soon able to disentangle itself from
-the knot of awakened emotions that had entwined it for a moment, a vague
-sense of fear remained with him. Something had been demanded of
-him--something that he had, involuntarily, found himself giving. This it
-was to have still a young nature, sensitive to impressions. He
-understood. Yet it was with a slight, a foolishly boyish reluctance, as
-he told himself, that he went down some hours later to meet Eppie at
-breakfast.
-
-There was an unlooked-for refuge for him when he found her hardly
-noticing him, and very angry over some village misdemeanor. The anger
-held her far away. She dilated on the subject all during breakfast,
-pouring forth her wrath, without excitement, but with a steady
-vehemence. It was an affair of a public-house, and Eppie accused the
-publican of enticing his clients to drink, of corrupting the village
-sobriety, and she urged the general, as local magistrate, to take
-immediate action, showing a very minute knowledge of the technicalities
-of the case.
-
-“My dear,” the general expostulated, “indeed I don’t think that the man
-has done anything illegal; we are powerless about the license in such a
-case. You must get more evidence.”
-
-“I have any amount of evidence. The man is a public nuisance. Poor Mrs.
-MacHendrie was crying to me about it this morning. Archie is hardly ever
-sober now. I shall drive over to Carlowrie and see Sir Alec about it; as
-the wretch’s landlord he can make it uncomfortable for him, and I’ll see
-that he makes it as uncomfortable as possible.”
-
-Laughingly, but slightly harassed, the general said: “You see, we have a
-tyrant here. Eppie is really a bit too hard on the man. He is an
-unpleasant fellow, I own, a most unpleasant manner--a beast, if you
-will, but a legal beast.”
-
-“The most unpleasant form of animal, isn’t it? It’s very good of Eppie
-to care so much,” said Gavan.
-
-“You don’t care, I suppose,” she said, turning her eyes on him, as
-though she saw him for the first time that morning.
-
-“I should feel more hopeless about it, perhaps.”
-
-“Why, pray?”
-
-“At all events, I shouldn’t be able to feel so much righteous
-indignation.”
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“He is pretty much of a product, isn’t he?--not worse, I suppose, than
-the men whose weakness enriches him. It’s a pity, of course, that one
-can’t painlessly pinch such people out of existence, as one would
-offensive insects.”
-
-Eppie, across the table, eyed him, her anger quieted. “He is a product
-of a good many things,” she said, now in her most reasonable manner,
-“and he is going to be a product of some more before I’m done with
-him,--a product of my hatred for him and his kind, for one thing. That
-will be a new factor in his development. Gavan,” she smiled, “you and I
-are going to quarrel.”
-
-“Dear Eppie!” Miss Barbara interposed. “Gavan, you must not take her
-seriously; she so often says extravagant things just to tease one.”
-Really dismayed, alternately nodding and shaking her head in reassurance
-and protest, she looked from one to the other. “And don’t, dear, say
-such unchristian things of anybody. She is not so hard and unforgiving
-as she sounds, Gavan.”
-
-“Aunt Barbara! Aunt Barbara!” laughed Eppie, leaning her elbows on the
-table, her eyes still on Gavan, “my hatred for Macdougall isn’t nearly
-as unchristian as Gavan’s indifference. I don’t want to pinch him
-painlessly out of life at all. I think that life has room for us both. I
-want to have him whipped, or made uncomfortable in some way, until he
-becomes less horrid.”
-
-“Whipped, dear! People are never whipped nowadays! It was a very
-barbarous punishment indeed, and, thank God, we have outgrown it. We
-will outgrow it all some day. And as to any punishment, I don’t know, I
-really don’t. Resist not evil,” Miss Barbara finished in a vague,
-helpless murmur, uncertain as to what course would at once best apply to
-Macdougall’s case and satisfy the needs of public sobriety.
-
-“Perhaps one owes it to people to resist them,” Eppie answered.
-
-“Oh, Eppie dear, if only you cared a little more for Maeterlinck!”
-sighed Miss Barbara, the more complex readings of whose later years had
-been somewhat incongruously adapted to her early simple faiths. “Do you
-remember that beautiful thing he says,--and Gavan’s attitude reminds me
-of it,--‘_Le sage qui passe interrompt mille drâmes’?_”
-
-“You will be quoting Tolstoi to me next, Aunt Barbara. I suspect that
-such sages would interrupt a good deal more than dramas.”
-
-“I hope that you care for Tolstoi, Gavan,” said Miss Barbara, not
-forgetful of his boyish pieties. “Not the novels,--they are very, very
-sad, and so long, and the characters have such a number of names it is
-most confusing,--but the dear little books on religion. It is all there:
-love of all men, and non-resistance of evil, and self-renunciation.”
-
-“Yes,” Gavan assented, while Eppie looked rather gravely at him.
-
-“How beautiful this world would be if we could see it so--no hatred, no
-strife, no evil.”
-
-Again Gavan assented with, “None.”
-
-“None; and no life either,” Eppie finished for them.
-
-She rose, thrusting her hands into alternate pockets looking for a
-note-book, which she found and consulted. “I’m off for the fray, Uncle
-Nigel, for hatred and strife. You and Gavan are going to shoot, so I’ll
-bring you your lunch at the corner of the Carlowrie woods.”
-
-“So that you and Gavan may continue your quarrel there. Very well. I
-prefer listening.”
-
-“Gavan understands that Eppie must not be taken seriously,” Miss Barbara
-interposed; but Eppie rejoined, drawing on her gloves, “Indeed, I intend
-to be taken seriously. I quarrel with people I like as well as with
-those I hate.”
-
-“You are going to be a factor in my development, too?” said Gavan.
-
-“Of course, as you are in mine, as we all are in one another’s. We can’t
-help that. And my attack on you shall be conscious.”
-
-These open threats didn’t at all alarm him. It was what was unconscious
-in her that stirred disquiet.
-
-When Eppie had departed and the general had gone off to see to
-preparations for the morning’s shoot, Miss Barbara, still sitting rather
-wistfully behind her urn, said: “I hope, dear Gavan, that you will be
-able to influence Eppie a little. I am so thankful to find you unchanged
-about all the deeper things of life. You could help her, I am sure. She
-needs guidance. She is so loving, so clever, a joy to Nigel and to me;
-but she is very headstrong, very reckless and wilful,--a will in
-subjection to nothing but her own sense of right. It’s not that she is
-altogether irreligious,--thank Heaven for that,--but she hasn’t any of
-the happiness of religion. There is no happiness, is there, Gavan--I
-feel sure that you see it as I do,--but in having our lives stayed on
-the Eternal?”
-
-Gavan, as it was very easy to do, assented again.
-
-He spent the morning with the general in shooting over the rather scant
-covers, and at two, in a sheltered bend of the woods, where the sunlight
-lay still and bright, Eppie joined them, bringing the lunch-basket in
-her dog-cart.
-
-She was in a very good humor, and while, sitting above them, she
-dispensed rations, announced to her uncle the result of her visit to Sir
-Alec.
-
-“He thinks he can turn him out if any flagrant ease of drunkenness
-occurs again. We talked over the conditions of his lease.”
-
-“Carston, I am sure, doesn’t care a snap of his fingers about it.”
-
-“Of course not; but he cares that I care.”
-
-“You see, Gavan, by what strings the world is pulled. Carston hasn’t two
-ideas in his head.”
-
-“Luckily I am here to use his empty head to advantage. I wheedled Lady
-Carston, too,--the bad influence Macdougall had on church-going. Lady
-Carston’s one idea, Gavan, is the keeping of the Sabbath. Altogether it
-was an excellent morning’s work.” Eppie was cheerful and triumphant. She
-was eating from a plate on her knees and drinking milk out of a little
-silver cup. “Do you think me a tiresome, managing busybody, Gavan?” She
-smiled down at him, and her lashes catching the sunlight, an odd, misty
-glitter half veiled her eyes. “You look,” she added, “as you used to
-look when you were a little boy. The years collapsed just then.”
-
-He was conscious that, under her sudden glance, he had, indeed, looked
-shy. It was not her light question, but the strange depth of her
-half-closed eyes.
-
-“I find a great deal of the old Eppie in you: I remember that you used
-to want to bully the village people for their good.”
-
-“I’m still a bully, I think, but a more discreet one. Won’t you have
-some milk, Gavan? You used to love milk when you were a little boy. Have
-you outgrown that?”
-
-“Not at all. I should still love some; but don’t rob yourself.”
-
-“There ‘s heaps here. I’ve no spare glass. Do you mind?” She held out to
-him the silver cup, turning its untouched edge to him, something
-maternal in the gesture, in the down-looking of her sun-dazed eyes.
-
-He felt himself foolishly flushing while he drank the milk; and when,
-really seized by a silly childish shyness, he protested that he wanted
-no more, she placidly, with an emphasizing of her air of sweet,
-comprehending authority, said, “Oh, but you must; it holds almost
-nothing.”
-
-For the second time that day, as he obediently took from her hand the
-innocent little cup, Gavan had the unreasoning impulse of tears.
-
-The sunny afternoon was silent. Overhead, the sky had its chalice look,
-clear, benignant, brimmed with light. The general, the lolling dogs,
-were part of the background, with the heather and the wood of larches,
-the finely falling sprays delicately blurred upon the sky.
-
-It was again something sweet, sweet, simple and profound, that brought
-again that pang of presage and of pain. But the pain was like a joy, and
-the tears like tears of happiness in the sunny stillness, where her firm
-and gentle hand gave him milk in a silver cup.
-
-The actual physical sensation of a rising saltness was an alarm signal
-that, with a swift reversal of mental wheels, brought a revulsion of
-consciousness. He saw himself threatened once more by nature’s
-enchantments: wily nature, luring one always back to life with looks
-from comrade eyes, touches from comrade fingers, pastoral drinks all
-seeming innocence, and embracing sunlight. Wily Circe. With a long
-breath, the mirage was seen as mirage and the moment’s dangerous
-blossoming withered as if dust had been strewn over it.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-To see his own susceptibility so plainly was, he told himself, to be
-safe from it; not safe from its pang, perhaps, but safe from its power,
-and that was the essential thing.
-
-It was not to Eppie, as he further assured himself, that he was
-susceptible. Eppie stood for life, personified its appeals; he could
-feel, yet be unmoved, by all life’s blandishments.
-
-Meanwhile on a very different plane--the after all remote plane of
-mental encounters and skirmishes--he felt, with relief, that he was
-entirely master of his own meaning. There were many of these skirmishes,
-and though he did not believe any of them planned, believe that she was
-carrying out her threat of conscious attack, he was aware that she was
-alert and inquisitive, and dexterously quick at taking any occasion that
-offered for further penetration.
-
-The first of these occasions was on Sunday evening when, after tea and
-in the gloaming, they sat together in the deep window-seat of one of the
-library windows and listened to Miss Barbara softly touching the chords
-of a hymn on the plaintive old piano and softly singing--a most
-unobtrusive accompaniment, at her distance and with her softness, for
-any talk or any thoughts of theirs. They had talked very little,
-watching the sunset burn itself out over the frosty moorland, and Gavan
-presently, while he listened, closed his eyes and leaned his head back
-upon the oak recess. Eppie, looking now from the sunset to him, observed
-him with an open, musing curiosity. His head, leaning back in the dusk,
-was like the ivory carving of a dead saint--a saint young, beautiful, at
-peace after long sorrow. Peace; that was the quality that his whole
-being expressed, though, with opened eyes, his face had the more human
-look of patience, verging now and then on a quiet dejection that would
-overspread his features like a veil. In boyhood, the peace, the placid
-dejection, had not been there; his face then had shown the tension of
-struggle and endurance.
-
- “Till in the ocean of thy love
- We lose ourselves in heaven above,”
-
-Miss Barbara quavered, and Gavan, opening his eyes at the closing
-cadence, found Eppie’s bent upon him. He smiled, and looked still more,
-she thought, the sad saint, all benediction and indifference, and an
-impulse of antagonism to such sainthood made her say, though smiling
-back, “How I dislike those words.”
-
-“Do you?” said Gavan.
-
-“Hate them? Why, dear child?” asked Miss Barbara, who had heard through
-the sigh of her held-down pedal.
-
-“I don’t want to lose myself,” said Eppie. “But I didn’t mean that I
-wanted you to stop, Aunt Barbara. Do go on. I love to hear you sing,
-however much I disapprove of the words.”
-
-But Miss Barbara, clasping and unclasping her hands a little nervously,
-and evidently finding the moment too propitious to be passed over,
-backed as she was by an ally, rose and came to them.
-
-“That is the very point you are so mistaken about, dear. It’s the self,
-you know, that keeps us from love.”
-
-“It’s the self that makes love possible,” said Eppie, taking her hand
-and looking up at her. “Do you want to lose me, Aunt Barbara? If you
-lose yourself you will have to lose me too, you know.”
-
-Miss Barbara stood perplexed but not at all convinced by these
-subtleties, turning mild eyes of query upon Gavan and evidently
-expecting him to furnish the obvious retort.
-
-“We will all be at one with God,” she reverently said at length, finding
-that her ally left the defense to her.
-
-Eppie met this large retort cheerfully. “You can’t love God unless you
-have a self to love him with. I know what you mean, and perhaps I agree
-with what you really mean; but I want to correct your Buddhistic
-tendencies and to keep you a good Christian.”
-
-“I humbly hope I’m that. You shouldn’t jest on such subjects, Eppie
-dear.”
-
-“I’m not one bit jesting,” Eppie protested. And now Gavan asked, while
-Miss Barbara looked gratefully at him, sure of his backing, though she
-might not quite be able to understand his methods, “Are they such
-different creeds?”
-
-Still holding her aunt’s hand and still looking up into her face, Eppie
-answered: “One is despair of life, the other trust in life. One takes
-all meaning out of life and the other fills it with meaning. The secret
-of one is to lose life, and the secret of the other to gain it. There is
-all the difference in the world between them; all the difference between
-life and death.”
-
-“As interpreted by Western youth and vigor, yes; but what of the
-mystics? I suppose you would call them Christians?”
-
-“Yes, dear, they are Christians. What of them?” Miss Barbara echoed,
-though slightly perturbed by this alliance with heathendom.
-
-“Buddhists, not Christians,” Eppie retorted.
-
-“That’s what I mean; in essentials they are the same creed: the
-differences are only the differences of the races or individuals who
-hold them.”
-
-At this Miss Barbara’s free hand began to flutter and protest. “Oh, but,
-Gavan dear, there I’m quite sure that you are wrong. Buddhism is, I
-don’t doubt, a very noble religion, but it’s not the true one. Indeed
-they are not the same, Gavan, though Christianity, of course, is founded
-on the renunciation of self. ‘Lose your life to gain it,’ Eppie dear.”
-
-“Yes, to gain it, that’s just the point. One renounces, and one wins a
-realer self.”
-
-“What is real? What is life?” Gavan asked, really curious to hear her
-definition.
-
-She only needed a moment to find it, and, with her answer, gave him her
-first glance during their battledore colloquy with innocent Aunt Barbara
-as the shuttlecock. “Selves and love.”
-
-“Well, of course, dear,” Miss Barbara cried. “That’s what heaven will
-be. All love and peace and rest.”
-
-“But you have left out the selves; you won’t get love without them. And
-as for rest and peace--Love is made by difference, so that as long as
-there is love there must be restlessness.”
-
-“Isn’t it made by sameness?” Gavan asked.
-
-“No, by incompleteness: one loves what could complete oneself and what
-one could complete; or so it seems to me.”
-
-“And as long as there are selves, will there be suffering, too?”
-
-Her eyes met his thought fearlessly.
-
-“That question, I am sure, is the basis for all the religions of
-cowardice, religions that deny life because of their craving for peace.”
-
-“Isn’t the craving for peace as legitimate as the craving for life?”
-
-“Nothing that denies life can be legitimate. Life is the one arbitrator.
-And restlessness need not mean suffering. A symphony is all
-restlessness--a restlessness made by difference in harmony; forgive the
-well-worn metaphor, but it is a good one. And, suppose that it did mean
-suffering, all of it. Isn’t it worth it?” Her eyes measured him, not in
-challenge, but quietly.
-
-“What a lover of life you are,” he said. It was like seeing him go into
-his house and, not hastily, but very firmly, shut the door. And as if,
-rather rudely, she hurled a stone at the shut door, she asked, “Do you
-love anything?”
-
-He smiled. “Please don’t quarrel with me.”
-
-“I wish I could make you quarrel. I suspect you of loving everything,”
-Eppie declared.
-
-She didn’t pursue him further on this occasion, when, indeed, he might
-accuse himself of having given her every chance; but on the next day, as
-they sat out at the edge of the birch-wood in a wonderfully warm
-afternoon sun, he, she, and Peter the dog (what a strange, changed echo
-it was), she returned, very lightly, to their discussion, tossing merely
-a few reconnoitering flowers in at his open window.
-
-She had never, since their remeeting, seemed to him so young. Holding a
-little branch of birch, she broke off and aimed bits of its bark at a
-tall gorse-bush near them. Peter basked, full length, in the sunlight at
-their feet. The day had almost the indolent quiet of summer.
-
-Eppie said, irrelevantly, for they had not been talking of that, but of
-people again, gossiping pleasantly, with gossip tempered to the day’s
-mildness: “I can’t bear the religions of peace, you see--any faith that
-takes the fight out of people. That Molly Carruthers I was telling you
-about has become a Christian Scientist, and she is in an imbecile
-condition of beatitude all the time. ‘Isn’t the happiness that comes of
-such a faith proof enough?’ she says to me. As if happiness were a
-proof! A drunkard is happy. Some people seem to me spiritually tipsy,
-and as unfit for usefulness as the drunkard. I think I distrust anything
-that gives a final satisfaction.”
-
-She amused him in her playing with half-apprehended thoughts. Her
-assurance was as light as though they were the bits of birch-bark she
-tossed.
-
-“You make me think a little of Nietzsche,” he said.
-
-“I should rather like Nietzsche right side up, I think. As he is
-standing on his head most of the time, it’s rather confusing. If it is a
-blind, unconscious force that has got hold of us, we get hold of it, and
-of ourselves, when we consciously use it for our own ends. But I’m not a
-bit a Nietzschian, Gavan, for, as an end, an Overman doesn’t at all
-appeal to me and I don’t intend to make myself a bridge for him to march
-across. Of course Nietzsche might reply, ‘You are the bridge, whether
-you want to be or not.’ He might say, ‘It’s better to walk willingly to
-your inevitable holocaust than to be rebelliously haled along; whatever
-you do, you are only the refuse whose burning makes the flame.’ I reply
-to that, that if the Overman is sure to come, why should I bother about
-him? I wouldn’t lift my finger for a distant perfection in which I
-myself, and all those I loved, only counted as fuel. But, on the other
-hand, I do believe that each one of us is going to grow into an
-Overman--in a quite different sense. Peter, too, will be an Overdog, and
-will, no doubt, sometime be more conscious than we are now.”
-
-Gavan glanced at her and at Peter with his vague, half-unseeing glance.
-
-“Why don’t you smile?” Eppie asked. “Not that you don’t smile, often.
-But you haven’t a scrap of gaiety, Gavan. Do stop soaring in the sky and
-come down to real things, to the earth, to me, to dear little
-rudimentary Overdogs.”
-
-“Do you think that dear little rudimentary dogs are nearer reality than
-the sky?” He did smile now.
-
-“Much nearer. The sky is only a background, an emptiness that shows up
-their meaning.”
-
-She had brought him down, for his eyes lingered on her as she leaned to
-Peter and pulled him up from his sun-baked recumbency. “Come, sit up,
-Peter; don’t be so comfortable. Watch how well I’ve trained him, Gavan.
-Now, Peter, sit up nicely. A dog on all fours is a darling heathen; but
-a dog sitting up on his hind legs is an ethical creature, and well on
-his way to Overdogdom. Peter on his hind legs is worth all your tiresome
-Hindoos--aren’t you, dear, Occidental dog?”
-
-He knew that through her gaiety she was searching him, feeling her way,
-with a merry hostility that she didn’t intend him to answer. It was as
-if she wouldn’t take seriously, not for a moment, the implications of
-his thought--implications that he suspected her of already pretty
-sharply guessing at. To herself, and to him, she pretended that such
-thoughts were a game he played at, until she should see just how
-seriously she might be forced to take them.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-For the next few days he found himself involved in Eppie’s sleuth-hound
-pursuit of the transgressing publican, amused, but quite
-willing,--somewhat, he saw, to her surprise,--to help her in her
-crusade. Not only did he tramp over the country with her in search of
-evidence, and expound the Gothenberg system to Sir Alec, to the general,
-to the rather alarmed quarry himself,--not unwilling to come to
-terms,--but the application of his extraordinarily practical good-sense
-to the situation was, she couldn’t help seeing, far more effective than
-her own not altogether temperate zeal.
-
-She was surprised and she was pleased; and at the same time, throughout
-all the little drama, she had the suspicion that it meant for him what
-that playing of dolls with her in childhood had meant--mere kindliness,
-and a selfless disposition to do what was agreeable to anybody.
-
-It was on the Saturday following the talk in the library that an
-incident occurred that made her vision of his passivity flame into
-something more ambiguous--an incident that gave margins for
-possibilities in him, for whose bare potentiality she had begun to
-fear.
-
-They were at evening in the gray, bleak village street, and outside one
-of the public-houses found a small crowd collected, watching, with the
-apathy of custom, the efforts of Archie MacHendrie’s wife to lead him
-home. Archie, a large, lurching man, was only slightly drunk, but his
-head, the massive granite of its Scotch peasant type, had been
-brutalized by years of hard drinking. It showed, as if the granite were
-crumbling into earth, sodden depressions and protuberances; his eye was
-lurid, heavy, yet alert. Mrs. MacHendrie’s face, looking as though
-scantily molded in tallow as the full glare of the bar-room lights beat
-upon it, was piteously patient. The group, under the cold evening sky,
-in the cold, steep street, seemed a little epitome of life’s
-degradation; the sordid glare of debasing pleasure lit it; the mean
-monotony of its daily routine surrounded it in the gaunt stone cottages;
-above it was the blank, hard sky.
-
-Gavan saw all the unpleasing picture, placed it, its past, its future,
-as he and Eppie approached; saw more, too, than degradation: for the
-wife’s face, in its patience, symbolized humanity’s heroism. Both
-heroism and degradation were results as necessary as the changes in a
-chemical demonstration; neither had value: one was a toadstool growth,
-the other, a flower; this was the fact to him, though the flower touched
-him and the toadstool made him shrink.
-
-“There, there, Archie mon,” Mrs. MacHendrie was pleading, “come awa
-hame, do.”
-
-Archie was declaiming on some wrong he had suffered and threatened to do
-for an enemy.
-
-That these flowers and toadstools were of vital significance to Eppie,
-Gavan realized as she left him in the middle of the street and strode to
-the center of the group. It fell aside for her air of facile, friendly
-authority, and in answer to her decisive, “What’s the matter?” one of
-the apathetic onlookers explained in his deliberate Scotch: “It’s nobbut
-Archie, Miss Eppie; he’s swearin’ he’ll na go hame na sleep gin he’s
-lickit Tam Donel’. He’s a wee bit the waur for the drink and Tam’ll soon
-be alang, and the dei’ll be in it gar his gudewife gets him ben.”
-
-“Well, she must get him ben,” said Eppie, her eye measuring Archie, who
-shook a menacing fist in the direction of his expected antagonist.
-
-“We must get him home between us, Mrs. MacHendrie. He’ll think better of
-it in the morning.”
-
-“Fech, an’ it’s that I’m aye tellin’ him, Miss Eppie; it’s the mornin’
-he’ll hae the sair head. Ay, Miss Eppie, he’s an awfu’ chiel when he’s a
-wee bittie fou.” Mrs. MacHendrie put the fringe of her shawl to her
-eyes.
-
-Archie’s low thunder had continued during this dialogue without a pause,
-and Eppie now addressed herself to him in authoritative tones. “Come on,
-Archie. Go home and get a sleep, at all events, before you fight Tom.”
-
-“It’s that I’m aye tellin’ you, Archie mon,” Mrs. MacHendrie wept.
-
-Archie now brought his eye round to the speakers and observed them in an
-ominous silence, his thoughts turned from more distant grievances. From
-his wife his eye traveled back to Eppie, who met it with a firm
-severity.
-
-“Damn ye for an interferin’ fishwife!” suddenly and with startling force
-he burst out. “Ye’re no but a meddlesome besom. Awa wi’ ye!” and from
-this broadside he swung round to his wife with uplifted fists. Flinging
-herself between them, Eppie found herself swept aside. Gavan was in the
-midst of the sudden uproar. Like a David before Goliath, he confronted
-Archie with a quelling eye. Mrs. MacHendrie had slipped into the dusk,
-and the bald, ugly light now fell on Gavan’s contrasting head.
-
-“_Un sage qui passe interrompt mille drâmes_,” flashed in Eppie’s mind.
-But on this occasion, the sage had to do more than pass--was forced,
-indeed, to provide the drama. He was speaking in a voice so
-dispassionately firm that had Archie been a little less drunk or a
-little less sober it must have exerted an almost hypnotic effect upon
-him. But the command to go home reached a brain inflamed and hardly
-dazed. Goliath fell upon David, and Eppie, with a curious mingling of
-exultation and panic, saw the two men locked in an animal struggle. For
-a moment Gavan’s cool alertness and scientific resource were overborne
-by sheer brute force; in another he had recovered himself, and Archie’s
-face streamed suddenly with blood. Another blow, couched like a lance,
-it seemed, was in readiness, wary and direct, when Mrs. MacHendrie, from
-behind, seized Gavan around the neck and, with a shrill scream, hung to
-him and dragged him back. Helpless and enmeshed, he received a savage
-blow from her husband, and, still held in the wife’s strangling clutch,
-he and she reeled back together. At this flagrant violation of fair play
-the onlookers interposed. Archie was dragged off, and Eppie, catching
-Gavan as he staggered free of his encumbrance, turned, while she held
-him by the shoulders, fiercely on Mrs. MacHendrie. “You well deserve
-every thrashing you get,” she said, her voice stilled by the very force
-of its intense anger.
-
-Mrs. MacHendrie had covered her face with her shawl. “My mon was a’
-bluid,” she sobbed. “I couldna stan’ an’ see him done to death.”
-
-“Of course you couldn’t; it was most natural of you,” said Gavan. The
-blood trickled over his brow and cheek as, gently freeing himself from
-Eppie, he straightened his collar and looked at Mrs. MacHendrie with
-sympathetic curiosity.
-
-“Natural!” said Eppie. “It was dastardly. You deserve every thrashing
-you get. I hope no one will interfere for you next time.”
-
-“My dear Eppie!” Gavan murmured, while Mrs. MacHendrie continued to weep
-humbly.
-
-“Why shouldn’t I say it? I am disgusted with her.” Eppie turned almost
-as fierce a stillness of look and tone upon him as upon Mrs. MacHendrie.
-“Let me tie up your head, Gavan. Yes, indeed, you are covered with
-blood. I suppose you never thought, Mrs. MacHendrie, that your husband
-might kill Mr. Palairet.” She passed her handkerchief around Gavan’s
-forehead as she spoke, knotting it with fingers at once tender and
-vindictive.
-
-“I canna say, Miss Eppie,” came Mrs. MacHendrie’s muffled voice from
-the shawl. “The wan’s my ain mon. It juist cam’ ower me, seein’ him a’
-bluid.”
-
-“Well, you have the satisfaction now of seeing Mr. Palairet a’ bluid.”
-Eppie tied her knots, and Gavan, submitting a bowed head to her
-ministrations, still kept his look of cogitating pity upon Mrs.
-MacHendrie. “You see how your husband has wounded him,” Eppie went on;
-“the handkerchief is red already. Come on, Gavan; lean on me, please.
-Let her get her husband home now as best she can.”
-
-But Gavan ignored his angry champion. Mrs. MacHendrie’s sorrow, most
-evidently, interested him more than Eppie’s indignation. He went to her,
-putting down the hand that held the shawl to the poor, disfigured,
-tallow face, and made her look at him, while he said with a gentle
-reasonableness: “Don’t mind what Miss Gifford says; she is angry on my
-account and doesn’t really mean to be so hard on you. I’m not at all
-badly hurt,--I can perfectly stand alone, Eppie,--and I’m sorry I had to
-hurt your husband. It was perfectly natural, what you did. Don’t cry;
-please don’t cry.” He smiled at her, comforted her, encouraged her.
-“They are taking your husband home, you see; he is going quite quietly.
-And now we will take you home. Take my arm. You are the worst off of us
-all, Mrs. MacHendrie.”
-
-Eppie, in silence, stalked beside him while he led Mrs. MacHendrie,
-dazed and submissive, up the village street. A neighbor’s wife was in
-kindly waiting and Archie already slumbering heavily on his bed. Eppie
-suspected, as they went, that she saw a gold piece slipped from Gavan’s
-hand to Mrs. MacHendrie’s.
-
-“Poor thing,” he said, when they were once more climbing the steep
-street, “I ‘m afraid I only made things worse for her”; and laughing a
-little, irrepressibly, he looked round at Eppie from under his oddly
-becoming bandage. “My dear Eppie, what a perfect brute you were to her!”
-
-“My dear Gavan, I can’t feel pity for such a fool. Oh, yes I can, but I
-don’t want to. Please remember that I, too, have impulses, and that I
-saw you ‘a’ bluid.’”
-
-“Well, then, I’m the brute for scolding you, and you are another poor
-thing.”
-
-“Are you incapable of righteous indignation, Gavan?”
-
-“Surely I showed enough to please you in my treatment of Archie.”
-
-“You showed none. You looked supremely indifferent as to whether he
-killed you or you him.”
-
-“Oh, I think I was quite anxious to do for him.”
-
-They were past the village now and upon the country road, and in the
-darkness their contrasting voices rang oddly--hers deep with its
-resentful affection, his light with its amusement. It was as if the
-little drama, that he had made instead of interrupting, struck his sense
-of the ridiculous. Yet, angry with him as she was, a thrill of
-exultation remained, for Eppie, in the thought of his calm, deliberate
-face, beautiful before its foe, and with blood upon it.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Gavan’s hurt soon healed, though it made him languid for a day or
-two--days of semi-invalidism, the unemphatic hours, seemingly so
-colorless, when she read to him or merely sat silently at hand occupied
-with her letters or a book, drawing still closer their odd intimacy; it
-could hardly be called sudden, for it had merely skipped intervening
-years, and it couldn’t be called a proved intimacy, the intervening
-years were too full, too many for that. But they were very near in their
-almost solitude--a solitude surrounded by gentle reminders of the closer
-past, reminders, in the case of living personalities, who seemed to find
-the intimacy altogether natural and needing no comment. What the general
-and Miss Barbara might really be thinking was a wonder that at moments
-occupied both Gavan and Eppie’s ruminations; but it wasn’t a wonder that
-needed to go far or deep. What they thought, the dear old people, made
-very little difference--not even the difference of awkwardness or
-self-consciousness under too cogitating eyes. Even if they thought the
-crude and obvious thing it didn’t matter, they would so peacefully
-relapse from their false inference once time had set it straight for
-them. Eppie couldn’t quite have told herself why its obviousness was so
-crude; in all her former experience such obviousness had never been so
-almost funnily out of the question. But Gavan made so many things almost
-funnily out of the question.
-
-It was this quality in him, of difference from usual things, that drew
-intimacy so near. To talk to him with a wonderful openness, to tell him
-about herself, about her troubles, was like sinking down in a pale,
-peaceful church and sighing out everything that lay heavily on one’s
-heart--the things that lay lightly, too, for little things as well as
-great, were understood by that compassionate, musing presence--to the
-downlooking face of an imaged saint.
-
-No claim upon one remained after it; one was freed of the load of
-silence and one hadn’t in the least been shackled by retributory
-penances. And if one felt some strange lack in the saint, if his
-sacerdotal quality was more than his humanity, it was just because of
-that that one was able to say anything one liked.
-
-At moments, it is true, she had an odd, fetish-worshiper’s impulse to
-smash her saint, and perhaps the reason why she never yielded to it was
-because, under all the seeing him as image, was the deep hoping that he
-was more. If he was more, much more, it might be unwise to smash him,
-for then she would have no pale church in which to take refuge, and,
-above all, if he were more he mustn’t find it out--and she
-mustn’t--through any act of her own. The saint himself must breathe into
-life and himself step down from his high pedestal. That he cared to
-listen, that he listened lovingly,--just as he had listened lovingly to
-Mrs. MacHendrie,--she knew.
-
-One day when he was again able to be out and when they were again upon
-the hilltop, walking in a mist that enshrouded them, she told him all
-about the wretched drama of her love-affair.
-
-She had never spoken of it to a human being.
-
-It was as if she led him into an empty room, dusty and dark and still,
-with dreary cobwebs stretching over its once festal furniture, and there
-pointed out to him faded blood-stains on the floor. No eyes but his had
-ever seen them.
-
-She told him all, analyzing the man, herself, unflinchingly, putting
-before him her distracted heart, distorted in its distraction. She had
-appalled herself. Her part had not been mere piteous nobility. She would
-have dragged herself through any humiliation to have had him back, the
-man she had helplessly adored. She would have taken him back on almost
-any terms. Only the semblance of pride had been left to her; beneath it,
-with all her scorn of him, was a craving that had been base in its
-despair.
-
-“But that wasn’t the worst,” said Eppie; “that very baseness had its
-pathos. Worst of all were my mean regrets. I had sacrificed my ambitions
-for him; I had refused a man who would have given me the life I wanted,
-a high place in the world, a great name, power, wide issues,--and I love
-high places, Gavan, I love power. When I refused him, he too married
-some one else, and it was after that that my crash came. Love and faith
-were thrown back at me, and I hadn’t in it all even my dignity. I was
-torn by mingled despairs. I loathed myself. Oh, it was too horrible!”
-
-His utter lack of sympathetic emotion, even when she spoke with the
-indignant tears on her cheeks, made it all the easier to say these
-fundamental things, and more than ever like the saint of ebony and ivory
-in the pale church was his head against the great wash of mist about
-them.
-
-“And now it has all dropped from you,” he said.
-
-“Yes, all--the love, the regret certainly, even the shame. The ambition,
-certainly not; but in that ugly form of a loveless marriage it’s no
-longer a possible temptation for me. My disappointment hasn’t driven me
-to worldly materialism. It’s a sane thing in nature, that outgrowing of
-griefs, though it’s bad for one’s pride to see them fade and one’s heart
-mend, solidly mend, once more.”
-
-“They do go, when one really sees them.”
-
-“Some do.”
-
-“All, when one really sees them,” he repeated unemphatically. “I know
-all about it, Eppie. I’ve been through the fire, too. Now that it’s
-gone, you see that it’s only a dream, that love, don’t you?”
-
-Eppie gazed before her into the mist, narrowing her eyes as though she
-concentrated her thoughts upon his exact meaning, and she received his
-casual confidence with some moments of silence.
-
-“That would imply that seeing destroyed feeling, wouldn’t it?” she said
-at last. “I see that _such_ love is a dream, if you will; but dreams may
-be mirrors of life, not delusions; hints of an awakened reality.”
-
-He showed only his unmoved face. This talk, so impersonal, with all its
-revealment of human pathos and weakness, so much a picture that they
-both looked at it together,--a picture of outlived woe,--claimed no more
-than his contemplation; but when her voice seemed to grope toward him,
-questioning in its very clearness of declaration, he felt again the
-flitting fear that he had already recognized, not as danger, but as
-discomfort. It flitted only, hardly stirred the calm he showed her, as
-the wings of a flying bird just skim and ruffle the surface of still,
-deep waters. That restless bird, always hovering, circling near, its
-shadow passing, repassing over the limpid water--he saw and knew it as
-the water might reflect in its stillness the bird’s flight. Life; the
-will to live, the will to want, and to strive, and to suffer in
-striving. All the waters of Eppie’s soul were broken by the flight of
-this bird of life; its wings, cruel and beautiful, furrowed and cut; its
-plumage, darkly bright, was reflected in every wave.
-
-He said nothing after her last words.
-
-“You think all feelings delusions, Gavan?”
-
-“Not that, perhaps, but very transitory; and to be tied to the
-transitory is to suffer.”
-
-“On that plan one ends with nothingness.”
-
-“Do you think so?”
-
-“Do _you_ think so?” She turned his question on him and her eyes, with
-the question, fixed hard on his face.
-
-He felt suddenly that after all the parrying and thrusting she had
-struck up his foil and faced him with no mask of gaiety--in deadly
-earnest. There was the click of steel in the question.
-
-He did not know whether he were the more irritated, for her sake, by her
-persistency, or the more fearful that, unwillingly, he should do her
-faith some injury.
-
-“I think,” he said, “more or less as Tolstoi thinks. You understood all
-that very well the other evening; so why go into it?”
-
-“You think that our human identity is unreal--an appearance?”
-
-“Most certainly.”
-
-“And that the separation between us is the illusion that makes hatred
-and evil, and that with the recognition of the illusion, love would come
-and all selfish effort cease?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“And don’t you see that what that results in is the Hindoo thing, the
-abolishing of consciousness, the abolishing of life--of individual
-life?”
-
-“Yes, I see that,” Gavan smiled, “but I’m a little surprised to see that
-you do. So many people are like Aunt Barbara.”
-
-But Eppie was pushing, pushing against the closed doors and would not be
-lured away by lightness. “Above all, Gavan, do you see that he is merely
-an illogical Hindoo when he tries to bridge his abyss with ethics? On
-his own premises he is utterly fatalistic, so that the very turning from
-the evil illusion, the very breaking down of the barrier of self, is
-never, with him, the result of an effort of the will, never a conscious
-choice, but something deep and rudimentary, subconscious, an influx of
-revelation, a vision that sets one free, perhaps, but that can only
-leave one with emptiness.”
-
-Above all, as she had said, he saw it; and now he was silent, seeking
-words that might rid him of pursuit, yet not infect her.
-
-She had stopped short before his silence. Smiling, now, on the
-background of mist, her eyes, her lips, her poise challenged him,
-incredulous, actually amused. “Don’t you think that _I_ have an
-identity?” she asked.
-
-He was willing at that to face her, for he saw suddenly and clearly,--it
-seemed to radiate from her in the smile, the look,--that he, apparently,
-couldn’t hurt her. She was too full of life to be in any danger from
-him, and perhaps the only way of ending pursuit was to fling wide the
-doors and, since she had said the word, show her the emptiness within.
-
-“You force me to talk cheap metaphysics to you, Eppie, but I’ll try to
-say what I do think,” he said. “I believe that the illusion of a
-separate identity, self-directing and permanent, is the deepest and most
-tenacious of all illusions--the illusion that makes the wheels go round,
-the common illusion that makes the common mirage. The abolishing of the
-identity, of the self, is the final word of science, and of philosophy,
-and of religion, too. The determinism of science, the ecstatic immediacy
-of the mystic consciousness, the monistic systems of the Absolutists,
-all tend toward the final discovery that,--now I’m going to be very glib
-indeed,--but one must use the technical jargon,--that under all the
-transitory appearance is a unity in which, for which, diversity
-vanishes.”
-
-Eppie no longer smiled. She had walked on while he spoke, her eyes on
-him, no longer amused or incredulous, with an air now of almost stern
-security.
-
-“Odd,” she said presently, “that such a perverse and meaningless Whole
-should be made up of such significant fragments.”
-
-“Ah, but I didn’t say that Reality was meaningless. It has all possible
-meaning for itself, no doubt; it’s our meaning for it that is so
-unpleasantly ambiguous. We are in it and for it, as if we were the
-kaleidoscope it turned, the picture it looked at; and we are and must be
-what it thinks or sees. Your musical simile expressed it very nicely:
-Reality an eternal symphony and our personalities the notes in
-it--discords to our own limited consciousness, but to Reality necessary
-parts of the perfect whole. Reality is just that will to contemplate, to
-think, the infinite variety of life, and it usually thinks us as wanting
-to live. All ethics, all religions, are merely records of the ceasing of
-this want. A man comes to see himself as discord, and with the seeing
-the discord is resolved to silence. One comes to see as the Reality
-sees, and since it is perfectly satisfied, although it is perhaps quite
-unconscious,--or so some people who think a great deal about it
-say,--we, in partaking of its vision, find in unconsciousness the goal,
-and are satisfied.”
-
-“You are satisfied with such a death in life?” Eppie asked in her steady
-voice.
-
-“What you call life is what I call death, perhaps, Eppie.”
-
-“Your metaphysics may be very cheap; I know very little about them. But
-if all that were true, I should still say that the illusion is more real
-than that nothingness--for to us such a reality would be nothingness.
-And I should say, let us live our reality all the more intensely, since,
-for us, there is no other.”
-
-“How you care for life,” said Gavan, as he had said it once before. He
-looked at her marching through the mist like a defiant Valkyrie.
-
-“Care for it? I’ve hated it at times, the bits that came to me.”
-
-“Yet you want it, always.”
-
-“Always,” she repeated. “Always. I have passed a great part of my life
-in being very unhappy--that is to say, in wanting badly something I’ve
-not got. Yet I am more glad than I can say to have lived.”
-
-“Probably because you still expect to get what you want.”
-
-“Of course.” She smiled a little now, though a veiled, ambiguous smile.
-And as they began the steep descent, the mist infolding them more
-closely, even the semblance of the smile faded, leaving a new sadness.
-
-“Poor Gavan,” she said.
-
-He just hesitated. “Why?”
-
-“Your religion is a hatred, a distrust of life; mine is trust in it,
-love of it. You see it as a sort of murderous uncle, beckoning to the
-babes in the wood; I own that I wouldn’t stir a step to follow it if I
-suspected it of such a character. And I see life--“ She paused here,
-looking down, musing, it seemed, on what she saw, and the pause grew
-long. In it, suddenly, Gavan knew again the invasion of emotion. Her
-downcast, musing face pervaded his consciousness with that sense of
-trembling. “You see life as what?” he asked her, not because he wanted
-to know, but because her words were always less to him than her
-silences.
-
-Eppie, unconscious, was finding words.
-
-“As something mysterious, beautiful. Something strange, yet near, like
-the thought of a mother about her unborn child, but, more still, like
-the thought of an unborn child about its unknown mother. We are such
-unborn children. And this something mysterious and beautiful says: Come;
-through thorns, over chasms, past terrors, and in darkness. So, one
-goes.”
-
-Gavan was silent. Looking up at him, her eyes full of her own vision,
-she saw tears in his.
-
-For a moment the full benignity, sweet, austere, of a maternal thing in
-her rested on him, so that it might have been she who said “Come.” Then,
-looking away from him again, knowing that she had seen more than he had
-meant to show, she said, “Own that if it’s all illusion, mine’s the best
-to live with.”
-
-He had never seen her so beautiful as at this moment when she did not
-pursue, but looked away, quiet in her strength, and he answered
-mechanically, conscious only of that beauty, that more than beauty,
-alluring when it no longer pursued: “No; there are no thorns, nor
-chasms, nor terrors any longer for me. I am satisfied, Eppie.”
-
-She was walking now, a little ahead of him, down the thread-like path
-that wound among phantom bracken. The islet of space where they could
-see seemed like a tiny ship gliding forward with them into a white,
-boundless ocean. Such, thought Gavan, was human life.
-
-In a long silence he felt that her mood had changed. Over her shoulder
-she looked round at him at last with her eyes of the spiritual
-steeplechaser. “It’s war to the knife, Gavan.”
-
-She hurt him in saying it. “You only have the knife,” he answered, and
-his gentleness might have reproached the sudden challenge.
-
-“You have poison.”
-
-“I never put it to your lips, dear.”
-
-She saw his pain. “Oh, don’t be afraid for me,” she said. “I drink your
-poison, and it is a tonic, a wine, that fills me with greater ardor for
-the fight.”
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-They were on the path that led to the deeply sunken garden gate, and
-they had not spoken another word while they followed it, while they
-stooped a little under the tangle of ivy that drooped from the stone
-lintel, while they went past the summer-house and on between the rows of
-withered plants and the empty, wintry spaces of the garden; only when
-they were nearly at the house, under the great pine-tree, did Eppie
-cheerfully surmise that they would be exactly on time for tea, and by
-her manner imply that tea was far more present to her thoughts than
-daggers or poison.
-
-He felt that in some sense matters had been left in the lurch. He didn’t
-quite know where he stood for her with his disastrous darkness about
-him--whether she had really taken up a weapon for open warfare or
-whether she hadn’t wisely fallen back upon the mere pleasantness of
-friendly intercourse, turning her eyes away from his accompanying gloom.
-
-He was glad to find her alone that evening after dinner when he had left
-the general in the smoking-room over a review and a cigar. Miss Barbara
-had gone early to bed, so that Eppie, in her white dress, as on the
-night of his arrival, had the dark brightness of the firelit room all to
-herself. He was glad, because the sense of uncertainty needed defining,
-and uncertainty, since that last moment of trembling, had been so acute
-that any sort of definition would be a relief.
-
-An evening alone with her, now that they were really on the plane of
-mutual understanding, would put his vague fears to the test. He would
-learn whether they must be fled from or whether, as mere superficial
-tremors, tricks of the emotions, they could not be outfaced smilingly.
-He really didn’t want to run away, especially not until he clearly knew
-from what he ran.
-
-Eppie sat before the fire on the low settle, laying down a book as he
-came in. In her aspect of exquisite worldliness, the white dress
-displaying her arms and shoulders with fashionable frankness, she struck
-him anew as being her most perfectly armed and panoplied self. Out on
-the windy hillside or singing among the woods, nature seemed partially
-to absorb and possess her, so that she became a part of the winds and
-woods; but indoors, finished and fine from head to foot, her mastered
-conventionality made her the more emphatically personal. She embodied
-civilization in her dress, her smile, her speech, her very being; the
-loose coils of her hair and the cut of her satin shoe were both
-significant of choice, of distinctive simplicity; and the very bareness
-of her shoulders--Gavan gave an amused thought to the ferociously
-sensitive Tolstoi--symbolized the armor of the world-lover, the
-world-user. It was she who possessed the charms and weapons of the
-civilization that crumbled to dust in the hand of the Russian mystic. He
-could see her confronting the ascetic’s eye with the challenge of her
-radiant and righteous self-assurance. Her whole aspect rebuilt that
-shattered world, its pomp and vanity, perhaps, its towering scale of
-values; each tier narrowing in its elimination of the lower, cruder,
-less conscious, more usual; each pinnacle a finely fretted flowering of
-the rare; a dazzling palace of foam. She embodied all that; but, more
-than all for Gavan, she embodied the deep currents of trust that flowed
-beneath the foam.
-
-Her look welcomed him, though without a smile, as he drew a deep chair
-to the fire and sat down near her, and for a little while they said
-nothing, he watching her and she with gravely downcast eyes.
-
-“What are you thinking of?” he asked at last.
-
-“Of you, of course,” she answered. “About our talk this afternoon; we
-haven’t finished it yet.”
-
-She, too, then, had felt uncertainty that needed relief.
-
-“Are you sharpening your knife?”
-
-She put aside his lightness. “Gavan, we are friends. May I talk as I
-like to you?”
-
-“Of course you may. I’ve always shown you that.”
-
-“No, you have tried to prevent me from talking. But now I will. I have
-been thinking. It seems to me that it is your life that has so twisted
-your mind; it has been so joyless.”
-
-“Does that make it unusual?”
-
-“You must love life before you can know it.”
-
-“You must love it, and lose it, before you can know it. I have had joy,
-Eppie; I have loved life. My experience has not been peculiarly
-personal; it is merely the history of all thought, pushed far enough.”
-
-“Of all mere thought, yes.”
-
-She rested her head on her hand as she looked at him, seeming to wonder
-over him and his thought, his mere thought, dispassionately. “Don’t be
-shy, or afraid, for me. Why should you mind? I’ve given you my story;
-give me yours. Tell me about your life.”
-
-He felt, suddenly, sunken there in his deep chair, passive and peaceful
-in the firelight, that it would be very easy to tell her. Why shouldn’t
-she see it all and understand it all? He couldn’t hurt her; it would be
-only a strange, a sorrowful picture to her; and to him, yes, there would
-be a relief in the telling. To speak, for the first time in his life--it
-would be like the strewing of rosemary on a grave, a commemoration that
-would have its sweetness and its balm.
-
-But he hesitated, feeling the helplessness of his race before verbal
-self-expression.
-
-Eppie lent him a hand.
-
-“Begin with when you left me.”
-
-“What was I then? I hardly remember. A tiresome, self-centered boy.”
-
-“No; you weren’t self-centered. You believed in God, then, and you loved
-your mother. Why have both of them, as personalities, become illusions
-to you?”
-
-She saw facts clearly and terribly. She was really inside the doors at
-last, and though it would be all the easier to make her understand the
-facts she saw, Gavan paled a little before the sudden, swift presence.
-
-For, yes, God was gone, and yes,--worse, far worse, as he knew she felt
-it,--his mother, too--except as that ghost, that pang of memory.
-
-She saw his pallor and helped him again, to the first and easier avowal.
-
-“How did you lose your faith? What happened to you when you left me?”
-
-“It’s a commonplace enough story, that.”
-
-“Of course it is. But when loss of faith becomes permanent and
-permanently means a loss of feeling, it’s not so commonplace.”
-
-“Oh, I think it is--more commonplace than people know, in temperaments
-as unvital and as logical as mine.”
-
-“You are not unvital.”
-
-“My reason isn’t often blurred by my instincts.”
-
-“That is because you are strong--terribly strong. It’s not that your
-vitality is so little as that your thought is so abnormal.”
-
-“No, no; it’s merely that I understand my own experience.”
-
-But she had put his feet upon the road, and, turning his eyes from her
-as he looked, he contemplated its vista.
-
-It was easy enough, after all, to gather into words that retrospect of
-the train; it was easy to be brief and lucid with such a comprehending
-listener,--to be very impersonal, too; simply to hold up before her eyes
-the picture that he saw.
-
-His eyes met hers seldom while he told her all that was essential to her
-true seeing. It was wonderful, the sense of her secure, strong life that
-made it possible to tell her all.
-
-The stages of his young, restless, tortured thought were swiftly
-sketched for an intelligence so quick, and the growing intuition of the
-capriciousness, the suffering of life. He only hesitated when it came to
-the reunion with his mother, the change that had crept between them; and
-her illness, her death; choosing his words with a reticence that bit
-them the more deeply into the listening mind.
-
-But, in the days that followed the death,--days ghost-like, yet
-sharp,--he lingered, so that she paused with him in that pause of
-stillness in his life, that morning in the spring woods when everything
-had softly, gently shown an abiding strangeness. He told her all about
-that: about the look of the day, not knowing why he so wanted her to see
-it, too, but it seemed to explain more than anything else--the pale,
-high sky, the gray branches, the shining water and the little bird that
-hopped to drink. He himself looked ghost-like while he spoke--sunken,
-long, dark, impalpable, in the deep chair, his thin white fingers
-lightly interlocked, his face showing only the oddity of its strange yet
-beautiful oval and its shadowy eyes and lips. All whiteness and shadow,
-he might have been a projection from the thought of the woman, who,
-before him, leaned her head on her hand, warm, breathing, vivid with
-color, her steady eyes seeing phantoms unafraid.
-
-After that there wasn’t much left to explain, it seemed--except Alice,
-that last convulsive effort of life to seize and keep him; and that
-didn’t take long--made, as it were, a little allegory, with nameless
-abstractions to symbolize the old drama of the soul entrameled and
-finally set free again. The experience of the spring woods had really
-been the decisive one. He came back to that again, at the end of his
-story. “It’s really, that experience, what in another kind of
-temperament is called conversion.”
-
-Her eyes had looked away from him at last. “No,” she said, “conversion
-is something that gives life.”
-
-“No,” he rejoined, “it’s something that lifts one above it.”
-
-The fundamental contest spoke again, and after that they were both
-silent. He, too, had looked away from her when the story was over, and
-he knew, from her deep, slow breathing, that the story had meant a great
-deal to her. It was not a laboring breath, nor broken by pain to sighs;
-but it seemed, in its steady rhythm, to accept and then to conquer what
-he had put before her. That he should so hear it, not looking at her,
-filled the silence with more than words; and, as in the afternoon, he
-sought the relief of words.
-
-“So you see,” he said, in his lighter voice, “thorns and precipices and
-terrors dissolve like dreams.” She had seen everything and he was
-ushering her out. But his eyes now met hers, looking across the little
-space at him.
-
-“And I? Do I, too, dissolve like a dream?” she said.
-
-His smile now was lighter than his voice had been. “Absolutely. Though I
-own that you are a highly colored phantom. Your color is very vivid
-indeed. Sometimes it almost masters my thought.”
-
-He had not, in his mere wish for ease, quite known what he meant to say,
-and now her look did not show him any deepened consciousness; but,
-suddenly, he felt that under his lightness and her quiet the current ran
-deeply.
-
-“I master your thought?” she repeated. “Doesn’t that make you distrust
-thought sometimes?”
-
-“No,” he laughed. “It makes me distrust you, dear Eppie.”
-
-There were all sorts of things before them now. What they were he really
-didn’t know; perhaps she didn’t, either. At all events he kept his eyes
-off them, and shaking his crossed foot a little, he still looked at her,
-smiling.
-
-“Why?” she asked.
-
-He felt that he must now answer her, and himself, in words that wouldn’t
-imply more than he could face.
-
-“Well, the very force of your craving for life, the very force of your
-will, might sweep me along for a bit. I might be caught up for a whirl
-on the wheel of illusion; not that you could ever bind me to it: it
-would need my own will, blind again, for that.”
-
-Her eyes had met his so steadily that he had imagined only contemplation
-or perhaps that maternal severity behind the steadiness. But the way in
-which they received these last tossed pebbles of metaphor showed him
-unrealized profundities. They deepened, they darkened, they widened on
-him. They seemed to engulf him in a sudden abyss of pain. And pain in
-her was indeed a color that could infect him.
-
-“How horrible you are, Gavan,” she said, and her voice went with the
-words and with the look.
-
-“Eppie!” he exclaimed on a tense, indrawn breath, as if over the sudden
-stab of a knife. “Have I hurt you?”
-
-Her eyes turned from him. “Not what you say, or do. What you are.”
-
-“You didn’t see, before, what I am?”
-
-“Never--like this.”
-
-He leaned toward her. “Dear Eppie, why do you make me talk? Let me be
-still. I only ask to be still.”
-
-“You are worse still. Don’t you think I see what stillness means?”
-
-She had pushed her low seat from him,--for he stretched his hands to her
-with his supplication,--and, rising to her feet, stepping back, she
-stood before the fire, somberly looking down at him.
-
-Gavan, too, rose. Compunction, supplication, a twist of perplexity and
-suffering, made him careless of discretion. Face to face, laying his
-hands on her shoulders, he said: “Don’t let me frighten you. It would be
-horrible if I could convince you, shatter you.”
-
-Standing erect under his hands, she looked hard into his face.
-
-“You could frighten me, horribly; but you couldn’t shatter me. You are
-ambiguous, veiled, all in mists. I am as clear, as sharp--.”
-
-Her dauntlessness, the old defiance, were a relief--a really delicious
-relief. He was able to smile at her, a smile that pled for reassurance.
-“How can I frighten you, then?”
-
-Her somber gaze did not soften. “Your mists come round me, chill,
-suffocating. They corrode my clearness.”
-
-“No; no; it’s you who come into them. Don’t. Don’t. Keep away from me.”
-
-“I’m not so afraid of you as that,” she answered.
-
-His hands were still on her shoulders and their eyes on each other--his
-with their appealing, uncertain smile, and hers unmoved, unsmiling; and
-suddenly that sense of danger came upon him: as if, in the mist, he felt
-upon him the breathing, warm, sweet, ominous, of some unseen creature.
-And in the fear was a strange delight, and like a hand drawn, with slow,
-deep pressure, across a harp, the nearness drew across his heart,
-stirring its one sad note--its dumb, its aching note--to a sudden
-ascending murmur of melody.
-
-He was caught swiftly from this inner tumult by its reflection in her
-face. She flushed, deeply, painfully. She drew back sharply, pushing
-his hands from her.
-
-Gavan sought his own equilibrium in an ignoring of that undercurrent.
-
-“Now you are not frightened; but why are you angry?” he asked.
-
-For a moment she did not speak.
-
-“Eppie, I am so sorry. What is it? You are really angry, Eppie!”
-
-Then, after that pause of speechlessness, she found words.
-
-“If I think of you as mist you must not think of me as glamour.” This
-she gave him straight.
-
-Only after disengaging her train from the settle, from his feet, after
-wheeling aside his chair to make a clear passage for her departure, did
-she add: “I have read your priggish Schopenhauer.”
-
-She gave him no time for reply or protestation. Quite mistress of
-herself, leaving him with all the awkwardness of the situation--if he
-chose to consider it awkward--upon his hands, very fully the finished
-mondaine and very beautifully the fearless and assured nymph of the
-hillside, she went to the piano, turned and rejected, in looking over
-it, some music, and sitting down, striking a long, full chord, she began
-to sing, in her voice of frosty dawn, the old Scotch ballad.
-
-He might go or listen as he liked. She had put him away, him and his
-mists, his ambiguous hold upon her, his ambiguous look at her. She sang
-to please herself as much as when she had gone up through the woodlands.
-And if the note of anger still thrilled in her voice she turned it to
-the uses of her song and made a higher triumph of sadness.
-
-She was still singing when the general came in.
-
- * * * * *
-
-SHE had been quite right; she had seen with her perfect sharpness and
-clearness indeed, and no wonder that she had been angry. He himself saw
-clearly, directly the hand was off the harp. It was laughably simple. He
-was a man, she a woman; they were both young and she was beautiful. That
-summed it up, sufficiently and brutally; and no wonder, again, that she
-had felt such summing an offense. It wasn’t in the light of such
-summings that she regarded herself.
-
-With him she had never, for a moment, made use of glamour. His was the
-rudimentary impulse, and Gavan’s sensitive cheek echoed her flush when
-he thought of it. Never again, he promised himself, after this full
-comprehension of it, should such an impulse dim their friendship. He
-would make it up to her by helping her to forget it.
-
-But for all that, it was with the strangest mixture of relief and dismay
-that he found upon the breakfast-table next morning an urgent summons
-for his return home. It was the affable little rector of the parish in
-Surrey who wrote to tell him of his father’s sudden breakdown,--softening
-of the brain. When Eppie appeared, a little grave, but all clear
-composure, he was able to show her the letter and to tell her of his
-immediate departure with a composure as assured as her own, but he
-wondered, while he spoke, if to her also the parting would mean any form
-of relief. At all events, for her, it couldn’t mean any form of wrench.
-
-Looking in swift glances at her face, while she questioned him about his
-father, suggested trains and nurses, and gave practical advice for his
-journey, he was conscious that the relief was the result of a pretty
-severe strain, and that though it was relieved it hadn’t stopped aching.
-
-The very fact that Eppie’s narrow face, the hair brushed back from brow
-and temples, showed, in the clear morning light, more of its oddity than
-its beauty, made its charm cling the more closely. Her eyes looked
-small, her features irregular; he saw the cliff-like modeling of her
-temples, the cheeks, a little flat, pale, freckled; the long, queer
-lines of her chin. Bare, exposed, without a flicker of sunlight on her
-delicate analogies of ruggedness, of weather-beaten strength, she might
-almost have been called ugly; and, with every glance, he was feeling her
-as sweetness, sweetness deep and reticent, embodied.
-
-The general and Miss Barbara were late. She poured out his coffee, saw
-him embarked on a sturdy breakfast, insisted, now with the irradiating
-smile that in a moment made her lovely, that he should eat a great deal
-before his journey, made him think anew of that maternal quality in
-her,--the tolerance, the tenderness. And in the ambiguous relief came
-the sharpened dismay of seeing how great was the cause for it.
-
-He wanted to say a word, only one, about their little drama of last
-night, but the time didn’t really seem to come for it; perhaps she saw
-that it shouldn’t come. But on the old stone steps with their yellow
-lichen spots, his farewells over to the uncle and aunt, and he and Eppie
-standing out there in a momentary solitude, she said, shaking his hand,
-“Friends, you know. Look me up when you are next in London.” She had her
-one word to say, and she had said it when and how she wished. It wasn’t
-anything so crude as reassurance; it was rather a sunny assurance, in
-which she wished him to share, that none was needed.
-
-He looked, like the boy of years ago, a real depth of gratitude into her
-eyes. She had given him his chance.
-
-“I’ll never frighten you again; I’ll never displease you again.”
-
-“I know you won’t. I won’t let you,” Eppie smiled.
-
-“I wish I were more worth your while--worth your being kind to me.”
-
-“You think you are still--gloomy, tiresome, self-centered?”
-
-“That defines it well enough.”
-
-“Well, you serve my purpose,” said Eppie, “and that is to have you for
-my friend.”
-
-She seemed in this parting to have effaced all memory of glamour, but
-Gavan knew that the deeper one was with him.
-
-It was with him, even while, in the long journey South, he was able to
-unwrap film after film of the mirage from its central core of reality,
-to see Eppie, in all her loveliness, in all her noblest aspects, as a
-sort of incarnation of the world, the flesh, and the devil. He could
-laugh over the grotesque analogy; it proved to him how far from life he
-was when its symbol could show in such unflattering terms, and yet it
-hurt him that he could find it in himself so to symbolize her. It was
-just because she was so lovely, so noble, that he must--he must--. For,
-under all, was the wrench that would take time to stop aching.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Captain Palairet had gone to pieces and was now as unpleasant an object
-as for years he had been a pleasant one.
-
-Gavan’s atrophied selfishness felt only a slight shrinking from the
-revolting aspects of dissolution, and his father’s condition rather
-interested him. The captain’s childish clinging to his son was like an
-animal instinct suddenly asserting itself, an almost vegetable instinct,
-so little more than mere instinct was it. It affected Gavan much as the
-suddenly contracting tentacles of a sea-anemone upon his finger might
-have done. He was not at all touched; but he felt the claim of a
-possible pang of loneliness and desolation in the dimness of decay, and,
-methodically, with all the appearances of a solicitous kindness, he
-responded to the claim.
-
-The man, immersed in his rudimentary universe of sense, showed a host of
-atavistic fears; fears of the dark, of strange faces, fears of sudden
-noises or of long stillness. He often wept, leaning his swollen face on
-Gavan’s shoulder, filled with an abject self-pity.
-
-“You know how I love you, Gavan,” he would again and again repeat, his
-lax lips fumbling with the words, “always loved you, ever since you were
-a little fellow--out in India, you know. I and your dear mother loved
-you better than life,” and, wagging his head, he would repeat, “better
-than life,” and break into sobs--sobs that ceased when the nurse brought
-him his wine-jelly. Then it might be again the tone of feeble whining.
-“It doesn’t taste right, Gavan. Can’t you make it taste right? Do you
-want to starve me between you all?”
-
-Gavan, with scientific scrutiny, diagnosed and observed while he soothed
-him or engaged his vagrant mind in games.
-
-In his intervals of leisure he pursued his own work, and rode and walked
-with all his usual tempered athleticism. He did not feel the days as a
-strain, hardly as disagreeable; he was indifferent or interested. At the
-worst he was bored. The undercurrent of pity he was accustomed to living
-with.
-
-Only at night, in hours of rest, he would sink into a half-dazed
-disgust, find himself on edge, nearly worn out. So the winter passed.
-
-He was playing draughts with his father on a day in earliest spring,
-when he was told that Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford were below.
-
-Gavan was feeling dull and jaded. The conducting of the game needed a
-monotonous patience and tact. The captain would now pick up a draught
-and gaze curiously at it for long periods of time, now move in a
-direction contrary to all the rules of the game and to his own
-advantage. When such mistakes were pointed out to him he would either
-apologize humbly or break into sudden peevish wrath. To-day he was in a
-peculiarly excitable condition and had more than once wept.
-
-Gavan, after the servant’s announcement, holding a quietly expectant
-draught in his thin, poised fingers, looked hard at the board that still
-waited for his father’s move. He then felt that a deep flush had mounted
-to his face.
-
-In spite of the one or two laconic letters that they had interchanged,
-Eppie had been relegated for many months to her dream-place--a dream, in
-spite of its high coloring, more distant than this nearer dream of ugly
-illness. It was painful to look back at the queer turmoil she had roused
-in him during the autumnal fortnight, and more painful to realize, as in
-his sudden panic of reluctance now, that, though a dream, she was an
-abiding and constant one.
-
-Mrs. Arley he knew, and her motor-car had recently made her a next-door
-neighbor in spite of the thirty miles between them. She was a friend
-with whom Eppie had before stayed on the other side of the county.
-Nothing could be more natural than that she and Eppie should drop in
-upon a solitude that must, to their eyes, have all the finished elements
-of pathos. Yet he was a little vexed by the intrusion, as well as
-reluctant to meet it.
-
-His father broke into vehement protest when he heard that he was to be
-abandoned at an unusual hour, and it needed some time for Gavan and the
-nurse to quiet him. Twenty minutes had passed before he could go down to
-his guests, and he surmised that they would feel in this delay yet
-further grounds for pity.
-
-They were in the hall, before a roaring fire, Eppie standing with her
-back to it, in a familiar attitude, though her long, caped cloak and
-hooded motoring-cap, the folds of gray silk gathered under her chin and
-narrowly framing her face, gave her an unfamiliar aspect. Her eyes met
-his as he turned the spacious staircase and came down to them, and he
-felt that they watched his every movement and noted every trace in him
-of fatigue and dejection.
-
-Mrs. Arley, fluent, flexible, amazingly pretty, for all the light
-powdering and wrinkling of her fifty years, came rustling forward.
-
-“Eppie is staying with me for the week-end,--I wrench her from her slums
-now and then,--and we wanted to hear how you are, to see how you are.
-You look dreadfully fagged; doesn’t he, Eppie? How is your father?”
-
-Eppie gave him her hand in silence.
-
-“My father will never be any better, you know,” he said. “As for me, I’m
-all right. I should have come over to see you before this, and looked
-you up, too, Eppie, but I can’t get away for more than an hour or so at
-a time.”
-
-He led them into the library while he spoke,--Mrs. Arley exclaiming that
-such devotion was dear and good of him,--and Eppie looked gravely round
-at the room that he had described to her as the room that he really
-passed his life in. The great spaces of ranged books framed for her, he
-knew, pictures of his own existence. He knew, too, that her gravity was
-the involuntary result of the impression that he made upon her. She was
-sorry for him. Poor Eppie, their relationship since childhood seemed to
-have consisted in that--in the sense of her pursuing pity and in his
-retreat before it, for her sake. He retreated now, as he knew, in his
-determination to show her that pity was misplaced, uncalled for.
-
-Mrs. Arley had thrown off her wrap and loosened her hood in a manner
-that made it almost imperative to ask them to stay with him for
-lunch--an invitation accepted with an assurance showing that it had been
-expected, and it wasn’t difficult, in conventional battledore and
-shuttlecock with her, to show a good humor and frivolity that
-discountenanced pathetic interpretations. What Mrs. Arley’s
-interpretations were he didn’t quite know; her eyes, fatigued yet fresh,
-were very acute behind their trivial meanings, and he could wonder if
-Eppie had shared with her her own sense of his “horribleness,” and if,
-in consequence, her conception of Eppie’s significance as the opponent
-of that quality was tinged with sentimental associations.
-
-Eppie’s gaze, while they rattled on, lost something of its gravity, but
-he was startled, as if by an assurance deeper than any of Mrs. Arley’s,
-when she rose to slip off her coat and went across the room to a small
-old mirror that hung near the door to take off her cap as well.
-
-In her manner of standing there with her back to them, untying her
-veils, pushing back her hair, was the assurance, indeed, of a person
-whose feet were firmly planted on certain rights, all the more firmly
-for “knowing her place” as it were, and for having repudiated mistaken
-assumptions. She might almost have been a new sick-nurse come to take up
-her duties by his side. She passed from the mirror to the writing-table,
-examining the books laid there, and then, until lunch was announced,
-stood looking out of the window. Quite the silent, capable, significant
-new nurse, with many theories of her own that might much affect the
-future.
-
-The dining-room at Cheylesford Lodge opened on a wonderful old lawn,
-centuries in its green. Bordered by beds, just alight with pale spring
-flowers, it swept in and out among shrubberies of rhododendron and
-laurel, the emerald nook set in a circle of trees, a high arabesque on
-the sky.
-
-Eppie from her seat at the table faced the sky, the trees, the lawn.
-What a beautiful place, she was thinking. A place for life, sheltered,
-embowered. How she would have loved, as a child, those delicious
-rivulets of green that ran into the thick mysteries of shadow. How she
-would have loved to play dolls on a hot summer afternoon in the shade of
-the great yew-tree that stretched its dark branches half across the sky.
-The house, the garden, made her think of children; she saw white
-pinafores and golden heads glancing in and out among the trees and
-shrubs, and the vision of young life, blossoming, growing in security
-and sunlight, filled her thought with its pictured songs of innocence,
-while, at the same time, under the vision, she was feeling it all--all
-the beauty and sheltered sweetness--as dreadful in its emptiness, its
-worse than emptiness: a casket holding a death’s-head. She came back
-with something of a start to hear her work in the slums enthusiastically
-described by Mrs. Arley. “I thought it was only in novels that children
-clung to the heroine’s skirts. I never believed they clung in real life
-until seeing Eppie with her ragamuffins; they adore her.”
-
-This remark, to whose truth she assented by a vague smile, gave Eppie’s
-thoughts a further push that sent them seeing herself among the golden
-heads and white pinafores on the lawn at Cheylesford Lodge; and though
-the vision maintained its loving aunt relationship of the slums, there
-was now a throb and flutter in it, as though she held under her hand a
-strange wild bird that only her own will not to look kept hidden.
-
-These dreams were followed by a nightmare little episode.
-
-In the library, again, the talk was still an airy dialogue, Eppie, her
-eyes on the flames as she drank her coffee, still maintaining her
-ruminating silence. In the midst of her thoughts and their chatter, the
-door opened suddenly and Captain Palairet appeared on the threshold.
-
-His head neatly brushed, a sumptuous dressing-gown of padded and
-embroidered silk girt about him, he stood there with moist eyes and
-lips, faintly and incessantly shaking through all his frame, a troubling
-and startling figure.
-
-Gavan had been wondering all through the visit how his father was
-bearing the abandonment, and his appearance, he saw now, must have been
-the triumphant fruit of contest with the nurse whose face of helpless
-disapprobation hovered outside.
-
-Gavan went to his side, and, leaning on his son’s arm, the captain said
-that he had come to pay his respects to Mrs. Arley and to Miss Gifford.
-
-Taking Mrs. Arley’s hand, he earnestly reiterated his pleasure in
-welcoming her to his home.
-
-“Gavan’s in fact, you know; but he’s a good son. Not very much in
-common, perhaps: Gavan was always a book-worm, a fellow of fads and
-theories; I love a broad life, men and things. No, not much in common,
-except our love for his mother, my dear, dead wife; that brought us
-together. We shook hands over her grave, so to speak,” said the captain,
-but without his usual sentiment. An air of jaunty cheerfulness pervaded
-his manner. “She is buried near here, you know. You may have seen the
-grave. A very pretty stone; very pretty indeed. Gavan chose it. I was in
-India at the time. A great blow to me. I never recovered from it. I
-forget, for the moment, what the text is; but it’s very pretty; very
-appropriate. I knew I could trust Gavan to do everything properly.”
-
-Gavan’s face had kept its pallid calm.
-
-“You will tire yourself, father,” he said. “Let me take you up-stairs
-now. Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford will excuse us.”
-
-The captain resisted his attempt to turn him to the door.
-
-“Miss Gifford. Yes, Miss Gifford,” he repeated, turning to where Eppie
-stood attentively watching father and son, “But I want to see Miss
-Elspeth Gifford. It was that I came for.” He took her hand and his
-wrecked and restless eyes went over her face. “So this is Miss Elspeth
-Gifford.”
-
-“You have heard of me?” Eppie’s composure was as successful as Gavan’s
-own and lent to the scene a certain matter-of-fact convention.
-
-The captain bowed low. “Heard of you? Yes. I have often heard of you. I
-am glad, glad and proud, to meet at last so much goodness and wit and
-beauty. You have a name in the world, Miss Gifford. Yes, indeed, I have
-heard of you.” Suddenly, while he held her hand and gazed at her, his
-look changed. Tears filled his eyes; a muscle in his lip began to shake;
-a flush of maudlin indignation purpled his face.
-
-“And you are the girl my son jilted! And you come to our house! It’s a
-noble action. It’s a generous action. It’s worthy of you, my dear.” He
-tightly squeezed her hand, Gavan’s attempt--and now no gentle one--to
-draw him away only making his clutch the more determined.
-
-“No, Gavan, I will not go. I will speak my mind. This is my hour. The
-time has come for me to speak my mind. Let’s have the truth; truth at
-all costs is my motto. A noble and generous action. But, my dear,” he
-leaned his head toward her and spoke in a loud whisper, “you’re well rid
-of him, you know--well rid of him. Don’t try to patch it up. Don’t come
-in that hope. So like a woman--I know, I know. But give it up; that’s my
-advice. Give it up. He’s a poor fellow--a very poor fellow. He wouldn’t
-make you happy; just take that from me--a friend, a true friend. He
-wouldn’t make any woman happy. He’s a poor creature, and a false
-creature, and I’ll say this,” the captain, now trembling violently,
-burst into tears: “if he has been a false lover to you he has been a bad
-son to me.”
-
-With both hands, sobbing, he clung to her, while, with a look of sick
-distress, Gavan tried, not too violently, to draw him from his hold on
-her.
-
-Eppie had not flushed. “Don’t mind,” she said, glancing at the helpless
-son, “he has mixed it up, you see.” And, bending on the captain eyes
-severe in kindly intention, like the eyes of a nurse firmly
-administering a potion, “You are mistaken about Gavan. It was another
-man who jilted me. Now let him take you up-stairs. You are ill.”
-
-But the captain still clung, she, erect in her spare young strength,
-showing no shrinking of repulsion. “No, no,” he said; “you always try to
-shield him. A woman’s way. He won your heart, and then he broke it, as
-he has mine. He has no heart, or he’d take you now. Give it up. Don’t
-come after him. Sir, how dare you! I won’t submit to this. How dare you,
-Sir!” Gavan had wrenched him away, and in a flare of silly passion he
-struck at him again and again, like a furious child. It was a wrestle
-with the animal, the vegetable thing, the pinioning of vicious
-tentacles. Mrs. Arley fluttered in helpless consternation, while Eppie,
-firm and adequate, assisted Gavan in securing the wildly striking hands.
-Caught, held, haled toward the door, the captain became, with amazing
-rapidity, all smiles and placidity.
-
-“Gently, gently, my dear boy. This is unseemly, you know, very childish
-indeed. Temper! Temper! You get it from me, no doubt--though your mother
-could be very spiteful at moments. I’ll come now. I’ve said my say. Well
-rid of him, my dear, well rid of him,” he nodded from the door.
-
-“Eppie! My dear!” cried Mrs. Arley, when father and son had disappeared.
-“How unutterably hateful. I am more sorry for him than for you, Eppie.
-His face!”
-
-Eppie was shrugging up her shoulders and straightening herself as though
-the captain’s grasp still threatened her.
-
-“Hateful indeed; but trivial. Gavan understands that I understand. We
-must make him feel that it’s nothing.”
-
-“He’s quite mad, horrible old man.”
-
-“Not quite; more uncomfortably muddled than mad. We must make him see
-that we think nothing of it,” Eppie repeated. She turned to Gavan, who
-entered as she spoke, still with his sick flush and showing a speechless
-inability to frame apologies.
-
-“This is what it is to have echoes, Gavan,” she said. “My little
-misfortunes have reached your father’s ears.” She went to him, she took
-his hand, she smiled at him, all her radiance recovered, a garment of
-warmth and ease to cover the shivering the captain’s words might have
-made. “Please don’t mind. I wasn’t a bit bothered, really.”
-
-He could almost have wept for the relief of her smile, her sanity. The
-linking of their names in such an unthinkable connection had given him
-the nausea qualm of a terrifying obsession. He could find now only trite
-words in which to tell her that she was very kind and that he was more
-sorry than he could say.
-
-“But you mustn’t be. It was such an obvious muddle for a twisted mind.
-He knew,” said Eppie, still smiling with the healing radiance, “that I
-had been jilted, and he knew that I was very fond of you, and he put
-together the one and one make two that happened to be before him.” She
-saw that his distress had been far greater than her own, that she now
-gave him relief.
-
-Afterward, as she and Mrs. Arley sped away, her own reaction from the
-healing attitude showed in a rather grim silence. She leaned back in the
-swift, keen air, her arms folded in the fullness of her capes.
-
-But Mrs. Arley could not repress her own accumulations of feeling. “My
-dear Eppie,” she said, her hand on her shoulder, and with an almost more
-than maternal lack of reticence, “I want you to marry him. Don’t glare
-Medusa at me. I hate tact and silences. Heaven knows I would have
-scouted the idea of such a match for you before seeing him to-day. But
-my hard old heart is touched. He is such a dear; so lonely. It’s a nice
-little place, too, and there is some money. Jim Grainger is too
-drab-colored a person for you,--all his force, all his sheckles, can’t
-gild him,--and Kenneth Langley is penniless. This dear creature is not a
-bit drab and not quite penniless. And you are big enough to marry a man
-who needs you rather than one you need. _Will_ you think of it, Eppie?”
-
-“Grace, you are worse than Captain Palairet,” said Eppie, whose eyes
-were firmly fixed on the neat leather back of the chauffeur in front of
-them.
-
-“Don’t be cross, Eppie. Why should you mind my prattle?”
-
-“Because I care for him so much.”
-
-“Well, that’s what I say.”
-
-“No; not as I mean it.”
-
-“_He_ of course cares, as I mean it.”
-
-Eppie did not pause over this.
-
-“It’s something different, quite different, from anything else in the
-world. It can’t be talked about like that. Please, Grace, never, never
-be like Captain Palairet again. _You_ haven’t softening of the brain. I
-shall lose Gavan if my friends and his father have such delusions too
-openly.”
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-Gavan went down the noisy, dirty thoroughfare, looking for the turning
-which would lead him, so the last policeman consulted said, to Eppie’s
-little square.
-
-It was a May day, suddenly clear after rain, liquid mud below, and above
-a sharply blue sky, looking its relentless contrast at the reeking,
-sordid streets, the ugly, hurrying life of the wide thoroughfare.
-
-All along the gutter was a vociferous fringe of dripping fruit-and
-food-barrows, these more haphazard conveniences faced by a line of
-gaudy, glaring shops.
-
-The blue above was laced with a tangle of tram-wires and cut with the
-jagged line of chimney-pots.
-
-The roaring trams, the glaring shops, seemed part of a cruel machinery
-creative of life, and the grim air of permanence, the width and solidity
-of the great thoroughfare, were more oppressive to Gavan’s nerves, its
-ugliness fiercer, more menacing, than the narrower meanness of the
-streets where life seemed to huddle with more despondency.
-
-In one of these he found that he had, apparently, lost his way.
-
-A random turn brought him to a squalid court with sloping, wet pavement
-and open doors disgorging, from inner darkness, swarms of children. They
-ran; tottered on infantile, bandy legs; locked in scuffling groups,
-screaming shrilly, or squatted on the ground, absorbed in some game.
-
-Gavan surveyed them vaguely as he wandered seeking an outlet. His eye
-showed neither shrinking nor tenderness, rather a bleak, hard, unmoved
-pity, like that of the sky above. He was as alien from that swarming,
-vivid life as the sky; but, worn as he was with months of nervous
-overstrain, he felt rising within him now and then a faint sense of
-nausea such as one might feel in contemplating a writhing clot of
-maggots.
-
-He threaded his way among them all, and at a corner of the court found a
-narrow exit. This covered passage led, apparently, to another and fouler
-court, and emerging from it, coming suddenly face to face with him, was
-Eppie. She was as startling, seen here, as “a lily in the mouth of
-Tartarus,” and he had a shock of delight in her mere aspect. For Eppie
-was as exquisite as a flower. Her garments had in no way adapted
-themselves to mud and misery. Her rough dress of Japanese blue showed at
-the open neck of its jacket a white linen blouse; her short, kilted
-skirt swung with the grace of petals; her little upturned cap of blue
-made her look like a Rosalind ready for a background of woodland glade,
-streams, and herds of deer.
-
-And here she stood, under that cruel sky, among the unimaginable
-ugliness of this City of Dreadful Night.
-
-In her great surprise she did not smile, saying, as she gave him her
-hand, “Gavan! by all that’s wonderful!”
-
-“You asked me to come and see you when I was next in London.”
-
-“So I did.”
-
-“So here I am. I had a day off by chance; some business that had to be
-seen to.”
-
-“And your father?”
-
-“Slowly going.”
-
-“And you have come down here, for how long?”
-
-“For as long as you’ll keep me. I needn’t go back till night.”
-
-Her eye now wandered away from him to the maggots, one of whom, Gavan
-observed, had attached itself to her skirt, while a sufficiently dense
-crowd surrounded them, staring.
-
-“You have a glimpse of our children,” said Eppie, surveying them with,
-not exactly a maternal, but, as it were, a fraternal eye of affectionate
-familiarity.
-
-“What’s that, Annie?” in answer to a husky whisper. “Do I expect you
-to-night? Rather! Is that the doll, Ada? Well, I can’t say that you’ve
-kept it very tidy. Where’s its pinafore?” She took the soiled object
-held up to her and examined its garments. “Where’s its petticoat?”
-
-“Please, Miss, Hemly took them.”
-
-“Took them away from you?”
-
-“Yes, Miss.”
-
-“For her own doll, I suppose.”
-
-“Yes, Miss.”
-
-Eppie cogitated. “I’ll speak to Emily about it presently. You shall have
-them back.”
-
-“Please, Miss, I called her a thief.”
-
-“You spoke the truth. How are you, Billy? You look decidedly better.
-Gavan, my hands are full for the next hour or so and I can’t even offer
-to take you with me, for I’m going to sick people. But I shall be back
-and through with all my work by tea-time, if you don’t mind going to my
-place and waiting. You’ll find Maude Allen there. She lives down here,
-and with me when I am here. She is a nice girl, though she will talk
-your head off.”
-
-“How do I find her? I don’t mind waiting.”
-
-“You follow this to the end, take the first turning to the right, and
-that will bring you to my place. I’ll meet you there at five.”
-
-Gavan, thus directed, made his way to the dingy little house occupied by
-the group of energetic women whom Eppie joined yearly for her three
-months of--dissipation? he asked himself, amused by her variegated
-vigor.
-
-The dingy little house looked on a dingy little square--shell of former
-respectable affluence from which the higher form of life had shriveled.
-The sooty trees were thickly powdered with young green, and uneven
-patches of rough, unkempt grass showed behind broken iron railings. A
-cat’s-meat man called his dangling wares along the street, and Gavan,
-noticing a thin and furtive cat, that stole from a window-ledge, stopped
-him and bought a large three-penny-worth, upon which he left the cat
-regaling itself with an odd, fastidious ferocity.
-
-He entered another world when he entered Eppie’s sitting-room. Here was
-life at its most austerely sweet. Books lined the walls, bowls of
-primroses and delicate Japanese bronzes set above their shelves;
-chintz-covered chairs were drawn before the fire; the latest reviews lay
-on a table, and on the piano stood open music; there were wide windows
-in the little room, and crocuses, growing in flat, earthenware dishes,
-blew out their narrow chalices against the sunlit muslin curtains.
-
-Miss Allen sat sewing near the crocuses, and, shy and voluble, rose to
-greet him. She was evidently accustomed to Eppie’s guests--accustomed,
-too, perhaps, to taking them off her hands, for though she was shy her
-volubility showed a familiarity with the situation. She was almost as
-funny a contrast to Eppie as the slum children had been an ugly one. She
-wore a spare, drab-colored skirt and a cotton shirt, its high, hard
-collar girt about by a red tie that revealed bone buttons before and
-behind. Her sleek, fair hair, relentlessly drawn back, looked like a
-varnish laid upon her head. Her features, at once acute and kindly, were
-sharp and pink.
-
-She was sewing on solid and distressingly ugly materials.
-
-“Yes, I am usually at home. Miss Gifford is the head and I am the hands,
-you see,” she smiled, casting quick, upward glances at the long, pale
-young man in his chair near the fire. “Miss Henderson, Miss Grey, and I
-live here all year round, and I do so look forward to Miss Gifford’s
-coming. Oh, yes, it’s a most interesting life. Do you do anything of the
-sort? Are you going to take up a club? Perhaps you are going into the
-Church?”
-
-Miss Allen asked her swift succession of questions as if in a mild
-desperateness.
-
-Gavan admitted that his interest was wholly in Miss Gifford.
-
-“She _is_ interesting,” Miss Allen, all comprehension, agreed. “So many
-people find her inspiring. Do you know Mr. Grainger, the M.P.? He comes
-here constantly. He is a cousin, you know. He has known her, of course,
-ever since she was a child. I think it’s very probable that she
-influences his political life--oh, quite in a right sense, I mean. He is
-such a conscientious man--everybody says that. And then she isn’t at all
-eccentric, you know, as so many fashionable women who come down here
-are; they do give one so much trouble when they are like that,--all
-sorts of fads that one has to manage to get on with. She isn’t at all
-faddish. And she isn’t sentimental, either. I think the sentimental ones
-are worst--for the people, especially, giving them all sorts of foolish
-ideas. And it’s not that she doesn’t _care_. She cares such a lot.
-That’s the secret of her not getting discouraged, you see. She never
-loses her spirit.”
-
-“Is it such discouraging work?” Gavan questioned from his chair. With
-his legs crossed, his hat and stick held on his knee, he surveyed Miss
-Allen and the crocuses.
-
-“Well, not to me,” she answered; “but that’s very different, for I have
-religious faith. Miss Gifford hasn’t that, so of course she must care a
-great deal to make up for it. When one hasn’t a firm faith it is far
-more difficult, I always think, to see any hope in it all. I think she
-would find it far easier if she had that. She can’t resign herself to
-things. She is rather hot-tempered at times,” Miss Allen added, with one
-of her sharp, shy glances.
-
-Gavan, amused by the idea that Eppie lacked religious faith, inquired
-whether the settlement were religious in intention, and Miss Allen
-sighed a little in answering no,--Miss Grey, indeed, was a Positivist.
-“But we Anglicans are very broad, you know,” she said. “I can work in
-perfectly with them all--better with Miss Grey and Miss Gifford than
-with Miss Henderson, who is very, very Low. Miss Gifford goes in more
-for social conditions and organization--trades-unions, all that sort of
-thing; that’s where she finds Mr. Grainger so much of a help, I think.”
-And he gathered from Miss Allen’s further conversation, from its very
-manner of vague though admiring protest, a clearer conception of Eppie’s
-importance down here. To Miss Allen, she evidently embodied a splendid,
-pagan force, ambiguous in its splendor. He saw her slightly shrinking
-vision of an intent combatant; no loving sister of charity, but a young
-Bellona, the latest weapons of sociological warfare in her hands, its
-latest battle-cry on her lips. And all for what? thought Gavan, while,
-with a sense of contrasting approval, he looked at Miss Allen’s tidy
-little head against the sunlit crocuses and watched the harmless
-occupation of her hands. All for life, more life; the rousing of desire;
-the struggling to higher forms of consciousness. She was in it, the
-strife, the struggle. He had seen on her face to-day, with all its
-surprise, perhaps its gladness, that alien look of grave preoccupation
-that passed from him to the destinies she touched. In thinking of it all
-he felt particularly at peace, though there was the irony of his
-assurance that Eppie’s efforts among this suffering life where he found
-her only resulted in a fiercer hold on suffering. Physical degradation
-and its resultant moral apathy were by no means the most unendurable of
-human calamities. Miss Allen’s anodynes--the mere practical petting,
-soothing, telling of pretty tales--were, in their very short-sightedness,
-more fitted to the case.
-
-Miss Allen little thought to what a context her harmless prattle was
-being adjusted. She would have been paralyzed with horror could she have
-known that to the gentle young man, sitting there so unalarmingly, she
-herself was only a rather simple symptom of life that he was quietly
-studying. In so far from suspecting, her shyness went from her; he was
-so unalarming--differing in this from so many people--that she found it
-easy to talk to him. And she still had a happy little hope of a closer
-community of interest than he had owned to. He looked, she thought, very
-High Church. Perhaps he was in the last stages of conversion.
-
-She had talked on for nearly an hour when another visitor was announced.
-This proved to be a young man slightly known to Gavan, a graceful,
-mellifluous youth, whose artificiality of manner and great personal
-beauty suggested a mingling of absinthe and honey. People had rather
-bracketed Gavan and Basil Mayburn together; one could easily deal with
-both as lumped in the same category,--charming drifters, softly
-disdainful of worldly aims and efforts. Mayburn himself took sympathy
-for granted, though disconcerted at times by finding his grasp of the
-older man to be on a sliding, slippery surface. Palairet had, to be
-sure, altogether the proper appreciations of art and literature, the
-rhythm of highly evolved human intercourse; the aroma distilled for the
-esthete from the vast tragic comedy of life; so that he had never quite
-satisfied himself as to why he could get no nearer on this common
-footing. Palairet was always charming, always interested, always
-courteous; but one’s hold did slip.
-
-And to Gavan, Basil Mayburn, with his fluent ecstasies, seemed a
-sojourner in a funny half-way house. To Mayburn the hallucination of
-life was worth while esthetically. His own initial appeal to life had
-been too fundamentally spiritual for the beautiful to be more to him
-than a second-rate illusion.
-
-Miss Allen greeted Mr. Mayburn with a coolness that at once
-discriminated for Gavan between her instinctive liking for himself and
-her shrinking from a man who perplexed and displeased her.
-
-Mayburn was all glad sweetness: delighted to see Miss Allen; delighted
-to see Palairet; delighted to wait in their company for the delightful
-Miss Gifford; and, turning to Miss Allen, he went on to say, as a thing
-that would engage her sympathies, that he had just come from a service
-at the Oratory.
-
-“I often go there,” he said; “one gets, as nowhere else that I know of
-in London, the quintessence of aspiration--the age-long yearning of the
-world. How are your schemes for having that little church built down
-here succeeding? I do so believe in it. Don’t let any ugly sect steal a
-march on you.”
-
-Miss Allen primly replied that the plans for the church were prospering;
-and adding that Miss Gifford would be here in a moment and that she must
-leave them, she gathered up her work and departed with some emphasis.
-
-“Nice, dear little creature, that,” said Mayburn, “though she does so
-dislike me. I hope I didn’t say the wrong thing. I never quite know how
-far her Anglicanism goes; such a pity that it doesn’t go a little
-further and carry her into a nunnery of the Catholic Church. She is the
-nun type. She ought to be done up in their delicious costume; it would
-lend her the flavor she lacks so distressingly now. Did you notice her
-collar and her hair? Astonishing the way that Eppie makes use of all
-these funny, _guindée_ creatures whom she gets hold of down here. Have
-you ever seen Miss Grey?--dogmatic, utilitarian, strangely ugly Miss
-Grey, another nun type corrupted by our silly modern conditions. She
-reeks of Comte and looks like a don. And all the rest of them,--the
-solemn humanitarians, the frothy socialists, the worldly, benign old
-ecclesiastics,--Eppie works them all; she has a genius for
-administration. It’s an art in her. It almost consoles one for seeing
-her wasted down here for so much of the year.”
-
-“Why wasted?” Gavan queried. “She enjoys it.”
-
-“Exactly. That’s the alleviation. Wasted for us, I mean. You have known
-her for a long time, haven’t you, Palairet?”
-
-Gavan, irked by the question and by the familiarity of Mayburn’s
-references to their absent hostess, answered dryly that he had known
-Miss Gifford since childhood; and Mayburn, all tact, passed at once to
-less personal topics, inquiring with a new earnestness whether Palairet
-had seen Selby’s Goya, and expatiating on its exquisite horror until the
-turning of a key in the hall-door, quick steps on the stairs leading up
-past the sitting-room, announced Eppie’s arrival.
-
-She was with them in a moment, cap and jacket doffed, her muddy shoes
-changed for slender patent-leather, fresh in her white blouse. She
-greeted Mayburn, turning to Gavan with, “I’m so glad you waited. You
-shall both have tea directly.”
-
-With all her crisp kindliness, Gavan fancied a change in her since the
-greeting of an hour and a half before. Things hadn’t gone well with her.
-And he could flatter himself, also, with the suspicion that she was
-vexed at finding their tête-à-tête interrupted.
-
-Mayburn loitered about the room after her while she straightened the
-shade on the student’s lamp, just brought in, and made the tea, telling
-her about people, about what was going on in the only world that
-counted, telling her about Chrissie Bentworth’s astounding elopement,
-and, finally, about the Goya. “You really must see it soon,” he assured
-her.
-
-Eppie, adjusting the flame of her kettle, said that she didn’t want to
-see it.
-
-“You don’t care for Goya, dear lady?”
-
-“Not just now.”
-
-“Well, of course I don’t mean just now. I mean after you have burned out
-this particular flame. But, really, it’s a sensation before you and you
-mustn’t miss having it. An exquisite thing. Horror made beautiful.”
-
-“I don’t want to see it made beautiful,” Eppie, with cheerful rudeness,
-objected.
-
-“Now that,” said Mayburn, drawing up to the tea-table with an
-appreciative glance for the simple but inviting fare spread upon
-it--“now that is just where I always must argue with you. Don’t you
-agree with me, Palairet, that life is beautiful--that it’s only in terms
-of beauty that it has significance?”
-
-“If you happen to see it so,” Gavan ambiguously assented.
-
-“Exactly; I accept your amendment--if you happen to have the good
-fortune to see it so; if you have the faculty that gives the vision; if,
-like Siegfried, the revealing dragon’s-blood has touched your lips.
-Eppie has the gift and shouldn’t wilfully atrophy it. She shouldn’t
-refuse to share the vision of the Supreme Artist, to whom all horror and
-tragedy are parts of the picture that his eternal joy contemplates; she
-should not refuse to listen with the ear of the Supreme Musician, to
-whom all the discords that each one of us is, before we taste the
-dragon’s-blood,--for what is man but a dissonance, as our admirable
-Nietzsche says,--to whom all these discords melt into the perfect
-phrase. All art, all truth is there. I’m rather dithyrambic, but, in
-your more reticent way, you agree with me, don’t you, Palairet?”
-
-Eppie’s eye, during this speech, had turned with observant irony upon
-Gavan.
-
-“How do you like your echo, Gavan?” she inquired, and she answered for
-him: “Of course he agrees, but in slightly different terms. He doesn’t
-care a fig about the symphony or about the Eternal Goya. There isn’t a
-touch of the ‘lyric rapture’ about him. Now pray don’t ask him to define
-his own conceptions, and drink your tea. And don’t say one word to me,
-either, about your gigantic, Bohemian deity. You have spoken of
-Nietzsche, and I know too well what you are coming to: the Apollonian
-spirit of the world of Appearances in which the Dionysiac spirit of
-Things-in-Themselves mirrors its vital ecstasy. Spare me, I’m not at all
-in the humor to see horror in terms of loveliness.”
-
-“_Ay de mi!_” Mayburn murmured, “you make me feel that I’m still a
-dissonance when you talk like this.”
-
-“A very wholesome realization.”
-
-“You are cross with life to-day, and therefore with me, its poor little
-appreciator.”
-
-“I’m never cross with life.”
-
-“Only with me, then?”
-
-“Only with you, to-day.”
-
-Mayburn, folding his slice of bread-and-butter, took her harshness with
-Apollonian serenity. “At least let me know that I’ve an ally in you,” he
-appealed to Gavan, while Eppie refilled her cup with the business-like
-air of stoking an engine that paused for a moment near wayside
-trivialities.
-
-Gavan had listened to the dithyrambics with some uneasiness, conscious
-of Eppie’s observation, and now owned that he felt little interest in
-the Eternal Goya.
-
-“Don’t, don’t, I pray of you, let him take the color out of life for
-you,” Mayburn pleaded, turning from this rebuff, tea-cup in hand, to
-Eppie; and Eppie, with a rather grim smile, again full of reminiscences
-for Gavan, declared that neither of them could take anything out of it
-for her.
-
-She kept, after that, the talk in pleasant enough shallows; but Mayburn
-fancied, more than once, that he heard the grating of his keel on an
-unpropitious shore. Eppie didn’t want him to-day, that was becoming
-evident; she wasn’t going to push him off into decorative sailing. And
-presently, wondering a little if his tact had already been too long at
-fault, wondering anew about the degree of intimacy between the childhood
-friends, who had, evidently, secrets in which he did not share, he
-gracefully departed.
-
-Eppie leaned back in her chair, folded her arms, and closed her eyes as
-though to give herself the relief of a long silence.
-
-Her hair softly silhouetted against the green shade and the flickering
-illumination of the firelight upon her, her passive face showed a stern
-wistfulness. Things had gone wrong with her.
-
-Looking at her, Gavan’s memory went back to the last time they had been
-together, alone, in firelight, to his impulse and her startlingly acute
-interpretation of it. Her very aspect now, her closed eyes and folded
-arms, seemed to show him how completely she disowned, for both of them,
-even the memory of such an unfitting episode. More keenly than ever he
-recognized the fineness in her, the generosity, the willingness to
-outlive trifles, to put them away forever; and the contagion of her
-somber peace enveloped him.
-
-She remarked presently, not opening her eyes: “I should like to make a
-bon-fire of all the pictures in the world, all the etchings, the
-carvings, the tapestries, the bric-à-brac in general,--and Basil
-Mayburn, in sackcloth and ashes, should light it.”
-
-“What puritanic savagery, Eppie!”
-
-“I prefer the savage puritan to the Basil Mayburn type; at least I do
-just now.”
-
-“What’s the matter?” Gavan asked, after a little pause.
-
-“Do I show it so evidently?” she asked, with a faint smile. “Everything
-is the matter.”
-
-“What, in particular, has gone wrong?”
-
-Eppie did not reply at first, and he guessed that she chose only to show
-him a lesser trouble when she said, “I’ve had a great quarrel with Miss
-Grey, for one thing.”
-
-“The positivistic lady?”
-
-“Yes; did Maude tell you that? She really is a very first-rate
-person--and runs this place; but I lost my temper with her--a stupid
-thing to do, and not suddenly, either, which made it the less
-excusable.”
-
-“Are your theories so different that you came to a clash?”
-
-“Of course they are different, though it was apparently only over a
-matter of practical administration that we fought.” Eppie drew a long
-breath, opening her eyes. “I shall stay on here this spring--I usually
-go to my cousin Alicia for the season. But one can’t expect things to go
-as one wants them unless one keeps one’s hand on the engine most of the
-time. She has almost a right to consider me a meddling outsider, I
-suppose. I shall stay on till the end of the summer.”
-
-“And smash Miss Grey?”
-
-Eppie, aware of his amusement, turned an unresentful glance upon him.
-
-“No, don’t think me merely brutally dominant. I really like her. I only
-want to use her to the best advantage.”
-
-At this he broke into a laugh. “Not brutally dominant, I know; but I’m
-sorry for Miss Grey.”
-
-“Miss Grey can well take care of herself, I assure you.”
-
-“What else has gone wrong?”
-
-Again Eppie chose something less wrong to show him. “The factory where
-some of my club-girls work has shut down half of its machinery. There
-will be a great deal of suffering. And we have pulled them above a
-flippant acceptance of state relief.”
-
-“And because you have pulled them up, they are to suffer more?”
-
-“Exactly, if you choose to put it so,” said Eppie.
-
-He saw that she had determined that he should not frighten her again,
-or, at all events, that he should never see it if he did frighten her;
-and he had himself determined that his mist should never again close
-round her. She should not see, even if she guessed at it pretty clearly,
-the interpretation that he put upon the afternoon’s frictions and
-failures, and, on the plane of a matter-of-fact agreement as to
-practice, he drew her on to talk of her factory-girls, of the standards
-of wages, the organization of woman’s labor, so that she presently said,
-“What a pleasure it is to hear you talking sense, Gavan!”
-
-“You have heard me talk a great deal of nonsense, I’m sure.”
-
-“A great deal. Worse than Basil Mayburn’s.”
-
-“I saw too clearly to-day the sorry figure I must have cut in your eyes.
-I have learned to hold my tongue. When one can only say things that
-sound particularly silly that is an obvious duty.”
-
-“I am glad to hear you use the word, my dear Gavan; use it, even though
-it means nothing to you. _Glissez mortel, n’appuyez pas_ should be your
-motto for a time; then, after some wholesome skating about on what seems
-the deceptive, glittering surface of things you will find, perhaps, that
-it isn’t an abyss the ice stretches over, but a firm meadow, the ice
-melted off it and no more need of skates.”
-
-He was quite willing that she should so see his case; he was easier to
-live with, no doubt, on this assumption of his curability.
-
-Eppie, still leaning back, still with folded arms, had once more closed
-her eyes, involuntarily sighing, as though under her own words the
-haunting echo of the abyss had sounded for her.
-
-She had not yet shown him what the real trouble was, and he asked her
-now, in this second lull of their talk, “What else is there besides the
-factory-girls and Miss Grey?”
-
-She was silent for a moment, then said, “You guess that there is
-something else.”
-
-“I can see it.”
-
-“And you are sorry?”
-
-“Sorry, dear Eppie? Of course.”
-
-“It’s a child, a cripple,” said Eppie. “It had been ill for a long time,
-but we thought that we could save it. It died this morning. I didn’t
-know. I didn’t get there in time. I only found out after leaving you
-this afternoon. And it cried for me.” She had turned her head from him
-as it leaned against the chair, but he saw the tears slowly rolling down
-her cheeks.
-
-“I am so sorry, dear Eppie,” he said.
-
-“The most darling child, Gavan.” His grave pity had brought him near and
-it gave her relief to speak. “It had such a wistful, dear little face. I
-used to spend hours with it; I never cared for any child so much. What I
-can’t bear is to think that it cried for me.” Her voice broke. Without a
-trace, now, of impulse or glamour, he took her hand, repeating his
-helpless phrase of sympathy. Yes, he thought, while she wept, here was
-the fatal flaw in any Tolstoian half-way house that promised peace. Love
-for others didn’t help their suffering; suffering with them didn’t stop
-it. Here was the brute fact of life that to all peace-mongers sternly
-said, Where there is love there is no peace.
-
-It was only after her hand had long lain in his fraternal clasp that she
-drew it away, drying her tears and trying to smile her thanks at him.
-Looking before her into the fire, and back into a retrospect of sadness,
-she said: “How often you and I meet death together, Gavan. The poor
-monkey, and Bobbie, and Elspeth even, ought to count.”
-
-“You must think of me and death together,” he said.
-
-He felt in a moment that the words had for her some significance that he
-had not intended. In her silence was a shock, and in her voice, when she
-spoke, a startled thing determinedly quieted.
-
-“Not more than you must think of me and it together.”
-
-“You and death, dear Eppie! You are its very antithesis!”
-
-She did not look at him, and he could not see her eyes, but he knew,
-with the almost uncanny intuition that he so often had in regard to her,
-that a rising strength, a strength that threatened something, strove
-with a sudden terror.
-
-“Life conquers death,” she said at last.
-
-He armed himself with lightness. “Of course, dear Eppie,” he said; “of
-course it does; always and always. The poor baby dies, and--I wonder how
-many other babies are being born at this moment? Conquers death? I
-should think it did!”
-
-“I did not mean in that way,” she answered. She had risen, and, looking
-at the clock, seemed to show him that their time was over. “But we won’t
-discuss life and death now,” she said.
-
-“You mean that it’s late and that I must go?” he smiled.
-
-“Perhaps I mean only that I don’t want to discuss,” she smiled back.
-“Though--yes, indeed, it is late; almost seven. I have a great many
-things to do this evening, so that I must rest before dinner, and let
-you go.”
-
-“I may come again?”
-
-“Whenever you will. Thank you for being so kind to-day.”
-
-“Kind, dear Eppie?”
-
-“For being sorry, I mean.”
-
-“Who but a brute would not have been?”
-
-“And you are not a brute.”
-
-The shaded light cast soft upward shadows on her face, revealing sweet
-oddities of expression. In their shadow he could not fathom her eyes;
-but a tenderness, peaceful, benignant, even a recovered gaiety, hovered
-on her brow, her upper lip, her cheeks. It was like a reflection of
-sunlight in a deep pool, this dim smiling of gratitude and gaiety.
-
-He had a queer feeling, and a profounder one than in their former moment
-when she had repudiated his helpless emotion, that she spared him, that
-she restrained some force that might break upon this fraternal nearness.
-For an instant he wondered if he wanted to be spared, and with the
-wonder was once more the wrench at leaving her there, alone, in her
-fire-lit room. But it was her strength that carried them over all these
-dubious undercurrents, and he so relied on it that, holding her hand in
-good-by, he said, “I will come soon. I like it here.”
-
-“And you are coming to Kirklands this summer. Uncle expects it. You
-mustn’t disappoint him, and me. I shall be there for a month.”
-
-“I’ll come.”
-
-“Jim Grainger will be there, too. You remember Jim. You can fight with
-him from morning till night, but you and I will fight about nothing,
-absolutely nothing, Gavan. We will--_glisser_. We will talk about Goya!
-We will be perfectly comfortable.”
-
-He really believed that they might be, so happily convincing was her
-tone.
-
-“Grainger is a great chum of yours, isn’t he?” he asked.
-
-“You remember, he and his brother were old playmates; Clarence has
-turned out a poor creature; he’s a nobody in the church. I’m very fond
-of Jim. And I admire him tremendously. He is the conquering type, you
-know--the type that tries for the high grapes.”
-
-“You won’t set him at me, to mangle me for your recreation?”
-
-“Do I seem such a pitiless person?”
-
-“Oh, it would be for my good, of course.”
-
-“You may come with no fear of manglings. You sha’n’t be worried or
-reformed.”
-
-They had spoken as if the captain were non-existent, but Gavan put the
-only qualifying touch to his assurance of seeing her at Kirklands. “I’ll
-come--if I can get there by then.”
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-But he did not go to her again in the slums. The final phases of his
-father’s long illness kept him in Surrey, and he found, on thinking it
-over, that he was content to rest in the peace of that last seeing of
-her.
-
-It was clear to him that, were it not for that paralysis of the heart
-and will, he would have been her lover. Like a veiled, exquisite
-picture, the impossible love was with him always; he could lift the veil
-and look upon it with calmness. That he owed something of this calmness
-to Eppie he well knew. She loved him,--that, too, was evident,--but as a
-sister might love, perhaps as a mother might. He was her child, her sick
-child or brother, and he smiled over the simile, well content, and with
-an odd sense of safety in his assurance. Peace was to be their final
-word, and in the long months of a still, hot summer, this soft,
-persistent note of peace was with him and filled a lassitude greater
-than any he had known.
-
-Monotonously the days went by like darkly freighted boats on a sultry
-sea--low-lying boats, sliding with the current under sleepy sails.
-
-He watched consciousness fade from his father’s body and found strange,
-sly analogies (they were like horrid nudges in the dark)--with his
-mother’s death, the worthless man, the saintly woman, mingling in the
-sameness of their ending, the pitifulness, after all, of the final
-insignificance that overtook them both. And so glassy was the current,
-so sleepy the wind, that the analogy shook hardly a tremor of pain
-through him.
-
-In the hour of his father’s death, a more trivial memory came--trivial,
-yet it lent a pathos, even a dignity, to the dying man. In the captain’s
-eyes, turned wonderingly on him, in the automatic stretching out of his
-wasted hand for his,--Gavan held it to the end--was the reminiscence of
-the poor monkey’s far-away death, the little tropical creature that had
-drooped and died at Kirklands.
-
-On the day of the funeral, Gavan sat in the library at dusk, and the
-lassitude had become so deep, partly through the breakdown of sheer
-exhaustion, that the thought of going on watching his own machinery
-work--toward that same end,--the end of the monkey, of his father, his
-mother,--was profoundly disgusting.
-
-It was a positively physical disgust, a nausea of fatigue, that had
-overtaken him as he watched the rooks, above the dark yet gilded woods,
-wheel against a sunset sky.
-
-Almost automatically, with no sense of choice or effort, he had unlocked
-a drawer of the writing-table beside him and taken out a case of
-pistols, merely wondering if the machine were going to take the final
-and only logical move of stopping itself.
-
-He was a little interested to observe, as he opened the case, that he
-felt no emotion at all. He had quite expected that at such a last moment
-life would concentrate, gather itself for a final leap on him, a final
-clinging. He had expected to have a bout with the elemental, the thing
-that some men called faith in life and some only desire of life, and,
-indeed, for a moment, his mind wandered in vague, Buddhistic fancies
-about the wheel of life to which all desire bound one, desire, the
-creator of life, so that as long as the individual felt any pulse of it
-life might always suck him back into the vortex. The fancy gave him his
-one stir of uneasiness. Suppose that the act of departure were but the
-final act of will. Could it be that such self-affirmation might tie him
-still to the wheel he strove to escape, and might the drama still go on
-for his unwilling spirit in some other dress of flesh? To see the fear
-as the final bout was to quiet it; it was a fear symptomatic of life, a
-lure to keep him going; and, besides, how meaningless such surmises, on
-their ethical basis of voluntary choice, as if in the final decision one
-would not be, as always, the puppet of the underlying will. His mind
-dropped from the thread-like interlacing of teasing metaphysical
-conjecture to a calm as quiet and deep as though he were about to turn
-on his pillow and fall asleep.
-
-Now, like the visions in a dreamy brain, the memories of the day trooped
-through the emptiness of thought. He was aware, while he watched the
-visions, of himself sitting there, to a spectator a tragic or a morbid
-figure. Morbid was of course the word that a frightened or merely stupid
-humanity would cast at him. And very morbid he was, to be sure, if life
-were desirable and to cease to desire it abnormal.
-
-He saw himself no longer in either guise. He was looking now at his
-father’s coffin lowered into the earth of the little churchyard beside
-his mother’s grave; the fat, genial face of the sexton, the decorous
-sadness on the little rector’s features. Overhead had been the quietly
-stirring elms; sheep grazed beyond the churchyard wall and on the
-horizon was the pastoral blue of distant hills. He saw the raw, new
-grave and the heave of the older grave’s green sod, the old stone, with
-its embroidery of yellow lichen and its text of eternal faith.
-
-And suddenly the thought of that heave of sod, that headstone, what it
-stood for in his life, the tragic memory, the love, the agony,--all
-sinking into mere dust, into the same dust as the father whom he had
-hated,--struck with such unendurable anguish upon him that, as if under
-heavy churchyard sod a long-dead heart strove up in a tormented
-resurrection, life rushed appallingly upon him and, involuntarily, as a
-drowning man’s hand seizes a spar and clings, his hand closed on the
-pistol under it. Leave it, leave it,--this dream where such
-resurrections were possible.
-
-He had lifted the pistol, pausing for a moment in an uncertainty as to
-whether head or heart were the surer exit, when a quiet step at the
-door arrested him.
-
-“Shall I bring the lamps, sir?” asked Howson’s quiet voice.
-
-Gavan could but admire his own deftness in tossing a newspaper over the
-pistol. He found himself perfectly prepared to keep up the last
-appearances. He said that he didn’t want the lamps yet and that Howson
-could leave the curtains undrawn. “It’s sultry this evening,” he added.
-
-“It is, sir; I expect we’ll have thunder in the night,” said Howson,
-whose voice partook of the day’s decorous gloom. He had brought in the
-evening mail and laid the letters and newspapers beside Gavan, slightly
-pushing aside the covered pistol to make room for them, an action that
-Gavan observed with some intentness. But Howson saw nothing.
-
-Left alone again, Gavan, not moving in his chair, glanced at the letters
-and papers neatly piled beside his elbow.
-
-After the rending agony of that moment of hideous realization, when, in
-every fiber, he had felt his own woeful humanity, an odd sleepiness
-almost overcame him.
-
-He felt much more like going to sleep than killing himself, and,
-yawning, stretching, he shivered a little from sheer fatigue.
-
-The edge of the newspaper that covered the pistol was weighted down by
-the pile of papers, and in putting out his hand for it, automatically,
-he pushed the letters aside, then, yawning again, picked them up instead
-of the pistol. He glanced over the envelops, not opening them,--the
-last hand at cards, that could hold no trumps for him. It was with as
-mechanical an interest as that of the condemned criminal who, on the way
-to the scaffold, turns his head to look at some unfamiliar sight. But at
-the last letter he paused. The post-mark was Scotch; the writing was
-Eppie’s.
-
-He might have considered at that moment that the shock he felt was a
-warning that life was by no means done with him, and that his way of
-safety lay in swift retreat.
-
-But after the wrench of agony and the succeeding sliding languor, he did
-not consider anything. It was like a purely physical sensation, what he
-felt, as he held the letter and looked at Eppie’s writing. Soft,
-recurrent thrills went through him, as though a living, vibrating thing
-were in his hands. Eppie; Kirklands; the heather under a summer sky. Was
-it desire, or a will-less drifting with a new current that the new
-vision brought? He could not have told.
-
-He opened the letter and read Eppie’s matter-of-fact yet delicate
-sympathy.
-
-He must be worn out. She begged him to remember his promise and to come
-to them at once.
-
-At once, thought Gavan. It must be that, indeed, or not at all. He
-glanced at the clock. He could really go at once. He could catch the
-London train, the night express for Scotland, and he could be at
-Kirklands at noon next day. He rose and rang the bell, looking out at
-the darker pink of the sky, where the rooks no longer wheeled, until
-Howson appeared.
-
-“I’m going to Scotland to-night, at once.” He found himself repeating
-the summons of the letter. “Pack up my things. Order the trap.”
-
-Howson showed no surprise. A flight from the house of death was only
-natural.
-
-Gavan, when he was gone, went to the table and closed the box of pistols
-with a short, decisive snap--a decision in sharp contrast to the mist in
-which his mind was steeped.
-
-The peace the pistols promised, the peace of the northern sky and the
-heather: why did he choose the latter? But then he did not choose.
-Something had chosen for him. Something had called him back. Was it that
-he was too weary to resist? or did all his strength consist in yielding?
-He could not have told. Let the play go on. Its next act would be sweet
-to watch. Of that he was sure.
-
-
-
-
-PART III
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-The moor was like an amethyst under a radiant August sky, and the air,
-with its harmony of wind and sunlight, was like music.
-
-Eppie walked beside him and Peter trotted before. The forms were
-changed, but it might almost have been little Eppie, the boy Gavan, and
-Robbie himself who went together through the heather. The form was
-changed, but the sense of saneness so strong that it would have seemed
-perfectly natural to pass an arm about a child Eppie’s neck and to talk
-of the morning’s reading in the Odyssey.
-
-Never had the feeling of reality been so vague or the dream sense been
-so beautiful. His instinctive choice of this peace, instead of the
-other, had been altogether justified. It was all like a delightful game
-they had agreed to play, and the only rule of the game was to take each
-other’s illusions for granted and, in so doing, to put them altogether
-aside.
-
-It was as if they went in a dream that tallied while, outside their
-dream, the sad life of waking slept. It was all limpid, all effortless,
-all clear sunlight and clear wind: limpid, like a happy dream, yet
-deliciously muddled too, as a happy dream is often muddled, with its
-mazed consciousness that, since it is a dream, ordinary impossibilities
-may become quite possible, that one only has to direct a little the
-turnings of the fairy-tale to have them lead one where one will, and yet
-that to all strange happenings there hovers a background of
-contradiction that makes them the more of an enchanted perplexity.
-
-In the old white house the general and Miss Barbara would soon be
-expecting them back to tea, both older, both vaguer, both, to Gavan’s
-appreciation, more and more the tapestried figures, the background to
-the young life that still moved, felt, thought in the foreground until
-it, too, should sink and fade into a tapestry for other dramas, other
-fairy-tales.
-
-The general retold his favorite anecdotes with shorter intervals between
-the tellings; cared more openly, with an innocent greediness, about the
-exactitudes of his diet; was content to sit idly with an unremembering,
-indifferent benignancy of gaze. All the sturdier significances of life
-were fast slipping from him, all the old martial activities; it was like
-seeing the undressing of a child, the laying aside of the toy trumpet
-and the soldier’s kilt preparatory to bed. Miss Barbara was sweeter than
-ever--a sweetness even less touched with variations than last year. And
-she was sillier, poor old darling; her laugh had in it at moments the
-tinkling, feeble foolishness of age.
-
-Gavan saw it all imperturbably--how, in boyhood, the apprehension of it
-would have cut into him!--and it all seemed really very good--as the
-furniture to a fairy-tale; the sweet, dim, silly tapestry was part of
-the peace. How Eppie saw it he didn’t know; he didn’t care; and she
-seemed willing not to care, either, about what he saw or thought. Eppie
-had for him in their fairy-tale all the unexacting loveliness of summer
-nature, healing, sunny, smiling. He had been really ill, he knew that
-now, and that the peace was in part the languor of convalescence, and,
-for the sake of his recovery, she seemed to have become a part of
-nature, to ask no questions and demand no dues.
-
-To have her so near, so tender, so untroubling, was like holding in his
-hands a soft, contented wild bird. He could, he thought, have held it
-against his heart, and the heart would not have throbbed the faster.
-
-There was nothing in her now of the young Valkyrie of mists and frosts,
-shaking spears and facing tragedy with stern eyes. She threatened
-nothing. She saw no tragedy. It was all again as if, in a bigger, more
-beautiful way, she gave him milk to drink from a silver cup. Together
-they drank, no potion, no enchanted, perilous potion, but, from the cup
-of innocent summer days, the long, sweet dream of an Eternal Now.
-
-To-day, for the first time, the hint of a cloud had crept into the sky.
-
-“And to-morrow, Eppie, ends our tête-à-tête,” he said. “Or will Grainger
-make as little of a third as the general and Miss Barbara?”
-
-“He sha’n’t spoil things, if that’s what you mean,” said Eppie.
-
-She wore a white dress and a white hat wreathed with green; the emerald
-drops trembled in the shadow of her hair. She made him think of some
-wandering princess in an Irish legend, with the white and green and the
-tranquil shining of her eyes.
-
-“Not our things, perhaps; but can’t he interfere with them? He will want
-to talk with you about all the things we go on so happily without
-talking of.”
-
-“I’ll talk to him and go on happily with you.”
-
-It was almost on his lips to ask her if she could marry Grainger and
-still go on happily, like this, with him, Gavan. That it should have
-seemed possible to ask it showed how far into fairy-land they had
-wandered; but it was one of the turnings that one didn’t choose to take;
-one was warned in one’s sleep of lurking dangers on that road. It might
-lead one straight out of fairy-land, straight into uncomfortable waking.
-
-“How happily we do go on, Eppie,” was what he did choose to say. “More
-happily than ever before. What a contrast this--to East London.”
-
-She glanced at him. “And to Surrey.”
-
-“And to Surrey,” he accepted.
-
-“Surrey was worse than East London,” she said.
-
-“I didn’t know how much of a strain it had been until I got away from
-it.”
-
-“One saw it all in your face.”
-
-“‘One’ meaning a clever Eppie, I suppose. But, yes, I had a bad moment
-there.”
-
-The memory of that heave of sod had no place in fairy-land, even less
-place than the forecast of an Eppie married to Jim Grainger, and he
-didn’t let his thought dwell on it even when he owned to the bad
-moment, and he was thinking, really with amusement over her
-unconsciousness, of the two means of escape from it that he had found to
-his hand,--the pistol and her letter,--when she took up his words with a
-quiet, “Yes, I knew you had.”
-
-“Knew that I had had a strain, you mean?”
-
-“No, had a bad moment,” she answered.
-
-“You saw it in my face?”
-
-“No. I knew. Before I saw you.”
-
-He smiled at her. “You have a clairvoyant streak in your Scotch blood?”
-
-She smiled back. “Probably. I knew, you see.”
-
-Her assurance, with its calm over what it knew, really puzzled him.
-
-“Well, what did you know?”
-
-She had kept on quietly smiling while she looked at him, and, though she
-now became grave, it was not as if for pain but for thankfulness. “It
-was in the evening, the day after I wrote to you, the day your father
-was buried. I went to my room to dress for dinner, my room next yours,
-you know. And I was looking out,--at the pine-tree, the summer-house
-where we played, and, in especial, I remember, at the white roses that I
-could smell in the evening so distinctly,--when I knew, or saw, I don’t
-know which, that you were in great suffering. It was most of all as if I
-were in you, feeling it myself, rather than seeing or knowing. Then,”
-her voice went on in its unshaken quiet, “I did seem to see--a grave;
-not your father’s grave. You were seeing it, too,--a green grave. And
-then I came back into myself and knew. You were in some way,--going. I
-stood there and looked at the roses and seemed only to wait intensely,
-to watch intensely. And after that came a great calm, and I knew that
-you were not going.”
-
-She quietly looked at him again,--her eyes had not been on him while she
-spoke,--and, though he had paled a little, he looked as quietly back.
-
-He found himself accepting, almost as a matter of course, this deep,
-subconscious bond between them.
-
-But in another moment, another realization came. He took her hand and
-raised it to his lips.
-
-“I always make you suffer.”
-
-“No,” she answered, though she, now, was a little pale, “I didn’t
-suffer. I was beyond, above all that. Whatever happened, we were really
-safe. That was another thing I knew.”
-
-He relinquished the kissed hand. “Dear Eppie, dear, dear Eppie, I am
-glad that this happened.”
-
-It had been, perhaps, to keep the dream safely around them that she had
-shown him only the calm; for now she asked, and he felt the echo of that
-suffering--that shared suffering--in it, “You had, then, chosen to go?”
-
-Somehow he knew that they were safe in the littler sense, that she would
-keep the dream unawakened, even if they spoke of the outside life.
-“Yes,” he said, “you saw what was happening to me, Eppie. I had chosen
-to go. But your letter came, and, instead, I chose to come to you.”
-
-She asked no further question, walking beside him with all her
-tranquillity.
-
-But, to her, it was not in a second childhood, not in a fairy-tale, that
-they went. She was tranquil, for him; a child, for him; healing,
-unexacting nature, for him. But she knew she had not needed his
-admission to know it, that it was life and death that went together.
-
-Sometimes, as they walked, the whole glory of the day melted into a
-phantasmagoria, unreal, specious, beside the intense reality of their
-unspoken thoughts, his thoughts and hers; those thoughts that left them
-only this little strip of fairy-land where they could meet in peace.
-Thoughts only, not dislikes, not indifferences, sundered them. Their
-natures, through all nature’s gamut, chimed; they looked upon each
-other--when in fairy-land--with eyes of love. But above this accord was
-a region where her human breath froze in an icy airlessness, where her
-human flesh shattered itself against ghastly precipices. To see those
-thoughts of Gavan’s was like having the lunar landscape suddenly glare
-at one through a telescope. His thoughts and hers were as real as life
-and death; they alone were real; only--and this was why, under its
-burden, Eppie’s heart throbbed more deeply, more strongly,--only, life
-conquered death. No, more still,--for so the strange evening vision had
-borne its speechless, sightless witness,--life had already conquered
-death. She had not needed him to tell her that, either.
-
-And these days were life; not the dream he thought them, not the
-fairy-tale, but balmy dawn stealing in, fresh, revivifying, upon his
-long, arctic night; the flush of spring over the lunar landscape. So
-she saw it with her eyes of faith.
-
-The mother was strong in her. She could bide her time. She could see
-death near him and, so that he should not see her fear, smile at him.
-She could play games with him, and wait.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Jim Grainger arrived that evening, and Gavan was able to observe, at the
-closest sort of quarters, his quondam rival.
-
-His condition was so obvious that its very indifference to observation
-took everybody into its confidence. Nobody counted with Mr. Grainger
-except his cousin, and since he held open before her eyes--with angry
-constancy, gloomy patience--the page of his devotion, the rest of the
-company were almost forced to read with her. One couldn’t see Mr.
-Grainger without seeing that page.
-
-He held it open, but the period of construing had evidently passed. All
-that there was to understand she understood long since, so that he was,
-for the most part, silent.
-
-In Eppie’s presence he would wander aimlessly about, look with an oddly
-irate, unseeing eye at books or pictures, and fling himself into deep
-chairs, where he sat, his arms folded in a sort of clutch, his head bent
-forward, gazing at her with an air of dogged, somber resolve.
-
-He was not by nature so taciturn. It was amusing to see the vehemence of
-reaction that would overtake him in the smoking-room, where his
-volubility became almost as overbearing and oppressive as his silences.
-
-He was a man at once impatient and self-controlled. His face was all
-made up of short, resolute lines. His nose, chopped off at the tip; his
-lips, curled yet compressed; the energetic modeling of his brows with
-their muscular protuberances; the clefted chin; the crest of chestnut
-hair,--all expressed a wilful abruptness, an arrested force, the more
-vehement for its repression.
-
-And at present his appearance accurately expressed him as a determined
-but exasperated lover.
-
-“Of course,” Miss Barbara said, in whispered confidence to Gavan,
-mingled pity and reprobation in her voice, “as her cousin he comes when
-he wishes to do so. But she has refused him twice already--he told me so
-himself; and, simply, he will not accept it. He only spoke of it once,
-and it was quite distressing. It really grieved me to hear him. He said
-that he would hang on till one or the other of them was dead.”
-Grainger’s words in Miss Barbara’s voice were the more pathetic for
-their incongruity.
-
-“And you don’t think she will have him,--if he does hang on?” Gavan
-asked.
-
-Miss Barbara glanced at him with a soft, scared look, as though his
-easy, colloquial question had turned a tawdry light on some tender,
-twilight dreaming of her own.
-
-He had wondered, anew of late, what Miss Barbara did think about him and
-Eppie, and what she had thought he now saw in her eyes, that showed
-their little shock, as at some rather graceless piece of pretence. He
-was quite willing that she should think him pretending, and quite
-willing that she should place him in Grainger’s hopeless category, if
-future events would be most easily so interpreted for her; so that he
-remained silent, as if over his relief, when she assured him, “Oh, I am
-sure not. Eppie does not change her mind.”
-
-Grainger’s presence, for all its ineffectuality, thus witnessed to by
-Miss Barbara, was as menacing to peace and sunshine as a huge
-thunder-cloud that suddenly heaves itself up from the horizon and hangs
-over a darkened landscape. But Eppie ignored the thunder-cloud; and,
-hanging over fairy-land, it became as merely decorative as an enchanted
-giant tethered at a safe distance and almost amusing in his huge
-helplessness.
-
-Eppie continued to give most of her time to Gavan, coloring her manner
-with something of a hospital nurse’s air of devotion to an obvious duty,
-and leaving Grainger largely to the general’s care while she and Gavan
-sat reading for hours in the shade of the birch-woods.
-
-Grainger often came upon them so; Eppie in her white dress, her hat cast
-aside, a book open upon her knees, and Gavan, in his white flannels,
-lying beside her, frail and emaciated, not looking at her,--Grainger
-seldom saw him look at her,--but down at the heather that he softly
-pulled and wrenched at. They were as beautiful, seen thus together, as
-any fairy-tale couple; flakes of gold wavering over their whiteness,
-the golden day all about their illumined shade, and rivulets from the
-sea of purple that surrounded them running in among the birches, making
-purple pools and eddies.
-
-Very beautiful, very strange, very pathetic, with all their serenity;
-even the unimaginative Grainger so felt them when, emerging from the
-gold and purple, he would pause before them, swinging his stick and
-eying them oddly, like people in a fairy-tale upon whom some strange
-enchantment rested. One might imagine--but Grainger’s imagination never
-took him so far--that they would always sit there among the birches,
-spellbound in their peace, their smiling, magic peace.
-
-“Come and listen to Faust, Jim. We are polishing up our German,” Eppie
-would cheerfully suggest; but Grainger, remarking that he had none to
-polish, would pass on, carrying the memory of Gavan’s impassive, upward
-glance at him and the meaning in Eppie’s eyes--eyes in which, yes, he
-was sure of it, and it was there he felt the pathos, some consciousness
-seemed at once to hide from and to challenge him.
-
-“Is he ill, your young Palairet?” he asked her one day, when they were
-alone together in the library. His rare references to his own emotions
-made the old, cousinly intimacy a frequent meeting-ground.
-
-He noticed that a faint color drifted into Eppie’s cheek when he named
-Gavan.
-
-“He is as old as you are, Jim,” she remarked.
-
-“He looks like a person to be taken care of, all the same.”
-
-“He has been ill. He took care of some one else, as it happens. He
-nursed his father for months.”
-
-“Um,” Grainger gave an inarticulate grunt, “just about what he’s fit
-for, isn’t it? to help dying people out of the world.”
-
-Eppie received this in silence, and he went on: “He looks rather like a
-priest, or a poet--something decorative and useless.”
-
-“Would you call Buddha decorative and useless?”
-
-“After all, Palairet isn’t a Hindoo. One expects something more normal
-from a white man.”
-
-His odd penetration was hurting her, but she laughed at his complacent
-Anglo-Saxondom. “If you want a white man, what do you make of the one
-who wrote the Imitation?”
-
-“Make of him? Nothing. Nor any one else, I fancy. What does your young
-Palairet do?” Grainger brought the subject firmly back from her
-digression.
-
-Eppie was sitting in the window-seat, and, leaning her head back, framed
-in an arabesque of creepers, she now owned, after a little pause, and as
-if with a weariness of evasion she was willing to let him see as she
-did: “Nothing, really.”
-
-“Does he care about anything?” Grainger placed himself opposite her,
-folding his arms with an air of determined inquiry.
-
-And again Eppie owned, “He believes in nothing, so how can he care?”
-
-“Believes in nothing? What do you mean by that?”
-
-“Well,” with a real sense of amusement over the inner icy weight, she
-was ready to put it in its crudest, most inclusive terms, “he doesn’t
-believe in immortality.”
-
-Grainger stared, taken aback by the ingenuous avowal.
-
-“Immortality? No more do I,” he retorted.
-
-“Oh, yes, you do,” said Eppie, looking not at him but out at the summer
-sky. “You believe in life and so you do believe in immortality, even
-though you don’t know that you do. You are, like most energetic people,
-too much preoccupied with living to know what your life means, that’s
-all.”
-
-“My dear child,”--Grainger was fond of this form of appellation, an
-outlet for the pent-up forces of his baffled tenderness,--“any one who
-is alive finds life worth while without a Paradise to complete it, and
-any one who isn’t a coward doesn’t turn from it because it’s also
-unhappy.”
-
-“If you think that Gavan does that you mistake the very essence of his
-skepticism, or, if you like to call it so, of his faith. It’s not
-because he finds it unhappy that he turns from it, but because he finds
-it meaningless.”
-
-“Meaningless?--a place where one can work, achieve, love, suffer?”
-
-Grainger jerked out the words from an underlying growl of protest.
-
-Eppie now looked from the sky to him, her unconscious ally. “Dear old
-Jim, I like to hear you. You’ve got it, all. Every word you say implies
-immortality. It’s all a question of being conscious of one’s real needs
-and then of trusting them.”
-
-“Life, here, now, could satisfy my needs,” he said.
-
-She kept her eyes on his, at this, for a grave moment, letting it have
-its full stress as she took it up with, “Could it? With death at the end
-of it?” and without waiting for his answer she passed from the personal
-moment. “You said that life was worth while, and you meant, I suppose,
-that it was worth while because we were capable of making it good rather
-than evil.”
-
-“Well, of course,” said Grainger.
-
-“And a real choice between good and evil is only possible to a real
-identity, you’ll own?”
-
-“If you are going to talk metaphysics I’ll cut and run, I warn you.
-Socratic methods of tripping one up always infuriate me.”
-
-“I’m only trying to talk common-sense.”
-
-“Well, go on. I agree to what you say of a real identity. We’ve that, of
-course.”
-
-“Well, then, can an identity destroyed at death by the destruction of
-the body be called real? It can’t, Jim. It’s either only a result of the
-body, a merely materialistic phenomenon, or else it is a transient,
-unreal aspect of some supremely real World-Self and its good and its
-evil just as fated by that Self’s way of thinking it as the color of its
-hair and eyes is fated by nature. And if that were so the sense of
-freedom, of identity, that gives us our only sanction for goodness,
-truth, and worth, would be a mere illusion.”
-
-Her earnestness, as she worked it out for him, held his eyes more than
-her words his thoughts. He was observing her with such a softening of
-expression as rarely showed itself on his virile countenance.
-
-“You’ve thought it all out, haven’t you?” he said.
-
-“I’ve tried to. Knowing Gavan has made me. It has converted me,” she
-smiled.
-
-“So that’s your conversion.”
-
-“Oh, more than that. I know that I’m _in_ life; _for_ it, and that’s
-more than all such reasoning.”
-
-“And you believe that you’ll go on forever as you are now,” he said. His
-eyes dwelt on her: “Young and beautiful.”
-
-“_Forever_; what queer words we must use to try to express it. We are in
-Forever now. It’s just that one casts in one’s lot, open-eyed, with
-life.”
-
-“And has Palairet cast in his with death?”
-
-Again the change of color was in her cheek, but it was to pallor now.
-
-“He thinks so.”
-
-“And he doesn’t frighten you?”
-
-She armed herself to smile over Gavan’s old question. “Why should he?”
-
-Grainger left her for some moments of aimless, silent wandering. He came
-back and paused again before her. He did not answer her.
-
-“I throw in my lot with life, too, Eppie,” he said, “and I ask no more
-of it than the here and the now of our human affair. But that I do ask
-with all my might, and if might can give it to me, I’ll get it.”
-
-She looked up at him gravely, without challenge, with a sympathy too
-deep for pity.
-
-“At all events,” he added slowly, “at all events, in so far, our lots
-are cast together.”
-
-“Yes,” she assented.
-
-His eyes studied hers; his keen mind questioned itself: Could a woman
-look so steadily, with such a clear, untroubled sympathy, upon such a
-love as his, were there no great emotion within her, controlling her,
-absorbing her, making her indifferent to all lesser appeals? Had this
-negative, this aimless, this ambiguous man, captured, without any fight
-for it, her strong, her reckless heart? So he questioned, while Eppie
-still answered his gaze with eyes that showed him nothing but their
-grave, deep friendship.
-
-“So it’s a contest between life and death?” he said at last.
-
-“Between me and Gavan you mean?”
-
-The shield of their personal question had dropped from her again, and
-the quick flush was in her cheek.
-
-“Oh, I come into it, too,” he ventured.
-
-“You don’t, in any way, depend on it, Jim.”
-
-“So you say.” His eyes still mercilessly perused her. “That remains to
-be seen. If you lose, perhaps I shall come into it.”
-
-Eppie found no answer.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-It was night, and Eppie, Gavan, and Jim Grainger were on the lawn before
-the house waiting for a display of fireworks.
-
-Grainger was feeling sore for his own shutting-out from the happy
-child-world of games and confidences that the other two inhabited, for
-it had been to Gavan that she had spoken of her love for fireworks and
-he who had at once sent for them.
-
-Grainger was sore and his heart heavy, and not only it seemed to him, on
-his own account. Since the encounter in the library there had been a
-veil between him and Eppie, and through it he seemed to see her face as
-waiting the oncoming of some unknown fate. Grainger could not feel that
-fate, whatever the form it took, as a happy one.
-
-She stood between them now, in her white dress, wrapped around with a
-long, white Chinese shawl, and the light from the open window behind
-them fell upon her hair, her neck, her shoulders, and the shawl’s soft,
-thick embroideries that were like frozen milk.
-
-Gavan and Grainger leaned against the deep creepers of the old walls,
-Gavan’s cigarette a steady little point of light, the glow of
-Grainger’s pipe, as he puffed, coming and going in sharp pulses of
-color.
-
-Aunt Barbara sat within at the open window, and beyond the gates, at the
-edge of the moor, the general and the gardener, dark figures fitfully
-revealed by the light of lanterns, superintended the preparations.
-
-The moment was like that in which one watches a poised orchestra, in
-which one waits, tense and expectant, for the fall of the conductor’s
-bâton and for the first, sweeping note.
-
-It seemed to break upon the stillness, sound made visible, when the
-herald rocket soared up from the dark earth, up to the sky of stars.
-
-Bizarre, exquisite, glorious, it caught one’s breath with the swiftness,
-the strength, the shining, of its long, exultant flight; its languor of
-attainment; its curve and droop; the soft shock of its blossoming into
-an unearthly metamorphosis of splendor far and high on the zenith.
-
-The note was struck and after it the symphony followed.
-
-Like a ravished Ganymede, the sense of sight soared amazed among
-dazzling ecstasies of light and movement.
-
-Thin ribbons of fire streaked the sky; radiant sheaves showered drops of
-multitudinous gold; fierce constellations of color whirled themselves to
-stillness on the night’s solemn permanence; a rain of stars drifted
-wonderfully, with the softness of falling snow, down gulfs of space. And
-then again the rockets, strong, suave, swift, and their blossoming
-lassitude.
-
-Eppie gazed, silent and motionless, her uplifted profile like a child’s
-in its astonished joy. Once or twice she looked round at Gavan and at
-Grainger,--always first at Gavan,--smiling, and speechless with delight.
-Her folded arms had dropped to her sides and the shawl fell straightly
-from her shoulders. She made one think of some young knight, transfixed
-before a heavenly vision, a benediction of revealed beauty. The trivial
-occasion lent itself to splendid analogies. The strange light from above
-bathed her from head to foot in soft, intermittent, heavenly color.
-
-Suddenly, in darkness, Grainger seized her hand. She had hardly felt the
-pressure, short, sharp with all the exasperation of his worship, before
-it was gone.
-
-She did not turn to look at him. More than the unjustifiableness of the
-action, its unexpectedness, she felt a pain, a perplexity, as for
-something mocking, incongruous. And as if in instinctive seeking she
-turned her eyes on Gavan and found that he was looking at her.
-
-Was it, then, her eyes, seeking and perplexed, that compelled him; was
-it his own enfranchised impulse; was it only a continuation of
-fairy-land fitness, the child instinct of sharing in a unison of touch a
-mutual wonder? In the fringes of her shawl his hand sought and found her
-hand. Another rose of joy had expanded on the sky; and they stood so,
-hand in hand, looking up.
-
-Eppie looked up steadily; but now the outer vision was but a dim symbol,
-a reflection, vaguely seen, of the inner vision that, in a miracle of
-accomplished growth, broke upon her. She did not think or know. Her
-heart seemed to dilate, to breathe itself away in long throbs, that
-worshiped, that trembled, that prayed. Her strength was turned to
-weakness and her weakness rose to strength, and, as she looked up at the
-sky, the stars, the dream-like constellations that bloomed and drifted
-away, universes made and unmade on the void, her mind, her heart, her
-spirit were all one prayer and its strength and its humility were one.
-
-She had known that she loved him, but not till now that she loved him
-with a depth that passed beyond knowledge; she had known that he loved
-her, but not till now had she felt that all that lived in him was hers
-forever. His voice, his eyes, might hide, might deny, but the seeking,
-instinctive hand confessed, dumbly, to all.
-
-She had drawn him to her by her will; she had held him back from death
-by her love. His beloved hand clasped hers; she would never let him go.
-
-Looking up at the night, the stars, holding his hand, she gave herself
-to the new life, to all that it might mean of woe and tragedy. Let it
-lead her where it would, she was beside him forever.
-
-Yet, though her spirit held the sky, the stars, her heart, suffocated
-and appalled with love, seemed to lie at his feet, and the inarticulate
-prayer, running through all, said only, over and over, “O God, God.”
-
-Meanwhile Grainger leaned against the wall, puffing doggedly at his
-pipe, unrepentant and unsatisfied.
-
-“There, that is the end,” Miss Barbara sighed. “How very, very pretty.
-But they have made me quite sleepy.”
-
-A few fumes still smoldered at the edge of the moor, and the night, like
-an obscure ocean, was engulfing the lights, the movements; after the
-radiance the darkness was thick, oppressive.
-
-Eppie knew, as Gavan released her hand, that his eyes again sought hers,
-but she would not look at him. What could they say, here and now?
-
-He went on into the house, and Grainger, lingering outside, detained her
-on the steps. “You forgive me?” he said.
-
-She had almost forgotten for what, but fixing her eyes and thoughts upon
-him, she said, “Yes, Jim, of course.”
-
-“I couldn’t stand it,--you were so lovely,” said Grainger; “I didn’t
-know that I was such a sentimental brute. But I had no business not to
-stand it. It’s my business in life to stand it.”
-
-“I am so sorry, Jim,” Eppie murmured. “You know, I can do
-nothing--except forgive you.”
-
-“I am not ungrateful. I know how good it is of you to put up with me. Do
-I bother you too much, Eppie?”
-
-“No, Jim dear; you don’t.”
-
-He stood aside for her to enter the house. He saw that, with all her
-effort to be kind, her thought passed from him. Pausing to knock the
-ashes of his pipe against the wall, he softly murmured, “Damn,” before
-following her into the house.
-
-Eppie, in her own room, put out her candle and went to the window.
-
-Leaning out, she could see the soft maze of tree-tops emerge from the
-dim abyss beneath. The boughs of the pine-tree made the starlit sky pale
-with their blackness.
-
-This was the window where she and Gavan had stood on the morning of
-Robbie’s death. Here Gavan had shuddered, sobbing, in her arms. He had
-suffered, he had been able to love and suffer then.
-
-The long past went before her, this purpose in it all, her purpose; in
-all the young, unconscious beginnings, in the reunion, in her growing
-consciousness of something to oppose, to conquer, to save. And to-night
-had consecrated her to that sacred trust. What lived in him was hers.
-But could she keep him in life? The memory, a dark shadow, of the deep
-indifference that she had seen in his contemplative eyes went with a
-chill over her.
-
-Leaning out, she conquered her own deep fear, looking up at the stars
-and still praying, “O God, God.”
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-She could not read his face next day. It showed a change, but the
-significance of the change was hidden from her. He knew that she knew;
-was that it? or did he think that they could still pretend at the
-unchanged fairy-tale where one clasped hands simply, like children? Or
-did he trust her to spare them both, now that she knew?
-
-When they were alone, this, more than all, the pale, jaded face seemed
-to tell her, it would be able to hide nothing; but its strength was in
-evasion; he would not be alone with her.
-
-All the morning he spent with the general and in the afternoon he went
-away, a book under his arm, down to the burn.
-
-From the library window Eppie watched him go. She could see for a long
-time the flicker of his white figure among the distant birches.
-
-She sat in a low chair in the deep embrasure of the window-seat, silent
-and motionless. She felt, after the night’s revelation, an apathy,
-mental and physical; a willing pause; a lull of the spirit, that rested
-in its accepted fate, should it be joyful or tragic. The very fact of
-such acceptance partook of both tragedy and joy.
-
-Grainger was with her, walking, as usual, up and down the room, glancing
-at her as he passed and repassed.
-
-He felt, all about him, within and without, the pressure of some crisis;
-and his ignorance, his intuitions, struggling within him, made a
-consciousness, oddly mingled, of sharp pain, deep dread, and,
-superficially, a suffocating irritation, continually rising and
-continually repressed.
-
-Eppie’s aspect intensified the mingled consciousness. Her figure, in its
-thin dress of black and white, showed lassitude. With her head thrown
-back against the chair, her hands, long, white, inert, lying along the
-chair-arms, she looked out from the cool shadow of the room at the day,
-fierce in its blue and gold, its sunlight and its wind.
-
-He had seen Gavan pass, so strangely alone; he had watched her watching
-of him. She was languid; but she was patient, she was strong. That was
-part of the suffocation, that such strength, such patience, should be
-devoted to ends so undeserving. More than by mere jealousy, though that
-seethed in him, he was oppressed by the bitter sense of waste, of the
-futile spending of noble capacity; for, more than all, she was piteous;
-there came the part of pain and dread, the presage of doom that weighed
-on his heart.
-
-In her still figure, her steady look out at the empty, splendid vault of
-blue, the monotonous purple stretches of the moor, his unesthetic,
-accurate mind felt, with the sharp intuition that carried him so much
-further than any conscious appreciation, a symbol of the human soul
-contemplating the ominous enigma of its destiny. She made him dimly
-think of some old picture he had seen, a saint, courageous, calm,
-enraptured, in the luminous pause before a dark, accepted martyrdom. He
-did violence to the simile, shaking it off vehemently, with a clutch at
-the sane impatience of silly fancies.
-
-Stopping abruptly before her, though hardly knowing for what end, he
-found himself saying, and the decisive words, as he heard, rather than
-thought them, had indeed the effect of shattering foolish visions, “I
-shall go to-day, Eppie.”
-
-In seeing her startled, pained, expostulatory, he saw her again, very
-sanely, as an unfortunate woman bent on doing for herself and unable to
-hide her situation from his keen-sightedness. For really he didn’t know
-whether a hopeless love-affair or a hopeless marriage would the more
-completely “do” for her.
-
-“My dear Jim, why to-day?” Eppie asked in a tone of kindest protest.
-
-He was glad to have drawn her down to the solid ground of his own
-grievances. She hurt him less there.
-
-“Why not to-day?” he retorted.
-
-She replied that, if for no better reason, the weather was too lovely
-not to be enjoyed by them all together.
-
-“Thanks, but I don’t care about the weather. Nor do I care,” Grainger
-went on, taking the sorry comfort that his own mere ill-temper afforded
-him, “to watch other people’s enjoyment--of more than weather. I’m not
-made of such selfless stuff as that.”
-
-She understood, of course; perhaps she had all along understood what he
-was feeling more clearly than clumsy he had, and she met all that was
-beneath the mannerless words with her air of sad kindliness.
-
-“You can share it, Jim.”
-
-“No, I can’t share it. I share nothing--except the weather.”
-
-She murmured, as she had the night before, that she was sorry, adding
-that she must have failed; but he interrupted her with: “It’s not that.
-You are all right. You give me all you can. It’s merely that you can’t
-give me anything I want. I came to see if there was any chance for me,
-and all I do see is that I may as well be off. I do myself no good by
-staying on,--harm, rather; you may begin to resent my sulkiness and my
-boorish relapses from even rudimentary good manners.”
-
-“I have resented nothing, Jim. I can’t imagine ever resenting
-anything--from you.”
-
-“Ah, that’s just the worst of it,” Grainger muttered.
-
-“For your own sake,” Eppie went on, “you are perhaps wise to go. I own
-that I can’t see what happiness you can find in being with me, while you
-feel as you do.”
-
-“While I feel as I do,” he repeated, not ironically, but as if weighing
-the words in a sort of wonder. “That ‘while’ is funny, Eppie. You are
-right. I don’t find happiness, and I came to seek it.” The “while” had
-cut deep. He paused, then added, eying her, “So I’ll go, and leave
-Palairet to find the happiness.”
-
-Eppie was silent. Paler than before, her eyes dropped, she seemed to
-accept with a helpless magnanimity whatever he might choose to say. “You
-find me impertinent,”--Grainger, standing before her, clutched his arms
-across his chest and put his own thought of himself into the
-words,--“brutal.”
-
-Without looking up at him she answered: “I am so fond of you, so near
-you, that I suppose I give you the right.”
-
-The patient words, so unlike Eppie in their patience, the downcast eyes,
-were a torch to his exasperation.
-
-“I can take it, then--the right?” he said. “I am near enough to say the
-truth and to ask it, Eppie?”
-
-She rose and walked away from him.
-
-With the sense of hot pursuit that sprang up in him he felt himself as
-ruthless as a boy, pushing through the thickets of reticence, through
-the very supplications of generosity, to the nest of her secret. It was
-not joy he sought, but his own pain, and to see it clearly, finally. He
-must see it. And when Eppie, her back to him, leaning her arm on the
-mantel and looking down into the empty cavern of the great
-chimney-place, answered, accepting all his implications, “Gavan hasn’t
-found any happiness,” he said, “He finds all that he asks for.”
-
-It was as if he had wrenched away the last bough from the nest, and the
-words gave him, with their breathless determination, an ugly feeling of
-cruel, breaking malignity.
-
-Eppie’s face was still turned from him so that he could not see how she
-bore the rifling, but in the same dulled and gentle voice she answered,
-“He doesn’t ask what you do.”
-
-At that Grainger’s deepest resentment broke out.
-
-“Doesn’t ask your love? No, I suppose not. The man’s a mollusk,--a
-wretched, diseased creature.”
-
-He had struck at last a flash from her persistent gentleness. She faced
-him, and he saw that she tried to smile over deep anger.
-
-“You say that because Gavan is not in love with me? It is a sick fancy
-that sees every man not in love with me as sick too.”
-
-She had taken up a weapon at last, she really challenged him; and he
-felt, full on that quivering nerve of dread, that she defended at once
-herself and the man she loved from her own and from his unveiling.
-
-It made a sort of rage rise in him.
-
-“A man who cares for you,--a man who depends on you,--as he does,--a man
-whom you care for,--so much,--is a bloodless vampire if he
-doesn’t--respond.”
-
-When he had driven the knife in like that, straight up to the hilt, he
-hardly knew whether his anger or his adoration were the greater; for, as
-if over a disabling wound, she bent her head in utter surrender, quite
-still for a moment, and then saying only, while she looked at him as if
-more sorry for him than for herself, “You hurt me, Jim.”
-
-Tears of fury stood in his eyes. “You hurt, too. My love for you--a
-disease. _My_ love, Eppie!”
-
-“Forgive me.”
-
-“Forgive you! I worship everything you say or do!”
-
-“It was that it hurt too much to see--what you did, with your eyes.”
-
-“Then--then--you don’t deny it,--if I have eyes to see, he too must
-see--how much you care?”
-
-“I don’t deny it.”
-
-“And if I have courage enough to ask it, you have courage enough to
-answer me? You love him, Eppie?”
-
-He had come to her, his eyes threatening her, beseeching her, adoring
-her, all at once. She saw it all--all that he felt, and the furious pity
-that was deeper than his own deep pain. She could resent nothing, deny
-nothing. As she had said, he was so near.
-
-She put her hand on his shoulder, keeping him from her, yet accepting
-him as near, and then all that she found to say--but it was in a voice
-that brought a rapt pallor to his face--was, “Dear Jim.”
-
-He understood her--all that she accepted, all that she avowed. Her hand
-was that of a comrade in misfortune. She forgave brutality from a heart
-as stricken as his. She forgave even his cruelly clear seeing of her own
-desperate case--a seeing that had revealed to her that it was indeed
-very desperate. But if she too was stricken, she too was resolute, and
-she could do no more for him than look with him at the truth. Their
-eyes recognized so many likenesses in each other.
-
-He took the hand at last in both his own, looking down at it, pressing
-it hard.
-
-“Poor darling,” he said.
-
-“No, Jim.”
-
-“Yes; even if he loves you.”
-
-“Even if he doesn’t love me--and he does love me in a strange, unwilling
-way; but even if he doesn’t love me,--as you and I mean love,--I am not
-piteous.”
-
-“Even if he loves you, you are piteous.” All his savagery had fallen
-from him. His quiet was like the slow dropping of tears.
-
-“No, Jim. There is the joy of loving. You know that.”
-
-“You are more piteous than I, Eppie. You, _you_, to sue to such a man.
-He is the negation of everything you mean. To live with him would be
-like fighting for breath. If you marry him,--if you bring him to
-it,--he’ll suffocate you.”
-
-“No, Jim,” she repeated,--and now, looking up, he saw in those beloved
-eyes the deep wells of solemn joy,--“I am the stronger.”
-
-“In fighting, yes, perhaps. Not in every-day, passive life. He’ll kill
-you.”
-
-“Even if he kills me he’ll not conquer me.”
-
-He shook away the transcendentalism with a gentle impatience, “Much good
-that would do to me, who would only know that you were gone. Oh,
-Eppie!--“
-
-He pressed and let fall her hand.
-
-The words of the crisis were over. Anything else would be only, as it
-were, the filling in of the grave.
-
-He had walked away from her to the window, and said presently, while he
-looked out: “And I thought that you were ambitious. I loved you for it,
-too. I didn’t want a wife who would acquiesce in the common lot or make
-a virtue of incapacity. I wanted a woman who would rather fail,
-open-eyed, in a big venture than rest in security. You would have
-buckled the sword on a man and told him that he must conquer high places
-for you. You would have told him that he must crown you and make you
-shine in the world’s eyes, as well as in his own. And I could do it. You
-are so worthy of all the biggest opportunities and so unfit for little
-places. It’s so stupid, you know,” he finished, “that you aren’t in love
-with me.”
-
-“It is stupid, I own it,” Eppie acquiesced.
-
-He found a certain relief in following these bitterly comic aspects of
-their case and presently took it up again with: “I am so utterly the man
-for you and he is so utterly not the man. I don’t mean that I’m big
-enough or enough worth your while, but at least I could give you
-something, and I could fight for you. He won’t fight, for you, or for
-anything.”
-
-“I shall have to do all the fighting if I get him.”
-
-“You want him so that you don’t mind anything else. I see that.”
-
-“Exactly. For a long time I didn’t know how I loved him just because I
-had always taken all that you are saying for granted, in the funniest,
-most naïvely conceited way; I took it for granted that I was a very big
-person and that the man I married must stand for big opportunities. Now,
-you see,” she finished, “he is my big opportunity.”
-
-He was accepting it all now with no protest. “Next to no money, I
-suppose?” he questioned simply.
-
-“Next to none, Jim.”
-
-“It means obscurity, unless a man has ambition.”
-
-“It means all the things I’ve always hated.” She smiled a little over
-these strange old hatreds.
-
-Again a silence fell, and it was again Grainger who broke it.
-
-“You may as well let me have the last drop of gall,” he said. “Own that
-if it hadn’t been for him you might have come to care for me.”
-
-Still he did not look at her, and it was easier, so, to let him have the
-last gulp.
-
-“I probably should.”
-
-He meditated the mixed flavor for some moments; pure gall would have
-been easier to swallow. And he took refuge at last in school-boy
-phraseology. “I should like to break all the furniture in the room.”
-
-“I should like to break some, too,” she rejoined, but she laughed out
-suddenly at this anticlimax, and, even before the unbroken heaviness of
-the gaze now turned on her, that comic aspect of their talk, the dearly,
-sanely comic, carried her laugh into a peal as boyish as his words.
-
-Grainger still gazed at her. “I love that in you,” he said--“your laugh.
-You could laugh at death.”
-
-“Ah, Jim,” she said, smiling on, though with the laughter tears had come
-to her eyes, “it’s a good deal more difficult to laugh at life,
-sometimes. And we both have to do a lot of living before we can laugh at
-death.”
-
-“A lot of living,” he repeated. His stern, firm face had a queer grimace
-of pain at the prospect of it, and again she put out her hand to him.
-
-“Let me count for as much as I can, always,” she said. “You will always
-count for so much with me.”
-
-He had taken the hand, and he looked at her in a long silence that
-promised, accepted, everything.
-
-But an appeal, a demand, wistful yet insistent, came into his silence as
-he looked--looked at the odd, pale, dear face, the tawny, russet hair,
-the dear, deep eyes.
-
-“I’m going now,” he said, holding to his breast the hand she had given
-him. “And I will ask one thing of you--a thing I’ve never had and never
-shall, I suppose, again.”
-
-“What is it, Jim?” But before his look she almost guessed and the
-guessing made her blanch.
-
-“Let me take you in my arms and kiss you,” said Grainger.
-
-“Ah, Jim!” Seeing herself as cruel, ungenerous, she yet, in a recoil of
-her whole nature, seemed to snatch from him a treasure, unclaimed, but
-no longer hers to give.
-
-Grainger eyed her. “You could. You would--if it weren’t for him.”
-
-“You understand that, too, Jim. I could and would.”
-
-“He robs me of even that, then--your gift of courageous pity.”
-
-His comprehension had arrested the recoil. And now the magnanimity she
-felt in him, the tragic force of the love he had seen barred from her
-forever, set free in her something greater than compassion and deeper
-than little loyalties, deeper than the lesser aspects of her own deep
-love. It was that love itself that seemed, with an expansion of power,
-to encircle all life, all need, all sorrow, and to find joy in
-sacrificing what was less to what was greater.
-
-He saw the change that, in its illumined tenderness, shut away his
-craving heart yet drew him near for the benison that it could grant, and
-as she said to him, “No, Jim, he shall not rob you,” his arms went round
-her.
-
-She shut her eyes to the pain there must be in enduring his passion of
-gratitude; but, though he held her close, kissing her cheeks, her brow,
-her hair, it was with a surprising, an exquisite tenderness.
-
-The pain that came for her was when,--pausing to gaze long into her
-face, printing forever upon his mind the wonderful memory of what she
-could look like, for him--he kissed her lips; it came in a pang of
-personal longing; in a yearning, that rose and stifled her, for other
-arms, other kisses; and, opening her eyes, she saw, an ironic answer to
-the inner cry, Gavan’s face outside, turned upon her in an instant of
-swift passing.
-
-Grainger had not seen. He did not speak another word to her. The kiss
-upon her lips had been in farewell. He had had his supreme moment. He
-let her go and left her.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-Gavan came up from the burn, restless and dissatisfied.
-
-He had wanted solitude, escape; but when he was alone, and walking
-beside the sun-dappled water, the loneliness weighed on him and he had
-seemed to himself walking with his own ghost, looking into eyes familiar
-yet alien, with curiosity and with fear. Was it he or that phantom of
-the solitude who smiled the long, still smile of mockery?
-
-How he wanted something and how he wanted not to want; to be freed from
-the intolerable stirring and striving within him, as of a maimed thing,
-with half-atrophied wings, that could never rise and fly to its goal. It
-was last night that had wakened this turmoil, and as he walked his
-thought turned and turned about those moments under the dazzling sky
-when he had found her hand in the fringes of her shawl.
-
-He knew that there had been a difference in the yielding of her hand, as
-he had known, in his own helpless stretching out for it in the darkness,
-another impulse than that of childlike tenderness. It had been as if
-some deep, primeval will beneath his own had stretched his hand out,
-searching in the dark; and with the strange blissfulness of so standing
-with her beneath the stars, there came a strange, new fear, as though he
-no longer knew himself and were become an automaton held by some
-incalculable force.
-
-Wandering through the woods in the hope of reëntering nature’s
-beneficent impersonality, he felt no anodynes--only that striving and
-stirring within him of maimed limbs and helpless wings.
-
-There was no refuge in nature, and there was none in himself. The
-thought of Eppie as refuge did not form itself, but it was again in
-seeking, as if through darkness for he knew not what, that he turned to
-the house. And then, on all his tangled mood, fell the vibrating shock
-of that vision at the window.
-
-With his quick looking away he did not know whether Eppie had seen him
-see. He went on, knowing nothing definite, until, suddenly, as if some
-fierce beast had seized him, he found himself struggling, choking, torn
-by a hideous, elemental jealousy.
-
-He stood still in the afternoon sunlight as he became aware of this
-phenomenon in himself, his hands involuntarily clenched, staring as if
-at a palpable enemy.
-
-The savage, rudimentary man had sprung up in him. He hated Grainger. He
-longed to beat him into the earth, to crush the breath out of him; and
-for a moment, most horrible of all,--a moment that seemed to set fangs
-in his throat,--he could not tell whether he more hated Eppie or more
-desired to tear her from the rival, to seize her and bear her away, with
-a passion untouched by any glamour.
-
-And Gavan was conscious, through it all, that only inhuman heights made
-possible such crumbling, crashing falls into savagedom; conscious that
-Grainger could not have known such thoughts. They were as ugly as those
-of a Saint Anthony. Wholesome manhood would recoil from their
-debasement. He, too, recoiled, but the debasement was within him, he
-could not flee from it. The moment of realization, helpless realization,
-was long. Ultra-civilization stood and watched barbarian hordes swarm
-over its devastated ruins. Then, with a feeling of horrible shame, a
-shame that was almost a nausea, he went on into the house.
-
-In his own room he sat down near the window, took his head in his hands,
-the gesture adding poignancy to his humiliation, and gazed at the truth.
-He had stripped himself of all illusion only to make himself the more
-helpless before its lowest forms. More than the realized love was the
-realized jealousy; more than the anguish at the thought of having lost
-her was the rage of the dispossessed, unsatisfied brute. Such love
-insulted the loved woman. He could not escape from it, but he could not
-feel the added grace and piety that, alone, could make it tolerable.
-From the fixed contemplation of his own sensations his mind dropped
-presently to the relief of more endurable thoughts. To feel the mere
-agony of loss was a dignifying and cleansing process. For, apparently,
-he had lost her. It was strange, almost unthinkable, that it should be
-so, and stranger the more he thought. He, who had never claimed, had no
-right to feel a loss. But he had not known till now how deep was his
-consciousness of their union.
-
-She had long ago guessed the secret of the voiceless, ambiguous love
-that could flutter only as far as pain, that could never rise to
-rapture. She had guessed that behind its half-tortured, momentary smile
-was the impersonal Buddha-gaze; and because she so understood its
-inevitable doom she had guarded herself from its avowal--guarded herself
-and him. He had trusted her not to forget the doom, and not to let him
-forget it, for a moment. But all the time he had known that in her eyes
-he was captive to some uncanny fate, and that could she release him from
-his chains her love would answer his. He had been sure of it. Hence his
-present perplexity.
-
-Perplexity began to resolve itself into a theory of commonplace
-expediency, and, feeling the irony of such resentment, he resented this
-tame sequel to their mute relationship.
-
-Unconsciously, he had assumed that had he been able to ask her to be his
-wife she would have been able to consent. Her courage, in a sense, would
-have been the reward of his weakness, for what he would see in himself
-as weakness she would see as strength. Courage on her part it certainly
-would have needed, for what a dubious offering would his have been:
-glamour, at its best,--a helpless, drugged glamour,--and, at its worst,
-the mere brute instinct that, blessedly, this winding path of thought
-led him away from.
-
-But she had probably come to despair of releasing him from chains, had
-come to see clearly that at the end of every avenue she walked with him
-the Buddha statue would be waiting in a serenity appalling and
-permanent; and, finding last night the child friendship dangerously
-threatened, discovering that the impossible love was dangerously real
-and menaced both their lives, she had swiftly drawn back, she had
-retreated to the obvious safeguards of an advantageous marriage. He
-couldn’t but own that she was wise and right; more wise, more
-right,--there was the odd part of it, the unadjusted bit where
-perplexity stung him,--than he could have expected her to be. Ambition
-and the common-sense that is the very staff of life counted for much, of
-course; but he hadn’t expected them to count so soon, so punctually, as
-it were.
-
-Perhaps,--and his mind, disentangled from the personal clutch where such
-an interpretation might have hurt or horrified, safe once more on its
-Stylites pillar, dwelt quite calmly on this final aspect,--perhaps, with
-her, too, sudden glamour and instinct had counted, answering the appeal
-of Grainger’s passion. He suspected the whole fabric of the love between
-men and women to be woven of these blind, helpless impulses,--impulses
-that created their own objects. Her mind, with its recognition of
-danger, had chosen Grainger as a fitting mate, and, in his arms, she had
-felt that justification by the senses that people so funnily took for
-the final sanctification of choice.
-
-This monkish understanding of the snares of life was quite untouched by
-monkish reprobation; even the sense of resentment had faded. And it
-spoke much for the long training of his thought in the dissecting and
-destroying of transitory desires that he was presently able to
-contemplate his loss--as he still must absurdly term it--with an icy
-tranquillity.
-
-A breathlessness, as from some drastic surgical operation, was beneath
-it, but that was of the nature of a mere physical symptom, destined to
-readjust itself to lopped conditions; and with the full turning of his
-mind from himself came the fuller realization of how well it was with
-Eppie and a cold, acquiescent peace that, in his nature, was the
-equivalent for an upwelling of religious gratitude, for her salvation.
-
-But the stress of the whole strange seizure, wrench and renouncement had
-told on him mentally and physically. Every atom of his being, as if from
-some violent concussion, seemed altered, shifted.
-
-The change was in his face when, in the closing dusk of the day, he went
-down to the library. It was not steeled to the hearing of the news that
-must await him: such tension of endurance had passed swiftly into his
-habitual ease; but a look of death had crossed and marked it. It looked
-like a still, drowned face, sinking under deep waters, and Eppie, in her
-low chair near the window, where she had sat for many hours, saw in his
-eyes the awful, passionless detachment from life.
-
-After his pause at the unexpected sight of her, sitting there alone, a
-pause in which she did not speak, although he saw that her eyes were on
-him, he went on softly down the room, glancing out at each window as he
-passed it; and he looked, as he went, like an evening moth, drifting,
-aimless, uncanny.
-
-Outside, the moor stretched like a heavily sighing ocean, desolate and
-dark, to the horizon where, from behind the huge rim of the world, the
-sun’s dim glow, a gloomy, ominous red, mounted far into the sky.
-
-Within the room, a soft, magical color pervaded the dusk, touching
-Eppie’s hair, her hands, the vague folds and fallings of her dress.
-
-He waited for her to speak, though it seemed perfectly fitting that
-neither should. In the silence, the sadness of this radiant gloom, they
-needed no words to make more clear the accepted separation, and the
-silence, the sadness, were like a bleeding to quiet, desired death.
-
-The day was dying, and the instable, impossible love was dying, too.
-
-She had let go, and he quietly sank.
-
-But when she spoke her words were like sharp air cutting into drowned
-lungs.
-
-“I saw you pass this afternoon, Gavan.”
-
-From the farthest window, where he had paused, he turned to her.
-
-“Did you, Eppie?”
-
-“Didn’t you see that I did?”
-
-“I wasn’t sure.” He heard the flavor of helplessness in his own voice
-and felt in her a hard hostility, pleased to play with his helplessness.
-
-“Why did you not speak of what you saw?” Her anger against him was
-almost like a palpable presence between them in the dark, glowing room.
-He began to feel that through some ugly blunder he was very much at her
-mercy, and that, for the first time, he should find little mercy in her;
-and, for the first time, too, a quick hostility rose in him to answer
-hers. It was as if he had tasted too deeply of release; all his strength
-was with him to fight off the threat of the returning grasp.
-
-“Why should I?” he asked, letting her see in his gaze at her that just
-such a hard placidity would meet any interpretation she chose to give.
-
-“Didn’t you care to understand?”
-
-“I thought that I did understand.”
-
-“What did you think, then?” Eppie asked.
-
-He had to give her the helpless answer. “That you had accepted him.”
-
-He knew, now, that she hadn’t, and that for him to have thought so was
-to have cruelly wronged her; and she took it in a long silence, as
-though she must give herself time to see it clearly, to adjust herself
-to it and to all that it meant--in him, for her.
-
-What it meant, in her and for him, was filling his thoughts with a dizzy
-enough whirl of readjustment, and there mingled with it a strange
-after-flavor of the jealousy, and of the resentment against her; for,
-after all, though he had probably now an added reason for considering
-himself a warped wretch, there had been some reason for his mistake: if
-she hadn’t accepted him, why had he seen her so?
-
-“Jim is gone,” she said at last.
-
-“Because--It was unwillingly, then?”
-
-The full flame of her scorn blazed out at that, but he felt, like an
-echo of tears in himself, that she would have burst into tears of
-wretchedness if she had not been able so to scorn him.
-
-“Unwillingly! Why should you think him insolent and me helpless? Can
-you conceive of nothing noble?” she said.
-
-“I am sorry, Eppie. I have been stupid.”
-
-“You have--more than stupid. He was going and he asked me for that. And
-I gave it--proudly.”
-
-“I am sorry,” Gavan repeated. “I see, of course. Of course it was
-noble.”
-
-“You should be more than sorry. You knew that I did not love him.”
-
-“I am more than sorry. I am ashamed,” he answered gravely.
-
-He had the dignity of full contrition; but under it, unshaken after all,
-was the repudiation of the nearness that her explanation revealed. His
-heart throbbed heavily, for he saw, as never before, how near it was;
-yet he had never feared her less. He had learned too much that afternoon
-to fear her. He was sure of his power to save her from what he had so
-fully learned.
-
-He looked away from her and for long out at the ebbing red, and it was
-the unshaken resolve that spoke at last. “But all the same I am sorry
-that it was only that. He would have made you happy.”
-
-“You knew that I did not love him,” Eppie repeated.
-
-“With time, as his wife, you might love him.” Facing her, now, folding
-his arms, he leaned back against the mantel at his far end of the room.
-“I know that I’ve seemed odiously to belittle and misunderstand you, and
-I am ashamed, Eppie--more ashamed than you can guess; but, in another
-way, it wasn’t so belittling, either. I thought you very wise and
-courageous. I thought that you had determined to take the real thing
-that life offered you and to turn your back, for once and for all,
-on--on unreal things.” He stopped at that, as though to let it have its
-full drop, and Eppie, her eyes still fixed on him from her distant
-chair, made no answer and no sign of dissent.
-
-As he spoke a queer, effervescent blitheness had come to him, a light
-indifference to his own cruelty; and the hateful callousness of his
-state gave him a pause of wonder and interest. However, he couldn’t help
-it; it was the reaction, no doubt, from the deep disgust of his
-abasement, and it helped him, as nothing else would have done,
-thoroughly to accomplish his task.
-
-“He can give you all the things you need,” he went on, echoing poor
-Grainger’s _naïf_ summing up of his own advantages. “He has any amount
-of money, and a very big future before him; and then, really above all,
-you do care for him so much. You see the same things in life. You
-believe in the same things; want the same things. If you would take him
-he would never fail you in anything.”
-
-Still her heavy silence was unbroken. He waited in vain for a sign from
-her, and in the silence the vibration of her dumb agony seemed to reach
-him, so that, with all the callousness, he had to conquer an impulse to
-go to her and see if she wept. But when he said, “I wish you would take
-him, Eppie,” and she at last answered him, there were no tears in her
-voice.
-
-“I will never take him.”
-
-“Don’t say that,” he replied. “One changes.”
-
-“Is that a taunt?”
-
-“Not a taunt--a reminder.”
-
-She rose and came to him, walking down the long room, past the somber
-illuminations of the windows, straight to him. They stood face to face,
-bathed in the unearthly light. All their deep antagonism was there
-between them, almost a hatred, and the love that swords clashed over.
-
-“You do not believe that of me,” she said.
-
-He was ready and unfaltering, and was able to smile at her, a bright,
-odd smile. “I believe it of any one.”
-
-It was love that eyed him--love more stern, more relentless in its
-silence than if she had spoken it, and never had she been so near as
-when, sending her clarion of open warfare across the abyss, she said, “I
-will never change--to you.”
-
-The words, the look,--a look of solemn defiance,--shattered forever the
-palace of pretence that they had dwelt in for so long. Till now, it
-might have stood for them. In its rainbow chambers they might still have
-smiled and sorrowed and eluded each other, only glanced through the
-glittering casements at the dark realities outside; but when the word of
-truth was spoken, casements, chambers, turrets, fell together and
-reality rushed in. She had spoken the word. After that it was impossible
-to pretend anything.
-
-Gavan, among the wreck, had grown pale; but he kept his smile fixed,
-even while he, too, spoke the new language of reality.
-
-“I am afraid of you, then.”
-
-“Of course you are afraid of me.”
-
-Still he smiled. “I am afraid _for_ you.”
-
-“Of course you are. You have your moments of humanity.”
-
-“I have. And so I shall go to-morrow,” said Gavan.
-
-She looked at him in silence, her face taking on its haggard,
-unbeautiful aspect of strange, rocky endurance. And never had his mind
-been more alert, more mocking, more aloof from any entanglement of
-feeling than while he saw her love and his; saw her sorrow and his
-sorrow--his strange, strange sorrow that, like a sick, helpless child,
-longed, in its darkness, its loneliness, to hide its head on her breast
-and to feel her arms go round it. Love and sorrow were far, far away--so
-far that it was as if they had no part at all in himself, as if it were
-not he that felt them.
-
-“Are you so afraid as that?” Eppie asked.
-
-“After last night?” he answered. “After what I felt when I saw you here,
-with him? After this? Of course I am as afraid as that. I must flee--for
-your life, Eppie. I am its shadow--its fatal shadow.”
-
-“No, I am yours. Life is the shadow to you.”
-
-“Well, on both sides, then, we must be afraid,” he assented.
-
-She made no gesture, no appeal. Her face was like a rock. It was only
-that deep endurance and, under it, that deep threat. Never, never would
-she allure; never draw him to her; never build in her cathedral a
-Venusberg for him. He must come to her. He must kneel, with her, before
-her altar. He must worship, with her, her God of suffering and triumph.
-And, the dying light making her face waver before his eyes with a
-visionary strangeness, stern and angelic, he seemed to see, deep in her
-eyes, the burning of high, sacramental candles.
-
-That was the last he saw. In silence she turned and went. And what she
-left with him was the sad, awed sense of beauty that he knew when
-watching kneeling multitudes bowed before the great myth of the
-Church,--in silence, beneath dim, soaring heights. He was near humanity
-in such moments of self-losing, when the cruder myth of the great world,
-built up by desire, slipped from it. And Eppie, in this symbolic seeing
-of her, was nearer than when he desired or feared her. Beauty, supreme
-and disenfranchising, he saw. He did not know what he felt.
-
-Far away, on the horizon, in the gloomy waste of embers, the sun’s deep
-core still burned, and in his heart was a deep fatigue, like the sky’s
-slow smoldering to gray.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Grainger had gone, and Gavan announced his departure for the next
-morning. The situation was simplified, he felt, by Eppie’s somber
-preoccupation. He was very willing that she should be seen as a gloomy
-taker of scalps and that his own should be supposed to be hanging at her
-girdle. The resultant muteness and melancholy in the general and Miss
-Barbara were really a comfort. The dear old figures in the tapestry
-seemed fading to-night into mere plaintive shadows, fixing eyes of sad
-but unquestioning contemplation upon the latent tragedies of the
-foreground figures.
-
-It was a comfort to have the tapestry so reticent and so submissive,
-but, all the same, it made the foreground tragedy, for his eyes,
-painfully distinct. He could look at nothing else. Eppie seemed to
-stand, with her broken and bleeding heart, in the very center of the
-design. For the first time he saw what the design was--saw all of it,
-from the dim reaches of the past, as working to this end.
-
-The weaving of fate was accomplished. There she stood, suffering,
-speechless, and he, looking at her, fatal shuttle of her doom that he
-was, felt under all the ashes a dull throbbing.
-
-After dinner he smoked a cigar with the general, who, tactfully, as to
-one obviously maimed, spoke only of distant and impersonal matters.
-Gavan left him over some papers in the quiet light of the smoking-room
-and went to the library. Eppie, with her broken heart, was not there.
-The night was very hot. By an open window Miss Barbara sat dozing, her
-hands upturned with an appealing laxity on her knees, sad even in her
-sleep.
-
-Eppie was not there and she had not spoken one word to him since those
-last words of the afternoon. Perhaps she intended to speak no more, to
-see him no more. Pausing on the threshold, he was now conscious of a
-slow, rising misery.
-
-If he was to be spared the final wrench, he was also to be robbed of
-something. He hadn’t known, till then, of how much. He hadn’t known,
-while she stood there before him, this fully revealed Eppie, this Eppie
-who loved far beyond his imagining, far beyond prudence, ambition, even
-happiness, what it would be not to see her again, to part from her
-speechlessly, and with a sort of enmity unresolved between them.
-
-The cathedral simile was still with him, not in her interpretation of
-it, as the consecration of human love, but in his own, as a place of
-peace, where together they might still kneel in farewell.
-
-But she barred him out from that; she wouldn’t accept such peace. He
-could only submit and own that she was perhaps altogether right in
-risking no more battles and in proudly denying to him the opportunity of
-any reconciling. She was right to have it end there; but the core among
-the embers ached.
-
-He wandered out into the dark, vague night, sorrowfully restless.
-
-It was not a radiant night. The trees and the long undulations of the
-moorland melted into the sky, making all about a sea of enveloping
-obscurity. The moor might have been the sky but for its starlessness;
-and there were few stars to-night, and these, large and soft, seemed to
-float like helpless expanded flowers on a still ocean.
-
-A night for wandering griefs to hide in, to feel at one with, and, with
-an instinct that knew that it sorrowed but hardly knew that it sought,
-Gavan went on around the house, through the low door in the garden wall,
-and into the garden.
-
-Here all the warmth and perfume of the summer day seemed still to exhale
-itself in a long sigh like that of a peaceful sleeper. Earth, trees,
-fruit, and flowers gave out their drowsy balms. Veiled beauty, dreaming
-life, were beneath, above, about him, and the high walls inclosed a
-place of magic, a shadow paradise.
-
-He walked on, past white phlox, white pansies, and white foxglove,
-through the little trellis where white jasmine starred its festoons of
-frail, melancholy foliage, and under the low boughs of the small,
-gnarled fruit-trees. Near the summer-house he paused, looking in at the
-darkness and seeing there the figures of the past--two children at play.
-His heart ached on dully, the smoldering sorrow rising neither to
-passionate regret nor to passionate longing, acquiescing in its own
-sorrow that was part of the vision. Moved by that retrospect, he stepped
-inside.
-
-The sweet old odor, so well remembered, half musty, half fresh, of
-cobwebbed wood, lichened along the lintels and doorway beams, assailed
-him while he groped lightly around the walls, automatically reaching out
-his hand to the doll’s locker, the little row of shelves, the low,
-rustic bench and the table that, he remembered as it rocked slightly
-under his touch, had always been unsteady. All were in their old,
-accustomed places, and among them he saw himself a ghost, some
-sightless, soundless creature hovering in the darkness.
-
-The darkness and the familiar forms he evoked from it grew oppressive,
-and he stepped out again into the night, where, by contrast with the
-uncanny blindness, he found a new distinctness of form, almost of color,
-and where a memory, old and deep, seemed to seize him with gentle,
-compelling hands, in the fragrance of the white roses growing near the
-summer-house. Wine-like and intoxicating, it filled the air with magic;
-and he had gone but a few steps farther when, like a picture called up
-by the enchantment, he saw the present, the future too, it seemed, and,
-with a shock that for all its quiet violence was not unexpected, stood
-still to gaze, to feel in the one moment of memory and forecast all his
-life gathered into his contemplation.
-
-Eppie sat on a low garden bench in the garden’s most hidden corner. With
-the fresh keenness of sight he could see the clustering white roses on
-the wall behind her, see against them the darkness of her hair, the
-whiter whiteness of her dress, as she sat there with head a little bent,
-looking down, the long white shawl folded about her.
-
-It was no longer the Eppie of the past, not even the Eppie of the
-present: the present was only that long pause. It was the future that
-waited there, silent, motionless, almost as if asleep; waited for the
-word and touch that would reveal it.
-
-She had not heard his light step, and it seemed to be in the very
-stillness of his pause that the sense of his presence came to her.
-Raising her head she looked round at him.
-
-He could only see the narrow oval of her face, but he felt her look; it
-seized him, compelling as the fragrance had been--compelling but not
-gentle. He felt it like firm hands upon him while he walked on slowly
-toward her, and not until he was near her, not until he had sat down
-beside her, did he see as well as feel her fixed and hostile gaze.
-
-All swathed and infolded as she was, impalpable and unsubstantial in the
-darkness, her warm and breathing loveliness was like the aroma of a
-midnight flower. She was so beautiful sitting there, a blossoming of the
-darkness, that her beauty seemed aware of itself and of its appeal; and
-it was as if her soul, gazing at him, dominated the appeal; menaced him
-should he yield to it; yet loved, ah, loved him with a love the greater
-for the courage, the will, that could discipline it into this set, stern
-stillness.
-
-Yes, here was the future, and what was he to do with it? or, rather,
-what was it to do with him? He was at her mercy.
-
-He had leaned near her, his hand on the bench, to look into her eyes,
-and in a shaken, supplicating voice he said, “Eppie, Eppie, what do you
-want?”
-
-Without change, looking deeply at him, she answered, “You.”
-
-That crashed through him. He was lost, drowned, in the mere sense of
-beauty--the beauty of the courage that could so speak and so hold him at
-the point of a sword heroically drawn. And with the word the future
-seized him. He hid his face upon her shoulder and his arms went round
-her. Her breast heaved. For a moment she sat as if stricken with
-astonishment. Then, but with sternness, as of a just and angry mother,
-she clasped him, holding him closely but untenderly.
-
-“I did not mean this,” she said.
-
-“No; but you _are_ it,” Gavan murmured.
-
-She held him in the stern, untender clasp, her head drawn back from him,
-while, slowly, seeking her words over the tumult she subdued, she said:
-“It’s _you_ I want--not your unwilling longing, not your unwilling love.
-I want you so that I can be really myself; I want you so that you can be
-really yourself.”
-
-He strained her to him, hiding his face on her breast.
-
-“Can’t you live? Can’t you be--if I help you?” she asked him.
-
-For a long time he was silent, only pressing closely to her as though
-to hide himself from her questions--from his own thoughts.
-
-He said at last: “I can’t think, Eppie. Your words go like birds over my
-head. Your suffering, my longing, hurt me; but it’s like the memory of a
-hurt. I am apart from it, even while I feel it. Even while I love
-you--oh, Eppie! Eppie!--I don’t care. But when we are like this--at last
-like this--I am caught back into it all, all that I thought I’d got over
-forever, this afternoon,--all the dreadful dream--the beautiful dream.
-It’s for this I’ve longed--you have known it: to hold you, to feel your
-breath on me, to dream with you. How beautiful you are, how sweet! Kiss
-me, Eppie,--darling, darling Eppie!”
-
-“I will not kiss you. It would be real to me.”
-
-He had raised his head and was seeing now the suffering of her shadowy
-eyes, the shadowy lips she refused him tragically compressed lest they
-should tremble. Behind her pale head and its heavy cloud of hair were
-the white roses giving out--how his mind reeled with the memory of
-it--the old, sweet, wine-like fragrance.
-
-He closed his eyes to the vision, bending his lips to her hand, saying:
-“Yes, that’s why I wanted to spare you--wanted to run away.”
-
-In the little distance now of his drawing from her, even while he still
-held her, his cheek on her hand, she could speak more easily.
-
-“It is that that enrages me,--your mystic sickness. I am awake, but you
-aren’t even dreaming. You are drugged--drugged with thought not strong
-enough to find its real end. You have paralyzed yourself. No argument
-could cure you. No thought could cure you. Only life could cure you. You
-must get life, and to get it you must want it.”
-
-“I don’t want it. I can’t want it. I only want you,” said Gavan, with
-such a different echo.
-
-She understood, more fully than he, perhaps, the helpless words.
-
-Above his bowed head, her face set, she looked out into the night. Her
-mind measured, coldly it seemed to her, the strength of her own faith
-and of his negation.
-
-Her love, including but so far transcending all natural cravings, had
-its proud recoil from the abasement--oh, she saw it all!--that his
-limitation would bring to it. Yet, like the mother again, adapting truth
-to the child’s dim apprehension, leading it on by symbols, she brooded
-over her deep thoughts of redemption and looked clearly at all dangers
-and all hopes. Faith must face even his unspiritual seeing. Faith must
-endure his worse than pagan love. Bound to her by every natural tie, her
-strength must lift him, through them, to their spiritual aspect, to
-their reality. Life was her ally. She must put her trust in life. She
-consecrated herself to it anew. Let it lead her where it would.
-
-The long moment of steady forecast had, after its agony of shame and
-fear, its triumph over both.
-
-He felt the deep sigh that lifted her breast--it was almost a sob; but
-now her arms took him closely, gently, to her and her voice had the
-steadfastness, no longer of rejection, but of acceptance.
-
-“Gavan, dream with me, then; that’s better than being drugged. Perhaps
-you will wake some day. There, I kiss you.”
-
-She said it, and with the words his lips were on hers.
-
-In the long moment of their embrace he had a strange intuition.
-Something was accomplished; some destiny that had led them to this hour
-was satisfied and would have no more to do with them. He seemed almost
-to hear this thought of finality, like the far, distant throbbing of a
-funeral bell, though the tolling only shut them the more closely into
-the silence of the wonderful moment.
-
-Drugged? No, he was not drugged. But was she really dragging him down
-again, poor child, into her own place of dreams?
-
-After the ecstasy, in the darkness of her breast and arms, he knew again
-the horrible surge of suffering that life had always meant to him. He
-saw, as though through deep waters, the love, the strife, the clinging
-to all that went; he saw the withering of dreams, and death, and the
-implacable, devouring thought that underlay all life and found its joy
-in the rending sorrow of the tragedy it triumphed over.
-
-It was like a wave catching him, sucking him down into a gulf of
-blackness. The dizziness of the whirlpool reeled its descending spiral
-through his brain. Eppie was the sweet, the magical, the sinister
-mermaid; she held him, triumphing, and he clung to her, helpless; while,
-like the music of rushing waters, the horror and enchantment of life
-rang in his ears. But the horror grew and grew. The music rang on to a
-multitudinous world-cry of despair,--the cry of all the torments of the
-world turning on their rack of consciousness,--and, in a crash of
-unendurable anguish, came the thought of what it all would mean; what it
-all might mean now--now--unless he could save her; for he guessed that
-her faith, put to the test, might accept any risk, might pay any price,
-to keep him. And the anguish was for her.
-
-He started from her, putting away her arms, yet pinioning her, holding
-her from him with a fierceness of final challenge and looking in the
-darkness into her darker eyes.
-
-“Suppose I do,” he said. “Suppose I marry you,”--for he must show her
-that some tests she should not be put to. “Suppose I take you and
-reëenter the dream. Look at it, Eppie. Look at your life with me. It
-won’t stay like this, you know. Look far, far ahead.”
-
-“I do,” she said.
-
-“No, no. You don’t. You can’t. It would, for a year, perhaps, perhaps
-only for a day, be dream and ecstasy,--ah, Eppie, don’t imagine that I
-don’t know what it would be,--the beauty, the joy, the forgetfulness, a
-radiant mist hanging over an abyss. Your will could keep me in it--for a
-year, perhaps. But then, the inevitable fading. See what comes. Eppie,
-don’t you know, don’t you feel, that I’m dead--dead?”
-
-“No; not while you suffer. You are suffering now--for me.”
-
-“The shadow of a shadow. It will pass. No, don’t speak; wait; as you
-said, we can’t argue, we can’t, now, go into the reasons of it. As you
-said, thought can’t cure me; it’s probably something far deeper than our
-little thought: it’s probably the aspect we are fated to be by that one
-reality that makes and unmakes our dreams. And I’m not of the robust
-Western stuff that can work in its dream,--create more dream, and find
-it worth while. I’ve not enough life in me to create the illusion of
-realities to strive for. Action, to me, brings no proof of life’s
-reality; it’s merely a symptom of life, its result, not its cause or its
-sanction. And the power of action is dead in me because the desire of
-life is dead,--unless you are there to infect me with it.”
-
-“I am here, Gavan.”
-
-“Yes, you are,--can I forget it? And I’m yours--while you want me. But,
-Eppie, look at it; look at it straight. See the death that I will bring
-into the very heart of your life. See the children we may have; see what
-they would mean to you, and what they would mean to me: Transient
-appearances; creatures lovely and pathetic, perhaps, but empty of all
-the significance that you would find in them. I would have no love for
-our children, Eppie, as you understand love. We will grow old, and all
-the glamour will go--all the passion that holds us together now. I will
-be kind--and sorry; but you will know that, beside you, I watch you
-fading into listlessness, indifference, death, and know that even if I
-am to weep over you, dead, I will feel only that you have escaped
-forever, from me, from consciousness, from life. Eppie, don’t delude
-yourself with one ray of hope. To me your faith is a mirage. And it all
-comes to that. Have you faith enough to foresee all the horror of
-emptiness that you’ll find in me for the sake of one year of ecstasy?”
-
-She had not moved while he spoke--spoke with a passion, a vehemence,
-that was like a sudden rushing into flame of a forest fire. There was
-something lurid and terrible in such passion, such vehemence, from him.
-It shook him as the forest is shaken and was like the ruinous force of
-the flames. She sat, while he held her, looking at it, as he had told
-her, “straight.” She knew that she looked at everything. Her eyes went
-back to his eyes as she gave him her answer.
-
-“Not for the sake of the year of ecstasy; in spite of it.”
-
-“For what, then?” he asked, stammering suddenly.
-
-Her eyes, with their look of dedication, held him fast.
-
-“For the sake of life--the long life--together; the life without the
-glamour, when my faith may altogether infect you.”
-
-“You believe, Eppie, that you are so much stronger than I?”
-
-“It’s not that I’m strong; but life is stronger than anything; life is
-the only reality. I am on the winning side.”
-
-“So you will hope?”
-
-“Hope! Of course I hope. You could never make me stop hoping--not even
-if you broke my heart. You may call it a mirage if you like--that’s
-only a word. I’ll fill your trance with my mirage, I’ll flood your
-whiteness with my color, and, God grant, you will feel life and know
-that you are at last awake. You are right--life _is_ endless contest,
-endless pain; it’s only at that price that we can have it; but you will
-know that it’s worth the price. I see it all, Gavan, and I accept. I
-accept not only the certainty of my own suffering, but the certainty of
-yours.”
-
-Through the night they gazed at each other, his infinite sadness, her
-infinite valor. Their faces were like strange, beautiful dreams--dreams
-holding in their dimness such deep, such vivid significance. They more
-saw the significance--that sadness, that valor--than its embodiment in
-eyes and lips.
-
-It was finally with a sense of realization so keen that it trembled on
-the border of oblivion, of the fainting from over-consciousness, that
-Gavan once more laid his head upon her breast. He, too, accepting, held
-her close,--held her and all that she signified, while, leaning above
-him, her cheek against his hair, she said in a voice that over its depth
-upon depth of steadiness trembled at last a little: “I see it all.
-Imagine what a faith it is that is willing to make the thing it loves
-most in the whole world suffer--suffer horribly--so that it may live.”
-
-He gave a long sigh. At its height emotion dissolved into a rapt
-contemplation. “How beautiful,” he said.
-
-“Beautiful?” she repeated, with almost a gentle mockery for the word.
-“Well, begin with beauty if you will. You will find that--and more
-besides--as an end of it all.”
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-She left him in the garden. They had talked quietly, of the past, of
-their childhood, and, as quietly, of the future--their immediate
-marriage and departure for long, wonderful voyages together. His head
-lay on her breast, and often, while they spoke of that life together, of
-the homecoming to Cheylesford Lodge and when he heard her voice tremble
-a little, he kissed the dear hand he held.
-
-When she rose at last and stood before him, he said, still holding her
-hands, that he would sit on there in the darkness and think of her.
-
-She felt the languor of his voice and told him that he was very tired
-and would do much better to go to bed and forget about her till morning;
-but, looking up at her, he shook his head, smiling: “I couldn’t sleep.”
-
-So she left him; but, before she went, after the last gazing pause in
-which there seemed now no discord, no strife, nothing to hide or to
-threaten, she had suddenly put her arms around his neck, bending to him
-and murmuring, “Oh, I love you.”
-
-“I seem to have loved you forever, Eppie,” he said.
-
-But, once more, in all the strange oblivion of his acceptance, there had
-been for him in their kiss and their embrace the undertone of anguish,
-the distant tolling--as if for something accomplished, over forever--of
-a funeral bell.
-
-He watched her figure--white was not the word for it in this midnight
-world--pass away into the darkness. And, as she disappeared, the bell
-seemed still to toll, “Gone. Gone. Gone.”
-
-So he was alone.
-
-He was alone. The hours went by and he still sat there. The white roses
-near him, they, too, only a strange blossoming of darkness, symbolized,
-in their almost aching sweetness, the departed presence. He breathed in
-their fragrance; and, as he listened to his own quiet breaths, they
-seemed those of the night made conscious in him. The roses remembered
-for him; the night breathed through him; it was an interchange, a
-mingling. Above were the deep vaults of heaven, the profundities of
-distance, the appalling vastness, strewn with its dust of stars. And it,
-too, was with him, in him, as the roses were, as his own breath came and
-went.
-
-The veils had now lifted from the night and it was radiant, all its
-stars visible; and veil after veil seemed drifting from before his soul.
-
-A cool, light breeze stirred his hair.
-
-Closing his eyes, at last, his thought plunged, as his sight had
-plunged, into gulf under gulf of vacancy.
-
-After the unutterable fatigue, like the sinking under anæsthesia, of his
-final yielding, he could not know what was happening to him, nor care.
-It had often happened before, only never quite like this. It was, once
-more, the great peace, lapping wave after wave, slow, sliding,
-immeasurable waves, through and through him; dissolving thought and
-feeling; dissolving all discord, all pain, all joy and beauty.
-
-The hours went by, and, as they went, Eppie’s face, like a drift of
-stars, sank, sank into the gulf. What had he said to her? what promised?
-Only the fragrance of the roses seemed to remember, nothing in himself.
-For what had he wanted? He wanted nothing now. Her will, her life, had
-seized him; but no, no, no,--the hours quietly, in their passing seemed
-to say it,--they had not kept him. He had at last, after a lifelong
-resistance, abandoned himself to her, and the abandonment had been the
-final step toward complete enfranchisement. For, with no effort now of
-his own at escape, no will at all to be free, he had left her far behind
-him, as if through the waters of the whirlpool his soul, like a light
-bubble, had softly, surely, risen to the air. It had lost itself, and
-her.
-
-He thought of her, but now with no fear, no anguish. A vast indifference
-filled him. It was no longer a question of tearing himself from her, no
-longer a question of saving himself and her. There was no question, nor
-any one to save. He was gone away, from her, from everything.
-
-When the dawn slowly stole into the garden, so that the ghosts of day
-began to take shape and color, Gavan rose among them. The earth was damp
-with dew; his hair and clothes were damp. Overhead the sky was white,
-and the hills upon it showed a flat, shadowless green. Between the
-night’s enchantments of stillness, starriness, veiled, dreaming beauty
-and the sunlit, voluble enchantments of the day,--songs and flights of
-birds, ripple and shine of water, the fugitive, changing color of land
-and sky,--this hour was poor, bare, monotonous. There wasn’t a ray of
-enchantment in it. It was like bleak canvas scenery waiting for the
-footlights and a decorated stage.
-
-Gavan looked before him, down the garden path, shivering a little. He
-was cold, and the sensation brought him back to the old fact of life,
-that, after all, was there as long as one saw it. The coming of the
-light seemed to retwist once more his own palely tinted prism of
-personality, and with the cold, with the conscious looking back at the
-night and forward to the day, came a long, dull ache of sadness. It was
-more physical than mental; hunger and chill played their part in it, he
-knew, while, as the prism twined its colors, the fatiguing faculty of
-analysis once more built up the world of change and diversity. He looked
-up at the pale walls of the old house, laced with their pattern of
-creepers. The pine-tree lay like an inky shadow across it, and, among
-the branches, were the windows of Eppie’s room, the window where he and
-she had stood together on the morning of Robbie’s death--a white,
-dew-drenched morning like this. There she slept, dear, beautiful, the
-shadow of life. And here he stood, still living, after all, in their
-mutual mirage; still to hurt her. He didn’t think of her face, her
-voice, her aspect. The only image that came was of a shadow--something
-darkly beautiful that entranced and suffocated, something that,
-enveloping one, shut out peace and vacancy.
-
-His cold hands thrust into his pockets, he stood thinking for a moment,
-of how he would have to hurt her, and of how much less it was to be than
-if what they had seen in the night’s glamour had been possible.
-
-He wondered why the mere fact of the night’s revelation--all those
-passing-bell hours--had made it so impossible for him to go on, by sheer
-force of will, with the play. Why couldn’t he, for her sake, act the
-lifelong part? In her arms he would know again the moments of glamour.
-But, at the mere question, a sickness shuddered through him. He saw now,
-clearly, what stood in the way: suffering, hideous suffering, for both
-of them--permanent, all-pervading suffering. The night had proved too
-irrevocably that any union between them was only momentary, only a
-seeming, and with her, feeling her faith, her hope, her love, he could
-know nothing but the undurable discord of their united and warring
-notes.
-
-Could life and death be made one flesh?
-
-The horror of the thought spurred him from his rigor of contemplation.
-That, at least, had been spared her. Destiny, then, had not meant for
-them that final, tragic consummation.
-
-He threaded his way rapidly among the paths, the flower-beds, under the
-low boughs of the old fruit-trees. She had left the little door near
-the morning-room open for him, and through it he entered the still
-house.
-
-It wasn’t escape, now, from her, but from that pressing horror, as of
-something, that, unless he hastened, might still overtake them both. Yet
-outside her door he paused, bent his head, listened with a strange
-curiosity, helpless before the nearness of that loved, that dreaded
-being, the warring note that he sought yet fled from.
-
-She slept. Not a sound stirred in the room.
-
-He closed his eyes, seeing, with a vividness that was almost a
-hallucination, her face, her wonderful face, asleep, with the dark
-rivers of her hair flowing about it.
-
-And, fixed as he was in his frozen certainty of truth, he felt, once
-more like the striking of a hand across a harp, a longing, wild and
-passionate, to enter, to take her, sleeping, in his arms, to see her
-eyes open on him; to hide himself in life, as in the darkness of her
-breast and arms, and to forget forever the piercing of inexorable
-thought.
-
-He found that his hand was on the lock and that he was violently
-trembling.
-
-It was inexorable thought, the knowledge of the horror that would await
-them, that conquered the leap of blind instinct.
-
-Half an hour later a thin, intense light rimmed all the eastern hills,
-and a cold, clear cheerfulness spread over the earth. The moors were
-purple and the sky overhead palely, immaculately blue. About the tall
-lime-trees the rooks circled, cawing, and a skylark sang far and high,
-a floating atom of ecstasy.
-
-And in the clearness Gavan’s figure showed, walking rapidly away from
-the white house, down the road that led through the heather and past the
-birch-woods, walking away from it forever.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Grainger stood in Eppie’s little sitting-room, confronting, as Gavan had
-confronted the spring before, Miss Allen’s placidly sewing figure.
-
-The flowers against which her uneventful head now bent were autumnal.
-Thickly growing Michaelmas daisies, white and purple, screened the lower
-section of the square outside. Above were the shabby tree-tops, that
-seemed heavily painted upon an equally solid sky. The square was dusty,
-the trees were dusty, the very blue of the sky looked grimed with dust.
-
-The hot air; the still flowers, not stirred by a breath of breeze; Miss
-Allen’s figure, motionless but for its monotonously moving hand, were
-harmonious in their quiet, and in contrast to them Grainger’s pervasive,
-restless, irritable presence was like a loud, incessant jangling.
-
-He walked back and forth; he picked up the photographs on the
-mantel-shelf, the books on the table, flinging them down in a succession
-of impatient claps. He threw himself heavily into chairs,--so heavily
-that Miss Allen glanced round, alarmed for the security of the
-furniture,--and he asked her half a dozen times if Miss Gifford would be
-in at five.
-
-“She is seldom late,” or, “I expect her then,” Miss Allen would answer
-in the tone of mild severity that one might employ toward an unseemly
-child over whom one had no authority.
-
-But though there was severity in Miss Allen’s voice, the acute glances
-that she stole at the clamorous guest were not unsympathetic. She placed
-him. She pitied and she rather admired him. Even while emphasizing the
-dismay of her involuntary starts when the table rattled and the chairs
-groaned, she felt a satisfaction in these symptoms of passion; for that
-she was in the presence of a passion, a hopeless and rather magnificent
-passion, she made no doubt. She associated such passions with Eppie,--it
-was trailing such clouds of glory that she descended upon the arid life
-of the little square,--and none had so demonstrated itself, none had so
-performed its part for her benefit. She was sorry that it was hopeless;
-but she was glad that it was there, in all its Promethean wrathfulness,
-for her to observe. Miss Allen felt pretty sure that this was the
-nearest experience of passion she would ever know.
-
-“In at five, as a rule, you say?” Grainger repeated for the fourth time,
-springing from the chair where, with folded arms, he had sat for a few
-moments scowling unseeingly at the pansies.
-
-He stationed himself now beside her and, over her head, stared out at
-the square. It was at once alarming and delightful,--as if the Titan
-with his attendant vulture had risen from his rock to join her.
-
-“You’ve no idea from which direction she is coming?”
-
-“None,” said Miss Allen, decisively but not unkindly. “It’s really no
-good for you to think of going out to meet her. She is doing a lot of
-different things this afternoon and might come from any direction. You
-would almost certainly miss her.” And she went on, unemphatically, but,
-for all the colorless quality of her voice, so significantly that
-Grainger, realizing for the first time the presence of an understanding
-sympathy, darted a quick look at her. “She gets in at five, just as I go
-out. She knows that I depend on her to be here by then.”
-
-So she would not be in the way, this little individual. She made him
-think, now that he looked at her more attentively, as she sat there with
-her trimly, accurately moving hand, of a beaver he had once seen swiftly
-and automatically feeding itself; her sleek head, her large, smooth
-front teeth, were like a beaver’s. It was really very decent of her to
-see that he wanted her out of the way; so decent that, conscious of the
-link it had made between them, he said presently, abruptly and rather
-roughly, “How is she?”
-
-“Well, of course she has not recovered,” said Miss Allen.
-
-“Recovered? But she wasn’t actually ill.” Grainger had a retorting air.
-
-“No; I suppose not. It was nervous prostration, I suppose--if that’s not
-an illness.”
-
-“This isn’t the place for her to recover from nervous prostration in.”
-He seemed to fasten an accusation, but Miss Allen understood perfectly.
-
-“Of course not. I’ve tried to make her see that. But,”--she was making
-now quite a chain of links,--“she feels she must work, must lose herself
-in something. Of course she overdoes it. She overdoes everything.”
-
-“Overwork, do you think? The cause, I mean?”
-
-Grainger jerked this out, keeping his eyes on the square.
-
-Miss Allen, not in any discreet hesitation, but in sincere uncertainty,
-paused over her answer.
-
-“It couldn’t be, quite. She was well enough when she went away in the
-summer, though she really isn’t at all strong,--not nearly so strong as
-she looks. She broke down, you know, at her uncle’s, in Scotland”; and
-Miss Allen added, in a low-pitched and obviously confidential voice, “I
-think it was some shock that nobody knows anything about.”
-
-Grainger stood still for some moments, and then plunging back into the
-little room, he crossed and re-crossed it with rapid strides. Her
-guessing and his knowledge came too near.
-
-Only after a long pause did Miss Allen say, “She’s really frightfully
-changed.” The clock was on the stroke. Rising, gathering up her work,
-dropping, with neat little clicks, her scissors, her thimble, into her
-work-box, she added, and she fixed her eyes on him for a moment as she
-spoke, “Do, if you can, make her--“
-
-“Well, what? Go away?” he demanded. “I’ve no authority--none. Her people
-ought to kidnap her. That’s what I’d do. Lift her out of this hole.”
-
-Miss Allen’s eyes dwelt on his while she nerved herself to a height of
-adventurous courage that, in looking back at it, amazed her. “Here she
-is,” she said, and almost whispering, “Well, kidnap her, then. That’s
-what she needs--some one stronger than herself to kidnap her.”
-
-She slid her hand through his, a panic of shyness overtaking her, and
-darted out, followed by the flutter of a long, white strip of muslin.
-
-Grainger stood looking at the open door, through which in a moment Eppie
-entered.
-
-His first feeling was one of relief. He did not, in that first moment,
-see that she was “frightfully changed.” Even her voice seemed the same,
-as she said with all the frank kindness of her welcome and surprise,
-“Why, Jim, this is good of you,” and all her tact was there, too, giving
-him an impression of the resource and flexibility of happy vitality, in
-her ignoring by glance or tone of their parting.
-
-She wore, on the hot autumn day, a white linen frock, the loose bodice
-belted with green, a knot of green at her throat, and, under the white
-and green of her little hat, her face showed color and its dear smile.
-
-Relief was so great, indeed, that Grainger found himself almost clinging
-to her hand in his sudden thankfulness.
-
-“You’re not so ill, then,” he brought out. “I heard it--that you had
-broken down--and I came back. I was in the Dolomites. I hadn’t had news
-of you since I left.”
-
-“So ill! Nonsense,” said Eppie, giving his hand a reassuring shake and
-releasing her own to pull off her soft, loose gloves. “It was a
-breakdown I had, but nothing serious. I believe it to have been an
-attack of biliousness, myself. People don’t like to own to liver when
-they can claim graceful maladies like nervous prostration,--so it was
-called. But liver, only, I fear it was. And I’m all right now, thank
-goodness, for I loathe being ill and am a horrid patient.”
-
-She had taken off her hat, pushing back her hair from her forehead and
-sinking into a chair that was against the light. The Michaelmas daisies
-made a background for the bronze and white of her head, for, as she
-rested, the color that her surprise and her swift walking had given her
-died. She was glad to rest, her smile said that, and he saw, indeed,
-that she was utterly tired.
-
-Suddenly, as he looked at her, seeing the great fatigue, seeing the
-pallor, seeing the smile only stay as if with determination, the truth
-of Miss Allen’s description was revealed to him. She was frightfully
-changed. Her smile, her courage, made him think of a _danse macabre_.
-The rhythm, the gaiety of life were there, but life itself was gone.
-
-The revelation came to him, but he felt himself clutch it silently, and
-he let her go on talking.
-
-She went on, indeed, very volubly, talking of her breakdown, of how good
-the general and her aunt had been to her, and of how getting back to her
-work had picked her up directly.
-
-“I think I’ll finally pitch my tent here,” she went on. “The interest
-grows all the time,--and the ties, the responsibility. One can’t do
-things by half measures; you know that, thorough person that you are. I
-mustn’t waste my mite of income by gadding about. I’m going to chuck all
-the rest and give myself altogether to this.”
-
-“You used to think that the rest helped you in this,” said Grainger.
-
-“To a certain extent it did, and will, for I’ve had so much that it will
-last me for a long time.”
-
-“You intend to live permanently down here?”
-
-“I shall have my holidays, and I shall run up to civilization for a
-dinner or two now and then. It’s not that I’ve any illusions about my
-usefulness or importance. It’s that all this is so useful to me. It’s
-something I can do with all my might and main, and I’ve such masses of
-energy you know, Jim, that need employment. And then, though of course
-one works at the wrong side of the tapestry and has to trust that the
-pattern is coming right, I do believe that, to a certain extent, it does
-need me.”
-
-He leaned back in his chair opposite her, listening to the voice that
-rattled on so cheerfully. With his head bent, he kept that old gaze upon
-her and clutched the clearer and clearer revelation: Eppie--Eppie in
-torment; Eppie shattered;--Eppie--why, it was as if she sat there before
-him smiling and rattling over a huge hole in her chest. And, finally,
-the consciousness of the falsity in her own tone made her falter a
-little. She couldn’t continue so glibly while his eyes were saying to
-her: “Yes; I see, I see. You are wounded to death.” But if she faltered
-it was only, in the pause, to look about for another shield.
-
-“And you?” she said. “Have you done a great deal of climbing? Tell me
-about yourself, dear Jim.”
-
-It was a dangerous note to strike and the “dear Jim” gave away her sense
-of insecurity. It was almost an appeal to him not to see, or, at all
-events, not to tell her that he saw.
-
-“Don’t talk about me,” he said very rudely. She knew the significance of
-his rudeness.
-
-“Let us talk of whatever you will.”
-
-“Of you, then. Don’t try to shut me out, Eppie.”
-
-“Am I shutting you out?”
-
-“You are trying to. You have succeeded with the rest, I suppose; but, as
-of course you know, you can’t succeed with me. I know too much. I care
-too much.”
-
-His rough, tense voice beat down her barriers. She sat silent, oddly
-smiling.
-
-He rose and came to her and stood above her, pressing the tips of his
-fingers heavily down upon her shoulder.
-
-“You must tell me. I must know. I won’t stand not knowing.”
-
-Motionless, without looking up at him, she still smiled before her.
-
-“That--that coward has broken your heart,” he said. There were tears in
-his voice, and, looking up now, the smile stiffened to a resolute
-grimace, she saw them running down his cheeks. But her own face did not
-soften. With a glib dryness she answered:
-
-“Yes, Jim; that’s it.”
-
-“Oh--“ It was a long growl over her head.
-
-She had looked away again, and continued in the same crisp voice: “I’d
-lie if I could, you may be sure. But you put it so, you look so, that I
-can’t. I’m at your mercy. You know what I feel, so I can’t hide it from
-you. I hate any one, even you, to know what I feel. Help me to hide it.”
-
-“What has he done?” Grainger asked on the muffled, growling note.
-
-“Gavan? Done? He’s done nothing.”
-
-“But something happened. You aren’t where you were when I left you. You
-weren’t breaking down then.”
-
-“Hope deferred, Jim--“
-
-“It’s not that. Don’t fence, to shield him. It’s not hope deferred. It’s
-hope dead. Something happened. What was it?”
-
-“All that happened was that he went, when I thought that he was going to
-stay, forever.”
-
-“He went, knowing--“
-
-“That I loved him? Yes; I told him.”
-
-“And he told you that he didn’t love you?”
-
-“No, there you were wrong. He told me that he did. But he saw what you
-saw. So what would you have asked of him?”
-
-“Saw what I saw? What do you mean?”
-
-“That he would suffocate me. That he was the negation of everything I
-believed in.”
-
-“You mean to tell me,” said Grainger, his fingers still pressing down
-upon her shoulder, “that it all came out,--that you had it there between
-you,--and then that he ran away?”
-
-“From the fear of hurting my life. Yes.”
-
-“From the fear of life itself, you mean.”
-
-“If that was it, wasn’t it enough?”
-
-“The coward. The mean, bloodless coward,” said Jim Grainger.
-
-“I let you say it because I understand; it’s your relief. But he is not
-a coward. He is only--a saint. A saint without a saint’s perquisites. A
-Spinoza without a God. An imitator of Christ without a Christ. I have
-been thinking, thinking it all out, seeing it all, ever since.”
-
-“Spinoza! What has he to do with it! Don’t talk rot, dear child, to
-comfort yourself.”
-
-“Be patient, Jim. Perhaps I can help you. It calms one when one
-understands. I have been reading up all the symptoms. Listen to this, if
-you think that Spinoza has nothing to do with it. On the contrary, he
-knew all about it and would have seen very much as Gavan does.”
-
-She took up one of the books that had been so frequently flung down by
-Grainger in his waiting and turned its pages while he watched her with
-the enduring look of a mother who humors a sick child’s foolish fancies.
-
-“Listen to Spinoza, Jim,” she said, and he obediently bent his lowering
-gaze to the task. “‘When a thing is not loved, no strife arises about
-it; there is no pang if it perishes, no envy if another bears it away,
-no fear, no hate; yes, in a word, no tumult of soul. These things all
-come from loving that which perishes.’ And now the Imitation: ‘What
-canst thou see anywhere which can continue long under the sun? Thou
-believest, perchance, that thou shalt be satisfied, but thou wilt never
-be able to attain unto this. If thou shouldst see all things before thee
-at once, what would it be but a vain vision?’ And this: ‘Trust not thy
-feeling, for that which is now will be quickly changed into somewhat
-else.’”
-
-Her voice, as she read on to him,--and from page to page she went,
-plucking for him, it seemed, their cold, white blossoms, fit flowers to
-lay on the grave of love,--had lost the light dryness as of withered
-leaves rustling. It seemed now gravely to understand, to acquiesce. A
-chill went over the man, as though, under his hand, he felt her, too,
-sliding from warm life into that place of shadows where she must be to
-be near the one she loved.
-
-“Shut the books, for God’s sake, Eppie,” he said. “Don’t tell me that
-you’ve come to see as he has.”
-
-She looked up at him, and now, in the dear, deep eyes, he saw all the
-old Eppie, the Eppie of life and battle.
-
-“Can you think it, Jim? It’s because I see so clearly what he sees that
-I hate it and repudiate it and fight it with every atom of my being.
-It’s that hatred, that repudiation, that fight, that is life. I believe
-in it, I’m for it, as I never believed before, as I never was before.”
-
-He was answering her look, seeing her as life’s wounded champion,
-standing, shot through, on the ramparts of her beleaguered city. She
-would shake her banner high in the air as she fell. The pity, the fury,
-the love of his eyes dwelt on her.
-
-And suddenly, under that look, her eyes closed. She shrank together in
-her chair; she bowed down her head upon her knees, covering her face.
-
-“Oh, Jim,” she said, “my heart is broken.”
-
-He knew that he had brought her to this, that never before an onlooker
-had she so fallen into her own misery. He had forced her to show the
-final truth that, though she held the banner, she was shot through and
-through. And he could do nothing but stand on above her, his face set to
-a flintier, sharper endurance, as he heard the great sobs shake her.
-
-He left her presently and walked up and down the room while she wept,
-crouched over upon her knees. It was not for long. The tempest passed,
-and, when she sat in quiet, her head in her hands, her face still
-hidden, he said, “You must set about mending now, Eppie.”
-
-“I can’t mend. I’ll live; but I can’t mend.”
-
-“Don’t say it, Eppie. This may pass as--well--other things in your life
-have passed.”
-
-“Do you, too, talk Spinoza to me, Jim?”
-
-“Damn Spinoza! I’m talking life to you--the life we both believe in. I’m
-not telling you to turn your back on it because it has crippled you. You
-won’t, I know it. I know that you are brave. Eppie, Eppie,”--before her,
-now, he bent to her, then knelt beside her chair,--“let me be the
-crutch. Let me have the fragments. Let’s try, together, to mend them. I
-ask nothing of you but that trying, with my help, to mend. He isn’t for
-you. He’s never for you. I’ll say no more brutalities of him. I’ll use
-your own words and say that he can’t,--that his saintship can’t. So
-won’t you, simply, let me take you? Even if you’re broken for life, let
-me have the broken Eppie.”
-
-She had never, except in the moment of the kiss, seen this deepest thing
-in him, this gentleness, this reverent tenderness that, under the
-bullying, threatening, angry aspects of his love, now supplicated with a
-beauty that revealed all the angel in humanity. Strange--she could think
-it in all her sorrow--that the thing that held him to her was the thing
-that held her to Gavan, the deep, the mysterious, the unchangeable
-affinity. For him, as for her, there could be but one, and for that one
-alone could these depths and heights of the heart open themselves.
-
-“Jim, dear, dear Jim, never, never,” she said. “I am his, only his,
-fragments, all of me, for as long as I am I.”
-
-Grainger hid his face on the arm of her chair.
-
-“And he is mine,” said Eppie. “He knows it, and that is why he fears me.
-He is mine forever.”
-
-“I am glad for your sake that you can believe that,” Grainger muttered,
-“and glad, for my own, that I don’t.”
-
-“Why, Jim?”
-
-“I could hardly live if I thought that you were going to love him in
-eternity and that I was, forever, to be shut away. Thank goodness that
-it’s only for a lifetime that my tragedy lasts.”
-
-She closed her eyes to these perplexities, laying her hand on his.
-
-“I don’t know. We can only think and act for this life. It’s this we
-have to shape. Perhaps in eternity, really in eternity, whatever that
-may mean, I won’t need to shut you out. Dear, dear Jim, it’s hard that
-it must seem that to you now. You know what I feel about you. And who
-could feel it as I do? We are in the same boat.”
-
-“No, for he, at least, loves no one else. You haven’t that to bear. As
-far as he goes,--and it isn’t far,--he is yours. We are not at all in
-the same boat. But that’s enough of me. I suppose I am done for, as you
-say, forever.”
-
-He had got upon his feet, and, as if at their mutual wreckage, looked
-down with a face that had found again its old shield of grimness.
-
-“As for you,” he went on, “I sha’n’t, at all events, see you
-suffocating. You must mend alone, then, as best you can. Really, you’re
-not as tragic as you might have been.”
-
-Then, after this salutary harshness, and before he turned from her to
-go, he added, as once before, “Poor darling.”
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Grainger hardly knew why he had come and, as he walked up the deep
-Surrey lane from the drowsy village station, his common-sense warred
-with the instinct, almost the obsession, that was taking him to
-Cheylesford Lodge. Eppie had been persistently in his thoughts since
-their meeting of the week before, and from his own hopelessness had
-sprung the haunting of a hope for her. Turn from it as he would, accuse
-himself angrily of madness, morbidity, or a mere tendency to outrageous
-meddling,--symptomatic of shattered nerves,--he couldn’t escape it. By
-day and night it was with him, until he saw himself, in a lurid vision,
-as responsible for Eppie’s very life if he didn’t test its validity. For
-where she had failed might not a man armed with the strength of his
-selfless love succeed?
-
-He had said, in his old anger, that as Gavan’s wife Gavan would kill
-her; but he hadn’t really meant that literally; now, literally, the new
-fear had come that she might die of Gavan’s loss. Her will hadn’t
-snapped, but her vitality was like the flare of the candle in its
-socket. To love, the eremite of Cheylesford Lodge wouldn’t
-yield--perhaps for very pity’s sake; but if he were made to see the
-other side of it?--Grainger found a grim amusement in the paradox--the
-lover, in spite of love, might yield to pity. Couldn’t his own manliness
-strike some spark of manliness from Gavan? Couldn’t he and Eppie between
-them, with their so different appeals,--she to what was soft, he to what
-was tough,--hoist his tragically absurd head above water, as it were,
-into the air of real life, that might, who knew? fill and sustain his
-aquatic lungs? It gave him a vindictive pleasure to see the drowning
-simile in the most ludicrous aspects--Gavan, draped in the dramatic
-robes of his twopenny-halfpenny philosophies, holding his head in a
-basin of water, there resolved to die. Grainger felt that as far as his
-own inclinations were concerned it would have given him some pleasure to
-help to hold him under, to see that, while he was about it, he did it
-thoroughly; but the question wasn’t one of his own inclinations: it was
-for Eppie’s sake that he must try to drag out the enraptured suicide. It
-was Eppie, bereft and dying,--so it seemed to him in moments of deep
-fear,--whose very life depended on the submerged life. And to see if he
-could fish it up for her he had come on this undignified, this
-ridiculous errand.
-
-Very undignified and very ridiculous he felt the errand to be, as he
-strode on through the lane, its high hedge-rows all dusty with the
-autumn drought; but he was indifferent enough to that side of it. He
-felt no confusion. He was completely prepared to speak his mind.
-
-Coming to a turning of the lane, where he stood for a moment,
-uncertain, at branching paths, he was joined by an alert little parson
-who asked him courteously if he could direct him on his way. They were
-both, it then appeared, going to Cheylesford Lodge; and the Reverend
-John Best, after introducing himself as the rector of Dittleworth
-parish, and receiving Grainger’s name, which had its reverberations,
-with affable interest, surmised that it was to another friend of Mr.
-Palairet’s that he spoke.
-
-“Yes. No. That is to say, I’ve known him after a fashion for years, but
-seen little of him. Has he been here all summer?” Grainger asked, as
-they walked on.
-
-It seemed that Gavan had only returned from the Continent the week
-before, but Mr. Best went on to say, with an evidently temperamental
-loquacity, that he was there for most of the time as a rule and was
-found a very charming neighbor and a very excellent parishioner.
-
-This last was a rôle in which Gavan seemed extremely incongruous, and
-Grainger looked his perplexity, murmuring, “Parishioner?”
-
-“Not, I fear, that we can claim him as an altogether orthodox one,” Mr.
-Best said, smiling tolerantly upon his companion’s probable narrowness.
-“We ask for the spirit, rather than the letter, nowadays, Mr. Grainger;
-and Mr. Palairet is, at heart, as good a Christian as any of us, of that
-I am assured: better than many of us, as far as living the Christian
-life goes. Christianity, in its essence, is a life. Ah, if only you
-statesmen, you active men of the world, would realize that; would look
-past the symbols to the reality. We, who see life as a spiritual
-organization, are able to break down the limitations of the dry,
-self-centered individualism that, for so many years, has obscured the
-glorious features of our faith. And it is the spirit of the Church that
-Mr. Palairet has grasped. Time only is needed, I am convinced, to make
-him a partaker of her gifts.”
-
-Grainger walked on in a sardonic silence, and Mr. Best, all
-unsuspecting, continued to embroider his congenial theme with
-illustrations: the village poor, to whom Mr. Palairet was so devoted;
-the village hospital, of which he was to talk over the plans to-day; the
-neighborly thoughtfulness and unfailing kindness and charity he showed
-toward high and low.
-
-“Palairet always seemed to me very ineffectual,” said Grainger when, in
-a genial pause, he felt that something in the way of response was
-expected of him.
-
-“Ah, I fear you judge by the worldly standard of outward attainment, Mr.
-Grainger.”
-
-“What other is there for us human beings to judge by?”
-
-“The standard of our unhappy modern plutocratic society is not that by
-which to measure the contemplative type of character.”
-
-Grainger felt a slight stress of severity in the good little parson’s
-affability.
-
-“Oh, I think its standards aren’t at all unwholesome,” he made reply. He
-could have justified anything, any standard, against Gavan and his
-standards.
-
-“Unwholesome, my dear Mr. Grainger? That is just what they are. See the
-beauty of a life like our friend’s here. It judges your barbarous
-Christless civilization. He lives laborious, simple days. He does his
-work, he has his friends. His influence upon them counts for more than
-an outside observer could compute. Great men are among them. I met Lord
-Taunton at his house last Sunday. A most impressive personality. Even
-though Mr. Palairet has abandoned the political career, one can’t call
-him ineffectual when such a man is among his intimates.”
-
-“The monkish type doesn’t appeal to me, I own.”
-
-“Ah, there you touch the point that has troubled me. It is not good for
-a man to live alone. My chief wish for him is that he may marry. I often
-urge it on him.”
-
-“Well done.”
-
-“One did hear,” Mr. Best went on, his small, ruddy face taking on a look
-of retrospective reprobation, “that there was an attachment to a certain
-young woman--the tale was public property--only as such do I allude to
-it--a very fashionable, very worldly young woman. I was relieved indeed
-when the rumor came to nothing. He escaped finally, I can’t help
-fancying it, this summer. I was much relieved.”
-
-“Why so, pray?”
-
-“I am rural, old-fashioned, my dear young man, and that type of young
-woman is one toward which, I own it, I find it difficult to feel
-charitably. She represents the pagan, the Christless element that I
-spoke of in our modern world. Her charm could not have been a noble
-one. Had our friend here succumbed to it, she could only have meant
-disaster in his life. She would have urged him into ambition,
-pleasure-seeking, dissipation. Of course I only cite what I have heard
-in my quiet corner, though I have had glimpses of her, passing with a
-friend, a very frivolous person, in a motor-car. She looked completely
-what I had imagined.”
-
-“If you mean Miss Gifford,” said Grainger, trying for temperateness, “I
-happen to know her. She is anything but a pleasure-seeker, anything but
-frivolous, anything, above all, but a pagan. If Palairet had been lucky
-enough to marry her it would have been the best thing that ever happened
-to him in his life, and a very dubious thing for her. She is a thousand
-times too good for him.”
-
-“My dear Mr. Grainger, pardon me; I had no idea that you knew the lady.
-But,” Mr. Best had flushed a little under this onslaught, “I cannot but
-think you a partisan.”
-
-“Do you call a woman frivolous who spends half of her time working in
-the slums?”
-
-“That is a phase, I hear, of the ultra-smart young woman. But no doubt
-rumor has been unjust. I must beg you to pardon me.”
-
-“Oh, don’t mind that. You heard, no doubt, the surface things. But no
-one who knows Miss Gifford can think of them, that’s all.”
-
-“And if I have been betrayed into injustice, I hope that you will
-reconsider a little more charitably your impression of Mr. Palairet,”
-said Mr. Best, in whom, evidently, Grainger’s roughness rankled.
-
-Grainger laughed grimly. “I can’t consider him anything but a thousand
-times too bad for Miss Gifford.”
-
-They had reached the entrance to Cheylesford Lodge on this final and
-discordant phrase. Mr. Best kept a grieved silence and Grainger’s
-thoughts passed from him.
-
-He had had in his life no training in appreciation and was indifferent
-to things of the eye, but even to his insensible nature the whole aspect
-of the house that they approached between high yew hedges, its dreaming
-quiet, the tones of its dim old bricks, the shadowed white of paneled
-walls within, spoke of pensive beauty, of a secure content in things of
-the mind. He felt it suddenly as oppressive and ominous in its assured
-quietness. It had some secret against the probes of feeling. Its magic
-softly shut away suffering and encircled safely a treasure of
-tranquillity.
-
-That was the secret, that the magic; it flashed vaguely for
-Grainger--though by its light he saw more vividly his own errand as
-ridiculous--that a life of thought, pure thought, if one could only
-achieve it, was the only _safe_ life. Where, in this adjusted system of
-beauty and contemplation, would his appeals find foothold?
-
-He dashed back the crowding doubts, summoning his own crude forces.
-
-The man who admitted them said that Mr. Palairet was in the garden, and
-stepping from opened windows at the back of the house, they found
-themselves on the sunny spaces of the lawn with its encompassing trees
-and its wandering border of flowers.
-
-Gavan was sitting with a book in the shade of the great yew-tree. In
-summer flannels, a panama hat tilted over his eyes, he was very white,
-very tenuous, very exquisite. And he was the center of it all, the
-secret securely his, the magic all at his disposal.
-
-Seeing them he rose, dropping his book into his chair, strolling over
-the miraculous green to meet them, showing no haste, no hesitation, no
-surprise.
-
-“I’ve come on particular business,” Grainger said, “and I’ll stroll
-about until you and Mr. Best are done with the hospital.”
-
-Mr. Best, still with sadness in his manner, promised not to keep Mr.
-Palairet long and they went inside.
-
-Grainger was left standing under the yew-tree. He took up Gavan’s book,
-while the sense of frustration, and of rebellion against it, rose in
-him. The book was French and dealt with an obscure phase of Byzantine
-history. Gavan’s neat notes marked passages concerning some contemporary
-religious phenomena.
-
-Grainger flung down the book, careless of crumpled leaves, and wandered
-off abruptly, among the hedges and into the garden. It was a very
-different garden from the old Scotch one where a sweet pensiveness
-seemed always to hover and where romance whispered and beckoned. This
-garden, steeped in sunlight, and where plums and pears on the hot rosy
-walls shone like jewels among their crisp green leaves, was unshadowed,
-unhaunted, smiling and decorous--the garden of placid wisdom and
-Epicurean calm. Grainger, as he walked, felt at his heart a tug of
-strange homesickness and yearning for that Northern garden, its dim
-gray walls and its disheveled nooks and corners. Were they all done with
-it forever?
-
-By the time he had returned to the lawn Gavan was just emerging from the
-house. They met in the shadow of the yew.
-
-“I’m glad to see you, Grainger,” Gavan said, with a smile that struck
-Grainger as faded in quality. “This place is a sort of harbor for tired
-workers, you know. You should have looked me up before, or are you never
-tired enough for that?”
-
-“I don’t feel the need of harbors, yet. One never sees you in London.”
-
-“No, the lounging life down here suits me.”
-
-“Your little parson doesn’t see it in that light. He has been telling me
-how you live up to your duties as neighbor and parishioner.”
-
-“It doesn’t require much effort. Nice little fellow, isn’t he, Best? He
-tells me that you walked up together.”
-
-“We did,” said Grainger, with his own inner sense of grim humor at the
-memory. “I should think you would find him rather limited.”
-
-“But I’m limited, too,” said Gavan, mildly. “I like being with people so
-neatly adapted to their functions. There are no loose ends about Best;
-nothing unfulfilled or uncomfortable. He’s all there--all that there is
-of him to be there.”
-
-“Not a very lively companion.”
-
-“I’m not a lively companion, either,” Gavan once more, with his mild
-gaiety, retorted.
-
-Grainger at this gave a harsh laugh. “No, you certainly aren’t,” he
-agreed.
-
-They had twice paced the length of the yew-tree shadow and Gavan had
-asked no question; and Grainger felt, as the pause grew, that Gavan
-never would ask questions. Any onus for a disturbance of the atmosphere
-must rest entirely on himself, and to disturb it he would have to be
-brutal.
-
-He jerked aside the veils of the placid dialogue with sudden violence.
-“I’ve seen Eppie,” he said.
-
-He had intended to use her formal name only, but the nearer word rushed
-out and seemed to shatter the magic that held him off.
-
-Gavan’s face grew a shade paler. “Have you?” he said.
-
-“You knew that she had been ill?”
-
-“I heard of it, recently, from General Carmichael. It was nothing
-serious, I think.”
-
-“It will be serious.” Grainger stood still and gazed into his eyes. “Do
-you want to kill her?”
-
-It struck him, when he had said it, and while Gavan received the words
-and seemed to reflect on them, that however artificial his atmosphere
-might be he would never evade any reality brought forcibly into it. He
-contemplated this one and did not pretend not to understand.
-
-“I want Eppie to be happy,” he said presently.
-
-“Happy, yes. So do I,” broke from Grainger with a groan.
-
-They stood now near the great trunk of the yew-tree, and turning away,
-striking the steel-gray bark monotonously with his fist, he went on: “I
-love her, as you know. And she loves you. She told me--I made her tell
-me. But any one with eyes could see it; even your gossiping little fool
-of a parson here had heard of it--was relieved for your escape. But who
-cares for the cackling? And you have crippled her, broken her. You have
-tossed aside that woman whose little finger is worth more to the world
-than your whole being. I wish to God she’d never seen you.”
-
-“So do I,” Gavan said.
-
-“I’d kill you with the greatest pleasure--if it could do her any good.”
-
-There was relief for Grainger in getting out these fundamental things.
-
-“Yes,--I quite understand that. So would I,” Gavan acquiesced,--“kill
-myself, I mean,--if it would do her any good.”
-
-“Don’t try that. It wouldn’t. She’s beyond all help but one. So I am
-here to put it to you.”
-
-The still, hot day encompassed their shadow and with its quiet made more
-intense Grainger’s sense of his own passion--passion and its negation,
-the stress between the two. Their words, though they spoke so quietly,
-seemed to fill the world.
-
-“I am sorry,” Gavan said; “I can do nothing.”
-
-Grainger beat at the tree.
-
-“You love her.”
-
-“Not as she must be loved. I only want her, when I am selfish. When I
-think for her I have no want at all.”
-
-“Give her your selfishness.”
-
-“Ah, even that fades. That’s what I found out. I can’t count on my
-selfishness. I’ve tried to do it. It didn’t work.”
-
-Grainger turned his bloodshot eyes upon him; these moments under the
-yew-tree, that white figure with its pale smile, its comprehending
-gravity confronting him, would count in his life, he knew, among its
-most racking memories.
-
-“I consider you a madman,” he now said.
-
-“Perhaps I am one. You don’t think it for Eppie’s happiness to marry a
-madman?”
-
-“My God, I don’t know what to think! I want to save her.”
-
-“But so do I,” Gavan’s voice had its first note of eagerness. “_I_ want
-to save her. And I want her to marry you. That’s her chance, and
-yours--and mine, though mine really doesn’t count. That’s what I hope
-for.”
-
-“There’s no hope there.”
-
-“Have patience. Wait. She will, perhaps, get over me.”
-
-Grainger’s eyes, with their hot, jaded look of baffled purpose, so
-selfless that it transcended jealousy and hatred, were still on him, and
-he thought now that he detected on the other’s face the strain of some
-inner tension. He wasn’t so dead, then. He was suffering. No, more yet,
-and the final insight came in another vague flash that darkly showed the
-trouble at the heart of all the magic, the beauty, he, too, more really
-than Eppie, perhaps, was dying for love. Madman, devoted madman that he
-was, he was dying for love of the woman from whom he must always flee.
-It was strange to feel one’s sane, straightforward mind forced along
-this labyrinth of dazed comprehension, turning in the cruelly knotted
-paradox of this impossible love-story. Yet, against his very will, he
-was so forced to follow and almost to understand.
-
-There wasn’t much more to say. And he had his own paradoxical
-satisfaction in the sight of the canker at the core of thought. So, at
-all events, one wasn’t safe even so.
-
-“She won’t get over you,” he said. “It isn’t a mere love-affair. It’s
-her life. She may not die of it; that’s a figure of speech that I had no
-right, I suppose, to use. At all events, she’ll try her best not to die.
-But she won’t get over you.”
-
-“Not even if I get out of the way forever?”
-
-Gavan put the final proposition before him, but Grainger, staring at the
-sunlight, shook his head.
-
-“The very fact that you’re alive makes her hold the tighter. No, you
-can’t save her in that way. I wish you could.”
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Grainger had had his insight, but, outwardly, in the year that followed,
-Gavan’s life was one of peace, of achieved escape.
-
-The world soon ceased to pull at him, to plead or protest. With a kindly
-shrug of the shoulders the larger life passed him by as one more proved
-ineffectual. The little circle that clung about him, as the flotsam and
-jetsam of a river drift from the hurrying current around the stability
-and stillness of a green islet, was, in the main, composed of the
-defeated or the indifferent. One or two cynical fighters moored their
-boats, for a week-end, at his tranquil shores, and the powerful old
-statesman who believed nothing, hoped nothing, felt very little, and
-who, behind his show-life of patriotic and hard-working nobleman, smiled
-patiently at the whole foolish comedy, was his most intimate companion.
-To the world at large, Lord Taunton was the witty Tory, the devoted
-churchman, the wise upholder of all the hard-won props of civilization;
-to Gavan, he was the skeptical and pessimistic metaphysician; together
-they watched the wheels go round.
-
-Mayburn came down once or twice to see his poor, queer, dear old
-Palairet, and in London boasted much of the experience. “He’s too, too
-wonderful,” he said. “He has achieved a most delicate, recondite
-harmony. One never heard anything just like it before, and can’t, for
-the life of one, tell just what the notes are. Effort, constant effort,
-amidst constant quiet and austerity. Work is his passion, and yet never
-was any creature so passionless. He’s like a rower, rowing easily,
-indefatigably, down a long river, among lilies, while he looks up at the
-sky.”
-
-But Mayburn felt the quiet and austerity a little disturbing. He didn’t,
-after all, come to look at quiet and austerity unless some one were
-there to hear him talk about them; and his host, all affability, never
-seemed quite there.
-
-So a year, more than a year, went by.
-
-It was on an early spring morning that Gavan found on his
-breakfast-table a letter written in a faltering hand,--a hand that
-faltered with the weeping that shook it,--Miss Barbara’s old, faint
-hand.
-
-He read, at first, hardly comprehending.
-
-It was of Eppie she wrote: of her overwork--they thought it must be
-that--in the winter, of the resultant fragility that had made her
-succumb suddenly to an illness contracted in some hotbed of epidemic in
-the slums. They had all thought that she would come through it. People
-had been very kind. Eppie had so many, many friends. Every one loved
-her. She had been moved to Lady Alicia’s house in Grosvenor Street. She,
-Aunt Barbara, had come up to town at once, and the general was with
-her.
-
-It was with a fierce impatience that he went on through the phrases that
-were like the slow trickling of tear after tear, as if he knew, yet
-refused to know, the tragedy that the trivial tears flowed for, knew
-what was coming, resented its insufferable delay, yet spurned its bare
-possibility. At the end, and only then, it came. Her strength had
-suddenly failed. There was no hope. Eppie was dying and had asked to see
-him--at once.
-
-A bird, above the window open to the dew and sunlight, sang and whistled
-while he read, a phrase, not joyous, not happy, yet strangely full of
-triumph, of the innocent praise of life. Gavan, standing still, with the
-letter in his hand, listened, while again and again, monotonously,
-freshly, the bird repeated its song.
-
-He seemed at first to listen quietly, with pleasure, appreciative of
-this heraldry of spring; then memory, blind, numbed from some dark
-shock, stirred, stole out to meet it--the memory of Eppie’s morning
-voice on the hillside, the voice monotonous yet triumphant with its
-sense of life; and at each reiteration, the phrase seemed a dagger
-plunged into his heart.
-
-Oh, memory! Oh, cruel thought! Cruel life!
-
-After he had ordered the trap, and while waiting for it, he walked out
-into the freshness and back and forth, over and over across the lawn,
-with the patient, steady swiftness of an animal caged and knowing that
-the bars are about it. So this was to be the end. But, though already he
-acquiesced, it seemed in some way a strange, inapt ending. He couldn’t
-think of Eppie and death. He couldn’t see her dead. He could only see
-her looking at death.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The early train he caught got him to London by eleven, and in twenty
-minutes he was in Grosvenor Street. He had wired from the country, and
-Miss Barbara met him in the drawing-room of the house, hushed in its
-springtime gaiety. She was the frail ghost of her shadowy old self, her
-voice tremulous, her face blurred with tears and sleepless nights. Yet
-he saw, under the woe, the essential listlessness of age, the placidity
-beneath the half-mechanical tears. “Oh, Gavan,” she said, taking his
-hand and holding it in both her own--“Oh, Gavan, we couldn’t have
-thought of this, could we, that she would go first.” And that his own
-face showed some sharp fixity of woe he felt from its reflection on
-hers--like a sword-flash reflected in a shallow pool.
-
-She told him that it was now an affair of hours only. “I would have sent
-for you long ago, Gavan; I knew--I knew that you would want it. But she
-wouldn’t--not while there was hope. I think she was afraid of hurting
-you. You know she had never been the same since--since--“
-
-“Since what?” he asked, knowing.
-
-“Since you went away. She was so ill then. Poor child! She never found
-herself, you see, Gavan. She did not know what she wanted. She has worn
-herself out in looking for it.”
-
-Miss Barbara was very ignorant. He himself could not know, probably
-Eppie herself didn’t know, what had killed her, though she had so well
-known what she wanted; but he suspected that Grainger had been right,
-and that it was on him that Eppie’s life had shattered itself.
-
-Her will, evidently, still ruled those about her, for when Miss Barbara
-had led him up-stairs she said, pausing in the passage, that Eppie would
-see him alone; the nurse would leave them. She had insisted on that, and
-there was now no reason why she should not have her way. The nurse came
-out to them, telling him that Miss Gifford waited; and, just before she
-let him go, Miss Barbara drew his head down to hers and kissed him,
-murmuring to him to be brave. He really didn’t know whether he were more
-the felon, or more the victim that she thought him. Then the door closed
-behind him and he was alone with Eppie.
-
-Eppie was propped high on pillows, her hair twisted up from her brows
-and neck and folded in heavy masses on her head.
-
-In the wide, white room, among her pillows, so white herself, and
-strange with a curious thinness, he had never received a more prodigious
-impression of life than in meeting her eyes, where all the forces of her
-soul looked out. So motionless, she was like music, like all that moves,
-that strives and is restless; so white, she was like skies at dawn, like
-deep seas under sunlight. In the stillness, the whiteness, the emptiness
-of the room she was illusion itself, life and beauty, a wonderful
-rainbow thing staining “the white radiance of eternity.” And as if,
-before its final shattering, every color flamed, her whole being was
-concentrated in the mere fact of its existence--its existence that
-defied death. A deep, quiet excitement, almost a gaiety, breathed from
-her. In the tangled rivers of her hair, the intertwined currents of dark
-and gold winding in a lovely disorder,--in the white folds of lawn that
-lay so delicately about her; in the emerald slipping far down her
-finger, the emeralds in her ears, shaking faintly with her ebbing
-heart-beats, there was even a sort of wilful and heroic coquetry. She
-was, in her dying, triumphantly beautiful, yet, as always, through her
-beauty went the strength of her reliance on deeper significances.
-
-She lay motionless as Gavan approached her, and he guessed that she
-saved all her strength. Only as he took the chair beside her, horror at
-his heart, the old familiar horror, she put out her hand to him.
-
-He took it silently, looking up, after a little while, from its
-marvelous lightness and whiteness to her eyes, her smile. Then, at last,
-she spoke to him.
-
-“So you think that you have got the better of me at last, don’t you,
-Gavan dear?” she said. Her voice was strange, as though familiar notes
-were played on some far-away flute, sweet and melancholy among the
-hills. The voice was strange and sad, but the words were not. In them
-was a caress, as though she pitied his pity for her; but the old
-antagonism, too, was there--a defiance, a willingness to be cruel to
-him. “I did play fair, you see,” she went on. “I wouldn’t have you come
-till there was no danger, for you, any more. And now this is the end of
-it all, you think. You will soon be able to say of me, Gavan,
-
- “her words to Scorn
- Are scattered, and her mouth is stopt with Dust!”
-
-His hand shut involuntarily, painfully, on hers, and as though his
-breath cut him, he said, “Don’t--don’t, Eppie.”
-
-But with her gaiety she insisted: “Oh, but let us have the truth. You
-must think it. What else could you think?” and, again with the note of
-pity that would atone for the cruel lightness, “Poor Gavan! My poor,
-darling Gavan! And I must leave you with your thoughts--your empty
-thoughts, alone.”
-
-He had taken a long breath over the physical pang her words had
-inflicted, and now he looked down at her hand, gently, one after the
-other, as though unseeingly, smoothing her fingers.
-
-“While I go on,” she said.
-
-“Yes, dear,” he assented.
-
-“You humor me with that. You are so glad, for me, that I go with all my
-illusions about me. Aren’t you afraid that, because of them, I’ll be
-caught in the mill again and ground round and round in incarnations
-until, only after such a long time, I come out all clean and white and
-selfless, not a scrap of dangerous life about me--Alone with the Alone.”
-
-He felt now the fever in her clearness, the hovering on the border of
-hallucination. The colors flamed indeed, and her thoughts seemed to
-shoot up in strange flickerings, a medley of inconsequent memories and
-fancies strung on their chain of unnatural lucidity.
-
-He answered with patient gentleness, “I’m not afraid for you, Eppie. I
-don’t think all that.”
-
-“Nor I for myself,” she retorted. “I love the mill and its grindings.
-But what you think,--I know perfectly what you think. You can’t keep it
-from me, Gavan. You can’t keep anything from me. And I found something
-that said it all. I can remember it. Shall I say it to you?”
-
-He bowed his head, smoothing her hand, not looking up at her while, in
-that voice of defiance, of fever, yet of such melancholy and echoing
-sweetness, she repeated:
-
- “Ne suis-je pas un faux accord
- Dans la divine symphonie,
- Grâce à la vorace Ironie
- Qui me secoue et qui me mord?
-
- “Elle est dans ma voix, la criarde!
- C’est tout mon sang, ce poison noir!
- Je suis le sinistre miroir
- Où la mégère se regarde!
-
- “Je suis la plaie et le couteau!
- Je suis le soufflet et la joue!
- Je suis les membres et la roue,
- Et le victime et le bourreau!”
-
-She paused after it, smiling intently upon him, and he met the smile to
-say:
-
-“That’s only one side of it, dear.”
-
-“Ah, it’s a side I know about, too! Didn’t I see it, feel it? Haven’t I
-been all through it--with you, for you, because of you? Ah, when you
-left me--when you left me, Gavan--“
-
-Still she smiled, with brilliant eyes, repeating,
-
- “Qui me secoue et qui me mord.”
-
-He was silent, sitting with his pallid, drooping head; and suddenly she
-put her other hand on his, on the hand that gently, mechanically,
-smoothed her fingers.
-
-“You caress me, you try to comfort me,--while I am tormenting you. It’s
-strange that I should want to torment you. Is it that I’m so afraid you
-sha’n’t feel? I want you to feel. I want you to suffer. It is so
-horrible to leave you. It is so horrible to be afraid--sometimes
-afraid--that I shall never, never see you again. When you feel, when you
-suffer, I am not so lonely. But you feel nothing, do you?”
-
-He did not answer her.
-
-“Will you ever miss me, Gavan?”
-
-He did not answer.
-
-“Won’t you even remember me?” she asked.
-
-And still he did not answer, sitting with downcast eyes. And she saw
-that he could not, and in his silence, of a dumb torture, was his reply.
-He looked the stricken saint, pierced through with arrows. And which of
-them was the victim, which the executioner?
-
-With her question a clearness, quieter, deeper, came to her, as though
-in the recoil of its engulfing anguish she pushed her way from among
-vibrating discords to a sudden harmony that, in holy peace, resolved
-them all in unison. Her eyelids fluttered down while, for an instant,
-she listened. Yes, under it all, above it all, holding them all about,
-there it was. She seemed to see the pain mounting, circling, flowing
-from its knotted root into strength and splendor. But though he was with
-her in it he was also far away,--he was blind, and deaf,--held fast by
-cruel bonds.
-
-“Look at me,” she commanded him gently.
-
-And now, reluctantly, he looked up into her eyes.
-
-They held him, they drew him, they flooded him. With the keenness of
-life they cut into his heart, and like the surging up of blood his love
-answered hers. As helpless as he had ever been before her, he laid his
-head on her breast, his arms encircling her, while, with closed eyes, he
-said: “Don’t think that I don’t feel. Don’t think that I don’t suffer.
-It’s only that;--I have only to see you;--something grasps me, and
-tortures me--“
-
-“Something,” she said, her voice like the far flute echo of the voice
-that had spoken on that night in the old Scotch garden, “that brings you
-to life--to God.”
-
-“Oh, Eppie, what can I say to you?” he murmured.
-
-“You can say nothing. But you will have to wake. It will have to
-come,--the sorrow, the joy of reality,--God--and me.”
-
-It was his face, with closed eyes, with its stricken, ashen agony, that
-seemed the dying face. Hers, turned gently toward him, had all the
-beneficence, the radiance of life. But when she spoke again there was in
-her voice a tranced stillness as though already it spoke from another
-world.
-
-“You love me, Gavan.”
-
-“I love you. You have that. That is yours, forever. I long for you,
-always, always,--even when I think that I am at peace. You are in
-everything: I hear a bird, and I think of your voice; I see a flower,
-or the sky, and it’s of your face I think. I am yours, Eppie--yours
-forever.”
-
-“You make me happy,” she said.
-
-“Eppie, my darling Eppie, die now, die in my arms, dearest--in your
-happiness.”
-
-“No, not yet; I can’t go yet--though I wish it, too,” she said. “There
-are still horrid bits--dreadful dark places--like the dreadful poem--the
-poem of you, Gavan--where I lose myself; burning places, edges of pain,
-where I fight to find myself again; long, dim places where I
-dream--dream--. I won’t have you see me like that; you might think that
-you watched the scattering of the real me. I won’t have you remember me
-all dim and broken.”
-
-Her voice was sinking from her into an abyss of languor, and she felt
-the swirl of phantom thoughts blurring her mind even while she spoke.
-
-As on that far-away night when he held her hand and they stood together
-under the stars, she said, speaking now her prayer, “O God! God!”; and
-seeming in the effort of her will to lift a weight that softly,
-inexorably, like the lid of a tomb, pressed down upon her, “I am here,”
-she said. “You are mine. I will not be afraid. Remember me. So good-by,
-Gavan.”
-
-“I will remember,” he said.
-
-His arms still held her. And through his mind an army seemed to rush,
-galloping, with banners, with cries of lamentations, agony, regret,
-passionate rebellion. It crashed in conflict, blood beneath it, and
-above it tempests and torn banners. And the banners were desperate
-hopes riddled with bullets; and the blood was love poured out and the
-tempest was his heart. It was, he thought, even while he saw, listened,
-felt, the last onslaught upon his soul. She was going--the shadow of
-life was sliding from her--and from him, for she was life and its terror
-and beauty. Above the turmoil was the fated peace. He had won it,
-unwillingly. He could not be kept from it even by the memory that would
-stay.
-
-But though he knew, and, in knowing, saw his contemplative soul far from
-this scene of suffocating misery, Eppie, his dear, his beautiful, was in
-his arms, her eyes, her lips, her heart. He would never see her again.
-
-He raised his head to look his last, and, like a faint yet piercing
-perfume, her soul’s smile still dwelt on him as she lay there
-speechless. For the moment--and was not the moment eternity?--the
-triumph was all hers. The moment, when long, long past, would still be
-part of him and her triumph in it eternal. To spare her the sight of his
-anguish would be to rob her. Anguish had been and was the only offering
-he could make her. He felt--felt unendurably, she would see that; he
-suffered, he loved her, unspeakably; she had that, too, while, in their
-last long silence, he held her hands against his heart. And her eyes,
-still smiling on him with their transcendent faith, showed that her
-triumph was shadowless.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He heard next day that she had died during the night.
-
-Peace did not come to him for long; the wounds of the warring interlude
-of life had been too deep. He forgot himself at last in the treadmill
-quiet of days all serene laboriousness, knowing that it could not be for
-many years that he should watch the drama. She had shattered herself on
-him; but he, too, had felt that in himself something had broken. And he
-forgot the wounds, except when some sight or sound, the song of a bird
-in Spring, a spray of heather, a sky of stars, startled them to deep
-throbbing. And then a hand, stretched out from the past, would seize
-him, a shudder, a pang, would shake him, and he would know that he was
-alone and that he remembered.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Shadow of Life
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: June 17, 2013 [EBook #42965]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SHADOW OF LIFE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-BY
-
-Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-AUTHOR OF "THE RESCUE," "THE CONFOUNDING OF
-CAMELIA," "PATHS OF JUDGEMENT," ETC.
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-NEW YORK
-
-The Century Co.
-
-1906
-
-Copyright, 1906, by
-The Century Co.
-
-_Published February, 1906_
-
-THE DE VINNE PRESS
-
-
-
-
-
-THE SHADOW OF LIFE
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-Elspeth Gifford was five years old when she went to live at Kirklands.
-Her father, an army officer, died in her babyhood, and her mother a few
-years later. The uncle and aunts in Scotland, all three much her
-mother's seniors, were the child's nearest relatives.
-
-To such a little girl death had meant no more than a bewildered
-loneliness, but the bewilderment was so sharp, the loneliness so aching,
-that she cried herself into an illness. She had seen her dead mother,
-the sweet, sightless, silent face, familiar yet amazing, and more than
-any fear or shrinking had been the suffocating mystery of feeling
-herself forgotten and left behind. Her uncle Nigel, sorrowful and grave,
-but so large and kind that his presence seemed to radiate a restoring
-warmth, came to London for her and a fond nurse went with her to the
-North, and after a few weeks the anxious affection of her aunts Rachel
-and Barbara built about her, again, a child's safe universe of love.
-
-Kirklands was a large white house and stood on a slope facing south,
-backed by a rise of thickly wooded hill and overlooking a sea of
-heathery moorland. It was a solitary but not a melancholy house. Lichens
-yellowed the high-pitched slate roof and creepers clung to the roughly
-"harled" walls. On sunny days the long rows of windows were golden
-squares in the illumined white, and, under a desolate winter sky, glowed
-with an inner radiance.
-
-In the tall limes to the west a vast colony of rooks made their nests;
-and to Eppie these high nests, so dark against the sky in the vaguely
-green boughs of spring or in the autumn's bare, swaying branches, had a
-weird, fairy-tale charm. They belonged neither to the earth nor to the
-sky, but seemed to float between, in a place of inaccessible romance,
-and the clamor, joyous yet irritable, at dawn and evening seemed full of
-quaint, strange secrets that only a wandering prince or princess would
-have understood.
-
-Before the house a round of vivid green was encircled by the drive that
-led through high stone gates to the moorland road. A stone wall, running
-from gate to gate, divided the lawn from the road, and upon each pillar
-a curiously carved old griffin, its back and head spotted with yellow
-lichens, held stiffly up, for the inspection of passers-by, the family
-escutcheon. From the windows at the back of the house one looked up at
-the hilltop, bare but for a group of pine-trees, and down into a deep
-garden. Here, among utilitarian squares of vegetable beds, went
-overgrown borders of flowers--bands of larkspurs, lupins, stocks, and
-columbines. The golden-gray of the walls was thickly embroidered with
-climbing fruit-trees, and was entirely covered, at one end of the
-garden, by a small snow-white rose, old-fashioned, closely petaled; and
-here in a corner stood a thatched summer-house, where Eppie played with
-her dolls, and where, on warm summer days, the white roses filled the
-air with a fragrance heavy yet fresh in its wine-like sweetness. All
-Eppie's early memories of Kirklands centered about the summer-house and
-were mingled with the fragrance of the roses. Old James, the gardener,
-put up there a little locker where her toys were stored, and shelves
-where she ranged her dolls' dishes. There were rustic seats, too, and a
-table--a table always rather unsteady on the uneven wooden floor. The
-sun basked in that sheltered, windless corner, and, when it rained, the
-low, projecting eaves ranged one safely about with a silvery fringe of
-drops through which one looked out over the wet garden and up at the
-white walls of the house, crossed by the boughs of a great, dark
-pine-tree.
-
-Inside the house the chief room was the fine old library, where, from
-long windows, one looked south over the purples and blues of the
-moorland. Books filled the shelves from floor to ceiling--old-fashioned
-tomes in leather bindings, shut away, many of them, behind brass
-gratings and with all the delightful sense of peril connected with the
-lofty upper ranges, only to be reached by a courageous use of the
-library steps.
-
-Here Uncle Nigel gave Eppie lessons in Greek and history every morning,
-aided in the minor matters of her education by a submissive nursery
-governess, an Englishwoman, High Church in doctrine and plaintive in a
-country of dissent.
-
-A door among the book-shelves led from the library into the morning-room
-or boudoir, where Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara sewed, read, dispensed
-small charities and lengthy advice to the village poor--a cheerful
-little room in spite of its northern aspect and the shadowing trunk of
-the great pine-tree just outside its windows. It was all faded chintzes,
-gilt carvings, porcelain ornaments in corner cabinets; its paper was
-white with a fine gilt line upon it; and even though to Eppie it had sad
-associations with Bible lessons and Sunday morning collects, it retained
-always its aspect of incongruous and delightful gaiety--almost of
-frivolity. Sitting there in their delicate caps and neatly appointed
-dresses, with their mild eyes and smoothly banded hair, Aunt Rachel and
-Aunt Barbara gathered a picture-book charm--seemed to count less as
-personalities and more as ornaments. On the other side of the hall,
-rather bare and bleak in its antlered spaciousness, were the dining-and
-smoking-rooms, the first paneled in slightly carved wood, painted white,
-the last a thoroughly modern room, redolent of shabby comforts, with
-deep leather chairs, massive mid-century furniture, and an aggressively
-cheerful paper.
-
-The drawing-room, above the library, was never used--a long, vacant
-room, into which Eppie would wander with a pleasant sense of
-trespassing and impertinence; a trivial room, for all the dignity of its
-shrouded shapes and huge, draped chandelier. Its silver-flecked gray
-paper and oval gilt picture-frames recalled an epoch nearer and uglier
-than that of the grave library and sprightly boudoir below, though even
-its ugliness had a charm. Eppie was fond of playing by herself there,
-and hid sundry secrets under the Chinese cabinet, a large, scowling
-piece of furniture, its black lacquered panels inlaid with
-mother-of-pearl. Once it was a quaintly cut cake, neatly sealed in a
-small jeweler's box, that she thrust far away under it; and once a
-minute china doll, offspring of a Christmas cracker and too minute for
-personality, was swaddled mummy fashion in a ribbon and placed beside
-the box. Much excitement was to be had by not looking to see if the
-secrets were still there and in hastily removing them when a cleaning
-threatened.
-
-The day-nursery, afterward the school-room, was over the dining-room,
-and the bedrooms were at the back of the house.
-
-The Carmichaels were of an ancient and impoverished family, their
-estates, shrunken as they were, only kept together by careful economy,
-but there was no touch of dreariness in Eppie's home. She was a happy
-child, filling her life with imaginative pastimes and finding on every
-side objects for her vigorous affections. Her aunts' mild disciplines
-weighed lightly on her. Love and discipline were sundered principles in
-the grandmotherly administration, and Eppie soon learned that the
-formalities of the first were easily evaded and to weigh the force of
-her own naughtiness against it. Corporal punishment formed part of the
-Misses Carmichael's conception of discipline, but though, on the rare
-occasions when it could not be escaped, Eppie bawled heart-rendingly
-during the very tremulous application, it was with little disturbance of
-spirit that she endured the reward of transgression.
-
-At an early age she understood very clearly the simple characters around
-her. Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara were both placid, both pious, both
-full of unsophisticated good works, both serenely acquiescent in their
-lots. In Aunt Barbara, indeed, placidity was touched with wistfulness;
-she was the gentler, the more yielding of the two. Aunt Rachel could be
-inspired with the greater ruthlessness of conscientious conviction. It
-was she who insisted upon the letter of the law in regard to the Sunday
-collect, the Sunday church-going, who mingled reproof with her village
-charities, who could criticize with such decision the short-comings,
-doctrinal and domestic, of Mr. MacNab, minister of the little
-established church that stood near the village. Aunt Barbara was far
-less assured of the forms of things; she seemed to search and fumble a
-little for further, fuller outlets, and yet to have found a greater
-serenity. Aunt Rachel was fond of pointing out to her niece such facts
-of geology, botany, and natural history in general as the country life
-and her own somewhat rudimentary knowledge suggested to her as useful;
-Aunt Barbara, on the contrary, told pretty, allegorical tales about
-birds and flowers--tales with a heavy cargo of moral insinuation, to
-which, it must be confessed, Eppie listened with an inner sense of
-stubborn realism. It was Aunt Barbara who sought to impress upon her
-that the inclusive attribute of Deity was love, and who, when Eppie
-asked her where God was, answered, "In your heart, dear child." Eppie
-was much puzzled by anatomical considerations in reflecting upon this
-information. Aunt Rachel, with clear-cut, objective facts from Genesis,
-was less mystifying to inquisitive, but pagan childhood. Eppie could not
-help thinking of God as somewhat like austere, gray-bearded old James,
-the gardener, whose vocation suggested that pictorial chapter in the
-Bible, and who, when he found her one day eating unripe fruit, warned
-her with such severity of painful retribution.
-
-The aunts spent year after year at Kirklands, with an infrequent trip to
-Edinburgh. Neither had been South since the death of the beloved younger
-sister. Uncle Nigel, the general, older than either, was russet-faced,
-white-haired, robust. He embodied a sound, well-nurtured type and
-brought to it hardly an individual variation. He taught his niece,
-re-read a few old books, followed current thought in the "Quarterly" and
-the "Scotsman," and wrote his memoirs, that moved with difficulty from
-boyhood, so detailed were his recollections and so painstaking his
-recording of inessential fact.
-
-For their few neighbors, life went on as slowly as for the Carmichaels.
-The Carstons of Carlowrie House were in touch with a larger outside
-life: Sir Alec Carston was member for the county; but the inmates of
-Brechin House, Crail Hill, and Newton Lowry were fixtures. These dim
-personages hardly counted at all in young Eppie's experience. She saw
-them gathered round the tea-table in the library when she was summoned
-to appear with tidy hair and fresh frock: stout, ruddy ladies in
-driving-gloves and boat-shaped hats; dry, thin young ladies in
-hard-looking muslins and with frizzed fringes; a solid laird or two.
-They were vague images in her world.
-
-People who really counted were the village people, and on the basis of
-her aunts' charitable relationship Eppie built up for herself with most
-of them a tyrannous friendship. The village was over two miles away; one
-reached it by the main road that ran along the moor, past the
-birch-woods, the tiny loch, and then down a steep bit of hill to the
-handful of huddled gray roofs. There was the post-office, the sweet-shop
-with its dim, small panes, behind which, to Eppie's imagination, the
-bull's-eyes and toffee and Edinburgh rock looked, in their jars, like
-odd fish in an aquarium; there was the carpenter's shop, the floor all
-heaped with scented shavings, through which one's feet shuffled in
-delightful, dry rustlings; there the public-house, a lurid corner
-building, past which Miss Grimsby always hurried her over-interested
-young charge, and there the little inn where one ordered the dusty,
-lurching, capacious old fly that conveyed one to the station, five miles
-away. Eppie was far more in the village than her share of her aunts'
-charities at all justified, and was often brought in disgrace from
-sheer truancy. The village babies, her dolls, and Robbie, her Aberdeen
-terrier, were the realities at once serious and radiant of life. She
-could do for them, love them as she would. Her uncle and aunts and the
-fond old nurse were included in an unquestioning tenderness, but they
-could not be brought under its laws, and their independence made them
-more remote.
-
-Remote, too, though by no means independent, and calling forth little
-tenderness, were her cousins, who spent part of their holidays each
-summer at Kirklands. They were English boys, coming from an English
-school, and Eppie was very stanchly Scotch. The Graingers, Jim and
-Clarence, were glad young animals. They brought from a home of small
-means and overflowing sisters uncouth though not bad manners and an
-assured tradition of facile bullying. The small Scotch cousin was at
-first seen only in the light of a convenience. She was to be ignored,
-save for her few and rudimentary uses. But Eppie, at eight years old,
-when the Graingers first came, had an opposed and firmly established
-tradition. In her own domain, she was absolute ruler, and not for a
-moment did her conception of her supremacy waver. Her assurance was so
-complete that it left no room for painful struggle or dispute. From
-helpless stupor to a submission as helpless, the cousins fell by degrees
-to a not unhappy dependence. Eppie ran, climbed, played, as good a boy
-as either; and it was she who organized games, she who invented
-wonderful new adventures, all illumined by thrilling recitatives while
-in progress, she who, though their ally, and a friendly one, was the
-brains of the alliance, and, as thinker, dominated. Brains, at their
-age, being rudimentary in the young male, Eppie had some ground for her
-consciousness of kindly disdain. She regarded Jim and Clarence as an
-animated form of toy, more amusing than other toys because of
-possibilities of unruliness, or as a mere audience, significant only as
-a means for adding to the zest of life. Clarence, the younger, even from
-the first dumb days of reconstruction, was the more malleable. He was
-formed for the part of dazzled subjection to a strong and splendid
-despotism. Eppie treated her subject races to plenty of pomp and glory.
-Clarence listened, tranced, to her heroic stories, followed her
-leadership with docile, eager fidelity, and finally, showing symptoms of
-extreme romanticism, declared himself forever in love with her. Eppie,
-like the ascendant race again, made prompt and shameless use of the
-avowed and very apparent weakness. She bartered rare and difficult
-favors for acts of service, and on one occasion--a patch of purple in
-young Clarence's maudlin days--submitted, with a stony grimace, to being
-kissed; for this treasure Clarence paid by stealing down to the
-forbidden public-house and there buying a bottle of beer which Eppie and
-Jim were to consume as robbers in a cave,--Clarence the seized and
-despoiled traveler. Eppie was made rather ill by her share of the beer,
-but, standing in a bed-gown at her window, she called to her cousins, in
-the garden below, such cheerful accounts of her malady, the slight
-chastisement that Aunt Rachel had inflicted, and her deft evasion of
-medicines, that her luster was heightened rather than dimmed by the
-disaster. Jim never owned, for a moment, to there being any luster. He
-was a square-faced boy, with abrupt nose, and lips funnily turning up at
-the corners, yet funnily grim,--most unsmiling of lips. He followed
-Eppie's lead with the half-surly look of a slave in bondage, and seemed
-dumbly to recognize that his own unfitness rather than Eppie's right
-gave her authority. He retaliated on Clarence for his sense of
-subjection and cruelly teased and scoffed at him. Clarence, when pushed
-too far, would appeal to Eppie for protection, and on these occasions,
-even while she sheltered him, a strange understanding seemed to pass
-between her and the tormentor as though, with him, she found Clarence
-ludicrous. Jim, before her stinging reproofs, would stand tongue-tied
-and furious, but, while she stung him, Eppie liked the sullen culprit
-better than the suppliant victim.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-When Eppie was ten years old, she heard one day that a boy, a new boy,
-was coming to spend the spring and summer--a boy from India, Gavan
-Palairet. His mother and her own had been dear friends, and his father,
-as hers had been, was in the army; and these points of contact mitigated
-for Eppie the sense of exotic strangeness.
-
-Eppie gathered that a cloud rested upon Mrs. Palairet, and the boy,
-though exotic, seemed to come from the far, brilliant country with his
-mother's cloud about him.
-
-"Ah, poor Fanny!" the general sighed over the letter he read at the
-breakfast-table. "How did she come to marry that brute! It will be a
-heart-breaking thing for her to send the boy from her."
-
-Eppie, listening with keen interest, gathered further, from the
-reminiscent talk that went on between the sisters and brother, that Mrs.
-Palairet, for some years of her boy's babyhood, lived in England; then
-it had been India and the effort to keep him near her in the hills, and
-now his delicacy and the definite necessity of schooling had braced her
-to the parting. The general said, glancing with fond pride at his
-niece, that Eppie would be a fine playmate for him and would be of great
-service in cheering him before his plunge into school. Fanny had begged
-for much gentleness and affection for him. Apparently the boy was as
-heartbroken as she.
-
-Eppie had very little diffidence about her own powers as either playmate
-or cheerer: she was well accustomed to both parts; but her eagerness to
-sustain and amuse the invalid was touched with a little shyness. The sad
-boy from India--her heart and mind rushed out in a hundred plans of
-welcome and consolation; but she suspected that a sad boy from India
-would require subtler methods than those sufficing for a Jim or a
-Clarence. From the first moment of hearing about him she had felt, as if
-instinctively, that he would not be at all like Jim and Clarence.
-
-He came on a still, sunny spring day. The general went to meet him at
-the station, and while he was gone Eppie made excitement endurable by
-vigorous action. Again and again she visited the fresh little room
-overlooking the hills, the garden, the pine-tree boughs, standing in a
-thoughtful surveyal of its beauties and comforts or darting off to add
-to them. She herself chose the delightful piece of green soap from the
-store-cupboard and the books for the table; and she gathered the
-daffodils in the birch-woods, filling every vase with them, so that the
-little room with its white walls and hangings of white dimity seemed
-lighted by clusters of pale, bright flames.
-
-When the old fly rumbled at last through the gates and around the drive,
-Miss Rachel and Miss Barbara were in the doorway, and Eppie stood
-before them on the broad stone step, Robbie beside her.
-
-Eppie was a lithe, sturdy, broad-shouldered child, with russet,
-sun-streaked hair, dark yet radiant, falling to her waist. She had a
-pale, freckled face and the woodland eyes of a gay, deep-hearted dog.
-To-day she wore a straight white frock, and her hair, her frock, dazzled
-with sunlight. No more invigorating figure could have greeted a jaded
-traveler.
-
-That it was a very jaded traveler she saw at once, while the general
-bundled out of the fly and handed rugs, dressing-cases, and cages to the
-maid, making a passage for Gavan's descent. The boy followed him,
-casting anxious glances at the cages, and Eppie's eyes, following his,
-saw tropical birds in one and in the other a quaint, pathetic little
-beast--a lemur-like monkey swaddled in flannel and motionless with fear.
-Its quick, shining eyes met hers for a moment, and she looked away from
-them with a sense of pity and repulsion.
-
-Gavan, as he ascended the steps, looked at once weary, frightened, and
-composed. He had a white, thin face and thick black hair--the sort of
-face and hair, Eppie thought, that the wandering prince of one of her
-own stories, the prince who understood the rooks' secrets, would have.
-He was dressed in a long gray traveling-cloak with capes. The eager
-welcome she had in readiness for him seemed out of place before his
-gentle air of self-possession, going as it did with the look of almost
-painful shrinking. She was a little at a loss and so were the aunts, as
-she saw. They took his hand in turn, they smiled, they murmured vague
-words of kindness; but they did not venture to kiss him. He did not seem
-as little a boy as they had expected. The same expression of restraint
-was on Uncle Nigel's hearty countenance. The sad boy was frozen and he
-chilled others.
-
-He was among them now, in the hall, his cages and rugs and boxes about
-him, and, with all the cheery bustling to and fro, he must feel himself
-dreadfully alone. Eppie, too, was chilled and knew, indeed, the
-childish, panic impulse to run away, but her imagination of his
-loneliness was so strong as to nerve quite another impulse. Once she saw
-him as so desolate she could not hesitate. With resolute gravity she
-took his hand, saying, "I am so glad that you have come, Gavan," and, as
-resolutely and as gravely, she kissed him on the cheek. He flushed so
-deeply that for a moment all her panic came back with the fear that she
-had wounded his pride; but in a moment he said, glancing at her, "You
-are very kind. I am glad to be here, too."
-
-His pride was not at all wounded. Eppie felt that at all events the
-worst of the ice was broken.
-
-"May I feed your animals for you while you rest?" she asked him, as,
-with Aunt Barbara, they went up-stairs to his room. Gavan carried the
-lemur himself. Eppie had the birds in their cage.
-
-"Thanks, so much. It only takes a moment; I can do it. My monkey would
-be afraid of any one else," he answered, adding, "The journey has been
-too much for him; he has been very strange all day."
-
-"He will soon get well here," said Eppie, encouragingly--"this is such a
-healthy place. But Scotland will be a great change from India for him,
-won't it?"
-
-"Very great. I am afraid he is going to be ill." And again Gavan's eye
-turned its look of weary anxiety upon the lemur.
-
-But his anxiety did not make him forget his courtesy. "What a beautiful
-view," he said, when they reached his room, "and what beautiful
-flowers!"
-
-"I have this view, too," said Eppie. "The school-room has the view of
-the moor; but I like this best, for early morning when one gets up. You
-will see how lovely it is to smell the pine-tree when it is all wet with
-dew."
-
-Gavan agreed that it must be lovely, and looked out with her at the
-blue-green boughs; but even while he looked and admired, she felt more
-courtesy than interest.
-
-They left him in his room to rest till tea-time, and in the library Aunt
-Rachel and Aunt Barbara exclaimed over his air of fragility.
-
-"He is fearfully tired, poor little fellow," said the general; "a day or
-two of rest will set him up."
-
-"He looks a very intelligent boy, Nigel," said Miss Rachel, "but not a
-cheerful disposition."
-
-"How could one expect that from him now, poor, dear child!" Aunt Barbara
-expostulated. "He has a beautiful nature, I am sure--such a sensitive
-mouth and such fine eyes."
-
-And the general said: "He is wonderfully like his mother. I am glad to
-see that he takes after Claude Palairet in nothing."
-
-Eppie asked if Captain Palairet were very horrid and was told that he
-was, with the warning that no intimation of such knowledge on her part
-was to be given to her new playmate; a warning that Eppie received with
-some indignation. No one, she was sure, could feel for Gavan as she did,
-or know so well what to say and what not to say to him.
-
-She was gratified to hear that he was not to go down to dinner but was
-to share the school-room high-tea with her and Miss Grimsby. But in the
-wide school-room, ruddy with the hues of sunset and hung with its maps
-and its childish decorations of Caldecott drawings and colored Christmas
-supplements from the "Graphic,"--little girls on stairs with dogs, and
-"Cherry Ripe,"--he was almost oppressively out of place. Not that he
-seemed to find himself so. He made, evidently, no claims to maturity.
-But Eppie felt a strange sense of shrunken importance as she listened to
-him politely answering Miss Grimsby's questions about his voyage and
-giving her all sorts of information about religious sects in India. She
-saw herself relegated to a humbler rle than any she had conceived
-possible for herself. She would be lucky if she succeeded in cheering at
-all this remote person; it was doubtful if she could ever come near
-enough to console. She took this first blow to her self-assurance very
-wholesomely. Her interest in the sad boy was all the keener for it. She
-led him, next morning, about the garden, over a bit of the moor, and
-into the fairyland of the birch-woods--their young green all tremulous
-in the wind and sunlight. And she showed him, among the pines and
-heather, the winding path, its white, sandy soil laced with black
-tree-roots, that led to the hilltop. "When you are quite rested, we will
-go up there, if you like," she said. "The burn runs beside this path
-almost all the way--you can't think how pretty it is; and when you get
-to the top you can see for miles and miles all about, all over the
-moors, and the hills, away beyond there, and you can see two villages
-besides ours, and such a beautiful windmill."
-
-Gavan, hardly noticing the kind little girl, except to know that she was
-kind, assented to all her projects, indifferent to them and to her.
-
-A day or two after his arrival, he and Eppie were united in ministering
-to the dying lemur. The sad creature lay curled up in its basket,
-motionless, refusing food, only from time to time stretching out a
-languid little hand to its master; and when Gavan took it, the delicate
-animal miniature lay inert in his. Its eyes, seeming to grow larger and
-brighter as life went, had a strange look of question and wonder.
-
-Eppie wept loudly when it was dead; but Gavan had no tears. She
-suspected him of a suffering all the keener and that his self-control
-did not allow him the relief of emotion before her. She hoped, at least,
-to be near him in the formalities of grief, and proposed that they
-should bury the lemur together, suggesting a spot among birch-trees and
-heather where some rabbits of her own were interred. When she spoke of
-the ceremony, Gavan hesitated; to repulse her, or to have her with him
-in the task of burial, were perhaps equally painful to him. "If you
-don't mind, I think I would rather do it by myself," he said in his
-gentle, tentative way.
-
-Eppie felt her lack of delicacy unconsciously rebuked. She recognized
-that, in spite of her most genuine grief, the burial of the lemur had
-held out to her some of the satisfactory possibilities of a solemn game.
-She had been gross in imagining that Gavan could share in such divided
-instincts. Her tears fell for her own just abasement, as well as for the
-lemur, while she watched Gavan walking away into the woods--evidently
-avoiding the proximity of the rabbits--with the small white box under
-his arm.
-
-The day after this was Sunday, a day of doom to Eppie. It meant that
-morning recitation of hymn and collect in the chintz and gilt boudoir
-and then the bleak and barren hours in church. Even Aunt Barbara's
-mildness could, on this subject, become inflexible, and Aunt Rachel's
-aspect reminded Eppie of the stern angel with the flaming sword driving
-frail, reluctant humanity into the stony wilderness. A flaming sword was
-needed. Every Sunday saw the renewal of her protest, and there were
-occasions on which her submission was only extorted after disgraceful
-scenes. Eppie herself, on looking back, had to own that she had indeed
-disgraced herself when she had taken refuge under her bed and lain
-there, her hat all bent, her fresh dress all crumpled, fiercely
-shrieking her refusal; and disgrace had been deeper on another day when
-she had actually struck out at her aunts while they mutely and in pale
-indignation haled her toward the door. It was dreadful to remember that
-Aunt Barbara had burst into tears. Eppie could not forgive herself for
-that. She had a stoic satisfaction in the memory of the smart whipping
-that she had borne without a whimper, and perhaps did not altogether
-repent the heavier slap she had dealt Aunt Rachel; but the thought of
-Aunt Barbara's tears--they had continued so piteously to flow while Aunt
-Rachel whipped her--quelled physical revolt forever. She was older now,
-too, and protest only took the form of dejection and a hostile gloom.
-
-On this Sunday the gloom was shot with a new and, it seemed, a most
-legitimate hope. Boys were usually irreligious; the Grainger cousins
-certainly were so: they had once run away on Sunday morning. She could
-not, to be sure, build much upon possible analogies of behavior between
-Gavan and the Graingers; yet the facts of his age and sex were there:
-normal, youthful manliness might be relied upon. If Gavan wished to
-remain it seemed perfectly probable that the elders might yield as a
-matter of course, and as if to a grown-up guest. Gavan was hardly
-treated as a child by any of them.
-
-"You are fond of going to church, I hope, Gavan," Aunt Rachel said at
-breakfast. The question had its reproof for Eppie, who, with large eyes,
-over her porridge, listened for the reply.
-
-"Yes, very," was the doom that fell.
-
-Eppie flushed so deeply that Gavan noticed it. "I don't mind a bit not
-going if Eppie doesn't go and would like to have me stay at home with
-her," he hastened, with an almost uncanny intuition of her
-disappointment, to add.
-
-Aunt Rachel cast an eye of comprehension upon Eppie's discomfited
-visage. "That would be a most inappropriate generosity, my dear Gavan.
-Eppie comes with us always."
-
-Gavan still looked at Eppie, who, with downcast eyes, ate swiftly.
-
-"Now I'll be bound that she has been wheedling you to get her off,
-Gavan," said the general, with genial banter. "She is a little rebel to
-the bone. She knows that it's no good to rebel, so she put you up to
-pleading for her"; and, as Gavan protested, "Indeed, indeed, sir, she
-didn't," he still continued, "Oh, Eppie, you baggage, you! Isn't that
-it, eh? Didn't you hope that you could stay with him if he stayed
-behind?"
-
-"Yes, I did," Eppie said, without contrition.
-
-"She didn't tell me so," said Gavan, full of evident sympathy for
-Eppie's wounds under this false accusation.
-
-She repelled his defense with a curt, "I would have, if it would have
-done any good."
-
-"Ah, that's my brave lassie," laughed the general; but Aunt Rachel ended
-the unseemly exposure with a decisive, "Be still now, Eppie; we know too
-well what you feel about this subject. There is nothing brave in such
-naughtiness."
-
-Gavan said no more; from Eppie's unmoved expression he guessed that such
-reproofs did not cut deep. He joined her after breakfast as she stood
-in the open doorway, looking out at the squandered glories of the day.
-
-"Do you dislike going to church so much?" he asked her. The friendly
-bond of his sympathy at the table would have cheered her heart at
-another time; it could do no more for her now than make frankness easy
-and a relief.
-
-"I hate it," she answered.
-
-"But why?"
-
-"It's so long--so stupid."
-
-Gavan loitered about before her on the door-step, his hands in his
-pockets. Evidently he could find no ready comment for her accusation.
-
-"Every one looks so silly and so sleepy," she went on. "Mr. MacNab is so
-ugly. Besides, he is an unkind man: he whips his children all the time;
-not whippings when they deserve it--like mine,"--Gavan looked at her,
-startled by this impersonally just remark,--"he whips them because he is
-cross himself. Why should he tell us about being good if he is as
-ill-tempered as possible? And he has a horrid voice,--not like the
-village people, who talk in a dear, funny way,--he has a horrid, pretend
-voice. And you stand up and sit down and have nothing to do for ages and
-ages. I don't see how anybody _can_ like church."
-
-Gavan kicked vaguely at the lichen spots.
-
-"Do you really _like_ it?"
-
-"Yes," he answered, with his shy abruptness.
-
-"But why? It's different, I know, for old people--I don't suppose that
-they mind things any longer; but I don't see how a boy, a young
-boy"--and Eppie allowed herself a reproachful emphasis--"can possibly
-like it."
-
-"I'm used to it, you see, and I don't think of it in your way at all."
-Gavan could not speak to this funny child of its sacred associations. In
-church he had always felt that he and his mother had escaped to a place
-of reality and peace. He entered, through his love for her, into the
-love of the sense of sanctuary from an ominous and hostile world. And he
-was a boy with a deep, sad sense of God.
-
-"But you don't _like_ it," said the insistent Eppie.
-
-"I more than like it."
-
-She eyed him gravely. "I suppose it is because you are so grown up. Yet
-you are only four years older than I am. I wonder if I will ever get to
-like it. I hope not."
-
-"Well, it will be more comfortable for you if you do,--since you have to
-go," said Gavan, with his faint, wintry smile.
-
-She felt the kindness of his austere banter, and retorting, "I'd rather
-not be comfortable, then," joined him in the sunlight on the broad,
-stone step, going on with quite a sense of companionship: "Only one
-thing I don't so much mind--and that is the hymns. I am so glad when
-they come that I almost shout them. Sometimes--I'm telling you as quite
-a secret, you know--I shout as loud as I possibly can on purpose to
-disturb Aunt Rachel. I know it's wrong, so don't bother to tell me so;
-besides, it's partly because I really like to shout. But I always do
-hope that some day they may leave me at home rather than have me making
-such a noise. People often turn round to look."
-
-Gavan laughed.
-
-"You think that wicked no doubt?"
-
-"No, I think it funny, and quite useless, I'm sure."
-
-After all, Gavan wasn't a muff, as a boy fond of church might have been
-suspected of being.
-
-Yet after the walk through the birch-woods and over a corner of moor to
-the bare little common where the church stood, and when they were all
-installed in the hard, familiar pew, a new and still more alienating
-impression came to her--alienating yet fascinating. A sense of awe crept
-over her and she watched Gavan in an absorbed, a dreamy wonder.
-
-Eppie only associated prayers with a bedside; they were part of the
-toilet, so to speak--went in with the routine of hair-and tooth-brushing
-and having one's bath. To pray in church, if one were a young person,
-seemed a mystifying, almost an abnormal oddity. She was accustomed to
-seeing in the sodden faces of the village children an echo to her own
-wholesome vacuity. But Gavan really prayed; that was evident. He buried
-his face in his arms. He thought of no one near him.
-
-It was Eppie's custom to vary the long monotony of Mr. MacNab's dreary,
-nasal, burring voice by sundry surreptitious occupations, such as
-drawing imaginary pictures with her forefinger upon the lap of her
-frock, picking out in the Bible all the words of which her aunts said
-she could only know the meaning when she grew up, counting the number of
-times that Mr. MacNab stiffly raised his hand in speaking, seeing how
-often she could softly kick the pew in front of her before being told to
-stop; and then there was the favorite experiment suggested to her by the
-advertisement of a soap where, after fixing the eyes upon a red spot
-while one counted thirty, one found, on looking at a blank white space,
-that the spot appeared transformed, ghost-like and floating, to a vivid
-green. Eppie's fertile imagination had seen in Mr. MacNab's thin, red
-face a substitute for the spot, and most diverting results had followed
-when, after a fixed stare at his countenance, one transferred him, as it
-were, to the pages of one's prayer-book. To see Mr. MacNab dimly
-hovering there, a green emanation, made him less intolerable in reality:
-found, at least, a use for him. This discovery had been confided to the
-Graingers, and they had been grateful for it. And when all else failed
-and even Mr. MacNab's poor uses had palled, there was one bright moment
-to look forward to in the morning's suffocating tedium. Just before the
-sermon, Uncle Nigel, settling himself in his corner, would feel, as if
-absently, in his waistcoat pocket and then slip a lime-drop into her
-hand. The sharply sweet flavor filled her with balmy content, and could,
-with discretion in the use of the tongue, be prolonged for ten minutes.
-
-But to-day her eyes and thoughts were fixed on Gavan; and when the
-lime-drop was in her mouth she crunched it mechanically and heedlessly:
-how he held his prayer-book, his pallid, melancholy profile bent above
-it, how he sat gravely listening to Mr. MacNab, how he prayed and sang.
-Only toward the end of the sermon was the tension of her spirit relieved
-by seeing humanizing symptoms of weariness. She was sure that he was
-hearing as little as she was--his thoughts were far away; and when he
-put up a hand to hide a yawn her jaws stretched themselves in quick
-sympathy. Gavan's eyes at this turned on her and he smiled openly and
-delightfully at her. Delightfully; yet the very fact of his daring to
-smile made him more grown up than ever. Such maturity, such strange
-spiritual assurance, could afford lightnesses. He brought with him, into
-the fresh, living world outside, his aura of mystery.
-
-Eppie walked beside her uncle and still observed Gavan as he went before
-them with the aunts.
-
-"How do you like your playmate, Eppie?" the general asked.
-
-"He isn't a playmate," Eppie gravely corrected him.
-
-"Not very lively? But a nice boy, eh?"
-
-"I think he is very nice; but he is too big to care about me."
-
-"Nonsense; he's but three years older."
-
-"Four, Uncle Nigel. That makes a great deal of difference at our ages,"
-said Eppie, wisely.
-
-"Nonsense," the general repeated. "He is only a bit down on his luck;
-he's not had time to find you out yet. To-morrow he joins you in your
-Greek and history, and I fancy he'll see that four years' difference
-isn't such a difference when it comes to some things. Not many chits of
-your age are such excellent scholars."
-
-"But I think that we will always be very different," said Eppie, though
-at her uncle's commendation her spirits had risen.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Greek and history proved, indeed, a bond. The two children, during the
-hours in the library, met on a more equal footing, for Gavan was
-backward with his studies. But the question of inequality had not come
-up in Gavan's consciousness. "I'm only afraid that I shall bore her," he
-hastened, in all sincerity, to say when the general appealed to a
-possible vanity in him by hoping that he didn't mind being kind to a
-little girl and going about with her. "She's the only companion we have
-for you, you see. And we all find her very good company, in spite of her
-ten years."
-
-And at this Gavan said, with a smile that protested against any idea
-that he should not find her so: "I'm only afraid that I'm not good
-company for any one. She is a dear little girl."
-
-It was in the wanderings over the moors and in the birch-woods and up
-the hillside, where Eppie took him to see her views, that the bond
-really drew to closeness. Here nature and little Eppie seemed together
-to thaw him, to heal him, to make him unconsciously happy. A fugitive
-color dawned in his wasted cheeks; a fragile gaiety came to his manner.
-He began to find it easy to talk, easy to be quite a little boy. And
-once he did talk, Gavan talked a great deal, quickly, with a sort of
-nervous eagerness. There grew, in Eppie's mind, a vast mirage-like
-picture of the strange land he came from: the great mountains about
-their high summer home; the blue-shadowed verandas; the flowers he and
-his mother grew in the garden; the rides at dawn; the long, hot days;
-the gentle, softly moving servants, some of whom he loved and told her a
-great deal about. Then the crowds, the swarming colors of the bazaars in
-the great cities.
-
-"No, no; don't wish to go there," he said, taking his swift, light
-strides through the heather, his head bent, his eyes looking before
-him--he seldom looked at one, glanced only; "I hate it,--more than you
-do church!" and though his simile was humorous he didn't laugh with it.
-"I hate the thought of any one I care about being there." He had still,
-for Eppie, his mystery, and she dimly felt, too, that his greater ease
-with her made more apparent his underlying sadness; but the sense of
-being an outsider was gone, and she glowed now at the implication that
-she was one he cared about.
-
-"It's vast and meaningless," said Gavan, who often used terms curiously
-unboyish. "I can't describe it to you. It's like a dream; you expect all
-the time to wake up and find nothing."
-
-"I know that I should never love anything so much as Scotland--as
-heather and pines and sky with clouds. Still, I should like to see
-India. I should like to see everything that there is to be seen--if I
-could be sure of always coming back here."
-
-"Ah, yes, if one could be sure of that."
-
-"I shall always live here, Gavan," said Eppie, feeling the skepticism of
-his "if."
-
-"Well, that may be so," he returned, with the manner that made her
-realize so keenly the difference that was more than a matter of four
-years.
-
-She insisted now: "I shall live here until I am grown up. Then I shall
-travel everywhere, all over the world--India, Japan, America; then I
-shall marry and come back here to live and have twelve children. I don't
-believe you care for children as I do, Gavan. How they would enjoy
-themselves here, twelve of them all together--six boys and six girls."
-
-Gavan laughed. "Well, I hope all that will come true," he assented. "Why
-twelve?"
-
-"I don't know; but I've always thought of there being twelve. I would
-like as many as possible, and one could hardly remember the names of
-more. I don't believe that there are more than twelve names that I care
-for. But with twelve we should have a birthday-party once a month, one
-for each month. Did you have birthday-cakes in India, Gavan, with
-candles for your age?"
-
-"Yes; my mother always had a cake for my birthday." His voice, in
-speaking of his mother, seemed always to steel itself, as though to
-speak of her hurt him. Eppie had felt this directly, and now, regretting
-her allusion, said, "When is your birthday, Gavan?" thinking of a cake
-with fifteen candles--how splendid!--to hear disappointingly that the
-day was not till January, when he would have been gone--long since.
-
-On another time, as they walked up the hillside, beside the burn, she
-said: "I thought you were not going to like us at all, when you first
-came."
-
-"I was horribly afraid of you all," said Gavan. "Everything was so
-strange to me."
-
-"No, you weren't afraid," Eppie objected--"not really afraid. I don't
-believe you are ever really afraid of people."
-
-"Yes, I am--afraid of displeasing them, trying them in some way. And I
-was miserable on that day, too, with anxiety about my poor monkey. I'm
-sorry I seemed horrid."
-
-"Not a bit horrid, only very cold and polite."
-
-"I didn't realize things much. You see--" Gavan paused.
-
-"Yes, of course; you weren't thinking of us. You were thinking of--what
-you had left."
-
-"Yes," he assented, not looking at her.
-
-He went on presently, turning his eyes on her and smiling over a sort of
-alarm at his own advance to personalities: "_You_ weren't horrid. I
-remember that I thought you the nicest little girl I had ever seen. You
-were all that I did see--standing there in the sun, with a white dress
-like Alice in Wonderland and with your hair all shining. I never saw
-hair like it."
-
-"Do you think it pretty?" Eppie asked eagerly.
-
-"Very--all those rivers of gold in the dark."
-
-"I _am_ glad. I think it pretty, too, and nurse is afraid that I am
-vain, I think, for she always takes great pains to tell me that it is
-striped hair and that she hopes it may grow to be the same color when
-I'm older."
-
-"_I_ hope not," said Gavan, gallantly.
-
-Many long afternoons were spent in the garden, where Eppie initiated him
-into the sanctities of the summer-house. Gavan's sense of other people's
-sanctities was wonderful. She would never have dreamed of showing her
-dolls to her cousins; but she brought them out and displayed them to
-Gavan, and he looked at them and their appurtenances carefully, gravely
-assenting to all the characteristics that she pointed out. So kind,
-indeed, so comprehending was he, that Eppie, a delightful project
-dawning in her mind, asked: "Have you ever played with dolls? I mean
-when you were very little?"
-
-"No, never."
-
-"I've always had to play by myself," said Eppie, "and it's rather dull
-sometimes, having to carry on all the conversations alone." And with a
-rush she brought out, rather aghast at her own hardihood, "I suppose you
-couldn't think of playing with me?"
-
-Gavan, at this, showed something of the bashful air of a young bachelor
-asked to hold a baby, but in a moment he said, "I shouldn't mind at all,
-though I'm afraid I shall be stupid at it."
-
-Eppie flushed, incredulous of such good fortune, and almost reluctant to
-accept it. "You _really_ don't mind, Gavan? Boys hate dolls, as a rule,
-you know."
-
-"I don't mind in the least," he laughed. "I am sure I shall enjoy it.
-How do we begin? You must teach me."
-
-"I'll teach you everything. You are the very kindest person I ever knew,
-Gavan. Really, I wouldn't ask you to if I didn't believe you would like
-it when once you had tried it. It is such fun. And now we can make them
-do all sorts of things, have all sorts of adventures, that they never
-could have before." She suspected purest generosity, but so trusted in
-the enchantments he was to discover that she felt herself justified in
-profiting by it. She placed in his hand Agnes, the fairest of all the
-dolls, golden-haired, blue-eyed. Agnes was good, and her own daughter,
-Elspeth, named after herself, was bad. "As bad as possible," said Eppie.
-"I have to whip her a great deal."
-
-Gavan, holding his charge rather helplessly and looking at Elspeth, a
-doll of sturdier build, with short hair, dark eyes, and, for a doll, a
-mutinous face, remarked, with his touch of humor, "I thought you didn't
-approve of whipping."
-
-"I don't,--not real children, or dolls either, except when they are
-really bad. Mr. MacNab whips his all the time, and they are not a bit
-bad, really, as Elspeth is." And Elspeth proceeded to demonstrate how
-really bad she was by falling upon Agnes with such malicious kicks and
-blows that Gavan, in defense of his own doll, dealt her a vigorous slap.
-
-"Well done, Mr. Palairet; she richly deserves it! Come here directly,
-you naughty child," and after a scuffling flight around the
-summer-house, Elspeth was secured, and so soundly beaten that Gavan at
-last interceded for her with the ruthless mother.
-
-"Not until she says that she is sorry."
-
-"Oh, Elspeth, say that you are sorry," Gavan supplicated, while he
-laughed. "Really, Eppie, you are savage. I feel as if you were really
-hurting some one. Please forgive her now; Agnes has, I am sure."
-
-"I hurt her because I love her and want her to be a good child. She will
-come to no good end when she grows up if she cannot learn to control her
-temper. What is it I hear you say, Elspeth?"
-
-Elspeth, in a low, sullen voice that did not augur well for permanent
-amendment, whispered that she was sorry, and was led up, crestfallen, to
-beg Agnes's pardon and to receive a reconciling kiss.
-
-The table was then brought out and laid. Eppie had her small store of
-biscuits and raisins, and Elspeth and Agnes were sent into the garden to
-pick currants and flowers. To Agnes was given the task of making a
-nosegay for the place of each guest. There were four of these guests,
-bidden to the feast with great ceremony: three, pink and curly, of
-little individuality, and the fourth a dingy, armless old rag-doll,
-reverently wrapped in a fine shawl, and with a pathetic,
-half-obliterated face.
-
-"Very old and almost deaf," Eppie whispered to Gavan. "Everybody loves
-her. She lost her arms in a great fire, saving a baby's life."
-
-Gavan was entering into all the phases of the game with such spirit,
-keeping up Agnes's character for an irritating perfection so aptly that
-Eppie forgot to wonder if his enjoyment were as real as her own. But
-suddenly the doorway was darkened, and glancing up, she saw her uncle's
-face, long-drawn with jocular incredulity, looking in upon them. Then,
-and only then, under the eyes of an uncomprehending sex, did the true
-caliber of Gavan's self-immolation flash upon her. A boy, a big boy, he
-was playing dolls with a girl; it was monstrous; as monstrous as the
-general's eyes showed that he found it. Stooping in his tall slightness,
-as he assisted Agnes's steps across the floor, he seemed, suddenly, a
-fairy prince decoyed and flouted. What would Uncle Nigel think of him?
-She could almost have flung herself before him protectingly.
-
-The general had burst into laughter. "Now, upon my word, this is too bad
-of you, Eppie!" he cried, while Gavan, not abandoning his hold on
-Agnes's arm, turned his eyes upon the intruder with perfect serenity.
-"You are the most unconscionable little tyrant. You kept the Grainger
-boys under your thumb; but I didn't think you could carry wheedling or
-bullying as far as this. Gavan, my dear boy, you are too patient with
-her."
-
-Eppie stood at the table, scarlet with anger and compunction. Gavan had
-raised himself, and, still holding Agnes, looked from one to the other.
-
-"But she hasn't bullied me; she hasn't wheedled me," he said. "I like
-it."
-
-"At your age, my dear boy! Like doll-babies!"
-
-"Indeed I do."
-
-"This is the finest bit of chivalry I've come across for a long time.
-The gentleman who jumped into the lions' den for his mistress's glove
-was hardly pluckier. Drop that ridiculous thing and come away. I'll
-rescue you."
-
-"But I don't want to be rescued. I really am enjoying myself. It's not a
-case of courage at all," Gavan protested.
-
-This was too much. He should not tarnish himself to shield her, and
-Eppie burst out: "Nonsense, Gavan. I asked you to. You are only doing it
-because you are so kind, and to please me. It was very wrong of me. Put
-her down as Uncle Nigel says."
-
-"There, our little tyrant is honest, at all events. Drop it, Gavan. You
-should see the figure you cut with that popinjay in your arms. Come,
-you've won your spurs. Come away with me."
-
-But Gavan, smiling, shook his head. "No, I don't want to, thanks. I did
-it to please her, if you like; but now I do it to please myself. Playing
-with dolls is a most amusing game,--and you are interrupting us at a
-most interesting point," he added. He seemed, funnily, doll and all,
-older than the general as he said it. Incredulous but mystified, Uncle
-Nigel was forced to beat a retreat, and Gavan was left confronting his
-playmate.
-
-"Why did you tell him that you enjoyed it?" she cried. "He'll think you
-unmanly."
-
-"My dear Eppie, he won't think me unmanly at all. Besides, I don't care
-if he does."
-
-"_I_ care."
-
-"But, Eppie, you take it too hard. Why should you care? It's only funny.
-Why shouldn't we amuse ourselves as we like? We are only children."
-
-"You are much more than a child. Uncle Nigel thinks so, too, I am sure."
-
-"All the more reason, then, for my having a right to amuse myself as I
-please. And I am a child, for I do amuse myself."
-
-Eppie stood staring out rigidly at the blighted prospect, and he took
-her unyielding hand. "Poor Elspeth is lying on her face. Do let us go
-on. I want you to hear what Agnes has to say next."
-
-She turned to him now. "I don't believe a word you say. You only did it
-for me. You are only doing it for me now."
-
-"Well, what if I did? What if I do? Can't I enjoy doing things for you?
-And really, really, Eppie, I do think it fun. I assure you I do."
-
-"I think you are a hero," Eppie said solemnly, and at this absurdity he
-burst into his high, shrill laugh, and renewed his supplications; but
-supplications were in vain. She refused to let him play with her again.
-He might do things for the dolls,--yes, she reluctantly consented to
-that at last,--he might take the part of robber or of dangerous wild
-beast in the woods, but into domestic relations, as it were, he should
-not enter with them; and from this determination Gavan could not move
-her.
-
-As far as his dignity in the eyes of others went, he might have gone on
-playing dolls with her all summer; Eppie realized, with surprise and
-relief, that Gavan's assurance had been well founded. Uncle Nigel,
-evidently, did not think him unmanly, and there was no chaffing. It
-really was as he had said, he was so little a child that he could do as
-he chose. His dignity needed no defense.
-
-But though the doll episode was not to be repeated, other and more equal
-ties knit her friendship with Gavan. Wide vistas of talk opened from
-their lessons, from their readings together. As they rambled through the
-heather they would talk of the Odyssey, of Plutarch's Lives, of nearer
-great people and events in history. Gavan listened with smiling interest
-while Eppie expressed her hatreds and her loves, correcting her
-vehemence, now and then, by a reference to mitigatory circumstance.
-Penelope was one of the people she hated. "See, Gavan, how she neglected
-her husband's dog while he was away--let him starve to death on a
-dunghill."
-
-Gavan surmised that the Homeric Greeks had little sense of
-responsibility about dogs.
-
-"They were horrid, then," said Eppie. "Dear Argos! Think of him trying
-to wag his tail when he was dying and saw Ulysses; _he_ was horrid, too,
-for he surely might have just stopped for a moment and patted his head.
-I'm glad that Robbie didn't live in those times. You wouldn't let Robbie
-die on a dunghill if _I_ were to go away!"
-
-"No, indeed, Eppie!" Gavan smiled.
-
-"I think you really love Robbie as much as I do, Gavan. You love him
-more than Uncle Nigel does. One can always see in people's eyes how much
-they love a dog. That fat, red Miss Erskine simply feels nothing for
-them, though she always says 'Come, come,' to Robbie. But her eyes are
-like stones when she looks at him. She is really thinking about her
-tea, and watching to see that Aunt Rachel puts in plenty of cream. I
-suppose that Penelope looked like her, when she used to see Argos on the
-dunghill."
-
-Robbie was plunging through the heather before them and paused to look
-round at them, his delicate tongue lapping in little pants over his
-teeth.
-
-"Darling Robbie," said Gavan. "Our eyes aren't like stones when we look
-at you! See him smile, Eppie, when I speak to him. Wouldn't it be funny
-if we smiled with our ears instead of with our mouths."
-
-Gavan, after a moment, sighed involuntarily and deeply.
-
-"What is the matter?" Eppie asked quickly, for she had grown near enough
-to ask it. And how near they were was shown after a little silence, by
-Gavan saying: "I was only wishing that everything could be happy at
-once, Eppie. I was thinking about my mother and wishing that she might
-be here with you and me and Robbie." His voice was steadied to its cold
-quiet as he said it, though he knew how safe from any hurt he was with
-her. And she said nothing, and did not look at him, only, in silence,
-putting a hand of comradeship on his shoulder while they walked.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Once a week, on the days of the Indian mail, Eppie's understanding
-hovered helplessly about Gavan, seeing pain for him and powerless to
-shield him from it. Prayers took place in the dining-room ten minutes
-before breakfast, and with the breakfast the mail was brought in, so
-that Gavan's promptest descent could not secure him a solitary reading
-of the letter that, Eppie felt, he awaited with trembling eagerness.
-
-"A letter from India, Gavan dear," Miss Rachel, the distributer of the
-mail would say. "Tell us your news." And before them all, in the midst
-of the general's comments on politics, crops, and weather, the rustling
-of newspapers, the pouring of tea, he was forced to open and read his
-letter and to answer, even during the reading, the kindly triviality of
-the questions showered upon him. "Yes, thank you, very well indeed. Yes,
-in Calcutta. Yes, enjoying herself, I think, thanks." His pallor on
-these occasions, his look of hardened endurance, told Eppie all that it
-did not tell the others. And that his eagerness was too great for him to
-wait until after breakfast, she saw, too. A bright thought of rescue
-came to her at last. On the mornings when the Indian mail was due, she
-was up a good hour before her usual time. Long before the quaint,
-musical gong sounded its vague, blurred melody for prayers, she was out
-of the house and running through the birch-woods to the village road,
-where, just above the church, she met the postman. He was an old friend,
-glad to please the young lady's love of importance, and the mail was
-trusted to her care. Eppie saved all her speed for the return. Every
-moment counted for Gavan's sheltered reading. She felt as if, her back
-to its door, she stood before the sheltered chamber of their meeting,
-guarding their clasp and kiss, sweet and sorrowful, from alien eyes.
-Flushed, panting, she darted up to his room, handing his letter in to
-him, while she said in an easy, matter-of-fact tone, "Your mail, Gavan."
-
-Gavan, like the postman, attributed his good luck to Eppie's love of
-importance, and only on the third morning discovered her manoeuver.
-
-He came down early himself to get his own letter, found that the mail
-had not arrived, and, strolling disappointedly down the drive, was
-almost knocked down by Eppie rushing in at the gate. She fell back,
-dismayed at the revelation that must force the fullness of her sympathy
-upon him--almost as if she herself glanced in at the place of meeting.
-
-"I've got the letters," she said, leaning on the stone pillar and
-recovering her breath. "There's one for you." And she held it out.
-
-But for once Gavan's concentration seemed to be for her rather than for
-the letter. "My mother's letter?" he said.
-
-She nodded.
-
-"It was you, then. I wondered why they came so much earlier."
-
-"I met the postman; he likes to be saved that much of his walk."
-
-"You must have to go a long way to get them so early. You went on
-purpose for me, I think."
-
-Looking aside, she now had to own: "I saw that you hated reading them
-before us all. I would hate it, too."
-
-"Eppie, my dearest Eppie," said Gavan. Glancing at him, she saw tears in
-his eyes, and joy and pride flamed up in her. He opened the letter and
-read it, walking beside her, his hand on her shoulder, showing her that
-he did not count her among "us all."
-
-After that they went together to meet the postman, and, unasked, Gavan
-would read to her long pieces from what his mother said.
-
-It was a few weeks later, on one of these days, that she knew, from his
-face while he read, and from his silence, that bad news had come. He
-left her at the house, making no confidence, and at breakfast, when he
-came down to it later, she could see that he had been struggling for
-self-mastery. This pale, controlled face, at which she glanced furtively
-while they did their lessons in the library, made her think of the
-Spartan boy, calm over an agony. Even the general noticed the mechanical
-voice and the pallor and asked him if he were feeling tired this
-morning. Gavan owned to a headache.
-
-"Off to the moors directly, then," said the general; "and you, too,
-Eppie. Have a morning together."
-
-Eppie sat over her book and said that perhaps Gavan would rather go
-without her; but Gavan, who had risen, said quickly that he wanted her
-to come. "Let us go to the hilltop," he said, when they were outside in
-the warm, scented sunlight.
-
-They went through the woods, where the burn ran, rippling loudly, and
-the shadows were blue on the little, sandy path that wound among pines
-and birches. Neither spoke while they climbed the gradual ascent. They
-came out upon the height that ran in a long undulation to the far lift
-of mountain ranges. Under a solitary group of pines they sat down.
-
-The woods of Kirklands were below them, and then the vast sea of purple,
-heaving in broad, long waves to the azure, intense and clear, of the
-horizon. The wind sighed, soft and shrill, through the pines above them,
-and far away they heard a sheep-bell tinkle. Beyond the delicate
-miniature of the village a wind-mill turned slow, gray sails. The whole
-world, seemed a sunlit island floating in the circling blue. Robbie sat
-at their feet, alert, upright, silhouetted against the sky.
-
-"Robbie, Robbie," said Gavan, gently, as he leaned forward and stroked
-the dog's back. Eppie, too, stroked with him. The silence of his unknown
-grief weighed heavily on her heart and she guessed that though for him
-the pain of silence was great, the pain of speech seemed greater.
-
-He presently raised himself again, clasping both hands about his knees
-and looking away into the vast distance. His head, with its thick hair,
-its fine, aquiline nose and delicately jutting chin, made Eppie think,
-vaguely, of a picture she had seen of a young Saint Sebastian, mutely
-enduring arrows, on a background of serene sky. With the thought, the
-silence became unendurable; she strung herself to speak. "Tell me,
-Gavan," she said, "have you had bad news?"
-
-He cast her a frightened glance, and, looking down, began to pull at the
-heather. "No, not bad news, exactly."
-
-Eppie drew a breath of dubious relief. "But you are so unhappy about
-something."
-
-Gavan nodded.
-
-"But why, if it's not bad news?"
-
-After a pause he said, and she knew, with all the pain of it, what the
-relief of speaking must be: "I guess at things. I always feel if she is
-hiding things."
-
-"Perhaps you are only imagining."
-
-"I wish I could think it; but I know not. I know what is happening to
-her."
-
-He was still wrenching away at the heather, tossing aside the purple
-sprays with their finely tangled sandy roots. Suddenly he put his head
-on his knees, hiding his face.
-
-"Oh, Gavan! Oh, don't be so unhappy," Eppie whispered, drawing near him,
-helpless and awe-struck.
-
-"How can I be anything but unhappy when the person I care most for is
-miserable--miserable, and I am so far from her?" His shoulders heaved;
-she saw that he was weeping.
-
-Eppie, at first, gazed, motionless, silent, frozen with a child's quick
-fear of demonstrated grief. A child's quick response followed. Throwing
-her arms around him, she too burst into tears.
-
-It was strange to see how the boy's reserves melted in the onslaught of
-this hot, simple sympathy. He turned to her, hiding his face on her
-shoulder, and they cried together.
-
-"I didn't want to make you unhappy, too," Gavan said at last in a
-weakened voice. His tears were over first and he faintly smiled as he
-met Robbie's alarmed, beseeching eyes. Robbie had been scrambling over
-them, scratching, whining, licking their hands and cheeks in an
-exasperation of shut-out pity.
-
-"I'm not nearly so unhappy as when you don't say anything and I know
-that you are keeping things back," Eppie choked, pushing Robbie away
-blindly. "I'd much rather _be_ unhappy if you are."
-
-It was Gavan, one arm around the rejected Robbie, who had to dry her
-tears, trying to console her with: "Perhaps I did imagine more than
-there actually is. One can't help imagining--at this distance." He
-smiled at her, as he had smiled at Robbie, and holding her hand, he went
-on: "She is so gentle, and so lonely, and so unhappy. I could help her
-out there. Here, I am so helpless."
-
-"Make her come here!" Eppie cried. "Write at once and make her come.
-Send a wire, Gavan. Couldn't she be here very soon, if you wired that
-she must--_must_ come? I wouldn't bear it if I were you."
-
-"She can't come. She must stay with my father."
-
-All the barriers were down now, so that Eppie could insist: "She would
-rather be with you. You want her most."
-
-"Yes, I want her most. But he needs her most," said Gavan. "He is
-extravagant and weak and bad. He drinks and he gambles, and if she left
-him he would probably soon ruin himself--and us; for my mother has no
-money. She could not leave him if she would. And though he is often very
-cruel to her, he wants her with him." Gavan spoke with all his quiet,
-but he had flushed as if from a still anger. "Money is an odious thing,
-Eppie. That's what I want to do, as soon as I can: make money for her."
-He added presently: "I pray for strength to help her."
-
-There was a long silence after this. Gavan lay back on the heather, his
-hat tilted over his tired eyes. Eppie sat above him, staring out at the
-empty blue. Her longing, her pity, her revolt from this suffering,--for
-herself and for him,--her vague but vehement desires, flew out--out; she
-almost seemed to see them, like strong, bright birds flying so far at
-last that the blue engulfed them. The idea hurt her. She turned away
-from the dissolving vastness before which it was impossible to think or
-feel, turned her head to look down at the long, white form beside her,
-exhausted and inert. Darling Gavan. How he suffered. His poor mother,
-too. She saw Gavan's mother in a sort of padlocked palanquin under a
-burning sky, surrounded by dazzling deserts, a Blue-beard, bristling
-with swords, reeling in a drunken sentinelship round her prison.
-Considering Gavan, with his hidden face, the thought of his last words
-came more distinctly to her. A long time had passed, and his breast was
-rising quietly, almost as if he slept. Conjecture grew as to the odd
-form of action in which he evidently trusted. "Do you pray a great deal,
-Gavan?" she asked.
-
-He nodded under the hat.
-
-"Do you feel as if there was a God--quite near you--who listened?"
-
-"I wouldn't want to live unless I could feel that."
-
-Eppie paused at this, perplexed, and asked presently, with a slight
-embarrassment, "Why not?"
-
-"Nothing would have any meaning," said Gavan.
-
-"No meaning, Gavan? You would still care for your mother and want to
-help her, wouldn't you?"
-
-"Yes, but without God there would be no hope of helping her, no hope of
-strength. Why, Eppie," came the voice from behind the hat, "without God
-life would be death."
-
-Eppie retired to another discomfited silence. "I am afraid I don't think
-much about God," she confessed at last. "I always feel as if I had
-strength already--I suppose, heaps and heaps of strength.
-Only--to-day--I do know more what you mean. If only God would do
-something for you and your mother. You want something so big to help you
-if you are very, very unhappy."
-
-"Yes, and some one to turn to when you are lonely."
-
-Again Eppie hesitated. "Well, but, Gavan, while you're here you have me,
-you know."
-
-At this Gavan pushed aside his hat almost to laugh at her. "What a
-funny little girl you are, Eppie! What a dear little girl! Yes, of
-course, I have you. But when I go away? And even while I'm here,--what
-if we were both lonely together? Can't you imagine that? The feeling of
-being lost in a great forest at night. You have such quaint ideas about
-God."
-
-"I've never had any ideas at all. I've only thought of Some One who was
-there,--Some One I didn't need yet. I've always thought of God as being
-more for grown-up people. Lost in a forest together? I don't think I
-would mind that so much, Gavan. I don't think I would be frightened, if
-we were together."
-
-"I didn't exactly mean it literally,--not a real forest, perhaps." He
-had looked away from her, and, his thin, white face sunken among the
-heather, his eyes were on the blue immensities where her thoughts had
-lost themselves. "I am so often frightened. I get so lost sometimes that
-I can hardly believe that that Some One is near me. And then the fear
-becomes a sort of numbness, so that I hardly seem there myself; it's
-only loneliness, while I melt and melt away into nothing. Even now, when
-I look at that sky, the feeling creeps and creeps, that dreadful
-loneliness, where there isn't any I left to know that it's lonely--only
-a feeling." He shut his eyes resolutely. "My mother always says that it
-is when one has such fancies that one must pray and have faith."
-
-Eppie hardly felt that he spoke to her, and she groped among his strange
-thoughts, seizing the most concrete of them, imitating his shutting out
-of the emptiness by closing her own eyes. "Yes," she said, reflecting in
-the odd, glowing dimness, "I am quite sure that you have much more
-feeling about God when you think hard, inside yourself, than when you
-look at the sky."
-
-"Only then, there are chasms inside, too." Gavan's hand beside him was
-once more restlessly pulling at the heather. "Even inside, one can fall,
-and fall, and fall."
-
-The strange tone of his voice--it was indeed like the far note of a
-falling bell, dying in an abyss--roused Eppie from her experiments. She
-shook his shoulder. "Open your eyes, Gavan; please, at once. You make me
-feel horridly. I would rather have you look at the sky than fall inside
-like that."
-
-He raised himself on an arm now, with a gaze, for a moment, vague,
-deadened, blank, then sprang to his feet. "Don't let's look. Don't let's
-fall. We must pray and have faith. Eppie, I have made you so pale. Dear
-Eppie, to care so much. Please forgive me for going to pieces like
-that."
-
-Eppie was on her feet, too. "But I want you to. You know what I mean:
-never hide things. Oh, Gavan, if I could only help you."
-
-"You do. It is because you care, just in the way you do, that I _could_
-go to pieces,--and it has helped me to be so selfish."
-
-"Please be selfish, often, often, then. I always am caring. And just
-wait till I am grown up. I shall do something for you then. _I'll_ make
-money, too, Gavan."
-
-"Eppie, you are the dearest little girl," he repeated, in a shaken
-voice; and at that she put her arms around his neck and kissed him. The
-boy's eyes filled with tears. They stood under the sighing pines, high
-in the blue, and the scent of the heather was strong, sweet, in the
-sunny air. Gavan did not return the kiss, but holding her face between
-his hands, stammering, he said, "Eppie, how can I bear ever to leave
-you?"
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-In looking back, after long years, at their summer, Eppie could see,
-more clearly than when she lived in it, that sadness and Gavan had
-always gone together. He had, as it were, initiated her into suffering.
-Sadness was the undertone of their sweet comradeship. Their happy
-stories came to tragic endings. Death and disaster, though in trivial
-forms, followed him.
-
-With his returning strength, and perhaps with a sense of atonement to
-her for what he had called his selfishness, Gavan plunged eagerly into
-any outer interest that would please her. He spent hours in building for
-her a little hut on the banks of the brae among the birches: the dolls'
-Petit Trianon he called it, as the summer-house was their Versailles.
-They had been reading about the French Revolution. Eppie objected to the
-analogy. "I should always imagine that Elspeth's head were going to be
-cut off if I called it that."
-
-Gavan said that Elspeth need not be the queen, but a less exalted, more
-fortunate court lady. "We'll imagine that she escaped early from France
-with all her family, saw none of the horrors, was a happy _migre_ in
-England and married there," he said; and he went on, while he hammered
-at the pine boughs, with a desultory and reassuring account of Elspeth's
-English adventures. But poor Elspeth came to as sad an end as any victim
-of the guillotine. Eppie was carrying her one day when she and Gavan had
-followed Aunt Barbara on some housewifely errand up to the highest attic
-rooms. Outside the low sills of the dormer-windows ran a narrow stone
-gallery looking down over the pine-tree and the garden. The children
-squeezed out through the window to hang in delighted contemplation over
-the birds'-eye view, and then Eppie crawled to a farther corner where
-one could see round to the moorland and find oneself on a level, almost,
-with the rooks' nests in the lime-trees. She handed Elspeth to Gavan to
-hold for her while she went on this adventure.
-
-He had just risen to his feet, looking down from where he stood over the
-low parapet, when a sudden cry from Eppie--a great bird sailing by that
-she called to him to look at--made him start, almost losing his balance
-on the narrow ledge. Elspeth fell from his arms.
-
-She was picked up on the garden path, far, far beneath, with a shattered
-head. Gavan, perhaps, suffered more from the disaster than Eppie
-herself. He was sick with dismay and self-reproach. She was forced to
-make light of her grief to soothe his. But she did not feel that her
-soothing hoodwinked or comforted him. Indeed, after that hour on the
-hilltop, when he showed her his sorrow and his fear, Eppie felt that
-though near, very near him, she was also held away. It was as if he felt
-a discomfort in the nearness, or a dread that through it he might hurt
-again or be hurt. He was at once more loving and more reticent. His
-resolute cheerfulness, when they could be cheerful, was a wall between
-them.
-
-Once more, and only once, before their childhood together ended, was she
-to see all, feel all, suffer all with him. Toward the end of the summer
-Robbie sickened and died. For three nights the children sat up with him,
-taking turns at sleep, refusing alien help. By candle-light, in Eppie's
-room, they bent over Robbie's basket, listening to his laboring breath.
-The general, protesting against the folly of the sleepless nights, yet
-tiptoed in and out, gruffly kind, moved by the pathos of the young
-figures. He gave medical advice and superintended the administering of
-teaspoonfuls of milk and brandy. That he thought Robbie's case a
-hopeless one the children knew, for all his air of reassuring good
-cheer.
-
-Robbie died early on the morning of the fourth day. A little while
-before, he faintly wagged his tail when they spoke to him, raising eyes
-unendurably sad.
-
-Eppie, during the illness, had been constantly in tears; Gavan had shown
-a stoic fortitude. But when all was over and Eppie was covering Robbie
-with the white towel that was to be his shroud, Gavan suddenly broke
-down. Casting his arms around her, hiding his face against her, he burst
-into sobs, saying in a shuddering voice, while he clung to her, shaken
-all through with the violence of his weeping: "Oh, I can't bear it,
-Eppie! I can't bear it!"
-
-Before this absolute shattering Eppie found her own self-control.
-Holding him to her,--and she almost thought that he would have fallen if
-she had not so held him,--she murmured, "Gavan, darling Gavan, I know, I
-know."
-
-"Oh, Eppie," he gasped, "we will never see him again."
-
-She had drawn him down to the window-seat, where they leaned together,
-and she was silent for a moment at his last words. But suddenly her arms
-tightened around him with an almost vindictive tenderness. "We _will_,"
-she said.
-
-"Never! Never!" Gavan gasped. "His eyes, Eppie,--his eyes seemed to know
-it; they were saying good-by forever. And, oh, Eppie, they were so
-astonished--so astonished," he repeated, while the sobs shook him.
-
-"We will," Eppie said again, pressing the boy's head to hers, while she
-shut her eyes over the poignant memory. "Why, Gavan, I don't know much
-about God, but I do know about heaven. Animals will go to heaven; it
-wouldn't be heaven unless they were there."
-
-That memory of the astonishment in Robbie's eyes seemed to put knives in
-her heart, but over the sharpness she grasped her conviction.
-
-In all the despair of his grief, the boy had, in answering her, the
-disciplined logic of his more formal faith, more clearly seen fact.
-
-"Dear Eppie, animals have no souls."
-
-"How do you know?" she retorted, almost with anger.
-
-"One only has to think. They stop, as Robbie has."
-
-"How do you know he has stopped? It's only," said Eppie, groping, "that
-he doesn't want his body any longer."
-
-"But it's Robbie in his body that we want. It's his body, with Robbie in
-it, that we know. God has done with wanting him--that's it, perhaps; but
-we want him. Oh, Eppie, it's no good: as we know him, as we want him, he
-is dead--dead forever. Besides,"--in speaking this Gavan straightened
-himself,--"we shall forget him." He turned, in speaking, from her
-consolations, as though their inefficiency hurt him.
-
-"I won't forget him," said Eppie.
-
-Gavan made no reply. He had risen, and standing now at the widely opened
-window, looked out over the chill, misty dawn. Beneath was the garden,
-its golden-gray walls rippling with green traceries, the clotted color
-of the hanging fruit among them. Over the hilltop, the solitary group of
-pines, the running wave of mountain, was a great piece of palest blue,
-streaked with milky filaments. The boughs of the pine-tree were just
-below the window, drenched with dew through all their fragrant darkness.
-
-Eppie, too, rose, and stood beside him.
-
-The hardened misery on his young face hurt her childish, yet
-comprehending heart even more than Robbie's supplicating and astonished
-eyes had done. She could imagine that look of steeled endurance freezing
-through it forever, and an answering hardness of opposition rose in her
-to resist and break it. "We won't forget him."
-
-"People do forget," Gavan answered.
-
-She found a cruel courage. "Could you forget your mother?"
-
-Gavan continued to look stonily out of the window and did not answer
-her.
-
-"Could you?" she repeated.
-
-"Don't, Eppie, don't," he said.
-
-She saw that she had stirred some black terror in him, and her ignorant,
-responsive fear made her pitiless: "Could you forget her if she died?
-Never. Never as long as you lived."
-
-"Already," he said, as though the words were forced from him by her
-will, "I haven't remembered her all the time."
-
-"She is there. You haven't forgotten her."
-
-"Years and years come. New things come. Old things fade and fade,--all
-but the deepest things. They couldn't fade. No," he repeated, "they
-couldn't. Only, even they might get dimmer."
-
-She saw that he spoke from an agony of doubt, and he seemed to wrench
-the knife she had stabbed him with from his heart as he added: "But
-Robbie is such a little thing. And little things people do forget, I am
-sure of it. It's that that makes them so sad."
-
-"Well, then,"--Eppie, too, felt the relief of the lesser pain,--"they
-will remember again. When you see Robbie in heaven you will remember all
-about him. But I won't forget him," she repeated once more, swallowing
-the sob that rose chokingly at the thought of how long it would be till
-they should see Robbie in heaven.
-
-Gavan had now a vague, chill smile for the pertinacity of her faith.
-Something had broken in him, as if, with Robbie's passing, a veil had
-been drawn from reality, an illusion of confidence dispelled forever. He
-leaned out of the window and breathed in the scent of the wet pine-tree,
-looking, with an odd detachment and clearness of observation,--as if
-through that acceptation of tragedy all his senses had grown keener,--at
-the bluish bloom the dew made upon the pine-needles; at the flowers and
-fruit in the garden below, the thatched roof of the summer-house, the
-fragile whiteness of the roses growing near it, like a bridal veil blown
-against the ancient wall. It was, in a moment of strange, suspended
-vision, as if he had often and often seen tragic dawn in the garden
-before and was often to see it again. What was he? Where was he? All the
-world was like a dream and he seemed to see to its farthest ends and
-back to its beginnings.
-
-Eppie stood silent beside him.
-
-He was presently conscious of her silence, and then, the uncanny
-crystal, gazing sense slipping from him, of a possible unkindness in his
-repudiating grief. He looked round at her. The poor child's eyes, heavy
-with weeping and all the weight of the dark, encompassing woe he had
-shown her, dwelt on him with a somber compassionateness.
-
-"Poor, darling little Eppie," he said, putting an arm about her, "what a
-brute, a selfish brute, I am."
-
-"Why a brute, Gavan?"
-
-"Making you suffer--more. I'm always making you suffer, Eppie, always;
-and you are really such a happy person. Come, let us go out for a walk.
-Let us go out on the moor. It will be delicious in the heather now. I
-want to see it and smell it. It will do us good."
-
-She resented his wisdom. "But you won't forget Robbie, while we walk."
-
-For a moment, as if in great weariness, Gavan leaned his head against
-her shoulder. "Don't talk of Robbie, please. We must forget him--just
-now, or try to, or else we can't go on at all."
-
-Still she persisted, for she could not let it go like that: "I can think
-of him and go on too. I don't want to run away from Robbie because he
-makes me unhappy."
-
-Gavan sighed, raising his head. "You are stronger than I am, Eppie. I
-must--I must run away." He took her hand and drew her to the door, and
-she followed him, though glancing back, as she went, at the little form
-under the shroud.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Robbie's death overshadowed the last days of Gavan's stay. Eppie did not
-feel, after it, after his avowed and helpless breakdown, the barrier
-sense so strongly. He didn't attempt to hide dejection; but that was
-probably because she too was dejected and there was no necessity for
-keeping up appearances that would only jar and hurt. Eppie gave herself
-whole-heartedly to her griefs, and this was her grief as well as his. He
-could share it. It was no longer the holding her at arm's length from a
-private woe. Yet the grief was not really shared, Eppie knew, for it was
-not the same grief that they felt. Of the difference they did not speak
-again. Then there came the sadness of the parting, so near now and for
-the first time realized in all its aspects.
-
-Eppie gathered, from chance remarks of the general's, that this parting
-was to be indefinite. The summer at Kirklands was no precedent for
-future summers, as she and Gavan had quite taken for granted. An uncle
-of Gavan's, his father's eldest brother, was to give him his home in
-England. This uncle had been traveling in the East this summer, and
-Gavan did not formally come under his jurisdiction until autumn. But the
-general conjectured that the jurisdiction would be well defined and
-tolerably stringent. Sir James Palairet had clearly cut projects for
-Gavan; they would, perhaps, not include holidays at Kirklands. The
-realization was, for Gavan, too, a new one.
-
-"Am I not to come back here next summer?" he asked.
-
-"I'm afraid not, Gavan; we haven't first claim, you see. Perhaps Sir
-James will lend you to us now and then; but from what I know of him I
-imagine that he will want to do a lot with you, to put you through a
-great deal. There won't be much time for this sort of thing. You will
-probably travel with him."
-
-They were in the library and, speaking from the depths of her fear,
-Eppie asked: "Do you like Sir James, Uncle Nigel?" She suspected a
-pitying quality in the cogitating look that the general bent upon Gavan.
-
-"I hardly know him, my dear. He is quite an eminent man. A little
-severe, perhaps,--something of a martinet,--but just, conscientious. It
-is a great thing for Gavan," the general continued, making the best of a
-rather bleak prospect, "to have such an uncle to give him a start in
-life. It means the best sort of start."
-
-Directly the two children were alone, both sitting in the deep
-window-seat, Gavan said, "Don't worry, Eppie. Of course I'll come
-back--soon." His face took on the hardness that its delicacy could so
-oddly express. He was confronting his ambiguous fate in an attitude of
-cold resolution. For his sake, Eppie controlled useless outcries. "You
-have seen your uncle, Gavan?"
-
-"Yes, once; in India. He came up to Darjeeling one summer."
-
-"Is he nice--nicer than Uncle Nigel made out, I mean?"
-
-"He isn't like my father," said Gavan, after a moment.
-
-"You mean that he isn't wicked?" Eppie asked baldly.
-
-"Oh, a good deal more than that. He is just and conscientious, as the
-general said. That's what my mother felt; that's why she could bear it,
-my going to him. And the general is right, you know, Eppie, about its
-being a great thing for me. He is a very important person, in his way,
-and he is going to put me through. He is determined that my father
-sha'n't spoil my life. And, as you know, Eppie, my mother's life, any
-chance for her, depends on me. To make her life, to atone to her in any
-way for all she has had to bear, I must make my own. My uncle will help
-me."
-
-The steeliness of his resolves made his face almost alien. Eppie felt
-this unknown future, where he must fight alone, for objects in which she
-had no share, shutting her out, and a child's sick misery of desolation
-filled her, bringing back the distant memory of her mother's death, that
-suffocating sense of being left behind and forgotten; but, keeping her
-eyes on his prospect, she managed in a firm voice to question him about
-the arid uncle, learned that he was married, childless, had a house in
-the country and one in London, and sat in Parliament. He was vastly
-busy, traveled a great deal, and wrote books of travel; not books about
-foreign people and the things they ate and wore, as Eppie with her
-courageous interest hopefully surmised, but books of dry, colorless
-fact, with lots of statistics in them, Gavan said.
-
-"He wants me to go in for the same sort of thing--politics and public
-life."
-
-"You are going to be a Pitt--make laws, Gavan, like Pitt?" Eppie kept up
-her dispassionate tone.
-
-He smiled at the magnified conception. "I'll try for a seat, probably,
-or some governmental office; that is, if I turn out to be worth
-anything."
-
-How the vague vastness shut her out! What should she do, meanwhile? How
-carve for herself a future that would keep her near him in the great
-outside world? And would he want her near him in it when he was to be so
-great, too? This question brought the irrepressible tears to her eyes at
-last, though she turned away her head and would not let them fall. But
-Gavan glanced at her and leaned forward to look, and then she saw, as
-her eyes met his, that the hard resolve was for her, too, and did not
-shut her out, but in.
-
-"I'm coming back, Eppie," he said, taking her hand and holding it
-tightly. "Next to my mother, it's _you_,--you know it."
-
-"I haven't any mother," said Eppie, keeping up the bravery, though it
-was really harder not to cry now. He understood where she placed him.
-
-Eppie was glad that it was raining on the last morning. Sunshine would
-have been a mockery, and this tranquilly falling rain, that turned the
-hills to pale, substanceless ghosts and brought the end of the moor,
-where it disappeared into the white, so near, was not tragic. Gavan was
-coming back. She would think only of that. She would not--would not cry.
-He should see how brave she could be. When he was gone--well, she
-allowed herself a swift thought of the Petit Trianon, its hidden refuge.
-There, all alone, she would, of course, howl. There was a grim comfort
-in this vision of herself, rolling upon the pine-needle carpet of the
-Petit Trianon and shrieking her woes aloud.
-
-At breakfast Gavan showed a tense, calm face. She was impressed anew
-with the sense of his strength, for, in spite of his resolves, he was
-suffering, perhaps more keenly than herself. Suffering, with him,
-partook of horror. She could live in hopes, and on them. To Gavan, this
-parting was the going into a dark cavern that he must march through in
-fear. And then, he would never roll and shriek.
-
-After breakfast, they hardly spoke to each other. Indeed, what was there
-to say? Eppie filled the moments in superintending the placing of fruit
-and sandwiches in his dressing-case. The carriage was a little late, so
-that when the final moment came, there was a hurried conventionality of
-farewell. Gavan was kissed by the aunts and shook hands with Miss
-Grimsby, while the general called out that there was no time to lose.
-
-"Come back to us, dear boy; keep your feet dry on the journey," said
-Miss Rachel, while Miss Barbara, holding his hand, whispered gently
-that she would always pray for him.
-
-Eppie and Gavan had not looked at each other, and when the moment came
-for their farewell, beneath the eyes of aunts, uncle, Miss Grimsby, and
-the servants, it seemed the least significant of all, was the shortest,
-the most formal. They looked, they held hands for a moment, and Gavan
-faltered out some words. Eppie did not speak and kept her firm smile.
-Only when he had followed the general into the carriage and it was
-slowly grinding over the gravel did something hot, stinging, choking,
-flare up in her, something that made her know this smooth parting to be
-intolerable--not to be borne.
-
-She darted out into the rain. Bobbie was dead; Gavan was gone; why, she
-was alone--alone--and a question was beating through her as she ran down
-the drive and, with a leap to its step, caught the heavy old carriage in
-its careful turning at the gate. Gavan saw, at the window, her white,
-freckled face, her startled eyes, her tossed hair all beaded with the
-finely falling rain--like an apparition on the ghostly background of
-mist.
-
-"Oh, Gavan, don't forget me!" That had been the flaring terror.
-
-He had just time to catch her hand, to lean to her, to kiss her. He did
-not speak. Mutely he looked at the little comrade all the things he
-could not say: what she was to him, what he felt for her, what he would
-always feel,--always, always, always, his eyes said to hers as she
-stepped back to the road and was gone.
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-He had never seen Eppie again, and sixteen years had passed.
-
-It was of this that Gavan was thinking as the Scotch express bore him
-northward on a dark October night.
-
-A yellow-bound, half-cut volume of French essays lay beside him. He had
-lighted a cigar and, his feet warmly ensconced on the hot-water tin, his
-legs enfolded in rugs, the fur collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears, he leaned back, well fortified against the sharp air that struck
-in from the half-opened window.
-
-Gavan, at thirty, had oddly maintained all the more obvious
-characteristics of his boyhood. He was long, pale, emaciated, as he had
-been at fourteen. His clean-shaved face was the boy's face, matured, but
-unchanged in essentials. The broad, steep brow, the clear, aquiline jut
-of nose and chin, the fineness and strength of the jaw, sculptured now
-by the light overhead into vehement relief and shadow, were more
-emphatic, only, than they had been.
-
-At fourteen his face had surprised with its maturity and at thirty it
-surprised with its quality of wistful boyishness. This was the obvious.
-The changes were there, but they were subtle, consisting more in a
-certain hardening of youth's hesitancy into austerity; as though the
-fine metal of the countenance had been tempered by time into a fixed,
-enduring type. His pallor was the scholar's, but his emaciation the
-athlete's; the fragility, now, was a braced and disciplined fragility.
-No sedentary softness was in him. In his body, as in his face, one felt
-a delicacy as strong as it was fine. The great change was that hardening
-to fixity.
-
-To-night, he was feeling the change himself. The journey to Kirklands,
-after the long gap that lay between it and his farewell, made something
-of an epoch for his thoughts. He did not find it significant, but the
-mere sense of comparison was arresting.
-
-The darkness of the October night, speeding by outside, the solitude of
-the bright railway carriage, London two hours behind and, before, the
-many hours of his lonely journey,--time and place were like empty
-goblets, only waiting to be filled with the still wine of memory.
-
-Gavan had not cast aside his book, lighted his cigar, and, leaning back,
-drawn his rugs about him with the conscious intention of yielding
-himself to retrospect. On the contrary, he had, at first, pushed aside
-the thoughts that, softly, persistently, pressed round him. Then the
-languor, the opportunity of the hour seized him. He allowed himself to
-drift hither and thither, as first one eddy lapped over him and then
-another. And finally he abandoned himself to the full current and, once
-it had him, it carried him far.
-
-It was, at the beginning, as far back as Eppie and childhood that it
-carried him, to the sunny summer days and to the speechless parting of
-the rainy autumn morning. And, with all that sense of change, he was
-surprised to find how very much one thing had held firm. He had never
-forgotten. He had kept the mute promise of that misty morning. How well
-he had kept it he hadn't known until he found the chain of memory hold
-so firm as he pulled upon it. The promise had been made to himself as
-well as to her, given in solemn hostage to his own childish fears. Even
-then what an intuitive dread had been upon him of the impermanence of
-things. But it wasn't impermanent after all, that vision.
-
-Dear little Eppie. It was astonishing now to find how well he
-remembered, how clearly he could see, in looking back,--more clearly
-than even his acute child's perception had made evident to him,--what a
-dear little Eppie she had been. She lived in his memory, and probably
-nowhere else: in the present Eppie he didn't fancy that he should find
-much trace of the child Eppie, and it was sad, in its funny way, to
-think that he, who had, with all his forebodings, so felt the need of a
-promise, should so well remember her who, undoubtedly, had long ago
-forgotten him. He took little interest in the present Eppie. But the
-child wore perfectly with time.
-
-Dear child Eppie and strange, distant boy, groping toward the present
-Gavan; unhappy little boy, of deep, inarticulate, passionate affections
-and of deep hopes and dreads. There they walked, knee-deep in heather;
-he smelled it, the sun warm upon it, Eppie in her white,
-Alice-in-Wonderland frock and her "striped" hair. And there went Robbie,
-plunging through the heather before them.
-
-Robbie. Eppie had been right, then. He had not forgotten him at all. He
-and Eppie stood at the window looking out at the dawn; the scent of the
-wet pine-tree was in the air, and their eyes were heavy with weeping.
-How near they had been. Had any one, in all his life, ever been nearer
-him than Eppie?
-
-Curious, when he had so well kept the promise never to forget, that the
-other promise, the promise to return, he had not been able to keep. In
-making it, he had not imagined, even with his foreboding, what manacles
-of routine and theory were to be locked upon him for the rest of his
-boyhood. He had soon learned that protest, pleading, rebellion, were
-equally vain, and that outward conformity was the preservative of inner
-freedom. He could not jeopardize the purpose of his life--his mother's
-rescue--by a persistence that, in his uncle's not unkind and not
-unhumorous eyes, was merely foolish. He was forced to swallow his own
-longings and to endure, as best he could, his pangs of fear lest Eppie
-should think him slack, or even faithless. He submitted to the treadmill
-of a highly organized education, that could spare no time for
-insignificant summers in Scotland. Every moment in Gavan's youth was to
-be made significant by tangible achievement. The distilled knowledge of
-the past, the intellectual trophies of civilization, were to be his; if
-he didn't want them, they, in the finished and effective figure of his
-uncle, wanted him, and, in the sense of the fulfilment of his uncle's
-hopes, they got him.
-
-During those years Gavan wrote to Eppie, tried to make her share with
-him in all the lonely and rather abstract interests of his life. But he
-found that the four years of difference, counting for nothing in the
-actual intercourse of word and look, counted for everything against any
-reality of intercourse in writing. Translated into that formality, the
-childish affection became as unlike itself as a pressed flower is unlike
-a fresh one. Eppie's letters, punctual and very fond, were far more
-immature than she herself. These letters gave accounts of animals,
-walks, lessons, very bald and concise, and of the Grainger cousins and
-their doings, and then of her new relation, cousin Alicia, whose
-daughters, children of Eppie's own age, soon seemed to poor Gavan, in
-his distant prison, to fill his place. Eppie went away with these
-cousins to Germany, where they all heard wonderful music, and after that
-they came to Kirklands for the summer. Altogether, when Gavan's
-opportunity came and, with the dignity of seventeen to back his request,
-he had his uncle's consent to his spending of a month in Scotland, he
-felt himself, even as he made it, rather silly in his determination to
-cling at all costs to something precious but vanishing. Then it was that
-Eppie had been swept away by the engulfing relative. At the very moment
-of his own release, she was taken to the Continent for three years of
-travel and study. The final effort of childhood to hold to its own
-meaning was frustrated. The letters, after that, soon ceased. Silence
-ended the first chapter.
-
-Gavan glanced out at the rushing darkness on either side. It was like
-the sliding of a curtain before the first act of a drama. His cigar was
-done and he did not light another. His eyes on that darkness that passed
-and passed, he gave himself up to the long vision of the nearer years.
-Through them went always the link with childhood, the haunting phrase
-that sounded in every scene--that fear of life, that deep dread of its
-evil and its pain that he had tried to hide from Eppie, but that,
-together, they had glanced at.
-
-In that first chapter, whose page he had just turned, he had seen
-himself as a very unhappy boy--unhappy from causes as apparent as a cage
-about a pining bird. His youth had been weighted with an over-mature
-understanding of wrong and sorrow. His childish faith in supreme good
-had shaped itself to a conception of life as a place of probation where
-oneself and, far worse, those one loved were burned continually in the
-fiery furnace of inexplicable affliction. One couldn't say what God
-might not demand of one in the way of endurance. He had, helpless, seen
-his fragile, shrinking mother hatefully bullied and abused or more
-hatefully caressed. He had been parted from her to brood and tremble
-over her distant fate. Loved things had died; loved things had all, it
-seemed, been taken from him; the soulless machinery of his uncle's
-system had ground and polished at his stiffening heart. No wonder that
-the boy of that first chapter had been very unhappy. But in the later
-chapters, to which he had now come, the causes for unhappiness were not
-so obvious, yet the gloom that overhung them deepened. He saw himself at
-Eton in the hedged-round world of buoyant youth, standing apart,
-preoccupied, indifferent. He had been oddly popular there. His
-selflessness, his gentle candor, his capacity for a highly keyed
-joy,--strung, though it was, over an incapacity for peace,--endeared
-him; but even to his friends he remained a veiled and ambiguous
-personality. He seemed to himself to stand on the confines of that
-artificially happy domain, listening always for the sound of sorrow in
-the greater world outside. History, growing before his growing mind,
-loomed blood-stained, cruel, disastrous. The defeat of goodness, its
-degradation by the triumphant forces of evil, haunted him. The
-dependence of mind, of soul, on body opened new and ominous vistas. For
-months he was pursued by morbid fears of what a jostled brain-cell or a
-diseased body might do to one. One might become a fiend, it seemed, or
-an imbecile, if one's atoms were disarranged too much. Life was a tragic
-duty,--he held to that blindly, fiercely at times; but what if life's
-chances made even goodness impossible? what if it were to rob one of
-one's very selfhood? It became to him a thing dangerous, uncertain, like
-an insecurely chained wild beast that one must lie down with and rise
-with and that might spring at one's throat at any moment.
-
-Under the pressure of this new knowledge, crude enough in its
-materialistic forms, and keen, new thought, already subtle, already
-passing from youthful crudity, the skeptical crash of his religious
-faith came at last upon him. Religion had meant too much to him for its
-loss to be the merely disturbing epoch of readjustment that it is in
-much young development. He found himself in a reeling horror of darkness
-where the only lights were the dim beacons of science and the fantastic
-will-o'-the-wisps of estheticism. In the midst of the chaos he saw his
-mother again. He dreaded the longed-for meeting. How could he see her
-and hide from her the inner desolation? And when she came, at last,
-after all these years, a desperate pity nerved him to act a part. She
-was changed; the years had told on her more than even his imagination
-had feared. She drooped like a tired, fading flower. She was fading,
-that he saw at the first glance. Mentally as well as physically, there
-was an air of withering about her, and the look of sorrow was stamped
-ineffaceably upon her aging features. To know that he had lost his
-faith, his hold on life, his trust in good, would have been, he thought,
-to kill her. He kept from her a whisper of his desolation; and to a
-fundamental skepticism like his, acting was facile. But when she was
-gone, back to her parched life, he knew that to her, as well as to him,
-something essential had lacked. Her love, again and again, must have
-fluttered, however blindly, against that barrier between them. The years
-of separation had been sad, but, in looking back at it, the summer of
-meeting was saddest of all.
-
-The experience put an edge to his hardening strength. He must fail her
-in essentials; they could never meet in the blessed nearness of shared
-hopes; but he wouldn't fail her in all the lesser things of life. The
-time of her deliverance was near. Love and beauty would soon be about
-her. He worked at Oxford with the inner passion of a larger purpose than
-mere scholarship that is the soul of true scholarship. He felt the
-sharp, cold joy of high achievement, the Alpine, precipitous scaling of
-the mind. And here he embarked upon the conscious quest for truth, his
-skepticism grown to a doubt of its own premises.
-
-Gavan looked quietly back upon the turmoil of that quest.
-
-He watched himself in those young years pressing restlessly, eagerly,
-pursued by the phantoms of death and nothingness, through spiral after
-spiral of human thought: through Spinoza's horror of the meaninglessness
-of life and through Spinoza's barren peace; through Kant's skepticism
-that would not let him rest in Kant's super-rational assurance;
-precipitated from Hegel's dialectics--building their pyramid of paradox
-to the apex of an impersonal Absolute--into Schopenhauer's petulant
-despair. And more and more clearly he saw, through all the forms of
-thought, that the finite self dissolved like mist in the one
-all-embracing, all-transcending Subject. Science, philosophy, religion,
-seemed, in their final development, to merge in a Monism that conceived
-reality as spirit, but as impersonal spirit, a conception that, if in
-western thought it did not reduce to illusion every phase of
-experience, yet reduced the finite self to a contradiction and its sense
-of moral freedom, upon which were built all the valuations of life and
-all its sanctions, to a self-deception. His own dual life deepened his
-abiding intuition of unreality. There was the Gavan of the river, the
-debate, the dinner, popular among his fellows, gentle, debonair; already
-the man of the world through the fineness of his perception, his
-instinct for the fitting, his perfection of mannerless manner that was
-the flower of selflessness. And there was the Gavan of the inner
-thought, fixed, always, in its knot of torturing perplexity. To the
-inner Gavan, the Gavan of human relations was a wraith-like figure. Now
-began for him the strange experience at which childish terrors had
-hinted. It was in the exhaustions that followed a long wrench of
-thought, or after an illness, a shock of sorrow that left one pulseless
-and inert, that these pauses of an awful peace would come to him. One
-faced, then, the dread vision, and it seized one, as when, in the deep
-stillness of the night, the world drops from one and only a
-consciousness, dispassionate and contemplative, seeing all life as
-dream, remains. It was when life was thus stilled, its desires quenched
-by weakness or great sorrow, that this peace stole into the empty
-chambers, and whispered that all pain, all evil, all life were dreams
-and that the dreams were made by the strife and restlessness of the
-fragmentary self in its endless discord. See oneself as discord, as part
-of the whole, every thought, every act, every feeling determined by it,
-and one entered, as it were, into the unwilling redemption. Desire,
-striving, hope, and fear fell from one. One found the secret of the
-Eternal Now, holding in its timelessness the vast vision of a world of
-change. But to Gavan, in these moments, the sorrow, the striving, the
-agony of life was sweet and desirable; for, to the finite life that
-strove, and hoped, and suffered the vision became the sightless gaze of
-death, and nothingness was the guerdon of such attainment. To turn, with
-an almost physical sickness of horror, from the hypnotic spell, to
-forcibly forget thought, to clasp life about him like a loved
-Nessus-robe, was a frequent solution during these years of struggle; to
-renter the place of joy and sorrow, taking it, so to speak, at its own
-terms. But the specter was never far from the inner Gavan, who more and
-more suspected that the longing for reality, for significance, that
-flamed up in him with each renewal of personal force and energy, was the
-mere result of life, not its sanction. And more and more, when, in such
-renewals, his nature turned with a desperate trust to action, as a
-possible test of worth, he saw that it was not action, not faith, that
-created life and the trust in life, but life, the force and will
-incarnated in one, that created faith and action. The very will to act
-was the will to live, and the will to live was the will of the Whole
-that the particular discord of one's personal self should continue to
-strive and suffer.
-
-Life, indeed, clutched him, and that quite without any artificial effort
-of his own, when his mother came home to England to die.
-
-Gavan had just left Oxford. He was exquisitely equipped for the best
-things of life, and, with the achievement, his long dependence on his
-uncle suddenly ceased. An eccentric old cousin, a scholarly recluse, who
-had taken a fancy to him, died, leaving him a small estate in Surrey and
-fifteen hundred pounds a year.
-
-With the good fortune came the bitter irony that turned it to dust and
-ashes. All his life he had longed to help his mother, to smooth her
-rough path and put power over fate into her hand. Now he could only help
-her to die in peace.
-
-He took her to the quiet old house, among its lawns, its hedges, its
-high-walled gardens and deep woods. He gave her all that it was now too
-late to give--beauty, ease, and love.
-
-She was changed by disease, more changed than by life and sorrow;
-gentle, very patient, but only by an effort showing her appreciation of
-the loveliness, only by an effort answering his love.
-
-Of all his fears the worst had been the fear that, with the conviction
-of the worthlessness of life, the capacity for love had left him. Now,
-as with intolerable anguish, her life ebbed from her, there was almost
-relief in his own despair; in feeling it to the full; in seeing the
-heartlessness of thought wither in the fierce flame of his agony.
-
-It seemed to him that he had never before known what it was to love. It
-was as if he were more her than himself. He relived her life and its
-sorrows. He relived her miserable married years, the long loneliness,
-parted from her child, her terror of the final parting, coming so
-cruelly upon them; and he lived the pains of her dissolution. He
-understood as he had never understood, all that she was and felt; he
-yearned as he had never yearned, to hold and keep her with him in joy
-and security; he suffered as he had never suffered.
-
-Such passionate rebellion filled him that he would walk for hours about
-the country, while merciful anesthetics gave her oblivion, in a blind
-rage of mere feeling--feeling at a white heat, a core of tormented life.
-And the worst was that her life of martyrdom was not to be crowned by a
-martyr's happy death; the worst was that her own light died away from
-before her feet, that she groped in darkness, and that, since he was to
-lose her, he might not even have her to the end.
-
-For months he watched the slow fading of all that had made her herself,
-her relapse into the instinctive, almost into the animal. Her lips, for
-many days, kept the courage of their smile, but it was at last only an
-automatic courage, showing no sweetness, no caress. Her eyes, in the
-first tragic joy of their reunion, had longed, grieved, yearned over the
-son who hid his sorrow for her sake. Afterward, all feeling, except a
-sort of chill resentment, died from her look. For the last days of her
-life, when, in great anguish, she never spoke at all, these eyes would
-turn on him with a strange immensity of indifference. It was as if
-already his mother were gone and as if a ghost had stolen into his life.
-She died at last, after a long night of unconsciousness, without a word
-or look that brought them near.
-
-Gavan lived through all that followed in a stupor.
-
-On the day of her funeral, when all was over, he walked out into the
-spring woods.
-
-The day was sweet and mild. Pools of shallow water shone here and there
-in the hollows, among the slender tree-stems. Pale slips of blue were
-seen among the fine, gray branches, and pushing up from last year's
-leaves were snowdrops growing everywhere, white and green among the
-russet leaves, lovely, lovely snowdrops. Seeing them, in his swift,
-aimless wandering, Gavan paused.
-
-The long nights and days had worn him to that last stage of exhaustion
-where every sense is stretched fine and sharp as the highest string of a
-musical instrument. Leaning against a tree, his arms folded, he looked
-at the snowdrops, at their vivid green, and their white, as fresh, as
-delicate as flakes of newly fallen snow.
-
-"Lovely, lovely," he said, and, looking all about him, at the fretwork
-of gray branches on the blue, the pale, shining water,--a little bird
-just hopping to its edge among the shorter grass to drink,--he repeated,
-"Lovely," while the anguish in his heart and the sweet beauty without
-combined in the sharp, exquisite tension of a mood about to snap, the
-fineness of a note, unendurably high, held to an unendurable length.
-
-A dimness overtook him: as if the note, no longer keenly singing, sank
-to an insect-like buzz, a chaos of minute, whirring vibrations that made
-a queer, dizzy rhythm; and, in a daze of sudden indifference, both to
-beauty and anguish, he seemed to see himself standing there, collapsed
-against the tree, his frail figure outworn with misery,--to see himself,
-and the trees, the pools of water, the drinking bird, and the snowy
-flowers,--like a picture held before calm, dying eyes.
-
-"Yes," he thought, "she saw it like this,--me, herself, life; that is
-why she didn't care any longer."
-
-He continued to look, and from the dimness and the buzzing the calm grew
-clear--clear as a sharply cut hallucination. He knew the experience, he
-had often before known it; but he had never yet felt it so unutterably,
-so finally. Something in him had done struggling forever; something was
-relinquished; he had accepted something. "Yes, it is like that," he
-thought on; "they are all of them right."
-
-With the cold eye of contemplation he gazed on the illusion of life:
-joy, suffering, beauty, good and evil. His individual life, enfranchised
-from its dream of a separate self, drifted into the life about him. He
-was part of it all; in him, as in those other freed ones, the self
-suddenly knew itself as fleeting and unsubstantial as a dream, knew its
-own profound irrationality and the suffering that its striving to be
-must always mean.
-
-He was perfectly at peace, he who had never known peace. "I am as dead
-as she is," he thought.
-
-In his peace he was conscious of no emotion, yet he found himself
-suddenly leaning his head against the tree and weeping. He wept, but he
-knew that it was no longer with grief or longing. He watched the
-exhausted machine give way, and noted its piteous desolation of
-attitude,--not pitying it,--while he thought, "I shall feel, perhaps
-suffer, perhaps enjoy again; but I shall always watch myself from above
-it all."
-
-The mystic experience had come overwhelmingly to him and his mind was
-never to lose the effect of that immediacy of consciousness,
-untransmissible, unspeakable, ineffaceable. And that with which he found
-himself one was far from any human thoughts or emotions; rather it was
-the negation of them, the infinite negation of finite restlessness.
-
-He went back to the house, to the darkened, empty room. The memories
-that crowded there, of pity and love and terror, were now part of the
-picture he looked at, as near and yet as far, as the vision of the
-snowdrops, the bird, and the spring sky.
-
-All was quiet. She was gone as he would go. The laboring breath was
-stilled forever.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Gavan did not address himself to an ascetic remodeling of his life. He
-pursued the path traced out before him. He yielded placidly to the calls
-of life, willing to work, to accomplish, willing even to indulge his
-passions, since there could lurk for him no trap among the shows of
-life. His taste soon drew back, disdainful and delicate, from his
-experience of youthful dissipation; his ironic indifference made him
-deaf to the lures of ambition; but he was an accurate and steady worker
-and a tolerably interested observer of existence.
-
-As he had ceased to have value for himself, so others had no value in
-his eyes. Social effort and self-realization were, as ideals, equally
-meaningless to him; and though pity was always with him, it was a pity
-gentle and meditative, hopeless of alleviation: for suffering was life,
-and to cure one, one must abolish the other. Material remedies seemed to
-him worse than useless; they merely renewed the craving forces. The
-Imitation of Christ was a fitter panacea than organized charities and
-progressive legislation.
-
-Physical pain in the helpless, the dumbly conscious, in children or
-animals, hurt him and made him know that he, too, lived; and he would
-spend himself to give relief to any suffering thing. He sought no
-further in metaphysical systems; he desired no further insight. Now and
-then, finding their pensive pastures pleasant, he would read some Hindoo
-or medieval mystic; but ecstasies were as alien to him as materialism:
-both were curious forms of self-deception--one the inflation of the
-illusory self into the loss of any sense of relation, and the other the
-self's painful concentration into imbecilely selfish aims. The people
-most pleasing to him were the people who, without self-doubt and without
-self-consciousness, performed some inherited function in the state; the
-simply great in life; or those who, by natural gift, the fortunately
-finished, the inevitably distinguished, followed some beautifully
-complex calling. The mediocre and the pretentious were unpleasing
-phenomena, and the ideals of democracy mere barbarous nonsense.
-
-His own pursuits were those of a fashionable and ambitious man, and, to
-the casual observer, the utter absence of any of the pose of
-disillusionized youth made all the more apparent what seemed to be a man
-of the world cynicism. Those who knew him better found him charming and
-perplexing. He seemed to have no barriers, yet one could not come near
-him. His center receded before pursuit. And he was much pursued. He
-aroused conjecture, interest, attachment. His exquisite head, the chill
-sweetness of his manner, the strange, piercing charm of his smile, drew
-eyes and hearts to him. Idly amused, he saw himself, all inert, boosted
-from step to step, saw friends swarm about him and hardly an enemy's
-face.
-
-It was rare for him to meet dislike. One young man, vaguely known at
-Oxford, noticed with interest as a relative of Eppie's, he had, indeed,
-by merely being, it seemed, antagonized. Gavan had really felt something
-of a shy, derivative affection for this Jim Grainger, a dogged, sullen,
-strenuous youth; because of the dear old memory, he had made one or two
-delicate, diffident approaches--approaches repulsed with bull-dog
-defiance. Gavan, who understood most things, quite understood that to
-the serious, the plain, the obviously laborious son of an impecunious
-barrister, he might have given the impression, so funnily erroneous, of
-a sauntering dilettantism, an aristocratic _flnerie_. At all events,
-Grainger was intrenched in a resolute disapproval, colored, perhaps,
-with some tinge of reminiscent childish jealousy. When their paths again
-crossed in London and Gavan found his suavity encountered by an even
-more scowling sarcasm, jealousy, of another type, was an obvious cause.
-Grainger, scornful of social dexterities and weapons, had worked himself
-to skin and bone in preparation for a career, and a career that he
-intended to be of serious significance. And at its outset he found
-himself in apparent competition with Gavan for a post that, significant
-indeed to him, as the first rung on the political ladder, could only be
-decorative to his rival--the post of secretary to a prominent
-cabinet-minister. Grainger had his justified hopes, and he was, except
-for outward graces, absolutely fitted for the place.
-
-In his path he found the listless figure of the well-remembered and
-heartily disliked Gavan--a gilded youth, pure and simple, and as such
-being lifted, by all accounts, onto the coveted rung of the coveted
-ladder. Gavan's scholarly fitness for the post Grainger only half
-credited. Of the sturdy professional class, with a streak of the easily
-suspicious bourgeois about him, he was glad to believe tales of
-drawing-room influence. He expressed himself with disgusted openness as
-to the fatal effect of a type like Palairet's on public life. Gavan
-heard a little and guessed more. He found himself sympathizing with
-Grainger; he had always liked him. With an effort that he had never used
-on his own behalf, he managed to get him fitted into the pair of shoes
-that were standing waiting for his own feet. It had been, indeed, though
-in superficial ways, an affair of drawing-room influence. The wife of
-the great statesman, as well as that high personage himself, was one of
-Gavan's devoted and baffled friends. She said that he made her think of
-a half-frozen bird that one longed to take in one's hands and warm, and
-she hopefully communed with her husband as to the invigorating effect of
-a career upon him. She suspected Gavan--his influence over her
-husband--when she found that an alien candidate was being foisted upon
-her.
-
-"Grainger!" she exclaimed, vexed and incredulous. "Why Grainger? Why not
-anybody as well as Grainger? Yes, I've seen the young man. He looks
-like a pugilistic Broad-Church parson. All he wants is to climb and to
-reform everything."
-
-"Exactly the type for British politics," Gavan rejoined. "He is in
-earnest about politics, and I'm not; you know I'm not." His friend
-helplessly owned that he was exasperating. Grainger, had he known to
-whom he was indebted for his lift, would have felt, perhaps, a
-heightened wrath against "drawing-room influence."
-
-Happily and justifiably unconscious, he proceeded to climb.
-
-Meanwhile another pair of shoes was swiftly found for Gavan. He went out
-to India as secretary to the viceroy.
-
-Here, in the surroundings of his early youth, the second great moral
-upheaval of his life came to him. Three years had passed since his
-mother's death. He was twenty-six years old.
-
-During a long summer among the mountains of Simla, he met Alice Grafton.
-She was married, a year older than himself, but a girl still in mind and
-appearance--fragile, hesitant, exquisite. Gavan at his very first seeing
-of her felt something knocking in his heart. It seemed like pity,
-instinctive pity, the bond between him and life, and for some time he
-deluded himself with this comparatively safe interpretation. He did not
-quite know why he should pity Mrs. Grafton. That she should look like a
-girl was hardly a reason, nor that her husband, large, masterful,
-embossed with decorations, was uninteresting. She had been married to
-him--by all accounts the phrase applied--at nineteen and could not find
-him sympathetic; but, after all, many cheerful women were in that
-situation. He was a kindly, an admiring husband, and her life was set in
-luxurious beauty. Yet piteousness was there. She was all promise and
-unfulfilment; and dimly, mutely, she seemed to feel that the promise
-would never be fulfilled, as though a too-early primrose smiled
-wistfully through a veil of ice. Should she never become consciously
-unhappy that would be but another symptom of permanent immaturity.
-
-Gavan rode with her and talked with her, and read with her in her fresh,
-flower-filled drawing-room. Their tastes were not at all alike; but he
-did not in the least mind that when she lifted her lovely eyes to him
-over poor poetry; and when she played and sang to him her very
-ineffectuality added a pathos, full of charm, to the obvious ballads
-that she liked. It was sweet, too, and endearing, to watch her, by
-degrees, molding her taste to his until it became a delightful and
-intuitive echo.
-
-He almost wondered if it was also in echo that she began to feel for
-herself his own appreciation of her. Certainly she matured to
-consciousness of lack. She began to confide; not with an open frankness,
-but vaguely, as though she groped toward the causes of her sadness. She
-shrank, and knew now why she shrank, when her loud-voiced, cheerful
-husband came tramping into the room. Then she began to see that she was
-horribly lonely. Unconsciously, in the confidences now, she plead for
-help, for reassurance. She probed him constantly as to religious hopes
-and the real significance of life. Her soft voice, with its endearing
-little stammer, grew to Gavan nearer and dearer than all the voices of
-the world. At first it appealed, and then it possessed him. He had
-thought that what he felt for her was only pity. He had thought himself
-too dead to all earthly pangs for the rudimentary one of love to reach
-him. But when, one day, he found her weeping, alone, among her flowers,
-he took her into his arms and the great illusion seized him once more.
-
-It seized him, though he knew it for illusion. He laughed at the specter
-of nothingness and gloried in the beauty of the rainbow moment. This
-human creature needed him and he her: that was, for them, the only
-reality; who cared for the blank background where their lives flashed
-and vanished? The flash was what mattered. He sprang from the dead self,
-as from a tomb, when he kissed her lips. Life might mean sorrow and
-defeat, but its tragedy was atoned for by a moment of such joy.
-
-"Gavan, Gavan, do we love each other? Do we?" she wept.
-
-He saw illusion and joy where her woman's heart felt only reality and
-terror in the joy.
-
-They obviously loved each other, though it was without a word of love
-that they found themselves in each other's arms. Had ever two beings so
-lonely so needed love? Her sweet, stunned eyes were a rapture of
-awakening to him, and though, under all, ran the deep, buried river of
-knowledge, whispering forever, "Vanity of vanities," he was far above it
-in the sunlight of the upper air. He felt himself, knew himself only as
-the longing to look forever into her eyes, to hold her to him forever.
-That, on the day of awakening, seemed all that life meant.
-
-Later on he found that more fundamental things had clutched him through
-the broken barriers of thought--jealousies and desires that showed him
-his partaking of the common life of humanity.
-
-Gavan's skepticism had not come face to face with a moral test as yet,
-and he could but contemplate curiously in himself the strong,
-instinctive revolt of all the man of hereditary custom and conscience
-from any dishonorable form of illegal love. He couldn't justify it, but
-it was there, as strong as his longing for the woman.
-
-It was not that he cared a rap, so he analyzed it, for laws or
-conventions: it was merely that he could not do anything that he felt as
-dishonorable.
-
-He told Alice that she must leave her husband and come openly to him.
-They would go back to Europe; live in Italy--the land of happy outcasts
-from unhappy forms; there they would study and travel and make beauty
-grow about them. Holding her hands gently, he put it all before her with
-a reverent devotion that gave the proposal a matrimonial dignity.
-
-"You know me well enough, dear Alice," he said, "to know that you need
-fear none of the usual dangers in such cases. I don't care about
-anything but you; I never will--ambition, country, family. Nothing
-outside me, or inside me, could make me fail you. All I want, or shall
-ever want, is to make you happy, and to be happy with you."
-
-But the things he put away as meaningless dreams the poor woman with the
-girl's mind saw as grim realities. It was easy for Gavan to barter a
-mirage for the one thing he cared to have; the world was not a mirage to
-her, and even her love could not make it so. Her thin young nature knew
-only the craving to keep and not the revulsion from a hidden wrong.
-Every fiber in her shrank from the facing of a hostile order of things,
-the bearing through life of a public dishonor. It was as if it were he
-who purposed the worse disgrace, not she.
-
-She wept and wept in his arms, hoping, perhaps, to weaken him by her
-feebleness and her abandonment, so that an open avowal of cowardice, an
-open appeal that he should yield to it, might be needless; but at last,
-since he would not speak, only stroking her hair, her hand, sharing her
-sorrow, she moaned out, "Oh, Gavan, I can't, I can't."
-
-He only half understood, feeling his heart freeze in the renunciation
-that she might demand. But when she sobbed on brokenly, "Don't leave me.
-Stay with me. I can't live without you. No one need ever know," he
-understood.
-
-Standing white and motionless, it was he now who repeated, "I can't. I
-can't. I can't."
-
-She wept on, incredulous, supplicating, reproachful. "You will not leave
-me! You will not abandon me!"
-
-"I cannot--stay with you."
-
-"You win my heart--humiliate me,--see that I'm yours--only yours,--and
-then cast me off!"
-
-"Don't speak so cruelly, Alice. Cast you off? I, who only pray you to
-let me take you with me?"
-
-"A target for the world!"
-
-"Darling, poor darling, I know that I ask all--all; but what else is
-there--unless I leave you?"
-
-She hid her face on his shoulder, sobbing miserably, her sobs her only
-answer, and to it he rejoined: "We can't go on, you know that; and to
-stay, to deceive your husband, to drag you through all the baseness, the
-ugliness, the degradation, Alice, of a hidden intrigue--I can't do that;
-it's the only thing I can't do for you."
-
-"You despise me; you think me wicked--because I can't have such horrible
-courage. I think what you ask is more wicked; I think it hurts everybody
-more; I think that it would degrade us more. People can't live like
-that--cut off from everything--and not be degraded in the end."
-
-It was a new species of torture that now tore at Gavan's heart and mind.
-He saw too clearly the force of the arguments that underlay her specious
-appeal--more clearly, far, than she could see. It was horribly true that
-the life of happy outlawry he proposed might wither and debase more than
-a conscious sin. The organized, crafty wisdom of life was on her side.
-And on his was a mere matter of taste. He could find no sanction for his
-resistance to her and to himself except in that instinctive recoil from
-what he felt as dishonor. He was sacrificing them both to a silly,
-subjective figment. The lurid realization, that burned and froze, went
-through him, and with it the unanswerable necessity. He must, he must,
-sacrifice them. And he must talk the language of right and wrong as
-though he believed in it. He acted as if he did, yet nothing was further
-from him than such belief; that was the strange agony that wrenched his
-brain as he said: "You are blind, not wicked. Some day you will thank me
-if I make it possible for you to let me go." And, he too incredulous, he
-cried, "Alice, Alice, will you really let me go without you?"
-
-She would not consent to the final alternative, and the struggle lasted
-for a week, through their daily meetings--the dream-like, deft meetings
-under the eyes of others,--and while they rode alone over the
-hills--long, sad rides, when both, often in a moody silence, showed at
-once their hope and their resistance.
-
-Her fear won at last. "And I can't even pretend that it's goodness," she
-said, her voice trembling with self-scorn. "You've abased me to the
-dust, Gavan. Yes, it's true, if you like--my fear is greater than my
-love." Irony, a half-felt anger, helped her to bear the blow, for, to
-the end, she could not believe that he would find strength to leave her.
-
-The parting came suddenly. Wringing her hands, looking hard into her
-face, where he saw still a fawning hope and a half-stupefied despair, he
-left her, and felt that he had torn his heart up by the very roots.
-
-And he had sacrificed her and himself, to what? Gavan could ask himself
-the question at leisure during the following year.
-
-Yet, from the irrational sacrifice was born a timid, trembling trust, a
-dim hope that the unbannered combat had not been in vain, that even the
-blind holding to the ambiguous right might blossom in a better life for
-her than if he had taken the joy held out to him. The trust was as
-irrational as the sacrifice, but it was dear to him. He cherished it,
-and it fluttered in him, sweet, intangible, during all the desolate
-year. Then, at the year's end, he met Alice, suddenly, unexpectedly, and
-found her ominously changed. Her girlhood was gone. A hard, glittering
-surface, competent, resourceful, hid something.
-
-The strength of his renouncement was so rooted that he felt no personal
-fear, and for her, too, he no longer felt fear in his nearness. What he
-felt was a new pity--a pity suffocating and horrible. Whispers of
-discreet scandal enlightened him. Alice was in no danger of what she
-most shrank from--a public pillory; but she was among those of whom the
-world whispers, with a half-condoning smile and shrug.
-
-Gavan saw her riding one morning with a famous soldier, a Nietzschian
-type of strength, splendor, and high indifference. And now he understood
-all. He knew the man. He was one who would have stared light irony at
-Gavan's chivalrous willingness to sacrifice his life to a woman; to such
-a charming triviality as an intrigue he would sacrifice just enough and
-no more. He knew the rules of the game and with him Alice was safe from
-any open pillory. People would never do more than whisper.
-
-A bitter daylight flooded for Gavan that sweet, false dawn, and once
-again the cruelty, the caprice at the heart of all things were revealed
-to him. He knew the flame of impotent remorse. He had tossed the
-miserable child to this fate, and though remorse, like all else, was
-meaningless, he loathed himself for his futile, empty magnanimity.
-
-She had seen his eyes upon her as she rode. She sent for him, and, alone
-with him, the glitter, the hardness, broke to dreadful despair.
-
-She confessed all at his knees. Hardness and glitter had been the shield
-of the racked, terror-stricken heart. The girl was a woman and knew the
-use of shields.
-
-"And Gavan, Gavan, worst of all,--far worst,--I don't love him; I never
-loved him. It was simply--simply"--she could hardly speak--"that he
-frightened and flattered me. It was vanity--recklessness--I don't know
-what it was."
-
-After the confession, she waited, her face hidden, for his reproach or
-anger. Neither came. Instead, she felt, in the long silence, that
-something quiet enveloped her.
-
-She looked up to see his eyes far from her.
-
-"Gavan, can you forgive me?" she whispered.
-
-Once more he was looking at it all--all the cruel, the meaningless drama
-in which he had been enmeshed for a little while. Once more his thought
-had risen far above it, and the old peace, the old, dead peace, with no
-trembling of the hopes that meant only a deeper delusion, was regained.
-He knew how deep must be the reattained tranquillity, when, the woman he
-had loved at his feet, he felt no shrinking, no reproach, no desire,
-only an immense, an indifferent pity.
-
-"Forgive you, Alice? Poor, poor Alice. Perhaps you should forgive me;
-but it isn't a question of that. Don't cry; don't cry," he repeated
-mechanically, gently stroking her hair--hair whose profuse, wonderful
-gold he had once kissed with a lover's awed delight.
-
-"You forgive me--you do forgive me, Gavan?"
-
-"It isn't a question of forgiveness; but of course I forgive you, dear
-Alice."
-
-"Gavan, tell me that you love me still. Can you love me? Oh, say that I
-haven't lost that."
-
-He did not reply, looking away and lifting his hand from her hair.
-
-The woman, leaning on his knees, felt a stealing sense of awe, worse
-than any fear of his anger. And worse than a vehement disavowal of love,
-worse than a spurning of her from him, were his words: "I want you not
-to suffer, dear Alice; I want you to find peace."
-
-"Peace! What peace can I find?"
-
-He looked at her now, wondering if she would understand and willing to
-put it before her as he himself saw it: "The peace of seeing it all, and
-letting it all go."
-
-"Gavan, I swear to you that I will never see him again. Oh, Gavan, what
-do you mean? If you would forgive me--really forgive me--and take me
-now, I would follow you anywhere. I am not afraid any longer. I have
-found out that the only thing to be afraid of is oneself. If I have you,
-nothing else matters."
-
-He looked steadily at her, no longer touching her. "You have said what I
-mean. You have found it out. The only thing to be afraid of is
-ourselves. You will not see this man again? You will keep that promise
-to me?"
-
-"Any promise! Anything you ask! And, indeed, indeed, I could not see him
-now," she shuddered. "Gavan, you will take me away with you?"
-
-He wondered at her that she did not see how far he was from her--how
-far, and yet how one with her, how merged in her through his
-comprehension of the essential unity that bound all life together, that
-made her suffering part of him, even while he looked down upon it from
-an almost musing height.
-
-He felt unutterable gentleness and unutterable ruthlessness. "I don't
-mean that, Alice. You won't lose yourself by clinging to me, by clinging
-to what you want."
-
-"You don't love me! Oh, you don't love me! I have killed your love!" she
-wailed out, rising to her feet, pierced by her full realization. She
-stepped back from him to gaze at him with a sort of horror. "You talk as
-if you had become a priest."
-
-He appreciated what his attitude must seem to her--priestly indeed,
-almost sleek in its lack of personal emotion, its trite recourse to the
-preaching of renunciation. And, almost with a sense of humor, that he
-felt as hateful at such a moment, the perception came that he might
-serve her through the very erroneousness of her seeing of him. The sense
-of humor was hateful, and his skilful seizing of her suggestion had a
-grotesque aspect as well. Even in his weariness, he was aware that the
-cup of contemplation was full when it could hold its drop of realized
-irony.
-
-"I think that I have become a priest, Alice," he said. "I see everything
-differently. And weren't you brought up in a religious way--to go to
-church, seek props, say your prayers, sacrifice yourself and live for
-others? Can't you take hold of that again? It's the only way."
-
-Her quick flaming was justified, he knew; one shouldn't speak of help
-when one was so far away; he had exaggerated the sacerdotal note. "Oh,
-you despise me! It is because of that, and you are trying to hide it
-from me! What is religion to me, what is anything--anything in the world
-to me--if I have lost you, Gavan? Why are you so cruel, so horrible? I
-can't understand it! I can't bear it! Oh, I can't! Why are our lives
-wrecked like this? Why did you leave me? Why have I become wicked? I was
-never, never meant to be wicked." Tears, not of abasement, not of
-appeal, but of pure anguish ran down her face.
-
-He was nearer to that elemental sadness and could speak with a more
-human tone. "You are not wicked--no more--no less--than any one. I don't
-despise you. Believe me, Alice. If I hadn't changed, this would have
-drawn me to you; I should have felt a deeper tenderness because you
-needed me more. But think of me as a priest: I have changed as much as
-that. And remember that what you have yourself found out is true--the
-only thing to be afraid of is oneself, and the only escape from fear is
-to--is to"--he paused, hearing the triteness of his own words and
-wondering with a new wonder at their truth, their gray antiquity, their
-ever-verdant youth--"is to renounce," he finished.
-
-He was standing now, ready for departure. In her eyes he saw at last the
-dignity of hopelessness, of an accepted doom, a pain far above panic.
-
-"Dear Alice," he said, taking her hand--"dear Alice." And, with all the
-delicacy of his shrinking from a too great directness, his eyes had a
-steadiness of demand that sank into the poor woman's tossed, unstable
-soul, he added, "Don't ever do anything ugly--or foolish--again."
-
-Her lover lost,--the very slightness of the words "ugly," "foolish,"
-told her how utterly lost,--a deep thrill of emotional exaltation went
-through the emptiness he left. She longed to clasp the lost lover and to
-sink at the knees of the priest.
-
-"I will be good. I will renounce myself," she said, as though it were a
-creed before an altar; and hurriedly she whispered, poor child, "Perhaps
-in heaven--we will find each other."
-
-Gavan often thought of that pathetic human clutch. So was the dream of
-an atoning heaven built. It kept its pathos, even its beauty, for him,
-when the whole tale ended in the world's shrug and smile. He heard first
-that Alice had become an emotionally devout churchwoman;--that lasted
-for a year;--and then, alas! alas!--but, after all, the smile and shrug
-was the best philosophy,--that she rode once more with the Nietzschian
-lover. He had one short note from her: he would have heard--perhaps, at
-any rate, he would know what to think when he did hear that she saw the
-man again. And she wanted him to know from her that it was not as he
-might think: she really loved him now--the other; not as she had loved
-Gavan,--that would always be first,--but very much; and she needed love,
-she must have it in her life, and she was lifting this man who loved
-her, was helping his life, and she had broader views now and did not
-believe in creeds or in the shibboleths that guided the vulgar. And she
-was harming no one, no one knew. Life was far too complicated, the
-intricacies of modern civilization far too enmeshing, for duty to be
-seen in plain black and white. The whole question of marriage was an
-open one, and one had a right to interpret one's duty according to one's
-own lights. Gavan saw the hand of the new master through it all. Shortly
-after, the death of Alice's husband, killed while tiger-shooting, set
-her free, and the new master proved himself at all events a fond one by
-promptly marrying her. So ended Alice in his life.
-
-There was not much more to look back on after that. His return to
-England; his entering the political arena, with neither desire nor
-reluctance; his standing for the town his uncle's influence marked out
-for him; the fight and the very gallant failure,--there had been, for
-him, an amused interest in the game of it all. The last year he had
-spent in his Surrey home, usually in company with a really pathetic
-effigy of the past--his father, poor and broken in health, the old
-serpent of Gavan's childhood basking now in torpid insignificance, its
-fangs drawn.
-
-People probably thought that he had been soured by an initial defeat.
-Gavan knew that the game had merely ceased to amuse him. What amused him
-most was concentrated and accurate scholarship. He was writing a book on
-some of the obscurer phases of religious enthusiasm, studying from a
-historical and psychological point of view the origin and formation of
-queer little sects,--failures in the struggle for survival,--their
-brief, ambiguous triumphs and their disintegrations.
-
-His unruffled stepping-back from the arena of political activity was to
-the more congenial activity of understanding and observation. But there
-burned in him none of the observer's, the thinker's passion. He worked
-as he rode or ate his breakfast. Work was part of the necessary fuel
-that kept life's flame bright. While he lived he didn't want a feeble,
-flickering flame. But at his heart, he was profoundly indifferent to
-work, as to all else.
-
- * * * * *
-
-GAVAN'S mind, as he leaned back in the railway carriage, had passed over
-the visual aspect of this long retrospect, not in meditation, but in a
-passive seeing of its scenes and faces. Eppie's face, fading in the
-mist; Robbie, silhouetted on the sky; the sulky Grainger; his uncle; his
-mother, and the vision of the spring day where he had wandered in the
-old dream of pain and into its cessation; finally, Alice, her pale hair
-and wistful eyes and her look when, at parting, she had said that they
-might be together in heaven.
-
-He had rarely known a greater lucidity than in those swift, lonely
-hours of night. It was like a queer, long pause between a past
-accomplished and a future not yet begun--as though one should sunder
-time and stand between its cloven waves. The figures crossed the stage,
-and he seemed to see them all in the infinite leisure of an eternal
-moment.
-
-This future, its figures just about to emerge from the wings into full
-view, slightly troubled his reverie. It was at dawn that his mind again
-turned to it with a conjecture half amused and half reluctant. There was
-something disturbing in the linkage he must make between that child's
-face on the mist and the Miss Gifford he was so soon to see. That she
-would, at all events in her own conception, dominate the stage, he felt
-sure; she might even expect a special attention from a spectator whose
-memory could join hers in that far first act. He was pretty sure that
-his memory would have to do service for both; and quite sure that memory
-would not hold for her, as it did for him, a distinct tincture of pain,
-of restlessness, as though there strove in it something shackled and
-unfulfilled.
-
-One's thoughts, at four o'clock in the morning, after hours of
-sleeplessness, became fantastic, and Gavan found himself watching, with
-some shrinking, this image of the past, suddenly released, brought
-gasping and half stupefied to the air, to freedom, to new, strong
-activity, after having been, for so long, bound and gagged and thrust
-into an underground prison.
-
-He turned to a forecast of what Eppie would probably be like. He had
-heard a good deal about her, and he had not cared for what he had
-heard. The fact that one did hear a good deal was not pleasing. Every
-one, in describing her, used the word charming; he had gathered that it
-meant, as applied to her, more than mere prettiness, wit, or social
-deftness; and it was precisely for the more that it meant that he did
-not care.
-
-Apparently what really distinguished her was her energy. She traveled
-with her cousin, Lady Alicia Waring, a worldly, kindly dabbler in art
-and politics; she rushed from country-house to country-house; she worked
-in the slums; she sat on committees; she canvassed for parliamentary
-friends; she hunted, she yachted, she sang, she broke hearts, and, by
-all accounts, had high and resolute matrimonial ambitions. Would Eppie
-Gifford "get" So-and-so was a question that Gavan had heard more than
-once repeated, with the graceless terseness of our modern colloquialism,
-and it spoke much for Eppie's popularity that it was usually asked in
-sympathy.
-
-This reputation for a direct and vigorous worldliness was only thrown
-into more pungent relief by the startling tale of her love-affair. She
-had fallen in love, helplessly in love, with an impecunious younger son,
-an officer in the Guards--a lazy, lovable, petulant nobody, the last
-type one would have expected her to lose her head over. He was not
-stupid, but he didn't count and never would. The match would have been a
-reckless one, for Eppie had, practically, only enough to pay for her
-clothes and her traveling expenses. The handsome guardsman had not even
-prospects. Yet, deliberately sacrificing all her chances, she had fallen
-in love, been radiantly engaged, and then, from the radiance, flung into
-stupefying humiliation. He had thrown her over, quite openly, for an
-ugly little heiress from Liverpool. Poor Eppie had carried off her
-broken heart--and she didn't deny that it was broken--for a year or so
-of travel. This had happened four years ago. She had mended as bravely
-as possible,--it wasn't a deep break after all,--and on the thrilling
-occasion of her first meeting with the faithless lover and his bride was
-magnificently sweet and regal to the ugly heiress. It was surmised that
-the husband was as uncomfortable as he deserved to be. But this capacity
-for recklessness, this picture of one so dauntless, dazed and
-discomfited, hardly redeemed the other, the probably fundamental aspect.
-She had lost her head; but that didn't prove that when she had it she
-would not make the best possible use of it. There was talk now--Eppie's
-was the publicity of popularity--of Gavan's old-time rival, Grainger,
-who had inherited an immense fortune and, unvarnished and defiantly
-undecorative on his lustrous background, was one of the world's prizes.
-All that he had was at Eppie's feet, and some more brilliant alternative
-could be the only cause for hesitation in a young woman seared by
-misfortune and cured forever of folly.
-
-So the talk went, and Gavan took such gabble with a large pinch of
-ironic incredulity; but at the same time the gossip left its trail. The
-impetuous and devastating young lady, with her assurance and her aim at
-large successes, was to him a distasteful figure. There was pain in
-linking it with little Eppie. It stood waiting in the wings and was
-altogether novel and a little menacing to one's peace of mind. He really
-did not want to see Miss Gilford; she belonged to a modern type
-intensely wearisome to him. But she was staying with her uncle and
-aunt--only Miss Barbara was left--at Kirklands, and the general, after a
-meeting in London, had written begging him to pay them all a visit, and,
-since there had seemed no reason for not going, here he was.
-
-Here he was, and round the corner of the wing the new Eppie stood
-waiting. Poor little Eppie of childhood--she was lost forever.
-
-But all the clearness of the night concentrated, at dawn, into that
-vivid memory of the past where they had wandered together, sharing joy
-and sorrow.
-
-That was long, long over. To-morrow was already here, and to-morrow
-belonged to the new Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Gavan spent the morning in Edinburgh, seeing an old relative, and
-reached Kirklands at six.
-
-It was a cold October evening, the moors like a dark, sullenly heaving
-ocean and a heavy bar of sunset lying along the horizon.
-
-The windows of the old white house mirrored the dying color, and here
-and there the inner light of fire and candle seemed like laughter on a
-grave face. With all its loneliness it was a happy-looking house; he
-remembered that; and in the stillness of the vast moors and the coming
-night it made him think of a warmly throbbing heart filling with courage
-and significance a desolate life.
-
-The general came from the long oak library, book in hand, to welcome
-him. Gavan was almost automatically observant of physical processes and
-noted now the pronounced limp, the touch of garrulity--symptoms of the
-fine old organism's placid disintegration. Life was leaving it
-unreluctantly, and the mild indifference of age made his cordiality at
-once warmer and more impersonal than of old.
-
-As he led Gavan to his room, the room of boyhood, near Eppie's,
-overlooking the garden and the wooded hills, he told him that Eppie and
-Miss Barbara were dressing and that he would have time for a talk with
-them before dinner at eight.
-
-"It's changed since you were here, Gavan. Ah! time goes--it goes. Poor
-Rachel! we lost her five years ago. If Eppie didn't look after us so
-well we should be lonely, Barbara and I. We seldom get away now. Too old
-to care for change. But Eppie always gives us three or four months, and
-a letter once a week while she's away. She puts us first. This is home,
-she says. She sees clever people at Alicia Waring's, has the world at
-her feet,--you've heard, no doubt,--but she loves Kirklands best. She
-gardens with me--a great gardener Eppie, but she is good at anything she
-sets herself to; she drives her aunt about, she reads to us and sings to
-us,--you have heard of her singing, too,--keeps us in touch with life.
-Eppie is a wonderful person for sharing happiness," the general
-monologued, looking about the fire-lit room; and Gavan felt that, from
-this point of view, some of the little Eppie might still have survived.
-
-"So you have given up the idea of the House?" the general went on.
-
-"I'm no good at it," said Gavan; "I've proved it."
-
-"Proved it? Nonsense. Wait till you are fifty before saying that. Why,
-you've everything in your favor. You weren't enough in earnest; that was
-the trouble. You didn't care enough; you played into your opponents'
-hands. The British public doesn't understand idealism or irony. Eppie
-told us all about it."
-
-"Eppie? How did Eppie know?" He found himself using her little name as a
-matter of course.
-
-"She knows everything," the general rejoined, with his air of happy,
-derived complacency; "even when she's not in England, she never loses
-touch. Eppie is very much behind the scenes."
-
-The simile recalled to Gavan his own vision of the stage and the waiting
-figure. "Even behind my scenes!" he ejaculated, smiling at so much
-omniscience.
-
-"From the moment you came into public life, yes."
-
-"And she knows why I failed at it? Idealism and irony?"
-
-"That's what she says; and I usually find Eppie right." The general,
-after the half-humorous declaration, had a pause, and before leaving his
-guest, he added, "Right, except about her own affairs. She is a child
-there yet."
-
-Eppie's disaster must have been keenly felt and keenly resented at
-Kirklands. The general made no further reference to it and Gavan asked
-no question.
-
-There was a fire, a lamp, and several clusters of candles in the long,
-dark library when Gavan entered it an hour later, so that the darkness
-was full of light; yet he had wandered slowly down its length, looking
-about him at the faded tan, russet, and gilt of well-remembered books,
-at the massive chairs and tables, all in their old places, all so
-intimately familiar, before seeing that he was not alone in the room.
-
-Some one in white was sitting, half submerged in a deep chair, behind
-the table with its lamp--some one who had been watching him as he
-wandered, and who now rose to meet him, taking him so unawares that she
-startled him, all the light in the dim room seeming suddenly to center
-upon her and she herself to throw everything, even his former thoughts
-of her, into the background.
-
-It was Eppie, of course, and all that he had heard of her, all that he
-had conjectured, fell back before the impression that held him in a
-moment, long, really dazzled, yet very acute.
-
-Her face was narrow, pale, faintly freckled; the jaw long, the nose
-high-bridged, the lips a little prominent; and, as he now saw, a clear
-flush sprang easily to her cheeks. Eyes, lips, and hair were vivid with
-color: the hair, with its remembered rivulets of russet and gold, piled
-high on her head, framing the narrow face and the long throat; the eyes
-gray or green or gold, like the depths of a mountain stream.
-
-He had heard many analogies for the haunting and fugitive charm of Miss
-Gifford's face--a charm that could only, apparently, be caught with the
-subtleties of antithesis. One appreciator had said that she was like an
-angelic jockey; another, that with a statesman's gaze she had a baby's
-smile; another, that she was a Flying Victory done by Velasquez. And
-with his own dominant impression of strength, sweetness, and daring,
-there crowded other similes. Her eyes had the steeplechaser's hard,
-smiling scrutiny of the next jump; the halloo of the hunt under a
-morning sky was in them, the joyous shouts of Spartan boys at play; yet,
-though eyes of heroism and laughter, they were eyes sad and almost
-tragically benignant.
-
-She was tall, with the spare lightness of a runner poised for a race,
-and the firm, ample breast of a hardy nymph. She suggested these pagan,
-outdoor similes while, at the same time, luxuriously feminine in her
-more than fashionable aspect, the last touches of modernity were upon
-her: her dress, the eighteenth-century, interpreted by Paris, her
-decorations all discretion and distinction--a knot of silver-green at
-her breast, an emerald ring on her finger, and emerald earrings, two
-drops of smooth, green light, trembling in the shadows of her hair.
-
-Altogether Gavan was able to grasp the impression even further, to
-simplify it, to express at once its dazzled quality and its acuteness,
-as various and almost violent, as if, suddenly, every instrument in an
-orchestra were to strike one long, clear, vibrating note.
-
-His gaze had been prolonged, and hers had answered it with as open an
-intentness. And it was at last she who took both his hands, shook them a
-little, holding them while, not shyly, but with that vivid flush on her
-cheek, "_You_," she said.
-
-For she was startled, too. It _was_ he. She remembered, as if she had
-seen them yesterday, his air of quick response, surface-shrinking, deep
-composure, the old delicious smile, and the glance swiftly looking and
-swiftly averted.
-
-"And _you_," Gavan repeated. "I haven't changed so much, though," he
-said.
-
-"And I have? Really much? Long skirts and turned up hair are a
-transformation. It's wonderful to see you, Gavan. It makes one get hold
-of the past and of oneself in it."
-
-"Does it?"
-
-"_Doesn't_ it?" She let go his hands, and moving to the fire and
-standing before it while she surveyed him, she went on, not waiting for
-an answer:
-
-"But I don't suppose that you have my keenness of memory. It all rushes
-back--our walks, our games, our lessons, the smell of the heather, the
-very taste of the heather-honey we ate at tea, and all the things you
-did and said and looked; your building the Petit Trianon, and your
-playing dolls with me that day; your Agnes, in her pink dress, and my
-Elspeth, whom I used to whip so."
-
-"I remember it all," said Gavan, "and I remember how I broke poor
-Elspeth."
-
-"Do you?"
-
-"All of it: the attic windows and the pine-tree under them, and the
-great white bird, and the dreadful, soft little thud on the garden
-path."
-
-"Yes, I can see your face looking down. You were quite silent and
-frozen. I screamed and screamed. Aunt Barbara thought that _you_ had
-fallen at first from the way I screamed."
-
-"Poor little Eppie. Yes, I remember; it was horrid."
-
-Their eyes, smiling, quizzical, yet sad, watched, measured each other,
-while they exchanged these trophies from the past. He had joined her
-beside the fire, and, turning, she leaned her hands on the mantel and
-looked into the flames. So looking, her face had its aspect of almost
-tragic brooding. It was as if, Gavan thought, under the light memories,
-all those visions of his night were there before her, as if,
-astonishingly, and in almost uncanny measure, she shared them.
-
-"And do you remember Robbie?" she asked presently.
-
-"I was just thinking of Robbie," Gavan answered. It was her face that
-had brought back the old sorrow, and that memory, more than any, linked
-them over all that was new and strange. They glanced at each other.
-
-"I am so glad," said Eppie.
-
-"Because I remember?"
-
-"Yes, that you haven't forgotten. You said you would."
-
-"Did I?" he asked, though he quite remembered that, too.
-
-"Yes; and I should have felt Robbie more dead if you had forgotten him."
-
-This was wonderfully not the Miss Gifford, and wonderfully the old
-Eppie. She saw that thought, too, answering it with, "Things haven't
-really changed so much, have they? It's all so very near--all of that."
-
-So near, that its sudden sharing was making Gavan a little
-uncomfortable, with the discomfort of the night before justified,
-intensified.
-
-He hadn't imagined such familiar closeness with a woman really unknown,
-nor that, sweeping away all the formalities that might have grown up
-between them, she should call him Gavan and make it natural for him to
-call her Eppie. He didn't really mind. It was amusing, charming perhaps,
-perhaps even touching--yes, of course it was that; but she was rather
-out of place: much nearer than where he had imagined she would be, on
-the stage before him.
-
-Passing to another memory, she now said, "I clung for years, you know,
-to your promise to come back."
-
-"I couldn't come--really and simply could not."
-
-"I never for a moment thought you could, any more than I thought you
-could forget Robbie."
-
-"And when I could come, you were gone."
-
-"How miserable that made me! I was in Rome when I had the news from
-Uncle Nigel."
-
-He felt bound fully to exonerate the past. "I had the life, during my
-boyhood, of a sumptuous galley-slave. I had everything except liberty
-and leisure. I was put into a system and left there until it had had its
-will of me. And when I was free I imagined that you had forgotten all
-about me. To a shy, warped boy, a grown-up Eppie was an alarming idea."
-
-"I never thought you had forgotten _me_!" said Eppie, smiling.
-
-Again she actually disturbed him; but, lightly, he replied with the
-truth, feeling a certain satisfaction in its lightness: "Never, never;
-though, of course, you fell into a background. You can't deny that _I_
-did."
-
-"Oh, no, I don't deny it." Her smile met his, seemed placidly to
-perceive its meaning. She did not for a moment imply, by her admissions,
-any more than he did; the only question was, What did his admissions
-imply?
-
-She left them there, going on in an apparent sequence, "Have you heard
-much about me, Gavan?"
-
-"A good deal," he owned.
-
-"I ask because I want to pick up threads; I want to know how many
-stitches are dropped, so to speak. Since you have heard, I want to know
-just what; I often seem to leave reverberations behind me. Some rather
-ugly ones, I fear. You heard, perhaps, that I was that rather ambiguous
-being, the young woman of fashion, materialistic, ambitious, hard." Her
-gaze, with its cool scrutiny, was now upon him.
-
-"Those are really too ugly names for what I heard. I gathered, on the
-whole, that you were merely very vigorous and that you had more
-opportunities than most people for vigor."
-
-"I'm glad that you saw it so; but all the same, the truth, at times,
-hasn't been beautiful. I have, often, been too indifferent toward people
-who didn't count for me, and too diplomatic toward those who did. You
-see, Gavan," she put it placidly before him, not at all as if drawing
-near in confidence,--she was much further in her confidences than in her
-memories,--but merely as if she unrolled a map before him so that he
-might clearly see where, at present, they found themselves, "you see, I
-am a nearly penniless girl--just enough to dress and go about. Of course
-if I didn't dress and didn't go about I could keep body and soul
-together; but to the shrewd eyes of the world, a girl living on her
-friends, making capital of her personality, while she seeks a husband
-who will give her the sort of place she wants--oh, yes, the world isn't
-so unfair, either, when one takes off the veils. And this girl, with the
-personality that pays, was put early in a place from where she could see
-all sorts of paths at once, see the world, in its ladder aspect, before
-her--all the horridness of low rungs and all the satisfaction of high
-ones. I have been tempted through complexity of understanding; perhaps I
-still am. One wants the best; and when one doesn't see clearly what the
-best is, one is in danger of becoming ugly. But echoes are often
-distorting."
-
-Miss Gifford was now very fully before him, as she had evidently
-intended to be. It was as if she herself had drawn between them the
-barrier of the footlights and as if, on her chosen stage, she swept a
-really splendid curtsey. And this frank and panoplied young woman of the
-world was far easier to deal with than the reminiscent Eppie. He could
-comfortably smile and applaud from his stall, once more the mere
-spectator--easiest of attitudes.
-
-"The echoes, on the whole, were rather magnificent, as if an Amazon had
-galloped across mountains and left them calling her prowess from peak to
-peak."
-
-Her eyes, quickly on his, seemed to measure the conscious artificiality,
-to compare it with what he had already, more helplessly, shown her. He
-felt his rather silly deftness penetrated and that she guessed that the
-mountain calls had not at all enchanted him. She owned to her own
-acuteness in her next words:
-
-"And you don't like young ladies to gallop across mountains. Well, I
-love galloping, though I'm sorry that I leave over-loud echoes. You, at
-all events, are noiseless. You seem to have sailed over my head in an
-air-boat. It was hard for me to keep any trace of you."
-
-"But I don't at all mean that I dislike Amazons to have their rides."
-
-"Let us talk of you now. I have had an eye on you, you know, even when
-you disappeared into the Indian haze; you had just disappeared when I
-first came to London. I only heard of lofty things--scholarly
-distinction, diplomatic grace, exquisite indifference to the world's
-prizes and to noisy things in general. It's all true, I can see."
-
-"Well, I'm not indifferent to you," said Gavan, smiling, tossing his
-appropriate bouquet.
-
-She had at this another, but a sharper, of her penetrative pauses. It
-was pretty to see her, rather like a deer arrested in its careless
-speed, suddenly wary, its head high. And, in another moment, he saw that
-the quick flush, almost violently, sprang to her cheek. Turning her head
-a little from him, she looked away, almost as if his glib acceptance of
-a frivolous meaning in her words abashed her--and more for him than for
-herself; as if she suddenly suspected him of being stupid enough to
-accept her at the uglier valuation of those echoes he had heard. She had
-not meant to say that she was one of the world's prizes, and she had
-perhaps meant to say, generously, that if he found her noisy she
-wouldn't resent indifference. Perhaps she had meant to say nothing of
-herself at all. She certainly wasn't on the stage, and in thinking her
-so he felt that he had shown himself disloyal to something that she,
-more nobly, had taken for granted. The flush, so vivid, that stayed made
-him feel himself a blunderer.
-
-But, in a moment, she went on with a lightness of allusion to his speech
-that yet oddly answered the last turn of his self-reproach. "Oh, you are
-loyal, I am sure, even to a memory. I wasn't thinking of particulars,
-but of universals. My whole impression of you was of something fragrant,
-elusive, impalpable. I never felt that I had a glimpse of really _you_.
-It was almost gross in comparison actually to see your name in the
-papers, to read of your fight for Camley, to think of you in that
-earthly scuffle. It was like roast-beef after roses; and I was glad,
-because I'm gross. I like roast-beef."
-
-He was grateful to her for the lightness that carried him so kindly over
-his own blunder.
-
-"It was only the fragrance of the roast, too, you see, since I was
-defeated," he said.
-
-"You didn't mind a bit, did you?"
-
-"It would sound, wouldn't it, rather like sour grapes to say it?"
-
-"You can say it. It was so obvious that you might have had the bunch by
-merely stretching out your hand--they were under it, not over your head.
-You simply wouldn't play the game." She left him now, reaching her chair
-with a long stride and a curving, gleaming turn of her white skirts,
-suggesting a graceful adaptation of some outdoor dexterity. As she
-leaned back in her chair, fixing him with that look of cheerful
-hardness, she made him think so strongly of the resolute, winning type,
-that almost involuntarily he said, "You would have played it, wouldn't
-you?"
-
-"I should think so! I care for the grapes, you see. It's what I
-said--you didn't care enough."
-
-"Well, it's kind of you to see ineffectuality in that light." Still
-examining the steeplechaser quality, he added, "You do care, don't you,
-a lot?"
-
-"Yes, a lot. I am worldly to my finger-tips." Her eyes challenged
-him--gaily, not defiantly--to misunderstand her again.
-
-"What do you mean, exactly, by worldly?" he asked.
-
-"I mean by it that I believe in the world, that I love the world; I
-believe that its grapes are worth while,--and by grapes I mean the
-things that people strive for and that the strong attain. The higher
-they hang and the harder the climb, the more I like them."
-
-Gavan received these interpretations without comment. "A seat in the
-House isn't very high, though, is it?" he remarked.
-
-"That depends on the sitter. It might be a splendid or a trivial thing."
-
-"And in my case, if I'd got it, what would it have been? Can you see
-that, too, you very clear-sighted young woman?"
-
-He stood above her, smiling, but now without suavity or artificiality;
-looking at her as though she were a pretty gipsy whose palm he had
-crossed with silver. And Eppie answered, quite like a good-natured
-gipsy, conscious of an admiring but skeptical questioner, "I think it
-would have been neither."
-
-"But what then? What would this sitter have made of it?"
-
-"A distraction? An experiment upon himself? I'm sure I don't know.
-Indeed, I don't pretend to know you at all yet. Perhaps I will in time."
-
-Once more he was conscious of the discomfort, slight and stealing, as
-though the gipsy knew too much already. But he protested, and with
-sincerity: "If there is anything to find you will certainly find it. I
-hope that you will find it worth your while. I hope that we shall be
-great friends."
-
-She smiled up at him, clearly and quietly: "I have always been your
-great friend."
-
-"Always? All this while?"
-
-"All this while. Never mind if you haven't felt it; I have. I will do
-for both."
-
-Her smile, her look, made him finally and completely understand the
-application of the well-worn word to her. She was charming. She could be
-lavish, pour out unasked bounty upon one, and yet, in no way
-undervaluing it, be full of delicacy, of humor, in her generosity.
-
-"I thought I hadn't any right to feel it," said Gavan. "I thought you
-would not have remembered."
-
-"Well, you will find out--I always remember, it's my strong point," said
-Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Next morning at breakfast he had quite a new impression of her.
-
-Pale sunlight flooded the square, white room where, in all its dignified
-complexity of appurtenance, the simple meal was laid out. From the
-windows one saw the clear sky, the moor, its summer purple turned to
-rich browns and golds, and, nearer, the griffins with their shields.
-
-Eppie was a little late in coming, and Gavan, while he and the general
-finished their wandering consumption of porridge and sat down to bacon
-and eggs, had time to observe by daylight in Miss Barbara, behind her
-high silver urn, the changes that in her were even more emphatic than in
-her brother. She was sweeter than ever, more appealing, more
-affirmative, with all manner of futile, fluttering little gestures and
-gentle, half-inarticulate little ejaculations of pleasure, approbation,
-or distress. Her smile, rather silly, worked too continually, as though
-moved by slackened wires. Her hands defined, described, ejaculated;
-over-expression had become automatic with her.
-
-Eppie, when she appeared, said that she had had a walk, stooping to
-kiss her aunt and giving Gavan a firm, chill hand on her way to the same
-office for the general. She took her seat opposite Gavan, whistling an
-Irish-terrier to her from the door and, before she began to eat,
-dropping large fragments of bannock into his mouth. Her loose, frieze
-clothes smelled of peat and sunshine; her hair seemed to have the
-sparkle of the dew on it; she suggested mountain tarns, skylarks,
-morning gladness: but, with all this, Gavan, for the first time, now
-that she faced the hard, high light, saw how deeply, too, she suggested
-sadness.
-
-Her face had moments of looking older than his own. It was fresh, it was
-young, but it had lived a great deal, and felt things to the bone, as it
-were.
-
-There were little wrinkles about her eyes; her white brow, under its
-sweep of hair, was faintly lined; the oval of her cheek, long and fine,
-took, at certain angles, an almost haggard sharpness. It was not a faded
-face, nor a face to wither with years: every line of it spoke of a
-permanent beauty; but, with all the color that the chill morning air had
-brought into it, it yet made one think of bleak uplands, of
-weather-beaten cliffs. Life had engraved it with ineffaceable symbols.
-Storms had left their mark, bitter conflicts and bitter endurances.
-
-While she ate, with great appetite, she talked incessantly, to the
-general, to Miss Barbara, to Gavan, but not so much to him, tossing, in
-the intervals of her knife and fork and cup, bits of food to the
-attentive terrier. He saw why the old people adored her. She was the
-light, the movement of their monotonous days. Not only did she bring
-them her life: it was their own that she vivified with her interest. The
-interest was not assumed, dutiful. There was no touch of the conscious
-being kind. She questioned as eagerly as she told. She knew and cared
-for every inch of the country, every individual in the country-side. She
-was full of sagacity and suggestion, full of anecdote and a nipping
-Scotch humor. And one felt strongly in her the quality of old race.
-Experience was in her blood, an inheritance of instinct, and, that so
-significant symptom, the power of playfulness--the intellectual
-detachment that, toward firm convictions, could afford a lightness
-scandalous to more crudely compacted natures, could afford gaieties and
-audacities, like the flights of a bird tethered by an invisible thread
-to a strong hand.
-
-Miss Barbara, plaintively repining over village delinquencies, was lured
-to see comedy lurking in the cases of insubordination and
-thriftlessness, though at the mention of Archie MacHendrie, the local
-drunkard and wife-beater, Eppie's brow grew black--with a blackness
-beside which Miss Barbara's gloom was pallid. Eppie said that she wished
-some one would give Archie a thrashing, and Gavan could almost see her
-doing it herself.
-
-From local topics she followed the general to politics, while he glanced
-down the columns of the "Scotsman," so absorbed and so vehement that,
-meeting at last Gavan's meditative eye, she seemed to become aware of an
-irony he had not at all intended, and said, "A crackling of thorns under
-a pot, all this, Gavan thinks, and, what does it all matter? You have
-become a philosopher, Gavan; I can see that."
-
-"Well, my dear, from Plato down philosophers have thought that politics
-did matter," said the general, incredulous of indifference to such a
-topic.
-
-"Unless they were of a school that thought that nothing did," said
-Eppie.
-
-"Gavan's not of that weak-kneed persuasion."
-
-"Oh, he isn't weak-kneed!" laughed Eppie.
-
-She drove her aunt all morning in the little pony-cart and wrote letters
-after lunch, Gavan being left to the general's care. It was not until
-later that she assumed toward him the more personal offices of deputy
-hostess, meeting him in the hall as she emerged from the morning-room,
-her thick sheaf of letters in her hand, and proposing a walk before tea.
-She took him up the well-remembered path beside the burn; but now, in
-the clear autumnal afternoon, he seemed further from her than last night
-before the fire. Already he had seen that the sense of nearness or
-distance depended on her will rather than his own; so that it was now
-she who chose to talk of trivial things, not referring by word or look
-to the old memories, deepest of all, that crowded about him on the
-hilltop, not even when, breasting the wind, they passed the solitary
-group of pine-trees, where she had so deeply shared his suffering, so
-wonderfully comprehended his fears.
-
-She strode against the twisted flappings of her skirt, tawny strands of
-hair whipping across her throat, her hands deeply thrust into her
-pockets, her head unbowed before the enormous buffets of the wind, and
-he felt anew the hardy energy that would make tender, lingering touches
-upon the notes of the past rare things with her.
-
-In the uproar of air, any sequence of talk was difficult. Her clear
-voice seemed to shout to him, like the cold shocks of a mountain stream
-leaping from ledge to ledge, and the trivial things she said were like
-the tossing of spray upon that current of deep, joyful energy.
-
-"Isn't it splendid!" she exclaimed at last. They had walked two miles
-along the crest of the hill, and, smiling in looking round at him, her
-face, all the sky behind it, all the wind around it, made the word match
-his own appreciation.
-
-"Splendid," he assented, thinking of her glance and poise.
-
-Still bending her smile upon him, she said, "You already look
-different."
-
-"Different from what?" he asked, amused by her expression, as of a
-kindly, diagnosing young doctor.
-
-"From last night. From what I felt of you. One might have thought that
-you had lost the capacity for feeling splendor."
-
-"Why should you have imagined me so deadened?" He kept his cheerful
-curiosity.
-
-"I don't know. I did. There,"--she paused to point,--"do you remember
-the wind-mill, Gavan? The old miller is dead and his son is the miller
-now; but the mill looks just as it did when we were little. It makes one
-think of birds and ships, doesn't it?--with the beauty that it stays and
-doesn't pass. When I was a child--did I ever confide it to you?--my
-dream was to catch one of the sails as it came down and let it carry me
-up, up, and right around. What fun it would have been! I suppose that
-one could have held on."
-
-"In pretty grim earnest, after the first fun."
-
-"It would be the sense of coming grimness that would make the desperate
-thrill of it."
-
-"You are fond of thrills and perils."
-
-"Not fond, exactly; the love of risk is a deeper thing--something
-fundamental in us, I suppose."
-
-She had walked on, down the hillside, where gorse bushes pulled at her
-skirts, and he was putting together last night's impressions with
-to-day's, and thinking that if she embodied the instinctive, the
-life-loving, it wasn't in the simple, unreflecting forms that the words
-usually implied. She was simple, but not in the least guileless, and her
-directness was a choice among recognized complexities. It was no
-spontaneous child of nature who, on the quieter hillside, where they
-could talk, talked of India, now, of his life there, the people he had
-known, many of whom she too knew. He knew that he was being managed,
-being made to talk of what she wanted to hear, that she was still
-engaged in penetrating. He was quite willing to be managed,
-penetrated,--for as far as she could get; he could rely on his own
-deftness in retreat before too deep a probe, though, should she discover
-that for him the lessons of life had resulted in an outlook perhaps the
-antipodes from her own, he guessed that her own would show no wavering.
-Still, she should run, if possible, no such risk. They were to be
-friends, good friends: that was, as she had said, not only an
-accomplished, but a long-accomplished fact; but, even more than in
-childhood, she would be a friend held at arm's-length.
-
-Meanwhile, unconscious, no doubt, of these barriers, Eppie walked beside
-him and made him talk about himself. She knew, of course, of his
-mother's death; she did not speak of that: many barriers were her
-own--she was capable of most delicate avoidances. But she asked after
-his father. "He is still alive, I hear."
-
-"Yes, indeed, and gives me a good deal of his company."
-
-"Oh." She was a little at a loss. He could guess at what she had heard
-of his father. He went on, though choosing his words in a way that
-showed a slight wincing behind his wish to be very frank and friendly
-with her, for even yet his father made him wince, standing, as he did,
-for the tragedy of his mother's life: "He is very much alive for a
-person so gone to pieces. But I can put up with him far more comfortably
-than when he was less pitiable."
-
-"How much do you have to put up with him?" she asked, trying to image,
-as he saw, his mnage in Surrey, in the house he had just been
-describing to her, its old bricks all vague pinks and mauves, its
-high-walled gardens clustering near it, its wonderful hedges, that, he
-said, it ruined him to keep up to their reputation of exquisite
-formality; and, within, its vast library--all the house a brain,
-practically, the other rooms like mere places for life's renewal before
-centering in the intellectual workshop. She evidently found it difficult
-to place, among the hedges, the lawns, the long walls of the library, a
-father, gone to pieces perhaps, but displaying all the more helplessly
-his general unworthiness. Even in lenient circles, Captain Palairet was
-thought to have an undignified record.
-
-"Oh, he is there for most of the time. He is there now," said Gavan,
-without pathos. "He has no money left, and now that I've a little I'm
-the obvious thing to retire to."
-
-"I hope that it's not very horrid for you."
-
-"I can't say that it's horrid at all. I don't see much of him, and, in
-many respects, he has remained, for the onlooker, rather a charming
-creature. He gives me very little trouble--smokes, eats, plays
-billiards. When we meet, we are very affable."
-
-Eppie did not say, "You tolerate him because he is piteous," but he
-imagined that she guessed it.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-He was awakened early next morning by the sound of singing in the garden
-below.
-
-His windows were widely opened and a cold, pure air filled the room. He
-lay dreamily listening for some moments before recognizing Eppie's
-voice--recognizing it, though he had never heard her sing.
-
-Fresh and strong, it put a new vitality into the simple sadness of an
-old Scotch ballad, as though in the very sorrow it found joy. It was not
-an emotional voice. Clearly and firmly it sounded, and seemed a part of
-the frosty, sunny morning, part of the sky that was like a great chalice
-filled with light, of the whitened hills, the aromatic pine-woods, and
-the distant, rushing burn. He had sprung up after the first dreamy
-listening and looked out at it all, and at her walking through the
-garden, her dog at her heels. She went out by the little gate sunken
-deep in the wall, and disappeared in the woods; and still the voice
-reached him, singing on, and at each repetition of the monotonous,
-departing melody, a sadder, sweeter sense of pain strove in his heart.
-
-He listened, looking down at the pine-tree beneath the window, at the
-garden, the summer-house, the withered tangle of the rose upon the wall,
-and up at the hilltop, at the crystalline sky; and such a sudden pang of
-recollection pierced him that tears came to his eyes.
-
-What was it that he remembered? or, rather, what did he not? Things deep
-and things trivial, idle smiles, wrenching despairs, youth, sorrow,
-laughter,--all the past was in the pang, all the future, too, it seemed,
-and he could not have said whether his mother, Alice, Eppie with her
-dolls, and little Robbie, or the clairvoyant intuition of a future
-waiting for him here--whether presage or remembrance--were its greater
-part.
-
-Not until the voice had died, in faintest filaments of sound, far away
-among the woods, did the pain fade, leaving him shaken. Such moods were
-like dead things starting to life, and reminded him too vividly of the
-fact that as long as one was alive, one was, indeed, in danger from
-life; and though his thought was soon able to disentangle itself from
-the knot of awakened emotions that had entwined it for a moment, a vague
-sense of fear remained with him. Something had been demanded of
-him--something that he had, involuntarily, found himself giving. This it
-was to have still a young nature, sensitive to impressions. He
-understood. Yet it was with a slight, a foolishly boyish reluctance, as
-he told himself, that he went down some hours later to meet Eppie at
-breakfast.
-
-There was an unlooked-for refuge for him when he found her hardly
-noticing him, and very angry over some village misdemeanor. The anger
-held her far away. She dilated on the subject all during breakfast,
-pouring forth her wrath, without excitement, but with a steady
-vehemence. It was an affair of a public-house, and Eppie accused the
-publican of enticing his clients to drink, of corrupting the village
-sobriety, and she urged the general, as local magistrate, to take
-immediate action, showing a very minute knowledge of the technicalities
-of the case.
-
-"My dear," the general expostulated, "indeed I don't think that the man
-has done anything illegal; we are powerless about the license in such a
-case. You must get more evidence."
-
-"I have any amount of evidence. The man is a public nuisance. Poor Mrs.
-MacHendrie was crying to me about it this morning. Archie is hardly ever
-sober now. I shall drive over to Carlowrie and see Sir Alec about it; as
-the wretch's landlord he can make it uncomfortable for him, and I'll see
-that he makes it as uncomfortable as possible."
-
-Laughingly, but slightly harassed, the general said: "You see, we have a
-tyrant here. Eppie is really a bit too hard on the man. He is an
-unpleasant fellow, I own, a most unpleasant manner--a beast, if you
-will, but a legal beast."
-
-"The most unpleasant form of animal, isn't it? It's very good of Eppie
-to care so much," said Gavan.
-
-"You don't care, I suppose," she said, turning her eyes on him, as
-though she saw him for the first time that morning.
-
-"I should feel more hopeless about it, perhaps."
-
-"Why, pray?"
-
-"At all events, I shouldn't be able to feel so much righteous
-indignation."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"He is pretty much of a product, isn't he?--not worse, I suppose, than
-the men whose weakness enriches him. It's a pity, of course, that one
-can't painlessly pinch such people out of existence, as one would
-offensive insects."
-
-Eppie, across the table, eyed him, her anger quieted. "He is a product
-of a good many things," she said, now in her most reasonable manner,
-"and he is going to be a product of some more before I'm done with
-him,--a product of my hatred for him and his kind, for one thing. That
-will be a new factor in his development. Gavan," she smiled, "you and I
-are going to quarrel."
-
-"Dear Eppie!" Miss Barbara interposed. "Gavan, you must not take her
-seriously; she so often says extravagant things just to tease one."
-Really dismayed, alternately nodding and shaking her head in reassurance
-and protest, she looked from one to the other. "And don't, dear, say
-such unchristian things of anybody. She is not so hard and unforgiving
-as she sounds, Gavan."
-
-"Aunt Barbara! Aunt Barbara!" laughed Eppie, leaning her elbows on the
-table, her eyes still on Gavan, "my hatred for Macdougall isn't nearly
-as unchristian as Gavan's indifference. I don't want to pinch him
-painlessly out of life at all. I think that life has room for us both. I
-want to have him whipped, or made uncomfortable in some way, until he
-becomes less horrid."
-
-"Whipped, dear! People are never whipped nowadays! It was a very
-barbarous punishment indeed, and, thank God, we have outgrown it. We
-will outgrow it all some day. And as to any punishment, I don't know, I
-really don't. Resist not evil," Miss Barbara finished in a vague,
-helpless murmur, uncertain as to what course would at once best apply to
-Macdougall's case and satisfy the needs of public sobriety.
-
-"Perhaps one owes it to people to resist them," Eppie answered.
-
-"Oh, Eppie dear, if only you cared a little more for Maeterlinck!"
-sighed Miss Barbara, the more complex readings of whose later years had
-been somewhat incongruously adapted to her early simple faiths. "Do you
-remember that beautiful thing he says,--and Gavan's attitude reminds me
-of it,--'_Le sage qui passe interrompt mille drmes'?_"
-
-"You will be quoting Tolstoi to me next, Aunt Barbara. I suspect that
-such sages would interrupt a good deal more than dramas."
-
-"I hope that you care for Tolstoi, Gavan," said Miss Barbara, not
-forgetful of his boyish pieties. "Not the novels,--they are very, very
-sad, and so long, and the characters have such a number of names it is
-most confusing,--but the dear little books on religion. It is all there:
-love of all men, and non-resistance of evil, and self-renunciation."
-
-"Yes," Gavan assented, while Eppie looked rather gravely at him.
-
-"How beautiful this world would be if we could see it so--no hatred, no
-strife, no evil."
-
-Again Gavan assented with, "None."
-
-"None; and no life either," Eppie finished for them.
-
-She rose, thrusting her hands into alternate pockets looking for a
-note-book, which she found and consulted. "I'm off for the fray, Uncle
-Nigel, for hatred and strife. You and Gavan are going to shoot, so I'll
-bring you your lunch at the corner of the Carlowrie woods."
-
-"So that you and Gavan may continue your quarrel there. Very well. I
-prefer listening."
-
-"Gavan understands that Eppie must not be taken seriously," Miss Barbara
-interposed; but Eppie rejoined, drawing on her gloves, "Indeed, I intend
-to be taken seriously. I quarrel with people I like as well as with
-those I hate."
-
-"You are going to be a factor in my development, too?" said Gavan.
-
-"Of course, as you are in mine, as we all are in one another's. We can't
-help that. And my attack on you shall be conscious."
-
-These open threats didn't at all alarm him. It was what was unconscious
-in her that stirred disquiet.
-
-When Eppie had departed and the general had gone off to see to
-preparations for the morning's shoot, Miss Barbara, still sitting rather
-wistfully behind her urn, said: "I hope, dear Gavan, that you will be
-able to influence Eppie a little. I am so thankful to find you unchanged
-about all the deeper things of life. You could help her, I am sure. She
-needs guidance. She is so loving, so clever, a joy to Nigel and to me;
-but she is very headstrong, very reckless and wilful,--a will in
-subjection to nothing but her own sense of right. It's not that she is
-altogether irreligious,--thank Heaven for that,--but she hasn't any of
-the happiness of religion. There is no happiness, is there, Gavan--I
-feel sure that you see it as I do,--but in having our lives stayed on
-the Eternal?"
-
-Gavan, as it was very easy to do, assented again.
-
-He spent the morning with the general in shooting over the rather scant
-covers, and at two, in a sheltered bend of the woods, where the sunlight
-lay still and bright, Eppie joined them, bringing the lunch-basket in
-her dog-cart.
-
-She was in a very good humor, and while, sitting above them, she
-dispensed rations, announced to her uncle the result of her visit to Sir
-Alec.
-
-"He thinks he can turn him out if any flagrant ease of drunkenness
-occurs again. We talked over the conditions of his lease."
-
-"Carston, I am sure, doesn't care a snap of his fingers about it."
-
-"Of course not; but he cares that I care."
-
-"You see, Gavan, by what strings the world is pulled. Carston hasn't two
-ideas in his head."
-
-"Luckily I am here to use his empty head to advantage. I wheedled Lady
-Carston, too,--the bad influence Macdougall had on church-going. Lady
-Carston's one idea, Gavan, is the keeping of the Sabbath. Altogether it
-was an excellent morning's work." Eppie was cheerful and triumphant. She
-was eating from a plate on her knees and drinking milk out of a little
-silver cup. "Do you think me a tiresome, managing busybody, Gavan?" She
-smiled down at him, and her lashes catching the sunlight, an odd, misty
-glitter half veiled her eyes. "You look," she added, "as you used to
-look when you were a little boy. The years collapsed just then."
-
-He was conscious that, under her sudden glance, he had, indeed, looked
-shy. It was not her light question, but the strange depth of her
-half-closed eyes.
-
-"I find a great deal of the old Eppie in you: I remember that you used
-to want to bully the village people for their good."
-
-"I'm still a bully, I think, but a more discreet one. Won't you have
-some milk, Gavan? You used to love milk when you were a little boy. Have
-you outgrown that?"
-
-"Not at all. I should still love some; but don't rob yourself."
-
-"There 's heaps here. I've no spare glass. Do you mind?" She held out to
-him the silver cup, turning its untouched edge to him, something
-maternal in the gesture, in the down-looking of her sun-dazed eyes.
-
-He felt himself foolishly flushing while he drank the milk; and when,
-really seized by a silly childish shyness, he protested that he wanted
-no more, she placidly, with an emphasizing of her air of sweet,
-comprehending authority, said, "Oh, but you must; it holds almost
-nothing."
-
-For the second time that day, as he obediently took from her hand the
-innocent little cup, Gavan had the unreasoning impulse of tears.
-
-The sunny afternoon was silent. Overhead, the sky had its chalice look,
-clear, benignant, brimmed with light. The general, the lolling dogs,
-were part of the background, with the heather and the wood of larches,
-the finely falling sprays delicately blurred upon the sky.
-
-It was again something sweet, sweet, simple and profound, that brought
-again that pang of presage and of pain. But the pain was like a joy, and
-the tears like tears of happiness in the sunny stillness, where her firm
-and gentle hand gave him milk in a silver cup.
-
-The actual physical sensation of a rising saltness was an alarm signal
-that, with a swift reversal of mental wheels, brought a revulsion of
-consciousness. He saw himself threatened once more by nature's
-enchantments: wily nature, luring one always back to life with looks
-from comrade eyes, touches from comrade fingers, pastoral drinks all
-seeming innocence, and embracing sunlight. Wily Circe. With a long
-breath, the mirage was seen as mirage and the moment's dangerous
-blossoming withered as if dust had been strewn over it.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-To see his own susceptibility so plainly was, he told himself, to be
-safe from it; not safe from its pang, perhaps, but safe from its power,
-and that was the essential thing.
-
-It was not to Eppie, as he further assured himself, that he was
-susceptible. Eppie stood for life, personified its appeals; he could
-feel, yet be unmoved, by all life's blandishments.
-
-Meanwhile on a very different plane--the after all remote plane of
-mental encounters and skirmishes--he felt, with relief, that he was
-entirely master of his own meaning. There were many of these skirmishes,
-and though he did not believe any of them planned, believe that she was
-carrying out her threat of conscious attack, he was aware that she was
-alert and inquisitive, and dexterously quick at taking any occasion that
-offered for further penetration.
-
-The first of these occasions was on Sunday evening when, after tea and
-in the gloaming, they sat together in the deep window-seat of one of the
-library windows and listened to Miss Barbara softly touching the chords
-of a hymn on the plaintive old piano and softly singing--a most
-unobtrusive accompaniment, at her distance and with her softness, for
-any talk or any thoughts of theirs. They had talked very little,
-watching the sunset burn itself out over the frosty moorland, and Gavan
-presently, while he listened, closed his eyes and leaned his head back
-upon the oak recess. Eppie, looking now from the sunset to him, observed
-him with an open, musing curiosity. His head, leaning back in the dusk,
-was like the ivory carving of a dead saint--a saint young, beautiful, at
-peace after long sorrow. Peace; that was the quality that his whole
-being expressed, though, with opened eyes, his face had the more human
-look of patience, verging now and then on a quiet dejection that would
-overspread his features like a veil. In boyhood, the peace, the placid
-dejection, had not been there; his face then had shown the tension of
-struggle and endurance.
-
- "Till in the ocean of thy love
- We lose ourselves in heaven above,"
-
-Miss Barbara quavered, and Gavan, opening his eyes at the closing
-cadence, found Eppie's bent upon him. He smiled, and looked still more,
-she thought, the sad saint, all benediction and indifference, and an
-impulse of antagonism to such sainthood made her say, though smiling
-back, "How I dislike those words."
-
-"Do you?" said Gavan.
-
-"Hate them? Why, dear child?" asked Miss Barbara, who had heard through
-the sigh of her held-down pedal.
-
-"I don't want to lose myself," said Eppie. "But I didn't mean that I
-wanted you to stop, Aunt Barbara. Do go on. I love to hear you sing,
-however much I disapprove of the words."
-
-But Miss Barbara, clasping and unclasping her hands a little nervously,
-and evidently finding the moment too propitious to be passed over,
-backed as she was by an ally, rose and came to them.
-
-"That is the very point you are so mistaken about, dear. It's the self,
-you know, that keeps us from love."
-
-"It's the self that makes love possible," said Eppie, taking her hand
-and looking up at her. "Do you want to lose me, Aunt Barbara? If you
-lose yourself you will have to lose me too, you know."
-
-Miss Barbara stood perplexed but not at all convinced by these
-subtleties, turning mild eyes of query upon Gavan and evidently
-expecting him to furnish the obvious retort.
-
-"We will all be at one with God," she reverently said at length, finding
-that her ally left the defense to her.
-
-Eppie met this large retort cheerfully. "You can't love God unless you
-have a self to love him with. I know what you mean, and perhaps I agree
-with what you really mean; but I want to correct your Buddhistic
-tendencies and to keep you a good Christian."
-
-"I humbly hope I'm that. You shouldn't jest on such subjects, Eppie
-dear."
-
-"I'm not one bit jesting," Eppie protested. And now Gavan asked, while
-Miss Barbara looked gratefully at him, sure of his backing, though she
-might not quite be able to understand his methods, "Are they such
-different creeds?"
-
-Still holding her aunt's hand and still looking up into her face, Eppie
-answered: "One is despair of life, the other trust in life. One takes
-all meaning out of life and the other fills it with meaning. The secret
-of one is to lose life, and the secret of the other to gain it. There is
-all the difference in the world between them; all the difference between
-life and death."
-
-"As interpreted by Western youth and vigor, yes; but what of the
-mystics? I suppose you would call them Christians?"
-
-"Yes, dear, they are Christians. What of them?" Miss Barbara echoed,
-though slightly perturbed by this alliance with heathendom.
-
-"Buddhists, not Christians," Eppie retorted.
-
-"That's what I mean; in essentials they are the same creed: the
-differences are only the differences of the races or individuals who
-hold them."
-
-At this Miss Barbara's free hand began to flutter and protest. "Oh, but,
-Gavan dear, there I'm quite sure that you are wrong. Buddhism is, I
-don't doubt, a very noble religion, but it's not the true one. Indeed
-they are not the same, Gavan, though Christianity, of course, is founded
-on the renunciation of self. 'Lose your life to gain it,' Eppie dear."
-
-"Yes, to gain it, that's just the point. One renounces, and one wins a
-realer self."
-
-"What is real? What is life?" Gavan asked, really curious to hear her
-definition.
-
-She only needed a moment to find it, and, with her answer, gave him her
-first glance during their battledore colloquy with innocent Aunt Barbara
-as the shuttlecock. "Selves and love."
-
-"Well, of course, dear," Miss Barbara cried. "That's what heaven will
-be. All love and peace and rest."
-
-"But you have left out the selves; you won't get love without them. And
-as for rest and peace--Love is made by difference, so that as long as
-there is love there must be restlessness."
-
-"Isn't it made by sameness?" Gavan asked.
-
-"No, by incompleteness: one loves what could complete oneself and what
-one could complete; or so it seems to me."
-
-"And as long as there are selves, will there be suffering, too?"
-
-Her eyes met his thought fearlessly.
-
-"That question, I am sure, is the basis for all the religions of
-cowardice, religions that deny life because of their craving for peace."
-
-"Isn't the craving for peace as legitimate as the craving for life?"
-
-"Nothing that denies life can be legitimate. Life is the one arbitrator.
-And restlessness need not mean suffering. A symphony is all
-restlessness--a restlessness made by difference in harmony; forgive the
-well-worn metaphor, but it is a good one. And, suppose that it did mean
-suffering, all of it. Isn't it worth it?" Her eyes measured him, not in
-challenge, but quietly.
-
-"What a lover of life you are," he said. It was like seeing him go into
-his house and, not hastily, but very firmly, shut the door. And as if,
-rather rudely, she hurled a stone at the shut door, she asked, "Do you
-love anything?"
-
-He smiled. "Please don't quarrel with me."
-
-"I wish I could make you quarrel. I suspect you of loving everything,"
-Eppie declared.
-
-She didn't pursue him further on this occasion, when, indeed, he might
-accuse himself of having given her every chance; but on the next day, as
-they sat out at the edge of the birch-wood in a wonderfully warm
-afternoon sun, he, she, and Peter the dog (what a strange, changed echo
-it was), she returned, very lightly, to their discussion, tossing merely
-a few reconnoitering flowers in at his open window.
-
-She had never, since their remeeting, seemed to him so young. Holding a
-little branch of birch, she broke off and aimed bits of its bark at a
-tall gorse-bush near them. Peter basked, full length, in the sunlight at
-their feet. The day had almost the indolent quiet of summer.
-
-Eppie said, irrelevantly, for they had not been talking of that, but of
-people again, gossiping pleasantly, with gossip tempered to the day's
-mildness: "I can't bear the religions of peace, you see--any faith that
-takes the fight out of people. That Molly Carruthers I was telling you
-about has become a Christian Scientist, and she is in an imbecile
-condition of beatitude all the time. 'Isn't the happiness that comes of
-such a faith proof enough?' she says to me. As if happiness were a
-proof! A drunkard is happy. Some people seem to me spiritually tipsy,
-and as unfit for usefulness as the drunkard. I think I distrust anything
-that gives a final satisfaction."
-
-She amused him in her playing with half-apprehended thoughts. Her
-assurance was as light as though they were the bits of birch-bark she
-tossed.
-
-"You make me think a little of Nietzsche," he said.
-
-"I should rather like Nietzsche right side up, I think. As he is
-standing on his head most of the time, it's rather confusing. If it is a
-blind, unconscious force that has got hold of us, we get hold of it, and
-of ourselves, when we consciously use it for our own ends. But I'm not a
-bit a Nietzschian, Gavan, for, as an end, an Overman doesn't at all
-appeal to me and I don't intend to make myself a bridge for him to march
-across. Of course Nietzsche might reply, 'You are the bridge, whether
-you want to be or not.' He might say, 'It's better to walk willingly to
-your inevitable holocaust than to be rebelliously haled along; whatever
-you do, you are only the refuse whose burning makes the flame.' I reply
-to that, that if the Overman is sure to come, why should I bother about
-him? I wouldn't lift my finger for a distant perfection in which I
-myself, and all those I loved, only counted as fuel. But, on the other
-hand, I do believe that each one of us is going to grow into an
-Overman--in a quite different sense. Peter, too, will be an Overdog, and
-will, no doubt, sometime be more conscious than we are now."
-
-Gavan glanced at her and at Peter with his vague, half-unseeing glance.
-
-"Why don't you smile?" Eppie asked. "Not that you don't smile, often.
-But you haven't a scrap of gaiety, Gavan. Do stop soaring in the sky and
-come down to real things, to the earth, to me, to dear little
-rudimentary Overdogs."
-
-"Do you think that dear little rudimentary dogs are nearer reality than
-the sky?" He did smile now.
-
-"Much nearer. The sky is only a background, an emptiness that shows up
-their meaning."
-
-She had brought him down, for his eyes lingered on her as she leaned to
-Peter and pulled him up from his sun-baked recumbency. "Come, sit up,
-Peter; don't be so comfortable. Watch how well I've trained him, Gavan.
-Now, Peter, sit up nicely. A dog on all fours is a darling heathen; but
-a dog sitting up on his hind legs is an ethical creature, and well on
-his way to Overdogdom. Peter on his hind legs is worth all your tiresome
-Hindoos--aren't you, dear, Occidental dog?"
-
-He knew that through her gaiety she was searching him, feeling her way,
-with a merry hostility that she didn't intend him to answer. It was as
-if she wouldn't take seriously, not for a moment, the implications of
-his thought--implications that he suspected her of already pretty
-sharply guessing at. To herself, and to him, she pretended that such
-thoughts were a game he played at, until she should see just how
-seriously she might be forced to take them.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-For the next few days he found himself involved in Eppie's sleuth-hound
-pursuit of the transgressing publican, amused, but quite
-willing,--somewhat, he saw, to her surprise,--to help her in her
-crusade. Not only did he tramp over the country with her in search of
-evidence, and expound the Gothenberg system to Sir Alec, to the general,
-to the rather alarmed quarry himself,--not unwilling to come to
-terms,--but the application of his extraordinarily practical good-sense
-to the situation was, she couldn't help seeing, far more effective than
-her own not altogether temperate zeal.
-
-She was surprised and she was pleased; and at the same time, throughout
-all the little drama, she had the suspicion that it meant for him what
-that playing of dolls with her in childhood had meant--mere kindliness,
-and a selfless disposition to do what was agreeable to anybody.
-
-It was on the Saturday following the talk in the library that an
-incident occurred that made her vision of his passivity flame into
-something more ambiguous--an incident that gave margins for
-possibilities in him, for whose bare potentiality she had begun to
-fear.
-
-They were at evening in the gray, bleak village street, and outside one
-of the public-houses found a small crowd collected, watching, with the
-apathy of custom, the efforts of Archie MacHendrie's wife to lead him
-home. Archie, a large, lurching man, was only slightly drunk, but his
-head, the massive granite of its Scotch peasant type, had been
-brutalized by years of hard drinking. It showed, as if the granite were
-crumbling into earth, sodden depressions and protuberances; his eye was
-lurid, heavy, yet alert. Mrs. MacHendrie's face, looking as though
-scantily molded in tallow as the full glare of the bar-room lights beat
-upon it, was piteously patient. The group, under the cold evening sky,
-in the cold, steep street, seemed a little epitome of life's
-degradation; the sordid glare of debasing pleasure lit it; the mean
-monotony of its daily routine surrounded it in the gaunt stone cottages;
-above it was the blank, hard sky.
-
-Gavan saw all the unpleasing picture, placed it, its past, its future,
-as he and Eppie approached; saw more, too, than degradation: for the
-wife's face, in its patience, symbolized humanity's heroism. Both
-heroism and degradation were results as necessary as the changes in a
-chemical demonstration; neither had value: one was a toadstool growth,
-the other, a flower; this was the fact to him, though the flower touched
-him and the toadstool made him shrink.
-
-"There, there, Archie mon," Mrs. MacHendrie was pleading, "come awa
-hame, do."
-
-Archie was declaiming on some wrong he had suffered and threatened to do
-for an enemy.
-
-That these flowers and toadstools were of vital significance to Eppie,
-Gavan realized as she left him in the middle of the street and strode to
-the center of the group. It fell aside for her air of facile, friendly
-authority, and in answer to her decisive, "What's the matter?" one of
-the apathetic onlookers explained in his deliberate Scotch: "It's nobbut
-Archie, Miss Eppie; he's swearin' he'll na go hame na sleep gin he's
-lickit Tam Donel'. He's a wee bit the waur for the drink and Tam'll soon
-be alang, and the dei'll be in it gar his gudewife gets him ben."
-
-"Well, she must get him ben," said Eppie, her eye measuring Archie, who
-shook a menacing fist in the direction of his expected antagonist.
-
-"We must get him home between us, Mrs. MacHendrie. He'll think better of
-it in the morning."
-
-"Fech, an' it's that I'm aye tellin' him, Miss Eppie; it's the mornin'
-he'll hae the sair head. Ay, Miss Eppie, he's an awfu' chiel when he's a
-wee bittie fou." Mrs. MacHendrie put the fringe of her shawl to her
-eyes.
-
-Archie's low thunder had continued during this dialogue without a pause,
-and Eppie now addressed herself to him in authoritative tones. "Come on,
-Archie. Go home and get a sleep, at all events, before you fight Tom."
-
-"It's that I'm aye tellin' you, Archie mon," Mrs. MacHendrie wept.
-
-Archie now brought his eye round to the speakers and observed them in an
-ominous silence, his thoughts turned from more distant grievances. From
-his wife his eye traveled back to Eppie, who met it with a firm
-severity.
-
-"Damn ye for an interferin' fishwife!" suddenly and with startling force
-he burst out. "Ye're no but a meddlesome besom. Awa wi' ye!" and from
-this broadside he swung round to his wife with uplifted fists. Flinging
-herself between them, Eppie found herself swept aside. Gavan was in the
-midst of the sudden uproar. Like a David before Goliath, he confronted
-Archie with a quelling eye. Mrs. MacHendrie had slipped into the dusk,
-and the bald, ugly light now fell on Gavan's contrasting head.
-
-"_Un sage qui passe interrompt mille drmes_," flashed in Eppie's mind.
-But on this occasion, the sage had to do more than pass--was forced,
-indeed, to provide the drama. He was speaking in a voice so
-dispassionately firm that had Archie been a little less drunk or a
-little less sober it must have exerted an almost hypnotic effect upon
-him. But the command to go home reached a brain inflamed and hardly
-dazed. Goliath fell upon David, and Eppie, with a curious mingling of
-exultation and panic, saw the two men locked in an animal struggle. For
-a moment Gavan's cool alertness and scientific resource were overborne
-by sheer brute force; in another he had recovered himself, and Archie's
-face streamed suddenly with blood. Another blow, couched like a lance,
-it seemed, was in readiness, wary and direct, when Mrs. MacHendrie, from
-behind, seized Gavan around the neck and, with a shrill scream, hung to
-him and dragged him back. Helpless and enmeshed, he received a savage
-blow from her husband, and, still held in the wife's strangling clutch,
-he and she reeled back together. At this flagrant violation of fair play
-the onlookers interposed. Archie was dragged off, and Eppie, catching
-Gavan as he staggered free of his encumbrance, turned, while she held
-him by the shoulders, fiercely on Mrs. MacHendrie. "You well deserve
-every thrashing you get," she said, her voice stilled by the very force
-of its intense anger.
-
-Mrs. MacHendrie had covered her face with her shawl. "My mon was a'
-bluid," she sobbed. "I couldna stan' an' see him done to death."
-
-"Of course you couldn't; it was most natural of you," said Gavan. The
-blood trickled over his brow and cheek as, gently freeing himself from
-Eppie, he straightened his collar and looked at Mrs. MacHendrie with
-sympathetic curiosity.
-
-"Natural!" said Eppie. "It was dastardly. You deserve every thrashing
-you get. I hope no one will interfere for you next time."
-
-"My dear Eppie!" Gavan murmured, while Mrs. MacHendrie continued to weep
-humbly.
-
-"Why shouldn't I say it? I am disgusted with her." Eppie turned almost
-as fierce a stillness of look and tone upon him as upon Mrs. MacHendrie.
-"Let me tie up your head, Gavan. Yes, indeed, you are covered with
-blood. I suppose you never thought, Mrs. MacHendrie, that your husband
-might kill Mr. Palairet." She passed her handkerchief around Gavan's
-forehead as she spoke, knotting it with fingers at once tender and
-vindictive.
-
-"I canna say, Miss Eppie," came Mrs. MacHendrie's muffled voice from
-the shawl. "The wan's my ain mon. It juist cam' ower me, seein' him a'
-bluid."
-
-"Well, you have the satisfaction now of seeing Mr. Palairet a' bluid."
-Eppie tied her knots, and Gavan, submitting a bowed head to her
-ministrations, still kept his look of cogitating pity upon Mrs.
-MacHendrie. "You see how your husband has wounded him," Eppie went on;
-"the handkerchief is red already. Come on, Gavan; lean on me, please.
-Let her get her husband home now as best she can."
-
-But Gavan ignored his angry champion. Mrs. MacHendrie's sorrow, most
-evidently, interested him more than Eppie's indignation. He went to her,
-putting down the hand that held the shawl to the poor, disfigured,
-tallow face, and made her look at him, while he said with a gentle
-reasonableness: "Don't mind what Miss Gifford says; she is angry on my
-account and doesn't really mean to be so hard on you. I'm not at all
-badly hurt,--I can perfectly stand alone, Eppie,--and I'm sorry I had to
-hurt your husband. It was perfectly natural, what you did. Don't cry;
-please don't cry." He smiled at her, comforted her, encouraged her.
-"They are taking your husband home, you see; he is going quite quietly.
-And now we will take you home. Take my arm. You are the worst off of us
-all, Mrs. MacHendrie."
-
-Eppie, in silence, stalked beside him while he led Mrs. MacHendrie,
-dazed and submissive, up the village street. A neighbor's wife was in
-kindly waiting and Archie already slumbering heavily on his bed. Eppie
-suspected, as they went, that she saw a gold piece slipped from Gavan's
-hand to Mrs. MacHendrie's.
-
-"Poor thing," he said, when they were once more climbing the steep
-street, "I 'm afraid I only made things worse for her"; and laughing a
-little, irrepressibly, he looked round at Eppie from under his oddly
-becoming bandage. "My dear Eppie, what a perfect brute you were to her!"
-
-"My dear Gavan, I can't feel pity for such a fool. Oh, yes I can, but I
-don't want to. Please remember that I, too, have impulses, and that I
-saw you 'a' bluid.'"
-
-"Well, then, I'm the brute for scolding you, and you are another poor
-thing."
-
-"Are you incapable of righteous indignation, Gavan?"
-
-"Surely I showed enough to please you in my treatment of Archie."
-
-"You showed none. You looked supremely indifferent as to whether he
-killed you or you him."
-
-"Oh, I think I was quite anxious to do for him."
-
-They were past the village now and upon the country road, and in the
-darkness their contrasting voices rang oddly--hers deep with its
-resentful affection, his light with its amusement. It was as if the
-little drama, that he had made instead of interrupting, struck his sense
-of the ridiculous. Yet, angry with him as she was, a thrill of
-exultation remained, for Eppie, in the thought of his calm, deliberate
-face, beautiful before its foe, and with blood upon it.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Gavan's hurt soon healed, though it made him languid for a day or
-two--days of semi-invalidism, the unemphatic hours, seemingly so
-colorless, when she read to him or merely sat silently at hand occupied
-with her letters or a book, drawing still closer their odd intimacy; it
-could hardly be called sudden, for it had merely skipped intervening
-years, and it couldn't be called a proved intimacy, the intervening
-years were too full, too many for that. But they were very near in their
-almost solitude--a solitude surrounded by gentle reminders of the closer
-past, reminders, in the case of living personalities, who seemed to find
-the intimacy altogether natural and needing no comment. What the general
-and Miss Barbara might really be thinking was a wonder that at moments
-occupied both Gavan and Eppie's ruminations; but it wasn't a wonder that
-needed to go far or deep. What they thought, the dear old people, made
-very little difference--not even the difference of awkwardness or
-self-consciousness under too cogitating eyes. Even if they thought the
-crude and obvious thing it didn't matter, they would so peacefully
-relapse from their false inference once time had set it straight for
-them. Eppie couldn't quite have told herself why its obviousness was so
-crude; in all her former experience such obviousness had never been so
-almost funnily out of the question. But Gavan made so many things almost
-funnily out of the question.
-
-It was this quality in him, of difference from usual things, that drew
-intimacy so near. To talk to him with a wonderful openness, to tell him
-about herself, about her troubles, was like sinking down in a pale,
-peaceful church and sighing out everything that lay heavily on one's
-heart--the things that lay lightly, too, for little things as well as
-great, were understood by that compassionate, musing presence--to the
-downlooking face of an imaged saint.
-
-No claim upon one remained after it; one was freed of the load of
-silence and one hadn't in the least been shackled by retributory
-penances. And if one felt some strange lack in the saint, if his
-sacerdotal quality was more than his humanity, it was just because of
-that that one was able to say anything one liked.
-
-At moments, it is true, she had an odd, fetish-worshiper's impulse to
-smash her saint, and perhaps the reason why she never yielded to it was
-because, under all the seeing him as image, was the deep hoping that he
-was more. If he was more, much more, it might be unwise to smash him,
-for then she would have no pale church in which to take refuge, and,
-above all, if he were more he mustn't find it out--and she
-mustn't--through any act of her own. The saint himself must breathe into
-life and himself step down from his high pedestal. That he cared to
-listen, that he listened lovingly,--just as he had listened lovingly to
-Mrs. MacHendrie,--she knew.
-
-One day when he was again able to be out and when they were again upon
-the hilltop, walking in a mist that enshrouded them, she told him all
-about the wretched drama of her love-affair.
-
-She had never spoken of it to a human being.
-
-It was as if she led him into an empty room, dusty and dark and still,
-with dreary cobwebs stretching over its once festal furniture, and there
-pointed out to him faded blood-stains on the floor. No eyes but his had
-ever seen them.
-
-She told him all, analyzing the man, herself, unflinchingly, putting
-before him her distracted heart, distorted in its distraction. She had
-appalled herself. Her part had not been mere piteous nobility. She would
-have dragged herself through any humiliation to have had him back, the
-man she had helplessly adored. She would have taken him back on almost
-any terms. Only the semblance of pride had been left to her; beneath it,
-with all her scorn of him, was a craving that had been base in its
-despair.
-
-"But that wasn't the worst," said Eppie; "that very baseness had its
-pathos. Worst of all were my mean regrets. I had sacrificed my ambitions
-for him; I had refused a man who would have given me the life I wanted,
-a high place in the world, a great name, power, wide issues,--and I love
-high places, Gavan, I love power. When I refused him, he too married
-some one else, and it was after that that my crash came. Love and faith
-were thrown back at me, and I hadn't in it all even my dignity. I was
-torn by mingled despairs. I loathed myself. Oh, it was too horrible!"
-
-His utter lack of sympathetic emotion, even when she spoke with the
-indignant tears on her cheeks, made it all the easier to say these
-fundamental things, and more than ever like the saint of ebony and ivory
-in the pale church was his head against the great wash of mist about
-them.
-
-"And now it has all dropped from you," he said.
-
-"Yes, all--the love, the regret certainly, even the shame. The ambition,
-certainly not; but in that ugly form of a loveless marriage it's no
-longer a possible temptation for me. My disappointment hasn't driven me
-to worldly materialism. It's a sane thing in nature, that outgrowing of
-griefs, though it's bad for one's pride to see them fade and one's heart
-mend, solidly mend, once more."
-
-"They do go, when one really sees them."
-
-"Some do."
-
-"All, when one really sees them," he repeated unemphatically. "I know
-all about it, Eppie. I've been through the fire, too. Now that it's
-gone, you see that it's only a dream, that love, don't you?"
-
-Eppie gazed before her into the mist, narrowing her eyes as though she
-concentrated her thoughts upon his exact meaning, and she received his
-casual confidence with some moments of silence.
-
-"That would imply that seeing destroyed feeling, wouldn't it?" she said
-at last. "I see that _such_ love is a dream, if you will; but dreams may
-be mirrors of life, not delusions; hints of an awakened reality."
-
-He showed only his unmoved face. This talk, so impersonal, with all its
-revealment of human pathos and weakness, so much a picture that they
-both looked at it together,--a picture of outlived woe,--claimed no more
-than his contemplation; but when her voice seemed to grope toward him,
-questioning in its very clearness of declaration, he felt again the
-flitting fear that he had already recognized, not as danger, but as
-discomfort. It flitted only, hardly stirred the calm he showed her, as
-the wings of a flying bird just skim and ruffle the surface of still,
-deep waters. That restless bird, always hovering, circling near, its
-shadow passing, repassing over the limpid water--he saw and knew it as
-the water might reflect in its stillness the bird's flight. Life; the
-will to live, the will to want, and to strive, and to suffer in
-striving. All the waters of Eppie's soul were broken by the flight of
-this bird of life; its wings, cruel and beautiful, furrowed and cut; its
-plumage, darkly bright, was reflected in every wave.
-
-He said nothing after her last words.
-
-"You think all feelings delusions, Gavan?"
-
-"Not that, perhaps, but very transitory; and to be tied to the
-transitory is to suffer."
-
-"On that plan one ends with nothingness."
-
-"Do you think so?"
-
-"Do _you_ think so?" She turned his question on him and her eyes, with
-the question, fixed hard on his face.
-
-He felt suddenly that after all the parrying and thrusting she had
-struck up his foil and faced him with no mask of gaiety--in deadly
-earnest. There was the click of steel in the question.
-
-He did not know whether he were the more irritated, for her sake, by her
-persistency, or the more fearful that, unwillingly, he should do her
-faith some injury.
-
-"I think," he said, "more or less as Tolstoi thinks. You understood all
-that very well the other evening; so why go into it?"
-
-"You think that our human identity is unreal--an appearance?"
-
-"Most certainly."
-
-"And that the separation between us is the illusion that makes hatred
-and evil, and that with the recognition of the illusion, love would come
-and all selfish effort cease?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And don't you see that what that results in is the Hindoo thing, the
-abolishing of consciousness, the abolishing of life--of individual
-life?"
-
-"Yes, I see that," Gavan smiled, "but I'm a little surprised to see that
-you do. So many people are like Aunt Barbara."
-
-But Eppie was pushing, pushing against the closed doors and would not be
-lured away by lightness. "Above all, Gavan, do you see that he is merely
-an illogical Hindoo when he tries to bridge his abyss with ethics? On
-his own premises he is utterly fatalistic, so that the very turning from
-the evil illusion, the very breaking down of the barrier of self, is
-never, with him, the result of an effort of the will, never a conscious
-choice, but something deep and rudimentary, subconscious, an influx of
-revelation, a vision that sets one free, perhaps, but that can only
-leave one with emptiness."
-
-Above all, as she had said, he saw it; and now he was silent, seeking
-words that might rid him of pursuit, yet not infect her.
-
-She had stopped short before his silence. Smiling, now, on the
-background of mist, her eyes, her lips, her poise challenged him,
-incredulous, actually amused. "Don't you think that _I_ have an
-identity?" she asked.
-
-He was willing at that to face her, for he saw suddenly and clearly,--it
-seemed to radiate from her in the smile, the look,--that he, apparently,
-couldn't hurt her. She was too full of life to be in any danger from
-him, and perhaps the only way of ending pursuit was to fling wide the
-doors and, since she had said the word, show her the emptiness within.
-
-"You force me to talk cheap metaphysics to you, Eppie, but I'll try to
-say what I do think," he said. "I believe that the illusion of a
-separate identity, self-directing and permanent, is the deepest and most
-tenacious of all illusions--the illusion that makes the wheels go round,
-the common illusion that makes the common mirage. The abolishing of the
-identity, of the self, is the final word of science, and of philosophy,
-and of religion, too. The determinism of science, the ecstatic immediacy
-of the mystic consciousness, the monistic systems of the Absolutists,
-all tend toward the final discovery that,--now I'm going to be very glib
-indeed,--but one must use the technical jargon,--that under all the
-transitory appearance is a unity in which, for which, diversity
-vanishes."
-
-Eppie no longer smiled. She had walked on while he spoke, her eyes on
-him, no longer amused or incredulous, with an air now of almost stern
-security.
-
-"Odd," she said presently, "that such a perverse and meaningless Whole
-should be made up of such significant fragments."
-
-"Ah, but I didn't say that Reality was meaningless. It has all possible
-meaning for itself, no doubt; it's our meaning for it that is so
-unpleasantly ambiguous. We are in it and for it, as if we were the
-kaleidoscope it turned, the picture it looked at; and we are and must be
-what it thinks or sees. Your musical simile expressed it very nicely:
-Reality an eternal symphony and our personalities the notes in
-it--discords to our own limited consciousness, but to Reality necessary
-parts of the perfect whole. Reality is just that will to contemplate, to
-think, the infinite variety of life, and it usually thinks us as wanting
-to live. All ethics, all religions, are merely records of the ceasing of
-this want. A man comes to see himself as discord, and with the seeing
-the discord is resolved to silence. One comes to see as the Reality
-sees, and since it is perfectly satisfied, although it is perhaps quite
-unconscious,--or so some people who think a great deal about it
-say,--we, in partaking of its vision, find in unconsciousness the goal,
-and are satisfied."
-
-"You are satisfied with such a death in life?" Eppie asked in her steady
-voice.
-
-"What you call life is what I call death, perhaps, Eppie."
-
-"Your metaphysics may be very cheap; I know very little about them. But
-if all that were true, I should still say that the illusion is more real
-than that nothingness--for to us such a reality would be nothingness.
-And I should say, let us live our reality all the more intensely, since,
-for us, there is no other."
-
-"How you care for life," said Gavan, as he had said it once before. He
-looked at her marching through the mist like a defiant Valkyrie.
-
-"Care for it? I've hated it at times, the bits that came to me."
-
-"Yet you want it, always."
-
-"Always," she repeated. "Always. I have passed a great part of my life
-in being very unhappy--that is to say, in wanting badly something I've
-not got. Yet I am more glad than I can say to have lived."
-
-"Probably because you still expect to get what you want."
-
-"Of course." She smiled a little now, though a veiled, ambiguous smile.
-And as they began the steep descent, the mist infolding them more
-closely, even the semblance of the smile faded, leaving a new sadness.
-
-"Poor Gavan," she said.
-
-He just hesitated. "Why?"
-
-"Your religion is a hatred, a distrust of life; mine is trust in it,
-love of it. You see it as a sort of murderous uncle, beckoning to the
-babes in the wood; I own that I wouldn't stir a step to follow it if I
-suspected it of such a character. And I see life--" She paused here,
-looking down, musing, it seemed, on what she saw, and the pause grew
-long. In it, suddenly, Gavan knew again the invasion of emotion. Her
-downcast, musing face pervaded his consciousness with that sense of
-trembling. "You see life as what?" he asked her, not because he wanted
-to know, but because her words were always less to him than her
-silences.
-
-Eppie, unconscious, was finding words.
-
-"As something mysterious, beautiful. Something strange, yet near, like
-the thought of a mother about her unborn child, but, more still, like
-the thought of an unborn child about its unknown mother. We are such
-unborn children. And this something mysterious and beautiful says: Come;
-through thorns, over chasms, past terrors, and in darkness. So, one
-goes."
-
-Gavan was silent. Looking up at him, her eyes full of her own vision,
-she saw tears in his.
-
-For a moment the full benignity, sweet, austere, of a maternal thing in
-her rested on him, so that it might have been she who said "Come." Then,
-looking away from him again, knowing that she had seen more than he had
-meant to show, she said, "Own that if it's all illusion, mine's the best
-to live with."
-
-He had never seen her so beautiful as at this moment when she did not
-pursue, but looked away, quiet in her strength, and he answered
-mechanically, conscious only of that beauty, that more than beauty,
-alluring when it no longer pursued: "No; there are no thorns, nor
-chasms, nor terrors any longer for me. I am satisfied, Eppie."
-
-She was walking now, a little ahead of him, down the thread-like path
-that wound among phantom bracken. The islet of space where they could
-see seemed like a tiny ship gliding forward with them into a white,
-boundless ocean. Such, thought Gavan, was human life.
-
-In a long silence he felt that her mood had changed. Over her shoulder
-she looked round at him at last with her eyes of the spiritual
-steeplechaser. "It's war to the knife, Gavan."
-
-She hurt him in saying it. "You only have the knife," he answered, and
-his gentleness might have reproached the sudden challenge.
-
-"You have poison."
-
-"I never put it to your lips, dear."
-
-She saw his pain. "Oh, don't be afraid for me," she said. "I drink your
-poison, and it is a tonic, a wine, that fills me with greater ardor for
-the fight."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-They were on the path that led to the deeply sunken garden gate, and
-they had not spoken another word while they followed it, while they
-stooped a little under the tangle of ivy that drooped from the stone
-lintel, while they went past the summer-house and on between the rows of
-withered plants and the empty, wintry spaces of the garden; only when
-they were nearly at the house, under the great pine-tree, did Eppie
-cheerfully surmise that they would be exactly on time for tea, and by
-her manner imply that tea was far more present to her thoughts than
-daggers or poison.
-
-He felt that in some sense matters had been left in the lurch. He didn't
-quite know where he stood for her with his disastrous darkness about
-him--whether she had really taken up a weapon for open warfare or
-whether she hadn't wisely fallen back upon the mere pleasantness of
-friendly intercourse, turning her eyes away from his accompanying gloom.
-
-He was glad to find her alone that evening after dinner when he had left
-the general in the smoking-room over a review and a cigar. Miss Barbara
-had gone early to bed, so that Eppie, in her white dress, as on the
-night of his arrival, had the dark brightness of the firelit room all to
-herself. He was glad, because the sense of uncertainty needed defining,
-and uncertainty, since that last moment of trembling, had been so acute
-that any sort of definition would be a relief.
-
-An evening alone with her, now that they were really on the plane of
-mutual understanding, would put his vague fears to the test. He would
-learn whether they must be fled from or whether, as mere superficial
-tremors, tricks of the emotions, they could not be outfaced smilingly.
-He really didn't want to run away, especially not until he clearly knew
-from what he ran.
-
-Eppie sat before the fire on the low settle, laying down a book as he
-came in. In her aspect of exquisite worldliness, the white dress
-displaying her arms and shoulders with fashionable frankness, she struck
-him anew as being her most perfectly armed and panoplied self. Out on
-the windy hillside or singing among the woods, nature seemed partially
-to absorb and possess her, so that she became a part of the winds and
-woods; but indoors, finished and fine from head to foot, her mastered
-conventionality made her the more emphatically personal. She embodied
-civilization in her dress, her smile, her speech, her very being; the
-loose coils of her hair and the cut of her satin shoe were both
-significant of choice, of distinctive simplicity; and the very bareness
-of her shoulders--Gavan gave an amused thought to the ferociously
-sensitive Tolstoi--symbolized the armor of the world-lover, the
-world-user. It was she who possessed the charms and weapons of the
-civilization that crumbled to dust in the hand of the Russian mystic. He
-could see her confronting the ascetic's eye with the challenge of her
-radiant and righteous self-assurance. Her whole aspect rebuilt that
-shattered world, its pomp and vanity, perhaps, its towering scale of
-values; each tier narrowing in its elimination of the lower, cruder,
-less conscious, more usual; each pinnacle a finely fretted flowering of
-the rare; a dazzling palace of foam. She embodied all that; but, more
-than all for Gavan, she embodied the deep currents of trust that flowed
-beneath the foam.
-
-Her look welcomed him, though without a smile, as he drew a deep chair
-to the fire and sat down near her, and for a little while they said
-nothing, he watching her and she with gravely downcast eyes.
-
-"What are you thinking of?" he asked at last.
-
-"Of you, of course," she answered. "About our talk this afternoon; we
-haven't finished it yet."
-
-She, too, then, had felt uncertainty that needed relief.
-
-"Are you sharpening your knife?"
-
-She put aside his lightness. "Gavan, we are friends. May I talk as I
-like to you?"
-
-"Of course you may. I've always shown you that."
-
-"No, you have tried to prevent me from talking. But now I will. I have
-been thinking. It seems to me that it is your life that has so twisted
-your mind; it has been so joyless."
-
-"Does that make it unusual?"
-
-"You must love life before you can know it."
-
-"You must love it, and lose it, before you can know it. I have had joy,
-Eppie; I have loved life. My experience has not been peculiarly
-personal; it is merely the history of all thought, pushed far enough."
-
-"Of all mere thought, yes."
-
-She rested her head on her hand as she looked at him, seeming to wonder
-over him and his thought, his mere thought, dispassionately. "Don't be
-shy, or afraid, for me. Why should you mind? I've given you my story;
-give me yours. Tell me about your life."
-
-He felt, suddenly, sunken there in his deep chair, passive and peaceful
-in the firelight, that it would be very easy to tell her. Why shouldn't
-she see it all and understand it all? He couldn't hurt her; it would be
-only a strange, a sorrowful picture to her; and to him, yes, there would
-be a relief in the telling. To speak, for the first time in his life--it
-would be like the strewing of rosemary on a grave, a commemoration that
-would have its sweetness and its balm.
-
-But he hesitated, feeling the helplessness of his race before verbal
-self-expression.
-
-Eppie lent him a hand.
-
-"Begin with when you left me."
-
-"What was I then? I hardly remember. A tiresome, self-centered boy."
-
-"No; you weren't self-centered. You believed in God, then, and you loved
-your mother. Why have both of them, as personalities, become illusions
-to you?"
-
-She saw facts clearly and terribly. She was really inside the doors at
-last, and though it would be all the easier to make her understand the
-facts she saw, Gavan paled a little before the sudden, swift presence.
-
-For, yes, God was gone, and yes,--worse, far worse, as he knew she felt
-it,--his mother, too--except as that ghost, that pang of memory.
-
-She saw his pallor and helped him again, to the first and easier avowal.
-
-"How did you lose your faith? What happened to you when you left me?"
-
-"It's a commonplace enough story, that."
-
-"Of course it is. But when loss of faith becomes permanent and
-permanently means a loss of feeling, it's not so commonplace."
-
-"Oh, I think it is--more commonplace than people know, in temperaments
-as unvital and as logical as mine."
-
-"You are not unvital."
-
-"My reason isn't often blurred by my instincts."
-
-"That is because you are strong--terribly strong. It's not that your
-vitality is so little as that your thought is so abnormal."
-
-"No, no; it's merely that I understand my own experience."
-
-But she had put his feet upon the road, and, turning his eyes from her
-as he looked, he contemplated its vista.
-
-It was easy enough, after all, to gather into words that retrospect of
-the train; it was easy to be brief and lucid with such a comprehending
-listener,--to be very impersonal, too; simply to hold up before her eyes
-the picture that he saw.
-
-His eyes met hers seldom while he told her all that was essential to her
-true seeing. It was wonderful, the sense of her secure, strong life that
-made it possible to tell her all.
-
-The stages of his young, restless, tortured thought were swiftly
-sketched for an intelligence so quick, and the growing intuition of the
-capriciousness, the suffering of life. He only hesitated when it came to
-the reunion with his mother, the change that had crept between them; and
-her illness, her death; choosing his words with a reticence that bit
-them the more deeply into the listening mind.
-
-But, in the days that followed the death,--days ghost-like, yet
-sharp,--he lingered, so that she paused with him in that pause of
-stillness in his life, that morning in the spring woods when everything
-had softly, gently shown an abiding strangeness. He told her all about
-that: about the look of the day, not knowing why he so wanted her to see
-it, too, but it seemed to explain more than anything else--the pale,
-high sky, the gray branches, the shining water and the little bird that
-hopped to drink. He himself looked ghost-like while he spoke--sunken,
-long, dark, impalpable, in the deep chair, his thin white fingers
-lightly interlocked, his face showing only the oddity of its strange yet
-beautiful oval and its shadowy eyes and lips. All whiteness and shadow,
-he might have been a projection from the thought of the woman, who,
-before him, leaned her head on her hand, warm, breathing, vivid with
-color, her steady eyes seeing phantoms unafraid.
-
-After that there wasn't much left to explain, it seemed--except Alice,
-that last convulsive effort of life to seize and keep him; and that
-didn't take long--made, as it were, a little allegory, with nameless
-abstractions to symbolize the old drama of the soul entrameled and
-finally set free again. The experience of the spring woods had really
-been the decisive one. He came back to that again, at the end of his
-story. "It's really, that experience, what in another kind of
-temperament is called conversion."
-
-Her eyes had looked away from him at last. "No," she said, "conversion
-is something that gives life."
-
-"No," he rejoined, "it's something that lifts one above it."
-
-The fundamental contest spoke again, and after that they were both
-silent. He, too, had looked away from her when the story was over, and
-he knew, from her deep, slow breathing, that the story had meant a great
-deal to her. It was not a laboring breath, nor broken by pain to sighs;
-but it seemed, in its steady rhythm, to accept and then to conquer what
-he had put before her. That he should so hear it, not looking at her,
-filled the silence with more than words; and, as in the afternoon, he
-sought the relief of words.
-
-"So you see," he said, in his lighter voice, "thorns and precipices and
-terrors dissolve like dreams." She had seen everything and he was
-ushering her out. But his eyes now met hers, looking across the little
-space at him.
-
-"And I? Do I, too, dissolve like a dream?" she said.
-
-His smile now was lighter than his voice had been. "Absolutely. Though I
-own that you are a highly colored phantom. Your color is very vivid
-indeed. Sometimes it almost masters my thought."
-
-He had not, in his mere wish for ease, quite known what he meant to say,
-and now her look did not show him any deepened consciousness; but,
-suddenly, he felt that under his lightness and her quiet the current ran
-deeply.
-
-"I master your thought?" she repeated. "Doesn't that make you distrust
-thought sometimes?"
-
-"No," he laughed. "It makes me distrust you, dear Eppie."
-
-There were all sorts of things before them now. What they were he really
-didn't know; perhaps she didn't, either. At all events he kept his eyes
-off them, and shaking his crossed foot a little, he still looked at her,
-smiling.
-
-"Why?" she asked.
-
-He felt that he must now answer her, and himself, in words that wouldn't
-imply more than he could face.
-
-"Well, the very force of your craving for life, the very force of your
-will, might sweep me along for a bit. I might be caught up for a whirl
-on the wheel of illusion; not that you could ever bind me to it: it
-would need my own will, blind again, for that."
-
-Her eyes had met his so steadily that he had imagined only contemplation
-or perhaps that maternal severity behind the steadiness. But the way in
-which they received these last tossed pebbles of metaphor showed him
-unrealized profundities. They deepened, they darkened, they widened on
-him. They seemed to engulf him in a sudden abyss of pain. And pain in
-her was indeed a color that could infect him.
-
-"How horrible you are, Gavan," she said, and her voice went with the
-words and with the look.
-
-"Eppie!" he exclaimed on a tense, indrawn breath, as if over the sudden
-stab of a knife. "Have I hurt you?"
-
-Her eyes turned from him. "Not what you say, or do. What you are."
-
-"You didn't see, before, what I am?"
-
-"Never--like this."
-
-He leaned toward her. "Dear Eppie, why do you make me talk? Let me be
-still. I only ask to be still."
-
-"You are worse still. Don't you think I see what stillness means?"
-
-She had pushed her low seat from him,--for he stretched his hands to her
-with his supplication,--and, rising to her feet, stepping back, she
-stood before the fire, somberly looking down at him.
-
-Gavan, too, rose. Compunction, supplication, a twist of perplexity and
-suffering, made him careless of discretion. Face to face, laying his
-hands on her shoulders, he said: "Don't let me frighten you. It would be
-horrible if I could convince you, shatter you."
-
-Standing erect under his hands, she looked hard into his face.
-
-"You could frighten me, horribly; but you couldn't shatter me. You are
-ambiguous, veiled, all in mists. I am as clear, as sharp--."
-
-Her dauntlessness, the old defiance, were a relief--a really delicious
-relief. He was able to smile at her, a smile that pled for reassurance.
-"How can I frighten you, then?"
-
-Her somber gaze did not soften. "Your mists come round me, chill,
-suffocating. They corrode my clearness."
-
-"No; no; it's you who come into them. Don't. Don't. Keep away from me."
-
-"I'm not so afraid of you as that," she answered.
-
-His hands were still on her shoulders and their eyes on each other--his
-with their appealing, uncertain smile, and hers unmoved, unsmiling; and
-suddenly that sense of danger came upon him: as if, in the mist, he felt
-upon him the breathing, warm, sweet, ominous, of some unseen creature.
-And in the fear was a strange delight, and like a hand drawn, with slow,
-deep pressure, across a harp, the nearness drew across his heart,
-stirring its one sad note--its dumb, its aching note--to a sudden
-ascending murmur of melody.
-
-He was caught swiftly from this inner tumult by its reflection in her
-face. She flushed, deeply, painfully. She drew back sharply, pushing
-his hands from her.
-
-Gavan sought his own equilibrium in an ignoring of that undercurrent.
-
-"Now you are not frightened; but why are you angry?" he asked.
-
-For a moment she did not speak.
-
-"Eppie, I am so sorry. What is it? You are really angry, Eppie!"
-
-Then, after that pause of speechlessness, she found words.
-
-"If I think of you as mist you must not think of me as glamour." This
-she gave him straight.
-
-Only after disengaging her train from the settle, from his feet, after
-wheeling aside his chair to make a clear passage for her departure, did
-she add: "I have read your priggish Schopenhauer."
-
-She gave him no time for reply or protestation. Quite mistress of
-herself, leaving him with all the awkwardness of the situation--if he
-chose to consider it awkward--upon his hands, very fully the finished
-mondaine and very beautifully the fearless and assured nymph of the
-hillside, she went to the piano, turned and rejected, in looking over
-it, some music, and sitting down, striking a long, full chord, she began
-to sing, in her voice of frosty dawn, the old Scotch ballad.
-
-He might go or listen as he liked. She had put him away, him and his
-mists, his ambiguous hold upon her, his ambiguous look at her. She sang
-to please herself as much as when she had gone up through the woodlands.
-And if the note of anger still thrilled in her voice she turned it to
-the uses of her song and made a higher triumph of sadness.
-
-She was still singing when the general came in.
-
- * * * * *
-
-SHE had been quite right; she had seen with her perfect sharpness and
-clearness indeed, and no wonder that she had been angry. He himself saw
-clearly, directly the hand was off the harp. It was laughably simple. He
-was a man, she a woman; they were both young and she was beautiful. That
-summed it up, sufficiently and brutally; and no wonder, again, that she
-had felt such summing an offense. It wasn't in the light of such
-summings that she regarded herself.
-
-With him she had never, for a moment, made use of glamour. His was the
-rudimentary impulse, and Gavan's sensitive cheek echoed her flush when
-he thought of it. Never again, he promised himself, after this full
-comprehension of it, should such an impulse dim their friendship. He
-would make it up to her by helping her to forget it.
-
-But for all that, it was with the strangest mixture of relief and dismay
-that he found upon the breakfast-table next morning an urgent summons
-for his return home. It was the affable little rector of the parish in
-Surrey who wrote to tell him of his father's sudden breakdown,--softening
-of the brain. When Eppie appeared, a little grave, but all clear
-composure, he was able to show her the letter and to tell her of his
-immediate departure with a composure as assured as her own, but he
-wondered, while he spoke, if to her also the parting would mean any form
-of relief. At all events, for her, it couldn't mean any form of wrench.
-
-Looking in swift glances at her face, while she questioned him about his
-father, suggested trains and nurses, and gave practical advice for his
-journey, he was conscious that the relief was the result of a pretty
-severe strain, and that though it was relieved it hadn't stopped aching.
-
-The very fact that Eppie's narrow face, the hair brushed back from brow
-and temples, showed, in the clear morning light, more of its oddity than
-its beauty, made its charm cling the more closely. Her eyes looked
-small, her features irregular; he saw the cliff-like modeling of her
-temples, the cheeks, a little flat, pale, freckled; the long, queer
-lines of her chin. Bare, exposed, without a flicker of sunlight on her
-delicate analogies of ruggedness, of weather-beaten strength, she might
-almost have been called ugly; and, with every glance, he was feeling her
-as sweetness, sweetness deep and reticent, embodied.
-
-The general and Miss Barbara were late. She poured out his coffee, saw
-him embarked on a sturdy breakfast, insisted, now with the irradiating
-smile that in a moment made her lovely, that he should eat a great deal
-before his journey, made him think anew of that maternal quality in
-her,--the tolerance, the tenderness. And in the ambiguous relief came
-the sharpened dismay of seeing how great was the cause for it.
-
-He wanted to say a word, only one, about their little drama of last
-night, but the time didn't really seem to come for it; perhaps she saw
-that it shouldn't come. But on the old stone steps with their yellow
-lichen spots, his farewells over to the uncle and aunt, and he and Eppie
-standing out there in a momentary solitude, she said, shaking his hand,
-"Friends, you know. Look me up when you are next in London." She had her
-one word to say, and she had said it when and how she wished. It wasn't
-anything so crude as reassurance; it was rather a sunny assurance, in
-which she wished him to share, that none was needed.
-
-He looked, like the boy of years ago, a real depth of gratitude into her
-eyes. She had given him his chance.
-
-"I'll never frighten you again; I'll never displease you again."
-
-"I know you won't. I won't let you," Eppie smiled.
-
-"I wish I were more worth your while--worth your being kind to me."
-
-"You think you are still--gloomy, tiresome, self-centered?"
-
-"That defines it well enough."
-
-"Well, you serve my purpose," said Eppie, "and that is to have you for
-my friend."
-
-She seemed in this parting to have effaced all memory of glamour, but
-Gavan knew that the deeper one was with him.
-
-It was with him, even while, in the long journey South, he was able to
-unwrap film after film of the mirage from its central core of reality,
-to see Eppie, in all her loveliness, in all her noblest aspects, as a
-sort of incarnation of the world, the flesh, and the devil. He could
-laugh over the grotesque analogy; it proved to him how far from life he
-was when its symbol could show in such unflattering terms, and yet it
-hurt him that he could find it in himself so to symbolize her. It was
-just because she was so lovely, so noble, that he must--he must--. For,
-under all, was the wrench that would take time to stop aching.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Captain Palairet had gone to pieces and was now as unpleasant an object
-as for years he had been a pleasant one.
-
-Gavan's atrophied selfishness felt only a slight shrinking from the
-revolting aspects of dissolution, and his father's condition rather
-interested him. The captain's childish clinging to his son was like an
-animal instinct suddenly asserting itself, an almost vegetable instinct,
-so little more than mere instinct was it. It affected Gavan much as the
-suddenly contracting tentacles of a sea-anemone upon his finger might
-have done. He was not at all touched; but he felt the claim of a
-possible pang of loneliness and desolation in the dimness of decay, and,
-methodically, with all the appearances of a solicitous kindness, he
-responded to the claim.
-
-The man, immersed in his rudimentary universe of sense, showed a host of
-atavistic fears; fears of the dark, of strange faces, fears of sudden
-noises or of long stillness. He often wept, leaning his swollen face on
-Gavan's shoulder, filled with an abject self-pity.
-
-"You know how I love you, Gavan," he would again and again repeat, his
-lax lips fumbling with the words, "always loved you, ever since you were
-a little fellow--out in India, you know. I and your dear mother loved
-you better than life," and, wagging his head, he would repeat, "better
-than life," and break into sobs--sobs that ceased when the nurse brought
-him his wine-jelly. Then it might be again the tone of feeble whining.
-"It doesn't taste right, Gavan. Can't you make it taste right? Do you
-want to starve me between you all?"
-
-Gavan, with scientific scrutiny, diagnosed and observed while he soothed
-him or engaged his vagrant mind in games.
-
-In his intervals of leisure he pursued his own work, and rode and walked
-with all his usual tempered athleticism. He did not feel the days as a
-strain, hardly as disagreeable; he was indifferent or interested. At the
-worst he was bored. The undercurrent of pity he was accustomed to living
-with.
-
-Only at night, in hours of rest, he would sink into a half-dazed
-disgust, find himself on edge, nearly worn out. So the winter passed.
-
-He was playing draughts with his father on a day in earliest spring,
-when he was told that Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford were below.
-
-Gavan was feeling dull and jaded. The conducting of the game needed a
-monotonous patience and tact. The captain would now pick up a draught
-and gaze curiously at it for long periods of time, now move in a
-direction contrary to all the rules of the game and to his own
-advantage. When such mistakes were pointed out to him he would either
-apologize humbly or break into sudden peevish wrath. To-day he was in a
-peculiarly excitable condition and had more than once wept.
-
-Gavan, after the servant's announcement, holding a quietly expectant
-draught in his thin, poised fingers, looked hard at the board that still
-waited for his father's move. He then felt that a deep flush had mounted
-to his face.
-
-In spite of the one or two laconic letters that they had interchanged,
-Eppie had been relegated for many months to her dream-place--a dream, in
-spite of its high coloring, more distant than this nearer dream of ugly
-illness. It was painful to look back at the queer turmoil she had roused
-in him during the autumnal fortnight, and more painful to realize, as in
-his sudden panic of reluctance now, that, though a dream, she was an
-abiding and constant one.
-
-Mrs. Arley he knew, and her motor-car had recently made her a next-door
-neighbor in spite of the thirty miles between them. She was a friend
-with whom Eppie had before stayed on the other side of the county.
-Nothing could be more natural than that she and Eppie should drop in
-upon a solitude that must, to their eyes, have all the finished elements
-of pathos. Yet he was a little vexed by the intrusion, as well as
-reluctant to meet it.
-
-His father broke into vehement protest when he heard that he was to be
-abandoned at an unusual hour, and it needed some time for Gavan and the
-nurse to quiet him. Twenty minutes had passed before he could go down to
-his guests, and he surmised that they would feel in this delay yet
-further grounds for pity.
-
-They were in the hall, before a roaring fire, Eppie standing with her
-back to it, in a familiar attitude, though her long, caped cloak and
-hooded motoring-cap, the folds of gray silk gathered under her chin and
-narrowly framing her face, gave her an unfamiliar aspect. Her eyes met
-his as he turned the spacious staircase and came down to them, and he
-felt that they watched his every movement and noted every trace in him
-of fatigue and dejection.
-
-Mrs. Arley, fluent, flexible, amazingly pretty, for all the light
-powdering and wrinkling of her fifty years, came rustling forward.
-
-"Eppie is staying with me for the week-end,--I wrench her from her slums
-now and then,--and we wanted to hear how you are, to see how you are.
-You look dreadfully fagged; doesn't he, Eppie? How is your father?"
-
-Eppie gave him her hand in silence.
-
-"My father will never be any better, you know," he said. "As for me, I'm
-all right. I should have come over to see you before this, and looked
-you up, too, Eppie, but I can't get away for more than an hour or so at
-a time."
-
-He led them into the library while he spoke,--Mrs. Arley exclaiming that
-such devotion was dear and good of him,--and Eppie looked gravely round
-at the room that he had described to her as the room that he really
-passed his life in. The great spaces of ranged books framed for her, he
-knew, pictures of his own existence. He knew, too, that her gravity was
-the involuntary result of the impression that he made upon her. She was
-sorry for him. Poor Eppie, their relationship since childhood seemed to
-have consisted in that--in the sense of her pursuing pity and in his
-retreat before it, for her sake. He retreated now, as he knew, in his
-determination to show her that pity was misplaced, uncalled for.
-
-Mrs. Arley had thrown off her wrap and loosened her hood in a manner
-that made it almost imperative to ask them to stay with him for
-lunch--an invitation accepted with an assurance showing that it had been
-expected, and it wasn't difficult, in conventional battledore and
-shuttlecock with her, to show a good humor and frivolity that
-discountenanced pathetic interpretations. What Mrs. Arley's
-interpretations were he didn't quite know; her eyes, fatigued yet fresh,
-were very acute behind their trivial meanings, and he could wonder if
-Eppie had shared with her her own sense of his "horribleness," and if,
-in consequence, her conception of Eppie's significance as the opponent
-of that quality was tinged with sentimental associations.
-
-Eppie's gaze, while they rattled on, lost something of its gravity, but
-he was startled, as if by an assurance deeper than any of Mrs. Arley's,
-when she rose to slip off her coat and went across the room to a small
-old mirror that hung near the door to take off her cap as well.
-
-In her manner of standing there with her back to them, untying her
-veils, pushing back her hair, was the assurance, indeed, of a person
-whose feet were firmly planted on certain rights, all the more firmly
-for "knowing her place" as it were, and for having repudiated mistaken
-assumptions. She might almost have been a new sick-nurse come to take up
-her duties by his side. She passed from the mirror to the writing-table,
-examining the books laid there, and then, until lunch was announced,
-stood looking out of the window. Quite the silent, capable, significant
-new nurse, with many theories of her own that might much affect the
-future.
-
-The dining-room at Cheylesford Lodge opened on a wonderful old lawn,
-centuries in its green. Bordered by beds, just alight with pale spring
-flowers, it swept in and out among shrubberies of rhododendron and
-laurel, the emerald nook set in a circle of trees, a high arabesque on
-the sky.
-
-Eppie from her seat at the table faced the sky, the trees, the lawn.
-What a beautiful place, she was thinking. A place for life, sheltered,
-embowered. How she would have loved, as a child, those delicious
-rivulets of green that ran into the thick mysteries of shadow. How she
-would have loved to play dolls on a hot summer afternoon in the shade of
-the great yew-tree that stretched its dark branches half across the sky.
-The house, the garden, made her think of children; she saw white
-pinafores and golden heads glancing in and out among the trees and
-shrubs, and the vision of young life, blossoming, growing in security
-and sunlight, filled her thought with its pictured songs of innocence,
-while, at the same time, under the vision, she was feeling it all--all
-the beauty and sheltered sweetness--as dreadful in its emptiness, its
-worse than emptiness: a casket holding a death's-head. She came back
-with something of a start to hear her work in the slums enthusiastically
-described by Mrs. Arley. "I thought it was only in novels that children
-clung to the heroine's skirts. I never believed they clung in real life
-until seeing Eppie with her ragamuffins; they adore her."
-
-This remark, to whose truth she assented by a vague smile, gave Eppie's
-thoughts a further push that sent them seeing herself among the golden
-heads and white pinafores on the lawn at Cheylesford Lodge; and though
-the vision maintained its loving aunt relationship of the slums, there
-was now a throb and flutter in it, as though she held under her hand a
-strange wild bird that only her own will not to look kept hidden.
-
-These dreams were followed by a nightmare little episode.
-
-In the library, again, the talk was still an airy dialogue, Eppie, her
-eyes on the flames as she drank her coffee, still maintaining her
-ruminating silence. In the midst of her thoughts and their chatter, the
-door opened suddenly and Captain Palairet appeared on the threshold.
-
-His head neatly brushed, a sumptuous dressing-gown of padded and
-embroidered silk girt about him, he stood there with moist eyes and
-lips, faintly and incessantly shaking through all his frame, a troubling
-and startling figure.
-
-Gavan had been wondering all through the visit how his father was
-bearing the abandonment, and his appearance, he saw now, must have been
-the triumphant fruit of contest with the nurse whose face of helpless
-disapprobation hovered outside.
-
-Gavan went to his side, and, leaning on his son's arm, the captain said
-that he had come to pay his respects to Mrs. Arley and to Miss Gifford.
-
-Taking Mrs. Arley's hand, he earnestly reiterated his pleasure in
-welcoming her to his home.
-
-"Gavan's in fact, you know; but he's a good son. Not very much in
-common, perhaps: Gavan was always a book-worm, a fellow of fads and
-theories; I love a broad life, men and things. No, not much in common,
-except our love for his mother, my dear, dead wife; that brought us
-together. We shook hands over her grave, so to speak," said the captain,
-but without his usual sentiment. An air of jaunty cheerfulness pervaded
-his manner. "She is buried near here, you know. You may have seen the
-grave. A very pretty stone; very pretty indeed. Gavan chose it. I was in
-India at the time. A great blow to me. I never recovered from it. I
-forget, for the moment, what the text is; but it's very pretty; very
-appropriate. I knew I could trust Gavan to do everything properly."
-
-Gavan's face had kept its pallid calm.
-
-"You will tire yourself, father," he said. "Let me take you up-stairs
-now. Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford will excuse us."
-
-The captain resisted his attempt to turn him to the door.
-
-"Miss Gifford. Yes, Miss Gifford," he repeated, turning to where Eppie
-stood attentively watching father and son, "But I want to see Miss
-Elspeth Gifford. It was that I came for." He took her hand and his
-wrecked and restless eyes went over her face. "So this is Miss Elspeth
-Gifford."
-
-"You have heard of me?" Eppie's composure was as successful as Gavan's
-own and lent to the scene a certain matter-of-fact convention.
-
-The captain bowed low. "Heard of you? Yes. I have often heard of you. I
-am glad, glad and proud, to meet at last so much goodness and wit and
-beauty. You have a name in the world, Miss Gifford. Yes, indeed, I have
-heard of you." Suddenly, while he held her hand and gazed at her, his
-look changed. Tears filled his eyes; a muscle in his lip began to shake;
-a flush of maudlin indignation purpled his face.
-
-"And you are the girl my son jilted! And you come to our house! It's a
-noble action. It's a generous action. It's worthy of you, my dear." He
-tightly squeezed her hand, Gavan's attempt--and now no gentle one--to
-draw him away only making his clutch the more determined.
-
-"No, Gavan, I will not go. I will speak my mind. This is my hour. The
-time has come for me to speak my mind. Let's have the truth; truth at
-all costs is my motto. A noble and generous action. But, my dear," he
-leaned his head toward her and spoke in a loud whisper, "you're well rid
-of him, you know--well rid of him. Don't try to patch it up. Don't come
-in that hope. So like a woman--I know, I know. But give it up; that's my
-advice. Give it up. He's a poor fellow--a very poor fellow. He wouldn't
-make you happy; just take that from me--a friend, a true friend. He
-wouldn't make any woman happy. He's a poor creature, and a false
-creature, and I'll say this," the captain, now trembling violently,
-burst into tears: "if he has been a false lover to you he has been a bad
-son to me."
-
-With both hands, sobbing, he clung to her, while, with a look of sick
-distress, Gavan tried, not too violently, to draw him from his hold on
-her.
-
-Eppie had not flushed. "Don't mind," she said, glancing at the helpless
-son, "he has mixed it up, you see." And, bending on the captain eyes
-severe in kindly intention, like the eyes of a nurse firmly
-administering a potion, "You are mistaken about Gavan. It was another
-man who jilted me. Now let him take you up-stairs. You are ill."
-
-But the captain still clung, she, erect in her spare young strength,
-showing no shrinking of repulsion. "No, no," he said; "you always try to
-shield him. A woman's way. He won your heart, and then he broke it, as
-he has mine. He has no heart, or he'd take you now. Give it up. Don't
-come after him. Sir, how dare you! I won't submit to this. How dare you,
-Sir!" Gavan had wrenched him away, and in a flare of silly passion he
-struck at him again and again, like a furious child. It was a wrestle
-with the animal, the vegetable thing, the pinioning of vicious
-tentacles. Mrs. Arley fluttered in helpless consternation, while Eppie,
-firm and adequate, assisted Gavan in securing the wildly striking hands.
-Caught, held, haled toward the door, the captain became, with amazing
-rapidity, all smiles and placidity.
-
-"Gently, gently, my dear boy. This is unseemly, you know, very childish
-indeed. Temper! Temper! You get it from me, no doubt--though your mother
-could be very spiteful at moments. I'll come now. I've said my say. Well
-rid of him, my dear, well rid of him," he nodded from the door.
-
-"Eppie! My dear!" cried Mrs. Arley, when father and son had disappeared.
-"How unutterably hateful. I am more sorry for him than for you, Eppie.
-His face!"
-
-Eppie was shrugging up her shoulders and straightening herself as though
-the captain's grasp still threatened her.
-
-"Hateful indeed; but trivial. Gavan understands that I understand. We
-must make him feel that it's nothing."
-
-"He's quite mad, horrible old man."
-
-"Not quite; more uncomfortably muddled than mad. We must make him see
-that we think nothing of it," Eppie repeated. She turned to Gavan, who
-entered as she spoke, still with his sick flush and showing a speechless
-inability to frame apologies.
-
-"This is what it is to have echoes, Gavan," she said. "My little
-misfortunes have reached your father's ears." She went to him, she took
-his hand, she smiled at him, all her radiance recovered, a garment of
-warmth and ease to cover the shivering the captain's words might have
-made. "Please don't mind. I wasn't a bit bothered, really."
-
-He could almost have wept for the relief of her smile, her sanity. The
-linking of their names in such an unthinkable connection had given him
-the nausea qualm of a terrifying obsession. He could find now only trite
-words in which to tell her that she was very kind and that he was more
-sorry than he could say.
-
-"But you mustn't be. It was such an obvious muddle for a twisted mind.
-He knew," said Eppie, still smiling with the healing radiance, "that I
-had been jilted, and he knew that I was very fond of you, and he put
-together the one and one make two that happened to be before him." She
-saw that his distress had been far greater than her own, that she now
-gave him relief.
-
-Afterward, as she and Mrs. Arley sped away, her own reaction from the
-healing attitude showed in a rather grim silence. She leaned back in the
-swift, keen air, her arms folded in the fullness of her capes.
-
-But Mrs. Arley could not repress her own accumulations of feeling. "My
-dear Eppie," she said, her hand on her shoulder, and with an almost more
-than maternal lack of reticence, "I want you to marry him. Don't glare
-Medusa at me. I hate tact and silences. Heaven knows I would have
-scouted the idea of such a match for you before seeing him to-day. But
-my hard old heart is touched. He is such a dear; so lonely. It's a nice
-little place, too, and there is some money. Jim Grainger is too
-drab-colored a person for you,--all his force, all his sheckles, can't
-gild him,--and Kenneth Langley is penniless. This dear creature is not a
-bit drab and not quite penniless. And you are big enough to marry a man
-who needs you rather than one you need. _Will_ you think of it, Eppie?"
-
-"Grace, you are worse than Captain Palairet," said Eppie, whose eyes
-were firmly fixed on the neat leather back of the chauffeur in front of
-them.
-
-"Don't be cross, Eppie. Why should you mind my prattle?"
-
-"Because I care for him so much."
-
-"Well, that's what I say."
-
-"No; not as I mean it."
-
-"_He_ of course cares, as I mean it."
-
-Eppie did not pause over this.
-
-"It's something different, quite different, from anything else in the
-world. It can't be talked about like that. Please, Grace, never, never
-be like Captain Palairet again. _You_ haven't softening of the brain. I
-shall lose Gavan if my friends and his father have such delusions too
-openly."
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-Gavan went down the noisy, dirty thoroughfare, looking for the turning
-which would lead him, so the last policeman consulted said, to Eppie's
-little square.
-
-It was a May day, suddenly clear after rain, liquid mud below, and above
-a sharply blue sky, looking its relentless contrast at the reeking,
-sordid streets, the ugly, hurrying life of the wide thoroughfare.
-
-All along the gutter was a vociferous fringe of dripping fruit-and
-food-barrows, these more haphazard conveniences faced by a line of
-gaudy, glaring shops.
-
-The blue above was laced with a tangle of tram-wires and cut with the
-jagged line of chimney-pots.
-
-The roaring trams, the glaring shops, seemed part of a cruel machinery
-creative of life, and the grim air of permanence, the width and solidity
-of the great thoroughfare, were more oppressive to Gavan's nerves, its
-ugliness fiercer, more menacing, than the narrower meanness of the
-streets where life seemed to huddle with more despondency.
-
-In one of these he found that he had, apparently, lost his way.
-
-A random turn brought him to a squalid court with sloping, wet pavement
-and open doors disgorging, from inner darkness, swarms of children. They
-ran; tottered on infantile, bandy legs; locked in scuffling groups,
-screaming shrilly, or squatted on the ground, absorbed in some game.
-
-Gavan surveyed them vaguely as he wandered seeking an outlet. His eye
-showed neither shrinking nor tenderness, rather a bleak, hard, unmoved
-pity, like that of the sky above. He was as alien from that swarming,
-vivid life as the sky; but, worn as he was with months of nervous
-overstrain, he felt rising within him now and then a faint sense of
-nausea such as one might feel in contemplating a writhing clot of
-maggots.
-
-He threaded his way among them all, and at a corner of the court found a
-narrow exit. This covered passage led, apparently, to another and fouler
-court, and emerging from it, coming suddenly face to face with him, was
-Eppie. She was as startling, seen here, as "a lily in the mouth of
-Tartarus," and he had a shock of delight in her mere aspect. For Eppie
-was as exquisite as a flower. Her garments had in no way adapted
-themselves to mud and misery. Her rough dress of Japanese blue showed at
-the open neck of its jacket a white linen blouse; her short, kilted
-skirt swung with the grace of petals; her little upturned cap of blue
-made her look like a Rosalind ready for a background of woodland glade,
-streams, and herds of deer.
-
-And here she stood, under that cruel sky, among the unimaginable
-ugliness of this City of Dreadful Night.
-
-In her great surprise she did not smile, saying, as she gave him her
-hand, "Gavan! by all that's wonderful!"
-
-"You asked me to come and see you when I was next in London."
-
-"So I did."
-
-"So here I am. I had a day off by chance; some business that had to be
-seen to."
-
-"And your father?"
-
-"Slowly going."
-
-"And you have come down here, for how long?"
-
-"For as long as you'll keep me. I needn't go back till night."
-
-Her eye now wandered away from him to the maggots, one of whom, Gavan
-observed, had attached itself to her skirt, while a sufficiently dense
-crowd surrounded them, staring.
-
-"You have a glimpse of our children," said Eppie, surveying them with,
-not exactly a maternal, but, as it were, a fraternal eye of affectionate
-familiarity.
-
-"What's that, Annie?" in answer to a husky whisper. "Do I expect you
-to-night? Rather! Is that the doll, Ada? Well, I can't say that you've
-kept it very tidy. Where's its pinafore?" She took the soiled object
-held up to her and examined its garments. "Where's its petticoat?"
-
-"Please, Miss, Hemly took them."
-
-"Took them away from you?"
-
-"Yes, Miss."
-
-"For her own doll, I suppose."
-
-"Yes, Miss."
-
-Eppie cogitated. "I'll speak to Emily about it presently. You shall have
-them back."
-
-"Please, Miss, I called her a thief."
-
-"You spoke the truth. How are you, Billy? You look decidedly better.
-Gavan, my hands are full for the next hour or so and I can't even offer
-to take you with me, for I'm going to sick people. But I shall be back
-and through with all my work by tea-time, if you don't mind going to my
-place and waiting. You'll find Maude Allen there. She lives down here,
-and with me when I am here. She is a nice girl, though she will talk
-your head off."
-
-"How do I find her? I don't mind waiting."
-
-"You follow this to the end, take the first turning to the right, and
-that will bring you to my place. I'll meet you there at five."
-
-Gavan, thus directed, made his way to the dingy little house occupied by
-the group of energetic women whom Eppie joined yearly for her three
-months of--dissipation? he asked himself, amused by her variegated
-vigor.
-
-The dingy little house looked on a dingy little square--shell of former
-respectable affluence from which the higher form of life had shriveled.
-The sooty trees were thickly powdered with young green, and uneven
-patches of rough, unkempt grass showed behind broken iron railings. A
-cat's-meat man called his dangling wares along the street, and Gavan,
-noticing a thin and furtive cat, that stole from a window-ledge, stopped
-him and bought a large three-penny-worth, upon which he left the cat
-regaling itself with an odd, fastidious ferocity.
-
-He entered another world when he entered Eppie's sitting-room. Here was
-life at its most austerely sweet. Books lined the walls, bowls of
-primroses and delicate Japanese bronzes set above their shelves;
-chintz-covered chairs were drawn before the fire; the latest reviews lay
-on a table, and on the piano stood open music; there were wide windows
-in the little room, and crocuses, growing in flat, earthenware dishes,
-blew out their narrow chalices against the sunlit muslin curtains.
-
-Miss Allen sat sewing near the crocuses, and, shy and voluble, rose to
-greet him. She was evidently accustomed to Eppie's guests--accustomed,
-too, perhaps, to taking them off her hands, for though she was shy her
-volubility showed a familiarity with the situation. She was almost as
-funny a contrast to Eppie as the slum children had been an ugly one. She
-wore a spare, drab-colored skirt and a cotton shirt, its high, hard
-collar girt about by a red tie that revealed bone buttons before and
-behind. Her sleek, fair hair, relentlessly drawn back, looked like a
-varnish laid upon her head. Her features, at once acute and kindly, were
-sharp and pink.
-
-She was sewing on solid and distressingly ugly materials.
-
-"Yes, I am usually at home. Miss Gifford is the head and I am the hands,
-you see," she smiled, casting quick, upward glances at the long, pale
-young man in his chair near the fire. "Miss Henderson, Miss Grey, and I
-live here all year round, and I do so look forward to Miss Gifford's
-coming. Oh, yes, it's a most interesting life. Do you do anything of the
-sort? Are you going to take up a club? Perhaps you are going into the
-Church?"
-
-Miss Allen asked her swift succession of questions as if in a mild
-desperateness.
-
-Gavan admitted that his interest was wholly in Miss Gifford.
-
-"She _is_ interesting," Miss Allen, all comprehension, agreed. "So many
-people find her inspiring. Do you know Mr. Grainger, the M.P.? He comes
-here constantly. He is a cousin, you know. He has known her, of course,
-ever since she was a child. I think it's very probable that she
-influences his political life--oh, quite in a right sense, I mean. He is
-such a conscientious man--everybody says that. And then she isn't at all
-eccentric, you know, as so many fashionable women who come down here
-are; they do give one so much trouble when they are like that,--all
-sorts of fads that one has to manage to get on with. She isn't at all
-faddish. And she isn't sentimental, either. I think the sentimental ones
-are worst--for the people, especially, giving them all sorts of foolish
-ideas. And it's not that she doesn't _care_. She cares such a lot.
-That's the secret of her not getting discouraged, you see. She never
-loses her spirit."
-
-"Is it such discouraging work?" Gavan questioned from his chair. With
-his legs crossed, his hat and stick held on his knee, he surveyed Miss
-Allen and the crocuses.
-
-"Well, not to me," she answered; "but that's very different, for I have
-religious faith. Miss Gifford hasn't that, so of course she must care a
-great deal to make up for it. When one hasn't a firm faith it is far
-more difficult, I always think, to see any hope in it all. I think she
-would find it far easier if she had that. She can't resign herself to
-things. She is rather hot-tempered at times," Miss Allen added, with one
-of her sharp, shy glances.
-
-Gavan, amused by the idea that Eppie lacked religious faith, inquired
-whether the settlement were religious in intention, and Miss Allen
-sighed a little in answering no,--Miss Grey, indeed, was a Positivist.
-"But we Anglicans are very broad, you know," she said. "I can work in
-perfectly with them all--better with Miss Grey and Miss Gifford than
-with Miss Henderson, who is very, very Low. Miss Gifford goes in more
-for social conditions and organization--trades-unions, all that sort of
-thing; that's where she finds Mr. Grainger so much of a help, I think."
-And he gathered from Miss Allen's further conversation, from its very
-manner of vague though admiring protest, a clearer conception of Eppie's
-importance down here. To Miss Allen, she evidently embodied a splendid,
-pagan force, ambiguous in its splendor. He saw her slightly shrinking
-vision of an intent combatant; no loving sister of charity, but a young
-Bellona, the latest weapons of sociological warfare in her hands, its
-latest battle-cry on her lips. And all for what? thought Gavan, while,
-with a sense of contrasting approval, he looked at Miss Allen's tidy
-little head against the sunlit crocuses and watched the harmless
-occupation of her hands. All for life, more life; the rousing of desire;
-the struggling to higher forms of consciousness. She was in it, the
-strife, the struggle. He had seen on her face to-day, with all its
-surprise, perhaps its gladness, that alien look of grave preoccupation
-that passed from him to the destinies she touched. In thinking of it all
-he felt particularly at peace, though there was the irony of his
-assurance that Eppie's efforts among this suffering life where he found
-her only resulted in a fiercer hold on suffering. Physical degradation
-and its resultant moral apathy were by no means the most unendurable of
-human calamities. Miss Allen's anodynes--the mere practical petting,
-soothing, telling of pretty tales--were, in their very short-sightedness,
-more fitted to the case.
-
-Miss Allen little thought to what a context her harmless prattle was
-being adjusted. She would have been paralyzed with horror could she have
-known that to the gentle young man, sitting there so unalarmingly, she
-herself was only a rather simple symptom of life that he was quietly
-studying. In so far from suspecting, her shyness went from her; he was
-so unalarming--differing in this from so many people--that she found it
-easy to talk to him. And she still had a happy little hope of a closer
-community of interest than he had owned to. He looked, she thought, very
-High Church. Perhaps he was in the last stages of conversion.
-
-She had talked on for nearly an hour when another visitor was announced.
-This proved to be a young man slightly known to Gavan, a graceful,
-mellifluous youth, whose artificiality of manner and great personal
-beauty suggested a mingling of absinthe and honey. People had rather
-bracketed Gavan and Basil Mayburn together; one could easily deal with
-both as lumped in the same category,--charming drifters, softly
-disdainful of worldly aims and efforts. Mayburn himself took sympathy
-for granted, though disconcerted at times by finding his grasp of the
-older man to be on a sliding, slippery surface. Palairet had, to be
-sure, altogether the proper appreciations of art and literature, the
-rhythm of highly evolved human intercourse; the aroma distilled for the
-esthete from the vast tragic comedy of life; so that he had never quite
-satisfied himself as to why he could get no nearer on this common
-footing. Palairet was always charming, always interested, always
-courteous; but one's hold did slip.
-
-And to Gavan, Basil Mayburn, with his fluent ecstasies, seemed a
-sojourner in a funny half-way house. To Mayburn the hallucination of
-life was worth while esthetically. His own initial appeal to life had
-been too fundamentally spiritual for the beautiful to be more to him
-than a second-rate illusion.
-
-Miss Allen greeted Mr. Mayburn with a coolness that at once
-discriminated for Gavan between her instinctive liking for himself and
-her shrinking from a man who perplexed and displeased her.
-
-Mayburn was all glad sweetness: delighted to see Miss Allen; delighted
-to see Palairet; delighted to wait in their company for the delightful
-Miss Gifford; and, turning to Miss Allen, he went on to say, as a thing
-that would engage her sympathies, that he had just come from a service
-at the Oratory.
-
-"I often go there," he said; "one gets, as nowhere else that I know of
-in London, the quintessence of aspiration--the age-long yearning of the
-world. How are your schemes for having that little church built down
-here succeeding? I do so believe in it. Don't let any ugly sect steal a
-march on you."
-
-Miss Allen primly replied that the plans for the church were prospering;
-and adding that Miss Gifford would be here in a moment and that she must
-leave them, she gathered up her work and departed with some emphasis.
-
-"Nice, dear little creature, that," said Mayburn, "though she does so
-dislike me. I hope I didn't say the wrong thing. I never quite know how
-far her Anglicanism goes; such a pity that it doesn't go a little
-further and carry her into a nunnery of the Catholic Church. She is the
-nun type. She ought to be done up in their delicious costume; it would
-lend her the flavor she lacks so distressingly now. Did you notice her
-collar and her hair? Astonishing the way that Eppie makes use of all
-these funny, _guinde_ creatures whom she gets hold of down here. Have
-you ever seen Miss Grey?--dogmatic, utilitarian, strangely ugly Miss
-Grey, another nun type corrupted by our silly modern conditions. She
-reeks of Comte and looks like a don. And all the rest of them,--the
-solemn humanitarians, the frothy socialists, the worldly, benign old
-ecclesiastics,--Eppie works them all; she has a genius for
-administration. It's an art in her. It almost consoles one for seeing
-her wasted down here for so much of the year."
-
-"Why wasted?" Gavan queried. "She enjoys it."
-
-"Exactly. That's the alleviation. Wasted for us, I mean. You have known
-her for a long time, haven't you, Palairet?"
-
-Gavan, irked by the question and by the familiarity of Mayburn's
-references to their absent hostess, answered dryly that he had known
-Miss Gifford since childhood; and Mayburn, all tact, passed at once to
-less personal topics, inquiring with a new earnestness whether Palairet
-had seen Selby's Goya, and expatiating on its exquisite horror until the
-turning of a key in the hall-door, quick steps on the stairs leading up
-past the sitting-room, announced Eppie's arrival.
-
-She was with them in a moment, cap and jacket doffed, her muddy shoes
-changed for slender patent-leather, fresh in her white blouse. She
-greeted Mayburn, turning to Gavan with, "I'm so glad you waited. You
-shall both have tea directly."
-
-With all her crisp kindliness, Gavan fancied a change in her since the
-greeting of an hour and a half before. Things hadn't gone well with her.
-And he could flatter himself, also, with the suspicion that she was
-vexed at finding their tte--tte interrupted.
-
-Mayburn loitered about the room after her while she straightened the
-shade on the student's lamp, just brought in, and made the tea, telling
-her about people, about what was going on in the only world that
-counted, telling her about Chrissie Bentworth's astounding elopement,
-and, finally, about the Goya. "You really must see it soon," he assured
-her.
-
-Eppie, adjusting the flame of her kettle, said that she didn't want to
-see it.
-
-"You don't care for Goya, dear lady?"
-
-"Not just now."
-
-"Well, of course I don't mean just now. I mean after you have burned out
-this particular flame. But, really, it's a sensation before you and you
-mustn't miss having it. An exquisite thing. Horror made beautiful."
-
-"I don't want to see it made beautiful," Eppie, with cheerful rudeness,
-objected.
-
-"Now that," said Mayburn, drawing up to the tea-table with an
-appreciative glance for the simple but inviting fare spread upon
-it--"now that is just where I always must argue with you. Don't you
-agree with me, Palairet, that life is beautiful--that it's only in terms
-of beauty that it has significance?"
-
-"If you happen to see it so," Gavan ambiguously assented.
-
-"Exactly; I accept your amendment--if you happen to have the good
-fortune to see it so; if you have the faculty that gives the vision; if,
-like Siegfried, the revealing dragon's-blood has touched your lips.
-Eppie has the gift and shouldn't wilfully atrophy it. She shouldn't
-refuse to share the vision of the Supreme Artist, to whom all horror and
-tragedy are parts of the picture that his eternal joy contemplates; she
-should not refuse to listen with the ear of the Supreme Musician, to
-whom all the discords that each one of us is, before we taste the
-dragon's-blood,--for what is man but a dissonance, as our admirable
-Nietzsche says,--to whom all these discords melt into the perfect
-phrase. All art, all truth is there. I'm rather dithyrambic, but, in
-your more reticent way, you agree with me, don't you, Palairet?"
-
-Eppie's eye, during this speech, had turned with observant irony upon
-Gavan.
-
-"How do you like your echo, Gavan?" she inquired, and she answered for
-him: "Of course he agrees, but in slightly different terms. He doesn't
-care a fig about the symphony or about the Eternal Goya. There isn't a
-touch of the 'lyric rapture' about him. Now pray don't ask him to define
-his own conceptions, and drink your tea. And don't say one word to me,
-either, about your gigantic, Bohemian deity. You have spoken of
-Nietzsche, and I know too well what you are coming to: the Apollonian
-spirit of the world of Appearances in which the Dionysiac spirit of
-Things-in-Themselves mirrors its vital ecstasy. Spare me, I'm not at all
-in the humor to see horror in terms of loveliness."
-
-"_Ay de mi!_" Mayburn murmured, "you make me feel that I'm still a
-dissonance when you talk like this."
-
-"A very wholesome realization."
-
-"You are cross with life to-day, and therefore with me, its poor little
-appreciator."
-
-"I'm never cross with life."
-
-"Only with me, then?"
-
-"Only with you, to-day."
-
-Mayburn, folding his slice of bread-and-butter, took her harshness with
-Apollonian serenity. "At least let me know that I've an ally in you," he
-appealed to Gavan, while Eppie refilled her cup with the business-like
-air of stoking an engine that paused for a moment near wayside
-trivialities.
-
-Gavan had listened to the dithyrambics with some uneasiness, conscious
-of Eppie's observation, and now owned that he felt little interest in
-the Eternal Goya.
-
-"Don't, don't, I pray of you, let him take the color out of life for
-you," Mayburn pleaded, turning from this rebuff, tea-cup in hand, to
-Eppie; and Eppie, with a rather grim smile, again full of reminiscences
-for Gavan, declared that neither of them could take anything out of it
-for her.
-
-She kept, after that, the talk in pleasant enough shallows; but Mayburn
-fancied, more than once, that he heard the grating of his keel on an
-unpropitious shore. Eppie didn't want him to-day, that was becoming
-evident; she wasn't going to push him off into decorative sailing. And
-presently, wondering a little if his tact had already been too long at
-fault, wondering anew about the degree of intimacy between the childhood
-friends, who had, evidently, secrets in which he did not share, he
-gracefully departed.
-
-Eppie leaned back in her chair, folded her arms, and closed her eyes as
-though to give herself the relief of a long silence.
-
-Her hair softly silhouetted against the green shade and the flickering
-illumination of the firelight upon her, her passive face showed a stern
-wistfulness. Things had gone wrong with her.
-
-Looking at her, Gavan's memory went back to the last time they had been
-together, alone, in firelight, to his impulse and her startlingly acute
-interpretation of it. Her very aspect now, her closed eyes and folded
-arms, seemed to show him how completely she disowned, for both of them,
-even the memory of such an unfitting episode. More keenly than ever he
-recognized the fineness in her, the generosity, the willingness to
-outlive trifles, to put them away forever; and the contagion of her
-somber peace enveloped him.
-
-She remarked presently, not opening her eyes: "I should like to make a
-bon-fire of all the pictures in the world, all the etchings, the
-carvings, the tapestries, the bric--brac in general,--and Basil
-Mayburn, in sackcloth and ashes, should light it."
-
-"What puritanic savagery, Eppie!"
-
-"I prefer the savage puritan to the Basil Mayburn type; at least I do
-just now."
-
-"What's the matter?" Gavan asked, after a little pause.
-
-"Do I show it so evidently?" she asked, with a faint smile. "Everything
-is the matter."
-
-"What, in particular, has gone wrong?"
-
-Eppie did not reply at first, and he guessed that she chose only to show
-him a lesser trouble when she said, "I've had a great quarrel with Miss
-Grey, for one thing."
-
-"The positivistic lady?"
-
-"Yes; did Maude tell you that? She really is a very first-rate
-person--and runs this place; but I lost my temper with her--a stupid
-thing to do, and not suddenly, either, which made it the less
-excusable."
-
-"Are your theories so different that you came to a clash?"
-
-"Of course they are different, though it was apparently only over a
-matter of practical administration that we fought." Eppie drew a long
-breath, opening her eyes. "I shall stay on here this spring--I usually
-go to my cousin Alicia for the season. But one can't expect things to go
-as one wants them unless one keeps one's hand on the engine most of the
-time. She has almost a right to consider me a meddling outsider, I
-suppose. I shall stay on till the end of the summer."
-
-"And smash Miss Grey?"
-
-Eppie, aware of his amusement, turned an unresentful glance upon him.
-
-"No, don't think me merely brutally dominant. I really like her. I only
-want to use her to the best advantage."
-
-At this he broke into a laugh. "Not brutally dominant, I know; but I'm
-sorry for Miss Grey."
-
-"Miss Grey can well take care of herself, I assure you."
-
-"What else has gone wrong?"
-
-Again Eppie chose something less wrong to show him. "The factory where
-some of my club-girls work has shut down half of its machinery. There
-will be a great deal of suffering. And we have pulled them above a
-flippant acceptance of state relief."
-
-"And because you have pulled them up, they are to suffer more?"
-
-"Exactly, if you choose to put it so," said Eppie.
-
-He saw that she had determined that he should not frighten her again,
-or, at all events, that he should never see it if he did frighten her;
-and he had himself determined that his mist should never again close
-round her. She should not see, even if she guessed at it pretty clearly,
-the interpretation that he put upon the afternoon's frictions and
-failures, and, on the plane of a matter-of-fact agreement as to
-practice, he drew her on to talk of her factory-girls, of the standards
-of wages, the organization of woman's labor, so that she presently said,
-"What a pleasure it is to hear you talking sense, Gavan!"
-
-"You have heard me talk a great deal of nonsense, I'm sure."
-
-"A great deal. Worse than Basil Mayburn's."
-
-"I saw too clearly to-day the sorry figure I must have cut in your eyes.
-I have learned to hold my tongue. When one can only say things that
-sound particularly silly that is an obvious duty."
-
-"I am glad to hear you use the word, my dear Gavan; use it, even though
-it means nothing to you. _Glissez mortel, n'appuyez pas_ should be your
-motto for a time; then, after some wholesome skating about on what seems
-the deceptive, glittering surface of things you will find, perhaps, that
-it isn't an abyss the ice stretches over, but a firm meadow, the ice
-melted off it and no more need of skates."
-
-He was quite willing that she should so see his case; he was easier to
-live with, no doubt, on this assumption of his curability.
-
-Eppie, still leaning back, still with folded arms, had once more closed
-her eyes, involuntarily sighing, as though under her own words the
-haunting echo of the abyss had sounded for her.
-
-She had not yet shown him what the real trouble was, and he asked her
-now, in this second lull of their talk, "What else is there besides the
-factory-girls and Miss Grey?"
-
-She was silent for a moment, then said, "You guess that there is
-something else."
-
-"I can see it."
-
-"And you are sorry?"
-
-"Sorry, dear Eppie? Of course."
-
-"It's a child, a cripple," said Eppie. "It had been ill for a long time,
-but we thought that we could save it. It died this morning. I didn't
-know. I didn't get there in time. I only found out after leaving you
-this afternoon. And it cried for me." She had turned her head from him
-as it leaned against the chair, but he saw the tears slowly rolling down
-her cheeks.
-
-"I am so sorry, dear Eppie," he said.
-
-"The most darling child, Gavan." His grave pity had brought him near and
-it gave her relief to speak. "It had such a wistful, dear little face. I
-used to spend hours with it; I never cared for any child so much. What I
-can't bear is to think that it cried for me." Her voice broke. Without a
-trace, now, of impulse or glamour, he took her hand, repeating his
-helpless phrase of sympathy. Yes, he thought, while she wept, here was
-the fatal flaw in any Tolstoian half-way house that promised peace. Love
-for others didn't help their suffering; suffering with them didn't stop
-it. Here was the brute fact of life that to all peace-mongers sternly
-said, Where there is love there is no peace.
-
-It was only after her hand had long lain in his fraternal clasp that she
-drew it away, drying her tears and trying to smile her thanks at him.
-Looking before her into the fire, and back into a retrospect of sadness,
-she said: "How often you and I meet death together, Gavan. The poor
-monkey, and Bobbie, and Elspeth even, ought to count."
-
-"You must think of me and death together," he said.
-
-He felt in a moment that the words had for her some significance that he
-had not intended. In her silence was a shock, and in her voice, when she
-spoke, a startled thing determinedly quieted.
-
-"Not more than you must think of me and it together."
-
-"You and death, dear Eppie! You are its very antithesis!"
-
-She did not look at him, and he could not see her eyes, but he knew,
-with the almost uncanny intuition that he so often had in regard to her,
-that a rising strength, a strength that threatened something, strove
-with a sudden terror.
-
-"Life conquers death," she said at last.
-
-He armed himself with lightness. "Of course, dear Eppie," he said; "of
-course it does; always and always. The poor baby dies, and--I wonder how
-many other babies are being born at this moment? Conquers death? I
-should think it did!"
-
-"I did not mean in that way," she answered. She had risen, and, looking
-at the clock, seemed to show him that their time was over. "But we won't
-discuss life and death now," she said.
-
-"You mean that it's late and that I must go?" he smiled.
-
-"Perhaps I mean only that I don't want to discuss," she smiled back.
-"Though--yes, indeed, it is late; almost seven. I have a great many
-things to do this evening, so that I must rest before dinner, and let
-you go."
-
-"I may come again?"
-
-"Whenever you will. Thank you for being so kind to-day."
-
-"Kind, dear Eppie?"
-
-"For being sorry, I mean."
-
-"Who but a brute would not have been?"
-
-"And you are not a brute."
-
-The shaded light cast soft upward shadows on her face, revealing sweet
-oddities of expression. In their shadow he could not fathom her eyes;
-but a tenderness, peaceful, benignant, even a recovered gaiety, hovered
-on her brow, her upper lip, her cheeks. It was like a reflection of
-sunlight in a deep pool, this dim smiling of gratitude and gaiety.
-
-He had a queer feeling, and a profounder one than in their former moment
-when she had repudiated his helpless emotion, that she spared him, that
-she restrained some force that might break upon this fraternal nearness.
-For an instant he wondered if he wanted to be spared, and with the
-wonder was once more the wrench at leaving her there, alone, in her
-fire-lit room. But it was her strength that carried them over all these
-dubious undercurrents, and he so relied on it that, holding her hand in
-good-by, he said, "I will come soon. I like it here."
-
-"And you are coming to Kirklands this summer. Uncle expects it. You
-mustn't disappoint him, and me. I shall be there for a month."
-
-"I'll come."
-
-"Jim Grainger will be there, too. You remember Jim. You can fight with
-him from morning till night, but you and I will fight about nothing,
-absolutely nothing, Gavan. We will--_glisser_. We will talk about Goya!
-We will be perfectly comfortable."
-
-He really believed that they might be, so happily convincing was her
-tone.
-
-"Grainger is a great chum of yours, isn't he?" he asked.
-
-"You remember, he and his brother were old playmates; Clarence has
-turned out a poor creature; he's a nobody in the church. I'm very fond
-of Jim. And I admire him tremendously. He is the conquering type, you
-know--the type that tries for the high grapes."
-
-"You won't set him at me, to mangle me for your recreation?"
-
-"Do I seem such a pitiless person?"
-
-"Oh, it would be for my good, of course."
-
-"You may come with no fear of manglings. You sha'n't be worried or
-reformed."
-
-They had spoken as if the captain were non-existent, but Gavan put the
-only qualifying touch to his assurance of seeing her at Kirklands. "I'll
-come--if I can get there by then."
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-But he did not go to her again in the slums. The final phases of his
-father's long illness kept him in Surrey, and he found, on thinking it
-over, that he was content to rest in the peace of that last seeing of
-her.
-
-It was clear to him that, were it not for that paralysis of the heart
-and will, he would have been her lover. Like a veiled, exquisite
-picture, the impossible love was with him always; he could lift the veil
-and look upon it with calmness. That he owed something of this calmness
-to Eppie he well knew. She loved him,--that, too, was evident,--but as a
-sister might love, perhaps as a mother might. He was her child, her sick
-child or brother, and he smiled over the simile, well content, and with
-an odd sense of safety in his assurance. Peace was to be their final
-word, and in the long months of a still, hot summer, this soft,
-persistent note of peace was with him and filled a lassitude greater
-than any he had known.
-
-Monotonously the days went by like darkly freighted boats on a sultry
-sea--low-lying boats, sliding with the current under sleepy sails.
-
-He watched consciousness fade from his father's body and found strange,
-sly analogies (they were like horrid nudges in the dark)--with his
-mother's death, the worthless man, the saintly woman, mingling in the
-sameness of their ending, the pitifulness, after all, of the final
-insignificance that overtook them both. And so glassy was the current,
-so sleepy the wind, that the analogy shook hardly a tremor of pain
-through him.
-
-In the hour of his father's death, a more trivial memory came--trivial,
-yet it lent a pathos, even a dignity, to the dying man. In the captain's
-eyes, turned wonderingly on him, in the automatic stretching out of his
-wasted hand for his,--Gavan held it to the end--was the reminiscence of
-the poor monkey's far-away death, the little tropical creature that had
-drooped and died at Kirklands.
-
-On the day of the funeral, Gavan sat in the library at dusk, and the
-lassitude had become so deep, partly through the breakdown of sheer
-exhaustion, that the thought of going on watching his own machinery
-work--toward that same end,--the end of the monkey, of his father, his
-mother,--was profoundly disgusting.
-
-It was a positively physical disgust, a nausea of fatigue, that had
-overtaken him as he watched the rooks, above the dark yet gilded woods,
-wheel against a sunset sky.
-
-Almost automatically, with no sense of choice or effort, he had unlocked
-a drawer of the writing-table beside him and taken out a case of
-pistols, merely wondering if the machine were going to take the final
-and only logical move of stopping itself.
-
-He was a little interested to observe, as he opened the case, that he
-felt no emotion at all. He had quite expected that at such a last moment
-life would concentrate, gather itself for a final leap on him, a final
-clinging. He had expected to have a bout with the elemental, the thing
-that some men called faith in life and some only desire of life, and,
-indeed, for a moment, his mind wandered in vague, Buddhistic fancies
-about the wheel of life to which all desire bound one, desire, the
-creator of life, so that as long as the individual felt any pulse of it
-life might always suck him back into the vortex. The fancy gave him his
-one stir of uneasiness. Suppose that the act of departure were but the
-final act of will. Could it be that such self-affirmation might tie him
-still to the wheel he strove to escape, and might the drama still go on
-for his unwilling spirit in some other dress of flesh? To see the fear
-as the final bout was to quiet it; it was a fear symptomatic of life, a
-lure to keep him going; and, besides, how meaningless such surmises, on
-their ethical basis of voluntary choice, as if in the final decision one
-would not be, as always, the puppet of the underlying will. His mind
-dropped from the thread-like interlacing of teasing metaphysical
-conjecture to a calm as quiet and deep as though he were about to turn
-on his pillow and fall asleep.
-
-Now, like the visions in a dreamy brain, the memories of the day trooped
-through the emptiness of thought. He was aware, while he watched the
-visions, of himself sitting there, to a spectator a tragic or a morbid
-figure. Morbid was of course the word that a frightened or merely stupid
-humanity would cast at him. And very morbid he was, to be sure, if life
-were desirable and to cease to desire it abnormal.
-
-He saw himself no longer in either guise. He was looking now at his
-father's coffin lowered into the earth of the little churchyard beside
-his mother's grave; the fat, genial face of the sexton, the decorous
-sadness on the little rector's features. Overhead had been the quietly
-stirring elms; sheep grazed beyond the churchyard wall and on the
-horizon was the pastoral blue of distant hills. He saw the raw, new
-grave and the heave of the older grave's green sod, the old stone, with
-its embroidery of yellow lichen and its text of eternal faith.
-
-And suddenly the thought of that heave of sod, that headstone, what it
-stood for in his life, the tragic memory, the love, the agony,--all
-sinking into mere dust, into the same dust as the father whom he had
-hated,--struck with such unendurable anguish upon him that, as if under
-heavy churchyard sod a long-dead heart strove up in a tormented
-resurrection, life rushed appallingly upon him and, involuntarily, as a
-drowning man's hand seizes a spar and clings, his hand closed on the
-pistol under it. Leave it, leave it,--this dream where such
-resurrections were possible.
-
-He had lifted the pistol, pausing for a moment in an uncertainty as to
-whether head or heart were the surer exit, when a quiet step at the
-door arrested him.
-
-"Shall I bring the lamps, sir?" asked Howson's quiet voice.
-
-Gavan could but admire his own deftness in tossing a newspaper over the
-pistol. He found himself perfectly prepared to keep up the last
-appearances. He said that he didn't want the lamps yet and that Howson
-could leave the curtains undrawn. "It's sultry this evening," he added.
-
-"It is, sir; I expect we'll have thunder in the night," said Howson,
-whose voice partook of the day's decorous gloom. He had brought in the
-evening mail and laid the letters and newspapers beside Gavan, slightly
-pushing aside the covered pistol to make room for them, an action that
-Gavan observed with some intentness. But Howson saw nothing.
-
-Left alone again, Gavan, not moving in his chair, glanced at the letters
-and papers neatly piled beside his elbow.
-
-After the rending agony of that moment of hideous realization, when, in
-every fiber, he had felt his own woeful humanity, an odd sleepiness
-almost overcame him.
-
-He felt much more like going to sleep than killing himself, and,
-yawning, stretching, he shivered a little from sheer fatigue.
-
-The edge of the newspaper that covered the pistol was weighted down by
-the pile of papers, and in putting out his hand for it, automatically,
-he pushed the letters aside, then, yawning again, picked them up instead
-of the pistol. He glanced over the envelops, not opening them,--the
-last hand at cards, that could hold no trumps for him. It was with as
-mechanical an interest as that of the condemned criminal who, on the way
-to the scaffold, turns his head to look at some unfamiliar sight. But at
-the last letter he paused. The post-mark was Scotch; the writing was
-Eppie's.
-
-He might have considered at that moment that the shock he felt was a
-warning that life was by no means done with him, and that his way of
-safety lay in swift retreat.
-
-But after the wrench of agony and the succeeding sliding languor, he did
-not consider anything. It was like a purely physical sensation, what he
-felt, as he held the letter and looked at Eppie's writing. Soft,
-recurrent thrills went through him, as though a living, vibrating thing
-were in his hands. Eppie; Kirklands; the heather under a summer sky. Was
-it desire, or a will-less drifting with a new current that the new
-vision brought? He could not have told.
-
-He opened the letter and read Eppie's matter-of-fact yet delicate
-sympathy.
-
-He must be worn out. She begged him to remember his promise and to come
-to them at once.
-
-At once, thought Gavan. It must be that, indeed, or not at all. He
-glanced at the clock. He could really go at once. He could catch the
-London train, the night express for Scotland, and he could be at
-Kirklands at noon next day. He rose and rang the bell, looking out at
-the darker pink of the sky, where the rooks no longer wheeled, until
-Howson appeared.
-
-"I'm going to Scotland to-night, at once." He found himself repeating
-the summons of the letter. "Pack up my things. Order the trap."
-
-Howson showed no surprise. A flight from the house of death was only
-natural.
-
-Gavan, when he was gone, went to the table and closed the box of pistols
-with a short, decisive snap--a decision in sharp contrast to the mist in
-which his mind was steeped.
-
-The peace the pistols promised, the peace of the northern sky and the
-heather: why did he choose the latter? But then he did not choose.
-Something had chosen for him. Something had called him back. Was it that
-he was too weary to resist? or did all his strength consist in yielding?
-He could not have told. Let the play go on. Its next act would be sweet
-to watch. Of that he was sure.
-
-
-
-
-PART III
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-The moor was like an amethyst under a radiant August sky, and the air,
-with its harmony of wind and sunlight, was like music.
-
-Eppie walked beside him and Peter trotted before. The forms were
-changed, but it might almost have been little Eppie, the boy Gavan, and
-Robbie himself who went together through the heather. The form was
-changed, but the sense of saneness so strong that it would have seemed
-perfectly natural to pass an arm about a child Eppie's neck and to talk
-of the morning's reading in the Odyssey.
-
-Never had the feeling of reality been so vague or the dream sense been
-so beautiful. His instinctive choice of this peace, instead of the
-other, had been altogether justified. It was all like a delightful game
-they had agreed to play, and the only rule of the game was to take each
-other's illusions for granted and, in so doing, to put them altogether
-aside.
-
-It was as if they went in a dream that tallied while, outside their
-dream, the sad life of waking slept. It was all limpid, all effortless,
-all clear sunlight and clear wind: limpid, like a happy dream, yet
-deliciously muddled too, as a happy dream is often muddled, with its
-mazed consciousness that, since it is a dream, ordinary impossibilities
-may become quite possible, that one only has to direct a little the
-turnings of the fairy-tale to have them lead one where one will, and yet
-that to all strange happenings there hovers a background of
-contradiction that makes them the more of an enchanted perplexity.
-
-In the old white house the general and Miss Barbara would soon be
-expecting them back to tea, both older, both vaguer, both, to Gavan's
-appreciation, more and more the tapestried figures, the background to
-the young life that still moved, felt, thought in the foreground until
-it, too, should sink and fade into a tapestry for other dramas, other
-fairy-tales.
-
-The general retold his favorite anecdotes with shorter intervals between
-the tellings; cared more openly, with an innocent greediness, about the
-exactitudes of his diet; was content to sit idly with an unremembering,
-indifferent benignancy of gaze. All the sturdier significances of life
-were fast slipping from him, all the old martial activities; it was like
-seeing the undressing of a child, the laying aside of the toy trumpet
-and the soldier's kilt preparatory to bed. Miss Barbara was sweeter than
-ever--a sweetness even less touched with variations than last year. And
-she was sillier, poor old darling; her laugh had in it at moments the
-tinkling, feeble foolishness of age.
-
-Gavan saw it all imperturbably--how, in boyhood, the apprehension of it
-would have cut into him!--and it all seemed really very good--as the
-furniture to a fairy-tale; the sweet, dim, silly tapestry was part of
-the peace. How Eppie saw it he didn't know; he didn't care; and she
-seemed willing not to care, either, about what he saw or thought. Eppie
-had for him in their fairy-tale all the unexacting loveliness of summer
-nature, healing, sunny, smiling. He had been really ill, he knew that
-now, and that the peace was in part the languor of convalescence, and,
-for the sake of his recovery, she seemed to have become a part of
-nature, to ask no questions and demand no dues.
-
-To have her so near, so tender, so untroubling, was like holding in his
-hands a soft, contented wild bird. He could, he thought, have held it
-against his heart, and the heart would not have throbbed the faster.
-
-There was nothing in her now of the young Valkyrie of mists and frosts,
-shaking spears and facing tragedy with stern eyes. She threatened
-nothing. She saw no tragedy. It was all again as if, in a bigger, more
-beautiful way, she gave him milk to drink from a silver cup. Together
-they drank, no potion, no enchanted, perilous potion, but, from the cup
-of innocent summer days, the long, sweet dream of an Eternal Now.
-
-To-day, for the first time, the hint of a cloud had crept into the sky.
-
-"And to-morrow, Eppie, ends our tte--tte," he said. "Or will Grainger
-make as little of a third as the general and Miss Barbara?"
-
-"He sha'n't spoil things, if that's what you mean," said Eppie.
-
-She wore a white dress and a white hat wreathed with green; the emerald
-drops trembled in the shadow of her hair. She made him think of some
-wandering princess in an Irish legend, with the white and green and the
-tranquil shining of her eyes.
-
-"Not our things, perhaps; but can't he interfere with them? He will want
-to talk with you about all the things we go on so happily without
-talking of."
-
-"I'll talk to him and go on happily with you."
-
-It was almost on his lips to ask her if she could marry Grainger and
-still go on happily, like this, with him, Gavan. That it should have
-seemed possible to ask it showed how far into fairy-land they had
-wandered; but it was one of the turnings that one didn't choose to take;
-one was warned in one's sleep of lurking dangers on that road. It might
-lead one straight out of fairy-land, straight into uncomfortable waking.
-
-"How happily we do go on, Eppie," was what he did choose to say. "More
-happily than ever before. What a contrast this--to East London."
-
-She glanced at him. "And to Surrey."
-
-"And to Surrey," he accepted.
-
-"Surrey was worse than East London," she said.
-
-"I didn't know how much of a strain it had been until I got away from
-it."
-
-"One saw it all in your face."
-
-"'One' meaning a clever Eppie, I suppose. But, yes, I had a bad moment
-there."
-
-The memory of that heave of sod had no place in fairy-land, even less
-place than the forecast of an Eppie married to Jim Grainger, and he
-didn't let his thought dwell on it even when he owned to the bad
-moment, and he was thinking, really with amusement over her
-unconsciousness, of the two means of escape from it that he had found to
-his hand,--the pistol and her letter,--when she took up his words with a
-quiet, "Yes, I knew you had."
-
-"Knew that I had had a strain, you mean?"
-
-"No, had a bad moment," she answered.
-
-"You saw it in my face?"
-
-"No. I knew. Before I saw you."
-
-He smiled at her. "You have a clairvoyant streak in your Scotch blood?"
-
-She smiled back. "Probably. I knew, you see."
-
-Her assurance, with its calm over what it knew, really puzzled him.
-
-"Well, what did you know?"
-
-She had kept on quietly smiling while she looked at him, and, though she
-now became grave, it was not as if for pain but for thankfulness. "It
-was in the evening, the day after I wrote to you, the day your father
-was buried. I went to my room to dress for dinner, my room next yours,
-you know. And I was looking out,--at the pine-tree, the summer-house
-where we played, and, in especial, I remember, at the white roses that I
-could smell in the evening so distinctly,--when I knew, or saw, I don't
-know which, that you were in great suffering. It was most of all as if I
-were in you, feeling it myself, rather than seeing or knowing. Then,"
-her voice went on in its unshaken quiet, "I did seem to see--a grave;
-not your father's grave. You were seeing it, too,--a green grave. And
-then I came back into myself and knew. You were in some way,--going. I
-stood there and looked at the roses and seemed only to wait intensely,
-to watch intensely. And after that came a great calm, and I knew that
-you were not going."
-
-She quietly looked at him again,--her eyes had not been on him while she
-spoke,--and, though he had paled a little, he looked as quietly back.
-
-He found himself accepting, almost as a matter of course, this deep,
-subconscious bond between them.
-
-But in another moment, another realization came. He took her hand and
-raised it to his lips.
-
-"I always make you suffer."
-
-"No," she answered, though she, now, was a little pale, "I didn't
-suffer. I was beyond, above all that. Whatever happened, we were really
-safe. That was another thing I knew."
-
-He relinquished the kissed hand. "Dear Eppie, dear, dear Eppie, I am
-glad that this happened."
-
-It had been, perhaps, to keep the dream safely around them that she had
-shown him only the calm; for now she asked, and he felt the echo of that
-suffering--that shared suffering--in it, "You had, then, chosen to go?"
-
-Somehow he knew that they were safe in the littler sense, that she would
-keep the dream unawakened, even if they spoke of the outside life.
-"Yes," he said, "you saw what was happening to me, Eppie. I had chosen
-to go. But your letter came, and, instead, I chose to come to you."
-
-She asked no further question, walking beside him with all her
-tranquillity.
-
-But, to her, it was not in a second childhood, not in a fairy-tale, that
-they went. She was tranquil, for him; a child, for him; healing,
-unexacting nature, for him. But she knew she had not needed his
-admission to know it, that it was life and death that went together.
-
-Sometimes, as they walked, the whole glory of the day melted into a
-phantasmagoria, unreal, specious, beside the intense reality of their
-unspoken thoughts, his thoughts and hers; those thoughts that left them
-only this little strip of fairy-land where they could meet in peace.
-Thoughts only, not dislikes, not indifferences, sundered them. Their
-natures, through all nature's gamut, chimed; they looked upon each
-other--when in fairy-land--with eyes of love. But above this accord was
-a region where her human breath froze in an icy airlessness, where her
-human flesh shattered itself against ghastly precipices. To see those
-thoughts of Gavan's was like having the lunar landscape suddenly glare
-at one through a telescope. His thoughts and hers were as real as life
-and death; they alone were real; only--and this was why, under its
-burden, Eppie's heart throbbed more deeply, more strongly,--only, life
-conquered death. No, more still,--for so the strange evening vision had
-borne its speechless, sightless witness,--life had already conquered
-death. She had not needed him to tell her that, either.
-
-And these days were life; not the dream he thought them, not the
-fairy-tale, but balmy dawn stealing in, fresh, revivifying, upon his
-long, arctic night; the flush of spring over the lunar landscape. So
-she saw it with her eyes of faith.
-
-The mother was strong in her. She could bide her time. She could see
-death near him and, so that he should not see her fear, smile at him.
-She could play games with him, and wait.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Jim Grainger arrived that evening, and Gavan was able to observe, at the
-closest sort of quarters, his quondam rival.
-
-His condition was so obvious that its very indifference to observation
-took everybody into its confidence. Nobody counted with Mr. Grainger
-except his cousin, and since he held open before her eyes--with angry
-constancy, gloomy patience--the page of his devotion, the rest of the
-company were almost forced to read with her. One couldn't see Mr.
-Grainger without seeing that page.
-
-He held it open, but the period of construing had evidently passed. All
-that there was to understand she understood long since, so that he was,
-for the most part, silent.
-
-In Eppie's presence he would wander aimlessly about, look with an oddly
-irate, unseeing eye at books or pictures, and fling himself into deep
-chairs, where he sat, his arms folded in a sort of clutch, his head bent
-forward, gazing at her with an air of dogged, somber resolve.
-
-He was not by nature so taciturn. It was amusing to see the vehemence of
-reaction that would overtake him in the smoking-room, where his
-volubility became almost as overbearing and oppressive as his silences.
-
-He was a man at once impatient and self-controlled. His face was all
-made up of short, resolute lines. His nose, chopped off at the tip; his
-lips, curled yet compressed; the energetic modeling of his brows with
-their muscular protuberances; the clefted chin; the crest of chestnut
-hair,--all expressed a wilful abruptness, an arrested force, the more
-vehement for its repression.
-
-And at present his appearance accurately expressed him as a determined
-but exasperated lover.
-
-"Of course," Miss Barbara said, in whispered confidence to Gavan,
-mingled pity and reprobation in her voice, "as her cousin he comes when
-he wishes to do so. But she has refused him twice already--he told me so
-himself; and, simply, he will not accept it. He only spoke of it once,
-and it was quite distressing. It really grieved me to hear him. He said
-that he would hang on till one or the other of them was dead."
-Grainger's words in Miss Barbara's voice were the more pathetic for
-their incongruity.
-
-"And you don't think she will have him,--if he does hang on?" Gavan
-asked.
-
-Miss Barbara glanced at him with a soft, scared look, as though his
-easy, colloquial question had turned a tawdry light on some tender,
-twilight dreaming of her own.
-
-He had wondered, anew of late, what Miss Barbara did think about him and
-Eppie, and what she had thought he now saw in her eyes, that showed
-their little shock, as at some rather graceless piece of pretence. He
-was quite willing that she should think him pretending, and quite
-willing that she should place him in Grainger's hopeless category, if
-future events would be most easily so interpreted for her; so that he
-remained silent, as if over his relief, when she assured him, "Oh, I am
-sure not. Eppie does not change her mind."
-
-Grainger's presence, for all its ineffectuality, thus witnessed to by
-Miss Barbara, was as menacing to peace and sunshine as a huge
-thunder-cloud that suddenly heaves itself up from the horizon and hangs
-over a darkened landscape. But Eppie ignored the thunder-cloud; and,
-hanging over fairy-land, it became as merely decorative as an enchanted
-giant tethered at a safe distance and almost amusing in his huge
-helplessness.
-
-Eppie continued to give most of her time to Gavan, coloring her manner
-with something of a hospital nurse's air of devotion to an obvious duty,
-and leaving Grainger largely to the general's care while she and Gavan
-sat reading for hours in the shade of the birch-woods.
-
-Grainger often came upon them so; Eppie in her white dress, her hat cast
-aside, a book open upon her knees, and Gavan, in his white flannels,
-lying beside her, frail and emaciated, not looking at her,--Grainger
-seldom saw him look at her,--but down at the heather that he softly
-pulled and wrenched at. They were as beautiful, seen thus together, as
-any fairy-tale couple; flakes of gold wavering over their whiteness,
-the golden day all about their illumined shade, and rivulets from the
-sea of purple that surrounded them running in among the birches, making
-purple pools and eddies.
-
-Very beautiful, very strange, very pathetic, with all their serenity;
-even the unimaginative Grainger so felt them when, emerging from the
-gold and purple, he would pause before them, swinging his stick and
-eying them oddly, like people in a fairy-tale upon whom some strange
-enchantment rested. One might imagine--but Grainger's imagination never
-took him so far--that they would always sit there among the birches,
-spellbound in their peace, their smiling, magic peace.
-
-"Come and listen to Faust, Jim. We are polishing up our German," Eppie
-would cheerfully suggest; but Grainger, remarking that he had none to
-polish, would pass on, carrying the memory of Gavan's impassive, upward
-glance at him and the meaning in Eppie's eyes--eyes in which, yes, he
-was sure of it, and it was there he felt the pathos, some consciousness
-seemed at once to hide from and to challenge him.
-
-"Is he ill, your young Palairet?" he asked her one day, when they were
-alone together in the library. His rare references to his own emotions
-made the old, cousinly intimacy a frequent meeting-ground.
-
-He noticed that a faint color drifted into Eppie's cheek when he named
-Gavan.
-
-"He is as old as you are, Jim," she remarked.
-
-"He looks like a person to be taken care of, all the same."
-
-"He has been ill. He took care of some one else, as it happens. He
-nursed his father for months."
-
-"Um," Grainger gave an inarticulate grunt, "just about what he's fit
-for, isn't it? to help dying people out of the world."
-
-Eppie received this in silence, and he went on: "He looks rather like a
-priest, or a poet--something decorative and useless."
-
-"Would you call Buddha decorative and useless?"
-
-"After all, Palairet isn't a Hindoo. One expects something more normal
-from a white man."
-
-His odd penetration was hurting her, but she laughed at his complacent
-Anglo-Saxondom. "If you want a white man, what do you make of the one
-who wrote the Imitation?"
-
-"Make of him? Nothing. Nor any one else, I fancy. What does your young
-Palairet do?" Grainger brought the subject firmly back from her
-digression.
-
-Eppie was sitting in the window-seat, and, leaning her head back, framed
-in an arabesque of creepers, she now owned, after a little pause, and as
-if with a weariness of evasion she was willing to let him see as she
-did: "Nothing, really."
-
-"Does he care about anything?" Grainger placed himself opposite her,
-folding his arms with an air of determined inquiry.
-
-And again Eppie owned, "He believes in nothing, so how can he care?"
-
-"Believes in nothing? What do you mean by that?"
-
-"Well," with a real sense of amusement over the inner icy weight, she
-was ready to put it in its crudest, most inclusive terms, "he doesn't
-believe in immortality."
-
-Grainger stared, taken aback by the ingenuous avowal.
-
-"Immortality? No more do I," he retorted.
-
-"Oh, yes, you do," said Eppie, looking not at him but out at the summer
-sky. "You believe in life and so you do believe in immortality, even
-though you don't know that you do. You are, like most energetic people,
-too much preoccupied with living to know what your life means, that's
-all."
-
-"My dear child,"--Grainger was fond of this form of appellation, an
-outlet for the pent-up forces of his baffled tenderness,--"any one who
-is alive finds life worth while without a Paradise to complete it, and
-any one who isn't a coward doesn't turn from it because it's also
-unhappy."
-
-"If you think that Gavan does that you mistake the very essence of his
-skepticism, or, if you like to call it so, of his faith. It's not
-because he finds it unhappy that he turns from it, but because he finds
-it meaningless."
-
-"Meaningless?--a place where one can work, achieve, love, suffer?"
-
-Grainger jerked out the words from an underlying growl of protest.
-
-Eppie now looked from the sky to him, her unconscious ally. "Dear old
-Jim, I like to hear you. You've got it, all. Every word you say implies
-immortality. It's all a question of being conscious of one's real needs
-and then of trusting them."
-
-"Life, here, now, could satisfy my needs," he said.
-
-She kept her eyes on his, at this, for a grave moment, letting it have
-its full stress as she took it up with, "Could it? With death at the end
-of it?" and without waiting for his answer she passed from the personal
-moment. "You said that life was worth while, and you meant, I suppose,
-that it was worth while because we were capable of making it good rather
-than evil."
-
-"Well, of course," said Grainger.
-
-"And a real choice between good and evil is only possible to a real
-identity, you'll own?"
-
-"If you are going to talk metaphysics I'll cut and run, I warn you.
-Socratic methods of tripping one up always infuriate me."
-
-"I'm only trying to talk common-sense."
-
-"Well, go on. I agree to what you say of a real identity. We've that, of
-course."
-
-"Well, then, can an identity destroyed at death by the destruction of
-the body be called real? It can't, Jim. It's either only a result of the
-body, a merely materialistic phenomenon, or else it is a transient,
-unreal aspect of some supremely real World-Self and its good and its
-evil just as fated by that Self's way of thinking it as the color of its
-hair and eyes is fated by nature. And if that were so the sense of
-freedom, of identity, that gives us our only sanction for goodness,
-truth, and worth, would be a mere illusion."
-
-Her earnestness, as she worked it out for him, held his eyes more than
-her words his thoughts. He was observing her with such a softening of
-expression as rarely showed itself on his virile countenance.
-
-"You've thought it all out, haven't you?" he said.
-
-"I've tried to. Knowing Gavan has made me. It has converted me," she
-smiled.
-
-"So that's your conversion."
-
-"Oh, more than that. I know that I'm _in_ life; _for_ it, and that's
-more than all such reasoning."
-
-"And you believe that you'll go on forever as you are now," he said. His
-eyes dwelt on her: "Young and beautiful."
-
-"_Forever_; what queer words we must use to try to express it. We are in
-Forever now. It's just that one casts in one's lot, open-eyed, with
-life."
-
-"And has Palairet cast in his with death?"
-
-Again the change of color was in her cheek, but it was to pallor now.
-
-"He thinks so."
-
-"And he doesn't frighten you?"
-
-She armed herself to smile over Gavan's old question. "Why should he?"
-
-Grainger left her for some moments of aimless, silent wandering. He came
-back and paused again before her. He did not answer her.
-
-"I throw in my lot with life, too, Eppie," he said, "and I ask no more
-of it than the here and the now of our human affair. But that I do ask
-with all my might, and if might can give it to me, I'll get it."
-
-She looked up at him gravely, without challenge, with a sympathy too
-deep for pity.
-
-"At all events," he added slowly, "at all events, in so far, our lots
-are cast together."
-
-"Yes," she assented.
-
-His eyes studied hers; his keen mind questioned itself: Could a woman
-look so steadily, with such a clear, untroubled sympathy, upon such a
-love as his, were there no great emotion within her, controlling her,
-absorbing her, making her indifferent to all lesser appeals? Had this
-negative, this aimless, this ambiguous man, captured, without any fight
-for it, her strong, her reckless heart? So he questioned, while Eppie
-still answered his gaze with eyes that showed him nothing but their
-grave, deep friendship.
-
-"So it's a contest between life and death?" he said at last.
-
-"Between me and Gavan you mean?"
-
-The shield of their personal question had dropped from her again, and
-the quick flush was in her cheek.
-
-"Oh, I come into it, too," he ventured.
-
-"You don't, in any way, depend on it, Jim."
-
-"So you say." His eyes still mercilessly perused her. "That remains to
-be seen. If you lose, perhaps I shall come into it."
-
-Eppie found no answer.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-It was night, and Eppie, Gavan, and Jim Grainger were on the lawn before
-the house waiting for a display of fireworks.
-
-Grainger was feeling sore for his own shutting-out from the happy
-child-world of games and confidences that the other two inhabited, for
-it had been to Gavan that she had spoken of her love for fireworks and
-he who had at once sent for them.
-
-Grainger was sore and his heart heavy, and not only it seemed to him, on
-his own account. Since the encounter in the library there had been a
-veil between him and Eppie, and through it he seemed to see her face as
-waiting the oncoming of some unknown fate. Grainger could not feel that
-fate, whatever the form it took, as a happy one.
-
-She stood between them now, in her white dress, wrapped around with a
-long, white Chinese shawl, and the light from the open window behind
-them fell upon her hair, her neck, her shoulders, and the shawl's soft,
-thick embroideries that were like frozen milk.
-
-Gavan and Grainger leaned against the deep creepers of the old walls,
-Gavan's cigarette a steady little point of light, the glow of
-Grainger's pipe, as he puffed, coming and going in sharp pulses of
-color.
-
-Aunt Barbara sat within at the open window, and beyond the gates, at the
-edge of the moor, the general and the gardener, dark figures fitfully
-revealed by the light of lanterns, superintended the preparations.
-
-The moment was like that in which one watches a poised orchestra, in
-which one waits, tense and expectant, for the fall of the conductor's
-bton and for the first, sweeping note.
-
-It seemed to break upon the stillness, sound made visible, when the
-herald rocket soared up from the dark earth, up to the sky of stars.
-
-Bizarre, exquisite, glorious, it caught one's breath with the swiftness,
-the strength, the shining, of its long, exultant flight; its languor of
-attainment; its curve and droop; the soft shock of its blossoming into
-an unearthly metamorphosis of splendor far and high on the zenith.
-
-The note was struck and after it the symphony followed.
-
-Like a ravished Ganymede, the sense of sight soared amazed among
-dazzling ecstasies of light and movement.
-
-Thin ribbons of fire streaked the sky; radiant sheaves showered drops of
-multitudinous gold; fierce constellations of color whirled themselves to
-stillness on the night's solemn permanence; a rain of stars drifted
-wonderfully, with the softness of falling snow, down gulfs of space. And
-then again the rockets, strong, suave, swift, and their blossoming
-lassitude.
-
-Eppie gazed, silent and motionless, her uplifted profile like a child's
-in its astonished joy. Once or twice she looked round at Gavan and at
-Grainger,--always first at Gavan,--smiling, and speechless with delight.
-Her folded arms had dropped to her sides and the shawl fell straightly
-from her shoulders. She made one think of some young knight, transfixed
-before a heavenly vision, a benediction of revealed beauty. The trivial
-occasion lent itself to splendid analogies. The strange light from above
-bathed her from head to foot in soft, intermittent, heavenly color.
-
-Suddenly, in darkness, Grainger seized her hand. She had hardly felt the
-pressure, short, sharp with all the exasperation of his worship, before
-it was gone.
-
-She did not turn to look at him. More than the unjustifiableness of the
-action, its unexpectedness, she felt a pain, a perplexity, as for
-something mocking, incongruous. And as if in instinctive seeking she
-turned her eyes on Gavan and found that he was looking at her.
-
-Was it, then, her eyes, seeking and perplexed, that compelled him; was
-it his own enfranchised impulse; was it only a continuation of
-fairy-land fitness, the child instinct of sharing in a unison of touch a
-mutual wonder? In the fringes of her shawl his hand sought and found her
-hand. Another rose of joy had expanded on the sky; and they stood so,
-hand in hand, looking up.
-
-Eppie looked up steadily; but now the outer vision was but a dim symbol,
-a reflection, vaguely seen, of the inner vision that, in a miracle of
-accomplished growth, broke upon her. She did not think or know. Her
-heart seemed to dilate, to breathe itself away in long throbs, that
-worshiped, that trembled, that prayed. Her strength was turned to
-weakness and her weakness rose to strength, and, as she looked up at the
-sky, the stars, the dream-like constellations that bloomed and drifted
-away, universes made and unmade on the void, her mind, her heart, her
-spirit were all one prayer and its strength and its humility were one.
-
-She had known that she loved him, but not till now that she loved him
-with a depth that passed beyond knowledge; she had known that he loved
-her, but not till now had she felt that all that lived in him was hers
-forever. His voice, his eyes, might hide, might deny, but the seeking,
-instinctive hand confessed, dumbly, to all.
-
-She had drawn him to her by her will; she had held him back from death
-by her love. His beloved hand clasped hers; she would never let him go.
-
-Looking up at the night, the stars, holding his hand, she gave herself
-to the new life, to all that it might mean of woe and tragedy. Let it
-lead her where it would, she was beside him forever.
-
-Yet, though her spirit held the sky, the stars, her heart, suffocated
-and appalled with love, seemed to lie at his feet, and the inarticulate
-prayer, running through all, said only, over and over, "O God, God."
-
-Meanwhile Grainger leaned against the wall, puffing doggedly at his
-pipe, unrepentant and unsatisfied.
-
-"There, that is the end," Miss Barbara sighed. "How very, very pretty.
-But they have made me quite sleepy."
-
-A few fumes still smoldered at the edge of the moor, and the night, like
-an obscure ocean, was engulfing the lights, the movements; after the
-radiance the darkness was thick, oppressive.
-
-Eppie knew, as Gavan released her hand, that his eyes again sought hers,
-but she would not look at him. What could they say, here and now?
-
-He went on into the house, and Grainger, lingering outside, detained her
-on the steps. "You forgive me?" he said.
-
-She had almost forgotten for what, but fixing her eyes and thoughts upon
-him, she said, "Yes, Jim, of course."
-
-"I couldn't stand it,--you were so lovely," said Grainger; "I didn't
-know that I was such a sentimental brute. But I had no business not to
-stand it. It's my business in life to stand it."
-
-"I am so sorry, Jim," Eppie murmured. "You know, I can do
-nothing--except forgive you."
-
-"I am not ungrateful. I know how good it is of you to put up with me. Do
-I bother you too much, Eppie?"
-
-"No, Jim dear; you don't."
-
-He stood aside for her to enter the house. He saw that, with all her
-effort to be kind, her thought passed from him. Pausing to knock the
-ashes of his pipe against the wall, he softly murmured, "Damn," before
-following her into the house.
-
-Eppie, in her own room, put out her candle and went to the window.
-
-Leaning out, she could see the soft maze of tree-tops emerge from the
-dim abyss beneath. The boughs of the pine-tree made the starlit sky pale
-with their blackness.
-
-This was the window where she and Gavan had stood on the morning of
-Robbie's death. Here Gavan had shuddered, sobbing, in her arms. He had
-suffered, he had been able to love and suffer then.
-
-The long past went before her, this purpose in it all, her purpose; in
-all the young, unconscious beginnings, in the reunion, in her growing
-consciousness of something to oppose, to conquer, to save. And to-night
-had consecrated her to that sacred trust. What lived in him was hers.
-But could she keep him in life? The memory, a dark shadow, of the deep
-indifference that she had seen in his contemplative eyes went with a
-chill over her.
-
-Leaning out, she conquered her own deep fear, looking up at the stars
-and still praying, "O God, God."
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-She could not read his face next day. It showed a change, but the
-significance of the change was hidden from her. He knew that she knew;
-was that it? or did he think that they could still pretend at the
-unchanged fairy-tale where one clasped hands simply, like children? Or
-did he trust her to spare them both, now that she knew?
-
-When they were alone, this, more than all, the pale, jaded face seemed
-to tell her, it would be able to hide nothing; but its strength was in
-evasion; he would not be alone with her.
-
-All the morning he spent with the general and in the afternoon he went
-away, a book under his arm, down to the burn.
-
-From the library window Eppie watched him go. She could see for a long
-time the flicker of his white figure among the distant birches.
-
-She sat in a low chair in the deep embrasure of the window-seat, silent
-and motionless. She felt, after the night's revelation, an apathy,
-mental and physical; a willing pause; a lull of the spirit, that rested
-in its accepted fate, should it be joyful or tragic. The very fact of
-such acceptance partook of both tragedy and joy.
-
-Grainger was with her, walking, as usual, up and down the room, glancing
-at her as he passed and repassed.
-
-He felt, all about him, within and without, the pressure of some crisis;
-and his ignorance, his intuitions, struggling within him, made a
-consciousness, oddly mingled, of sharp pain, deep dread, and,
-superficially, a suffocating irritation, continually rising and
-continually repressed.
-
-Eppie's aspect intensified the mingled consciousness. Her figure, in its
-thin dress of black and white, showed lassitude. With her head thrown
-back against the chair, her hands, long, white, inert, lying along the
-chair-arms, she looked out from the cool shadow of the room at the day,
-fierce in its blue and gold, its sunlight and its wind.
-
-He had seen Gavan pass, so strangely alone; he had watched her watching
-of him. She was languid; but she was patient, she was strong. That was
-part of the suffocation, that such strength, such patience, should be
-devoted to ends so undeserving. More than by mere jealousy, though that
-seethed in him, he was oppressed by the bitter sense of waste, of the
-futile spending of noble capacity; for, more than all, she was piteous;
-there came the part of pain and dread, the presage of doom that weighed
-on his heart.
-
-In her still figure, her steady look out at the empty, splendid vault of
-blue, the monotonous purple stretches of the moor, his unesthetic,
-accurate mind felt, with the sharp intuition that carried him so much
-further than any conscious appreciation, a symbol of the human soul
-contemplating the ominous enigma of its destiny. She made him dimly
-think of some old picture he had seen, a saint, courageous, calm,
-enraptured, in the luminous pause before a dark, accepted martyrdom. He
-did violence to the simile, shaking it off vehemently, with a clutch at
-the sane impatience of silly fancies.
-
-Stopping abruptly before her, though hardly knowing for what end, he
-found himself saying, and the decisive words, as he heard, rather than
-thought them, had indeed the effect of shattering foolish visions, "I
-shall go to-day, Eppie."
-
-In seeing her startled, pained, expostulatory, he saw her again, very
-sanely, as an unfortunate woman bent on doing for herself and unable to
-hide her situation from his keen-sightedness. For really he didn't know
-whether a hopeless love-affair or a hopeless marriage would the more
-completely "do" for her.
-
-"My dear Jim, why to-day?" Eppie asked in a tone of kindest protest.
-
-He was glad to have drawn her down to the solid ground of his own
-grievances. She hurt him less there.
-
-"Why not to-day?" he retorted.
-
-She replied that, if for no better reason, the weather was too lovely
-not to be enjoyed by them all together.
-
-"Thanks, but I don't care about the weather. Nor do I care," Grainger
-went on, taking the sorry comfort that his own mere ill-temper afforded
-him, "to watch other people's enjoyment--of more than weather. I'm not
-made of such selfless stuff as that."
-
-She understood, of course; perhaps she had all along understood what he
-was feeling more clearly than clumsy he had, and she met all that was
-beneath the mannerless words with her air of sad kindliness.
-
-"You can share it, Jim."
-
-"No, I can't share it. I share nothing--except the weather."
-
-She murmured, as she had the night before, that she was sorry, adding
-that she must have failed; but he interrupted her with: "It's not that.
-You are all right. You give me all you can. It's merely that you can't
-give me anything I want. I came to see if there was any chance for me,
-and all I do see is that I may as well be off. I do myself no good by
-staying on,--harm, rather; you may begin to resent my sulkiness and my
-boorish relapses from even rudimentary good manners."
-
-"I have resented nothing, Jim. I can't imagine ever resenting
-anything--from you."
-
-"Ah, that's just the worst of it," Grainger muttered.
-
-"For your own sake," Eppie went on, "you are perhaps wise to go. I own
-that I can't see what happiness you can find in being with me, while you
-feel as you do."
-
-"While I feel as I do," he repeated, not ironically, but as if weighing
-the words in a sort of wonder. "That 'while' is funny, Eppie. You are
-right. I don't find happiness, and I came to seek it." The "while" had
-cut deep. He paused, then added, eying her, "So I'll go, and leave
-Palairet to find the happiness."
-
-Eppie was silent. Paler than before, her eyes dropped, she seemed to
-accept with a helpless magnanimity whatever he might choose to say. "You
-find me impertinent,"--Grainger, standing before her, clutched his arms
-across his chest and put his own thought of himself into the
-words,--"brutal."
-
-Without looking up at him she answered: "I am so fond of you, so near
-you, that I suppose I give you the right."
-
-The patient words, so unlike Eppie in their patience, the downcast eyes,
-were a torch to his exasperation.
-
-"I can take it, then--the right?" he said. "I am near enough to say the
-truth and to ask it, Eppie?"
-
-She rose and walked away from him.
-
-With the sense of hot pursuit that sprang up in him he felt himself as
-ruthless as a boy, pushing through the thickets of reticence, through
-the very supplications of generosity, to the nest of her secret. It was
-not joy he sought, but his own pain, and to see it clearly, finally. He
-must see it. And when Eppie, her back to him, leaning her arm on the
-mantel and looking down into the empty cavern of the great
-chimney-place, answered, accepting all his implications, "Gavan hasn't
-found any happiness," he said, "He finds all that he asks for."
-
-It was as if he had wrenched away the last bough from the nest, and the
-words gave him, with their breathless determination, an ugly feeling of
-cruel, breaking malignity.
-
-Eppie's face was still turned from him so that he could not see how she
-bore the rifling, but in the same dulled and gentle voice she answered,
-"He doesn't ask what you do."
-
-At that Grainger's deepest resentment broke out.
-
-"Doesn't ask your love? No, I suppose not. The man's a mollusk,--a
-wretched, diseased creature."
-
-He had struck at last a flash from her persistent gentleness. She faced
-him, and he saw that she tried to smile over deep anger.
-
-"You say that because Gavan is not in love with me? It is a sick fancy
-that sees every man not in love with me as sick too."
-
-She had taken up a weapon at last, she really challenged him; and he
-felt, full on that quivering nerve of dread, that she defended at once
-herself and the man she loved from her own and from his unveiling.
-
-It made a sort of rage rise in him.
-
-"A man who cares for you,--a man who depends on you,--as he does,--a man
-whom you care for,--so much,--is a bloodless vampire if he
-doesn't--respond."
-
-When he had driven the knife in like that, straight up to the hilt, he
-hardly knew whether his anger or his adoration were the greater; for, as
-if over a disabling wound, she bent her head in utter surrender, quite
-still for a moment, and then saying only, while she looked at him as if
-more sorry for him than for herself, "You hurt me, Jim."
-
-Tears of fury stood in his eyes. "You hurt, too. My love for you--a
-disease. _My_ love, Eppie!"
-
-"Forgive me."
-
-"Forgive you! I worship everything you say or do!"
-
-"It was that it hurt too much to see--what you did, with your eyes."
-
-"Then--then--you don't deny it,--if I have eyes to see, he too must
-see--how much you care?"
-
-"I don't deny it."
-
-"And if I have courage enough to ask it, you have courage enough to
-answer me? You love him, Eppie?"
-
-He had come to her, his eyes threatening her, beseeching her, adoring
-her, all at once. She saw it all--all that he felt, and the furious pity
-that was deeper than his own deep pain. She could resent nothing, deny
-nothing. As she had said, he was so near.
-
-She put her hand on his shoulder, keeping him from her, yet accepting
-him as near, and then all that she found to say--but it was in a voice
-that brought a rapt pallor to his face--was, "Dear Jim."
-
-He understood her--all that she accepted, all that she avowed. Her hand
-was that of a comrade in misfortune. She forgave brutality from a heart
-as stricken as his. She forgave even his cruelly clear seeing of her own
-desperate case--a seeing that had revealed to her that it was indeed
-very desperate. But if she too was stricken, she too was resolute, and
-she could do no more for him than look with him at the truth. Their
-eyes recognized so many likenesses in each other.
-
-He took the hand at last in both his own, looking down at it, pressing
-it hard.
-
-"Poor darling," he said.
-
-"No, Jim."
-
-"Yes; even if he loves you."
-
-"Even if he doesn't love me--and he does love me in a strange, unwilling
-way; but even if he doesn't love me,--as you and I mean love,--I am not
-piteous."
-
-"Even if he loves you, you are piteous." All his savagery had fallen
-from him. His quiet was like the slow dropping of tears.
-
-"No, Jim. There is the joy of loving. You know that."
-
-"You are more piteous than I, Eppie. You, _you_, to sue to such a man.
-He is the negation of everything you mean. To live with him would be
-like fighting for breath. If you marry him,--if you bring him to
-it,--he'll suffocate you."
-
-"No, Jim," she repeated,--and now, looking up, he saw in those beloved
-eyes the deep wells of solemn joy,--"I am the stronger."
-
-"In fighting, yes, perhaps. Not in every-day, passive life. He'll kill
-you."
-
-"Even if he kills me he'll not conquer me."
-
-He shook away the transcendentalism with a gentle impatience, "Much good
-that would do to me, who would only know that you were gone. Oh,
-Eppie!--"
-
-He pressed and let fall her hand.
-
-The words of the crisis were over. Anything else would be only, as it
-were, the filling in of the grave.
-
-He had walked away from her to the window, and said presently, while he
-looked out: "And I thought that you were ambitious. I loved you for it,
-too. I didn't want a wife who would acquiesce in the common lot or make
-a virtue of incapacity. I wanted a woman who would rather fail,
-open-eyed, in a big venture than rest in security. You would have
-buckled the sword on a man and told him that he must conquer high places
-for you. You would have told him that he must crown you and make you
-shine in the world's eyes, as well as in his own. And I could do it. You
-are so worthy of all the biggest opportunities and so unfit for little
-places. It's so stupid, you know," he finished, "that you aren't in love
-with me."
-
-"It is stupid, I own it," Eppie acquiesced.
-
-He found a certain relief in following these bitterly comic aspects of
-their case and presently took it up again with: "I am so utterly the man
-for you and he is so utterly not the man. I don't mean that I'm big
-enough or enough worth your while, but at least I could give you
-something, and I could fight for you. He won't fight, for you, or for
-anything."
-
-"I shall have to do all the fighting if I get him."
-
-"You want him so that you don't mind anything else. I see that."
-
-"Exactly. For a long time I didn't know how I loved him just because I
-had always taken all that you are saying for granted, in the funniest,
-most navely conceited way; I took it for granted that I was a very big
-person and that the man I married must stand for big opportunities. Now,
-you see," she finished, "he is my big opportunity."
-
-He was accepting it all now with no protest. "Next to no money, I
-suppose?" he questioned simply.
-
-"Next to none, Jim."
-
-"It means obscurity, unless a man has ambition."
-
-"It means all the things I've always hated." She smiled a little over
-these strange old hatreds.
-
-Again a silence fell, and it was again Grainger who broke it.
-
-"You may as well let me have the last drop of gall," he said. "Own that
-if it hadn't been for him you might have come to care for me."
-
-Still he did not look at her, and it was easier, so, to let him have the
-last gulp.
-
-"I probably should."
-
-He meditated the mixed flavor for some moments; pure gall would have
-been easier to swallow. And he took refuge at last in school-boy
-phraseology. "I should like to break all the furniture in the room."
-
-"I should like to break some, too," she rejoined, but she laughed out
-suddenly at this anticlimax, and, even before the unbroken heaviness of
-the gaze now turned on her, that comic aspect of their talk, the dearly,
-sanely comic, carried her laugh into a peal as boyish as his words.
-
-Grainger still gazed at her. "I love that in you," he said--"your laugh.
-You could laugh at death."
-
-"Ah, Jim," she said, smiling on, though with the laughter tears had come
-to her eyes, "it's a good deal more difficult to laugh at life,
-sometimes. And we both have to do a lot of living before we can laugh at
-death."
-
-"A lot of living," he repeated. His stern, firm face had a queer grimace
-of pain at the prospect of it, and again she put out her hand to him.
-
-"Let me count for as much as I can, always," she said. "You will always
-count for so much with me."
-
-He had taken the hand, and he looked at her in a long silence that
-promised, accepted, everything.
-
-But an appeal, a demand, wistful yet insistent, came into his silence as
-he looked--looked at the odd, pale, dear face, the tawny, russet hair,
-the dear, deep eyes.
-
-"I'm going now," he said, holding to his breast the hand she had given
-him. "And I will ask one thing of you--a thing I've never had and never
-shall, I suppose, again."
-
-"What is it, Jim?" But before his look she almost guessed and the
-guessing made her blanch.
-
-"Let me take you in my arms and kiss you," said Grainger.
-
-"Ah, Jim!" Seeing herself as cruel, ungenerous, she yet, in a recoil of
-her whole nature, seemed to snatch from him a treasure, unclaimed, but
-no longer hers to give.
-
-Grainger eyed her. "You could. You would--if it weren't for him."
-
-"You understand that, too, Jim. I could and would."
-
-"He robs me of even that, then--your gift of courageous pity."
-
-His comprehension had arrested the recoil. And now the magnanimity she
-felt in him, the tragic force of the love he had seen barred from her
-forever, set free in her something greater than compassion and deeper
-than little loyalties, deeper than the lesser aspects of her own deep
-love. It was that love itself that seemed, with an expansion of power,
-to encircle all life, all need, all sorrow, and to find joy in
-sacrificing what was less to what was greater.
-
-He saw the change that, in its illumined tenderness, shut away his
-craving heart yet drew him near for the benison that it could grant, and
-as she said to him, "No, Jim, he shall not rob you," his arms went round
-her.
-
-She shut her eyes to the pain there must be in enduring his passion of
-gratitude; but, though he held her close, kissing her cheeks, her brow,
-her hair, it was with a surprising, an exquisite tenderness.
-
-The pain that came for her was when,--pausing to gaze long into her
-face, printing forever upon his mind the wonderful memory of what she
-could look like, for him--he kissed her lips; it came in a pang of
-personal longing; in a yearning, that rose and stifled her, for other
-arms, other kisses; and, opening her eyes, she saw, an ironic answer to
-the inner cry, Gavan's face outside, turned upon her in an instant of
-swift passing.
-
-Grainger had not seen. He did not speak another word to her. The kiss
-upon her lips had been in farewell. He had had his supreme moment. He
-let her go and left her.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-Gavan came up from the burn, restless and dissatisfied.
-
-He had wanted solitude, escape; but when he was alone, and walking
-beside the sun-dappled water, the loneliness weighed on him and he had
-seemed to himself walking with his own ghost, looking into eyes familiar
-yet alien, with curiosity and with fear. Was it he or that phantom of
-the solitude who smiled the long, still smile of mockery?
-
-How he wanted something and how he wanted not to want; to be freed from
-the intolerable stirring and striving within him, as of a maimed thing,
-with half-atrophied wings, that could never rise and fly to its goal. It
-was last night that had wakened this turmoil, and as he walked his
-thought turned and turned about those moments under the dazzling sky
-when he had found her hand in the fringes of her shawl.
-
-He knew that there had been a difference in the yielding of her hand, as
-he had known, in his own helpless stretching out for it in the darkness,
-another impulse than that of childlike tenderness. It had been as if
-some deep, primeval will beneath his own had stretched his hand out,
-searching in the dark; and with the strange blissfulness of so standing
-with her beneath the stars, there came a strange, new fear, as though he
-no longer knew himself and were become an automaton held by some
-incalculable force.
-
-Wandering through the woods in the hope of rentering nature's
-beneficent impersonality, he felt no anodynes--only that striving and
-stirring within him of maimed limbs and helpless wings.
-
-There was no refuge in nature, and there was none in himself. The
-thought of Eppie as refuge did not form itself, but it was again in
-seeking, as if through darkness for he knew not what, that he turned to
-the house. And then, on all his tangled mood, fell the vibrating shock
-of that vision at the window.
-
-With his quick looking away he did not know whether Eppie had seen him
-see. He went on, knowing nothing definite, until, suddenly, as if some
-fierce beast had seized him, he found himself struggling, choking, torn
-by a hideous, elemental jealousy.
-
-He stood still in the afternoon sunlight as he became aware of this
-phenomenon in himself, his hands involuntarily clenched, staring as if
-at a palpable enemy.
-
-The savage, rudimentary man had sprung up in him. He hated Grainger. He
-longed to beat him into the earth, to crush the breath out of him; and
-for a moment, most horrible of all,--a moment that seemed to set fangs
-in his throat,--he could not tell whether he more hated Eppie or more
-desired to tear her from the rival, to seize her and bear her away, with
-a passion untouched by any glamour.
-
-And Gavan was conscious, through it all, that only inhuman heights made
-possible such crumbling, crashing falls into savagedom; conscious that
-Grainger could not have known such thoughts. They were as ugly as those
-of a Saint Anthony. Wholesome manhood would recoil from their
-debasement. He, too, recoiled, but the debasement was within him, he
-could not flee from it. The moment of realization, helpless realization,
-was long. Ultra-civilization stood and watched barbarian hordes swarm
-over its devastated ruins. Then, with a feeling of horrible shame, a
-shame that was almost a nausea, he went on into the house.
-
-In his own room he sat down near the window, took his head in his hands,
-the gesture adding poignancy to his humiliation, and gazed at the truth.
-He had stripped himself of all illusion only to make himself the more
-helpless before its lowest forms. More than the realized love was the
-realized jealousy; more than the anguish at the thought of having lost
-her was the rage of the dispossessed, unsatisfied brute. Such love
-insulted the loved woman. He could not escape from it, but he could not
-feel the added grace and piety that, alone, could make it tolerable.
-From the fixed contemplation of his own sensations his mind dropped
-presently to the relief of more endurable thoughts. To feel the mere
-agony of loss was a dignifying and cleansing process. For, apparently,
-he had lost her. It was strange, almost unthinkable, that it should be
-so, and stranger the more he thought. He, who had never claimed, had no
-right to feel a loss. But he had not known till now how deep was his
-consciousness of their union.
-
-She had long ago guessed the secret of the voiceless, ambiguous love
-that could flutter only as far as pain, that could never rise to
-rapture. She had guessed that behind its half-tortured, momentary smile
-was the impersonal Buddha-gaze; and because she so understood its
-inevitable doom she had guarded herself from its avowal--guarded herself
-and him. He had trusted her not to forget the doom, and not to let him
-forget it, for a moment. But all the time he had known that in her eyes
-he was captive to some uncanny fate, and that could she release him from
-his chains her love would answer his. He had been sure of it. Hence his
-present perplexity.
-
-Perplexity began to resolve itself into a theory of commonplace
-expediency, and, feeling the irony of such resentment, he resented this
-tame sequel to their mute relationship.
-
-Unconsciously, he had assumed that had he been able to ask her to be his
-wife she would have been able to consent. Her courage, in a sense, would
-have been the reward of his weakness, for what he would see in himself
-as weakness she would see as strength. Courage on her part it certainly
-would have needed, for what a dubious offering would his have been:
-glamour, at its best,--a helpless, drugged glamour,--and, at its worst,
-the mere brute instinct that, blessedly, this winding path of thought
-led him away from.
-
-But she had probably come to despair of releasing him from chains, had
-come to see clearly that at the end of every avenue she walked with him
-the Buddha statue would be waiting in a serenity appalling and
-permanent; and, finding last night the child friendship dangerously
-threatened, discovering that the impossible love was dangerously real
-and menaced both their lives, she had swiftly drawn back, she had
-retreated to the obvious safeguards of an advantageous marriage. He
-couldn't but own that she was wise and right; more wise, more
-right,--there was the odd part of it, the unadjusted bit where
-perplexity stung him,--than he could have expected her to be. Ambition
-and the common-sense that is the very staff of life counted for much, of
-course; but he hadn't expected them to count so soon, so punctually, as
-it were.
-
-Perhaps,--and his mind, disentangled from the personal clutch where such
-an interpretation might have hurt or horrified, safe once more on its
-Stylites pillar, dwelt quite calmly on this final aspect,--perhaps, with
-her, too, sudden glamour and instinct had counted, answering the appeal
-of Grainger's passion. He suspected the whole fabric of the love between
-men and women to be woven of these blind, helpless impulses,--impulses
-that created their own objects. Her mind, with its recognition of
-danger, had chosen Grainger as a fitting mate, and, in his arms, she had
-felt that justification by the senses that people so funnily took for
-the final sanctification of choice.
-
-This monkish understanding of the snares of life was quite untouched by
-monkish reprobation; even the sense of resentment had faded. And it
-spoke much for the long training of his thought in the dissecting and
-destroying of transitory desires that he was presently able to
-contemplate his loss--as he still must absurdly term it--with an icy
-tranquillity.
-
-A breathlessness, as from some drastic surgical operation, was beneath
-it, but that was of the nature of a mere physical symptom, destined to
-readjust itself to lopped conditions; and with the full turning of his
-mind from himself came the fuller realization of how well it was with
-Eppie and a cold, acquiescent peace that, in his nature, was the
-equivalent for an upwelling of religious gratitude, for her salvation.
-
-But the stress of the whole strange seizure, wrench and renouncement had
-told on him mentally and physically. Every atom of his being, as if from
-some violent concussion, seemed altered, shifted.
-
-The change was in his face when, in the closing dusk of the day, he went
-down to the library. It was not steeled to the hearing of the news that
-must await him: such tension of endurance had passed swiftly into his
-habitual ease; but a look of death had crossed and marked it. It looked
-like a still, drowned face, sinking under deep waters, and Eppie, in her
-low chair near the window, where she had sat for many hours, saw in his
-eyes the awful, passionless detachment from life.
-
-After his pause at the unexpected sight of her, sitting there alone, a
-pause in which she did not speak, although he saw that her eyes were on
-him, he went on softly down the room, glancing out at each window as he
-passed it; and he looked, as he went, like an evening moth, drifting,
-aimless, uncanny.
-
-Outside, the moor stretched like a heavily sighing ocean, desolate and
-dark, to the horizon where, from behind the huge rim of the world, the
-sun's dim glow, a gloomy, ominous red, mounted far into the sky.
-
-Within the room, a soft, magical color pervaded the dusk, touching
-Eppie's hair, her hands, the vague folds and fallings of her dress.
-
-He waited for her to speak, though it seemed perfectly fitting that
-neither should. In the silence, the sadness of this radiant gloom, they
-needed no words to make more clear the accepted separation, and the
-silence, the sadness, were like a bleeding to quiet, desired death.
-
-The day was dying, and the instable, impossible love was dying, too.
-
-She had let go, and he quietly sank.
-
-But when she spoke her words were like sharp air cutting into drowned
-lungs.
-
-"I saw you pass this afternoon, Gavan."
-
-From the farthest window, where he had paused, he turned to her.
-
-"Did you, Eppie?"
-
-"Didn't you see that I did?"
-
-"I wasn't sure." He heard the flavor of helplessness in his own voice
-and felt in her a hard hostility, pleased to play with his helplessness.
-
-"Why did you not speak of what you saw?" Her anger against him was
-almost like a palpable presence between them in the dark, glowing room.
-He began to feel that through some ugly blunder he was very much at her
-mercy, and that, for the first time, he should find little mercy in her;
-and, for the first time, too, a quick hostility rose in him to answer
-hers. It was as if he had tasted too deeply of release; all his strength
-was with him to fight off the threat of the returning grasp.
-
-"Why should I?" he asked, letting her see in his gaze at her that just
-such a hard placidity would meet any interpretation she chose to give.
-
-"Didn't you care to understand?"
-
-"I thought that I did understand."
-
-"What did you think, then?" Eppie asked.
-
-He had to give her the helpless answer. "That you had accepted him."
-
-He knew, now, that she hadn't, and that for him to have thought so was
-to have cruelly wronged her; and she took it in a long silence, as
-though she must give herself time to see it clearly, to adjust herself
-to it and to all that it meant--in him, for her.
-
-What it meant, in her and for him, was filling his thoughts with a dizzy
-enough whirl of readjustment, and there mingled with it a strange
-after-flavor of the jealousy, and of the resentment against her; for,
-after all, though he had probably now an added reason for considering
-himself a warped wretch, there had been some reason for his mistake: if
-she hadn't accepted him, why had he seen her so?
-
-"Jim is gone," she said at last.
-
-"Because--It was unwillingly, then?"
-
-The full flame of her scorn blazed out at that, but he felt, like an
-echo of tears in himself, that she would have burst into tears of
-wretchedness if she had not been able so to scorn him.
-
-"Unwillingly! Why should you think him insolent and me helpless? Can
-you conceive of nothing noble?" she said.
-
-"I am sorry, Eppie. I have been stupid."
-
-"You have--more than stupid. He was going and he asked me for that. And
-I gave it--proudly."
-
-"I am sorry," Gavan repeated. "I see, of course. Of course it was
-noble."
-
-"You should be more than sorry. You knew that I did not love him."
-
-"I am more than sorry. I am ashamed," he answered gravely.
-
-He had the dignity of full contrition; but under it, unshaken after all,
-was the repudiation of the nearness that her explanation revealed. His
-heart throbbed heavily, for he saw, as never before, how near it was;
-yet he had never feared her less. He had learned too much that afternoon
-to fear her. He was sure of his power to save her from what he had so
-fully learned.
-
-He looked away from her and for long out at the ebbing red, and it was
-the unshaken resolve that spoke at last. "But all the same I am sorry
-that it was only that. He would have made you happy."
-
-"You knew that I did not love him," Eppie repeated.
-
-"With time, as his wife, you might love him." Facing her, now, folding
-his arms, he leaned back against the mantel at his far end of the room.
-"I know that I've seemed odiously to belittle and misunderstand you, and
-I am ashamed, Eppie--more ashamed than you can guess; but, in another
-way, it wasn't so belittling, either. I thought you very wise and
-courageous. I thought that you had determined to take the real thing
-that life offered you and to turn your back, for once and for all,
-on--on unreal things." He stopped at that, as though to let it have its
-full drop, and Eppie, her eyes still fixed on him from her distant
-chair, made no answer and no sign of dissent.
-
-As he spoke a queer, effervescent blitheness had come to him, a light
-indifference to his own cruelty; and the hateful callousness of his
-state gave him a pause of wonder and interest. However, he couldn't help
-it; it was the reaction, no doubt, from the deep disgust of his
-abasement, and it helped him, as nothing else would have done,
-thoroughly to accomplish his task.
-
-"He can give you all the things you need," he went on, echoing poor
-Grainger's _naf_ summing up of his own advantages. "He has any amount
-of money, and a very big future before him; and then, really above all,
-you do care for him so much. You see the same things in life. You
-believe in the same things; want the same things. If you would take him
-he would never fail you in anything."
-
-Still her heavy silence was unbroken. He waited in vain for a sign from
-her, and in the silence the vibration of her dumb agony seemed to reach
-him, so that, with all the callousness, he had to conquer an impulse to
-go to her and see if she wept. But when he said, "I wish you would take
-him, Eppie," and she at last answered him, there were no tears in her
-voice.
-
-"I will never take him."
-
-"Don't say that," he replied. "One changes."
-
-"Is that a taunt?"
-
-"Not a taunt--a reminder."
-
-She rose and came to him, walking down the long room, past the somber
-illuminations of the windows, straight to him. They stood face to face,
-bathed in the unearthly light. All their deep antagonism was there
-between them, almost a hatred, and the love that swords clashed over.
-
-"You do not believe that of me," she said.
-
-He was ready and unfaltering, and was able to smile at her, a bright,
-odd smile. "I believe it of any one."
-
-It was love that eyed him--love more stern, more relentless in its
-silence than if she had spoken it, and never had she been so near as
-when, sending her clarion of open warfare across the abyss, she said, "I
-will never change--to you."
-
-The words, the look,--a look of solemn defiance,--shattered forever the
-palace of pretence that they had dwelt in for so long. Till now, it
-might have stood for them. In its rainbow chambers they might still have
-smiled and sorrowed and eluded each other, only glanced through the
-glittering casements at the dark realities outside; but when the word of
-truth was spoken, casements, chambers, turrets, fell together and
-reality rushed in. She had spoken the word. After that it was impossible
-to pretend anything.
-
-Gavan, among the wreck, had grown pale; but he kept his smile fixed,
-even while he, too, spoke the new language of reality.
-
-"I am afraid of you, then."
-
-"Of course you are afraid of me."
-
-Still he smiled. "I am afraid _for_ you."
-
-"Of course you are. You have your moments of humanity."
-
-"I have. And so I shall go to-morrow," said Gavan.
-
-She looked at him in silence, her face taking on its haggard,
-unbeautiful aspect of strange, rocky endurance. And never had his mind
-been more alert, more mocking, more aloof from any entanglement of
-feeling than while he saw her love and his; saw her sorrow and his
-sorrow--his strange, strange sorrow that, like a sick, helpless child,
-longed, in its darkness, its loneliness, to hide its head on her breast
-and to feel her arms go round it. Love and sorrow were far, far away--so
-far that it was as if they had no part at all in himself, as if it were
-not he that felt them.
-
-"Are you so afraid as that?" Eppie asked.
-
-"After last night?" he answered. "After what I felt when I saw you here,
-with him? After this? Of course I am as afraid as that. I must flee--for
-your life, Eppie. I am its shadow--its fatal shadow."
-
-"No, I am yours. Life is the shadow to you."
-
-"Well, on both sides, then, we must be afraid," he assented.
-
-She made no gesture, no appeal. Her face was like a rock. It was only
-that deep endurance and, under it, that deep threat. Never, never would
-she allure; never draw him to her; never build in her cathedral a
-Venusberg for him. He must come to her. He must kneel, with her, before
-her altar. He must worship, with her, her God of suffering and triumph.
-And, the dying light making her face waver before his eyes with a
-visionary strangeness, stern and angelic, he seemed to see, deep in her
-eyes, the burning of high, sacramental candles.
-
-That was the last he saw. In silence she turned and went. And what she
-left with him was the sad, awed sense of beauty that he knew when
-watching kneeling multitudes bowed before the great myth of the
-Church,--in silence, beneath dim, soaring heights. He was near humanity
-in such moments of self-losing, when the cruder myth of the great world,
-built up by desire, slipped from it. And Eppie, in this symbolic seeing
-of her, was nearer than when he desired or feared her. Beauty, supreme
-and disenfranchising, he saw. He did not know what he felt.
-
-Far away, on the horizon, in the gloomy waste of embers, the sun's deep
-core still burned, and in his heart was a deep fatigue, like the sky's
-slow smoldering to gray.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Grainger had gone, and Gavan announced his departure for the next
-morning. The situation was simplified, he felt, by Eppie's somber
-preoccupation. He was very willing that she should be seen as a gloomy
-taker of scalps and that his own should be supposed to be hanging at her
-girdle. The resultant muteness and melancholy in the general and Miss
-Barbara were really a comfort. The dear old figures in the tapestry
-seemed fading to-night into mere plaintive shadows, fixing eyes of sad
-but unquestioning contemplation upon the latent tragedies of the
-foreground figures.
-
-It was a comfort to have the tapestry so reticent and so submissive,
-but, all the same, it made the foreground tragedy, for his eyes,
-painfully distinct. He could look at nothing else. Eppie seemed to
-stand, with her broken and bleeding heart, in the very center of the
-design. For the first time he saw what the design was--saw all of it,
-from the dim reaches of the past, as working to this end.
-
-The weaving of fate was accomplished. There she stood, suffering,
-speechless, and he, looking at her, fatal shuttle of her doom that he
-was, felt under all the ashes a dull throbbing.
-
-After dinner he smoked a cigar with the general, who, tactfully, as to
-one obviously maimed, spoke only of distant and impersonal matters.
-Gavan left him over some papers in the quiet light of the smoking-room
-and went to the library. Eppie, with her broken heart, was not there.
-The night was very hot. By an open window Miss Barbara sat dozing, her
-hands upturned with an appealing laxity on her knees, sad even in her
-sleep.
-
-Eppie was not there and she had not spoken one word to him since those
-last words of the afternoon. Perhaps she intended to speak no more, to
-see him no more. Pausing on the threshold, he was now conscious of a
-slow, rising misery.
-
-If he was to be spared the final wrench, he was also to be robbed of
-something. He hadn't known, till then, of how much. He hadn't known,
-while she stood there before him, this fully revealed Eppie, this Eppie
-who loved far beyond his imagining, far beyond prudence, ambition, even
-happiness, what it would be not to see her again, to part from her
-speechlessly, and with a sort of enmity unresolved between them.
-
-The cathedral simile was still with him, not in her interpretation of
-it, as the consecration of human love, but in his own, as a place of
-peace, where together they might still kneel in farewell.
-
-But she barred him out from that; she wouldn't accept such peace. He
-could only submit and own that she was perhaps altogether right in
-risking no more battles and in proudly denying to him the opportunity of
-any reconciling. She was right to have it end there; but the core among
-the embers ached.
-
-He wandered out into the dark, vague night, sorrowfully restless.
-
-It was not a radiant night. The trees and the long undulations of the
-moorland melted into the sky, making all about a sea of enveloping
-obscurity. The moor might have been the sky but for its starlessness;
-and there were few stars to-night, and these, large and soft, seemed to
-float like helpless expanded flowers on a still ocean.
-
-A night for wandering griefs to hide in, to feel at one with, and, with
-an instinct that knew that it sorrowed but hardly knew that it sought,
-Gavan went on around the house, through the low door in the garden wall,
-and into the garden.
-
-Here all the warmth and perfume of the summer day seemed still to exhale
-itself in a long sigh like that of a peaceful sleeper. Earth, trees,
-fruit, and flowers gave out their drowsy balms. Veiled beauty, dreaming
-life, were beneath, above, about him, and the high walls inclosed a
-place of magic, a shadow paradise.
-
-He walked on, past white phlox, white pansies, and white foxglove,
-through the little trellis where white jasmine starred its festoons of
-frail, melancholy foliage, and under the low boughs of the small,
-gnarled fruit-trees. Near the summer-house he paused, looking in at the
-darkness and seeing there the figures of the past--two children at play.
-His heart ached on dully, the smoldering sorrow rising neither to
-passionate regret nor to passionate longing, acquiescing in its own
-sorrow that was part of the vision. Moved by that retrospect, he stepped
-inside.
-
-The sweet old odor, so well remembered, half musty, half fresh, of
-cobwebbed wood, lichened along the lintels and doorway beams, assailed
-him while he groped lightly around the walls, automatically reaching out
-his hand to the doll's locker, the little row of shelves, the low,
-rustic bench and the table that, he remembered as it rocked slightly
-under his touch, had always been unsteady. All were in their old,
-accustomed places, and among them he saw himself a ghost, some
-sightless, soundless creature hovering in the darkness.
-
-The darkness and the familiar forms he evoked from it grew oppressive,
-and he stepped out again into the night, where, by contrast with the
-uncanny blindness, he found a new distinctness of form, almost of color,
-and where a memory, old and deep, seemed to seize him with gentle,
-compelling hands, in the fragrance of the white roses growing near the
-summer-house. Wine-like and intoxicating, it filled the air with magic;
-and he had gone but a few steps farther when, like a picture called up
-by the enchantment, he saw the present, the future too, it seemed, and,
-with a shock that for all its quiet violence was not unexpected, stood
-still to gaze, to feel in the one moment of memory and forecast all his
-life gathered into his contemplation.
-
-Eppie sat on a low garden bench in the garden's most hidden corner. With
-the fresh keenness of sight he could see the clustering white roses on
-the wall behind her, see against them the darkness of her hair, the
-whiter whiteness of her dress, as she sat there with head a little bent,
-looking down, the long white shawl folded about her.
-
-It was no longer the Eppie of the past, not even the Eppie of the
-present: the present was only that long pause. It was the future that
-waited there, silent, motionless, almost as if asleep; waited for the
-word and touch that would reveal it.
-
-She had not heard his light step, and it seemed to be in the very
-stillness of his pause that the sense of his presence came to her.
-Raising her head she looked round at him.
-
-He could only see the narrow oval of her face, but he felt her look; it
-seized him, compelling as the fragrance had been--compelling but not
-gentle. He felt it like firm hands upon him while he walked on slowly
-toward her, and not until he was near her, not until he had sat down
-beside her, did he see as well as feel her fixed and hostile gaze.
-
-All swathed and infolded as she was, impalpable and unsubstantial in the
-darkness, her warm and breathing loveliness was like the aroma of a
-midnight flower. She was so beautiful sitting there, a blossoming of the
-darkness, that her beauty seemed aware of itself and of its appeal; and
-it was as if her soul, gazing at him, dominated the appeal; menaced him
-should he yield to it; yet loved, ah, loved him with a love the greater
-for the courage, the will, that could discipline it into this set, stern
-stillness.
-
-Yes, here was the future, and what was he to do with it? or, rather,
-what was it to do with him? He was at her mercy.
-
-He had leaned near her, his hand on the bench, to look into her eyes,
-and in a shaken, supplicating voice he said, "Eppie, Eppie, what do you
-want?"
-
-Without change, looking deeply at him, she answered, "You."
-
-That crashed through him. He was lost, drowned, in the mere sense of
-beauty--the beauty of the courage that could so speak and so hold him at
-the point of a sword heroically drawn. And with the word the future
-seized him. He hid his face upon her shoulder and his arms went round
-her. Her breast heaved. For a moment she sat as if stricken with
-astonishment. Then, but with sternness, as of a just and angry mother,
-she clasped him, holding him closely but untenderly.
-
-"I did not mean this," she said.
-
-"No; but you _are_ it," Gavan murmured.
-
-She held him in the stern, untender clasp, her head drawn back from him,
-while, slowly, seeking her words over the tumult she subdued, she said:
-"It's _you_ I want--not your unwilling longing, not your unwilling love.
-I want you so that I can be really myself; I want you so that you can be
-really yourself."
-
-He strained her to him, hiding his face on her breast.
-
-"Can't you live? Can't you be--if I help you?" she asked him.
-
-For a long time he was silent, only pressing closely to her as though
-to hide himself from her questions--from his own thoughts.
-
-He said at last: "I can't think, Eppie. Your words go like birds over my
-head. Your suffering, my longing, hurt me; but it's like the memory of a
-hurt. I am apart from it, even while I feel it. Even while I love
-you--oh, Eppie! Eppie!--I don't care. But when we are like this--at last
-like this--I am caught back into it all, all that I thought I'd got over
-forever, this afternoon,--all the dreadful dream--the beautiful dream.
-It's for this I've longed--you have known it: to hold you, to feel your
-breath on me, to dream with you. How beautiful you are, how sweet! Kiss
-me, Eppie,--darling, darling Eppie!"
-
-"I will not kiss you. It would be real to me."
-
-He had raised his head and was seeing now the suffering of her shadowy
-eyes, the shadowy lips she refused him tragically compressed lest they
-should tremble. Behind her pale head and its heavy cloud of hair were
-the white roses giving out--how his mind reeled with the memory of
-it--the old, sweet, wine-like fragrance.
-
-He closed his eyes to the vision, bending his lips to her hand, saying:
-"Yes, that's why I wanted to spare you--wanted to run away."
-
-In the little distance now of his drawing from her, even while he still
-held her, his cheek on her hand, she could speak more easily.
-
-"It is that that enrages me,--your mystic sickness. I am awake, but you
-aren't even dreaming. You are drugged--drugged with thought not strong
-enough to find its real end. You have paralyzed yourself. No argument
-could cure you. No thought could cure you. Only life could cure you. You
-must get life, and to get it you must want it."
-
-"I don't want it. I can't want it. I only want you," said Gavan, with
-such a different echo.
-
-She understood, more fully than he, perhaps, the helpless words.
-
-Above his bowed head, her face set, she looked out into the night. Her
-mind measured, coldly it seemed to her, the strength of her own faith
-and of his negation.
-
-Her love, including but so far transcending all natural cravings, had
-its proud recoil from the abasement--oh, she saw it all!--that his
-limitation would bring to it. Yet, like the mother again, adapting truth
-to the child's dim apprehension, leading it on by symbols, she brooded
-over her deep thoughts of redemption and looked clearly at all dangers
-and all hopes. Faith must face even his unspiritual seeing. Faith must
-endure his worse than pagan love. Bound to her by every natural tie, her
-strength must lift him, through them, to their spiritual aspect, to
-their reality. Life was her ally. She must put her trust in life. She
-consecrated herself to it anew. Let it lead her where it would.
-
-The long moment of steady forecast had, after its agony of shame and
-fear, its triumph over both.
-
-He felt the deep sigh that lifted her breast--it was almost a sob; but
-now her arms took him closely, gently, to her and her voice had the
-steadfastness, no longer of rejection, but of acceptance.
-
-"Gavan, dream with me, then; that's better than being drugged. Perhaps
-you will wake some day. There, I kiss you."
-
-She said it, and with the words his lips were on hers.
-
-In the long moment of their embrace he had a strange intuition.
-Something was accomplished; some destiny that had led them to this hour
-was satisfied and would have no more to do with them. He seemed almost
-to hear this thought of finality, like the far, distant throbbing of a
-funeral bell, though the tolling only shut them the more closely into
-the silence of the wonderful moment.
-
-Drugged? No, he was not drugged. But was she really dragging him down
-again, poor child, into her own place of dreams?
-
-After the ecstasy, in the darkness of her breast and arms, he knew again
-the horrible surge of suffering that life had always meant to him. He
-saw, as though through deep waters, the love, the strife, the clinging
-to all that went; he saw the withering of dreams, and death, and the
-implacable, devouring thought that underlay all life and found its joy
-in the rending sorrow of the tragedy it triumphed over.
-
-It was like a wave catching him, sucking him down into a gulf of
-blackness. The dizziness of the whirlpool reeled its descending spiral
-through his brain. Eppie was the sweet, the magical, the sinister
-mermaid; she held him, triumphing, and he clung to her, helpless; while,
-like the music of rushing waters, the horror and enchantment of life
-rang in his ears. But the horror grew and grew. The music rang on to a
-multitudinous world-cry of despair,--the cry of all the torments of the
-world turning on their rack of consciousness,--and, in a crash of
-unendurable anguish, came the thought of what it all would mean; what it
-all might mean now--now--unless he could save her; for he guessed that
-her faith, put to the test, might accept any risk, might pay any price,
-to keep him. And the anguish was for her.
-
-He started from her, putting away her arms, yet pinioning her, holding
-her from him with a fierceness of final challenge and looking in the
-darkness into her darker eyes.
-
-"Suppose I do," he said. "Suppose I marry you,"--for he must show her
-that some tests she should not be put to. "Suppose I take you and
-renter the dream. Look at it, Eppie. Look at your life with me. It
-won't stay like this, you know. Look far, far ahead."
-
-"I do," she said.
-
-"No, no. You don't. You can't. It would, for a year, perhaps, perhaps
-only for a day, be dream and ecstasy,--ah, Eppie, don't imagine that I
-don't know what it would be,--the beauty, the joy, the forgetfulness, a
-radiant mist hanging over an abyss. Your will could keep me in it--for a
-year, perhaps. But then, the inevitable fading. See what comes. Eppie,
-don't you know, don't you feel, that I'm dead--dead?"
-
-"No; not while you suffer. You are suffering now--for me."
-
-"The shadow of a shadow. It will pass. No, don't speak; wait; as you
-said, we can't argue, we can't, now, go into the reasons of it. As you
-said, thought can't cure me; it's probably something far deeper than our
-little thought: it's probably the aspect we are fated to be by that one
-reality that makes and unmakes our dreams. And I'm not of the robust
-Western stuff that can work in its dream,--create more dream, and find
-it worth while. I've not enough life in me to create the illusion of
-realities to strive for. Action, to me, brings no proof of life's
-reality; it's merely a symptom of life, its result, not its cause or its
-sanction. And the power of action is dead in me because the desire of
-life is dead,--unless you are there to infect me with it."
-
-"I am here, Gavan."
-
-"Yes, you are,--can I forget it? And I'm yours--while you want me. But,
-Eppie, look at it; look at it straight. See the death that I will bring
-into the very heart of your life. See the children we may have; see what
-they would mean to you, and what they would mean to me: Transient
-appearances; creatures lovely and pathetic, perhaps, but empty of all
-the significance that you would find in them. I would have no love for
-our children, Eppie, as you understand love. We will grow old, and all
-the glamour will go--all the passion that holds us together now. I will
-be kind--and sorry; but you will know that, beside you, I watch you
-fading into listlessness, indifference, death, and know that even if I
-am to weep over you, dead, I will feel only that you have escaped
-forever, from me, from consciousness, from life. Eppie, don't delude
-yourself with one ray of hope. To me your faith is a mirage. And it all
-comes to that. Have you faith enough to foresee all the horror of
-emptiness that you'll find in me for the sake of one year of ecstasy?"
-
-She had not moved while he spoke--spoke with a passion, a vehemence,
-that was like a sudden rushing into flame of a forest fire. There was
-something lurid and terrible in such passion, such vehemence, from him.
-It shook him as the forest is shaken and was like the ruinous force of
-the flames. She sat, while he held her, looking at it, as he had told
-her, "straight." She knew that she looked at everything. Her eyes went
-back to his eyes as she gave him her answer.
-
-"Not for the sake of the year of ecstasy; in spite of it."
-
-"For what, then?" he asked, stammering suddenly.
-
-Her eyes, with their look of dedication, held him fast.
-
-"For the sake of life--the long life--together; the life without the
-glamour, when my faith may altogether infect you."
-
-"You believe, Eppie, that you are so much stronger than I?"
-
-"It's not that I'm strong; but life is stronger than anything; life is
-the only reality. I am on the winning side."
-
-"So you will hope?"
-
-"Hope! Of course I hope. You could never make me stop hoping--not even
-if you broke my heart. You may call it a mirage if you like--that's
-only a word. I'll fill your trance with my mirage, I'll flood your
-whiteness with my color, and, God grant, you will feel life and know
-that you are at last awake. You are right--life _is_ endless contest,
-endless pain; it's only at that price that we can have it; but you will
-know that it's worth the price. I see it all, Gavan, and I accept. I
-accept not only the certainty of my own suffering, but the certainty of
-yours."
-
-Through the night they gazed at each other, his infinite sadness, her
-infinite valor. Their faces were like strange, beautiful dreams--dreams
-holding in their dimness such deep, such vivid significance. They more
-saw the significance--that sadness, that valor--than its embodiment in
-eyes and lips.
-
-It was finally with a sense of realization so keen that it trembled on
-the border of oblivion, of the fainting from over-consciousness, that
-Gavan once more laid his head upon her breast. He, too, accepting, held
-her close,--held her and all that she signified, while, leaning above
-him, her cheek against his hair, she said in a voice that over its depth
-upon depth of steadiness trembled at last a little: "I see it all.
-Imagine what a faith it is that is willing to make the thing it loves
-most in the whole world suffer--suffer horribly--so that it may live."
-
-He gave a long sigh. At its height emotion dissolved into a rapt
-contemplation. "How beautiful," he said.
-
-"Beautiful?" she repeated, with almost a gentle mockery for the word.
-"Well, begin with beauty if you will. You will find that--and more
-besides--as an end of it all."
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-She left him in the garden. They had talked quietly, of the past, of
-their childhood, and, as quietly, of the future--their immediate
-marriage and departure for long, wonderful voyages together. His head
-lay on her breast, and often, while they spoke of that life together, of
-the homecoming to Cheylesford Lodge and when he heard her voice tremble
-a little, he kissed the dear hand he held.
-
-When she rose at last and stood before him, he said, still holding her
-hands, that he would sit on there in the darkness and think of her.
-
-She felt the languor of his voice and told him that he was very tired
-and would do much better to go to bed and forget about her till morning;
-but, looking up at her, he shook his head, smiling: "I couldn't sleep."
-
-So she left him; but, before she went, after the last gazing pause in
-which there seemed now no discord, no strife, nothing to hide or to
-threaten, she had suddenly put her arms around his neck, bending to him
-and murmuring, "Oh, I love you."
-
-"I seem to have loved you forever, Eppie," he said.
-
-But, once more, in all the strange oblivion of his acceptance, there had
-been for him in their kiss and their embrace the undertone of anguish,
-the distant tolling--as if for something accomplished, over forever--of
-a funeral bell.
-
-He watched her figure--white was not the word for it in this midnight
-world--pass away into the darkness. And, as she disappeared, the bell
-seemed still to toll, "Gone. Gone. Gone."
-
-So he was alone.
-
-He was alone. The hours went by and he still sat there. The white roses
-near him, they, too, only a strange blossoming of darkness, symbolized,
-in their almost aching sweetness, the departed presence. He breathed in
-their fragrance; and, as he listened to his own quiet breaths, they
-seemed those of the night made conscious in him. The roses remembered
-for him; the night breathed through him; it was an interchange, a
-mingling. Above were the deep vaults of heaven, the profundities of
-distance, the appalling vastness, strewn with its dust of stars. And it,
-too, was with him, in him, as the roses were, as his own breath came and
-went.
-
-The veils had now lifted from the night and it was radiant, all its
-stars visible; and veil after veil seemed drifting from before his soul.
-
-A cool, light breeze stirred his hair.
-
-Closing his eyes, at last, his thought plunged, as his sight had
-plunged, into gulf under gulf of vacancy.
-
-After the unutterable fatigue, like the sinking under ansthesia, of his
-final yielding, he could not know what was happening to him, nor care.
-It had often happened before, only never quite like this. It was, once
-more, the great peace, lapping wave after wave, slow, sliding,
-immeasurable waves, through and through him; dissolving thought and
-feeling; dissolving all discord, all pain, all joy and beauty.
-
-The hours went by, and, as they went, Eppie's face, like a drift of
-stars, sank, sank into the gulf. What had he said to her? what promised?
-Only the fragrance of the roses seemed to remember, nothing in himself.
-For what had he wanted? He wanted nothing now. Her will, her life, had
-seized him; but no, no, no,--the hours quietly, in their passing seemed
-to say it,--they had not kept him. He had at last, after a lifelong
-resistance, abandoned himself to her, and the abandonment had been the
-final step toward complete enfranchisement. For, with no effort now of
-his own at escape, no will at all to be free, he had left her far behind
-him, as if through the waters of the whirlpool his soul, like a light
-bubble, had softly, surely, risen to the air. It had lost itself, and
-her.
-
-He thought of her, but now with no fear, no anguish. A vast indifference
-filled him. It was no longer a question of tearing himself from her, no
-longer a question of saving himself and her. There was no question, nor
-any one to save. He was gone away, from her, from everything.
-
-When the dawn slowly stole into the garden, so that the ghosts of day
-began to take shape and color, Gavan rose among them. The earth was damp
-with dew; his hair and clothes were damp. Overhead the sky was white,
-and the hills upon it showed a flat, shadowless green. Between the
-night's enchantments of stillness, starriness, veiled, dreaming beauty
-and the sunlit, voluble enchantments of the day,--songs and flights of
-birds, ripple and shine of water, the fugitive, changing color of land
-and sky,--this hour was poor, bare, monotonous. There wasn't a ray of
-enchantment in it. It was like bleak canvas scenery waiting for the
-footlights and a decorated stage.
-
-Gavan looked before him, down the garden path, shivering a little. He
-was cold, and the sensation brought him back to the old fact of life,
-that, after all, was there as long as one saw it. The coming of the
-light seemed to retwist once more his own palely tinted prism of
-personality, and with the cold, with the conscious looking back at the
-night and forward to the day, came a long, dull ache of sadness. It was
-more physical than mental; hunger and chill played their part in it, he
-knew, while, as the prism twined its colors, the fatiguing faculty of
-analysis once more built up the world of change and diversity. He looked
-up at the pale walls of the old house, laced with their pattern of
-creepers. The pine-tree lay like an inky shadow across it, and, among
-the branches, were the windows of Eppie's room, the window where he and
-she had stood together on the morning of Robbie's death--a white,
-dew-drenched morning like this. There she slept, dear, beautiful, the
-shadow of life. And here he stood, still living, after all, in their
-mutual mirage; still to hurt her. He didn't think of her face, her
-voice, her aspect. The only image that came was of a shadow--something
-darkly beautiful that entranced and suffocated, something that,
-enveloping one, shut out peace and vacancy.
-
-His cold hands thrust into his pockets, he stood thinking for a moment,
-of how he would have to hurt her, and of how much less it was to be than
-if what they had seen in the night's glamour had been possible.
-
-He wondered why the mere fact of the night's revelation--all those
-passing-bell hours--had made it so impossible for him to go on, by sheer
-force of will, with the play. Why couldn't he, for her sake, act the
-lifelong part? In her arms he would know again the moments of glamour.
-But, at the mere question, a sickness shuddered through him. He saw now,
-clearly, what stood in the way: suffering, hideous suffering, for both
-of them--permanent, all-pervading suffering. The night had proved too
-irrevocably that any union between them was only momentary, only a
-seeming, and with her, feeling her faith, her hope, her love, he could
-know nothing but the undurable discord of their united and warring
-notes.
-
-Could life and death be made one flesh?
-
-The horror of the thought spurred him from his rigor of contemplation.
-That, at least, had been spared her. Destiny, then, had not meant for
-them that final, tragic consummation.
-
-He threaded his way rapidly among the paths, the flower-beds, under the
-low boughs of the old fruit-trees. She had left the little door near
-the morning-room open for him, and through it he entered the still
-house.
-
-It wasn't escape, now, from her, but from that pressing horror, as of
-something, that, unless he hastened, might still overtake them both. Yet
-outside her door he paused, bent his head, listened with a strange
-curiosity, helpless before the nearness of that loved, that dreaded
-being, the warring note that he sought yet fled from.
-
-She slept. Not a sound stirred in the room.
-
-He closed his eyes, seeing, with a vividness that was almost a
-hallucination, her face, her wonderful face, asleep, with the dark
-rivers of her hair flowing about it.
-
-And, fixed as he was in his frozen certainty of truth, he felt, once
-more like the striking of a hand across a harp, a longing, wild and
-passionate, to enter, to take her, sleeping, in his arms, to see her
-eyes open on him; to hide himself in life, as in the darkness of her
-breast and arms, and to forget forever the piercing of inexorable
-thought.
-
-He found that his hand was on the lock and that he was violently
-trembling.
-
-It was inexorable thought, the knowledge of the horror that would await
-them, that conquered the leap of blind instinct.
-
-Half an hour later a thin, intense light rimmed all the eastern hills,
-and a cold, clear cheerfulness spread over the earth. The moors were
-purple and the sky overhead palely, immaculately blue. About the tall
-lime-trees the rooks circled, cawing, and a skylark sang far and high,
-a floating atom of ecstasy.
-
-And in the clearness Gavan's figure showed, walking rapidly away from
-the white house, down the road that led through the heather and past the
-birch-woods, walking away from it forever.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Grainger stood in Eppie's little sitting-room, confronting, as Gavan had
-confronted the spring before, Miss Allen's placidly sewing figure.
-
-The flowers against which her uneventful head now bent were autumnal.
-Thickly growing Michaelmas daisies, white and purple, screened the lower
-section of the square outside. Above were the shabby tree-tops, that
-seemed heavily painted upon an equally solid sky. The square was dusty,
-the trees were dusty, the very blue of the sky looked grimed with dust.
-
-The hot air; the still flowers, not stirred by a breath of breeze; Miss
-Allen's figure, motionless but for its monotonously moving hand, were
-harmonious in their quiet, and in contrast to them Grainger's pervasive,
-restless, irritable presence was like a loud, incessant jangling.
-
-He walked back and forth; he picked up the photographs on the
-mantel-shelf, the books on the table, flinging them down in a succession
-of impatient claps. He threw himself heavily into chairs,--so heavily
-that Miss Allen glanced round, alarmed for the security of the
-furniture,--and he asked her half a dozen times if Miss Gifford would be
-in at five.
-
-"She is seldom late," or, "I expect her then," Miss Allen would answer
-in the tone of mild severity that one might employ toward an unseemly
-child over whom one had no authority.
-
-But though there was severity in Miss Allen's voice, the acute glances
-that she stole at the clamorous guest were not unsympathetic. She placed
-him. She pitied and she rather admired him. Even while emphasizing the
-dismay of her involuntary starts when the table rattled and the chairs
-groaned, she felt a satisfaction in these symptoms of passion; for that
-she was in the presence of a passion, a hopeless and rather magnificent
-passion, she made no doubt. She associated such passions with Eppie,--it
-was trailing such clouds of glory that she descended upon the arid life
-of the little square,--and none had so demonstrated itself, none had so
-performed its part for her benefit. She was sorry that it was hopeless;
-but she was glad that it was there, in all its Promethean wrathfulness,
-for her to observe. Miss Allen felt pretty sure that this was the
-nearest experience of passion she would ever know.
-
-"In at five, as a rule, you say?" Grainger repeated for the fourth time,
-springing from the chair where, with folded arms, he had sat for a few
-moments scowling unseeingly at the pansies.
-
-He stationed himself now beside her and, over her head, stared out at
-the square. It was at once alarming and delightful,--as if the Titan
-with his attendant vulture had risen from his rock to join her.
-
-"You've no idea from which direction she is coming?"
-
-"None," said Miss Allen, decisively but not unkindly. "It's really no
-good for you to think of going out to meet her. She is doing a lot of
-different things this afternoon and might come from any direction. You
-would almost certainly miss her." And she went on, unemphatically, but,
-for all the colorless quality of her voice, so significantly that
-Grainger, realizing for the first time the presence of an understanding
-sympathy, darted a quick look at her. "She gets in at five, just as I go
-out. She knows that I depend on her to be here by then."
-
-So she would not be in the way, this little individual. She made him
-think, now that he looked at her more attentively, as she sat there with
-her trimly, accurately moving hand, of a beaver he had once seen swiftly
-and automatically feeding itself; her sleek head, her large, smooth
-front teeth, were like a beaver's. It was really very decent of her to
-see that he wanted her out of the way; so decent that, conscious of the
-link it had made between them, he said presently, abruptly and rather
-roughly, "How is she?"
-
-"Well, of course she has not recovered," said Miss Allen.
-
-"Recovered? But she wasn't actually ill." Grainger had a retorting air.
-
-"No; I suppose not. It was nervous prostration, I suppose--if that's not
-an illness."
-
-"This isn't the place for her to recover from nervous prostration in."
-He seemed to fasten an accusation, but Miss Allen understood perfectly.
-
-"Of course not. I've tried to make her see that. But,"--she was making
-now quite a chain of links,--"she feels she must work, must lose herself
-in something. Of course she overdoes it. She overdoes everything."
-
-"Overwork, do you think? The cause, I mean?"
-
-Grainger jerked this out, keeping his eyes on the square.
-
-Miss Allen, not in any discreet hesitation, but in sincere uncertainty,
-paused over her answer.
-
-"It couldn't be, quite. She was well enough when she went away in the
-summer, though she really isn't at all strong,--not nearly so strong as
-she looks. She broke down, you know, at her uncle's, in Scotland"; and
-Miss Allen added, in a low-pitched and obviously confidential voice, "I
-think it was some shock that nobody knows anything about."
-
-Grainger stood still for some moments, and then plunging back into the
-little room, he crossed and re-crossed it with rapid strides. Her
-guessing and his knowledge came too near.
-
-Only after a long pause did Miss Allen say, "She's really frightfully
-changed." The clock was on the stroke. Rising, gathering up her work,
-dropping, with neat little clicks, her scissors, her thimble, into her
-work-box, she added, and she fixed her eyes on him for a moment as she
-spoke, "Do, if you can, make her--"
-
-"Well, what? Go away?" he demanded. "I've no authority--none. Her people
-ought to kidnap her. That's what I'd do. Lift her out of this hole."
-
-Miss Allen's eyes dwelt on his while she nerved herself to a height of
-adventurous courage that, in looking back at it, amazed her. "Here she
-is," she said, and almost whispering, "Well, kidnap her, then. That's
-what she needs--some one stronger than herself to kidnap her."
-
-She slid her hand through his, a panic of shyness overtaking her, and
-darted out, followed by the flutter of a long, white strip of muslin.
-
-Grainger stood looking at the open door, through which in a moment Eppie
-entered.
-
-His first feeling was one of relief. He did not, in that first moment,
-see that she was "frightfully changed." Even her voice seemed the same,
-as she said with all the frank kindness of her welcome and surprise,
-"Why, Jim, this is good of you," and all her tact was there, too, giving
-him an impression of the resource and flexibility of happy vitality, in
-her ignoring by glance or tone of their parting.
-
-She wore, on the hot autumn day, a white linen frock, the loose bodice
-belted with green, a knot of green at her throat, and, under the white
-and green of her little hat, her face showed color and its dear smile.
-
-Relief was so great, indeed, that Grainger found himself almost clinging
-to her hand in his sudden thankfulness.
-
-"You're not so ill, then," he brought out. "I heard it--that you had
-broken down--and I came back. I was in the Dolomites. I hadn't had news
-of you since I left."
-
-"So ill! Nonsense," said Eppie, giving his hand a reassuring shake and
-releasing her own to pull off her soft, loose gloves. "It was a
-breakdown I had, but nothing serious. I believe it to have been an
-attack of biliousness, myself. People don't like to own to liver when
-they can claim graceful maladies like nervous prostration,--so it was
-called. But liver, only, I fear it was. And I'm all right now, thank
-goodness, for I loathe being ill and am a horrid patient."
-
-She had taken off her hat, pushing back her hair from her forehead and
-sinking into a chair that was against the light. The Michaelmas daisies
-made a background for the bronze and white of her head, for, as she
-rested, the color that her surprise and her swift walking had given her
-died. She was glad to rest, her smile said that, and he saw, indeed,
-that she was utterly tired.
-
-Suddenly, as he looked at her, seeing the great fatigue, seeing the
-pallor, seeing the smile only stay as if with determination, the truth
-of Miss Allen's description was revealed to him. She was frightfully
-changed. Her smile, her courage, made him think of a _danse macabre_.
-The rhythm, the gaiety of life were there, but life itself was gone.
-
-The revelation came to him, but he felt himself clutch it silently, and
-he let her go on talking.
-
-She went on, indeed, very volubly, talking of her breakdown, of how good
-the general and her aunt had been to her, and of how getting back to her
-work had picked her up directly.
-
-"I think I'll finally pitch my tent here," she went on. "The interest
-grows all the time,--and the ties, the responsibility. One can't do
-things by half measures; you know that, thorough person that you are. I
-mustn't waste my mite of income by gadding about. I'm going to chuck all
-the rest and give myself altogether to this."
-
-"You used to think that the rest helped you in this," said Grainger.
-
-"To a certain extent it did, and will, for I've had so much that it will
-last me for a long time."
-
-"You intend to live permanently down here?"
-
-"I shall have my holidays, and I shall run up to civilization for a
-dinner or two now and then. It's not that I've any illusions about my
-usefulness or importance. It's that all this is so useful to me. It's
-something I can do with all my might and main, and I've such masses of
-energy you know, Jim, that need employment. And then, though of course
-one works at the wrong side of the tapestry and has to trust that the
-pattern is coming right, I do believe that, to a certain extent, it does
-need me."
-
-He leaned back in his chair opposite her, listening to the voice that
-rattled on so cheerfully. With his head bent, he kept that old gaze upon
-her and clutched the clearer and clearer revelation: Eppie--Eppie in
-torment; Eppie shattered;--Eppie--why, it was as if she sat there before
-him smiling and rattling over a huge hole in her chest. And, finally,
-the consciousness of the falsity in her own tone made her falter a
-little. She couldn't continue so glibly while his eyes were saying to
-her: "Yes; I see, I see. You are wounded to death." But if she faltered
-it was only, in the pause, to look about for another shield.
-
-"And you?" she said. "Have you done a great deal of climbing? Tell me
-about yourself, dear Jim."
-
-It was a dangerous note to strike and the "dear Jim" gave away her sense
-of insecurity. It was almost an appeal to him not to see, or, at all
-events, not to tell her that he saw.
-
-"Don't talk about me," he said very rudely. She knew the significance of
-his rudeness.
-
-"Let us talk of whatever you will."
-
-"Of you, then. Don't try to shut me out, Eppie."
-
-"Am I shutting you out?"
-
-"You are trying to. You have succeeded with the rest, I suppose; but, as
-of course you know, you can't succeed with me. I know too much. I care
-too much."
-
-His rough, tense voice beat down her barriers. She sat silent, oddly
-smiling.
-
-He rose and came to her and stood above her, pressing the tips of his
-fingers heavily down upon her shoulder.
-
-"You must tell me. I must know. I won't stand not knowing."
-
-Motionless, without looking up at him, she still smiled before her.
-
-"That--that coward has broken your heart," he said. There were tears in
-his voice, and, looking up now, the smile stiffened to a resolute
-grimace, she saw them running down his cheeks. But her own face did not
-soften. With a glib dryness she answered:
-
-"Yes, Jim; that's it."
-
-"Oh--" It was a long growl over her head.
-
-She had looked away again, and continued in the same crisp voice: "I'd
-lie if I could, you may be sure. But you put it so, you look so, that I
-can't. I'm at your mercy. You know what I feel, so I can't hide it from
-you. I hate any one, even you, to know what I feel. Help me to hide it."
-
-"What has he done?" Grainger asked on the muffled, growling note.
-
-"Gavan? Done? He's done nothing."
-
-"But something happened. You aren't where you were when I left you. You
-weren't breaking down then."
-
-"Hope deferred, Jim--"
-
-"It's not that. Don't fence, to shield him. It's not hope deferred. It's
-hope dead. Something happened. What was it?"
-
-"All that happened was that he went, when I thought that he was going to
-stay, forever."
-
-"He went, knowing--"
-
-"That I loved him? Yes; I told him."
-
-"And he told you that he didn't love you?"
-
-"No, there you were wrong. He told me that he did. But he saw what you
-saw. So what would you have asked of him?"
-
-"Saw what I saw? What do you mean?"
-
-"That he would suffocate me. That he was the negation of everything I
-believed in."
-
-"You mean to tell me," said Grainger, his fingers still pressing down
-upon her shoulder, "that it all came out,--that you had it there between
-you,--and then that he ran away?"
-
-"From the fear of hurting my life. Yes."
-
-"From the fear of life itself, you mean."
-
-"If that was it, wasn't it enough?"
-
-"The coward. The mean, bloodless coward," said Jim Grainger.
-
-"I let you say it because I understand; it's your relief. But he is not
-a coward. He is only--a saint. A saint without a saint's perquisites. A
-Spinoza without a God. An imitator of Christ without a Christ. I have
-been thinking, thinking it all out, seeing it all, ever since."
-
-"Spinoza! What has he to do with it! Don't talk rot, dear child, to
-comfort yourself."
-
-"Be patient, Jim. Perhaps I can help you. It calms one when one
-understands. I have been reading up all the symptoms. Listen to this, if
-you think that Spinoza has nothing to do with it. On the contrary, he
-knew all about it and would have seen very much as Gavan does."
-
-She took up one of the books that had been so frequently flung down by
-Grainger in his waiting and turned its pages while he watched her with
-the enduring look of a mother who humors a sick child's foolish fancies.
-
-"Listen to Spinoza, Jim," she said, and he obediently bent his lowering
-gaze to the task. "'When a thing is not loved, no strife arises about
-it; there is no pang if it perishes, no envy if another bears it away,
-no fear, no hate; yes, in a word, no tumult of soul. These things all
-come from loving that which perishes.' And now the Imitation: 'What
-canst thou see anywhere which can continue long under the sun? Thou
-believest, perchance, that thou shalt be satisfied, but thou wilt never
-be able to attain unto this. If thou shouldst see all things before thee
-at once, what would it be but a vain vision?' And this: 'Trust not thy
-feeling, for that which is now will be quickly changed into somewhat
-else.'"
-
-Her voice, as she read on to him,--and from page to page she went,
-plucking for him, it seemed, their cold, white blossoms, fit flowers to
-lay on the grave of love,--had lost the light dryness as of withered
-leaves rustling. It seemed now gravely to understand, to acquiesce. A
-chill went over the man, as though, under his hand, he felt her, too,
-sliding from warm life into that place of shadows where she must be to
-be near the one she loved.
-
-"Shut the books, for God's sake, Eppie," he said. "Don't tell me that
-you've come to see as he has."
-
-She looked up at him, and now, in the dear, deep eyes, he saw all the
-old Eppie, the Eppie of life and battle.
-
-"Can you think it, Jim? It's because I see so clearly what he sees that
-I hate it and repudiate it and fight it with every atom of my being.
-It's that hatred, that repudiation, that fight, that is life. I believe
-in it, I'm for it, as I never believed before, as I never was before."
-
-He was answering her look, seeing her as life's wounded champion,
-standing, shot through, on the ramparts of her beleaguered city. She
-would shake her banner high in the air as she fell. The pity, the fury,
-the love of his eyes dwelt on her.
-
-And suddenly, under that look, her eyes closed. She shrank together in
-her chair; she bowed down her head upon her knees, covering her face.
-
-"Oh, Jim," she said, "my heart is broken."
-
-He knew that he had brought her to this, that never before an onlooker
-had she so fallen into her own misery. He had forced her to show the
-final truth that, though she held the banner, she was shot through and
-through. And he could do nothing but stand on above her, his face set to
-a flintier, sharper endurance, as he heard the great sobs shake her.
-
-He left her presently and walked up and down the room while she wept,
-crouched over upon her knees. It was not for long. The tempest passed,
-and, when she sat in quiet, her head in her hands, her face still
-hidden, he said, "You must set about mending now, Eppie."
-
-"I can't mend. I'll live; but I can't mend."
-
-"Don't say it, Eppie. This may pass as--well--other things in your life
-have passed."
-
-"Do you, too, talk Spinoza to me, Jim?"
-
-"Damn Spinoza! I'm talking life to you--the life we both believe in. I'm
-not telling you to turn your back on it because it has crippled you. You
-won't, I know it. I know that you are brave. Eppie, Eppie,"--before her,
-now, he bent to her, then knelt beside her chair,--"let me be the
-crutch. Let me have the fragments. Let's try, together, to mend them. I
-ask nothing of you but that trying, with my help, to mend. He isn't for
-you. He's never for you. I'll say no more brutalities of him. I'll use
-your own words and say that he can't,--that his saintship can't. So
-won't you, simply, let me take you? Even if you're broken for life, let
-me have the broken Eppie."
-
-She had never, except in the moment of the kiss, seen this deepest thing
-in him, this gentleness, this reverent tenderness that, under the
-bullying, threatening, angry aspects of his love, now supplicated with a
-beauty that revealed all the angel in humanity. Strange--she could think
-it in all her sorrow--that the thing that held him to her was the thing
-that held her to Gavan, the deep, the mysterious, the unchangeable
-affinity. For him, as for her, there could be but one, and for that one
-alone could these depths and heights of the heart open themselves.
-
-"Jim, dear, dear Jim, never, never," she said. "I am his, only his,
-fragments, all of me, for as long as I am I."
-
-Grainger hid his face on the arm of her chair.
-
-"And he is mine," said Eppie. "He knows it, and that is why he fears me.
-He is mine forever."
-
-"I am glad for your sake that you can believe that," Grainger muttered,
-"and glad, for my own, that I don't."
-
-"Why, Jim?"
-
-"I could hardly live if I thought that you were going to love him in
-eternity and that I was, forever, to be shut away. Thank goodness that
-it's only for a lifetime that my tragedy lasts."
-
-She closed her eyes to these perplexities, laying her hand on his.
-
-"I don't know. We can only think and act for this life. It's this we
-have to shape. Perhaps in eternity, really in eternity, whatever that
-may mean, I won't need to shut you out. Dear, dear Jim, it's hard that
-it must seem that to you now. You know what I feel about you. And who
-could feel it as I do? We are in the same boat."
-
-"No, for he, at least, loves no one else. You haven't that to bear. As
-far as he goes,--and it isn't far,--he is yours. We are not at all in
-the same boat. But that's enough of me. I suppose I am done for, as you
-say, forever."
-
-He had got upon his feet, and, as if at their mutual wreckage, looked
-down with a face that had found again its old shield of grimness.
-
-"As for you," he went on, "I sha'n't, at all events, see you
-suffocating. You must mend alone, then, as best you can. Really, you're
-not as tragic as you might have been."
-
-Then, after this salutary harshness, and before he turned from her to
-go, he added, as once before, "Poor darling."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Grainger hardly knew why he had come and, as he walked up the deep
-Surrey lane from the drowsy village station, his common-sense warred
-with the instinct, almost the obsession, that was taking him to
-Cheylesford Lodge. Eppie had been persistently in his thoughts since
-their meeting of the week before, and from his own hopelessness had
-sprung the haunting of a hope for her. Turn from it as he would, accuse
-himself angrily of madness, morbidity, or a mere tendency to outrageous
-meddling,--symptomatic of shattered nerves,--he couldn't escape it. By
-day and night it was with him, until he saw himself, in a lurid vision,
-as responsible for Eppie's very life if he didn't test its validity. For
-where she had failed might not a man armed with the strength of his
-selfless love succeed?
-
-He had said, in his old anger, that as Gavan's wife Gavan would kill
-her; but he hadn't really meant that literally; now, literally, the new
-fear had come that she might die of Gavan's loss. Her will hadn't
-snapped, but her vitality was like the flare of the candle in its
-socket. To love, the eremite of Cheylesford Lodge wouldn't
-yield--perhaps for very pity's sake; but if he were made to see the
-other side of it?--Grainger found a grim amusement in the paradox--the
-lover, in spite of love, might yield to pity. Couldn't his own manliness
-strike some spark of manliness from Gavan? Couldn't he and Eppie between
-them, with their so different appeals,--she to what was soft, he to what
-was tough,--hoist his tragically absurd head above water, as it were,
-into the air of real life, that might, who knew? fill and sustain his
-aquatic lungs? It gave him a vindictive pleasure to see the drowning
-simile in the most ludicrous aspects--Gavan, draped in the dramatic
-robes of his twopenny-halfpenny philosophies, holding his head in a
-basin of water, there resolved to die. Grainger felt that as far as his
-own inclinations were concerned it would have given him some pleasure to
-help to hold him under, to see that, while he was about it, he did it
-thoroughly; but the question wasn't one of his own inclinations: it was
-for Eppie's sake that he must try to drag out the enraptured suicide. It
-was Eppie, bereft and dying,--so it seemed to him in moments of deep
-fear,--whose very life depended on the submerged life. And to see if he
-could fish it up for her he had come on this undignified, this
-ridiculous errand.
-
-Very undignified and very ridiculous he felt the errand to be, as he
-strode on through the lane, its high hedge-rows all dusty with the
-autumn drought; but he was indifferent enough to that side of it. He
-felt no confusion. He was completely prepared to speak his mind.
-
-Coming to a turning of the lane, where he stood for a moment,
-uncertain, at branching paths, he was joined by an alert little parson
-who asked him courteously if he could direct him on his way. They were
-both, it then appeared, going to Cheylesford Lodge; and the Reverend
-John Best, after introducing himself as the rector of Dittleworth
-parish, and receiving Grainger's name, which had its reverberations,
-with affable interest, surmised that it was to another friend of Mr.
-Palairet's that he spoke.
-
-"Yes. No. That is to say, I've known him after a fashion for years, but
-seen little of him. Has he been here all summer?" Grainger asked, as
-they walked on.
-
-It seemed that Gavan had only returned from the Continent the week
-before, but Mr. Best went on to say, with an evidently temperamental
-loquacity, that he was there for most of the time as a rule and was
-found a very charming neighbor and a very excellent parishioner.
-
-This last was a rle in which Gavan seemed extremely incongruous, and
-Grainger looked his perplexity, murmuring, "Parishioner?"
-
-"Not, I fear, that we can claim him as an altogether orthodox one," Mr.
-Best said, smiling tolerantly upon his companion's probable narrowness.
-"We ask for the spirit, rather than the letter, nowadays, Mr. Grainger;
-and Mr. Palairet is, at heart, as good a Christian as any of us, of that
-I am assured: better than many of us, as far as living the Christian
-life goes. Christianity, in its essence, is a life. Ah, if only you
-statesmen, you active men of the world, would realize that; would look
-past the symbols to the reality. We, who see life as a spiritual
-organization, are able to break down the limitations of the dry,
-self-centered individualism that, for so many years, has obscured the
-glorious features of our faith. And it is the spirit of the Church that
-Mr. Palairet has grasped. Time only is needed, I am convinced, to make
-him a partaker of her gifts."
-
-Grainger walked on in a sardonic silence, and Mr. Best, all
-unsuspecting, continued to embroider his congenial theme with
-illustrations: the village poor, to whom Mr. Palairet was so devoted;
-the village hospital, of which he was to talk over the plans to-day; the
-neighborly thoughtfulness and unfailing kindness and charity he showed
-toward high and low.
-
-"Palairet always seemed to me very ineffectual," said Grainger when, in
-a genial pause, he felt that something in the way of response was
-expected of him.
-
-"Ah, I fear you judge by the worldly standard of outward attainment, Mr.
-Grainger."
-
-"What other is there for us human beings to judge by?"
-
-"The standard of our unhappy modern plutocratic society is not that by
-which to measure the contemplative type of character."
-
-Grainger felt a slight stress of severity in the good little parson's
-affability.
-
-"Oh, I think its standards aren't at all unwholesome," he made reply. He
-could have justified anything, any standard, against Gavan and his
-standards.
-
-"Unwholesome, my dear Mr. Grainger? That is just what they are. See the
-beauty of a life like our friend's here. It judges your barbarous
-Christless civilization. He lives laborious, simple days. He does his
-work, he has his friends. His influence upon them counts for more than
-an outside observer could compute. Great men are among them. I met Lord
-Taunton at his house last Sunday. A most impressive personality. Even
-though Mr. Palairet has abandoned the political career, one can't call
-him ineffectual when such a man is among his intimates."
-
-"The monkish type doesn't appeal to me, I own."
-
-"Ah, there you touch the point that has troubled me. It is not good for
-a man to live alone. My chief wish for him is that he may marry. I often
-urge it on him."
-
-"Well done."
-
-"One did hear," Mr. Best went on, his small, ruddy face taking on a look
-of retrospective reprobation, "that there was an attachment to a certain
-young woman--the tale was public property--only as such do I allude to
-it--a very fashionable, very worldly young woman. I was relieved indeed
-when the rumor came to nothing. He escaped finally, I can't help
-fancying it, this summer. I was much relieved."
-
-"Why so, pray?"
-
-"I am rural, old-fashioned, my dear young man, and that type of young
-woman is one toward which, I own it, I find it difficult to feel
-charitably. She represents the pagan, the Christless element that I
-spoke of in our modern world. Her charm could not have been a noble
-one. Had our friend here succumbed to it, she could only have meant
-disaster in his life. She would have urged him into ambition,
-pleasure-seeking, dissipation. Of course I only cite what I have heard
-in my quiet corner, though I have had glimpses of her, passing with a
-friend, a very frivolous person, in a motor-car. She looked completely
-what I had imagined."
-
-"If you mean Miss Gifford," said Grainger, trying for temperateness, "I
-happen to know her. She is anything but a pleasure-seeker, anything but
-frivolous, anything, above all, but a pagan. If Palairet had been lucky
-enough to marry her it would have been the best thing that ever happened
-to him in his life, and a very dubious thing for her. She is a thousand
-times too good for him."
-
-"My dear Mr. Grainger, pardon me; I had no idea that you knew the lady.
-But," Mr. Best had flushed a little under this onslaught, "I cannot but
-think you a partisan."
-
-"Do you call a woman frivolous who spends half of her time working in
-the slums?"
-
-"That is a phase, I hear, of the ultra-smart young woman. But no doubt
-rumor has been unjust. I must beg you to pardon me."
-
-"Oh, don't mind that. You heard, no doubt, the surface things. But no
-one who knows Miss Gifford can think of them, that's all."
-
-"And if I have been betrayed into injustice, I hope that you will
-reconsider a little more charitably your impression of Mr. Palairet,"
-said Mr. Best, in whom, evidently, Grainger's roughness rankled.
-
-Grainger laughed grimly. "I can't consider him anything but a thousand
-times too bad for Miss Gifford."
-
-They had reached the entrance to Cheylesford Lodge on this final and
-discordant phrase. Mr. Best kept a grieved silence and Grainger's
-thoughts passed from him.
-
-He had had in his life no training in appreciation and was indifferent
-to things of the eye, but even to his insensible nature the whole aspect
-of the house that they approached between high yew hedges, its dreaming
-quiet, the tones of its dim old bricks, the shadowed white of paneled
-walls within, spoke of pensive beauty, of a secure content in things of
-the mind. He felt it suddenly as oppressive and ominous in its assured
-quietness. It had some secret against the probes of feeling. Its magic
-softly shut away suffering and encircled safely a treasure of
-tranquillity.
-
-That was the secret, that the magic; it flashed vaguely for
-Grainger--though by its light he saw more vividly his own errand as
-ridiculous--that a life of thought, pure thought, if one could only
-achieve it, was the only _safe_ life. Where, in this adjusted system of
-beauty and contemplation, would his appeals find foothold?
-
-He dashed back the crowding doubts, summoning his own crude forces.
-
-The man who admitted them said that Mr. Palairet was in the garden, and
-stepping from opened windows at the back of the house, they found
-themselves on the sunny spaces of the lawn with its encompassing trees
-and its wandering border of flowers.
-
-Gavan was sitting with a book in the shade of the great yew-tree. In
-summer flannels, a panama hat tilted over his eyes, he was very white,
-very tenuous, very exquisite. And he was the center of it all, the
-secret securely his, the magic all at his disposal.
-
-Seeing them he rose, dropping his book into his chair, strolling over
-the miraculous green to meet them, showing no haste, no hesitation, no
-surprise.
-
-"I've come on particular business," Grainger said, "and I'll stroll
-about until you and Mr. Best are done with the hospital."
-
-Mr. Best, still with sadness in his manner, promised not to keep Mr.
-Palairet long and they went inside.
-
-Grainger was left standing under the yew-tree. He took up Gavan's book,
-while the sense of frustration, and of rebellion against it, rose in
-him. The book was French and dealt with an obscure phase of Byzantine
-history. Gavan's neat notes marked passages concerning some contemporary
-religious phenomena.
-
-Grainger flung down the book, careless of crumpled leaves, and wandered
-off abruptly, among the hedges and into the garden. It was a very
-different garden from the old Scotch one where a sweet pensiveness
-seemed always to hover and where romance whispered and beckoned. This
-garden, steeped in sunlight, and where plums and pears on the hot rosy
-walls shone like jewels among their crisp green leaves, was unshadowed,
-unhaunted, smiling and decorous--the garden of placid wisdom and
-Epicurean calm. Grainger, as he walked, felt at his heart a tug of
-strange homesickness and yearning for that Northern garden, its dim
-gray walls and its disheveled nooks and corners. Were they all done with
-it forever?
-
-By the time he had returned to the lawn Gavan was just emerging from the
-house. They met in the shadow of the yew.
-
-"I'm glad to see you, Grainger," Gavan said, with a smile that struck
-Grainger as faded in quality. "This place is a sort of harbor for tired
-workers, you know. You should have looked me up before, or are you never
-tired enough for that?"
-
-"I don't feel the need of harbors, yet. One never sees you in London."
-
-"No, the lounging life down here suits me."
-
-"Your little parson doesn't see it in that light. He has been telling me
-how you live up to your duties as neighbor and parishioner."
-
-"It doesn't require much effort. Nice little fellow, isn't he, Best? He
-tells me that you walked up together."
-
-"We did," said Grainger, with his own inner sense of grim humor at the
-memory. "I should think you would find him rather limited."
-
-"But I'm limited, too," said Gavan, mildly. "I like being with people so
-neatly adapted to their functions. There are no loose ends about Best;
-nothing unfulfilled or uncomfortable. He's all there--all that there is
-of him to be there."
-
-"Not a very lively companion."
-
-"I'm not a lively companion, either," Gavan once more, with his mild
-gaiety, retorted.
-
-Grainger at this gave a harsh laugh. "No, you certainly aren't," he
-agreed.
-
-They had twice paced the length of the yew-tree shadow and Gavan had
-asked no question; and Grainger felt, as the pause grew, that Gavan
-never would ask questions. Any onus for a disturbance of the atmosphere
-must rest entirely on himself, and to disturb it he would have to be
-brutal.
-
-He jerked aside the veils of the placid dialogue with sudden violence.
-"I've seen Eppie," he said.
-
-He had intended to use her formal name only, but the nearer word rushed
-out and seemed to shatter the magic that held him off.
-
-Gavan's face grew a shade paler. "Have you?" he said.
-
-"You knew that she had been ill?"
-
-"I heard of it, recently, from General Carmichael. It was nothing
-serious, I think."
-
-"It will be serious." Grainger stood still and gazed into his eyes. "Do
-you want to kill her?"
-
-It struck him, when he had said it, and while Gavan received the words
-and seemed to reflect on them, that however artificial his atmosphere
-might be he would never evade any reality brought forcibly into it. He
-contemplated this one and did not pretend not to understand.
-
-"I want Eppie to be happy," he said presently.
-
-"Happy, yes. So do I," broke from Grainger with a groan.
-
-They stood now near the great trunk of the yew-tree, and turning away,
-striking the steel-gray bark monotonously with his fist, he went on: "I
-love her, as you know. And she loves you. She told me--I made her tell
-me. But any one with eyes could see it; even your gossiping little fool
-of a parson here had heard of it--was relieved for your escape. But who
-cares for the cackling? And you have crippled her, broken her. You have
-tossed aside that woman whose little finger is worth more to the world
-than your whole being. I wish to God she'd never seen you."
-
-"So do I," Gavan said.
-
-"I'd kill you with the greatest pleasure--if it could do her any good."
-
-There was relief for Grainger in getting out these fundamental things.
-
-"Yes,--I quite understand that. So would I," Gavan acquiesced,--"kill
-myself, I mean,--if it would do her any good."
-
-"Don't try that. It wouldn't. She's beyond all help but one. So I am
-here to put it to you."
-
-The still, hot day encompassed their shadow and with its quiet made more
-intense Grainger's sense of his own passion--passion and its negation,
-the stress between the two. Their words, though they spoke so quietly,
-seemed to fill the world.
-
-"I am sorry," Gavan said; "I can do nothing."
-
-Grainger beat at the tree.
-
-"You love her."
-
-"Not as she must be loved. I only want her, when I am selfish. When I
-think for her I have no want at all."
-
-"Give her your selfishness."
-
-"Ah, even that fades. That's what I found out. I can't count on my
-selfishness. I've tried to do it. It didn't work."
-
-Grainger turned his bloodshot eyes upon him; these moments under the
-yew-tree, that white figure with its pale smile, its comprehending
-gravity confronting him, would count in his life, he knew, among its
-most racking memories.
-
-"I consider you a madman," he now said.
-
-"Perhaps I am one. You don't think it for Eppie's happiness to marry a
-madman?"
-
-"My God, I don't know what to think! I want to save her."
-
-"But so do I," Gavan's voice had its first note of eagerness. "_I_ want
-to save her. And I want her to marry you. That's her chance, and
-yours--and mine, though mine really doesn't count. That's what I hope
-for."
-
-"There's no hope there."
-
-"Have patience. Wait. She will, perhaps, get over me."
-
-Grainger's eyes, with their hot, jaded look of baffled purpose, so
-selfless that it transcended jealousy and hatred, were still on him, and
-he thought now that he detected on the other's face the strain of some
-inner tension. He wasn't so dead, then. He was suffering. No, more yet,
-and the final insight came in another vague flash that darkly showed the
-trouble at the heart of all the magic, the beauty, he, too, more really
-than Eppie, perhaps, was dying for love. Madman, devoted madman that he
-was, he was dying for love of the woman from whom he must always flee.
-It was strange to feel one's sane, straightforward mind forced along
-this labyrinth of dazed comprehension, turning in the cruelly knotted
-paradox of this impossible love-story. Yet, against his very will, he
-was so forced to follow and almost to understand.
-
-There wasn't much more to say. And he had his own paradoxical
-satisfaction in the sight of the canker at the core of thought. So, at
-all events, one wasn't safe even so.
-
-"She won't get over you," he said. "It isn't a mere love-affair. It's
-her life. She may not die of it; that's a figure of speech that I had no
-right, I suppose, to use. At all events, she'll try her best not to die.
-But she won't get over you."
-
-"Not even if I get out of the way forever?"
-
-Gavan put the final proposition before him, but Grainger, staring at the
-sunlight, shook his head.
-
-"The very fact that you're alive makes her hold the tighter. No, you
-can't save her in that way. I wish you could."
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Grainger had had his insight, but, outwardly, in the year that followed,
-Gavan's life was one of peace, of achieved escape.
-
-The world soon ceased to pull at him, to plead or protest. With a kindly
-shrug of the shoulders the larger life passed him by as one more proved
-ineffectual. The little circle that clung about him, as the flotsam and
-jetsam of a river drift from the hurrying current around the stability
-and stillness of a green islet, was, in the main, composed of the
-defeated or the indifferent. One or two cynical fighters moored their
-boats, for a week-end, at his tranquil shores, and the powerful old
-statesman who believed nothing, hoped nothing, felt very little, and
-who, behind his show-life of patriotic and hard-working nobleman, smiled
-patiently at the whole foolish comedy, was his most intimate companion.
-To the world at large, Lord Taunton was the witty Tory, the devoted
-churchman, the wise upholder of all the hard-won props of civilization;
-to Gavan, he was the skeptical and pessimistic metaphysician; together
-they watched the wheels go round.
-
-Mayburn came down once or twice to see his poor, queer, dear old
-Palairet, and in London boasted much of the experience. "He's too, too
-wonderful," he said. "He has achieved a most delicate, recondite
-harmony. One never heard anything just like it before, and can't, for
-the life of one, tell just what the notes are. Effort, constant effort,
-amidst constant quiet and austerity. Work is his passion, and yet never
-was any creature so passionless. He's like a rower, rowing easily,
-indefatigably, down a long river, among lilies, while he looks up at the
-sky."
-
-But Mayburn felt the quiet and austerity a little disturbing. He didn't,
-after all, come to look at quiet and austerity unless some one were
-there to hear him talk about them; and his host, all affability, never
-seemed quite there.
-
-So a year, more than a year, went by.
-
-It was on an early spring morning that Gavan found on his
-breakfast-table a letter written in a faltering hand,--a hand that
-faltered with the weeping that shook it,--Miss Barbara's old, faint
-hand.
-
-He read, at first, hardly comprehending.
-
-It was of Eppie she wrote: of her overwork--they thought it must be
-that--in the winter, of the resultant fragility that had made her
-succumb suddenly to an illness contracted in some hotbed of epidemic in
-the slums. They had all thought that she would come through it. People
-had been very kind. Eppie had so many, many friends. Every one loved
-her. She had been moved to Lady Alicia's house in Grosvenor Street. She,
-Aunt Barbara, had come up to town at once, and the general was with
-her.
-
-It was with a fierce impatience that he went on through the phrases that
-were like the slow trickling of tear after tear, as if he knew, yet
-refused to know, the tragedy that the trivial tears flowed for, knew
-what was coming, resented its insufferable delay, yet spurned its bare
-possibility. At the end, and only then, it came. Her strength had
-suddenly failed. There was no hope. Eppie was dying and had asked to see
-him--at once.
-
-A bird, above the window open to the dew and sunlight, sang and whistled
-while he read, a phrase, not joyous, not happy, yet strangely full of
-triumph, of the innocent praise of life. Gavan, standing still, with the
-letter in his hand, listened, while again and again, monotonously,
-freshly, the bird repeated its song.
-
-He seemed at first to listen quietly, with pleasure, appreciative of
-this heraldry of spring; then memory, blind, numbed from some dark
-shock, stirred, stole out to meet it--the memory of Eppie's morning
-voice on the hillside, the voice monotonous yet triumphant with its
-sense of life; and at each reiteration, the phrase seemed a dagger
-plunged into his heart.
-
-Oh, memory! Oh, cruel thought! Cruel life!
-
-After he had ordered the trap, and while waiting for it, he walked out
-into the freshness and back and forth, over and over across the lawn,
-with the patient, steady swiftness of an animal caged and knowing that
-the bars are about it. So this was to be the end. But, though already he
-acquiesced, it seemed in some way a strange, inapt ending. He couldn't
-think of Eppie and death. He couldn't see her dead. He could only see
-her looking at death.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The early train he caught got him to London by eleven, and in twenty
-minutes he was in Grosvenor Street. He had wired from the country, and
-Miss Barbara met him in the drawing-room of the house, hushed in its
-springtime gaiety. She was the frail ghost of her shadowy old self, her
-voice tremulous, her face blurred with tears and sleepless nights. Yet
-he saw, under the woe, the essential listlessness of age, the placidity
-beneath the half-mechanical tears. "Oh, Gavan," she said, taking his
-hand and holding it in both her own--"Oh, Gavan, we couldn't have
-thought of this, could we, that she would go first." And that his own
-face showed some sharp fixity of woe he felt from its reflection on
-hers--like a sword-flash reflected in a shallow pool.
-
-She told him that it was now an affair of hours only. "I would have sent
-for you long ago, Gavan; I knew--I knew that you would want it. But she
-wouldn't--not while there was hope. I think she was afraid of hurting
-you. You know she had never been the same since--since--"
-
-"Since what?" he asked, knowing.
-
-"Since you went away. She was so ill then. Poor child! She never found
-herself, you see, Gavan. She did not know what she wanted. She has worn
-herself out in looking for it."
-
-Miss Barbara was very ignorant. He himself could not know, probably
-Eppie herself didn't know, what had killed her, though she had so well
-known what she wanted; but he suspected that Grainger had been right,
-and that it was on him that Eppie's life had shattered itself.
-
-Her will, evidently, still ruled those about her, for when Miss Barbara
-had led him up-stairs she said, pausing in the passage, that Eppie would
-see him alone; the nurse would leave them. She had insisted on that, and
-there was now no reason why she should not have her way. The nurse came
-out to them, telling him that Miss Gifford waited; and, just before she
-let him go, Miss Barbara drew his head down to hers and kissed him,
-murmuring to him to be brave. He really didn't know whether he were more
-the felon, or more the victim that she thought him. Then the door closed
-behind him and he was alone with Eppie.
-
-Eppie was propped high on pillows, her hair twisted up from her brows
-and neck and folded in heavy masses on her head.
-
-In the wide, white room, among her pillows, so white herself, and
-strange with a curious thinness, he had never received a more prodigious
-impression of life than in meeting her eyes, where all the forces of her
-soul looked out. So motionless, she was like music, like all that moves,
-that strives and is restless; so white, she was like skies at dawn, like
-deep seas under sunlight. In the stillness, the whiteness, the emptiness
-of the room she was illusion itself, life and beauty, a wonderful
-rainbow thing staining "the white radiance of eternity." And as if,
-before its final shattering, every color flamed, her whole being was
-concentrated in the mere fact of its existence--its existence that
-defied death. A deep, quiet excitement, almost a gaiety, breathed from
-her. In the tangled rivers of her hair, the intertwined currents of dark
-and gold winding in a lovely disorder,--in the white folds of lawn that
-lay so delicately about her; in the emerald slipping far down her
-finger, the emeralds in her ears, shaking faintly with her ebbing
-heart-beats, there was even a sort of wilful and heroic coquetry. She
-was, in her dying, triumphantly beautiful, yet, as always, through her
-beauty went the strength of her reliance on deeper significances.
-
-She lay motionless as Gavan approached her, and he guessed that she
-saved all her strength. Only as he took the chair beside her, horror at
-his heart, the old familiar horror, she put out her hand to him.
-
-He took it silently, looking up, after a little while, from its
-marvelous lightness and whiteness to her eyes, her smile. Then, at last,
-she spoke to him.
-
-"So you think that you have got the better of me at last, don't you,
-Gavan dear?" she said. Her voice was strange, as though familiar notes
-were played on some far-away flute, sweet and melancholy among the
-hills. The voice was strange and sad, but the words were not. In them
-was a caress, as though she pitied his pity for her; but the old
-antagonism, too, was there--a defiance, a willingness to be cruel to
-him. "I did play fair, you see," she went on. "I wouldn't have you come
-till there was no danger, for you, any more. And now this is the end of
-it all, you think. You will soon be able to say of me, Gavan,
-
- "her words to Scorn
- Are scattered, and her mouth is stopt with Dust!"
-
-His hand shut involuntarily, painfully, on hers, and as though his
-breath cut him, he said, "Don't--don't, Eppie."
-
-But with her gaiety she insisted: "Oh, but let us have the truth. You
-must think it. What else could you think?" and, again with the note of
-pity that would atone for the cruel lightness, "Poor Gavan! My poor,
-darling Gavan! And I must leave you with your thoughts--your empty
-thoughts, alone."
-
-He had taken a long breath over the physical pang her words had
-inflicted, and now he looked down at her hand, gently, one after the
-other, as though unseeingly, smoothing her fingers.
-
-"While I go on," she said.
-
-"Yes, dear," he assented.
-
-"You humor me with that. You are so glad, for me, that I go with all my
-illusions about me. Aren't you afraid that, because of them, I'll be
-caught in the mill again and ground round and round in incarnations
-until, only after such a long time, I come out all clean and white and
-selfless, not a scrap of dangerous life about me--Alone with the Alone."
-
-He felt now the fever in her clearness, the hovering on the border of
-hallucination. The colors flamed indeed, and her thoughts seemed to
-shoot up in strange flickerings, a medley of inconsequent memories and
-fancies strung on their chain of unnatural lucidity.
-
-He answered with patient gentleness, "I'm not afraid for you, Eppie. I
-don't think all that."
-
-"Nor I for myself," she retorted. "I love the mill and its grindings.
-But what you think,--I know perfectly what you think. You can't keep it
-from me, Gavan. You can't keep anything from me. And I found something
-that said it all. I can remember it. Shall I say it to you?"
-
-He bowed his head, smoothing her hand, not looking up at her while, in
-that voice of defiance, of fever, yet of such melancholy and echoing
-sweetness, she repeated:
-
- "Ne suis-je pas un faux accord
- Dans la divine symphonie,
- Grce la vorace Ironie
- Qui me secoue et qui me mord?
-
- "Elle est dans ma voix, la criarde!
- C'est tout mon sang, ce poison noir!
- Je suis le sinistre miroir
- O la mgre se regarde!
-
- "Je suis la plaie et le couteau!
- Je suis le soufflet et la joue!
- Je suis les membres et la roue,
- Et le victime et le bourreau!"
-
-She paused after it, smiling intently upon him, and he met the smile to
-say:
-
-"That's only one side of it, dear."
-
-"Ah, it's a side I know about, too! Didn't I see it, feel it? Haven't I
-been all through it--with you, for you, because of you? Ah, when you
-left me--when you left me, Gavan--"
-
-Still she smiled, with brilliant eyes, repeating,
-
- "Qui me secoue et qui me mord."
-
-He was silent, sitting with his pallid, drooping head; and suddenly she
-put her other hand on his, on the hand that gently, mechanically,
-smoothed her fingers.
-
-"You caress me, you try to comfort me,--while I am tormenting you. It's
-strange that I should want to torment you. Is it that I'm so afraid you
-sha'n't feel? I want you to feel. I want you to suffer. It is so
-horrible to leave you. It is so horrible to be afraid--sometimes
-afraid--that I shall never, never see you again. When you feel, when you
-suffer, I am not so lonely. But you feel nothing, do you?"
-
-He did not answer her.
-
-"Will you ever miss me, Gavan?"
-
-He did not answer.
-
-"Won't you even remember me?" she asked.
-
-And still he did not answer, sitting with downcast eyes. And she saw
-that he could not, and in his silence, of a dumb torture, was his reply.
-He looked the stricken saint, pierced through with arrows. And which of
-them was the victim, which the executioner?
-
-With her question a clearness, quieter, deeper, came to her, as though
-in the recoil of its engulfing anguish she pushed her way from among
-vibrating discords to a sudden harmony that, in holy peace, resolved
-them all in unison. Her eyelids fluttered down while, for an instant,
-she listened. Yes, under it all, above it all, holding them all about,
-there it was. She seemed to see the pain mounting, circling, flowing
-from its knotted root into strength and splendor. But though he was with
-her in it he was also far away,--he was blind, and deaf,--held fast by
-cruel bonds.
-
-"Look at me," she commanded him gently.
-
-And now, reluctantly, he looked up into her eyes.
-
-They held him, they drew him, they flooded him. With the keenness of
-life they cut into his heart, and like the surging up of blood his love
-answered hers. As helpless as he had ever been before her, he laid his
-head on her breast, his arms encircling her, while, with closed eyes, he
-said: "Don't think that I don't feel. Don't think that I don't suffer.
-It's only that;--I have only to see you;--something grasps me, and
-tortures me--"
-
-"Something," she said, her voice like the far flute echo of the voice
-that had spoken on that night in the old Scotch garden, "that brings you
-to life--to God."
-
-"Oh, Eppie, what can I say to you?" he murmured.
-
-"You can say nothing. But you will have to wake. It will have to
-come,--the sorrow, the joy of reality,--God--and me."
-
-It was his face, with closed eyes, with its stricken, ashen agony, that
-seemed the dying face. Hers, turned gently toward him, had all the
-beneficence, the radiance of life. But when she spoke again there was in
-her voice a tranced stillness as though already it spoke from another
-world.
-
-"You love me, Gavan."
-
-"I love you. You have that. That is yours, forever. I long for you,
-always, always,--even when I think that I am at peace. You are in
-everything: I hear a bird, and I think of your voice; I see a flower,
-or the sky, and it's of your face I think. I am yours, Eppie--yours
-forever."
-
-"You make me happy," she said.
-
-"Eppie, my darling Eppie, die now, die in my arms, dearest--in your
-happiness."
-
-"No, not yet; I can't go yet--though I wish it, too," she said. "There
-are still horrid bits--dreadful dark places--like the dreadful poem--the
-poem of you, Gavan--where I lose myself; burning places, edges of pain,
-where I fight to find myself again; long, dim places where I
-dream--dream--. I won't have you see me like that; you might think that
-you watched the scattering of the real me. I won't have you remember me
-all dim and broken."
-
-Her voice was sinking from her into an abyss of languor, and she felt
-the swirl of phantom thoughts blurring her mind even while she spoke.
-
-As on that far-away night when he held her hand and they stood together
-under the stars, she said, speaking now her prayer, "O God! God!"; and
-seeming in the effort of her will to lift a weight that softly,
-inexorably, like the lid of a tomb, pressed down upon her, "I am here,"
-she said. "You are mine. I will not be afraid. Remember me. So good-by,
-Gavan."
-
-"I will remember," he said.
-
-His arms still held her. And through his mind an army seemed to rush,
-galloping, with banners, with cries of lamentations, agony, regret,
-passionate rebellion. It crashed in conflict, blood beneath it, and
-above it tempests and torn banners. And the banners were desperate
-hopes riddled with bullets; and the blood was love poured out and the
-tempest was his heart. It was, he thought, even while he saw, listened,
-felt, the last onslaught upon his soul. She was going--the shadow of
-life was sliding from her--and from him, for she was life and its terror
-and beauty. Above the turmoil was the fated peace. He had won it,
-unwillingly. He could not be kept from it even by the memory that would
-stay.
-
-But though he knew, and, in knowing, saw his contemplative soul far from
-this scene of suffocating misery, Eppie, his dear, his beautiful, was in
-his arms, her eyes, her lips, her heart. He would never see her again.
-
-He raised his head to look his last, and, like a faint yet piercing
-perfume, her soul's smile still dwelt on him as she lay there
-speechless. For the moment--and was not the moment eternity?--the
-triumph was all hers. The moment, when long, long past, would still be
-part of him and her triumph in it eternal. To spare her the sight of his
-anguish would be to rob her. Anguish had been and was the only offering
-he could make her. He felt--felt unendurably, she would see that; he
-suffered, he loved her, unspeakably; she had that, too, while, in their
-last long silence, he held her hands against his heart. And her eyes,
-still smiling on him with their transcendent faith, showed that her
-triumph was shadowless.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He heard next day that she had died during the night.
-
-Peace did not come to him for long; the wounds of the warring interlude
-of life had been too deep. He forgot himself at last in the treadmill
-quiet of days all serene laboriousness, knowing that it could not be for
-many years that he should watch the drama. She had shattered herself on
-him; but he, too, had felt that in himself something had broken. And he
-forgot the wounds, except when some sight or sound, the song of a bird
-in Spring, a spray of heather, a sky of stars, startled them to deep
-throbbing. And then a hand, stretched out from the past, would seize
-him, a shudder, a pang, would shake him, and he would know that he was
-alone and that he remembered.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="369" height="520" alt="bookcover" title="" />
-</p>
-
-<p class="cb"><span class="eng">The Shadow of Life</span></p>
-
-<p class="c">
-<a href="#PART_I"><b>PART I</b></a><br />
-<a href="#I-1">I, </a>
-<a href="#II-1">II, </a>
-<a href="#III-1">III, </a>
-<a href="#IV-1">IV, </a>
-<a href="#V-1">V, </a>
-<a href="#VI-1">VI.</a><br />
-<a href="#PART_II"><b>PART II</b></a><br />
-<a href="#I-2">I, </a>
-<a href="#II-2">II, </a>
-<a href="#III-2">III, </a>
-<a href="#IV-2">IV, </a>
-<a href="#V-2">V, </a>
-<a href="#VI-2">VI, </a>
-<a href="#VII-2">VII, </a>
-<a href="#VIII-2">VIII, </a>
-<a href="#IX-2">IX, </a>
-<a href="#X-2">X, </a>
-<a href="#XI-2">XI, </a>
-<a href="#XII-2">XII.</a><br />
-<a href="#PART_III"><b>PART III</b></a><br />
-<a href="#I-3">I, </a>
-<a href="#II-3">II, </a>
-<a href="#III-3">III, </a>
-<a href="#IV-3">IV, </a>
-<a href="#V-3">V, </a>
-<a href="#VI-3">VI, </a>
-<a href="#VII-3">VII, </a>
-<a href="#VIII-3">VIII, </a>
-<a href="#IX-3">IX, </a>
-<a href="#X-3">X.</a>
-</p>
-
-<div class="bbox">
-
-<h1>
-<span class="eng">The Shadow of Life</span></h1>
-
-<p class="cb">BY<br /><big>
-<span class="eng">Anne Douglas Sedgwick</span></big><br />
-<small><small>AUTHOR OF “THE RESCUE,” “THE CONFOUNDING OF<br />
-CAMELIA,” “PATHS OF JUDGEMENT,” ETC.</small></small><br />
-<br /><br /><br />
-<img src="images/colophon.png" width="80" height="83" alt="colophon" title="" />
-<br /><br />
-<br /><br />
-NEW YORK<br />
-<span class="eng">The Century Co.</span><br />
-1906</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="c">
-<small>Copyright, 1906, by<br />
-The Century Co.<br />
-&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;<br />
-<i>Published February, 1906</i><br />
-<br /><br />
-THE DE VINNE PRESS<br /></small>
-</p>
-
-<p><a name="page_001" id="page_001"></a>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<h2><big>
-THE SHADOW OF LIFE</big><br />
-<img src="images/colophon2.png" width="13" height="14" alt="colophon" title="" />
-<br /><br />
-<a name="PART_I" id="PART_I"></a>PART I</h2>
-
-<p><a name="page_002" id="page_002"></a></p>
-
-<p><a name="page_003" id="page_003"></a></p>
-
-<h1>THE SHADOW OF LIFE</h1>
-
-<h3><a name="I-1" id="I-1"></a>I</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00e.png"
-width="79"
-height="81"
-alt="E"
-title="E"
-/></span>LSPETH GIFFORD was five years old when she went to live at Kirklands.
-Her father, an army officer, died in her babyhood, and her mother a few
-years later. The uncle and aunts in Scotland, all three much her
-mother’s seniors, were the child’s nearest relatives.</p>
-
-<p>To such a little girl death had meant no more than a bewildered
-loneliness, but the bewilderment was so sharp, the loneliness so aching,
-that she cried herself into an illness. She had seen her dead mother,
-the sweet, sightless, silent face, familiar yet amazing, and more than
-any fear or shrinking had been the suffocating mystery of feeling
-herself forgotten and left behind. Her uncle Nigel, sorrowful and grave,
-but so large and kind that his presence seemed to radiate a restoring
-warmth, came to London for her and a fond nurse went with her to the
-North, and after a few weeks the anxious affection of her aunts Rachel
-and Barbara built about her, again, a child’s safe universe of love.<a name="page_004" id="page_004"></a></p>
-
-<p>Kirklands was a large white house and stood on a slope facing south,
-backed by a rise of thickly wooded hill and overlooking a sea of
-heathery moorland. It was a solitary but not a melancholy house. Lichens
-yellowed the high-pitched slate roof and creepers clung to the roughly
-“harled” walls. On sunny days the long rows of windows were golden
-squares in the illumined white, and, under a desolate winter sky, glowed
-with an inner radiance.</p>
-
-<p>In the tall limes to the west a vast colony of rooks made their nests;
-and to Eppie these high nests, so dark against the sky in the vaguely
-green boughs of spring or in the autumn’s bare, swaying branches, had a
-weird, fairy-tale charm. They belonged neither to the earth nor to the
-sky, but seemed to float between, in a place of inaccessible romance,
-and the clamor, joyous yet irritable, at dawn and evening seemed full of
-quaint, strange secrets that only a wandering prince or princess would
-have understood.</p>
-
-<p>Before the house a round of vivid green was encircled by the drive that
-led through high stone gates to the moorland road. A stone wall, running
-from gate to gate, divided the lawn from the road, and upon each pillar
-a curiously carved old griffin, its back and head spotted with yellow
-lichens, held stiffly up, for the inspection of passers-by, the family
-escutcheon. From the windows at the back of the house one looked up at
-the hilltop, bare but for a group of pine-trees, and down into a deep
-garden. Here, among utilitarian squares of vegetable beds, went
-overgrown borders of flowers&mdash;<a name="page_005" id="page_005"></a>bands of larkspurs, lupins, stocks, and
-columbines. The golden-gray of the walls was thickly embroidered with
-climbing fruit-trees, and was entirely covered, at one end of the
-garden, by a small snow-white rose, old-fashioned, closely petaled; and
-here in a corner stood a thatched summer-house, where Eppie played with
-her dolls, and where, on warm summer days, the white roses filled the
-air with a fragrance heavy yet fresh in its wine-like sweetness. All
-Eppie’s early memories of Kirklands centered about the summer-house and
-were mingled with the fragrance of the roses. Old James, the gardener,
-put up there a little locker where her toys were stored, and shelves
-where she ranged her dolls’ dishes. There were rustic seats, too, and a
-table&mdash;a table always rather unsteady on the uneven wooden floor. The
-sun basked in that sheltered, windless corner, and, when it rained, the
-low, projecting eaves ranged one safely about with a silvery fringe of
-drops through which one looked out over the wet garden and up at the
-white walls of the house, crossed by the boughs of a great, dark
-pine-tree.</p>
-
-<p>Inside the house the chief room was the fine old library, where, from
-long windows, one looked south over the purples and blues of the
-moorland. Books filled the shelves from floor to ceiling&mdash;old-fashioned
-tomes in leather bindings, shut away, many of them, behind brass
-gratings and with all the delightful sense of peril connected with the
-lofty upper ranges, only to be reached by a courageous use of the
-library steps.<a name="page_006" id="page_006"></a></p>
-
-<p>Here Uncle Nigel gave Eppie lessons in Greek and history every morning,
-aided in the minor matters of her education by a submissive nursery
-governess, an Englishwoman, High Church in doctrine and plaintive in a
-country of dissent.</p>
-
-<p>A door among the book-shelves led from the library into the morning-room
-or boudoir, where Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara sewed, read, dispensed
-small charities and lengthy advice to the village poor&mdash;a cheerful
-little room in spite of its northern aspect and the shadowing trunk of
-the great pine-tree just outside its windows. It was all faded chintzes,
-gilt carvings, porcelain ornaments in corner cabinets; its paper was
-white with a fine gilt line upon it; and even though to Eppie it had sad
-associations with Bible lessons and Sunday morning collects, it retained
-always its aspect of incongruous and delightful gaiety&mdash;almost of
-frivolity. Sitting there in their delicate caps and neatly appointed
-dresses, with their mild eyes and smoothly banded hair, Aunt Rachel and
-Aunt Barbara gathered a picture-book charm&mdash;seemed to count less as
-personalities and more as ornaments. On the other side of the hall,
-rather bare and bleak in its antlered spaciousness, were the dining-and
-smoking-rooms, the first paneled in slightly carved wood, painted white,
-the last a thoroughly modern room, redolent of shabby comforts, with
-deep leather chairs, massive mid-century furniture, and an aggressively
-cheerful paper.</p>
-
-<p>The drawing-room, above the library, was never used&mdash;a long, vacant
-room, into which Eppie would<a name="page_007" id="page_007"></a> wander with a pleasant sense of
-trespassing and impertinence; a trivial room, for all the dignity of its
-shrouded shapes and huge, draped chandelier. Its silver-flecked gray
-paper and oval gilt picture-frames recalled an epoch nearer and uglier
-than that of the grave library and sprightly boudoir below, though even
-its ugliness had a charm. Eppie was fond of playing by herself there,
-and hid sundry secrets under the Chinese cabinet, a large, scowling
-piece of furniture, its black lacquered panels inlaid with
-mother-of-pearl. Once it was a quaintly cut cake, neatly sealed in a
-small jeweler’s box, that she thrust far away under it; and once a
-minute china doll, offspring of a Christmas cracker and too minute for
-personality, was swaddled mummy fashion in a ribbon and placed beside
-the box. Much excitement was to be had by not looking to see if the
-secrets were still there and in hastily removing them when a cleaning
-threatened.</p>
-
-<p>The day-nursery, afterward the school-room, was over the dining-room,
-and the bedrooms were at the back of the house.</p>
-
-<p>The Carmichaels were of an ancient and impoverished family, their
-estates, shrunken as they were, only kept together by careful economy,
-but there was no touch of dreariness in Eppie’s home. She was a happy
-child, filling her life with imaginative pastimes and finding on every
-side objects for her vigorous affections. Her aunts’ mild disciplines
-weighed lightly on her. Love and discipline were sundered principles in
-the grandmotherly administration, and Eppie soon learned that the
-formalities<a name="page_008" id="page_008"></a> of the first were easily evaded and to weigh the force of
-her own naughtiness against it. Corporal punishment formed part of the
-Misses Carmichael’s conception of discipline, but though, on the rare
-occasions when it could not be escaped, Eppie bawled heart-rendingly
-during the very tremulous application, it was with little disturbance of
-spirit that she endured the reward of transgression.</p>
-
-<p>At an early age she understood very clearly the simple characters around
-her. Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara were both placid, both pious, both
-full of unsophisticated good works, both serenely acquiescent in their
-lots. In Aunt Barbara, indeed, placidity was touched with wistfulness;
-she was the gentler, the more yielding of the two. Aunt Rachel could be
-inspired with the greater ruthlessness of conscientious conviction. It
-was she who insisted upon the letter of the law in regard to the Sunday
-collect, the Sunday church-going, who mingled reproof with her village
-charities, who could criticize with such decision the short-comings,
-doctrinal and domestic, of Mr. MacNab, minister of the little
-established church that stood near the village. Aunt Barbara was far
-less assured of the forms of things; she seemed to search and fumble a
-little for further, fuller outlets, and yet to have found a greater
-serenity. Aunt Rachel was fond of pointing out to her niece such facts
-of geology, botany, and natural history in general as the country life
-and her own somewhat rudimentary knowledge suggested to her as useful;
-Aunt Barbara, on the contrary,<a name="page_009" id="page_009"></a> told pretty, allegorical tales about
-birds and flowers&mdash;tales with a heavy cargo of moral insinuation, to
-which, it must be confessed, Eppie listened with an inner sense of
-stubborn realism. It was Aunt Barbara who sought to impress upon her
-that the inclusive attribute of Deity was love, and who, when Eppie
-asked her where God was, answered, “In your heart, dear child.” Eppie
-was much puzzled by anatomical considerations in reflecting upon this
-information. Aunt Rachel, with clear-cut, objective facts from Genesis,
-was less mystifying to inquisitive, but pagan childhood. Eppie could not
-help thinking of God as somewhat like austere, gray-bearded old James,
-the gardener, whose vocation suggested that pictorial chapter in the
-Bible, and who, when he found her one day eating unripe fruit, warned
-her with such severity of painful retribution.</p>
-
-<p>The aunts spent year after year at Kirklands, with an infrequent trip to
-Edinburgh. Neither had been South since the death of the beloved younger
-sister. Uncle Nigel, the general, older than either, was russet-faced,
-white-haired, robust. He embodied a sound, well-nurtured type and
-brought to it hardly an individual variation. He taught his niece,
-re-read a few old books, followed current thought in the “Quarterly” and
-the “Scotsman,” and wrote his memoirs, that moved with difficulty from
-boyhood, so detailed were his recollections and so painstaking his
-recording of inessential fact.</p>
-
-<p>For their few neighbors, life went on as slowly as for the Carmichaels.
-The Carstons of Carlowrie House were in touch with a larger outside
-life: Sir<a name="page_010" id="page_010"></a> Alec Carston was member for the county; but the inmates of
-Brechin House, Crail Hill, and Newton Lowry were fixtures. These dim
-personages hardly counted at all in young Eppie’s experience. She saw
-them gathered round the tea-table in the library when she was summoned
-to appear with tidy hair and fresh frock: stout, ruddy ladies in
-driving-gloves and boat-shaped hats; dry, thin young ladies in
-hard-looking muslins and with frizzed fringes; a solid laird or two.
-They were vague images in her world.</p>
-
-<p>People who really counted were the village people, and on the basis of
-her aunts’ charitable relationship Eppie built up for herself with most
-of them a tyrannous friendship. The village was over two miles away; one
-reached it by the main road that ran along the moor, past the
-birch-woods, the tiny loch, and then down a steep bit of hill to the
-handful of huddled gray roofs. There was the post-office, the sweet-shop
-with its dim, small panes, behind which, to Eppie’s imagination, the
-bull’s-eyes and toffee and Edinburgh rock looked, in their jars, like
-odd fish in an aquarium; there was the carpenter’s shop, the floor all
-heaped with scented shavings, through which one’s feet shuffled in
-delightful, dry rustlings; there the public-house, a lurid corner
-building, past which Miss Grimsby always hurried her over-interested
-young charge, and there the little inn where one ordered the dusty,
-lurching, capacious old fly that conveyed one to the station, five miles
-away. Eppie was far more in the village than her share of her aunts’
-charities at all justified,<a name="page_011" id="page_011"></a> and was often brought in disgrace from
-sheer truancy. The village babies, her dolls, and Robbie, her Aberdeen
-terrier, were the realities at once serious and radiant of life. She
-could do for them, love them as she would. Her uncle and aunts and the
-fond old nurse were included in an unquestioning tenderness, but they
-could not be brought under its laws, and their independence made them
-more remote.</p>
-
-<p>Remote, too, though by no means independent, and calling forth little
-tenderness, were her cousins, who spent part of their holidays each
-summer at Kirklands. They were English boys, coming from an English
-school, and Eppie was very stanchly Scotch. The Graingers, Jim and
-Clarence, were glad young animals. They brought from a home of small
-means and overflowing sisters uncouth though not bad manners and an
-assured tradition of facile bullying. The small Scotch cousin was at
-first seen only in the light of a convenience. She was to be ignored,
-save for her few and rudimentary uses. But Eppie, at eight years old,
-when the Graingers first came, had an opposed and firmly established
-tradition. In her own domain, she was absolute ruler, and not for a
-moment did her conception of her supremacy waver. Her assurance was so
-complete that it left no room for painful struggle or dispute. From
-helpless stupor to a submission as helpless, the cousins fell by degrees
-to a not unhappy dependence. Eppie ran, climbed, played, as good a boy
-as either; and it was she who organized games, she who invented
-wonderful new adventures, all illumined by thrilling<a name="page_012" id="page_012"></a> recitatives while
-in progress, she who, though their ally, and a friendly one, was the
-brains of the alliance, and, as thinker, dominated. Brains, at their
-age, being rudimentary in the young male, Eppie had some ground for her
-consciousness of kindly disdain. She regarded Jim and Clarence as an
-animated form of toy, more amusing than other toys because of
-possibilities of unruliness, or as a mere audience, significant only as
-a means for adding to the zest of life. Clarence, the younger, even from
-the first dumb days of reconstruction, was the more malleable. He was
-formed for the part of dazzled subjection to a strong and splendid
-despotism. Eppie treated her subject races to plenty of pomp and glory.
-Clarence listened, tranced, to her heroic stories, followed her
-leadership with docile, eager fidelity, and finally, showing symptoms of
-extreme romanticism, declared himself forever in love with her. Eppie,
-like the ascendant race again, made prompt and shameless use of the
-avowed and very apparent weakness. She bartered rare and difficult
-favors for acts of service, and on one occasion&mdash;a patch of purple in
-young Clarence’s maudlin days&mdash;submitted, with a stony grimace, to being
-kissed; for this treasure Clarence paid by stealing down to the
-forbidden public-house and there buying a bottle of beer which Eppie and
-Jim were to consume as robbers in a cave,&mdash;Clarence the seized and
-despoiled traveler. Eppie was made rather ill by her share of the beer,
-but, standing in a bed-gown at her window, she called to her cousins, in
-the garden below, such cheerful accounts of her<a name="page_013" id="page_013"></a> malady, the slight
-chastisement that Aunt Rachel had inflicted, and her deft evasion of
-medicines, that her luster was heightened rather than dimmed by the
-disaster. Jim never owned, for a moment, to there being any luster. He
-was a square-faced boy, with abrupt nose, and lips funnily turning up at
-the corners, yet funnily grim,&mdash;most unsmiling of lips. He followed
-Eppie’s lead with the half-surly look of a slave in bondage, and seemed
-dumbly to recognize that his own unfitness rather than Eppie’s right
-gave her authority. He retaliated on Clarence for his sense of
-subjection and cruelly teased and scoffed at him. Clarence, when pushed
-too far, would appeal to Eppie for protection, and on these occasions,
-even while she sheltered him, a strange understanding seemed to pass
-between her and the tormentor as though, with him, she found Clarence
-ludicrous. Jim, before her stinging reproofs, would stand tongue-tied
-and furious, but, while she stung him, Eppie liked the sullen culprit
-better than the suppliant victim.<a name="page_014" id="page_014"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="II-1" id="II-1"></a>II</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00w.png"
-width="77"
-height="76"
-alt="W"
-title="W"
-/></span>HEN Eppie was ten years old, she heard one day that a boy, a new boy,
-was coming to spend the spring and summer&mdash;a boy from India, Gavan
-Palairet. His mother and her own had been dear friends, and his father,
-as hers had been, was in the army; and these points of contact mitigated
-for Eppie the sense of exotic strangeness.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie gathered that a cloud rested upon Mrs. Palairet, and the boy,
-though exotic, seemed to come from the far, brilliant country with his
-mother’s cloud about him.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, poor Fanny!” the general sighed over the letter he read at the
-breakfast-table. “How did she come to marry that brute! It will be a
-heart-breaking thing for her to send the boy from her.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, listening with keen interest, gathered further, from the
-reminiscent talk that went on between the sisters and brother, that Mrs.
-Palairet, for some years of her boy’s babyhood, lived in England; then
-it had been India and the effort to keep him near her in the hills, and
-now his delicacy and the definite necessity of schooling had braced her
-to the parting. The general said, glancing with fond pride<a name="page_015" id="page_015"></a> at his
-niece, that Eppie would be a fine playmate for him and would be of great
-service in cheering him before his plunge into school. Fanny had begged
-for much gentleness and affection for him. Apparently the boy was as
-heartbroken as she.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie had very little diffidence about her own powers as either playmate
-or cheerer: she was well accustomed to both parts; but her eagerness to
-sustain and amuse the invalid was touched with a little shyness. The sad
-boy from India&mdash;her heart and mind rushed out in a hundred plans of
-welcome and consolation; but she suspected that a sad boy from India
-would require subtler methods than those sufficing for a Jim or a
-Clarence. From the first moment of hearing about him she had felt, as if
-instinctively, that he would not be at all like Jim and Clarence.</p>
-
-<p>He came on a still, sunny spring day. The general went to meet him at
-the station, and while he was gone Eppie made excitement endurable by
-vigorous action. Again and again she visited the fresh little room
-overlooking the hills, the garden, the pine-tree boughs, standing in a
-thoughtful surveyal of its beauties and comforts or darting off to add
-to them. She herself chose the delightful piece of green soap from the
-store-cupboard and the books for the table; and she gathered the
-daffodils in the birch-woods, filling every vase with them, so that the
-little room with its white walls and hangings of white dimity seemed
-lighted by clusters of pale, bright flames.</p>
-
-<p>When the old fly rumbled at last through the gates and around the drive,
-Miss Rachel and Miss Barbara<a name="page_016" id="page_016"></a> were in the doorway, and Eppie stood
-before them on the broad stone step, Robbie beside her.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie was a lithe, sturdy, broad-shouldered child, with russet,
-sun-streaked hair, dark yet radiant, falling to her waist. She had a
-pale, freckled face and the woodland eyes of a gay, deep-hearted dog.
-To-day she wore a straight white frock, and her hair, her frock, dazzled
-with sunlight. No more invigorating figure could have greeted a jaded
-traveler.</p>
-
-<p>That it was a very jaded traveler she saw at once, while the general
-bundled out of the fly and handed rugs, dressing-cases, and cages to the
-maid, making a passage for Gavan’s descent. The boy followed him,
-casting anxious glances at the cages, and Eppie’s eyes, following his,
-saw tropical birds in one and in the other a quaint, pathetic little
-beast&mdash;a lemur-like monkey swaddled in flannel and motionless with fear.
-Its quick, shining eyes met hers for a moment, and she looked away from
-them with a sense of pity and repulsion.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, as he ascended the steps, looked at once weary, frightened, and
-composed. He had a white, thin face and thick black hair&mdash;the sort of
-face and hair, Eppie thought, that the wandering prince of one of her
-own stories, the prince who understood the rooks’ secrets, would have.
-He was dressed in a long gray traveling-cloak with capes. The eager
-welcome she had in readiness for him seemed out of place before his
-gentle air of self-possession, going as it did with the look of almost
-painful shrinking. She was a little at a loss and so were<a name="page_017" id="page_017"></a> the aunts, as
-she saw. They took his hand in turn, they smiled, they murmured vague
-words of kindness; but they did not venture to kiss him. He did not seem
-as little a boy as they had expected. The same expression of restraint
-was on Uncle Nigel’s hearty countenance. The sad boy was frozen and he
-chilled others.</p>
-
-<p>He was among them now, in the hall, his cages and rugs and boxes about
-him, and, with all the cheery bustling to and fro, he must feel himself
-dreadfully alone. Eppie, too, was chilled and knew, indeed, the
-childish, panic impulse to run away, but her imagination of his
-loneliness was so strong as to nerve quite another impulse. Once she saw
-him as so desolate she could not hesitate. With resolute gravity she
-took his hand, saying, “I am so glad that you have come, Gavan,” and, as
-resolutely and as gravely, she kissed him on the cheek. He flushed so
-deeply that for a moment all her panic came back with the fear that she
-had wounded his pride; but in a moment he said, glancing at her, “You
-are very kind. I am glad to be here, too.”</p>
-
-<p>His pride was not at all wounded. Eppie felt that at all events the
-worst of the ice was broken.</p>
-
-<p>“May I feed your animals for you while you rest?” she asked him, as,
-with Aunt Barbara, they went up-stairs to his room. Gavan carried the
-lemur himself. Eppie had the birds in their cage.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, so much. It only takes a moment; I can do it. My monkey would
-be afraid of any one else,” he answered, adding, “The journey has been
-too much for him; he has been very strange all day.<a name="page_018" id="page_018"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“He will soon get well here,” said Eppie, encouragingly&mdash;“this is such a
-healthy place. But Scotland will be a great change from India for him,
-won’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very great. I am afraid he is going to be ill.” And again Gavan’s eye
-turned its look of weary anxiety upon the lemur.</p>
-
-<p>But his anxiety did not make him forget his courtesy. “What a beautiful
-view,” he said, when they reached his room, “and what beautiful
-flowers!”</p>
-
-<p>“I have this view, too,” said Eppie. “The school-room has the view of
-the moor; but I like this best, for early morning when one gets up. You
-will see how lovely it is to smell the pine-tree when it is all wet with
-dew.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan agreed that it must be lovely, and looked out with her at the
-blue-green boughs; but even while he looked and admired, she felt more
-courtesy than interest.</p>
-
-<p>They left him in his room to rest till tea-time, and in the library Aunt
-Rachel and Aunt Barbara exclaimed over his air of fragility.</p>
-
-<p>“He is fearfully tired, poor little fellow,” said the general; “a day or
-two of rest will set him up.”</p>
-
-<p>“He looks a very intelligent boy, Nigel,” said Miss Rachel, “but not a
-cheerful disposition.”</p>
-
-<p>“How could one expect that from him now, poor, dear child!” Aunt Barbara
-expostulated. “He has a beautiful nature, I am sure&mdash;such a sensitive
-mouth and such fine eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>And the general said: “He is wonderfully like his<a name="page_019" id="page_019"></a> mother. I am glad to
-see that he takes after Claude Palairet in nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie asked if Captain Palairet were very horrid and was told that he
-was, with the warning that no intimation of such knowledge on her part
-was to be given to her new playmate; a warning that Eppie received with
-some indignation. No one, she was sure, could feel for Gavan as she did,
-or know so well what to say and what not to say to him.</p>
-
-<p>She was gratified to hear that he was not to go down to dinner but was
-to share the school-room high-tea with her and Miss Grimsby. But in the
-wide school-room, ruddy with the hues of sunset and hung with its maps
-and its childish decorations of Caldecott drawings and colored Christmas
-supplements from the “Graphic,”&mdash;little girls on stairs with dogs, and
-“Cherry Ripe,”&mdash;he was almost oppressively out of place. Not that he
-seemed to find himself so. He made, evidently, no claims to maturity.
-But Eppie felt a strange sense of shrunken importance as she listened to
-him politely answering Miss Grimsby’s questions about his voyage and
-giving her all sorts of information about religious sects in India. She
-saw herself relegated to a humbler rôle than any she had conceived
-possible for herself. She would be lucky if she succeeded in cheering at
-all this remote person; it was doubtful if she could ever come near
-enough to console. She took this first blow to her self-assurance very
-wholesomely. Her interest in the sad boy was all the keener for it. She
-led him, next morning, about the garden, over a bit of the moor, and
-into the<a name="page_020" id="page_020"></a> fairyland of the birch-woods&mdash;their young green all tremulous
-in the wind and sunlight. And she showed him, among the pines and
-heather, the winding path, its white, sandy soil laced with black
-tree-roots, that led to the hilltop. “When you are quite rested, we will
-go up there, if you like,” she said. “The burn runs beside this path
-almost all the way&mdash;you can’t think how pretty it is; and when you get
-to the top you can see for miles and miles all about, all over the
-moors, and the hills, away beyond there, and you can see two villages
-besides ours, and such a beautiful windmill.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, hardly noticing the kind little girl, except to know that she was
-kind, assented to all her projects, indifferent to them and to her.</p>
-
-<p>A day or two after his arrival, he and Eppie were united in ministering
-to the dying lemur. The sad creature lay curled up in its basket,
-motionless, refusing food, only from time to time stretching out a
-languid little hand to its master; and when Gavan took it, the delicate
-animal miniature lay inert in his. Its eyes, seeming to grow larger and
-brighter as life went, had a strange look of question and wonder.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie wept loudly when it was dead; but Gavan had no tears. She
-suspected him of a suffering all the keener and that his self-control
-did not allow him the relief of emotion before her. She hoped, at least,
-to be near him in the formalities of grief, and proposed that they
-should bury the lemur together, suggesting a spot among birch-trees and
-heather where some rabbits of her own were interred.<a name="page_021" id="page_021"></a> When she spoke of
-the ceremony, Gavan hesitated; to repulse her, or to have her with him
-in the task of burial, were perhaps equally painful to him. “If you
-don’t mind, I think I would rather do it by myself,” he said in his
-gentle, tentative way.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie felt her lack of delicacy unconsciously rebuked. She recognized
-that, in spite of her most genuine grief, the burial of the lemur had
-held out to her some of the satisfactory possibilities of a solemn game.
-She had been gross in imagining that Gavan could share in such divided
-instincts. Her tears fell for her own just abasement, as well as for the
-lemur, while she watched Gavan walking away into the woods&mdash;evidently
-avoiding the proximity of the rabbits&mdash;with the small white box under
-his arm.</p>
-
-<p>The day after this was Sunday, a day of doom to Eppie. It meant that
-morning recitation of hymn and collect in the chintz and gilt boudoir
-and then the bleak and barren hours in church. Even Aunt Barbara’s
-mildness could, on this subject, become inflexible, and Aunt Rachel’s
-aspect reminded Eppie of the stern angel with the flaming sword driving
-frail, reluctant humanity into the stony wilderness. A flaming sword was
-needed. Every Sunday saw the renewal of her protest, and there were
-occasions on which her submission was only extorted after disgraceful
-scenes. Eppie herself, on looking back, had to own that she had indeed
-disgraced herself when she had taken refuge under her bed and lain
-there, her hat all bent, her fresh dress all crumpled, fiercely
-shrieking her refusal; and disgrace had been<a name="page_022" id="page_022"></a> deeper on another day when
-she had actually struck out at her aunts while they mutely and in pale
-indignation haled her toward the door. It was dreadful to remember that
-Aunt Barbara had burst into tears. Eppie could not forgive herself for
-that. She had a stoic satisfaction in the memory of the smart whipping
-that she had borne without a whimper, and perhaps did not altogether
-repent the heavier slap she had dealt Aunt Rachel; but the thought of
-Aunt Barbara’s tears&mdash;they had continued so piteously to flow while Aunt
-Rachel whipped her&mdash;quelled physical revolt forever. She was older now,
-too, and protest only took the form of dejection and a hostile gloom.</p>
-
-<p>On this Sunday the gloom was shot with a new and, it seemed, a most
-legitimate hope. Boys were usually irreligious; the Grainger cousins
-certainly were so: they had once run away on Sunday morning. She could
-not, to be sure, build much upon possible analogies of behavior between
-Gavan and the Graingers; yet the facts of his age and sex were there:
-normal, youthful manliness might be relied upon. If Gavan wished to
-remain it seemed perfectly probable that the elders might yield as a
-matter of course, and as if to a grown-up guest. Gavan was hardly
-treated as a child by any of them.</p>
-
-<p>“You are fond of going to church, I hope, Gavan,” Aunt Rachel said at
-breakfast. The question had its reproof for Eppie, who, with large eyes,
-over her porridge, listened for the reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, very,” was the doom that fell.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie flushed so deeply that Gavan noticed it.<a name="page_023" id="page_023"></a> “I don’t mind a bit not
-going if Eppie doesn’t go and would like to have me stay at home with
-her,” he hastened, with an almost uncanny intuition of her
-disappointment, to add.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Rachel cast an eye of comprehension upon Eppie’s discomfited
-visage. “That would be a most inappropriate generosity, my dear Gavan.
-Eppie comes with us always.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan still looked at Eppie, who, with downcast eyes, ate swiftly.</p>
-
-<p>“Now I’ll be bound that she has been wheedling you to get her off,
-Gavan,” said the general, with genial banter. “She is a little rebel to
-the bone. She knows that it’s no good to rebel, so she put you up to
-pleading for her”; and, as Gavan protested, “Indeed, indeed, sir, she
-didn’t,” he still continued, “Oh, Eppie, you baggage, you! Isn’t that
-it, eh? Didn’t you hope that you could stay with him if he stayed
-behind?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I did,” Eppie said, without contrition.</p>
-
-<p>“She didn’t tell me so,” said Gavan, full of evident sympathy for
-Eppie’s wounds under this false accusation.</p>
-
-<p>She repelled his defense with a curt, “I would have, if it would have
-done any good.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, that’s my brave lassie,” laughed the general; but Aunt Rachel ended
-the unseemly exposure with a decisive, “Be still now, Eppie; we know too
-well what you feel about this subject. There is nothing brave in such
-naughtiness.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan said no more; from Eppie’s unmoved expression he guessed that such
-reproofs did not cut<a name="page_024" id="page_024"></a> deep. He joined her after breakfast as she stood
-in the open doorway, looking out at the squandered glories of the day.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you dislike going to church so much?” he asked her. The friendly
-bond of his sympathy at the table would have cheered her heart at
-another time; it could do no more for her now than make frankness easy
-and a relief.</p>
-
-<p>“I hate it,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p>“But why?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so long&mdash;so stupid.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan loitered about before her on the door-step, his hands in his
-pockets. Evidently he could find no ready comment for her accusation.</p>
-
-<p>“Every one looks so silly and so sleepy,” she went on. “Mr. MacNab is so
-ugly. Besides, he is an unkind man: he whips his children all the time;
-not whippings when they deserve it&mdash;like mine,”&mdash;Gavan looked at her,
-startled by this impersonally just remark,&mdash;“he whips them because he is
-cross himself. Why should he tell us about being good if he is as
-ill-tempered as possible? And he has a horrid voice,&mdash;not like the
-village people, who talk in a dear, funny way,&mdash;he has a horrid, pretend
-voice. And you stand up and sit down and have nothing to do for ages and
-ages. I don’t see how anybody <i>can</i> like church.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan kicked vaguely at the lichen spots.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really <i>like</i> it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he answered, with his shy abruptness.</p>
-
-<p>“But why? It’s different, I know, for old people&mdash;I don’t suppose that
-they mind things any<a name="page_025" id="page_025"></a> longer; but I don’t see how a boy, a young
-boy”&mdash;and Eppie allowed herself a reproachful emphasis&mdash;“can possibly
-like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m used to it, you see, and I don’t think of it in your way at all.”
-Gavan could not speak to this funny child of its sacred associations. In
-church he had always felt that he and his mother had escaped to a place
-of reality and peace. He entered, through his love for her, into the
-love of the sense of sanctuary from an ominous and hostile world. And he
-was a boy with a deep, sad sense of God.</p>
-
-<p>“But you don’t <i>like</i> it,” said the insistent Eppie.</p>
-
-<p>“I more than like it.”</p>
-
-<p>She eyed him gravely. “I suppose it is because you are so grown up. Yet
-you are only four years older than I am. I wonder if I will ever get to
-like it. I hope not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it will be more comfortable for you if you do,&mdash;since you have to
-go,” said Gavan, with his faint, wintry smile.</p>
-
-<p>She felt the kindness of his austere banter, and retorting, “I’d rather
-not be comfortable, then,” joined him in the sunlight on the broad,
-stone step, going on with quite a sense of companionship: “Only one
-thing I don’t so much mind&mdash;and that is the hymns. I am so glad when
-they come that I almost shout them. Sometimes&mdash;I’m telling you as quite
-a secret, you know&mdash;I shout as loud as I possibly can on purpose to
-disturb Aunt Rachel. I know it’s wrong, so don’t bother to tell me so;
-besides, it’s partly because I really like to shout. But I always<a name="page_026" id="page_026"></a> do
-hope that some day they may leave me at home rather than have me making
-such a noise. People often turn round to look.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“You think that wicked no doubt?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I think it funny, and quite useless, I’m sure.”</p>
-
-<p>After all, Gavan wasn’t a muff, as a boy fond of church might have been
-suspected of being.</p>
-
-<p>Yet after the walk through the birch-woods and over a corner of moor to
-the bare little common where the church stood, and when they were all
-installed in the hard, familiar pew, a new and still more alienating
-impression came to her&mdash;alienating yet fascinating. A sense of awe crept
-over her and she watched Gavan in an absorbed, a dreamy wonder.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie only associated prayers with a bedside; they were part of the
-toilet, so to speak&mdash;went in with the routine of hair-and tooth-brushing
-and having one’s bath. To pray in church, if one were a young person,
-seemed a mystifying, almost an abnormal oddity. She was accustomed to
-seeing in the sodden faces of the village children an echo to her own
-wholesome vacuity. But Gavan really prayed; that was evident. He buried
-his face in his arms. He thought of no one near him.</p>
-
-<p>It was Eppie’s custom to vary the long monotony of Mr. MacNab’s dreary,
-nasal, burring voice by sundry surreptitious occupations, such as
-drawing imaginary pictures with her forefinger upon the lap of her
-frock, picking out in the Bible all the words<a name="page_027" id="page_027"></a> of which her aunts said
-she could only know the meaning when she grew up, counting the number of
-times that Mr. MacNab stiffly raised his hand in speaking, seeing how
-often she could softly kick the pew in front of her before being told to
-stop; and then there was the favorite experiment suggested to her by the
-advertisement of a soap where, after fixing the eyes upon a red spot
-while one counted thirty, one found, on looking at a blank white space,
-that the spot appeared transformed, ghost-like and floating, to a vivid
-green. Eppie’s fertile imagination had seen in Mr. MacNab’s thin, red
-face a substitute for the spot, and most diverting results had followed
-when, after a fixed stare at his countenance, one transferred him, as it
-were, to the pages of one’s prayer-book. To see Mr. MacNab dimly
-hovering there, a green emanation, made him less intolerable in reality:
-found, at least, a use for him. This discovery had been confided to the
-Graingers, and they had been grateful for it. And when all else failed
-and even Mr. MacNab’s poor uses had palled, there was one bright moment
-to look forward to in the morning’s suffocating tedium. Just before the
-sermon, Uncle Nigel, settling himself in his corner, would feel, as if
-absently, in his waistcoat pocket and then slip a lime-drop into her
-hand. The sharply sweet flavor filled her with balmy content, and could,
-with discretion in the use of the tongue, be prolonged for ten minutes.</p>
-
-<p>But to-day her eyes and thoughts were fixed on Gavan; and when the
-lime-drop was in her mouth she crunched it mechanically and heedlessly:
-how<a name="page_028" id="page_028"></a> he held his prayer-book, his pallid, melancholy profile bent above
-it, how he sat gravely listening to Mr. MacNab, how he prayed and sang.
-Only toward the end of the sermon was the tension of her spirit relieved
-by seeing humanizing symptoms of weariness. She was sure that he was
-hearing as little as she was&mdash;his thoughts were far away; and when he
-put up a hand to hide a yawn her jaws stretched themselves in quick
-sympathy. Gavan’s eyes at this turned on her and he smiled openly and
-delightfully at her. Delightfully; yet the very fact of his daring to
-smile made him more grown up than ever. Such maturity, such strange
-spiritual assurance, could afford lightnesses. He brought with him, into
-the fresh, living world outside, his aura of mystery.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie walked beside her uncle and still observed Gavan as he went before
-them with the aunts.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you like your playmate, Eppie?” the general asked.</p>
-
-<p>“He isn’t a playmate,” Eppie gravely corrected him.</p>
-
-<p>“Not very lively? But a nice boy, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think he is very nice; but he is too big to care about me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense; he’s but three years older.”</p>
-
-<p>“Four, Uncle Nigel. That makes a great deal of difference at our ages,”
-said Eppie, wisely.</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense,” the general repeated. “He is only a bit down on his luck;
-he’s not had time to find you out yet. To-morrow he joins you in your
-Greek and history, and I fancy he’ll see that four years<a name="page_029" id="page_029"></a>’ difference
-isn’t such a difference when it comes to some things. Not many chits of
-your age are such excellent scholars.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I think that we will always be very different,” said Eppie, though
-at her uncle’s commendation her spirits had risen.<a name="page_030" id="page_030"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="III-1" id="III-1"></a>III</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="75"
-height="76"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>REEK and history proved, indeed, a bond. The two children, during the
-hours in the library, met on a more equal footing, for Gavan was
-backward with his studies. But the question of inequality had not come
-up in Gavan’s consciousness. “I’m only afraid that I shall bore her,” he
-hastened, in all sincerity, to say when the general appealed to a
-possible vanity in him by hoping that he didn’t mind being kind to a
-little girl and going about with her. “She’s the only companion we have
-for you, you see. And we all find her very good company, in spite of her
-ten years.”</p>
-
-<p>And at this Gavan said, with a smile that protested against any idea
-that he should not find her so: “I’m only afraid that I’m not good
-company for any one. She is a dear little girl.”</p>
-
-<p>It was in the wanderings over the moors and in the birch-woods and up
-the hillside, where Eppie took him to see her views, that the bond
-really drew to closeness. Here nature and little Eppie seemed together
-to thaw him, to heal him, to make him unconsciously happy. A fugitive
-color dawned in his wasted cheeks; a fragile gaiety came to his manner.<a name="page_031" id="page_031"></a>
-He began to find it easy to talk, easy to be quite a little boy. And
-once he did talk, Gavan talked a great deal, quickly, with a sort of
-nervous eagerness. There grew, in Eppie’s mind, a vast mirage-like
-picture of the strange land he came from: the great mountains about
-their high summer home; the blue-shadowed verandas; the flowers he and
-his mother grew in the garden; the rides at dawn; the long, hot days;
-the gentle, softly moving servants, some of whom he loved and told her a
-great deal about. Then the crowds, the swarming colors of the bazaars in
-the great cities.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no; don’t wish to go there,” he said, taking his swift, light
-strides through the heather, his head bent, his eyes looking before
-him&mdash;he seldom looked at one, glanced only; “I hate it,&mdash;more than you
-do church!” and though his simile was humorous he didn’t laugh with it.
-“I hate the thought of any one I care about being there.” He had still,
-for Eppie, his mystery, and she dimly felt, too, that his greater ease
-with her made more apparent his underlying sadness; but the sense of
-being an outsider was gone, and she glowed now at the implication that
-she was one he cared about.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s vast and meaningless,” said Gavan, who often used terms curiously
-unboyish. “I can’t describe it to you. It’s like a dream; you expect all
-the time to wake up and find nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that I should never love anything so much as Scotland&mdash;as
-heather and pines and sky with clouds. Still, I should like to see
-India. I should like to see everything that there is to be<a name="page_032" id="page_032"></a> seen&mdash;if I
-could be sure of always coming back here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, yes, if one could be sure of that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall always live here, Gavan,” said Eppie, feeling the skepticism of
-his “if.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that may be so,” he returned, with the manner that made her
-realize so keenly the difference that was more than a matter of four
-years.</p>
-
-<p>She insisted now: “I shall live here until I am grown up. Then I shall
-travel everywhere, all over the world&mdash;India, Japan, America; then I
-shall marry and come back here to live and have twelve children. I don’t
-believe you care for children as I do, Gavan. How they would enjoy
-themselves here, twelve of them all together&mdash;six boys and six girls.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan laughed. “Well, I hope all that will come true,” he assented. “Why
-twelve?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know; but I’ve always thought of there being twelve. I would
-like as many as possible, and one could hardly remember the names of
-more. I don’t believe that there are more than twelve names that I care
-for. But with twelve we should have a birthday-party once a month, one
-for each month. Did you have birthday-cakes in India, Gavan, with
-candles for your age?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; my mother always had a cake for my birthday.” His voice, in
-speaking of his mother, seemed always to steel itself, as though to
-speak of her hurt him. Eppie had felt this directly, and now, regretting
-her allusion, said, “When is your birthday, Gavan?” thinking of a cake
-with fifteen candles<a name="page_033" id="page_033"></a>&mdash;how splendid!&mdash;to hear disappointingly that the
-day was not till January, when he would have been gone&mdash;long since.</p>
-
-<p>On another time, as they walked up the hillside, beside the burn, she
-said: “I thought you were not going to like us at all, when you first
-came.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was horribly afraid of you all,” said Gavan. “Everything was so
-strange to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you weren’t afraid,” Eppie objected&mdash;“not really afraid. I don’t
-believe you are ever really afraid of people.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I am&mdash;afraid of displeasing them, trying them in some way. And I
-was miserable on that day, too, with anxiety about my poor monkey. I’m
-sorry I seemed horrid.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit horrid, only very cold and polite.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t realize things much. You see&mdash;“ Gavan paused.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, of course; you weren’t thinking of us. You were thinking of&mdash;what
-you had left.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he assented, not looking at her.</p>
-
-<p>He went on presently, turning his eyes on her and smiling over a sort of
-alarm at his own advance to personalities: “<i>You</i> weren’t horrid. I
-remember that I thought you the nicest little girl I had ever seen. You
-were all that I did see&mdash;standing there in the sun, with a white dress
-like Alice in Wonderland and with your hair all shining. I never saw
-hair like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think it pretty?” Eppie asked eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Very&mdash;all those rivers of gold in the dark.”</p>
-
-<p>“I <i>am</i> glad. I think it pretty, too, and nurse is<a name="page_034" id="page_034"></a> afraid that I am
-vain, I think, for she always takes great pains to tell me that it is
-striped hair and that she hopes it may grow to be the same color when
-I’m older.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>I</i> hope not,” said Gavan, gallantly.</p>
-
-<p>Many long afternoons were spent in the garden, where Eppie initiated him
-into the sanctities of the summer-house. Gavan’s sense of other people’s
-sanctities was wonderful. She would never have dreamed of showing her
-dolls to her cousins; but she brought them out and displayed them to
-Gavan, and he looked at them and their appurtenances carefully, gravely
-assenting to all the characteristics that she pointed out. So kind,
-indeed, so comprehending was he, that Eppie, a delightful project
-dawning in her mind, asked: “Have you ever played with dolls? I mean
-when you were very little?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, never.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve always had to play by myself,” said Eppie, “and it’s rather dull
-sometimes, having to carry on all the conversations alone.” And with a
-rush she brought out, rather aghast at her own hardihood, “I suppose you
-couldn’t think of playing with me?”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, at this, showed something of the bashful air of a young bachelor
-asked to hold a baby, but in a moment he said, “I shouldn’t mind at all,
-though I’m afraid I shall be stupid at it.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie flushed, incredulous of such good fortune, and almost reluctant to
-accept it. “You <i>really</i> don’t mind, Gavan? Boys hate dolls, as a rule,
-you know.<a name="page_035" id="page_035"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind in the least,” he laughed. “I am sure I shall enjoy it.
-How do we begin? You must teach me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll teach you everything. You are the very kindest person I ever knew,
-Gavan. Really, I wouldn’t ask you to if I didn’t believe you would like
-it when once you had tried it. It is such fun. And now we can make them
-do all sorts of things, have all sorts of adventures, that they never
-could have before.” She suspected purest generosity, but so trusted in
-the enchantments he was to discover that she felt herself justified in
-profiting by it. She placed in his hand Agnes, the fairest of all the
-dolls, golden-haired, blue-eyed. Agnes was good, and her own daughter,
-Elspeth, named after herself, was bad. “As bad as possible,” said Eppie.
-“I have to whip her a great deal.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, holding his charge rather helplessly and looking at Elspeth, a
-doll of sturdier build, with short hair, dark eyes, and, for a doll, a
-mutinous face, remarked, with his touch of humor, “I thought you didn’t
-approve of whipping.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t,&mdash;not real children, or dolls either, except when they are
-really bad. Mr. MacNab whips his all the time, and they are not a bit
-bad, really, as Elspeth is.” And Elspeth proceeded to demonstrate how
-really bad she was by falling upon Agnes with such malicious kicks and
-blows that Gavan, in defense of his own doll, dealt her a vigorous slap.</p>
-
-<p>“Well done, Mr. Palairet; she richly deserves it! Come here directly,
-you naughty child,” and after a scuffling flight around the
-summer-house, Elspeth<a name="page_036" id="page_036"></a> was secured, and so soundly beaten that Gavan at
-last interceded for her with the ruthless mother.</p>
-
-<p>“Not until she says that she is sorry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Elspeth, say that you are sorry,” Gavan supplicated, while he
-laughed. “Really, Eppie, you are savage. I feel as if you were really
-hurting some one. Please forgive her now; Agnes has, I am sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hurt her because I love her and want her to be a good child. She will
-come to no good end when she grows up if she cannot learn to control her
-temper. What is it I hear you say, Elspeth?”</p>
-
-<p>Elspeth, in a low, sullen voice that did not augur well for permanent
-amendment, whispered that she was sorry, and was led up, crestfallen, to
-beg Agnes’s pardon and to receive a reconciling kiss.</p>
-
-<p>The table was then brought out and laid. Eppie had her small store of
-biscuits and raisins, and Elspeth and Agnes were sent into the garden to
-pick currants and flowers. To Agnes was given the task of making a
-nosegay for the place of each guest. There were four of these guests,
-bidden to the feast with great ceremony: three, pink and curly, of
-little individuality, and the fourth a dingy, armless old rag-doll,
-reverently wrapped in a fine shawl, and with a pathetic,
-half-obliterated face.</p>
-
-<p>“Very old and almost deaf,” Eppie whispered to Gavan. “Everybody loves
-her. She lost her arms in a great fire, saving a baby’s life.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan was entering into all the phases of the game with such spirit,
-keeping up Agnes’s character for an irritating perfection so aptly that
-Eppie forgot<a name="page_037" id="page_037"></a> to wonder if his enjoyment were as real as her own. But
-suddenly the doorway was darkened, and glancing up, she saw her uncle’s
-face, long-drawn with jocular incredulity, looking in upon them. Then,
-and only then, under the eyes of an uncomprehending sex, did the true
-caliber of Gavan’s self-immolation flash upon her. A boy, a big boy, he
-was playing dolls with a girl; it was monstrous; as monstrous as the
-general’s eyes showed that he found it. Stooping in his tall slightness,
-as he assisted Agnes’s steps across the floor, he seemed, suddenly, a
-fairy prince decoyed and flouted. What would Uncle Nigel think of him?
-She could almost have flung herself before him protectingly.</p>
-
-<p>The general had burst into laughter. “Now, upon my word, this is too bad
-of you, Eppie!” he cried, while Gavan, not abandoning his hold on
-Agnes’s arm, turned his eyes upon the intruder with perfect serenity.
-“You are the most unconscionable little tyrant. You kept the Grainger
-boys under your thumb; but I didn’t think you could carry wheedling or
-bullying as far as this. Gavan, my dear boy, you are too patient with
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie stood at the table, scarlet with anger and compunction. Gavan had
-raised himself, and, still holding Agnes, looked from one to the other.</p>
-
-<p>“But she hasn’t bullied me; she hasn’t wheedled me,” he said. “I like
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“At your age, my dear boy! Like doll-babies!”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“This is the finest bit of chivalry I’ve come across for a long time.
-The gentleman who jumped<a name="page_038" id="page_038"></a> into the lions’ den for his mistress’s glove
-was hardly pluckier. Drop that ridiculous thing and come away. I’ll
-rescue you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t want to be rescued. I really am enjoying myself. It’s not a
-case of courage at all,” Gavan protested.</p>
-
-<p>This was too much. He should not tarnish himself to shield her, and
-Eppie burst out: “Nonsense, Gavan. I asked you to. You are only doing it
-because you are so kind, and to please me. It was very wrong of me. Put
-her down as Uncle Nigel says.”</p>
-
-<p>“There, our little tyrant is honest, at all events. Drop it, Gavan. You
-should see the figure you cut with that popinjay in your arms. Come,
-you’ve won your spurs. Come away with me.”</p>
-
-<p>But Gavan, smiling, shook his head. “No, I don’t want to, thanks. I did
-it to please her, if you like; but now I do it to please myself. Playing
-with dolls is a most amusing game,&mdash;and you are interrupting us at a
-most interesting point,” he added. He seemed, funnily, doll and all,
-older than the general as he said it. Incredulous but mystified, Uncle
-Nigel was forced to beat a retreat, and Gavan was left confronting his
-playmate.</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you tell him that you enjoyed it?” she cried. “He’ll think you
-unmanly.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Eppie, he won’t think me unmanly at all. Besides, I don’t care
-if he does.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>I</i> care.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Eppie, you take it too hard. Why should you care? It’s only funny.
-Why shouldn’t we amuse ourselves as we like? We are only children.<a name="page_039" id="page_039"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“You are much more than a child. Uncle Nigel thinks so, too, I am sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“All the more reason, then, for my having a right to amuse myself as I
-please. And I am a child, for I do amuse myself.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie stood staring out rigidly at the blighted prospect, and he took
-her unyielding hand. “Poor Elspeth is lying on her face. Do let us go
-on. I want you to hear what Agnes has to say next.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned to him now. “I don’t believe a word you say. You only did it
-for me. You are only doing it for me now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what if I did? What if I do? Can’t I enjoy doing things for you?
-And really, really, Eppie, I do think it fun. I assure you I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you are a hero,” Eppie said solemnly, and at this absurdity he
-burst into his high, shrill laugh, and renewed his supplications; but
-supplications were in vain. She refused to let him play with her again.
-He might do things for the dolls,&mdash;yes, she reluctantly consented to
-that at last,&mdash;he might take the part of robber or of dangerous wild
-beast in the woods, but into domestic relations, as it were, he should
-not enter with them; and from this determination Gavan could not move
-her.</p>
-
-<p>As far as his dignity in the eyes of others went, he might have gone on
-playing dolls with her all summer; Eppie realized, with surprise and
-relief, that Gavan’s assurance had been well founded. Uncle Nigel,
-evidently, did not think him unmanly, and there was no chaffing. It
-really was as he had<a name="page_040" id="page_040"></a> said, he was so little a child that he could do as
-he chose. His dignity needed no defense.</p>
-
-<p>But though the doll episode was not to be repeated, other and more equal
-ties knit her friendship with Gavan. Wide vistas of talk opened from
-their lessons, from their readings together. As they rambled through the
-heather they would talk of the Odyssey, of Plutarch’s Lives, of nearer
-great people and events in history. Gavan listened with smiling interest
-while Eppie expressed her hatreds and her loves, correcting her
-vehemence, now and then, by a reference to mitigatory circumstance.
-Penelope was one of the people she hated. “See, Gavan, how she neglected
-her husband’s dog while he was away&mdash;let him starve to death on a
-dunghill.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan surmised that the Homeric Greeks had little sense of
-responsibility about dogs.</p>
-
-<p>“They were horrid, then,” said Eppie. “Dear Argos! Think of him trying
-to wag his tail when he was dying and saw Ulysses; <i>he</i> was horrid, too,
-for he surely might have just stopped for a moment and patted his head.
-I’m glad that Robbie didn’t live in those times. You wouldn’t let Robbie
-die on a dunghill if <i>I</i> were to go away!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, indeed, Eppie!” Gavan smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you really love Robbie as much as I do, Gavan. You love him
-more than Uncle Nigel does. One can always see in people’s eyes how much
-they love a dog. That fat, red Miss Erskine simply feels nothing for
-them, though she always says ‘Come, come,’ to Robbie. But her eyes are
-like stones when she looks at him. She is really thinking about her<a name="page_041" id="page_041"></a>
-tea, and watching to see that Aunt Rachel puts in plenty of cream. I
-suppose that Penelope looked like her, when she used to see Argos on the
-dunghill.”</p>
-
-<p>Robbie was plunging through the heather before them and paused to look
-round at them, his delicate tongue lapping in little pants over his
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“Darling Robbie,” said Gavan. “Our eyes aren’t like stones when we look
-at you! See him smile, Eppie, when I speak to him. Wouldn’t it be funny
-if we smiled with our ears instead of with our mouths.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, after a moment, sighed involuntarily and deeply.</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter?” Eppie asked quickly, for she had grown near enough
-to ask it. And how near they were was shown after a little silence, by
-Gavan saying: “I was only wishing that everything could be happy at
-once, Eppie. I was thinking about my mother and wishing that she might
-be here with you and me and Robbie.” His voice was steadied to its cold
-quiet as he said it, though he knew how safe from any hurt he was with
-her. And she said nothing, and did not look at him, only, in silence,
-putting a hand of comradeship on his shoulder while they walked.<a name="page_042" id="page_042"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="IV-1" id="IV-1"></a>IV</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00o.png"
-width="75"
-height="83"
-alt="O"
-title="O"
-/></span>NCE a week, on the days of the Indian mail, Eppie’s understanding
-hovered helplessly about Gavan, seeing pain for him and powerless to
-shield him from it. Prayers took place in the dining-room ten minutes
-before breakfast, and with the breakfast the mail was brought in, so
-that Gavan’s promptest descent could not secure him a solitary reading
-of the letter that, Eppie felt, he awaited with trembling eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>“A letter from India, Gavan dear,” Miss Rachel, the distributer of the
-mail would say. “Tell us your news.” And before them all, in the midst
-of the general’s comments on politics, crops, and weather, the rustling
-of newspapers, the pouring of tea, he was forced to open and read his
-letter and to answer, even during the reading, the kindly triviality of
-the questions showered upon him. “Yes, thank you, very well indeed. Yes,
-in Calcutta. Yes, enjoying herself, I think, thanks.” His pallor on
-these occasions, his look of hardened endurance, told Eppie all that it
-did not tell the others. And that his eagerness was too great for him to
-wait until after breakfast, she saw, too. A bright thought of rescue
-came to her at last. On the mornings when the Indian mail<a name="page_043" id="page_043"></a> was due, she
-was up a good hour before her usual time. Long before the quaint,
-musical gong sounded its vague, blurred melody for prayers, she was out
-of the house and running through the birch-woods to the village road,
-where, just above the church, she met the postman. He was an old friend,
-glad to please the young lady’s love of importance, and the mail was
-trusted to her care. Eppie saved all her speed for the return. Every
-moment counted for Gavan’s sheltered reading. She felt as if, her back
-to its door, she stood before the sheltered chamber of their meeting,
-guarding their clasp and kiss, sweet and sorrowful, from alien eyes.
-Flushed, panting, she darted up to his room, handing his letter in to
-him, while she said in an easy, matter-of-fact tone, “Your mail, Gavan.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, like the postman, attributed his good luck to Eppie’s love of
-importance, and only on the third morning discovered her manœuver.</p>
-
-<p>He came down early himself to get his own letter, found that the mail
-had not arrived, and, strolling disappointedly down the drive, was
-almost knocked down by Eppie rushing in at the gate. She fell back,
-dismayed at the revelation that must force the fullness of her sympathy
-upon him&mdash;almost as if she herself glanced in at the place of meeting.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got the letters,” she said, leaning on the stone pillar and
-recovering her breath. “There’s one for you.” And she held it out.</p>
-
-<p>But for once Gavan’s concentration seemed to be for her rather than for
-the letter. “My mother’s letter?” he said.<a name="page_044" id="page_044"></a></p>
-
-<p>She nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“It was you, then. I wondered why they came so much earlier.”</p>
-
-<p>“I met the postman; he likes to be saved that much of his walk.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must have to go a long way to get them so early. You went on
-purpose for me, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>Looking aside, she now had to own: “I saw that you hated reading them
-before us all. I would hate it, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eppie, my dearest Eppie,” said Gavan. Glancing at him, she saw tears in
-his eyes, and joy and pride flamed up in her. He opened the letter and
-read it, walking beside her, his hand on her shoulder, showing her that
-he did not count her among “us all.”</p>
-
-<p>After that they went together to meet the postman, and, unasked, Gavan
-would read to her long pieces from what his mother said.</p>
-
-<p>It was a few weeks later, on one of these days, that she knew, from his
-face while he read, and from his silence, that bad news had come. He
-left her at the house, making no confidence, and at breakfast, when he
-came down to it later, she could see that he had been struggling for
-self-mastery. This pale, controlled face, at which she glanced furtively
-while they did their lessons in the library, made her think of the
-Spartan boy, calm over an agony. Even the general noticed the mechanical
-voice and the pallor and asked him if he were feeling tired this
-morning. Gavan owned to a headache.</p>
-
-<p>“Off to the moors directly, then,” said the general;<a name="page_045" id="page_045"></a> “and you, too,
-Eppie. Have a morning together.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie sat over her book and said that perhaps Gavan would rather go
-without her; but Gavan, who had risen, said quickly that he wanted her
-to come. “Let us go to the hilltop,” he said, when they were outside in
-the warm, scented sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>They went through the woods, where the burn ran, rippling loudly, and
-the shadows were blue on the little, sandy path that wound among pines
-and birches. Neither spoke while they climbed the gradual ascent. They
-came out upon the height that ran in a long undulation to the far lift
-of mountain ranges. Under a solitary group of pines they sat down.</p>
-
-<p>The woods of Kirklands were below them, and then the vast sea of purple,
-heaving in broad, long waves to the azure, intense and clear, of the
-horizon. The wind sighed, soft and shrill, through the pines above them,
-and far away they heard a sheep-bell tinkle. Beyond the delicate
-miniature of the village a wind-mill turned slow, gray sails. The whole
-world, seemed a sunlit island floating in the circling blue. Robbie sat
-at their feet, alert, upright, silhouetted against the sky.</p>
-
-<p>“Robbie, Robbie,” said Gavan, gently, as he leaned forward and stroked
-the dog’s back. Eppie, too, stroked with him. The silence of his unknown
-grief weighed heavily on her heart and she guessed that though for him
-the pain of silence was great, the pain of speech seemed greater.</p>
-
-<p>He presently raised himself again, clasping both hands about his knees
-and looking away into the vast<a name="page_046" id="page_046"></a> distance. His head, with its thick hair,
-its fine, aquiline nose and delicately jutting chin, made Eppie think,
-vaguely, of a picture she had seen of a young Saint Sebastian, mutely
-enduring arrows, on a background of serene sky. With the thought, the
-silence became unendurable; she strung herself to speak. “Tell me,
-Gavan,” she said, “have you had bad news?”</p>
-
-<p>He cast her a frightened glance, and, looking down, began to pull at the
-heather. “No, not bad news, exactly.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie drew a breath of dubious relief. “But you are so unhappy about
-something.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“But why, if it’s not bad news?”</p>
-
-<p>After a pause he said, and she knew, with all the pain of it, what the
-relief of speaking must be: “I guess at things. I always feel if she is
-hiding things.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you are only imagining.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could think it; but I know not. I know what is happening to
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>He was still wrenching away at the heather, tossing aside the purple
-sprays with their finely tangled sandy roots. Suddenly he put his head
-on his knees, hiding his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Gavan! Oh, don’t be so unhappy,” Eppie whispered, drawing near him,
-helpless and awe-struck.</p>
-
-<p>“How can I be anything but unhappy when the person I care most for is
-miserable&mdash;miserable, and I am so far from her?” His shoulders heaved;
-she saw that he was weeping.<a name="page_047" id="page_047"></a></p>
-
-<p>Eppie, at first, gazed, motionless, silent, frozen with a child’s quick
-fear of demonstrated grief. A child’s quick response followed. Throwing
-her arms around him, she too burst into tears.</p>
-
-<p>It was strange to see how the boy’s reserves melted in the onslaught of
-this hot, simple sympathy. He turned to her, hiding his face on her
-shoulder, and they cried together.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t want to make you unhappy, too,” Gavan said at last in a
-weakened voice. His tears were over first and he faintly smiled as he
-met Robbie’s alarmed, beseeching eyes. Robbie had been scrambling over
-them, scratching, whining, licking their hands and cheeks in an
-exasperation of shut-out pity.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not nearly so unhappy as when you don’t say anything and I know
-that you are keeping things back,” Eppie choked, pushing Robbie away
-blindly. “I’d much rather <i>be</i> unhappy if you are.”</p>
-
-<p>It was Gavan, one arm around the rejected Robbie, who had to dry her
-tears, trying to console her with: “Perhaps I did imagine more than
-there actually is. One can’t help imagining&mdash;at this distance.” He
-smiled at her, as he had smiled at Robbie, and holding her hand, he went
-on: “She is so gentle, and so lonely, and so unhappy. I could help her
-out there. Here, I am so helpless.”</p>
-
-<p>“Make her come here!” Eppie cried. “Write at once and make her come.
-Send a wire, Gavan. Couldn’t she be here very soon, if you wired that
-she must&mdash;<i>must</i> come? I wouldn’t bear it if I were you.”</p>
-
-<p>“She can’t come. She must stay with my father.<a name="page_048" id="page_048"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>All the barriers were down now, so that Eppie could insist: “She would
-rather be with you. You want her most.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I want her most. But he needs her most,” said Gavan. “He is
-extravagant and weak and bad. He drinks and he gambles, and if she left
-him he would probably soon ruin himself&mdash;and us; for my mother has no
-money. She could not leave him if she would. And though he is often very
-cruel to her, he wants her with him.” Gavan spoke with all his quiet,
-but he had flushed as if from a still anger. “Money is an odious thing,
-Eppie. That’s what I want to do, as soon as I can: make money for her.”
-He added presently: “I pray for strength to help her.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a long silence after this. Gavan lay back on the heather, his
-hat tilted over his tired eyes. Eppie sat above him, staring out at the
-empty blue. Her longing, her pity, her revolt from this suffering,&mdash;for
-herself and for him,&mdash;her vague but vehement desires, flew out&mdash;out; she
-almost seemed to see them, like strong, bright birds flying so far at
-last that the blue engulfed them. The idea hurt her. She turned away
-from the dissolving vastness before which it was impossible to think or
-feel, turned her head to look down at the long, white form beside her,
-exhausted and inert. Darling Gavan. How he suffered. His poor mother,
-too. She saw Gavan’s mother in a sort of padlocked palanquin under a
-burning sky, surrounded by dazzling deserts, a Blue-beard, bristling
-with swords, reeling in a drunken sentinelship round her prison.
-Considering Gavan,<a name="page_049" id="page_049"></a> with his hidden face, the thought of his last words
-came more distinctly to her. A long time had passed, and his breast was
-rising quietly, almost as if he slept. Conjecture grew as to the odd
-form of action in which he evidently trusted. “Do you pray a great deal,
-Gavan?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>He nodded under the hat.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you feel as if there was a God&mdash;quite near you&mdash;who listened?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t want to live unless I could feel that.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie paused at this, perplexed, and asked presently, with a slight
-embarrassment, “Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing would have any meaning,” said Gavan.</p>
-
-<p>“No meaning, Gavan? You would still care for your mother and want to
-help her, wouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but without God there would be no hope of helping her, no hope of
-strength. Why, Eppie,” came the voice from behind the hat, “without God
-life would be death.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie retired to another discomfited silence. “I am afraid I don’t think
-much about God,” she confessed at last. “I always feel as if I had
-strength already&mdash;I suppose, heaps and heaps of strength.
-Only&mdash;to-day&mdash;I do know more what you mean. If only God would do
-something for you and your mother. You want something so big to help you
-if you are very, very unhappy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and some one to turn to when you are lonely.”</p>
-
-<p>Again Eppie hesitated. “Well, but, Gavan, while you’re here you have me,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p>At this Gavan pushed aside his hat almost to laugh<a name="page_050" id="page_050"></a> at her. “What a
-funny little girl you are, Eppie! What a dear little girl! Yes, of
-course, I have you. But when I go away? And even while I’m here,&mdash;what
-if we were both lonely together? Can’t you imagine that? The feeling of
-being lost in a great forest at night. You have such quaint ideas about
-God.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve never had any ideas at all. I’ve only thought of Some One who was
-there,&mdash;Some One I didn’t need yet. I’ve always thought of God as being
-more for grown-up people. Lost in a forest together? I don’t think I
-would mind that so much, Gavan. I don’t think I would be frightened, if
-we were together.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t exactly mean it literally,&mdash;not a real forest, perhaps.” He
-had looked away from her, and, his thin, white face sunken among the
-heather, his eyes were on the blue immensities where her thoughts had
-lost themselves. “I am so often frightened. I get so lost sometimes that
-I can hardly believe that that Some One is near me. And then the fear
-becomes a sort of numbness, so that I hardly seem there myself; it’s
-only loneliness, while I melt and melt away into nothing. Even now, when
-I look at that sky, the feeling creeps and creeps, that dreadful
-loneliness, where there isn’t any I left to know that it’s lonely&mdash;only
-a feeling.” He shut his eyes resolutely. “My mother always says that it
-is when one has such fancies that one must pray and have faith.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie hardly felt that he spoke to her, and she groped among his strange
-thoughts, seizing the most<a name="page_051" id="page_051"></a> concrete of them, imitating his shutting out
-of the emptiness by closing her own eyes. “Yes,” she said, reflecting in
-the odd, glowing dimness, “I am quite sure that you have much more
-feeling about God when you think hard, inside yourself, than when you
-look at the sky.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only then, there are chasms inside, too.” Gavan’s hand beside him was
-once more restlessly pulling at the heather. “Even inside, one can fall,
-and fall, and fall.”</p>
-
-<p>The strange tone of his voice&mdash;it was indeed like the far note of a
-falling bell, dying in an abyss&mdash;roused Eppie from her experiments. She
-shook his shoulder. “Open your eyes, Gavan; please, at once. You make me
-feel horridly. I would rather have you look at the sky than fall inside
-like that.”</p>
-
-<p>He raised himself on an arm now, with a gaze, for a moment, vague,
-deadened, blank, then sprang to his feet. “Don’t let’s look. Don’t let’s
-fall. We must pray and have faith. Eppie, I have made you so pale. Dear
-Eppie, to care so much. Please forgive me for going to pieces like
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie was on her feet, too. “But I want you to. You know what I mean:
-never hide things. Oh, Gavan, if I could only help you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You do. It is because you care, just in the way you do, that I <i>could</i>
-go to pieces,&mdash;and it has helped me to be so selfish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Please be selfish, often, often, then. I always am caring. And just
-wait till I am grown up. I shall do something for you then. <i>I’ll</i> make
-money, too, Gavan.<a name="page_052" id="page_052"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“Eppie, you are the dearest little girl,” he repeated, in a shaken
-voice; and at that she put her arms around his neck and kissed him. The
-boy’s eyes filled with tears. They stood under the sighing pines, high
-in the blue, and the scent of the heather was strong, sweet, in the
-sunny air. Gavan did not return the kiss, but holding her face between
-his hands, stammering, he said, “Eppie, how can I bear ever to leave
-you?<a name="page_053" id="page_053"></a>”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="V-1" id="V-1"></a>V</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00i.png"
-width="76"
-height="75"
-alt="I"
-title="I"
-/></span>N looking back, after long years, at their summer, Eppie could see,
-more clearly than when she lived in it, that sadness and Gavan had
-always gone together. He had, as it were, initiated her into suffering.
-Sadness was the undertone of their sweet comradeship. Their happy
-stories came to tragic endings. Death and disaster, though in trivial
-forms, followed him.</p>
-
-<p>With his returning strength, and perhaps with a sense of atonement to
-her for what he had called his selfishness, Gavan plunged eagerly into
-any outer interest that would please her. He spent hours in building for
-her a little hut on the banks of the brae among the birches: the dolls’
-Petit Trianon he called it, as the summer-house was their Versailles.
-They had been reading about the French Revolution. Eppie objected to the
-analogy. “I should always imagine that Elspeth’s head were going to be
-cut off if I called it that.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan said that Elspeth need not be the queen, but a less exalted, more
-fortunate court lady. “We’ll imagine that she escaped early from France
-with all her family, saw none of the horrors, was a happy <i>émigrée</i> in
-England and married there,” he<a name="page_054" id="page_054"></a> said; and he went on, while he hammered
-at the pine boughs, with a desultory and reassuring account of Elspeth’s
-English adventures. But poor Elspeth came to as sad an end as any victim
-of the guillotine. Eppie was carrying her one day when she and Gavan had
-followed Aunt Barbara on some housewifely errand up to the highest attic
-rooms. Outside the low sills of the dormer-windows ran a narrow stone
-gallery looking down over the pine-tree and the garden. The children
-squeezed out through the window to hang in delighted contemplation over
-the birds’-eye view, and then Eppie crawled to a farther corner where
-one could see round to the moorland and find oneself on a level, almost,
-with the rooks’ nests in the lime-trees. She handed Elspeth to Gavan to
-hold for her while she went on this adventure.</p>
-
-<p>He had just risen to his feet, looking down from where he stood over the
-low parapet, when a sudden cry from Eppie&mdash;a great bird sailing by that
-she called to him to look at&mdash;made him start, almost losing his balance
-on the narrow ledge. Elspeth fell from his arms.</p>
-
-<p>She was picked up on the garden path, far, far beneath, with a shattered
-head. Gavan, perhaps, suffered more from the disaster than Eppie
-herself. He was sick with dismay and self-reproach. She was forced to
-make light of her grief to soothe his. But she did not feel that her
-soothing hoodwinked or comforted him. Indeed, after that hour on the
-hilltop, when he showed her his sorrow and his fear, Eppie felt that
-though near, very near him, she was also held away. It was as if he felt
-a discomfort in<a name="page_055" id="page_055"></a> the nearness, or a dread that through it he might hurt
-again or be hurt. He was at once more loving and more reticent. His
-resolute cheerfulness, when they could be cheerful, was a wall between
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Once more, and only once, before their childhood together ended, was she
-to see all, feel all, suffer all with him. Toward the end of the summer
-Robbie sickened and died. For three nights the children sat up with him,
-taking turns at sleep, refusing alien help. By candle-light, in Eppie’s
-room, they bent over Robbie’s basket, listening to his laboring breath.
-The general, protesting against the folly of the sleepless nights, yet
-tiptoed in and out, gruffly kind, moved by the pathos of the young
-figures. He gave medical advice and superintended the administering of
-teaspoonfuls of milk and brandy. That he thought Robbie’s case a
-hopeless one the children knew, for all his air of reassuring good
-cheer.</p>
-
-<p>Robbie died early on the morning of the fourth day. A little while
-before, he faintly wagged his tail when they spoke to him, raising eyes
-unendurably sad.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, during the illness, had been constantly in tears; Gavan had shown
-a stoic fortitude. But when all was over and Eppie was covering Robbie
-with the white towel that was to be his shroud, Gavan suddenly broke
-down. Casting his arms around her, hiding his face against her, he burst
-into sobs, saying in a shuddering voice, while he clung to her, shaken
-all through with the violence of his weeping: “Oh, I can’t bear it,
-Eppie! I can’t bear it!”</p>
-
-<p>Before this absolute shattering Eppie found her<a name="page_056" id="page_056"></a> own self-control.
-Holding him to her,&mdash;and she almost thought that he would have fallen if
-she had not so held him,&mdash;she murmured, “Gavan, darling Gavan, I know, I
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Eppie,” he gasped, “we will never see him again.”</p>
-
-<p>She had drawn him down to the window-seat, where they leaned together,
-and she was silent for a moment at his last words. But suddenly her arms
-tightened around him with an almost vindictive tenderness. “We <i>will</i>,”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Never! Never!” Gavan gasped. “His eyes, Eppie,&mdash;his eyes seemed to know
-it; they were saying good-by forever. And, oh, Eppie, they were so
-astonished&mdash;so astonished,” he repeated, while the sobs shook him.</p>
-
-<p>“We will,” Eppie said again, pressing the boy’s head to hers, while she
-shut her eyes over the poignant memory. “Why, Gavan, I don’t know much
-about God, but I do know about heaven. Animals will go to heaven; it
-wouldn’t be heaven unless they were there.”</p>
-
-<p>That memory of the astonishment in Robbie’s eyes seemed to put knives in
-her heart, but over the sharpness she grasped her conviction.</p>
-
-<p>In all the despair of his grief, the boy had, in answering her, the
-disciplined logic of his more formal faith, more clearly seen fact.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Eppie, animals have no souls.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know?” she retorted, almost with anger.</p>
-
-<p>“One only has to think. They stop, as Robbie has.<a name="page_057" id="page_057"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know he has stopped? It’s only,” said Eppie, groping, “that
-he doesn’t want his body any longer.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s Robbie in his body that we want. It’s his body, with Robbie in
-it, that we know. God has done with wanting him&mdash;that’s it, perhaps; but
-we want him. Oh, Eppie, it’s no good: as we know him, as we want him, he
-is dead&mdash;dead forever. Besides,”&mdash;in speaking this Gavan straightened
-himself,&mdash;“we shall forget him.” He turned, in speaking, from her
-consolations, as though their inefficiency hurt him.</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t forget him,” said Eppie.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan made no reply. He had risen, and standing now at the widely opened
-window, looked out over the chill, misty dawn. Beneath was the garden,
-its golden-gray walls rippling with green traceries, the clotted color
-of the hanging fruit among them. Over the hilltop, the solitary group of
-pines, the running wave of mountain, was a great piece of palest blue,
-streaked with milky filaments. The boughs of the pine-tree were just
-below the window, drenched with dew through all their fragrant darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, too, rose, and stood beside him.</p>
-
-<p>The hardened misery on his young face hurt her childish, yet
-comprehending heart even more than Robbie’s supplicating and astonished
-eyes had done. She could imagine that look of steeled endurance freezing
-through it forever, and an answering hardness of opposition rose in her
-to resist and break it. “We won’t forget him.”</p>
-
-<p>“People do forget,” Gavan answered.<a name="page_058" id="page_058"></a></p>
-
-<p>She found a cruel courage. “Could you forget your mother?”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan continued to look stonily out of the window and did not answer
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Could you?” she repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, Eppie, don’t,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>She saw that she had stirred some black terror in him, and her ignorant,
-responsive fear made her pitiless: “Could you forget her if she died?
-Never. Never as long as you lived.”</p>
-
-<p>“Already,” he said, as though the words were forced from him by her
-will, “I haven’t remembered her all the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“She is there. You haven’t forgotten her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Years and years come. New things come. Old things fade and fade,&mdash;all
-but the deepest things. They couldn’t fade. No,” he repeated, “they
-couldn’t. Only, even they might get dimmer.”</p>
-
-<p>She saw that he spoke from an agony of doubt, and he seemed to wrench
-the knife she had stabbed him with from his heart as he added: “But
-Robbie is such a little thing. And little things people do forget, I am
-sure of it. It’s that that makes them so sad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,”&mdash;Eppie, too, felt the relief of the lesser pain,&mdash;“they
-will remember again. When you see Robbie in heaven you will remember all
-about him. But I won’t forget him,” she repeated once more, swallowing
-the sob that rose chokingly at the thought of how long it would be till
-they should see Robbie in heaven.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan had now a vague, chill smile for the pertinacity<a name="page_059" id="page_059"></a> of her faith.
-Something had broken in him, as if, with Robbie’s passing, a veil had
-been drawn from reality, an illusion of confidence dispelled forever. He
-leaned out of the window and breathed in the scent of the wet pine-tree,
-looking, with an odd detachment and clearness of observation,&mdash;as if
-through that acceptation of tragedy all his senses had grown keener,&mdash;at
-the bluish bloom the dew made upon the pine-needles; at the flowers and
-fruit in the garden below, the thatched roof of the summer-house, the
-fragile whiteness of the roses growing near it, like a bridal veil blown
-against the ancient wall. It was, in a moment of strange, suspended
-vision, as if he had often and often seen tragic dawn in the garden
-before and was often to see it again. What was he? Where was he? All the
-world was like a dream and he seemed to see to its farthest ends and
-back to its beginnings.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie stood silent beside him.</p>
-
-<p>He was presently conscious of her silence, and then, the uncanny
-crystal, gazing sense slipping from him, of a possible unkindness in his
-repudiating grief. He looked round at her. The poor child’s eyes, heavy
-with weeping and all the weight of the dark, encompassing woe he had
-shown her, dwelt on him with a somber compassionateness.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor, darling little Eppie,” he said, putting an arm about her, “what a
-brute, a selfish brute, I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why a brute, Gavan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Making you suffer&mdash;more. I’m always making you suffer, Eppie, always;
-and you are really such a happy person. Come, let us go out for a walk.<a name="page_060" id="page_060"></a>
-Let us go out on the moor. It will be delicious in the heather now. I
-want to see it and smell it. It will do us good.”</p>
-
-<p>She resented his wisdom. “But you won’t forget Robbie, while we walk.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment, as if in great weariness, Gavan leaned his head against
-her shoulder. “Don’t talk of Robbie, please. We must forget him&mdash;just
-now, or try to, or else we can’t go on at all.”</p>
-
-<p>Still she persisted, for she could not let it go like that: “I can think
-of him and go on too. I don’t want to run away from Robbie because he
-makes me unhappy.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan sighed, raising his head. “You are stronger than I am, Eppie. I
-must&mdash;I must run away.” He took her hand and drew her to the door, and
-she followed him, though glancing back, as she went, at the little form
-under the shroud.<a name="page_061" id="page_061"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="VI-1" id="VI-1"></a>VI</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00r.png"
-width="75"
-height="75"
-alt="R"
-title="R"
-/></span>OBBIE’S death overshadowed the last days of Gavan’s stay. Eppie did not
-feel, after it, after his avowed and helpless breakdown, the barrier
-sense so strongly. He didn’t attempt to hide dejection; but that was
-probably because she too was dejected and there was no necessity for
-keeping up appearances that would only jar and hurt. Eppie gave herself
-whole-heartedly to her griefs, and this was her grief as well as his. He
-could share it. It was no longer the holding her at arm’s length from a
-private woe. Yet the grief was not really shared, Eppie knew, for it was
-not the same grief that they felt. Of the difference they did not speak
-again. Then there came the sadness of the parting, so near now and for
-the first time realized in all its aspects.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie gathered, from chance remarks of the general’s, that this parting
-was to be indefinite. The summer at Kirklands was no precedent for
-future summers, as she and Gavan had quite taken for granted. An uncle
-of Gavan’s, his father’s eldest brother, was to give him his home in
-England. This uncle had been traveling in the East this summer,<a name="page_062" id="page_062"></a> and
-Gavan did not formally come under his jurisdiction until autumn. But the
-general conjectured that the jurisdiction would be well defined and
-tolerably stringent. Sir James Palairet had clearly cut projects for
-Gavan; they would, perhaps, not include holidays at Kirklands. The
-realization was, for Gavan, too, a new one.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I not to come back here next summer?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid not, Gavan; we haven’t first claim, you see. Perhaps Sir
-James will lend you to us now and then; but from what I know of him I
-imagine that he will want to do a lot with you, to put you through a
-great deal. There won’t be much time for this sort of thing. You will
-probably travel with him.”</p>
-
-<p>They were in the library and, speaking from the depths of her fear,
-Eppie asked: “Do you like Sir James, Uncle Nigel?” She suspected a
-pitying quality in the cogitating look that the general bent upon Gavan.</p>
-
-<p>“I hardly know him, my dear. He is quite an eminent man. A little
-severe, perhaps,&mdash;something of a martinet,&mdash;but just, conscientious. It
-is a great thing for Gavan,” the general continued, making the best of a
-rather bleak prospect, “to have such an uncle to give him a start in
-life. It means the best sort of start.”</p>
-
-<p>Directly the two children were alone, both sitting in the deep
-window-seat, Gavan said, “Don’t worry, Eppie. Of course I’ll come
-back&mdash;soon.” His face took on the hardness that its delicacy could<a name="page_063" id="page_063"></a> so
-oddly express. He was confronting his ambiguous fate in an attitude of
-cold resolution. For his sake, Eppie controlled useless outcries. “You
-have seen your uncle, Gavan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, once; in India. He came up to Darjeeling one summer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he nice&mdash;nicer than Uncle Nigel made out, I mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“He isn’t like my father,” said Gavan, after a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that he isn’t wicked?” Eppie asked baldly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a good deal more than that. He is just and conscientious, as the
-general said. That’s what my mother felt; that’s why she could bear it,
-my going to him. And the general is right, you know, Eppie, about its
-being a great thing for me. He is a very important person, in his way,
-and he is going to put me through. He is determined that my father
-sha’n’t spoil my life. And, as you know, Eppie, my mother’s life, any
-chance for her, depends on me. To make her life, to atone to her in any
-way for all she has had to bear, I must make my own. My uncle will help
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>The steeliness of his resolves made his face almost alien. Eppie felt
-this unknown future, where he must fight alone, for objects in which she
-had no share, shutting her out, and a child’s sick misery of desolation
-filled her, bringing back the distant memory of her mother’s death, that
-suffocating sense of being left behind and forgotten; but, keeping her
-eyes on his prospect, she managed in a firm<a name="page_064" id="page_064"></a> voice to question him about
-the arid uncle, learned that he was married, childless, had a house in
-the country and one in London, and sat in Parliament. He was vastly
-busy, traveled a great deal, and wrote books of travel; not books about
-foreign people and the things they ate and wore, as Eppie with her
-courageous interest hopefully surmised, but books of dry, colorless
-fact, with lots of statistics in them, Gavan said.</p>
-
-<p>“He wants me to go in for the same sort of thing&mdash;politics and public
-life.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are going to be a Pitt&mdash;make laws, Gavan, like Pitt?” Eppie kept up
-her dispassionate tone.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled at the magnified conception. “I’ll try for a seat, probably,
-or some governmental office; that is, if I turn out to be worth
-anything.”</p>
-
-<p>How the vague vastness shut her out! What should she do, meanwhile? How
-carve for herself a future that would keep her near him in the great
-outside world? And would he want her near him in it when he was to be so
-great, too? This question brought the irrepressible tears to her eyes at
-last, though she turned away her head and would not let them fall. But
-Gavan glanced at her and leaned forward to look, and then she saw, as
-her eyes met his, that the hard resolve was for her, too, and did not
-shut her out, but in.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m coming back, Eppie,” he said, taking her hand and holding it
-tightly. “Next to my mother, it’s <i>you</i>,&mdash;you know it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t any mother,” said Eppie, keeping up the bravery, though it
-was really harder not to cry now. He understood where she placed him.<a name="page_065" id="page_065"></a></p>
-
-<p>Eppie was glad that it was raining on the last morning. Sunshine would
-have been a mockery, and this tranquilly falling rain, that turned the
-hills to pale, substanceless ghosts and brought the end of the moor,
-where it disappeared into the white, so near, was not tragic. Gavan was
-coming back. She would think only of that. She would not&mdash;would not cry.
-He should see how brave she could be. When he was gone&mdash;well, she
-allowed herself a swift thought of the Petit Trianon, its hidden refuge.
-There, all alone, she would, of course, howl. There was a grim comfort
-in this vision of herself, rolling upon the pine-needle carpet of the
-Petit Trianon and shrieking her woes aloud.</p>
-
-<p>At breakfast Gavan showed a tense, calm face. She was impressed anew
-with the sense of his strength, for, in spite of his resolves, he was
-suffering, perhaps more keenly than herself. Suffering, with him,
-partook of horror. She could live in hopes, and on them. To Gavan, this
-parting was the going into a dark cavern that he must march through in
-fear. And then, he would never roll and shriek.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast, they hardly spoke to each other. Indeed, what was there
-to say? Eppie filled the moments in superintending the placing of fruit
-and sandwiches in his dressing-case. The carriage was a little late, so
-that when the final moment came, there was a hurried conventionality of
-farewell. Gavan was kissed by the aunts and shook hands with Miss
-Grimsby, while the general called out that there was no time to lose.</p>
-
-<p>“Come back to us, dear boy; keep your feet dry on the journey,” said
-Miss Rachel, while Miss Barbara,<a name="page_066" id="page_066"></a> holding his hand, whispered gently
-that she would always pray for him.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie and Gavan had not looked at each other, and when the moment came
-for their farewell, beneath the eyes of aunts, uncle, Miss Grimsby, and
-the servants, it seemed the least significant of all, was the shortest,
-the most formal. They looked, they held hands for a moment, and Gavan
-faltered out some words. Eppie did not speak and kept her firm smile.
-Only when he had followed the general into the carriage and it was
-slowly grinding over the gravel did something hot, stinging, choking,
-flare up in her, something that made her know this smooth parting to be
-intolerable&mdash;not to be borne.</p>
-
-<p>She darted out into the rain. Bobbie was dead; Gavan was gone; why, she
-was alone&mdash;alone&mdash;and a question was beating through her as she ran down
-the drive and, with a leap to its step, caught the heavy old carriage in
-its careful turning at the gate. Gavan saw, at the window, her white,
-freckled face, her startled eyes, her tossed hair all beaded with the
-finely falling rain&mdash;like an apparition on the ghostly background of
-mist.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Gavan, don’t forget me!” That had been the flaring terror.</p>
-
-<p>He had just time to catch her hand, to lean to her, to kiss her. He did
-not speak. Mutely he looked at the little comrade all the things he
-could not say: what she was to him, what he felt for her, what he would
-always feel,&mdash;always, always, always, his eyes said to hers as she
-stepped back to the road and was gone.<a name="page_067" id="page_067"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="PART_II" id="PART_II"></a>PART II</h2>
-
-<p><a name="page_068" id="page_068"></a></p>
-
-<p><a name="page_069" id="page_069"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="I-2" id="I-2"></a>I</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00h.png"
-width="76"
-height="76"
-alt="H"
-title="H"
-/></span>E had never seen Eppie again, and sixteen years had passed.</p>
-
-<p>It was of this that Gavan was thinking as the Scotch express bore him
-northward on a dark October night.</p>
-
-<p>A yellow-bound, half-cut volume of French essays lay beside him. He had
-lighted a cigar and, his feet warmly ensconced on the hot-water tin, his
-legs enfolded in rugs, the fur collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears, he leaned back, well fortified against the sharp air that struck
-in from the half-opened window.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, at thirty, had oddly maintained all the more obvious
-characteristics of his boyhood. He was long, pale, emaciated, as he had
-been at fourteen. His clean-shaved face was the boy’s face, matured, but
-unchanged in essentials. The broad, steep brow, the clear, aquiline jut
-of nose and chin, the fineness and strength of the jaw, sculptured now
-by the light overhead into vehement relief and shadow, were more
-emphatic, only, than they had been.</p>
-
-<p>At fourteen his face had surprised with its maturity and at thirty it
-surprised with its quality of wistful boyishness. This was the obvious.
-The<a name="page_070" id="page_070"></a> changes were there, but they were subtle, consisting more in a
-certain hardening of youth’s hesitancy into austerity; as though the
-fine metal of the countenance had been tempered by time into a fixed,
-enduring type. His pallor was the scholar’s, but his emaciation the
-athlete’s; the fragility, now, was a braced and disciplined fragility.
-No sedentary softness was in him. In his body, as in his face, one felt
-a delicacy as strong as it was fine. The great change was that hardening
-to fixity.</p>
-
-<p>To-night, he was feeling the change himself. The journey to Kirklands,
-after the long gap that lay between it and his farewell, made something
-of an epoch for his thoughts. He did not find it significant, but the
-mere sense of comparison was arresting.</p>
-
-<p>The darkness of the October night, speeding by outside, the solitude of
-the bright railway carriage, London two hours behind and, before, the
-many hours of his lonely journey,&mdash;time and place were like empty
-goblets, only waiting to be filled with the still wine of memory.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan had not cast aside his book, lighted his cigar, and, leaning back,
-drawn his rugs about him with the conscious intention of yielding
-himself to retrospect. On the contrary, he had, at first, pushed aside
-the thoughts that, softly, persistently, pressed round him. Then the
-languor, the opportunity of the hour seized him. He allowed himself to
-drift hither and thither, as first one eddy lapped over him and then
-another. And finally he abandoned himself to the full current and, once
-it had him, it carried him far.<a name="page_071" id="page_071"></a></p>
-
-<p>It was, at the beginning, as far back as Eppie and childhood that it
-carried him, to the sunny summer days and to the speechless parting of
-the rainy autumn morning. And, with all that sense of change, he was
-surprised to find how very much one thing had held firm. He had never
-forgotten. He had kept the mute promise of that misty morning. How well
-he had kept it he hadn’t known until he found the chain of memory hold
-so firm as he pulled upon it. The promise had been made to himself as
-well as to her, given in solemn hostage to his own childish fears. Even
-then what an intuitive dread had been upon him of the impermanence of
-things. But it wasn’t impermanent after all, that vision.</p>
-
-<p>Dear little Eppie. It was astonishing now to find how well he
-remembered, how clearly he could see, in looking back,&mdash;more clearly
-than even his acute child’s perception had made evident to him,&mdash;what a
-dear little Eppie she had been. She lived in his memory, and probably
-nowhere else: in the present Eppie he didn’t fancy that he should find
-much trace of the child Eppie, and it was sad, in its funny way, to
-think that he, who had, with all his forebodings, so felt the need of a
-promise, should so well remember her who, undoubtedly, had long ago
-forgotten him. He took little interest in the present Eppie. But the
-child wore perfectly with time.</p>
-
-<p>Dear child Eppie and strange, distant boy, groping toward the present
-Gavan; unhappy little boy, of deep, inarticulate, passionate affections
-and of<a name="page_072" id="page_072"></a> deep hopes and dreads. There they walked, knee-deep in heather;
-he smelled it, the sun warm upon it, Eppie in her white,
-Alice-in-Wonderland frock and her “striped” hair. And there went Robbie,
-plunging through the heather before them.</p>
-
-<p>Robbie. Eppie had been right, then. He had not forgotten him at all. He
-and Eppie stood at the window looking out at the dawn; the scent of the
-wet pine-tree was in the air, and their eyes were heavy with weeping.
-How near they had been. Had any one, in all his life, ever been nearer
-him than Eppie?</p>
-
-<p>Curious, when he had so well kept the promise never to forget, that the
-other promise, the promise to return, he had not been able to keep. In
-making it, he had not imagined, even with his foreboding, what manacles
-of routine and theory were to be locked upon him for the rest of his
-boyhood. He had soon learned that protest, pleading, rebellion, were
-equally vain, and that outward conformity was the preservative of inner
-freedom. He could not jeopardize the purpose of his life&mdash;his mother’s
-rescue&mdash;by a persistence that, in his uncle’s not unkind and not
-unhumorous eyes, was merely foolish. He was forced to swallow his own
-longings and to endure, as best he could, his pangs of fear lest Eppie
-should think him slack, or even faithless. He submitted to the treadmill
-of a highly organized education, that could spare no time for
-insignificant summers in Scotland. Every moment in Gavan’s youth was to
-be made significant by tangible achievement. The distilled knowledge of
-the past, the intellectual<a name="page_073" id="page_073"></a> trophies of civilization, were to be his; if
-he didn’t want them, they, in the finished and effective figure of his
-uncle, wanted him, and, in the sense of the fulfilment of his uncle’s
-hopes, they got him.</p>
-
-<p>During those years Gavan wrote to Eppie, tried to make her share with
-him in all the lonely and rather abstract interests of his life. But he
-found that the four years of difference, counting for nothing in the
-actual intercourse of word and look, counted for everything against any
-reality of intercourse in writing. Translated into that formality, the
-childish affection became as unlike itself as a pressed flower is unlike
-a fresh one. Eppie’s letters, punctual and very fond, were far more
-immature than she herself. These letters gave accounts of animals,
-walks, lessons, very bald and concise, and of the Grainger cousins and
-their doings, and then of her new relation, cousin Alicia, whose
-daughters, children of Eppie’s own age, soon seemed to poor Gavan, in
-his distant prison, to fill his place. Eppie went away with these
-cousins to Germany, where they all heard wonderful music, and after that
-they came to Kirklands for the summer. Altogether, when Gavan’s
-opportunity came and, with the dignity of seventeen to back his request,
-he had his uncle’s consent to his spending of a month in Scotland, he
-felt himself, even as he made it, rather silly in his determination to
-cling at all costs to something precious but vanishing. Then it was that
-Eppie had been swept away by the engulfing relative. At the very moment
-of his own release, she was taken to the Continent for three years of
-travel and study.<a name="page_074" id="page_074"></a> The final effort of childhood to hold to its own
-meaning was frustrated. The letters, after that, soon ceased. Silence
-ended the first chapter.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan glanced out at the rushing darkness on either side. It was like
-the sliding of a curtain before the first act of a drama. His cigar was
-done and he did not light another. His eyes on that darkness that passed
-and passed, he gave himself up to the long vision of the nearer years.
-Through them went always the link with childhood, the haunting phrase
-that sounded in every scene&mdash;that fear of life, that deep dread of its
-evil and its pain that he had tried to hide from Eppie, but that,
-together, they had glanced at.</p>
-
-<p>In that first chapter, whose page he had just turned, he had seen
-himself as a very unhappy boy&mdash;unhappy from causes as apparent as a cage
-about a pining bird. His youth had been weighted with an over-mature
-understanding of wrong and sorrow. His childish faith in supreme good
-had shaped itself to a conception of life as a place of probation where
-oneself and, far worse, those one loved were burned continually in the
-fiery furnace of inexplicable affliction. One couldn’t say what God
-might not demand of one in the way of endurance. He had, helpless, seen
-his fragile, shrinking mother hatefully bullied and abused or more
-hatefully caressed. He had been parted from her to brood and tremble
-over her distant fate. Loved things had died; loved things had all, it
-seemed, been taken from him; the soulless machinery of his uncle’s
-system had ground and polished at his stiffening heart.<a name="page_075" id="page_075"></a> No wonder that
-the boy of that first chapter had been very unhappy. But in the later
-chapters, to which he had now come, the causes for unhappiness were not
-so obvious, yet the gloom that overhung them deepened. He saw himself at
-Eton in the hedged-round world of buoyant youth, standing apart,
-preoccupied, indifferent. He had been oddly popular there. His
-selflessness, his gentle candor, his capacity for a highly keyed
-joy,&mdash;strung, though it was, over an incapacity for peace,&mdash;endeared
-him; but even to his friends he remained a veiled and ambiguous
-personality. He seemed to himself to stand on the confines of that
-artificially happy domain, listening always for the sound of sorrow in
-the greater world outside. History, growing before his growing mind,
-loomed blood-stained, cruel, disastrous. The defeat of goodness, its
-degradation by the triumphant forces of evil, haunted him. The
-dependence of mind, of soul, on body opened new and ominous vistas. For
-months he was pursued by morbid fears of what a jostled brain-cell or a
-diseased body might do to one. One might become a fiend, it seemed, or
-an imbecile, if one’s atoms were disarranged too much. Life was a tragic
-duty,&mdash;he held to that blindly, fiercely at times; but what if life’s
-chances made even goodness impossible? what if it were to rob one of
-one’s very selfhood? It became to him a thing dangerous, uncertain, like
-an insecurely chained wild beast that one must lie down with and rise
-with and that might spring at one’s throat at any moment.</p>
-
-<p>Under the pressure of this new knowledge, crude<a name="page_076" id="page_076"></a> enough in its
-materialistic forms, and keen, new thought, already subtle, already
-passing from youthful crudity, the skeptical crash of his religious
-faith came at last upon him. Religion had meant too much to him for its
-loss to be the merely disturbing epoch of readjustment that it is in
-much young development. He found himself in a reeling horror of darkness
-where the only lights were the dim beacons of science and the fantastic
-will-o’-the-wisps of estheticism. In the midst of the chaos he saw his
-mother again. He dreaded the longed-for meeting. How could he see her
-and hide from her the inner desolation? And when she came, at last,
-after all these years, a desperate pity nerved him to act a part. She
-was changed; the years had told on her more than even his imagination
-had feared. She drooped like a tired, fading flower. She was fading,
-that he saw at the first glance. Mentally as well as physically, there
-was an air of withering about her, and the look of sorrow was stamped
-ineffaceably upon her aging features. To know that he had lost his
-faith, his hold on life, his trust in good, would have been, he thought,
-to kill her. He kept from her a whisper of his desolation; and to a
-fundamental skepticism like his, acting was facile. But when she was
-gone, back to her parched life, he knew that to her, as well as to him,
-something essential had lacked. Her love, again and again, must have
-fluttered, however blindly, against that barrier between them. The years
-of separation had been sad, but, in looking back at it, the summer of
-meeting was saddest of all.<a name="page_077" id="page_077"></a></p>
-
-<p>The experience put an edge to his hardening strength. He must fail her
-in essentials; they could never meet in the blessed nearness of shared
-hopes; but he wouldn’t fail her in all the lesser things of life. The
-time of her deliverance was near. Love and beauty would soon be about
-her. He worked at Oxford with the inner passion of a larger purpose than
-mere scholarship that is the soul of true scholarship. He felt the
-sharp, cold joy of high achievement, the Alpine, precipitous scaling of
-the mind. And here he embarked upon the conscious quest for truth, his
-skepticism grown to a doubt of its own premises.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan looked quietly back upon the turmoil of that quest.</p>
-
-<p>He watched himself in those young years pressing restlessly, eagerly,
-pursued by the phantoms of death and nothingness, through spiral after
-spiral of human thought: through Spinoza’s horror of the meaninglessness
-of life and through Spinoza’s barren peace; through Kant’s skepticism
-that would not let him rest in Kant’s super-rational assurance;
-precipitated from Hegel’s dialectics&mdash;building their pyramid of paradox
-to the apex of an impersonal Absolute&mdash;into Schopenhauer’s petulant
-despair. And more and more clearly he saw, through all the forms of
-thought, that the finite self dissolved like mist in the one
-all-embracing, all-transcending Subject. Science, philosophy, religion,
-seemed, in their final development, to merge in a Monism that conceived
-reality as spirit, but as impersonal spirit, a conception that, if in
-western thought it did not<a name="page_078" id="page_078"></a> reduce to illusion every phase of
-experience, yet reduced the finite self to a contradiction and its sense
-of moral freedom, upon which were built all the valuations of life and
-all its sanctions, to a self-deception. His own dual life deepened his
-abiding intuition of unreality. There was the Gavan of the river, the
-debate, the dinner, popular among his fellows, gentle, debonair; already
-the man of the world through the fineness of his perception, his
-instinct for the fitting, his perfection of mannerless manner that was
-the flower of selflessness. And there was the Gavan of the inner
-thought, fixed, always, in its knot of torturing perplexity. To the
-inner Gavan, the Gavan of human relations was a wraith-like figure. Now
-began for him the strange experience at which childish terrors had
-hinted. It was in the exhaustions that followed a long wrench of
-thought, or after an illness, a shock of sorrow that left one pulseless
-and inert, that these pauses of an awful peace would come to him. One
-faced, then, the dread vision, and it seized one, as when, in the deep
-stillness of the night, the world drops from one and only a
-consciousness, dispassionate and contemplative, seeing all life as
-dream, remains. It was when life was thus stilled, its desires quenched
-by weakness or great sorrow, that this peace stole into the empty
-chambers, and whispered that all pain, all evil, all life were dreams
-and that the dreams were made by the strife and restlessness of the
-fragmentary self in its endless discord. See oneself as discord, as part
-of the whole, every thought, every act, every feeling determined by it,
-and one entered, as<a name="page_079" id="page_079"></a> it were, into the unwilling redemption. Desire,
-striving, hope, and fear fell from one. One found the secret of the
-Eternal Now, holding in its timelessness the vast vision of a world of
-change. But to Gavan, in these moments, the sorrow, the striving, the
-agony of life was sweet and desirable; for, to the finite life that
-strove, and hoped, and suffered the vision became the sightless gaze of
-death, and nothingness was the guerdon of such attainment. To turn, with
-an almost physical sickness of horror, from the hypnotic spell, to
-forcibly forget thought, to clasp life about him like a loved
-Nessus-robe, was a frequent solution during these years of struggle; to
-reënter the place of joy and sorrow, taking it, so to speak, at its own
-terms. But the specter was never far from the inner Gavan, who more and
-more suspected that the longing for reality, for significance, that
-flamed up in him with each renewal of personal force and energy, was the
-mere result of life, not its sanction. And more and more, when, in such
-renewals, his nature turned with a desperate trust to action, as a
-possible test of worth, he saw that it was not action, not faith, that
-created life and the trust in life, but life, the force and will
-incarnated in one, that created faith and action. The very will to act
-was the will to live, and the will to live was the will of the Whole
-that the particular discord of one’s personal self should continue to
-strive and suffer.</p>
-
-<p>Life, indeed, clutched him, and that quite without any artificial effort
-of his own, when his mother came home to England to die.<a name="page_080" id="page_080"></a></p>
-
-<p>Gavan had just left Oxford. He was exquisitely equipped for the best
-things of life, and, with the achievement, his long dependence on his
-uncle suddenly ceased. An eccentric old cousin, a scholarly recluse, who
-had taken a fancy to him, died, leaving him a small estate in Surrey and
-fifteen hundred pounds a year.</p>
-
-<p>With the good fortune came the bitter irony that turned it to dust and
-ashes. All his life he had longed to help his mother, to smooth her
-rough path and put power over fate into her hand. Now he could only help
-her to die in peace.</p>
-
-<p>He took her to the quiet old house, among its lawns, its hedges, its
-high-walled gardens and deep woods. He gave her all that it was now too
-late to give&mdash;beauty, ease, and love.</p>
-
-<p>She was changed by disease, more changed than by life and sorrow;
-gentle, very patient, but only by an effort showing her appreciation of
-the loveliness, only by an effort answering his love.</p>
-
-<p>Of all his fears the worst had been the fear that, with the conviction
-of the worthlessness of life, the capacity for love had left him. Now,
-as with intolerable anguish, her life ebbed from her, there was almost
-relief in his own despair; in feeling it to the full; in seeing the
-heartlessness of thought wither in the fierce flame of his agony.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to him that he had never before known what it was to love. It
-was as if he were more her than himself. He relived her life and its
-sorrows. He relived her miserable married years, the long loneliness,
-parted from her child, her terror of the<a name="page_081" id="page_081"></a> final parting, coming so
-cruelly upon them; and he lived the pains of her dissolution. He
-understood as he had never understood, all that she was and felt; he
-yearned as he had never yearned, to hold and keep her with him in joy
-and security; he suffered as he had never suffered.</p>
-
-<p>Such passionate rebellion filled him that he would walk for hours about
-the country, while merciful anesthetics gave her oblivion, in a blind
-rage of mere feeling&mdash;feeling at a white heat, a core of tormented life.
-And the worst was that her life of martyrdom was not to be crowned by a
-martyr’s happy death; the worst was that her own light died away from
-before her feet, that she groped in darkness, and that, since he was to
-lose her, he might not even have her to the end.</p>
-
-<p>For months he watched the slow fading of all that had made her herself,
-her relapse into the instinctive, almost into the animal. Her lips, for
-many days, kept the courage of their smile, but it was at last only an
-automatic courage, showing no sweetness, no caress. Her eyes, in the
-first tragic joy of their reunion, had longed, grieved, yearned over the
-son who hid his sorrow for her sake. Afterward, all feeling, except a
-sort of chill resentment, died from her look. For the last days of her
-life, when, in great anguish, she never spoke at all, these eyes would
-turn on him with a strange immensity of indifference. It was as if
-already his mother were gone and as if a ghost had stolen into his life.
-She died at last, after a long night of unconsciousness, without a word
-or look that brought them near.<a name="page_082" id="page_082"></a></p>
-
-<p>Gavan lived through all that followed in a stupor.</p>
-
-<p>On the day of her funeral, when all was over, he walked out into the
-spring woods.</p>
-
-<p>The day was sweet and mild. Pools of shallow water shone here and there
-in the hollows, among the slender tree-stems. Pale slips of blue were
-seen among the fine, gray branches, and pushing up from last year’s
-leaves were snowdrops growing everywhere, white and green among the
-russet leaves, lovely, lovely snowdrops. Seeing them, in his swift,
-aimless wandering, Gavan paused.</p>
-
-<p>The long nights and days had worn him to that last stage of exhaustion
-where every sense is stretched fine and sharp as the highest string of a
-musical instrument. Leaning against a tree, his arms folded, he looked
-at the snowdrops, at their vivid green, and their white, as fresh, as
-delicate as flakes of newly fallen snow.</p>
-
-<p>“Lovely, lovely,” he said, and, looking all about him, at the fretwork
-of gray branches on the blue, the pale, shining water,&mdash;a little bird
-just hopping to its edge among the shorter grass to drink,&mdash;he repeated,
-“Lovely,” while the anguish in his heart and the sweet beauty without
-combined in the sharp, exquisite tension of a mood about to snap, the
-fineness of a note, unendurably high, held to an unendurable length.</p>
-
-<p>A dimness overtook him: as if the note, no longer keenly singing, sank
-to an insect-like buzz, a chaos of minute, whirring vibrations that made
-a queer, dizzy rhythm; and, in a daze of sudden indifference, both to
-beauty and anguish, he seemed to see himself<a name="page_083" id="page_083"></a> standing there, collapsed
-against the tree, his frail figure outworn with misery,&mdash;to see himself,
-and the trees, the pools of water, the drinking bird, and the snowy
-flowers,&mdash;like a picture held before calm, dying eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he thought, “she saw it like this,&mdash;me, herself, life; that is
-why she didn’t care any longer.”</p>
-
-<p>He continued to look, and from the dimness and the buzzing the calm grew
-clear&mdash;clear as a sharply cut hallucination. He knew the experience, he
-had often before known it; but he had never yet felt it so unutterably,
-so finally. Something in him had done struggling forever; something was
-relinquished; he had accepted something. “Yes, it is like that,” he
-thought on; “they are all of them right.”</p>
-
-<p>With the cold eye of contemplation he gazed on the illusion of life:
-joy, suffering, beauty, good and evil. His individual life, enfranchised
-from its dream of a separate self, drifted into the life about him. He
-was part of it all; in him, as in those other freed ones, the self
-suddenly knew itself as fleeting and unsubstantial as a dream, knew its
-own profound irrationality and the suffering that its striving to be
-must always mean.</p>
-
-<p>He was perfectly at peace, he who had never known peace. “I am as dead
-as she is,” he thought.</p>
-
-<p>In his peace he was conscious of no emotion, yet he found himself
-suddenly leaning his head against the tree and weeping. He wept, but he
-knew that it was no longer with grief or longing. He watched<a name="page_084" id="page_084"></a> the
-exhausted machine give way, and noted its piteous desolation of
-attitude,&mdash;not pitying it,&mdash;while he thought, “I shall feel, perhaps
-suffer, perhaps enjoy again; but I shall always watch myself from above
-it all.”</p>
-
-<p>The mystic experience had come overwhelmingly to him and his mind was
-never to lose the effect of that immediacy of consciousness,
-untransmissible, unspeakable, ineffaceable. And that with which he found
-himself one was far from any human thoughts or emotions; rather it was
-the negation of them, the infinite negation of finite restlessness.</p>
-
-<p>He went back to the house, to the darkened, empty room. The memories
-that crowded there, of pity and love and terror, were now part of the
-picture he looked at, as near and yet as far, as the vision of the
-snowdrops, the bird, and the spring sky.</p>
-
-<p>All was quiet. She was gone as he would go. The laboring breath was
-stilled forever.<a name="page_085" id="page_085"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="II-2" id="II-2"></a>II</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="75"
-height="76"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>AVAN did not address himself to an ascetic remodeling of his life. He
-pursued the path traced out before him. He yielded placidly to the calls
-of life, willing to work, to accomplish, willing even to indulge his
-passions, since there could lurk for him no trap among the shows of
-life. His taste soon drew back, disdainful and delicate, from his
-experience of youthful dissipation; his ironic indifference made him
-deaf to the lures of ambition; but he was an accurate and steady worker
-and a tolerably interested observer of existence.</p>
-
-<p>As he had ceased to have value for himself, so others had no value in
-his eyes. Social effort and self-realization were, as ideals, equally
-meaningless to him; and though pity was always with him, it was a pity
-gentle and meditative, hopeless of alleviation: for suffering was life,
-and to cure one, one must abolish the other. Material remedies seemed to
-him worse than useless; they merely renewed the craving forces. The
-Imitation of Christ was a fitter panacea than organized charities and
-progressive legislation.</p>
-
-<p>Physical pain in the helpless, the dumbly conscious,<a name="page_086" id="page_086"></a> in children or
-animals, hurt him and made him know that he, too, lived; and he would
-spend himself to give relief to any suffering thing. He sought no
-further in metaphysical systems; he desired no further insight. Now and
-then, finding their pensive pastures pleasant, he would read some Hindoo
-or medieval mystic; but ecstasies were as alien to him as materialism:
-both were curious forms of self-deception&mdash;one the inflation of the
-illusory self into the loss of any sense of relation, and the other the
-self’s painful concentration into imbecilely selfish aims. The people
-most pleasing to him were the people who, without self-doubt and without
-self-consciousness, performed some inherited function in the state; the
-simply great in life; or those who, by natural gift, the fortunately
-finished, the inevitably distinguished, followed some beautifully
-complex calling. The mediocre and the pretentious were unpleasing
-phenomena, and the ideals of democracy mere barbarous nonsense.</p>
-
-<p>His own pursuits were those of a fashionable and ambitious man, and, to
-the casual observer, the utter absence of any of the pose of
-disillusionized youth made all the more apparent what seemed to be a man
-of the world cynicism. Those who knew him better found him charming and
-perplexing. He seemed to have no barriers, yet one could not come near
-him. His center receded before pursuit. And he was much pursued. He
-aroused conjecture, interest, attachment. His exquisite head, the chill
-sweetness of his manner, the strange, piercing charm of his smile, drew
-eyes and hearts to him.<a name="page_087" id="page_087"></a> Idly amused, he saw himself, all inert, boosted
-from step to step, saw friends swarm about him and hardly an enemy’s
-face.</p>
-
-<p>It was rare for him to meet dislike. One young man, vaguely known at
-Oxford, noticed with interest as a relative of Eppie’s, he had, indeed,
-by merely being, it seemed, antagonized. Gavan had really felt something
-of a shy, derivative affection for this Jim Grainger, a dogged, sullen,
-strenuous youth; because of the dear old memory, he had made one or two
-delicate, diffident approaches&mdash;approaches repulsed with bull-dog
-defiance. Gavan, who understood most things, quite understood that to
-the serious, the plain, the obviously laborious son of an impecunious
-barrister, he might have given the impression, so funnily erroneous, of
-a sauntering dilettantism, an aristocratic <i>flânerie</i>. At all events,
-Grainger was intrenched in a resolute disapproval, colored, perhaps,
-with some tinge of reminiscent childish jealousy. When their paths again
-crossed in London and Gavan found his suavity encountered by an even
-more scowling sarcasm, jealousy, of another type, was an obvious cause.
-Grainger, scornful of social dexterities and weapons, had worked himself
-to skin and bone in preparation for a career, and a career that he
-intended to be of serious significance. And at its outset he found
-himself in apparent competition with Gavan for a post that, significant
-indeed to him, as the first rung on the political ladder, could only be
-decorative to his rival&mdash;the post of secretary to a prominent
-cabinet-minister. Grainger had his justified hopes, and he was,<a name="page_088" id="page_088"></a> except
-for outward graces, absolutely fitted for the place.</p>
-
-<p>In his path he found the listless figure of the well-remembered and
-heartily disliked Gavan&mdash;a gilded youth, pure and simple, and as such
-being lifted, by all accounts, onto the coveted rung of the coveted
-ladder. Gavan’s scholarly fitness for the post Grainger only half
-credited. Of the sturdy professional class, with a streak of the easily
-suspicious bourgeois about him, he was glad to believe tales of
-drawing-room influence. He expressed himself with disgusted openness as
-to the fatal effect of a type like Palairet’s on public life. Gavan
-heard a little and guessed more. He found himself sympathizing with
-Grainger; he had always liked him. With an effort that he had never used
-on his own behalf, he managed to get him fitted into the pair of shoes
-that were standing waiting for his own feet. It had been, indeed, though
-in superficial ways, an affair of drawing-room influence. The wife of
-the great statesman, as well as that high personage himself, was one of
-Gavan’s devoted and baffled friends. She said that he made her think of
-a half-frozen bird that one longed to take in one’s hands and warm, and
-she hopefully communed with her husband as to the invigorating effect of
-a career upon him. She suspected Gavan&mdash;his influence over her
-husband&mdash;when she found that an alien candidate was being foisted upon
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Grainger!” she exclaimed, vexed and incredulous. “Why Grainger? Why not
-anybody as well as Grainger? Yes, I’ve seen the young man. He<a name="page_089" id="page_089"></a> looks
-like a pugilistic Broad-Church parson. All he wants is to climb and to
-reform everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly the type for British politics,” Gavan rejoined. “He is in
-earnest about politics, and I’m not; you know I’m not.” His friend
-helplessly owned that he was exasperating. Grainger, had he known to
-whom he was indebted for his lift, would have felt, perhaps, a
-heightened wrath against “drawing-room influence.”</p>
-
-<p>Happily and justifiably unconscious, he proceeded to climb.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile another pair of shoes was swiftly found for Gavan. He went out
-to India as secretary to the viceroy.</p>
-
-<p>Here, in the surroundings of his early youth, the second great moral
-upheaval of his life came to him. Three years had passed since his
-mother’s death. He was twenty-six years old.</p>
-
-<p>During a long summer among the mountains of Simla, he met Alice Grafton.
-She was married, a year older than himself, but a girl still in mind and
-appearance&mdash;fragile, hesitant, exquisite. Gavan at his very first seeing
-of her felt something knocking in his heart. It seemed like pity,
-instinctive pity, the bond between him and life, and for some time he
-deluded himself with this comparatively safe interpretation. He did not
-quite know why he should pity Mrs. Grafton. That she should look like a
-girl was hardly a reason, nor that her husband, large, masterful,
-embossed with decorations, was uninteresting. She had been married to
-him&mdash;by all accounts the phrase applied&mdash;at nineteen and could<a name="page_090" id="page_090"></a> not find
-him sympathetic; but, after all, many cheerful women were in that
-situation. He was a kindly, an admiring husband, and her life was set in
-luxurious beauty. Yet piteousness was there. She was all promise and
-unfulfilment; and dimly, mutely, she seemed to feel that the promise
-would never be fulfilled, as though a too-early primrose smiled
-wistfully through a veil of ice. Should she never become consciously
-unhappy that would be but another symptom of permanent immaturity.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan rode with her and talked with her, and read with her in her fresh,
-flower-filled drawing-room. Their tastes were not at all alike; but he
-did not in the least mind that when she lifted her lovely eyes to him
-over poor poetry; and when she played and sang to him her very
-ineffectuality added a pathos, full of charm, to the obvious ballads
-that she liked. It was sweet, too, and endearing, to watch her, by
-degrees, molding her taste to his until it became a delightful and
-intuitive echo.</p>
-
-<p>He almost wondered if it was also in echo that she began to feel for
-herself his own appreciation of her. Certainly she matured to
-consciousness of lack. She began to confide; not with an open frankness,
-but vaguely, as though she groped toward the causes of her sadness. She
-shrank, and knew now why she shrank, when her loud-voiced, cheerful
-husband came tramping into the room. Then she began to see that she was
-horribly lonely. Unconsciously, in the confidences now, she plead for
-help, for reassurance. She probed him constantly as to religious hopes
-and the real significance of life.<a name="page_091" id="page_091"></a> Her soft voice, with its endearing
-little stammer, grew to Gavan nearer and dearer than all the voices of
-the world. At first it appealed, and then it possessed him. He had
-thought that what he felt for her was only pity. He had thought himself
-too dead to all earthly pangs for the rudimentary one of love to reach
-him. But when, one day, he found her weeping, alone, among her flowers,
-he took her into his arms and the great illusion seized him once more.</p>
-
-<p>It seized him, though he knew it for illusion. He laughed at the specter
-of nothingness and gloried in the beauty of the rainbow moment. This
-human creature needed him and he her: that was, for them, the only
-reality; who cared for the blank background where their lives flashed
-and vanished? The flash was what mattered. He sprang from the dead self,
-as from a tomb, when he kissed her lips. Life might mean sorrow and
-defeat, but its tragedy was atoned for by a moment of such joy.</p>
-
-<p>“Gavan, Gavan, do we love each other? Do we?” she wept.</p>
-
-<p>He saw illusion and joy where her woman’s heart felt only reality and
-terror in the joy.</p>
-
-<p>They obviously loved each other, though it was without a word of love
-that they found themselves in each other’s arms. Had ever two beings so
-lonely so needed love? Her sweet, stunned eyes were a rapture of
-awakening to him, and though, under all, ran the deep, buried river of
-knowledge, whispering forever, “Vanity of vanities,” he was far above it
-in the sunlight of the upper air. He felt himself,<a name="page_092" id="page_092"></a> knew himself only as
-the longing to look forever into her eyes, to hold her to him forever.
-That, on the day of awakening, seemed all that life meant.</p>
-
-<p>Later on he found that more fundamental things had clutched him through
-the broken barriers of thought&mdash;jealousies and desires that showed him
-his partaking of the common life of humanity.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan’s skepticism had not come face to face with a moral test as yet,
-and he could but contemplate curiously in himself the strong,
-instinctive revolt of all the man of hereditary custom and conscience
-from any dishonorable form of illegal love. He couldn’t justify it, but
-it was there, as strong as his longing for the woman.</p>
-
-<p>It was not that he cared a rap, so he analyzed it, for laws or
-conventions: it was merely that he could not do anything that he felt as
-dishonorable.</p>
-
-<p>He told Alice that she must leave her husband and come openly to him.
-They would go back to Europe; live in Italy&mdash;the land of happy outcasts
-from unhappy forms; there they would study and travel and make beauty
-grow about them. Holding her hands gently, he put it all before her with
-a reverent devotion that gave the proposal a matrimonial dignity.</p>
-
-<p>“You know me well enough, dear Alice,” he said, “to know that you need
-fear none of the usual dangers in such cases. I don’t care about
-anything but you; I never will&mdash;ambition, country, family. Nothing
-outside me, or inside me, could make me fail you. All I want, or shall
-ever want, is to make you happy, and to be happy with you.<a name="page_093" id="page_093"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>But the things he put away as meaningless dreams the poor woman with the
-girl’s mind saw as grim realities. It was easy for Gavan to barter a
-mirage for the one thing he cared to have; the world was not a mirage to
-her, and even her love could not make it so. Her thin young nature knew
-only the craving to keep and not the revulsion from a hidden wrong.
-Every fiber in her shrank from the facing of a hostile order of things,
-the bearing through life of a public dishonor. It was as if it were he
-who purposed the worse disgrace, not she.</p>
-
-<p>She wept and wept in his arms, hoping, perhaps, to weaken him by her
-feebleness and her abandonment, so that an open avowal of cowardice, an
-open appeal that he should yield to it, might be needless; but at last,
-since he would not speak, only stroking her hair, her hand, sharing her
-sorrow, she moaned out, “Oh, Gavan, I can’t, I can’t.”</p>
-
-<p>He only half understood, feeling his heart freeze in the renunciation
-that she might demand. But when she sobbed on brokenly, “Don’t leave me.
-Stay with me. I can’t live without you. No one need ever know,” he
-understood.</p>
-
-<p>Standing white and motionless, it was he now who repeated, “I can’t. I
-can’t. I can’t.”</p>
-
-<p>She wept on, incredulous, supplicating, reproachful. “You will not leave
-me! You will not abandon me!”</p>
-
-<p>“I cannot&mdash;stay with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You win my heart&mdash;humiliate me,&mdash;see that I’m yours&mdash;only yours,&mdash;and
-then cast me off!”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t speak so cruelly, Alice. Cast you off?<a name="page_094" id="page_094"></a> I, who only pray you to
-let me take you with me?”</p>
-
-<p>“A target for the world!”</p>
-
-<p>“Darling, poor darling, I know that I ask all&mdash;all; but what else is
-there&mdash;unless I leave you?”</p>
-
-<p>She hid her face on his shoulder, sobbing miserably, her sobs her only
-answer, and to it he rejoined: “We can’t go on, you know that; and to
-stay, to deceive your husband, to drag you through all the baseness, the
-ugliness, the degradation, Alice, of a hidden intrigue&mdash;I can’t do that;
-it’s the only thing I can’t do for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You despise me; you think me wicked&mdash;because I can’t have such horrible
-courage. I think what you ask is more wicked; I think it hurts everybody
-more; I think that it would degrade us more. People can’t live like
-that&mdash;cut off from everything&mdash;and not be degraded in the end.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a new species of torture that now tore at Gavan’s heart and mind.
-He saw too clearly the force of the arguments that underlay her specious
-appeal&mdash;more clearly, far, than she could see. It was horribly true that
-the life of happy outlawry he proposed might wither and debase more than
-a conscious sin. The organized, crafty wisdom of life was on her side.
-And on his was a mere matter of taste. He could find no sanction for his
-resistance to her and to himself except in that instinctive recoil from
-what he felt as dishonor. He was sacrificing them both to a silly,
-subjective figment. The lurid realization, that burned and froze, went
-through him, and with it the unanswerable necessity.<a name="page_095" id="page_095"></a> He must, he must,
-sacrifice them. And he must talk the language of right and wrong as
-though he believed in it. He acted as if he did, yet nothing was further
-from him than such belief; that was the strange agony that wrenched his
-brain as he said: “You are blind, not wicked. Some day you will thank me
-if I make it possible for you to let me go.” And, he too incredulous, he
-cried, “Alice, Alice, will you really let me go without you?”</p>
-
-<p>She would not consent to the final alternative, and the struggle lasted
-for a week, through their daily meetings&mdash;the dream-like, deft meetings
-under the eyes of others,&mdash;and while they rode alone over the
-hills&mdash;long, sad rides, when both, often in a moody silence, showed at
-once their hope and their resistance.</p>
-
-<p>Her fear won at last. “And I can’t even pretend that it’s goodness,” she
-said, her voice trembling with self-scorn. “You’ve abased me to the
-dust, Gavan. Yes, it’s true, if you like&mdash;my fear is greater than my
-love.” Irony, a half-felt anger, helped her to bear the blow, for, to
-the end, she could not believe that he would find strength to leave her.</p>
-
-<p>The parting came suddenly. Wringing her hands, looking hard into her
-face, where he saw still a fawning hope and a half-stupefied despair, he
-left her, and felt that he had torn his heart up by the very roots.</p>
-
-<p>And he had sacrificed her and himself, to what? Gavan could ask himself
-the question at leisure during the following year.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, from the irrational sacrifice was born a timid,<a name="page_096" id="page_096"></a> trembling trust, a
-dim hope that the unbannered combat had not been in vain, that even the
-blind holding to the ambiguous right might blossom in a better life for
-her than if he had taken the joy held out to him. The trust was as
-irrational as the sacrifice, but it was dear to him. He cherished it,
-and it fluttered in him, sweet, intangible, during all the desolate
-year. Then, at the year’s end, he met Alice, suddenly, unexpectedly, and
-found her ominously changed. Her girlhood was gone. A hard, glittering
-surface, competent, resourceful, hid something.</p>
-
-<p>The strength of his renouncement was so rooted that he felt no personal
-fear, and for her, too, he no longer felt fear in his nearness. What he
-felt was a new pity&mdash;a pity suffocating and horrible. Whispers of
-discreet scandal enlightened him. Alice was in no danger of what she
-most shrank from&mdash;a public pillory; but she was among those of whom the
-world whispers, with a half-condoning smile and shrug.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan saw her riding one morning with a famous soldier, a Nietzschian
-type of strength, splendor, and high indifference. And now he understood
-all. He knew the man. He was one who would have stared light irony at
-Gavan’s chivalrous willingness to sacrifice his life to a woman; to such
-a charming triviality as an intrigue he would sacrifice just enough and
-no more. He knew the rules of the game and with him Alice was safe from
-any open pillory. People would never do more than whisper.</p>
-
-<p>A bitter daylight flooded for Gavan that sweet,<a name="page_097" id="page_097"></a> false dawn, and once
-again the cruelty, the caprice at the heart of all things were revealed
-to him. He knew the flame of impotent remorse. He had tossed the
-miserable child to this fate, and though remorse, like all else, was
-meaningless, he loathed himself for his futile, empty magnanimity.</p>
-
-<p>She had seen his eyes upon her as she rode. She sent for him, and, alone
-with him, the glitter, the hardness, broke to dreadful despair.</p>
-
-<p>She confessed all at his knees. Hardness and glitter had been the shield
-of the racked, terror-stricken heart. The girl was a woman and knew the
-use of shields.</p>
-
-<p>“And Gavan, Gavan, worst of all,&mdash;far worst,&mdash;I don’t love him; I never
-loved him. It was simply&mdash;simply”&mdash;she could hardly speak&mdash;“that he
-frightened and flattered me. It was vanity&mdash;recklessness&mdash;I don’t know
-what it was.”</p>
-
-<p>After the confession, she waited, her face hidden, for his reproach or
-anger. Neither came. Instead, she felt, in the long silence, that
-something quiet enveloped her.</p>
-
-<p>She looked up to see his eyes far from her.</p>
-
-<p>“Gavan, can you forgive me?” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>Once more he was looking at it all&mdash;all the cruel, the meaningless drama
-in which he had been enmeshed for a little while. Once more his thought
-had risen far above it, and the old peace, the old, dead peace, with no
-trembling of the hopes that meant only a deeper delusion, was regained.
-He knew how deep must be the reattained tranquillity, when, the woman he
-had loved at his feet, he felt<a name="page_098" id="page_098"></a> no shrinking, no reproach, no desire,
-only an immense, an indifferent pity.</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive you, Alice? Poor, poor Alice. Perhaps you should forgive me;
-but it isn’t a question of that. Don’t cry; don’t cry,” he repeated
-mechanically, gently stroking her hair&mdash;hair whose profuse, wonderful
-gold he had once kissed with a lover’s awed delight.</p>
-
-<p>“You forgive me&mdash;you do forgive me, Gavan?”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t a question of forgiveness; but of course I forgive you, dear
-Alice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gavan, tell me that you love me still. Can you love me? Oh, say that I
-haven’t lost that.”</p>
-
-<p>He did not reply, looking away and lifting his hand from her hair.</p>
-
-<p>The woman, leaning on his knees, felt a stealing sense of awe, worse
-than any fear of his anger. And worse than a vehement disavowal of love,
-worse than a spurning of her from him, were his words: “I want you not
-to suffer, dear Alice; I want you to find peace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Peace! What peace can I find?”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her now, wondering if she would understand and willing to
-put it before her as he himself saw it: “The peace of seeing it all, and
-letting it all go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gavan, I swear to you that I will never see him again. Oh, Gavan, what
-do you mean? If you would forgive me&mdash;really forgive me&mdash;and take me
-now, I would follow you anywhere. I am not afraid any longer. I have
-found out that the only thing to be afraid of is oneself. If I have you,
-nothing else matters.<a name="page_099" id="page_099"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>He looked steadily at her, no longer touching her. “You have said what I
-mean. You have found it out. The only thing to be afraid of is
-ourselves. You will not see this man again? You will keep that promise
-to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Any promise! Anything you ask! And, indeed, indeed, I could not see him
-now,” she shuddered. “Gavan, you will take me away with you?”</p>
-
-<p>He wondered at her that she did not see how far he was from her&mdash;how
-far, and yet how one with her, how merged in her through his
-comprehension of the essential unity that bound all life together, that
-made her suffering part of him, even while he looked down upon it from
-an almost musing height.</p>
-
-<p>He felt unutterable gentleness and unutterable ruthlessness. “I don’t
-mean that, Alice. You won’t lose yourself by clinging to me, by clinging
-to what you want.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t love me! Oh, you don’t love me! I have killed your love!” she
-wailed out, rising to her feet, pierced by her full realization. She
-stepped back from him to gaze at him with a sort of horror. “You talk as
-if you had become a priest.”</p>
-
-<p>He appreciated what his attitude must seem to her&mdash;priestly indeed,
-almost sleek in its lack of personal emotion, its trite recourse to the
-preaching of renunciation. And, almost with a sense of humor, that he
-felt as hateful at such a moment, the perception came that he might
-serve her through the very erroneousness of her seeing of him. The sense
-of humor was hateful, and his skilful seizing of her suggestion had a
-grotesque aspect as well. Even in his weariness, he was aware that the
-cup of<a name="page_100" id="page_100"></a> contemplation was full when it could hold its drop of realized
-irony.</p>
-
-<p>“I think that I have become a priest, Alice,” he said. “I see everything
-differently. And weren’t you brought up in a religious way&mdash;to go to
-church, seek props, say your prayers, sacrifice yourself and live for
-others? Can’t you take hold of that again? It’s the only way.”</p>
-
-<p>Her quick flaming was justified, he knew; one shouldn’t speak of help
-when one was so far away; he had exaggerated the sacerdotal note. “Oh,
-you despise me! It is because of that, and you are trying to hide it
-from me! What is religion to me, what is anything&mdash;anything in the world
-to me&mdash;if I have lost you, Gavan? Why are you so cruel, so horrible? I
-can’t understand it! I can’t bear it! Oh, I can’t! Why are our lives
-wrecked like this? Why did you leave me? Why have I become wicked? I was
-never, never meant to be wicked.” Tears, not of abasement, not of
-appeal, but of pure anguish ran down her face.</p>
-
-<p>He was nearer to that elemental sadness and could speak with a more
-human tone. “You are not wicked&mdash;no more&mdash;no less&mdash;than any one. I don’t
-despise you. Believe me, Alice. If I hadn’t changed, this would have
-drawn me to you; I should have felt a deeper tenderness because you
-needed me more. But think of me as a priest: I have changed as much as
-that. And remember that what you have yourself found out is true&mdash;the
-only thing to be afraid of is oneself, and the only escape from fear is
-to&mdash;is to”&mdash;he paused, hearing the triteness<a name="page_101" id="page_101"></a> of his own words and
-wondering with a new wonder at their truth, their gray antiquity, their
-ever-verdant youth&mdash;“is to renounce,” he finished.</p>
-
-<p>He was standing now, ready for departure. In her eyes he saw at last the
-dignity of hopelessness, of an accepted doom, a pain far above panic.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Alice,” he said, taking her hand&mdash;“dear Alice.” And, with all the
-delicacy of his shrinking from a too great directness, his eyes had a
-steadiness of demand that sank into the poor woman’s tossed, unstable
-soul, he added, “Don’t ever do anything ugly&mdash;or foolish&mdash;again.”</p>
-
-<p>Her lover lost,&mdash;the very slightness of the words “ugly,” “foolish,”
-told her how utterly lost,&mdash;a deep thrill of emotional exaltation went
-through the emptiness he left. She longed to clasp the lost lover and to
-sink at the knees of the priest.</p>
-
-<p>“I will be good. I will renounce myself,” she said, as though it were a
-creed before an altar; and hurriedly she whispered, poor child, “Perhaps
-in heaven&mdash;we will find each other.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan often thought of that pathetic human clutch. So was the dream of
-an atoning heaven built. It kept its pathos, even its beauty, for him,
-when the whole tale ended in the world’s shrug and smile. He heard first
-that Alice had become an emotionally devout churchwoman;&mdash;that lasted
-for a year;&mdash;and then, alas! alas!&mdash;but, after all, the smile and shrug
-was the best philosophy,&mdash;that she rode once more with the Nietzschian
-lover. He had one short note from her: he would have heard&mdash;perhaps, at
-any rate, he would know what to think when he did<a name="page_102" id="page_102"></a> hear that she saw the
-man again. And she wanted him to know from her that it was not as he
-might think: she really loved him now&mdash;the other; not as she had loved
-Gavan,&mdash;that would always be first,&mdash;but very much; and she needed love,
-she must have it in her life, and she was lifting this man who loved
-her, was helping his life, and she had broader views now and did not
-believe in creeds or in the shibboleths that guided the vulgar. And she
-was harming no one, no one knew. Life was far too complicated, the
-intricacies of modern civilization far too enmeshing, for duty to be
-seen in plain black and white. The whole question of marriage was an
-open one, and one had a right to interpret one’s duty according to one’s
-own lights. Gavan saw the hand of the new master through it all. Shortly
-after, the death of Alice’s husband, killed while tiger-shooting, set
-her free, and the new master proved himself at all events a fond one by
-promptly marrying her. So ended Alice in his life.</p>
-
-<p>There was not much more to look back on after that. His return to
-England; his entering the political arena, with neither desire nor
-reluctance; his standing for the town his uncle’s influence marked out
-for him; the fight and the very gallant failure,&mdash;there had been, for
-him, an amused interest in the game of it all. The last year he had
-spent in his Surrey home, usually in company with a really pathetic
-effigy of the past&mdash;his father, poor and broken in health, the old
-serpent of Gavan’s childhood basking now in torpid insignificance, its
-fangs drawn.<a name="page_103" id="page_103"></a></p>
-
-<p>People probably thought that he had been soured by an initial defeat.
-Gavan knew that the game had merely ceased to amuse him. What amused him
-most was concentrated and accurate scholarship. He was writing a book on
-some of the obscurer phases of religious enthusiasm, studying from a
-historical and psychological point of view the origin and formation of
-queer little sects,&mdash;failures in the struggle for survival,&mdash;their
-brief, ambiguous triumphs and their disintegrations.</p>
-
-<p>His unruffled stepping-back from the arena of political activity was to
-the more congenial activity of understanding and observation. But there
-burned in him none of the observer’s, the thinker’s passion. He worked
-as he rode or ate his breakfast. Work was part of the necessary fuel
-that kept life’s flame bright. While he lived he didn’t want a feeble,
-flickering flame. But at his heart, he was profoundly indifferent to
-work, as to all else.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="nind">G<small>AVAN’S</small> mind, as he leaned back in the railway carriage, had passed over
-the visual aspect of this long retrospect, not in meditation, but in a
-passive seeing of its scenes and faces. Eppie’s face, fading in the
-mist; Robbie, silhouetted on the sky; the sulky Grainger; his uncle; his
-mother, and the vision of the spring day where he had wandered in the
-old dream of pain and into its cessation; finally, Alice, her pale hair
-and wistful eyes and her look when, at parting, she had said that they
-might be together in heaven.</p>
-
-<p>He had rarely known a greater lucidity than in<a name="page_104" id="page_104"></a> those swift, lonely
-hours of night. It was like a queer, long pause between a past
-accomplished and a future not yet begun&mdash;as though one should sunder
-time and stand between its cloven waves. The figures crossed the stage,
-and he seemed to see them all in the infinite leisure of an eternal
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>This future, its figures just about to emerge from the wings into full
-view, slightly troubled his reverie. It was at dawn that his mind again
-turned to it with a conjecture half amused and half reluctant. There was
-something disturbing in the linkage he must make between that child’s
-face on the mist and the Miss Gifford he was so soon to see. That she
-would, at all events in her own conception, dominate the stage, he felt
-sure; she might even expect a special attention from a spectator whose
-memory could join hers in that far first act. He was pretty sure that
-his memory would have to do service for both; and quite sure that memory
-would not hold for her, as it did for him, a distinct tincture of pain,
-of restlessness, as though there strove in it something shackled and
-unfulfilled.</p>
-
-<p>One’s thoughts, at four o’clock in the morning, after hours of
-sleeplessness, became fantastic, and Gavan found himself watching, with
-some shrinking, this image of the past, suddenly released, brought
-gasping and half stupefied to the air, to freedom, to new, strong
-activity, after having been, for so long, bound and gagged and thrust
-into an underground prison.</p>
-
-<p>He turned to a forecast of what Eppie would probably be like. He had
-heard a good deal about<a name="page_105" id="page_105"></a> her, and he had not cared for what he had
-heard. The fact that one did hear a good deal was not pleasing. Every
-one, in describing her, used the word charming; he had gathered that it
-meant, as applied to her, more than mere prettiness, wit, or social
-deftness; and it was precisely for the more that it meant that he did
-not care.</p>
-
-<p>Apparently what really distinguished her was her energy. She traveled
-with her cousin, Lady Alicia Waring, a worldly, kindly dabbler in art
-and politics; she rushed from country-house to country-house; she worked
-in the slums; she sat on committees; she canvassed for parliamentary
-friends; she hunted, she yachted, she sang, she broke hearts, and, by
-all accounts, had high and resolute matrimonial ambitions. Would Eppie
-Gifford “get” So-and-so was a question that Gavan had heard more than
-once repeated, with the graceless terseness of our modern colloquialism,
-and it spoke much for Eppie’s popularity that it was usually asked in
-sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>This reputation for a direct and vigorous worldliness was only thrown
-into more pungent relief by the startling tale of her love-affair. She
-had fallen in love, helplessly in love, with an impecunious younger son,
-an officer in the Guards&mdash;a lazy, lovable, petulant nobody, the last
-type one would have expected her to lose her head over. He was not
-stupid, but he didn’t count and never would. The match would have been a
-reckless one, for Eppie had, practically, only enough to pay for her
-clothes and her traveling expenses. The handsome guardsman<a name="page_106" id="page_106"></a> had not even
-prospects. Yet, deliberately sacrificing all her chances, she had fallen
-in love, been radiantly engaged, and then, from the radiance, flung into
-stupefying humiliation. He had thrown her over, quite openly, for an
-ugly little heiress from Liverpool. Poor Eppie had carried off her
-broken heart&mdash;and she didn’t deny that it was broken&mdash;for a year or so
-of travel. This had happened four years ago. She had mended as bravely
-as possible,&mdash;it wasn’t a deep break after all,&mdash;and on the thrilling
-occasion of her first meeting with the faithless lover and his bride was
-magnificently sweet and regal to the ugly heiress. It was surmised that
-the husband was as uncomfortable as he deserved to be. But this capacity
-for recklessness, this picture of one so dauntless, dazed and
-discomfited, hardly redeemed the other, the probably fundamental aspect.
-She had lost her head; but that didn’t prove that when she had it she
-would not make the best possible use of it. There was talk now&mdash;Eppie’s
-was the publicity of popularity&mdash;of Gavan’s old-time rival, Grainger,
-who had inherited an immense fortune and, unvarnished and defiantly
-undecorative on his lustrous background, was one of the world’s prizes.
-All that he had was at Eppie’s feet, and some more brilliant alternative
-could be the only cause for hesitation in a young woman seared by
-misfortune and cured forever of folly.</p>
-
-<p>So the talk went, and Gavan took such gabble with a large pinch of
-ironic incredulity; but at the same time the gossip left its trail. The
-impetuous and devastating young lady, with her assurance and her<a name="page_107" id="page_107"></a> aim at
-large successes, was to him a distasteful figure. There was pain in
-linking it with little Eppie. It stood waiting in the wings and was
-altogether novel and a little menacing to one’s peace of mind. He really
-did not want to see Miss Gilford; she belonged to a modern type
-intensely wearisome to him. But she was staying with her uncle and
-aunt&mdash;only Miss Barbara was left&mdash;at Kirklands, and the general, after a
-meeting in London, had written begging him to pay them all a visit, and,
-since there had seemed no reason for not going, here he was.</p>
-
-<p>Here he was, and round the corner of the wing the new Eppie stood
-waiting. Poor little Eppie of childhood&mdash;she was lost forever.</p>
-
-<p>But all the clearness of the night concentrated, at dawn, into that
-vivid memory of the past where they had wandered together, sharing joy
-and sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>That was long, long over. To-morrow was already here, and to-morrow
-belonged to the new Eppie.<a name="page_108" id="page_108"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="III-2" id="III-2"></a>III</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="75"
-height="76"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>AVAN spent the morning in Edinburgh, seeing an old relative, and
-reached Kirklands at six.</p>
-
-<p>It was a cold October evening, the moors like a dark, sullenly heaving
-ocean and a heavy bar of sunset lying along the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>The windows of the old white house mirrored the dying color, and here
-and there the inner light of fire and candle seemed like laughter on a
-grave face. With all its loneliness it was a happy-looking house; he
-remembered that; and in the stillness of the vast moors and the coming
-night it made him think of a warmly throbbing heart filling with courage
-and significance a desolate life.</p>
-
-<p>The general came from the long oak library, book in hand, to welcome
-him. Gavan was almost automatically observant of physical processes and
-noted now the pronounced limp, the touch of garrulity&mdash;symptoms of the
-fine old organism’s placid disintegration. Life was leaving it
-unreluctantly, and the mild indifference of age made his cordiality at
-once warmer and more impersonal than of old.</p>
-
-<p>As he led Gavan to his room, the room of boyhood,<a name="page_109" id="page_109"></a> near Eppie’s,
-overlooking the garden and the wooded hills, he told him that Eppie and
-Miss Barbara were dressing and that he would have time for a talk with
-them before dinner at eight.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s changed since you were here, Gavan. Ah! time goes&mdash;it goes. Poor
-Rachel! we lost her five years ago. If Eppie didn’t look after us so
-well we should be lonely, Barbara and I. We seldom get away now. Too old
-to care for change. But Eppie always gives us three or four months, and
-a letter once a week while she’s away. She puts us first. This is home,
-she says. She sees clever people at Alicia Waring’s, has the world at
-her feet,&mdash;you’ve heard, no doubt,&mdash;but she loves Kirklands best. She
-gardens with me&mdash;a great gardener Eppie, but she is good at anything she
-sets herself to; she drives her aunt about, she reads to us and sings to
-us,&mdash;you have heard of her singing, too,&mdash;keeps us in touch with life.
-Eppie is a wonderful person for sharing happiness,” the general
-monologued, looking about the fire-lit room; and Gavan felt that, from
-this point of view, some of the little Eppie might still have survived.</p>
-
-<p>“So you have given up the idea of the House?” the general went on.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m no good at it,” said Gavan; “I’ve proved it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Proved it? Nonsense. Wait till you are fifty before saying that. Why,
-you’ve everything in your favor. You weren’t enough in earnest; that was
-the trouble. You didn’t care enough; you played into your opponents’
-hands. The British<a name="page_110" id="page_110"></a> public doesn’t understand idealism or irony. Eppie
-told us all about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eppie? How did Eppie know?” He found himself using her little name as a
-matter of course.</p>
-
-<p>“She knows everything,” the general rejoined, with his air of happy,
-derived complacency; “even when she’s not in England, she never loses
-touch. Eppie is very much behind the scenes.”</p>
-
-<p>The simile recalled to Gavan his own vision of the stage and the waiting
-figure. “Even behind my scenes!” he ejaculated, smiling at so much
-omniscience.</p>
-
-<p>“From the moment you came into public life, yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“And she knows why I failed at it? Idealism and irony?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what she says; and I usually find Eppie right.” The general,
-after the half-humorous declaration, had a pause, and before leaving his
-guest, he added, “Right, except about her own affairs. She is a child
-there yet.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie’s disaster must have been keenly felt and keenly resented at
-Kirklands. The general made no further reference to it and Gavan asked
-no question.</p>
-
-<p>There was a fire, a lamp, and several clusters of candles in the long,
-dark library when Gavan entered it an hour later, so that the darkness
-was full of light; yet he had wandered slowly down its length, looking
-about him at the faded tan, russet, and gilt of well-remembered books,
-at the massive chairs and tables, all in their old places, all so
-intimately familiar,<a name="page_111" id="page_111"></a> before seeing that he was not alone in the room.</p>
-
-<p>Some one in white was sitting, half submerged in a deep chair, behind
-the table with its lamp&mdash;some one who had been watching him as he
-wandered, and who now rose to meet him, taking him so unawares that she
-startled him, all the light in the dim room seeming suddenly to center
-upon her and she herself to throw everything, even his former thoughts
-of her, into the background.</p>
-
-<p>It was Eppie, of course, and all that he had heard of her, all that he
-had conjectured, fell back before the impression that held him in a
-moment, long, really dazzled, yet very acute.</p>
-
-<p>Her face was narrow, pale, faintly freckled; the jaw long, the nose
-high-bridged, the lips a little prominent; and, as he now saw, a clear
-flush sprang easily to her cheeks. Eyes, lips, and hair were vivid with
-color: the hair, with its remembered rivulets of russet and gold, piled
-high on her head, framing the narrow face and the long throat; the eyes
-gray or green or gold, like the depths of a mountain stream.</p>
-
-<p>He had heard many analogies for the haunting and fugitive charm of Miss
-Gifford’s face&mdash;a charm that could only, apparently, be caught with the
-subtleties of antithesis. One appreciator had said that she was like an
-angelic jockey; another, that with a statesman’s gaze she had a baby’s
-smile; another, that she was a Flying Victory done by Velasquez. And
-with his own dominant impression of strength, sweetness, and daring,
-there crowded other similes. Her eyes had the steeplechaser’s hard,
-smiling scrutiny of the<a name="page_112" id="page_112"></a> next jump; the halloo of the hunt under a
-morning sky was in them, the joyous shouts of Spartan boys at play; yet,
-though eyes of heroism and laughter, they were eyes sad and almost
-tragically benignant.</p>
-
-<p>She was tall, with the spare lightness of a runner poised for a race,
-and the firm, ample breast of a hardy nymph. She suggested these pagan,
-outdoor similes while, at the same time, luxuriously feminine in her
-more than fashionable aspect, the last touches of modernity were upon
-her: her dress, the eighteenth-century, interpreted by Paris, her
-decorations all discretion and distinction&mdash;a knot of silver-green at
-her breast, an emerald ring on her finger, and emerald earrings, two
-drops of smooth, green light, trembling in the shadows of her hair.</p>
-
-<p>Altogether Gavan was able to grasp the impression even further, to
-simplify it, to express at once its dazzled quality and its acuteness,
-as various and almost violent, as if, suddenly, every instrument in an
-orchestra were to strike one long, clear, vibrating note.</p>
-
-<p>His gaze had been prolonged, and hers had answered it with as open an
-intentness. And it was at last she who took both his hands, shook them a
-little, holding them while, not shyly, but with that vivid flush on her
-cheek, “<i>You</i>,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>For she was startled, too. It <i>was</i> he. She remembered, as if she had
-seen them yesterday, his air of quick response, surface-shrinking, deep
-composure, the old delicious smile, and the glance swiftly looking and
-swiftly averted.</p>
-
-<p>“And <i>you</i>,” Gavan repeated. “I haven’t changed so much, though,” he
-said.<a name="page_113" id="page_113"></a></p>
-
-<p>“And I have? Really much? Long skirts and turned up hair are a
-transformation. It’s wonderful to see you, Gavan. It makes one get hold
-of the past and of oneself in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does it?”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Doesn’t</i> it?” She let go his hands, and moving to the fire and
-standing before it while she surveyed him, she went on, not waiting for
-an answer:</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t suppose that you have my keenness of memory. It all rushes
-back&mdash;our walks, our games, our lessons, the smell of the heather, the
-very taste of the heather-honey we ate at tea, and all the things you
-did and said and looked; your building the Petit Trianon, and your
-playing dolls with me that day; your Agnes, in her pink dress, and my
-Elspeth, whom I used to whip so.”</p>
-
-<p>“I remember it all,” said Gavan, “and I remember how I broke poor
-Elspeth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“All of it: the attic windows and the pine-tree under them, and the
-great white bird, and the dreadful, soft little thud on the garden
-path.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I can see your face looking down. You were quite silent and
-frozen. I screamed and screamed. Aunt Barbara thought that <i>you</i> had
-fallen at first from the way I screamed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Poor little Eppie. Yes, I remember; it was horrid.”</p>
-
-<p>Their eyes, smiling, quizzical, yet sad, watched, measured each other,
-while they exchanged these trophies from the past. He had joined her
-beside the fire, and, turning, she leaned her hands on the mantel and
-looked into the flames. So looking, her<a name="page_114" id="page_114"></a> face had its aspect of almost
-tragic brooding. It was as if, Gavan thought, under the light memories,
-all those visions of his night were there before her, as if,
-astonishingly, and in almost uncanny measure, she shared them.</p>
-
-<p>“And do you remember Robbie?” she asked presently.</p>
-
-<p>“I was just thinking of Robbie,” Gavan answered. It was her face that
-had brought back the old sorrow, and that memory, more than any, linked
-them over all that was new and strange. They glanced at each other.</p>
-
-<p>“I am so glad,” said Eppie.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I remember?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that you haven’t forgotten. You said you would.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did I?” he asked, though he quite remembered that, too.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; and I should have felt Robbie more dead if you had forgotten him.”</p>
-
-<p>This was wonderfully not the Miss Gifford, and wonderfully the old
-Eppie. She saw that thought, too, answering it with, “Things haven’t
-really changed so much, have they? It’s all so very near&mdash;all of that.”</p>
-
-<p>So near, that its sudden sharing was making Gavan a little
-uncomfortable, with the discomfort of the night before justified,
-intensified.</p>
-
-<p>He hadn’t imagined such familiar closeness with a woman really unknown,
-nor that, sweeping away all the formalities that might have grown up
-between them, she should call him Gavan and make it<a name="page_115" id="page_115"></a> natural for him to
-call her Eppie. He didn’t really mind. It was amusing, charming perhaps,
-perhaps even touching&mdash;yes, of course it was that; but she was rather
-out of place: much nearer than where he had imagined she would be, on
-the stage before him.</p>
-
-<p>Passing to another memory, she now said, “I clung for years, you know,
-to your promise to come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t come&mdash;really and simply could not.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never for a moment thought you could, any more than I thought you
-could forget Robbie.”</p>
-
-<p>“And when I could come, you were gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“How miserable that made me! I was in Rome when I had the news from
-Uncle Nigel.”</p>
-
-<p>He felt bound fully to exonerate the past. “I had the life, during my
-boyhood, of a sumptuous galley-slave. I had everything except liberty
-and leisure. I was put into a system and left there until it had had its
-will of me. And when I was free I imagined that you had forgotten all
-about me. To a shy, warped boy, a grown-up Eppie was an alarming idea.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never thought you had forgotten <i>me</i>!” said Eppie, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>Again she actually disturbed him; but, lightly, he replied with the
-truth, feeling a certain satisfaction in its lightness: “Never, never;
-though, of course, you fell into a background. You can’t deny that <i>I</i>
-did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, I don’t deny it.” Her smile met his, seemed placidly to
-perceive its meaning. She did not for a moment imply, by her admissions,
-any<a name="page_116" id="page_116"></a> more than he did; the only question was, What did his admissions
-imply?</p>
-
-<p>She left them there, going on in an apparent sequence, “Have you heard
-much about me, Gavan?”</p>
-
-<p>“A good deal,” he owned.</p>
-
-<p>“I ask because I want to pick up threads; I want to know how many
-stitches are dropped, so to speak. Since you have heard, I want to know
-just what; I often seem to leave reverberations behind me. Some rather
-ugly ones, I fear. You heard, perhaps, that I was that rather ambiguous
-being, the young woman of fashion, materialistic, ambitious, hard.” Her
-gaze, with its cool scrutiny, was now upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“Those are really too ugly names for what I heard. I gathered, on the
-whole, that you were merely very vigorous and that you had more
-opportunities than most people for vigor.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad that you saw it so; but all the same, the truth, at times,
-hasn’t been beautiful. I have, often, been too indifferent toward people
-who didn’t count for me, and too diplomatic toward those who did. You
-see, Gavan,” she put it placidly before him, not at all as if drawing
-near in confidence,&mdash;she was much further in her confidences than in her
-memories,&mdash;but merely as if she unrolled a map before him so that he
-might clearly see where, at present, they found themselves, “you see, I
-am a nearly penniless girl&mdash;just enough to dress and go about. Of course
-if I didn’t dress and didn’t go about I could keep body and soul
-together; but to the shrewd eyes of the world, a girl living on her
-friends, making capital of her personality, while she seeks a husband<a name="page_117" id="page_117"></a>
-who will give her the sort of place she wants&mdash;oh, yes, the world isn’t
-so unfair, either, when one takes off the veils. And this girl, with the
-personality that pays, was put early in a place from where she could see
-all sorts of paths at once, see the world, in its ladder aspect, before
-her&mdash;all the horridness of low rungs and all the satisfaction of high
-ones. I have been tempted through complexity of understanding; perhaps I
-still am. One wants the best; and when one doesn’t see clearly what the
-best is, one is in danger of becoming ugly. But echoes are often
-distorting.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Gifford was now very fully before him, as she had evidently
-intended to be. It was as if she herself had drawn between them the
-barrier of the footlights and as if, on her chosen stage, she swept a
-really splendid curtsey. And this frank and panoplied young woman of the
-world was far easier to deal with than the reminiscent Eppie. He could
-comfortably smile and applaud from his stall, once more the mere
-spectator&mdash;easiest of attitudes.</p>
-
-<p>“The echoes, on the whole, were rather magnificent, as if an Amazon had
-galloped across mountains and left them calling her prowess from peak to
-peak.”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes, quickly on his, seemed to measure the conscious artificiality,
-to compare it with what he had already, more helplessly, shown her. He
-felt his rather silly deftness penetrated and that she guessed that the
-mountain calls had not at all enchanted him. She owned to her own
-acuteness in her next words:<a name="page_118" id="page_118"></a></p>
-
-<p>“And you don’t like young ladies to gallop across mountains. Well, I
-love galloping, though I’m sorry that I leave over-loud echoes. You, at
-all events, are noiseless. You seem to have sailed over my head in an
-air-boat. It was hard for me to keep any trace of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t at all mean that I dislike Amazons to have their rides.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us talk of you now. I have had an eye on you, you know, even when
-you disappeared into the Indian haze; you had just disappeared when I
-first came to London. I only heard of lofty things&mdash;scholarly
-distinction, diplomatic grace, exquisite indifference to the world’s
-prizes and to noisy things in general. It’s all true, I can see.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m not indifferent to you,” said Gavan, smiling, tossing his
-appropriate bouquet.</p>
-
-<p>She had at this another, but a sharper, of her penetrative pauses. It
-was pretty to see her, rather like a deer arrested in its careless
-speed, suddenly wary, its head high. And, in another moment, he saw that
-the quick flush, almost violently, sprang to her cheek. Turning her head
-a little from him, she looked away, almost as if his glib acceptance of
-a frivolous meaning in her words abashed her&mdash;and more for him than for
-herself; as if she suddenly suspected him of being stupid enough to
-accept her at the uglier valuation of those echoes he had heard. She had
-not meant to say that she was one of the world’s prizes, and she had
-perhaps meant to say, generously, that if he found her noisy she
-wouldn’t resent indifference. Perhaps she had meant to say nothing of
-herself<a name="page_119" id="page_119"></a> at all. She certainly wasn’t on the stage, and in thinking her
-so he felt that he had shown himself disloyal to something that she,
-more nobly, had taken for granted. The flush, so vivid, that stayed made
-him feel himself a blunderer.</p>
-
-<p>But, in a moment, she went on with a lightness of allusion to his speech
-that yet oddly answered the last turn of his self-reproach. “Oh, you are
-loyal, I am sure, even to a memory. I wasn’t thinking of particulars,
-but of universals. My whole impression of you was of something fragrant,
-elusive, impalpable. I never felt that I had a glimpse of really <i>you</i>.
-It was almost gross in comparison actually to see your name in the
-papers, to read of your fight for Camley, to think of you in that
-earthly scuffle. It was like roast-beef after roses; and I was glad,
-because I’m gross. I like roast-beef.”</p>
-
-<p>He was grateful to her for the lightness that carried him so kindly over
-his own blunder.</p>
-
-<p>“It was only the fragrance of the roast, too, you see, since I was
-defeated,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t mind a bit, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>“It would sound, wouldn’t it, rather like sour grapes to say it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You can say it. It was so obvious that you might have had the bunch by
-merely stretching out your hand&mdash;they were under it, not over your head.
-You simply wouldn’t play the game.” She left him now, reaching her chair
-with a long stride and a curving, gleaming turn of her white skirts,
-suggesting a graceful adaptation of some outdoor dexterity. As she
-leaned back in her chair, fixing<a name="page_120" id="page_120"></a> him with that look of cheerful
-hardness, she made him think so strongly of the resolute, winning type,
-that almost involuntarily he said, “You would have played it, wouldn’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should think so! I care for the grapes, you see. It’s what I
-said&mdash;you didn’t care enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s kind of you to see ineffectuality in that light.” Still
-examining the steeplechaser quality, he added, “You do care, don’t you,
-a lot?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a lot. I am worldly to my finger-tips.” Her eyes challenged
-him&mdash;gaily, not defiantly&mdash;to misunderstand her again.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean, exactly, by worldly?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean by it that I believe in the world, that I love the world; I
-believe that its grapes are worth while,&mdash;and by grapes I mean the
-things that people strive for and that the strong attain. The higher
-they hang and the harder the climb, the more I like them.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan received these interpretations without comment. “A seat in the
-House isn’t very high, though, is it?” he remarked.</p>
-
-<p>“That depends on the sitter. It might be a splendid or a trivial thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“And in my case, if I’d got it, what would it have been? Can you see
-that, too, you very clear-sighted young woman?”</p>
-
-<p>He stood above her, smiling, but now without suavity or artificiality;
-looking at her as though she were a pretty gipsy whose palm he had
-crossed with silver. And Eppie answered, quite like a good-natured<a name="page_121" id="page_121"></a>
-gipsy, conscious of an admiring but skeptical questioner, “I think it
-would have been neither.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what then? What would this sitter have made of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“A distraction? An experiment upon himself? I’m sure I don’t know.
-Indeed, I don’t pretend to know you at all yet. Perhaps I will in time.”</p>
-
-<p>Once more he was conscious of the discomfort, slight and stealing, as
-though the gipsy knew too much already. But he protested, and with
-sincerity: “If there is anything to find you will certainly find it. I
-hope that you will find it worth your while. I hope that we shall be
-great friends.”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled up at him, clearly and quietly: “I have always been your
-great friend.”</p>
-
-<p>“Always? All this while?”</p>
-
-<p>“All this while. Never mind if you haven’t felt it; I have. I will do
-for both.”</p>
-
-<p>Her smile, her look, made him finally and completely understand the
-application of the well-worn word to her. She was charming. She could be
-lavish, pour out unasked bounty upon one, and yet, in no way
-undervaluing it, be full of delicacy, of humor, in her generosity.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I hadn’t any right to feel it,” said Gavan. “I thought you
-would not have remembered.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you will find out&mdash;I always remember, it’s my strong point,” said
-Eppie.<a name="page_122" id="page_122"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="IV-2" id="IV-2"></a>IV</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00n.png"
-width="77"
-height="78"
-alt="N"
-title="N"
-/></span>EXT morning at breakfast he had quite a new impression of her.</p>
-
-<p>Pale sunlight flooded the square, white room where, in all its dignified
-complexity of appurtenance, the simple meal was laid out. From the
-windows one saw the clear sky, the moor, its summer purple turned to
-rich browns and golds, and, nearer, the griffins with their shields.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie was a little late in coming, and Gavan, while he and the general
-finished their wandering consumption of porridge and sat down to bacon
-and eggs, had time to observe by daylight in Miss Barbara, behind her
-high silver urn, the changes that in her were even more emphatic than in
-her brother. She was sweeter than ever, more appealing, more
-affirmative, with all manner of futile, fluttering little gestures and
-gentle, half-inarticulate little ejaculations of pleasure, approbation,
-or distress. Her smile, rather silly, worked too continually, as though
-moved by slackened wires. Her hands defined, described, ejaculated;
-over-expression had become automatic with her.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, when she appeared, said that she had had<a name="page_123" id="page_123"></a> a walk, stooping to
-kiss her aunt and giving Gavan a firm, chill hand on her way to the same
-office for the general. She took her seat opposite Gavan, whistling an
-Irish-terrier to her from the door and, before she began to eat,
-dropping large fragments of bannock into his mouth. Her loose, frieze
-clothes smelled of peat and sunshine; her hair seemed to have the
-sparkle of the dew on it; she suggested mountain tarns, skylarks,
-morning gladness: but, with all this, Gavan, for the first time, now
-that she faced the hard, high light, saw how deeply, too, she suggested
-sadness.</p>
-
-<p>Her face had moments of looking older than his own. It was fresh, it was
-young, but it had lived a great deal, and felt things to the bone, as it
-were.</p>
-
-<p>There were little wrinkles about her eyes; her white brow, under its
-sweep of hair, was faintly lined; the oval of her cheek, long and fine,
-took, at certain angles, an almost haggard sharpness. It was not a faded
-face, nor a face to wither with years: every line of it spoke of a
-permanent beauty; but, with all the color that the chill morning air had
-brought into it, it yet made one think of bleak uplands, of
-weather-beaten cliffs. Life had engraved it with ineffaceable symbols.
-Storms had left their mark, bitter conflicts and bitter endurances.</p>
-
-<p>While she ate, with great appetite, she talked incessantly, to the
-general, to Miss Barbara, to Gavan, but not so much to him, tossing, in
-the intervals of her knife and fork and cup, bits of food to the
-attentive terrier. He saw why the old people adored her. She was the
-light, the movement of their monotonous<a name="page_124" id="page_124"></a> days. Not only did she bring
-them her life: it was their own that she vivified with her interest. The
-interest was not assumed, dutiful. There was no touch of the conscious
-being kind. She questioned as eagerly as she told. She knew and cared
-for every inch of the country, every individual in the country-side. She
-was full of sagacity and suggestion, full of anecdote and a nipping
-Scotch humor. And one felt strongly in her the quality of old race.
-Experience was in her blood, an inheritance of instinct, and, that so
-significant symptom, the power of playfulness&mdash;the intellectual
-detachment that, toward firm convictions, could afford a lightness
-scandalous to more crudely compacted natures, could afford gaieties and
-audacities, like the flights of a bird tethered by an invisible thread
-to a strong hand.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barbara, plaintively repining over village delinquencies, was lured
-to see comedy lurking in the cases of insubordination and
-thriftlessness, though at the mention of Archie MacHendrie, the local
-drunkard and wife-beater, Eppie’s brow grew black&mdash;with a blackness
-beside which Miss Barbara’s gloom was pallid. Eppie said that she wished
-some one would give Archie a thrashing, and Gavan could almost see her
-doing it herself.</p>
-
-<p>From local topics she followed the general to politics, while he glanced
-down the columns of the “Scotsman,” so absorbed and so vehement that,
-meeting at last Gavan’s meditative eye, she seemed to become aware of an
-irony he had not at all intended, and said, “A crackling of thorns under
-a pot, all<a name="page_125" id="page_125"></a> this, Gavan thinks, and, what does it all matter? You have
-become a philosopher, Gavan; I can see that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, my dear, from Plato down philosophers have thought that politics
-did matter,” said the general, incredulous of indifference to such a
-topic.</p>
-
-<p>“Unless they were of a school that thought that nothing did,” said
-Eppie.</p>
-
-<p>“Gavan’s not of that weak-kneed persuasion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he isn’t weak-kneed!” laughed Eppie.</p>
-
-<p>She drove her aunt all morning in the little pony-cart and wrote letters
-after lunch, Gavan being left to the general’s care. It was not until
-later that she assumed toward him the more personal offices of deputy
-hostess, meeting him in the hall as she emerged from the morning-room,
-her thick sheaf of letters in her hand, and proposing a walk before tea.
-She took him up the well-remembered path beside the burn; but now, in
-the clear autumnal afternoon, he seemed further from her than last night
-before the fire. Already he had seen that the sense of nearness or
-distance depended on her will rather than his own; so that it was now
-she who chose to talk of trivial things, not referring by word or look
-to the old memories, deepest of all, that crowded about him on the
-hilltop, not even when, breasting the wind, they passed the solitary
-group of pine-trees, where she had so deeply shared his suffering, so
-wonderfully comprehended his fears.</p>
-
-<p>She strode against the twisted flappings of her skirt, tawny strands of
-hair whipping across her throat, her hands deeply thrust into her
-pockets, her<a name="page_126" id="page_126"></a> head unbowed before the enormous buffets of the wind, and
-he felt anew the hardy energy that would make tender, lingering touches
-upon the notes of the past rare things with her.</p>
-
-<p>In the uproar of air, any sequence of talk was difficult. Her clear
-voice seemed to shout to him, like the cold shocks of a mountain stream
-leaping from ledge to ledge, and the trivial things she said were like
-the tossing of spray upon that current of deep, joyful energy.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it splendid!” she exclaimed at last. They had walked two miles
-along the crest of the hill, and, smiling in looking round at him, her
-face, all the sky behind it, all the wind around it, made the word match
-his own appreciation.</p>
-
-<p>“Splendid,” he assented, thinking of her glance and poise.</p>
-
-<p>Still bending her smile upon him, she said, “You already look
-different.”</p>
-
-<p>“Different from what?” he asked, amused by her expression, as of a
-kindly, diagnosing young doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“From last night. From what I felt of you. One might have thought that
-you had lost the capacity for feeling splendor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should you have imagined me so deadened?” He kept his cheerful
-curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. I did. There,”&mdash;she paused to point,&mdash;“do you remember
-the wind-mill, Gavan? The old miller is dead and his son is the miller
-now; but the mill looks just as it did when we were little. It makes one
-think of birds and ships, doesn’t it?&mdash;with the beauty that it stays and
-doesn’t pass.<a name="page_127" id="page_127"></a> When I was a child&mdash;did I ever confide it to you?&mdash;my
-dream was to catch one of the sails as it came down and let it carry me
-up, up, and right around. What fun it would have been! I suppose that
-one could have held on.”</p>
-
-<p>“In pretty grim earnest, after the first fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“It would be the sense of coming grimness that would make the desperate
-thrill of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are fond of thrills and perils.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not fond, exactly; the love of risk is a deeper thing&mdash;something
-fundamental in us, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>She had walked on, down the hillside, where gorse bushes pulled at her
-skirts, and he was putting together last night’s impressions with
-to-day’s, and thinking that if she embodied the instinctive, the
-life-loving, it wasn’t in the simple, unreflecting forms that the words
-usually implied. She was simple, but not in the least guileless, and her
-directness was a choice among recognized complexities. It was no
-spontaneous child of nature who, on the quieter hillside, where they
-could talk, talked of India, now, of his life there, the people he had
-known, many of whom she too knew. He knew that he was being managed,
-being made to talk of what she wanted to hear, that she was still
-engaged in penetrating. He was quite willing to be managed,
-penetrated,&mdash;for as far as she could get; he could rely on his own
-deftness in retreat before too deep a probe, though, should she discover
-that for him the lessons of life had resulted in an outlook perhaps the
-antipodes from her own, he guessed that her own would show no wavering.
-Still, she should run, if possible, no<a name="page_128" id="page_128"></a> such risk. They were to be
-friends, good friends: that was, as she had said, not only an
-accomplished, but a long-accomplished fact; but, even more than in
-childhood, she would be a friend held at arm’s-length.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, unconscious, no doubt, of these barriers, Eppie walked beside
-him and made him talk about himself. She knew, of course, of his
-mother’s death; she did not speak of that: many barriers were her
-own&mdash;she was capable of most delicate avoidances. But she asked after
-his father. “He is still alive, I hear.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, indeed, and gives me a good deal of his company.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh.” She was a little at a loss. He could guess at what she had heard
-of his father. He went on, though choosing his words in a way that
-showed a slight wincing behind his wish to be very frank and friendly
-with her, for even yet his father made him wince, standing, as he did,
-for the tragedy of his mother’s life: “He is very much alive for a
-person so gone to pieces. But I can put up with him far more comfortably
-than when he was less pitiable.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much do you have to put up with him?” she asked, trying to image,
-as he saw, his ménage in Surrey, in the house he had just been
-describing to her, its old bricks all vague pinks and mauves, its
-high-walled gardens clustering near it, its wonderful hedges, that, he
-said, it ruined him to keep up to their reputation of exquisite
-formality; and, within, its vast library&mdash;all the house a brain,
-practically, the other rooms like mere places for life’s renewal<a name="page_129" id="page_129"></a> before
-centering in the intellectual workshop. She evidently found it difficult
-to place, among the hedges, the lawns, the long walls of the library, a
-father, gone to pieces perhaps, but displaying all the more helplessly
-his general unworthiness. Even in lenient circles, Captain Palairet was
-thought to have an undignified record.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he is there for most of the time. He is there now,” said Gavan,
-without pathos. “He has no money left, and now that I’ve a little I’m
-the obvious thing to retire to.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope that it’s not very horrid for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t say that it’s horrid at all. I don’t see much of him, and, in
-many respects, he has remained, for the onlooker, rather a charming
-creature. He gives me very little trouble&mdash;smokes, eats, plays
-billiards. When we meet, we are very affable.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie did not say, “You tolerate him because he is piteous,” but he
-imagined that she guessed it.<a name="page_130" id="page_130"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="V-2" id="V-2"></a>V</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00h.png"
-width="76"
-height="76"
-alt="H"
-title="H"
-/></span>E was awakened early next morning by the sound of singing in the garden
-below.</p>
-
-<p>His windows were widely opened and a cold, pure air filled the room. He
-lay dreamily listening for some moments before recognizing Eppie’s
-voice&mdash;recognizing it, though he had never heard her sing.</p>
-
-<p>Fresh and strong, it put a new vitality into the simple sadness of an
-old Scotch ballad, as though in the very sorrow it found joy. It was not
-an emotional voice. Clearly and firmly it sounded, and seemed a part of
-the frosty, sunny morning, part of the sky that was like a great chalice
-filled with light, of the whitened hills, the aromatic pine-woods, and
-the distant, rushing burn. He had sprung up after the first dreamy
-listening and looked out at it all, and at her walking through the
-garden, her dog at her heels. She went out by the little gate sunken
-deep in the wall, and disappeared in the woods; and still the voice
-reached him, singing on, and at each repetition of the monotonous,
-departing melody, a sadder, sweeter sense of pain strove in his heart.</p>
-
-<p>He listened, looking down at the pine-tree beneath<a name="page_131" id="page_131"></a> the window, at the
-garden, the summer-house, the withered tangle of the rose upon the wall,
-and up at the hilltop, at the crystalline sky; and such a sudden pang of
-recollection pierced him that tears came to his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>What was it that he remembered? or, rather, what did he not? Things deep
-and things trivial, idle smiles, wrenching despairs, youth, sorrow,
-laughter,&mdash;all the past was in the pang, all the future, too, it seemed,
-and he could not have said whether his mother, Alice, Eppie with her
-dolls, and little Robbie, or the clairvoyant intuition of a future
-waiting for him here&mdash;whether presage or remembrance&mdash;were its greater
-part.</p>
-
-<p>Not until the voice had died, in faintest filaments of sound, far away
-among the woods, did the pain fade, leaving him shaken. Such moods were
-like dead things starting to life, and reminded him too vividly of the
-fact that as long as one was alive, one was, indeed, in danger from
-life; and though his thought was soon able to disentangle itself from
-the knot of awakened emotions that had entwined it for a moment, a vague
-sense of fear remained with him. Something had been demanded of
-him&mdash;something that he had, involuntarily, found himself giving. This it
-was to have still a young nature, sensitive to impressions. He
-understood. Yet it was with a slight, a foolishly boyish reluctance, as
-he told himself, that he went down some hours later to meet Eppie at
-breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>There was an unlooked-for refuge for him when he found her hardly
-noticing him, and very angry over<a name="page_132" id="page_132"></a> some village misdemeanor. The anger
-held her far away. She dilated on the subject all during breakfast,
-pouring forth her wrath, without excitement, but with a steady
-vehemence. It was an affair of a public-house, and Eppie accused the
-publican of enticing his clients to drink, of corrupting the village
-sobriety, and she urged the general, as local magistrate, to take
-immediate action, showing a very minute knowledge of the technicalities
-of the case.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear,” the general expostulated, “indeed I don’t think that the man
-has done anything illegal; we are powerless about the license in such a
-case. You must get more evidence.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have any amount of evidence. The man is a public nuisance. Poor Mrs.
-MacHendrie was crying to me about it this morning. Archie is hardly ever
-sober now. I shall drive over to Carlowrie and see Sir Alec about it; as
-the wretch’s landlord he can make it uncomfortable for him, and I’ll see
-that he makes it as uncomfortable as possible.”</p>
-
-<p>Laughingly, but slightly harassed, the general said: “You see, we have a
-tyrant here. Eppie is really a bit too hard on the man. He is an
-unpleasant fellow, I own, a most unpleasant manner&mdash;a beast, if you
-will, but a legal beast.”</p>
-
-<p>“The most unpleasant form of animal, isn’t it? It’s very good of Eppie
-to care so much,” said Gavan.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t care, I suppose,” she said, turning her eyes on him, as
-though she saw him for the first time that morning.</p>
-
-<p>“I should feel more hopeless about it, perhaps.<a name="page_133" id="page_133"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, pray?”</p>
-
-<p>“At all events, I shouldn’t be able to feel so much righteous
-indignation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“He is pretty much of a product, isn’t he?&mdash;not worse, I suppose, than
-the men whose weakness enriches him. It’s a pity, of course, that one
-can’t painlessly pinch such people out of existence, as one would
-offensive insects.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, across the table, eyed him, her anger quieted. “He is a product
-of a good many things,” she said, now in her most reasonable manner,
-“and he is going to be a product of some more before I’m done with
-him,&mdash;a product of my hatred for him and his kind, for one thing. That
-will be a new factor in his development. Gavan,” she smiled, “you and I
-are going to quarrel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Eppie!” Miss Barbara interposed. “Gavan, you must not take her
-seriously; she so often says extravagant things just to tease one.”
-Really dismayed, alternately nodding and shaking her head in reassurance
-and protest, she looked from one to the other. “And don’t, dear, say
-such unchristian things of anybody. She is not so hard and unforgiving
-as she sounds, Gavan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Barbara! Aunt Barbara!” laughed Eppie, leaning her elbows on the
-table, her eyes still on Gavan, “my hatred for Macdougall isn’t nearly
-as unchristian as Gavan’s indifference. I don’t want to pinch him
-painlessly out of life at all. I think that life has room for us both. I
-want to have him whipped, or made uncomfortable in some way, until he
-becomes less horrid.<a name="page_134" id="page_134"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“Whipped, dear! People are never whipped nowadays! It was a very
-barbarous punishment indeed, and, thank God, we have outgrown it. We
-will outgrow it all some day. And as to any punishment, I don’t know, I
-really don’t. Resist not evil,” Miss Barbara finished in a vague,
-helpless murmur, uncertain as to what course would at once best apply to
-Macdougall’s case and satisfy the needs of public sobriety.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps one owes it to people to resist them,” Eppie answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Eppie dear, if only you cared a little more for Maeterlinck!”
-sighed Miss Barbara, the more complex readings of whose later years had
-been somewhat incongruously adapted to her early simple faiths. “Do you
-remember that beautiful thing he says,&mdash;and Gavan’s attitude reminds me
-of it,&mdash;‘<i>Le sage qui passe interrompt mille drâmes’?</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“You will be quoting Tolstoi to me next, Aunt Barbara. I suspect that
-such sages would interrupt a good deal more than dramas.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hope that you care for Tolstoi, Gavan,” said Miss Barbara, not
-forgetful of his boyish pieties. “Not the novels,&mdash;they are very, very
-sad, and so long, and the characters have such a number of names it is
-most confusing,&mdash;but the dear little books on religion. It is all there:
-love of all men, and non-resistance of evil, and self-renunciation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” Gavan assented, while Eppie looked rather gravely at him.</p>
-
-<p>“How beautiful this world would be if we could see it so&mdash;no hatred, no
-strife, no evil.<a name="page_135" id="page_135"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>Again Gavan assented with, “None.”</p>
-
-<p>“None; and no life either,” Eppie finished for them.</p>
-
-<p>She rose, thrusting her hands into alternate pockets looking for a
-note-book, which she found and consulted. “I’m off for the fray, Uncle
-Nigel, for hatred and strife. You and Gavan are going to shoot, so I’ll
-bring you your lunch at the corner of the Carlowrie woods.”</p>
-
-<p>“So that you and Gavan may continue your quarrel there. Very well. I
-prefer listening.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gavan understands that Eppie must not be taken seriously,” Miss Barbara
-interposed; but Eppie rejoined, drawing on her gloves, “Indeed, I intend
-to be taken seriously. I quarrel with people I like as well as with
-those I hate.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are going to be a factor in my development, too?” said Gavan.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course, as you are in mine, as we all are in one another’s. We can’t
-help that. And my attack on you shall be conscious.”</p>
-
-<p>These open threats didn’t at all alarm him. It was what was unconscious
-in her that stirred disquiet.</p>
-
-<p>When Eppie had departed and the general had gone off to see to
-preparations for the morning’s shoot, Miss Barbara, still sitting rather
-wistfully behind her urn, said: “I hope, dear Gavan, that you will be
-able to influence Eppie a little. I am so thankful to find you unchanged
-about all the deeper things of life. You could help her, I am sure. She
-needs guidance. She is so loving, so clever, a joy<a name="page_136" id="page_136"></a> to Nigel and to me;
-but she is very headstrong, very reckless and wilful,&mdash;a will in
-subjection to nothing but her own sense of right. It’s not that she is
-altogether irreligious,&mdash;thank Heaven for that,&mdash;but she hasn’t any of
-the happiness of religion. There is no happiness, is there, Gavan&mdash;I
-feel sure that you see it as I do,&mdash;but in having our lives stayed on
-the Eternal?”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, as it was very easy to do, assented again.</p>
-
-<p>He spent the morning with the general in shooting over the rather scant
-covers, and at two, in a sheltered bend of the woods, where the sunlight
-lay still and bright, Eppie joined them, bringing the lunch-basket in
-her dog-cart.</p>
-
-<p>She was in a very good humor, and while, sitting above them, she
-dispensed rations, announced to her uncle the result of her visit to Sir
-Alec.</p>
-
-<p>“He thinks he can turn him out if any flagrant ease of drunkenness
-occurs again. We talked over the conditions of his lease.”</p>
-
-<p>“Carston, I am sure, doesn’t care a snap of his fingers about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not; but he cares that I care.”</p>
-
-<p>“You see, Gavan, by what strings the world is pulled. Carston hasn’t two
-ideas in his head.”</p>
-
-<p>“Luckily I am here to use his empty head to advantage. I wheedled Lady
-Carston, too,&mdash;the bad influence Macdougall had on church-going. Lady
-Carston’s one idea, Gavan, is the keeping of the Sabbath. Altogether it
-was an excellent morning’s work.” Eppie was cheerful and triumphant. She
-was eating from a plate on her knees and drinking<a name="page_137" id="page_137"></a> milk out of a little
-silver cup. “Do you think me a tiresome, managing busybody, Gavan?” She
-smiled down at him, and her lashes catching the sunlight, an odd, misty
-glitter half veiled her eyes. “You look,” she added, “as you used to
-look when you were a little boy. The years collapsed just then.”</p>
-
-<p>He was conscious that, under her sudden glance, he had, indeed, looked
-shy. It was not her light question, but the strange depth of her
-half-closed eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I find a great deal of the old Eppie in you: I remember that you used
-to want to bully the village people for their good.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m still a bully, I think, but a more discreet one. Won’t you have
-some milk, Gavan? You used to love milk when you were a little boy. Have
-you outgrown that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all. I should still love some; but don’t rob yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“There ‘s heaps here. I’ve no spare glass. Do you mind?” She held out to
-him the silver cup, turning its untouched edge to him, something
-maternal in the gesture, in the down-looking of her sun-dazed eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He felt himself foolishly flushing while he drank the milk; and when,
-really seized by a silly childish shyness, he protested that he wanted
-no more, she placidly, with an emphasizing of her air of sweet,
-comprehending authority, said, “Oh, but you must; it holds almost
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>For the second time that day, as he obediently<a name="page_138" id="page_138"></a> took from her hand the
-innocent little cup, Gavan had the unreasoning impulse of tears.</p>
-
-<p>The sunny afternoon was silent. Overhead, the sky had its chalice look,
-clear, benignant, brimmed with light. The general, the lolling dogs,
-were part of the background, with the heather and the wood of larches,
-the finely falling sprays delicately blurred upon the sky.</p>
-
-<p>It was again something sweet, sweet, simple and profound, that brought
-again that pang of presage and of pain. But the pain was like a joy, and
-the tears like tears of happiness in the sunny stillness, where her firm
-and gentle hand gave him milk in a silver cup.</p>
-
-<p>The actual physical sensation of a rising saltness was an alarm signal
-that, with a swift reversal of mental wheels, brought a revulsion of
-consciousness. He saw himself threatened once more by nature’s
-enchantments: wily nature, luring one always back to life with looks
-from comrade eyes, touches from comrade fingers, pastoral drinks all
-seeming innocence, and embracing sunlight. Wily Circe. With a long
-breath, the mirage was seen as mirage and the moment’s dangerous
-blossoming withered as if dust had been strewn over it.<a name="page_139" id="page_139"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="VI-2" id="VI-2"></a>VI</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00t.png"
-width="75"
-height="83"
-alt="T"
-title="T"
-/></span>O see his own susceptibility so plainly was, he told himself, to be
-safe from it; not safe from its pang, perhaps, but safe from its power,
-and that was the essential thing.</p>
-
-<p>It was not to Eppie, as he further assured himself, that he was
-susceptible. Eppie stood for life, personified its appeals; he could
-feel, yet be unmoved, by all life’s blandishments.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile on a very different plane&mdash;the after all remote plane of
-mental encounters and skirmishes&mdash;he felt, with relief, that he was
-entirely master of his own meaning. There were many of these skirmishes,
-and though he did not believe any of them planned, believe that she was
-carrying out her threat of conscious attack, he was aware that she was
-alert and inquisitive, and dexterously quick at taking any occasion that
-offered for further penetration.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these occasions was on Sunday evening when, after tea and
-in the gloaming, they sat together in the deep window-seat of one of the
-library windows and listened to Miss Barbara softly touching the chords
-of a hymn on the plaintive old piano and softly singing&mdash;a most
-unobtrusive accompaniment,<a name="page_140" id="page_140"></a> at her distance and with her softness, for
-any talk or any thoughts of theirs. They had talked very little,
-watching the sunset burn itself out over the frosty moorland, and Gavan
-presently, while he listened, closed his eyes and leaned his head back
-upon the oak recess. Eppie, looking now from the sunset to him, observed
-him with an open, musing curiosity. His head, leaning back in the dusk,
-was like the ivory carving of a dead saint&mdash;a saint young, beautiful, at
-peace after long sorrow. Peace; that was the quality that his whole
-being expressed, though, with opened eyes, his face had the more human
-look of patience, verging now and then on a quiet dejection that would
-overspread his features like a veil. In boyhood, the peace, the placid
-dejection, had not been there; his face then had shown the tension of
-struggle and endurance.</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Till in the ocean of thy love<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">We lose ourselves in heaven above,”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Miss Barbara quavered, and Gavan, opening his eyes at the closing
-cadence, found Eppie’s bent upon him. He smiled, and looked still more,
-she thought, the sad saint, all benediction and indifference, and an
-impulse of antagonism to such sainthood made her say, though smiling
-back, “How I dislike those words.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you?” said Gavan.</p>
-
-<p>“Hate them? Why, dear child?” asked Miss Barbara, who had heard through
-the sigh of her held-down pedal.<a name="page_141" id="page_141"></a></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to lose myself,” said Eppie. “But I didn’t mean that I
-wanted you to stop, Aunt Barbara. Do go on. I love to hear you sing,
-however much I disapprove of the words.”</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Barbara, clasping and unclasping her hands a little nervously,
-and evidently finding the moment too propitious to be passed over,
-backed as she was by an ally, rose and came to them.</p>
-
-<p>“That is the very point you are so mistaken about, dear. It’s the self,
-you know, that keeps us from love.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the self that makes love possible,” said Eppie, taking her hand
-and looking up at her. “Do you want to lose me, Aunt Barbara? If you
-lose yourself you will have to lose me too, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barbara stood perplexed but not at all convinced by these
-subtleties, turning mild eyes of query upon Gavan and evidently
-expecting him to furnish the obvious retort.</p>
-
-<p>“We will all be at one with God,” she reverently said at length, finding
-that her ally left the defense to her.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie met this large retort cheerfully. “You can’t love God unless you
-have a self to love him with. I know what you mean, and perhaps I agree
-with what you really mean; but I want to correct your Buddhistic
-tendencies and to keep you a good Christian.”</p>
-
-<p>“I humbly hope I’m that. You shouldn’t jest on such subjects, Eppie
-dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not one bit jesting,” Eppie protested. And now Gavan asked, while
-Miss Barbara looked gratefully<a name="page_142" id="page_142"></a> at him, sure of his backing, though she
-might not quite be able to understand his methods, “Are they such
-different creeds?”</p>
-
-<p>Still holding her aunt’s hand and still looking up into her face, Eppie
-answered: “One is despair of life, the other trust in life. One takes
-all meaning out of life and the other fills it with meaning. The secret
-of one is to lose life, and the secret of the other to gain it. There is
-all the difference in the world between them; all the difference between
-life and death.”</p>
-
-<p>“As interpreted by Western youth and vigor, yes; but what of the
-mystics? I suppose you would call them Christians?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, dear, they are Christians. What of them?” Miss Barbara echoed,
-though slightly perturbed by this alliance with heathendom.</p>
-
-<p>“Buddhists, not Christians,” Eppie retorted.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I mean; in essentials they are the same creed: the
-differences are only the differences of the races or individuals who
-hold them.”</p>
-
-<p>At this Miss Barbara’s free hand began to flutter and protest. “Oh, but,
-Gavan dear, there I’m quite sure that you are wrong. Buddhism is, I
-don’t doubt, a very noble religion, but it’s not the true one. Indeed
-they are not the same, Gavan, though Christianity, of course, is founded
-on the renunciation of self. ‘Lose your life to gain it,’ Eppie dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, to gain it, that’s just the point. One renounces, and one wins a
-realer self.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is real? What is life?” Gavan asked, really curious to hear her
-definition.<a name="page_143" id="page_143"></a></p>
-
-<p>She only needed a moment to find it, and, with her answer, gave him her
-first glance during their battledore colloquy with innocent Aunt Barbara
-as the shuttlecock. “Selves and love.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, of course, dear,” Miss Barbara cried. “That’s what heaven will
-be. All love and peace and rest.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you have left out the selves; you won’t get love without them. And
-as for rest and peace&mdash;Love is made by difference, so that as long as
-there is love there must be restlessness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it made by sameness?” Gavan asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No, by incompleteness: one loves what could complete oneself and what
-one could complete; or so it seems to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“And as long as there are selves, will there be suffering, too?”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes met his thought fearlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“That question, I am sure, is the basis for all the religions of
-cowardice, religions that deny life because of their craving for peace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t the craving for peace as legitimate as the craving for life?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing that denies life can be legitimate. Life is the one arbitrator.
-And restlessness need not mean suffering. A symphony is all
-restlessness&mdash;a restlessness made by difference in harmony; forgive the
-well-worn metaphor, but it is a good one. And, suppose that it did mean
-suffering, all of it. Isn’t it worth it?” Her eyes measured him, not in
-challenge, but quietly.</p>
-
-<p>“What a lover of life you are,” he said. It was<a name="page_144" id="page_144"></a> like seeing him go into
-his house and, not hastily, but very firmly, shut the door. And as if,
-rather rudely, she hurled a stone at the shut door, she asked, “Do you
-love anything?”</p>
-
-<p>He smiled. “Please don’t quarrel with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could make you quarrel. I suspect you of loving everything,”
-Eppie declared.</p>
-
-<p>She didn’t pursue him further on this occasion, when, indeed, he might
-accuse himself of having given her every chance; but on the next day, as
-they sat out at the edge of the birch-wood in a wonderfully warm
-afternoon sun, he, she, and Peter the dog (what a strange, changed echo
-it was), she returned, very lightly, to their discussion, tossing merely
-a few reconnoitering flowers in at his open window.</p>
-
-<p>She had never, since their remeeting, seemed to him so young. Holding a
-little branch of birch, she broke off and aimed bits of its bark at a
-tall gorse-bush near them. Peter basked, full length, in the sunlight at
-their feet. The day had almost the indolent quiet of summer.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie said, irrelevantly, for they had not been talking of that, but of
-people again, gossiping pleasantly, with gossip tempered to the day’s
-mildness: “I can’t bear the religions of peace, you see&mdash;any faith that
-takes the fight out of people. That Molly Carruthers I was telling you
-about has become a Christian Scientist, and she is in an imbecile
-condition of beatitude all the time. ‘Isn’t the happiness that comes of
-such a faith proof enough?’ she says to me. As if happiness were a
-proof! A drunkard is happy. Some people seem to me spiritually tipsy,<a name="page_145" id="page_145"></a>
-and as unfit for usefulness as the drunkard. I think I distrust anything
-that gives a final satisfaction.”</p>
-
-<p>She amused him in her playing with half-apprehended thoughts. Her
-assurance was as light as though they were the bits of birch-bark she
-tossed.</p>
-
-<p>“You make me think a little of Nietzsche,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I should rather like Nietzsche right side up, I think. As he is
-standing on his head most of the time, it’s rather confusing. If it is a
-blind, unconscious force that has got hold of us, we get hold of it, and
-of ourselves, when we consciously use it for our own ends. But I’m not a
-bit a Nietzschian, Gavan, for, as an end, an Overman doesn’t at all
-appeal to me and I don’t intend to make myself a bridge for him to march
-across. Of course Nietzsche might reply, ‘You are the bridge, whether
-you want to be or not.’ He might say, ‘It’s better to walk willingly to
-your inevitable holocaust than to be rebelliously haled along; whatever
-you do, you are only the refuse whose burning makes the flame.’ I reply
-to that, that if the Overman is sure to come, why should I bother about
-him? I wouldn’t lift my finger for a distant perfection in which I
-myself, and all those I loved, only counted as fuel. But, on the other
-hand, I do believe that each one of us is going to grow into an
-Overman&mdash;in a quite different sense. Peter, too, will be an Overdog, and
-will, no doubt, sometime be more conscious than we are now.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan glanced at her and at Peter with his vague, half-unseeing glance.<a name="page_146" id="page_146"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you smile?” Eppie asked. “Not that you don’t smile, often.
-But you haven’t a scrap of gaiety, Gavan. Do stop soaring in the sky and
-come down to real things, to the earth, to me, to dear little
-rudimentary Overdogs.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think that dear little rudimentary dogs are nearer reality than
-the sky?” He did smile now.</p>
-
-<p>“Much nearer. The sky is only a background, an emptiness that shows up
-their meaning.”</p>
-
-<p>She had brought him down, for his eyes lingered on her as she leaned to
-Peter and pulled him up from his sun-baked recumbency. “Come, sit up,
-Peter; don’t be so comfortable. Watch how well I’ve trained him, Gavan.
-Now, Peter, sit up nicely. A dog on all fours is a darling heathen; but
-a dog sitting up on his hind legs is an ethical creature, and well on
-his way to Overdogdom. Peter on his hind legs is worth all your tiresome
-Hindoos&mdash;aren’t you, dear, Occidental dog?”</p>
-
-<p>He knew that through her gaiety she was searching him, feeling her way,
-with a merry hostility that she didn’t intend him to answer. It was as
-if she wouldn’t take seriously, not for a moment, the implications of
-his thought&mdash;implications that he suspected her of already pretty
-sharply guessing at. To herself, and to him, she pretended that such
-thoughts were a game he played at, until she should see just how
-seriously she might be forced to take them.<a name="page_147" id="page_147"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="VII-2" id="VII-2"></a>VII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00f.png"
-width="79"
-height="78"
-alt="F"
-title="F"
-/></span>OR the next few days he found himself involved in Eppie’s sleuth-hound
-pursuit of the transgressing publican, amused, but quite
-willing,&mdash;somewhat, he saw, to her surprise,&mdash;to help her in her
-crusade. Not only did he tramp over the country with her in search of
-evidence, and expound the Gothenberg system to Sir Alec, to the general,
-to the rather alarmed quarry himself,&mdash;not unwilling to come to
-terms,&mdash;but the application of his extraordinarily practical good-sense
-to the situation was, she couldn’t help seeing, far more effective than
-her own not altogether temperate zeal.</p>
-
-<p>She was surprised and she was pleased; and at the same time, throughout
-all the little drama, she had the suspicion that it meant for him what
-that playing of dolls with her in childhood had meant&mdash;mere kindliness,
-and a selfless disposition to do what was agreeable to anybody.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the Saturday following the talk in the library that an
-incident occurred that made her vision of his passivity flame into
-something more ambiguous&mdash;an incident that gave margins for
-possibilities in him, for whose bare potentiality she had begun to
-fear.<a name="page_148" id="page_148"></a></p>
-
-<p>They were at evening in the gray, bleak village street, and outside one
-of the public-houses found a small crowd collected, watching, with the
-apathy of custom, the efforts of Archie MacHendrie’s wife to lead him
-home. Archie, a large, lurching man, was only slightly drunk, but his
-head, the massive granite of its Scotch peasant type, had been
-brutalized by years of hard drinking. It showed, as if the granite were
-crumbling into earth, sodden depressions and protuberances; his eye was
-lurid, heavy, yet alert. Mrs. MacHendrie’s face, looking as though
-scantily molded in tallow as the full glare of the bar-room lights beat
-upon it, was piteously patient. The group, under the cold evening sky,
-in the cold, steep street, seemed a little epitome of life’s
-degradation; the sordid glare of debasing pleasure lit it; the mean
-monotony of its daily routine surrounded it in the gaunt stone cottages;
-above it was the blank, hard sky.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan saw all the unpleasing picture, placed it, its past, its future,
-as he and Eppie approached; saw more, too, than degradation: for the
-wife’s face, in its patience, symbolized humanity’s heroism. Both
-heroism and degradation were results as necessary as the changes in a
-chemical demonstration; neither had value: one was a toadstool growth,
-the other, a flower; this was the fact to him, though the flower touched
-him and the toadstool made him shrink.</p>
-
-<p>“There, there, Archie mon,” Mrs. MacHendrie was pleading, “come awa
-hame, do.”</p>
-
-<p>Archie was declaiming on some wrong he had suffered and threatened to do
-for an enemy.<a name="page_149" id="page_149"></a></p>
-
-<p>That these flowers and toadstools were of vital significance to Eppie,
-Gavan realized as she left him in the middle of the street and strode to
-the center of the group. It fell aside for her air of facile, friendly
-authority, and in answer to her decisive, “What’s the matter?” one of
-the apathetic onlookers explained in his deliberate Scotch: “It’s nobbut
-Archie, Miss Eppie; he’s swearin’ he’ll na go hame na sleep gin he’s
-lickit Tam Donel’. He’s a wee bit the waur for the drink and Tam’ll soon
-be alang, and the dei’ll be in it gar his gudewife gets him ben.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she must get him ben,” said Eppie, her eye measuring Archie, who
-shook a menacing fist in the direction of his expected antagonist.</p>
-
-<p>“We must get him home between us, Mrs. MacHendrie. He’ll think better of
-it in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fech, an’ it’s that I’m aye tellin’ him, Miss Eppie; it’s the mornin’
-he’ll hae the sair head. Ay, Miss Eppie, he’s an awfu’ chiel when he’s a
-wee bittie fou.” Mrs. MacHendrie put the fringe of her shawl to her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Archie’s low thunder had continued during this dialogue without a pause,
-and Eppie now addressed herself to him in authoritative tones. “Come on,
-Archie. Go home and get a sleep, at all events, before you fight Tom.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s that I’m aye tellin’ you, Archie mon,” Mrs. MacHendrie wept.</p>
-
-<p>Archie now brought his eye round to the speakers and observed them in an
-ominous silence, his thoughts turned from more distant grievances.<a name="page_150" id="page_150"></a> From
-his wife his eye traveled back to Eppie, who met it with a firm
-severity.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn ye for an interferin’ fishwife!” suddenly and with startling force
-he burst out. “Ye’re no but a meddlesome besom. Awa wi’ ye!” and from
-this broadside he swung round to his wife with uplifted fists. Flinging
-herself between them, Eppie found herself swept aside. Gavan was in the
-midst of the sudden uproar. Like a David before Goliath, he confronted
-Archie with a quelling eye. Mrs. MacHendrie had slipped into the dusk,
-and the bald, ugly light now fell on Gavan’s contrasting head.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Un sage qui passe interrompt mille drâmes</i>,” flashed in Eppie’s mind.
-But on this occasion, the sage had to do more than pass&mdash;was forced,
-indeed, to provide the drama. He was speaking in a voice so
-dispassionately firm that had Archie been a little less drunk or a
-little less sober it must have exerted an almost hypnotic effect upon
-him. But the command to go home reached a brain inflamed and hardly
-dazed. Goliath fell upon David, and Eppie, with a curious mingling of
-exultation and panic, saw the two men locked in an animal struggle. For
-a moment Gavan’s cool alertness and scientific resource were overborne
-by sheer brute force; in another he had recovered himself, and Archie’s
-face streamed suddenly with blood. Another blow, couched like a lance,
-it seemed, was in readiness, wary and direct, when Mrs. MacHendrie, from
-behind, seized Gavan around the neck and, with a shrill scream, hung to
-him and dragged him back. Helpless and enmeshed, he received a savage
-blow<a name="page_151" id="page_151"></a> from her husband, and, still held in the wife’s strangling clutch,
-he and she reeled back together. At this flagrant violation of fair play
-the onlookers interposed. Archie was dragged off, and Eppie, catching
-Gavan as he staggered free of his encumbrance, turned, while she held
-him by the shoulders, fiercely on Mrs. MacHendrie. “You well deserve
-every thrashing you get,” she said, her voice stilled by the very force
-of its intense anger.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. MacHendrie had covered her face with her shawl. “My mon was a’
-bluid,” she sobbed. “I couldna stan’ an’ see him done to death.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you couldn’t; it was most natural of you,” said Gavan. The
-blood trickled over his brow and cheek as, gently freeing himself from
-Eppie, he straightened his collar and looked at Mrs. MacHendrie with
-sympathetic curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Natural!” said Eppie. “It was dastardly. You deserve every thrashing
-you get. I hope no one will interfere for you next time.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Eppie!” Gavan murmured, while Mrs. MacHendrie continued to weep
-humbly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why shouldn’t I say it? I am disgusted with her.” Eppie turned almost
-as fierce a stillness of look and tone upon him as upon Mrs. MacHendrie.
-“Let me tie up your head, Gavan. Yes, indeed, you are covered with
-blood. I suppose you never thought, Mrs. MacHendrie, that your husband
-might kill Mr. Palairet.” She passed her handkerchief around Gavan’s
-forehead as she spoke, knotting it with fingers at once tender and
-vindictive.</p>
-
-<p>“I canna say, Miss Eppie,” came Mrs. MacHendrie<a name="page_152" id="page_152"></a>’s muffled voice from
-the shawl. “The wan’s my ain mon. It juist cam’ ower me, seein’ him a’
-bluid.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you have the satisfaction now of seeing Mr. Palairet a’ bluid.”
-Eppie tied her knots, and Gavan, submitting a bowed head to her
-ministrations, still kept his look of cogitating pity upon Mrs.
-MacHendrie. “You see how your husband has wounded him,” Eppie went on;
-“the handkerchief is red already. Come on, Gavan; lean on me, please.
-Let her get her husband home now as best she can.”</p>
-
-<p>But Gavan ignored his angry champion. Mrs. MacHendrie’s sorrow, most
-evidently, interested him more than Eppie’s indignation. He went to her,
-putting down the hand that held the shawl to the poor, disfigured,
-tallow face, and made her look at him, while he said with a gentle
-reasonableness: “Don’t mind what Miss Gifford says; she is angry on my
-account and doesn’t really mean to be so hard on you. I’m not at all
-badly hurt,&mdash;I can perfectly stand alone, Eppie,&mdash;and I’m sorry I had to
-hurt your husband. It was perfectly natural, what you did. Don’t cry;
-please don’t cry.” He smiled at her, comforted her, encouraged her.
-“They are taking your husband home, you see; he is going quite quietly.
-And now we will take you home. Take my arm. You are the worst off of us
-all, Mrs. MacHendrie.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, in silence, stalked beside him while he led Mrs. MacHendrie,
-dazed and submissive, up the village street. A neighbor’s wife was in
-kindly waiting and Archie already slumbering heavily on his<a name="page_153" id="page_153"></a> bed. Eppie
-suspected, as they went, that she saw a gold piece slipped from Gavan’s
-hand to Mrs. MacHendrie’s.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor thing,” he said, when they were once more climbing the steep
-street, “I ‘m afraid I only made things worse for her”; and laughing a
-little, irrepressibly, he looked round at Eppie from under his oddly
-becoming bandage. “My dear Eppie, what a perfect brute you were to her!”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Gavan, I can’t feel pity for such a fool. Oh, yes I can, but I
-don’t want to. Please remember that I, too, have impulses, and that I
-saw you ‘a’ bluid.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, I’m the brute for scolding you, and you are another poor
-thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you incapable of righteous indignation, Gavan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Surely I showed enough to please you in my treatment of Archie.”</p>
-
-<p>“You showed none. You looked supremely indifferent as to whether he
-killed you or you him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I think I was quite anxious to do for him.”</p>
-
-<p>They were past the village now and upon the country road, and in the
-darkness their contrasting voices rang oddly&mdash;hers deep with its
-resentful affection, his light with its amusement. It was as if the
-little drama, that he had made instead of interrupting, struck his sense
-of the ridiculous. Yet, angry with him as she was, a thrill of
-exultation remained, for Eppie, in the thought of his calm, deliberate
-face, beautiful before its foe, and with blood upon it.<a name="page_154" id="page_154"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="VIII-2" id="VIII-2"></a>VIII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="75"
-height="76"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>AVAN’S hurt soon healed, though it made him languid for a day or
-two&mdash;days of semi-invalidism, the unemphatic hours, seemingly so
-colorless, when she read to him or merely sat silently at hand occupied
-with her letters or a book, drawing still closer their odd intimacy; it
-could hardly be called sudden, for it had merely skipped intervening
-years, and it couldn’t be called a proved intimacy, the intervening
-years were too full, too many for that. But they were very near in their
-almost solitude&mdash;a solitude surrounded by gentle reminders of the closer
-past, reminders, in the case of living personalities, who seemed to find
-the intimacy altogether natural and needing no comment. What the general
-and Miss Barbara might really be thinking was a wonder that at moments
-occupied both Gavan and Eppie’s ruminations; but it wasn’t a wonder that
-needed to go far or deep. What they thought, the dear old people, made
-very little difference&mdash;not even the difference of awkwardness or
-self-consciousness under too cogitating eyes. Even if they thought the
-crude and obvious thing it didn’t matter, they would so peacefully
-relapse from their false inference<a name="page_155" id="page_155"></a> once time had set it straight for
-them. Eppie couldn’t quite have told herself why its obviousness was so
-crude; in all her former experience such obviousness had never been so
-almost funnily out of the question. But Gavan made so many things almost
-funnily out of the question.</p>
-
-<p>It was this quality in him, of difference from usual things, that drew
-intimacy so near. To talk to him with a wonderful openness, to tell him
-about herself, about her troubles, was like sinking down in a pale,
-peaceful church and sighing out everything that lay heavily on one’s
-heart&mdash;the things that lay lightly, too, for little things as well as
-great, were understood by that compassionate, musing presence&mdash;to the
-downlooking face of an imaged saint.</p>
-
-<p>No claim upon one remained after it; one was freed of the load of
-silence and one hadn’t in the least been shackled by retributory
-penances. And if one felt some strange lack in the saint, if his
-sacerdotal quality was more than his humanity, it was just because of
-that that one was able to say anything one liked.</p>
-
-<p>At moments, it is true, she had an odd, fetish-worshiper’s impulse to
-smash her saint, and perhaps the reason why she never yielded to it was
-because, under all the seeing him as image, was the deep hoping that he
-was more. If he was more, much more, it might be unwise to smash him,
-for then she would have no pale church in which to take refuge, and,
-above all, if he were more he mustn’t find it out&mdash;and she
-mustn’t&mdash;through any act of her own. The saint himself must breathe into
-life and himself<a name="page_156" id="page_156"></a> step down from his high pedestal. That he cared to
-listen, that he listened lovingly,&mdash;just as he had listened lovingly to
-Mrs. MacHendrie,&mdash;she knew.</p>
-
-<p>One day when he was again able to be out and when they were again upon
-the hilltop, walking in a mist that enshrouded them, she told him all
-about the wretched drama of her love-affair.</p>
-
-<p>She had never spoken of it to a human being.</p>
-
-<p>It was as if she led him into an empty room, dusty and dark and still,
-with dreary cobwebs stretching over its once festal furniture, and there
-pointed out to him faded blood-stains on the floor. No eyes but his had
-ever seen them.</p>
-
-<p>She told him all, analyzing the man, herself, unflinchingly, putting
-before him her distracted heart, distorted in its distraction. She had
-appalled herself. Her part had not been mere piteous nobility. She would
-have dragged herself through any humiliation to have had him back, the
-man she had helplessly adored. She would have taken him back on almost
-any terms. Only the semblance of pride had been left to her; beneath it,
-with all her scorn of him, was a craving that had been base in its
-despair.</p>
-
-<p>“But that wasn’t the worst,” said Eppie; “that very baseness had its
-pathos. Worst of all were my mean regrets. I had sacrificed my ambitions
-for him; I had refused a man who would have given me the life I wanted,
-a high place in the world, a great name, power, wide issues,&mdash;and I love
-high places, Gavan, I love power. When I refused him, he too married
-some one else, and it was after that that my<a name="page_157" id="page_157"></a> crash came. Love and faith
-were thrown back at me, and I hadn’t in it all even my dignity. I was
-torn by mingled despairs. I loathed myself. Oh, it was too horrible!”</p>
-
-<p>His utter lack of sympathetic emotion, even when she spoke with the
-indignant tears on her cheeks, made it all the easier to say these
-fundamental things, and more than ever like the saint of ebony and ivory
-in the pale church was his head against the great wash of mist about
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“And now it has all dropped from you,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, all&mdash;the love, the regret certainly, even the shame. The ambition,
-certainly not; but in that ugly form of a loveless marriage it’s no
-longer a possible temptation for me. My disappointment hasn’t driven me
-to worldly materialism. It’s a sane thing in nature, that outgrowing of
-griefs, though it’s bad for one’s pride to see them fade and one’s heart
-mend, solidly mend, once more.”</p>
-
-<p>“They do go, when one really sees them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some do.”</p>
-
-<p>“All, when one really sees them,” he repeated unemphatically. “I know
-all about it, Eppie. I’ve been through the fire, too. Now that it’s
-gone, you see that it’s only a dream, that love, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie gazed before her into the mist, narrowing her eyes as though she
-concentrated her thoughts upon his exact meaning, and she received his
-casual confidence with some moments of silence.</p>
-
-<p>“That would imply that seeing destroyed feeling, wouldn’t it?” she said
-at last. “I see that <i>such</i> love is a dream, if you will; but dreams may
-be mirrors<a name="page_158" id="page_158"></a> of life, not delusions; hints of an awakened reality.”</p>
-
-<p>He showed only his unmoved face. This talk, so impersonal, with all its
-revealment of human pathos and weakness, so much a picture that they
-both looked at it together,&mdash;a picture of outlived woe,&mdash;claimed no more
-than his contemplation; but when her voice seemed to grope toward him,
-questioning in its very clearness of declaration, he felt again the
-flitting fear that he had already recognized, not as danger, but as
-discomfort. It flitted only, hardly stirred the calm he showed her, as
-the wings of a flying bird just skim and ruffle the surface of still,
-deep waters. That restless bird, always hovering, circling near, its
-shadow passing, repassing over the limpid water&mdash;he saw and knew it as
-the water might reflect in its stillness the bird’s flight. Life; the
-will to live, the will to want, and to strive, and to suffer in
-striving. All the waters of Eppie’s soul were broken by the flight of
-this bird of life; its wings, cruel and beautiful, furrowed and cut; its
-plumage, darkly bright, was reflected in every wave.</p>
-
-<p>He said nothing after her last words.</p>
-
-<p>“You think all feelings delusions, Gavan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not that, perhaps, but very transitory; and to be tied to the
-transitory is to suffer.”</p>
-
-<p>“On that plan one ends with nothingness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do <i>you</i> think so?” She turned his question on him and her eyes, with
-the question, fixed hard on his face.</p>
-
-<p>He felt suddenly that after all the parrying and<a name="page_159" id="page_159"></a> thrusting she had
-struck up his foil and faced him with no mask of gaiety&mdash;in deadly
-earnest. There was the click of steel in the question.</p>
-
-<p>He did not know whether he were the more irritated, for her sake, by her
-persistency, or the more fearful that, unwillingly, he should do her
-faith some injury.</p>
-
-<p>“I think,” he said, “more or less as Tolstoi thinks. You understood all
-that very well the other evening; so why go into it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You think that our human identity is unreal&mdash;an appearance?”</p>
-
-<p>“Most certainly.”</p>
-
-<p>“And that the separation between us is the illusion that makes hatred
-and evil, and that with the recognition of the illusion, love would come
-and all selfish effort cease?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t you see that what that results in is the Hindoo thing, the
-abolishing of consciousness, the abolishing of life&mdash;of individual
-life?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I see that,” Gavan smiled, “but I’m a little surprised to see that
-you do. So many people are like Aunt Barbara.”</p>
-
-<p>But Eppie was pushing, pushing against the closed doors and would not be
-lured away by lightness. “Above all, Gavan, do you see that he is merely
-an illogical Hindoo when he tries to bridge his abyss with ethics? On
-his own premises he is utterly fatalistic, so that the very turning from
-the evil illusion, the very breaking down of the barrier of self, is
-never, with him, the result of an effort of the will,<a name="page_160" id="page_160"></a> never a conscious
-choice, but something deep and rudimentary, subconscious, an influx of
-revelation, a vision that sets one free, perhaps, but that can only
-leave one with emptiness.”</p>
-
-<p>Above all, as she had said, he saw it; and now he was silent, seeking
-words that might rid him of pursuit, yet not infect her.</p>
-
-<p>She had stopped short before his silence. Smiling, now, on the
-background of mist, her eyes, her lips, her poise challenged him,
-incredulous, actually amused. “Don’t you think that <i>I</i> have an
-identity?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>He was willing at that to face her, for he saw suddenly and clearly,&mdash;it
-seemed to radiate from her in the smile, the look,&mdash;that he, apparently,
-couldn’t hurt her. She was too full of life to be in any danger from
-him, and perhaps the only way of ending pursuit was to fling wide the
-doors and, since she had said the word, show her the emptiness within.</p>
-
-<p>“You force me to talk cheap metaphysics to you, Eppie, but I’ll try to
-say what I do think,” he said. “I believe that the illusion of a
-separate identity, self-directing and permanent, is the deepest and most
-tenacious of all illusions&mdash;the illusion that makes the wheels go round,
-the common illusion that makes the common mirage. The abolishing of the
-identity, of the self, is the final word of science, and of philosophy,
-and of religion, too. The determinism of science, the ecstatic immediacy
-of the mystic consciousness, the monistic systems of the Absolutists,
-all tend toward the final discovery that,&mdash;now I’m going to be very glib
-indeed,&mdash;but one must use the<a name="page_161" id="page_161"></a> technical jargon,&mdash;that under all the
-transitory appearance is a unity in which, for which, diversity
-vanishes.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie no longer smiled. She had walked on while he spoke, her eyes on
-him, no longer amused or incredulous, with an air now of almost stern
-security.</p>
-
-<p>“Odd,” she said presently, “that such a perverse and meaningless Whole
-should be made up of such significant fragments.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but I didn’t say that Reality was meaningless. It has all possible
-meaning for itself, no doubt; it’s our meaning for it that is so
-unpleasantly ambiguous. We are in it and for it, as if we were the
-kaleidoscope it turned, the picture it looked at; and we are and must be
-what it thinks or sees. Your musical simile expressed it very nicely:
-Reality an eternal symphony and our personalities the notes in
-it&mdash;discords to our own limited consciousness, but to Reality necessary
-parts of the perfect whole. Reality is just that will to contemplate, to
-think, the infinite variety of life, and it usually thinks us as wanting
-to live. All ethics, all religions, are merely records of the ceasing of
-this want. A man comes to see himself as discord, and with the seeing
-the discord is resolved to silence. One comes to see as the Reality
-sees, and since it is perfectly satisfied, although it is perhaps quite
-unconscious,&mdash;or so some people who think a great deal about it
-say,&mdash;we, in partaking of its vision, find in unconsciousness the goal,
-and are satisfied.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are satisfied with such a death in life?” Eppie asked in her steady
-voice.<a name="page_162" id="page_162"></a></p>
-
-<p>“What you call life is what I call death, perhaps, Eppie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your metaphysics may be very cheap; I know very little about them. But
-if all that were true, I should still say that the illusion is more real
-than that nothingness&mdash;for to us such a reality would be nothingness.
-And I should say, let us live our reality all the more intensely, since,
-for us, there is no other.”</p>
-
-<p>“How you care for life,” said Gavan, as he had said it once before. He
-looked at her marching through the mist like a defiant Valkyrie.</p>
-
-<p>“Care for it? I’ve hated it at times, the bits that came to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yet you want it, always.”</p>
-
-<p>“Always,” she repeated. “Always. I have passed a great part of my life
-in being very unhappy&mdash;that is to say, in wanting badly something I’ve
-not got. Yet I am more glad than I can say to have lived.”</p>
-
-<p>“Probably because you still expect to get what you want.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course.” She smiled a little now, though a veiled, ambiguous smile.
-And as they began the steep descent, the mist infolding them more
-closely, even the semblance of the smile faded, leaving a new sadness.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Gavan,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>He just hesitated. “Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Your religion is a hatred, a distrust of life; mine is trust in it,
-love of it. You see it as a sort of murderous uncle, beckoning to the
-babes in the<a name="page_163" id="page_163"></a> wood; I own that I wouldn’t stir a step to follow it if I
-suspected it of such a character. And I see life&mdash;“ She paused here,
-looking down, musing, it seemed, on what she saw, and the pause grew
-long. In it, suddenly, Gavan knew again the invasion of emotion. Her
-downcast, musing face pervaded his consciousness with that sense of
-trembling. “You see life as what?” he asked her, not because he wanted
-to know, but because her words were always less to him than her
-silences.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, unconscious, was finding words.</p>
-
-<p>“As something mysterious, beautiful. Something strange, yet near, like
-the thought of a mother about her unborn child, but, more still, like
-the thought of an unborn child about its unknown mother. We are such
-unborn children. And this something mysterious and beautiful says: Come;
-through thorns, over chasms, past terrors, and in darkness. So, one
-goes.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan was silent. Looking up at him, her eyes full of her own vision,
-she saw tears in his.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the full benignity, sweet, austere, of a maternal thing in
-her rested on him, so that it might have been she who said “Come.” Then,
-looking away from him again, knowing that she had seen more than he had
-meant to show, she said, “Own that if it’s all illusion, mine’s the best
-to live with.”</p>
-
-<p>He had never seen her so beautiful as at this moment when she did not
-pursue, but looked away, quiet in her strength, and he answered
-mechanically, conscious only of that beauty, that more than beauty,<a name="page_164" id="page_164"></a>
-alluring when it no longer pursued: “No; there are no thorns, nor
-chasms, nor terrors any longer for me. I am satisfied, Eppie.”</p>
-
-<p>She was walking now, a little ahead of him, down the thread-like path
-that wound among phantom bracken. The islet of space where they could
-see seemed like a tiny ship gliding forward with them into a white,
-boundless ocean. Such, thought Gavan, was human life.</p>
-
-<p>In a long silence he felt that her mood had changed. Over her shoulder
-she looked round at him at last with her eyes of the spiritual
-steeplechaser. “It’s war to the knife, Gavan.”</p>
-
-<p>She hurt him in saying it. “You only have the knife,” he answered, and
-his gentleness might have reproached the sudden challenge.</p>
-
-<p>“You have poison.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never put it to your lips, dear.”</p>
-
-<p>She saw his pain. “Oh, don’t be afraid for me,” she said. “I drink your
-poison, and it is a tonic, a wine, that fills me with greater ardor for
-the fight.<a name="page_165" id="page_165"></a>”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="IX-2" id="IX-2"></a>IX</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00t.png"
-width="75"
-height="80"
-alt="T"
-title="T"
-/></span>HEY were on the path that led to the deeply sunken garden gate, and
-they had not spoken another word while they followed it, while they
-stooped a little under the tangle of ivy that drooped from the stone
-lintel, while they went past the summer-house and on between the rows of
-withered plants and the empty, wintry spaces of the garden; only when
-they were nearly at the house, under the great pine-tree, did Eppie
-cheerfully surmise that they would be exactly on time for tea, and by
-her manner imply that tea was far more present to her thoughts than
-daggers or poison.</p>
-
-<p>He felt that in some sense matters had been left in the lurch. He didn’t
-quite know where he stood for her with his disastrous darkness about
-him&mdash;whether she had really taken up a weapon for open warfare or
-whether she hadn’t wisely fallen back upon the mere pleasantness of
-friendly intercourse, turning her eyes away from his accompanying gloom.</p>
-
-<p>He was glad to find her alone that evening after dinner when he had left
-the general in the smoking-room over a review and a cigar. Miss Barbara
-had<a name="page_166" id="page_166"></a> gone early to bed, so that Eppie, in her white dress, as on the
-night of his arrival, had the dark brightness of the firelit room all to
-herself. He was glad, because the sense of uncertainty needed defining,
-and uncertainty, since that last moment of trembling, had been so acute
-that any sort of definition would be a relief.</p>
-
-<p>An evening alone with her, now that they were really on the plane of
-mutual understanding, would put his vague fears to the test. He would
-learn whether they must be fled from or whether, as mere superficial
-tremors, tricks of the emotions, they could not be outfaced smilingly.
-He really didn’t want to run away, especially not until he clearly knew
-from what he ran.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie sat before the fire on the low settle, laying down a book as he
-came in. In her aspect of exquisite worldliness, the white dress
-displaying her arms and shoulders with fashionable frankness, she struck
-him anew as being her most perfectly armed and panoplied self. Out on
-the windy hillside or singing among the woods, nature seemed partially
-to absorb and possess her, so that she became a part of the winds and
-woods; but indoors, finished and fine from head to foot, her mastered
-conventionality made her the more emphatically personal. She embodied
-civilization in her dress, her smile, her speech, her very being; the
-loose coils of her hair and the cut of her satin shoe were both
-significant of choice, of distinctive simplicity; and the very bareness
-of her shoulders&mdash;Gavan gave an amused thought to the ferociously
-sensitive Tolstoi&mdash;symbolized<a name="page_167" id="page_167"></a> the armor of the world-lover, the
-world-user. It was she who possessed the charms and weapons of the
-civilization that crumbled to dust in the hand of the Russian mystic. He
-could see her confronting the ascetic’s eye with the challenge of her
-radiant and righteous self-assurance. Her whole aspect rebuilt that
-shattered world, its pomp and vanity, perhaps, its towering scale of
-values; each tier narrowing in its elimination of the lower, cruder,
-less conscious, more usual; each pinnacle a finely fretted flowering of
-the rare; a dazzling palace of foam. She embodied all that; but, more
-than all for Gavan, she embodied the deep currents of trust that flowed
-beneath the foam.</p>
-
-<p>Her look welcomed him, though without a smile, as he drew a deep chair
-to the fire and sat down near her, and for a little while they said
-nothing, he watching her and she with gravely downcast eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you thinking of?” he asked at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Of you, of course,” she answered. “About our talk this afternoon; we
-haven’t finished it yet.”</p>
-
-<p>She, too, then, had felt uncertainty that needed relief.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sharpening your knife?”</p>
-
-<p>She put aside his lightness. “Gavan, we are friends. May I talk as I
-like to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you may. I’ve always shown you that.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you have tried to prevent me from talking. But now I will. I have
-been thinking. It seems to me that it is your life that has so twisted
-your mind; it has been so joyless.<a name="page_168" id="page_168"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“Does that make it unusual?”</p>
-
-<p>“You must love life before you can know it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must love it, and lose it, before you can know it. I have had joy,
-Eppie; I have loved life. My experience has not been peculiarly
-personal; it is merely the history of all thought, pushed far enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of all mere thought, yes.”</p>
-
-<p>She rested her head on her hand as she looked at him, seeming to wonder
-over him and his thought, his mere thought, dispassionately. “Don’t be
-shy, or afraid, for me. Why should you mind? I’ve given you my story;
-give me yours. Tell me about your life.”</p>
-
-<p>He felt, suddenly, sunken there in his deep chair, passive and peaceful
-in the firelight, that it would be very easy to tell her. Why shouldn’t
-she see it all and understand it all? He couldn’t hurt her; it would be
-only a strange, a sorrowful picture to her; and to him, yes, there would
-be a relief in the telling. To speak, for the first time in his life&mdash;it
-would be like the strewing of rosemary on a grave, a commemoration that
-would have its sweetness and its balm.</p>
-
-<p>But he hesitated, feeling the helplessness of his race before verbal
-self-expression.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie lent him a hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Begin with when you left me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was I then? I hardly remember. A tiresome, self-centered boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; you weren’t self-centered. You believed in God, then, and you loved
-your mother. Why<a name="page_169" id="page_169"></a> have both of them, as personalities, become illusions
-to you?”</p>
-
-<p>She saw facts clearly and terribly. She was really inside the doors at
-last, and though it would be all the easier to make her understand the
-facts she saw, Gavan paled a little before the sudden, swift presence.</p>
-
-<p>For, yes, God was gone, and yes,&mdash;worse, far worse, as he knew she felt
-it,&mdash;his mother, too&mdash;except as that ghost, that pang of memory.</p>
-
-<p>She saw his pallor and helped him again, to the first and easier avowal.</p>
-
-<p>“How did you lose your faith? What happened to you when you left me?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a commonplace enough story, that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it is. But when loss of faith becomes permanent and
-permanently means a loss of feeling, it’s not so commonplace.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I think it is&mdash;more commonplace than people know, in temperaments
-as unvital and as logical as mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are not unvital.”</p>
-
-<p>“My reason isn’t often blurred by my instincts.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is because you are strong&mdash;terribly strong. It’s not that your
-vitality is so little as that your thought is so abnormal.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, no; it’s merely that I understand my own experience.”</p>
-
-<p>But she had put his feet upon the road, and, turning his eyes from her
-as he looked, he contemplated its vista.</p>
-
-<p>It was easy enough, after all, to gather into words<a name="page_170" id="page_170"></a> that retrospect of
-the train; it was easy to be brief and lucid with such a comprehending
-listener,&mdash;to be very impersonal, too; simply to hold up before her eyes
-the picture that he saw.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes met hers seldom while he told her all that was essential to her
-true seeing. It was wonderful, the sense of her secure, strong life that
-made it possible to tell her all.</p>
-
-<p>The stages of his young, restless, tortured thought were swiftly
-sketched for an intelligence so quick, and the growing intuition of the
-capriciousness, the suffering of life. He only hesitated when it came to
-the reunion with his mother, the change that had crept between them; and
-her illness, her death; choosing his words with a reticence that bit
-them the more deeply into the listening mind.</p>
-
-<p>But, in the days that followed the death,&mdash;days ghost-like, yet
-sharp,&mdash;he lingered, so that she paused with him in that pause of
-stillness in his life, that morning in the spring woods when everything
-had softly, gently shown an abiding strangeness. He told her all about
-that: about the look of the day, not knowing why he so wanted her to see
-it, too, but it seemed to explain more than anything else&mdash;the pale,
-high sky, the gray branches, the shining water and the little bird that
-hopped to drink. He himself looked ghost-like while he spoke&mdash;sunken,
-long, dark, impalpable, in the deep chair, his thin white fingers
-lightly interlocked, his face showing only the oddity of its strange yet
-beautiful oval and its shadowy eyes and lips. All whiteness and shadow,
-he might have been a projection from the thought of the woman,<a name="page_171" id="page_171"></a> who,
-before him, leaned her head on her hand, warm, breathing, vivid with
-color, her steady eyes seeing phantoms unafraid.</p>
-
-<p>After that there wasn’t much left to explain, it seemed&mdash;except Alice,
-that last convulsive effort of life to seize and keep him; and that
-didn’t take long&mdash;made, as it were, a little allegory, with nameless
-abstractions to symbolize the old drama of the soul entrameled and
-finally set free again. The experience of the spring woods had really
-been the decisive one. He came back to that again, at the end of his
-story. “It’s really, that experience, what in another kind of
-temperament is called conversion.”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes had looked away from him at last. “No,” she said, “conversion
-is something that gives life.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he rejoined, “it’s something that lifts one above it.”</p>
-
-<p>The fundamental contest spoke again, and after that they were both
-silent. He, too, had looked away from her when the story was over, and
-he knew, from her deep, slow breathing, that the story had meant a great
-deal to her. It was not a laboring breath, nor broken by pain to sighs;
-but it seemed, in its steady rhythm, to accept and then to conquer what
-he had put before her. That he should so hear it, not looking at her,
-filled the silence with more than words; and, as in the afternoon, he
-sought the relief of words.</p>
-
-<p>“So you see,” he said, in his lighter voice, “thorns and precipices and
-terrors dissolve like dreams.” She had seen everything and he was
-ushering her<a name="page_172" id="page_172"></a> out. But his eyes now met hers, looking across the little
-space at him.</p>
-
-<p>“And I? Do I, too, dissolve like a dream?” she said.</p>
-
-<p>His smile now was lighter than his voice had been. “Absolutely. Though I
-own that you are a highly colored phantom. Your color is very vivid
-indeed. Sometimes it almost masters my thought.”</p>
-
-<p>He had not, in his mere wish for ease, quite known what he meant to say,
-and now her look did not show him any deepened consciousness; but,
-suddenly, he felt that under his lightness and her quiet the current ran
-deeply.</p>
-
-<p>“I master your thought?” she repeated. “Doesn’t that make you distrust
-thought sometimes?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he laughed. “It makes me distrust you, dear Eppie.”</p>
-
-<p>There were all sorts of things before them now. What they were he really
-didn’t know; perhaps she didn’t, either. At all events he kept his eyes
-off them, and shaking his crossed foot a little, he still looked at her,
-smiling.</p>
-
-<p>“Why?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>He felt that he must now answer her, and himself, in words that wouldn’t
-imply more than he could face.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the very force of your craving for life, the very force of your
-will, might sweep me along for a bit. I might be caught up for a whirl
-on the wheel of illusion; not that you could ever bind me<a name="page_173" id="page_173"></a> to it: it
-would need my own will, blind again, for that.”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes had met his so steadily that he had imagined only contemplation
-or perhaps that maternal severity behind the steadiness. But the way in
-which they received these last tossed pebbles of metaphor showed him
-unrealized profundities. They deepened, they darkened, they widened on
-him. They seemed to engulf him in a sudden abyss of pain. And pain in
-her was indeed a color that could infect him.</p>
-
-<p>“How horrible you are, Gavan,” she said, and her voice went with the
-words and with the look.</p>
-
-<p>“Eppie!” he exclaimed on a tense, indrawn breath, as if over the sudden
-stab of a knife. “Have I hurt you?”</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes turned from him. “Not what you say, or do. What you are.”</p>
-
-<p>“You didn’t see, before, what I am?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never&mdash;like this.”</p>
-
-<p>He leaned toward her. “Dear Eppie, why do you make me talk? Let me be
-still. I only ask to be still.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are worse still. Don’t you think I see what stillness means?”</p>
-
-<p>She had pushed her low seat from him,&mdash;for he stretched his hands to her
-with his supplication,&mdash;and, rising to her feet, stepping back, she
-stood before the fire, somberly looking down at him.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, too, rose. Compunction, supplication, a twist of perplexity and
-suffering, made him careless<a name="page_174" id="page_174"></a> of discretion. Face to face, laying his
-hands on her shoulders, he said: “Don’t let me frighten you. It would be
-horrible if I could convince you, shatter you.”</p>
-
-<p>Standing erect under his hands, she looked hard into his face.</p>
-
-<p>“You could frighten me, horribly; but you couldn’t shatter me. You are
-ambiguous, veiled, all in mists. I am as clear, as sharp&mdash;.”</p>
-
-<p>Her dauntlessness, the old defiance, were a relief&mdash;a really delicious
-relief. He was able to smile at her, a smile that pled for reassurance.
-“How can I frighten you, then?”</p>
-
-<p>Her somber gaze did not soften. “Your mists come round me, chill,
-suffocating. They corrode my clearness.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; no; it’s you who come into them. Don’t. Don’t. Keep away from me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not so afraid of you as that,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p>His hands were still on her shoulders and their eyes on each other&mdash;his
-with their appealing, uncertain smile, and hers unmoved, unsmiling; and
-suddenly that sense of danger came upon him: as if, in the mist, he felt
-upon him the breathing, warm, sweet, ominous, of some unseen creature.
-And in the fear was a strange delight, and like a hand drawn, with slow,
-deep pressure, across a harp, the nearness drew across his heart,
-stirring its one sad note&mdash;its dumb, its aching note&mdash;to a sudden
-ascending murmur of melody.</p>
-
-<p>He was caught swiftly from this inner tumult by its reflection in her
-face. She flushed, deeply, painfully.<a name="page_175" id="page_175"></a> She drew back sharply, pushing
-his hands from her.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan sought his own equilibrium in an ignoring of that undercurrent.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you are not frightened; but why are you angry?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment she did not speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Eppie, I am so sorry. What is it? You are really angry, Eppie!”</p>
-
-<p>Then, after that pause of speechlessness, she found words.</p>
-
-<p>“If I think of you as mist you must not think of me as glamour.” This
-she gave him straight.</p>
-
-<p>Only after disengaging her train from the settle, from his feet, after
-wheeling aside his chair to make a clear passage for her departure, did
-she add: “I have read your priggish Schopenhauer.”</p>
-
-<p>She gave him no time for reply or protestation. Quite mistress of
-herself, leaving him with all the awkwardness of the situation&mdash;if he
-chose to consider it awkward&mdash;upon his hands, very fully the finished
-mondaine and very beautifully the fearless and assured nymph of the
-hillside, she went to the piano, turned and rejected, in looking over
-it, some music, and sitting down, striking a long, full chord, she began
-to sing, in her voice of frosty dawn, the old Scotch ballad.</p>
-
-<p>He might go or listen as he liked. She had put him away, him and his
-mists, his ambiguous hold upon her, his ambiguous look at her. She sang
-to please herself as much as when she had gone up through the woodlands.
-And if the note of anger<a name="page_176" id="page_176"></a> still thrilled in her voice she turned it to
-the uses of her song and made a higher triumph of sadness.</p>
-
-<p>She was still singing when the general came in.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="nind">S<small>HE</small> had been quite right; she had seen with her perfect sharpness and
-clearness indeed, and no wonder that she had been angry. He himself saw
-clearly, directly the hand was off the harp. It was laughably simple. He
-was a man, she a woman; they were both young and she was beautiful. That
-summed it up, sufficiently and brutally; and no wonder, again, that she
-had felt such summing an offense. It wasn’t in the light of such
-summings that she regarded herself.</p>
-
-<p>With him she had never, for a moment, made use of glamour. His was the
-rudimentary impulse, and Gavan’s sensitive cheek echoed her flush when
-he thought of it. Never again, he promised himself, after this full
-comprehension of it, should such an impulse dim their friendship. He
-would make it up to her by helping her to forget it.</p>
-
-<p>But for all that, it was with the strangest mixture of relief and dismay
-that he found upon the breakfast-table next morning an urgent summons
-for his return home. It was the affable little rector of the parish in
-Surrey who wrote to tell him of his father’s sudden
-breakdown,&mdash;softening of the brain. When Eppie appeared, a little grave,
-but all clear composure, he was able to show her the letter and to tell
-her of his immediate departure with a composure as assured as her own,
-but he wondered, while he spoke, if to her also the parting would mean
-any form of<a name="page_177" id="page_177"></a> relief. At all events, for her, it couldn’t mean any form
-of wrench.</p>
-
-<p>Looking in swift glances at her face, while she questioned him about his
-father, suggested trains and nurses, and gave practical advice for his
-journey, he was conscious that the relief was the result of a pretty
-severe strain, and that though it was relieved it hadn’t stopped aching.</p>
-
-<p>The very fact that Eppie’s narrow face, the hair brushed back from brow
-and temples, showed, in the clear morning light, more of its oddity than
-its beauty, made its charm cling the more closely. Her eyes looked
-small, her features irregular; he saw the cliff-like modeling of her
-temples, the cheeks, a little flat, pale, freckled; the long, queer
-lines of her chin. Bare, exposed, without a flicker of sunlight on her
-delicate analogies of ruggedness, of weather-beaten strength, she might
-almost have been called ugly; and, with every glance, he was feeling her
-as sweetness, sweetness deep and reticent, embodied.</p>
-
-<p>The general and Miss Barbara were late. She poured out his coffee, saw
-him embarked on a sturdy breakfast, insisted, now with the irradiating
-smile that in a moment made her lovely, that he should eat a great deal
-before his journey, made him think anew of that maternal quality in
-her,&mdash;the tolerance, the tenderness. And in the ambiguous relief came
-the sharpened dismay of seeing how great was the cause for it.</p>
-
-<p>He wanted to say a word, only one, about their little drama of last
-night, but the time didn’t really seem to come for it; perhaps she saw
-that it<a name="page_178" id="page_178"></a> shouldn’t come. But on the old stone steps with their yellow
-lichen spots, his farewells over to the uncle and aunt, and he and Eppie
-standing out there in a momentary solitude, she said, shaking his hand,
-“Friends, you know. Look me up when you are next in London.” She had her
-one word to say, and she had said it when and how she wished. It wasn’t
-anything so crude as reassurance; it was rather a sunny assurance, in
-which she wished him to share, that none was needed.</p>
-
-<p>He looked, like the boy of years ago, a real depth of gratitude into her
-eyes. She had given him his chance.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll never frighten you again; I’ll never displease you again.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know you won’t. I won’t let you,” Eppie smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I were more worth your while&mdash;worth your being kind to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You think you are still&mdash;gloomy, tiresome, self-centered?”</p>
-
-<p>“That defines it well enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you serve my purpose,” said Eppie, “and that is to have you for
-my friend.”</p>
-
-<p>She seemed in this parting to have effaced all memory of glamour, but
-Gavan knew that the deeper one was with him.</p>
-
-<p>It was with him, even while, in the long journey South, he was able to
-unwrap film after film of the mirage from its central core of reality,
-to see Eppie, in all her loveliness, in all her noblest aspects, as a
-sort of incarnation of the world, the flesh, and the<a name="page_179" id="page_179"></a> devil. He could
-laugh over the grotesque analogy; it proved to him how far from life he
-was when its symbol could show in such unflattering terms, and yet it
-hurt him that he could find it in himself so to symbolize her. It was
-just because she was so lovely, so noble, that he must&mdash;he must&mdash;. For,
-under all, was the wrench that would take time to stop aching.<a name="page_180" id="page_180"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="X-2" id="X-2"></a>X</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00c.png"
-width="77"
-height="76"
-alt="C"
-title="C"
-/></span>APTAIN PALAIRET had gone to pieces and was now as unpleasant an object
-as for years he had been a pleasant one.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan’s atrophied selfishness felt only a slight shrinking from the
-revolting aspects of dissolution, and his father’s condition rather
-interested him. The captain’s childish clinging to his son was like an
-animal instinct suddenly asserting itself, an almost vegetable instinct,
-so little more than mere instinct was it. It affected Gavan much as the
-suddenly contracting tentacles of a sea-anemone upon his finger might
-have done. He was not at all touched; but he felt the claim of a
-possible pang of loneliness and desolation in the dimness of decay, and,
-methodically, with all the appearances of a solicitous kindness, he
-responded to the claim.</p>
-
-<p>The man, immersed in his rudimentary universe of sense, showed a host of
-atavistic fears; fears of the dark, of strange faces, fears of sudden
-noises or of long stillness. He often wept, leaning his swollen face on
-Gavan’s shoulder, filled with an abject self-pity.</p>
-
-<p>“You know how I love you, Gavan,” he would<a name="page_181" id="page_181"></a> again and again repeat, his
-lax lips fumbling with the words, “always loved you, ever since you were
-a little fellow&mdash;out in India, you know. I and your dear mother loved
-you better than life,” and, wagging his head, he would repeat, “better
-than life,” and break into sobs&mdash;sobs that ceased when the nurse brought
-him his wine-jelly. Then it might be again the tone of feeble whining.
-“It doesn’t taste right, Gavan. Can’t you make it taste right? Do you
-want to starve me between you all?”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, with scientific scrutiny, diagnosed and observed while he soothed
-him or engaged his vagrant mind in games.</p>
-
-<p>In his intervals of leisure he pursued his own work, and rode and walked
-with all his usual tempered athleticism. He did not feel the days as a
-strain, hardly as disagreeable; he was indifferent or interested. At the
-worst he was bored. The undercurrent of pity he was accustomed to living
-with.</p>
-
-<p>Only at night, in hours of rest, he would sink into a half-dazed
-disgust, find himself on edge, nearly worn out. So the winter passed.</p>
-
-<p>He was playing draughts with his father on a day in earliest spring,
-when he was told that Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford were below.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan was feeling dull and jaded. The conducting of the game needed a
-monotonous patience and tact. The captain would now pick up a draught
-and gaze curiously at it for long periods of time, now move in a
-direction contrary to all the rules of the game and to his own
-advantage. When such mistakes were pointed out to him he would either
-apologize<a name="page_182" id="page_182"></a> humbly or break into sudden peevish wrath. To-day he was in a
-peculiarly excitable condition and had more than once wept.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, after the servant’s announcement, holding a quietly expectant
-draught in his thin, poised fingers, looked hard at the board that still
-waited for his father’s move. He then felt that a deep flush had mounted
-to his face.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the one or two laconic letters that they had interchanged,
-Eppie had been relegated for many months to her dream-place&mdash;a dream, in
-spite of its high coloring, more distant than this nearer dream of ugly
-illness. It was painful to look back at the queer turmoil she had roused
-in him during the autumnal fortnight, and more painful to realize, as in
-his sudden panic of reluctance now, that, though a dream, she was an
-abiding and constant one.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Arley he knew, and her motor-car had recently made her a next-door
-neighbor in spite of the thirty miles between them. She was a friend
-with whom Eppie had before stayed on the other side of the county.
-Nothing could be more natural than that she and Eppie should drop in
-upon a solitude that must, to their eyes, have all the finished elements
-of pathos. Yet he was a little vexed by the intrusion, as well as
-reluctant to meet it.</p>
-
-<p>His father broke into vehement protest when he heard that he was to be
-abandoned at an unusual hour, and it needed some time for Gavan and the
-nurse to quiet him. Twenty minutes had passed before he could go down to
-his guests, and he surmised<a name="page_183" id="page_183"></a> that they would feel in this delay yet
-further grounds for pity.</p>
-
-<p>They were in the hall, before a roaring fire, Eppie standing with her
-back to it, in a familiar attitude, though her long, caped cloak and
-hooded motoring-cap, the folds of gray silk gathered under her chin and
-narrowly framing her face, gave her an unfamiliar aspect. Her eyes met
-his as he turned the spacious staircase and came down to them, and he
-felt that they watched his every movement and noted every trace in him
-of fatigue and dejection.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Arley, fluent, flexible, amazingly pretty, for all the light
-powdering and wrinkling of her fifty years, came rustling forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Eppie is staying with me for the week-end,&mdash;I wrench her from her slums
-now and then,&mdash;and we wanted to hear how you are, to see how you are.
-You look dreadfully fagged; doesn’t he, Eppie? How is your father?”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie gave him her hand in silence.</p>
-
-<p>“My father will never be any better, you know,” he said. “As for me, I’m
-all right. I should have come over to see you before this, and looked
-you up, too, Eppie, but I can’t get away for more than an hour or so at
-a time.”</p>
-
-<p>He led them into the library while he spoke,&mdash;Mrs. Arley exclaiming that
-such devotion was dear and good of him,&mdash;and Eppie looked gravely round
-at the room that he had described to her as the room that he really
-passed his life in. The great spaces of ranged books framed for her, he
-knew, pictures of his own existence. He knew, too, that her gravity<a name="page_184" id="page_184"></a> was
-the involuntary result of the impression that he made upon her. She was
-sorry for him. Poor Eppie, their relationship since childhood seemed to
-have consisted in that&mdash;in the sense of her pursuing pity and in his
-retreat before it, for her sake. He retreated now, as he knew, in his
-determination to show her that pity was misplaced, uncalled for.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Arley had thrown off her wrap and loosened her hood in a manner
-that made it almost imperative to ask them to stay with him for
-lunch&mdash;an invitation accepted with an assurance showing that it had been
-expected, and it wasn’t difficult, in conventional battledore and
-shuttlecock with her, to show a good humor and frivolity that
-discountenanced pathetic interpretations. What Mrs. Arley’s
-interpretations were he didn’t quite know; her eyes, fatigued yet fresh,
-were very acute behind their trivial meanings, and he could wonder if
-Eppie had shared with her her own sense of his “horribleness,” and if,
-in consequence, her conception of Eppie’s significance as the opponent
-of that quality was tinged with sentimental associations.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie’s gaze, while they rattled on, lost something of its gravity, but
-he was startled, as if by an assurance deeper than any of Mrs. Arley’s,
-when she rose to slip off her coat and went across the room to a small
-old mirror that hung near the door to take off her cap as well.</p>
-
-<p>In her manner of standing there with her back to them, untying her
-veils, pushing back her hair, was the assurance, indeed, of a person
-whose feet were firmly planted on certain rights, all the more firmly<a name="page_185" id="page_185"></a>
-for “knowing her place” as it were, and for having repudiated mistaken
-assumptions. She might almost have been a new sick-nurse come to take up
-her duties by his side. She passed from the mirror to the writing-table,
-examining the books laid there, and then, until lunch was announced,
-stood looking out of the window. Quite the silent, capable, significant
-new nurse, with many theories of her own that might much affect the
-future.</p>
-
-<p>The dining-room at Cheylesford Lodge opened on a wonderful old lawn,
-centuries in its green. Bordered by beds, just alight with pale spring
-flowers, it swept in and out among shrubberies of rhododendron and
-laurel, the emerald nook set in a circle of trees, a high arabesque on
-the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie from her seat at the table faced the sky, the trees, the lawn.
-What a beautiful place, she was thinking. A place for life, sheltered,
-embowered. How she would have loved, as a child, those delicious
-rivulets of green that ran into the thick mysteries of shadow. How she
-would have loved to play dolls on a hot summer afternoon in the shade of
-the great yew-tree that stretched its dark branches half across the sky.
-The house, the garden, made her think of children; she saw white
-pinafores and golden heads glancing in and out among the trees and
-shrubs, and the vision of young life, blossoming, growing in security
-and sunlight, filled her thought with its pictured songs of innocence,
-while, at the same time, under the vision, she was feeling it all&mdash;all
-the beauty and sheltered sweetness&mdash;as dreadful in its emptiness, its
-worse than emptiness: a casket holding a<a name="page_186" id="page_186"></a> death’s-head. She came back
-with something of a start to hear her work in the slums enthusiastically
-described by Mrs. Arley. “I thought it was only in novels that children
-clung to the heroine’s skirts. I never believed they clung in real life
-until seeing Eppie with her ragamuffins; they adore her.”</p>
-
-<p>This remark, to whose truth she assented by a vague smile, gave Eppie’s
-thoughts a further push that sent them seeing herself among the golden
-heads and white pinafores on the lawn at Cheylesford Lodge; and though
-the vision maintained its loving aunt relationship of the slums, there
-was now a throb and flutter in it, as though she held under her hand a
-strange wild bird that only her own will not to look kept hidden.</p>
-
-<p>These dreams were followed by a nightmare little episode.</p>
-
-<p>In the library, again, the talk was still an airy dialogue, Eppie, her
-eyes on the flames as she drank her coffee, still maintaining her
-ruminating silence. In the midst of her thoughts and their chatter, the
-door opened suddenly and Captain Palairet appeared on the threshold.</p>
-
-<p>His head neatly brushed, a sumptuous dressing-gown of padded and
-embroidered silk girt about him, he stood there with moist eyes and
-lips, faintly and incessantly shaking through all his frame, a troubling
-and startling figure.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan had been wondering all through the visit how his father was
-bearing the abandonment, and his appearance, he saw now, must have been
-the triumphant<a name="page_187" id="page_187"></a> fruit of contest with the nurse whose face of helpless
-disapprobation hovered outside.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan went to his side, and, leaning on his son’s arm, the captain said
-that he had come to pay his respects to Mrs. Arley and to Miss Gifford.</p>
-
-<p>Taking Mrs. Arley’s hand, he earnestly reiterated his pleasure in
-welcoming her to his home.</p>
-
-<p>“Gavan’s in fact, you know; but he’s a good son. Not very much in
-common, perhaps: Gavan was always a book-worm, a fellow of fads and
-theories; I love a broad life, men and things. No, not much in common,
-except our love for his mother, my dear, dead wife; that brought us
-together. We shook hands over her grave, so to speak,” said the captain,
-but without his usual sentiment. An air of jaunty cheerfulness pervaded
-his manner. “She is buried near here, you know. You may have seen the
-grave. A very pretty stone; very pretty indeed. Gavan chose it. I was in
-India at the time. A great blow to me. I never recovered from it. I
-forget, for the moment, what the text is; but it’s very pretty; very
-appropriate. I knew I could trust Gavan to do everything properly.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan’s face had kept its pallid calm.</p>
-
-<p>“You will tire yourself, father,” he said. “Let me take you up-stairs
-now. Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford will excuse us.”</p>
-
-<p>The captain resisted his attempt to turn him to the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Gifford. Yes, Miss Gifford,” he repeated, turning to where Eppie
-stood attentively watching<a name="page_188" id="page_188"></a> father and son, “But I want to see Miss
-Elspeth Gifford. It was that I came for.” He took her hand and his
-wrecked and restless eyes went over her face. “So this is Miss Elspeth
-Gifford.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have heard of me?” Eppie’s composure was as successful as Gavan’s
-own and lent to the scene a certain matter-of-fact convention.</p>
-
-<p>The captain bowed low. “Heard of you? Yes. I have often heard of you. I
-am glad, glad and proud, to meet at last so much goodness and wit and
-beauty. You have a name in the world, Miss Gifford. Yes, indeed, I have
-heard of you.” Suddenly, while he held her hand and gazed at her, his
-look changed. Tears filled his eyes; a muscle in his lip began to shake;
-a flush of maudlin indignation purpled his face.</p>
-
-<p>“And you are the girl my son jilted! And you come to our house! It’s a
-noble action. It’s a generous action. It’s worthy of you, my dear.” He
-tightly squeezed her hand, Gavan’s attempt&mdash;and now no gentle one&mdash;to
-draw him away only making his clutch the more determined.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Gavan, I will not go. I will speak my mind. This is my hour. The
-time has come for me to speak my mind. Let’s have the truth; truth at
-all costs is my motto. A noble and generous action. But, my dear,” he
-leaned his head toward her and spoke in a loud whisper, “you’re well rid
-of him, you know&mdash;well rid of him. Don’t try to patch it up. Don’t come
-in that hope. So like a woman&mdash;I know, I know. But give it up; that’s my
-advice. Give it up. He’s a poor fellow&mdash;a very poor fellow.<a name="page_189" id="page_189"></a> He wouldn’t
-make you happy; just take that from me&mdash;a friend, a true friend. He
-wouldn’t make any woman happy. He’s a poor creature, and a false
-creature, and I’ll say this,” the captain, now trembling violently,
-burst into tears: “if he has been a false lover to you he has been a bad
-son to me.”</p>
-
-<p>With both hands, sobbing, he clung to her, while, with a look of sick
-distress, Gavan tried, not too violently, to draw him from his hold on
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie had not flushed. “Don’t mind,” she said, glancing at the helpless
-son, “he has mixed it up, you see.” And, bending on the captain eyes
-severe in kindly intention, like the eyes of a nurse firmly
-administering a potion, “You are mistaken about Gavan. It was another
-man who jilted me. Now let him take you up-stairs. You are ill.”</p>
-
-<p>But the captain still clung, she, erect in her spare young strength,
-showing no shrinking of repulsion. “No, no,” he said; “you always try to
-shield him. A woman’s way. He won your heart, and then he broke it, as
-he has mine. He has no heart, or he’d take you now. Give it up. Don’t
-come after him. Sir, how dare you! I won’t submit to this. How dare you,
-Sir!” Gavan had wrenched him away, and in a flare of silly passion he
-struck at him again and again, like a furious child. It was a wrestle
-with the animal, the vegetable thing, the pinioning of vicious
-tentacles. Mrs. Arley fluttered in helpless consternation, while Eppie,
-firm and adequate, assisted Gavan in securing the wildly striking hands.
-Caught, held, haled toward the door, the captain became,<a name="page_190" id="page_190"></a> with amazing
-rapidity, all smiles and placidity.</p>
-
-<p>“Gently, gently, my dear boy. This is unseemly, you know, very childish
-indeed. Temper! Temper! You get it from me, no doubt&mdash;though your mother
-could be very spiteful at moments. I’ll come now. I’ve said my say. Well
-rid of him, my dear, well rid of him,” he nodded from the door.</p>
-
-<p>“Eppie! My dear!” cried Mrs. Arley, when father and son had disappeared.
-“How unutterably hateful. I am more sorry for him than for you, Eppie.
-His face!”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie was shrugging up her shoulders and straightening herself as though
-the captain’s grasp still threatened her.</p>
-
-<p>“Hateful indeed; but trivial. Gavan understands that I understand. We
-must make him feel that it’s nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s quite mad, horrible old man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not quite; more uncomfortably muddled than mad. We must make him see
-that we think nothing of it,” Eppie repeated. She turned to Gavan, who
-entered as she spoke, still with his sick flush and showing a speechless
-inability to frame apologies.</p>
-
-<p>“This is what it is to have echoes, Gavan,” she said. “My little
-misfortunes have reached your father’s ears.” She went to him, she took
-his hand, she smiled at him, all her radiance recovered, a garment of
-warmth and ease to cover the shivering the captain’s words might have
-made. “Please don’t mind. I wasn’t a bit bothered, really.”</p>
-
-<p>He could almost have wept for the relief of her<a name="page_191" id="page_191"></a> smile, her sanity. The
-linking of their names in such an unthinkable connection had given him
-the nausea qualm of a terrifying obsession. He could find now only trite
-words in which to tell her that she was very kind and that he was more
-sorry than he could say.</p>
-
-<p>“But you mustn’t be. It was such an obvious muddle for a twisted mind.
-He knew,” said Eppie, still smiling with the healing radiance, “that I
-had been jilted, and he knew that I was very fond of you, and he put
-together the one and one make two that happened to be before him.” She
-saw that his distress had been far greater than her own, that she now
-gave him relief.</p>
-
-<p>Afterward, as she and Mrs. Arley sped away, her own reaction from the
-healing attitude showed in a rather grim silence. She leaned back in the
-swift, keen air, her arms folded in the fullness of her capes.</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Arley could not repress her own accumulations of feeling. “My
-dear Eppie,” she said, her hand on her shoulder, and with an almost more
-than maternal lack of reticence, “I want you to marry him. Don’t glare
-Medusa at me. I hate tact and silences. Heaven knows I would have
-scouted the idea of such a match for you before seeing him to-day. But
-my hard old heart is touched. He is such a dear; so lonely. It’s a nice
-little place, too, and there is some money. Jim Grainger is too
-drab-colored a person for you,&mdash;all his force, all his sheckles, can’t
-gild him,&mdash;and Kenneth Langley is penniless. This dear creature is not a
-bit drab and<a name="page_192" id="page_192"></a> not quite penniless. And you are big enough to marry a man
-who needs you rather than one you need. <i>Will</i> you think of it, Eppie?”</p>
-
-<p>“Grace, you are worse than Captain Palairet,” said Eppie, whose eyes
-were firmly fixed on the neat leather back of the chauffeur in front of
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be cross, Eppie. Why should you mind my prattle?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I care for him so much.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s what I say.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; not as I mean it.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>He</i> of course cares, as I mean it.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie did not pause over this.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s something different, quite different, from anything else in the
-world. It can’t be talked about like that. Please, Grace, never, never
-be like Captain Palairet again. <i>You</i> haven’t softening of the brain. I
-shall lose Gavan if my friends and his father have such delusions too
-openly.<a name="page_193" id="page_193"></a>”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="XI-2" id="XI-2"></a>XI</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="75"
-height="76"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>AVAN went down the noisy, dirty thoroughfare, looking for the turning
-which would lead him, so the last policeman consulted said, to Eppie’s
-little square.</p>
-
-<p>It was a May day, suddenly clear after rain, liquid mud below, and above
-a sharply blue sky, looking its relentless contrast at the reeking,
-sordid streets, the ugly, hurrying life of the wide thoroughfare.</p>
-
-<p>All along the gutter was a vociferous fringe of dripping fruit-and
-food-barrows, these more haphazard conveniences faced by a line of
-gaudy, glaring shops.</p>
-
-<p>The blue above was laced with a tangle of tram-wires and cut with the
-jagged line of chimney-pots.</p>
-
-<p>The roaring trams, the glaring shops, seemed part of a cruel machinery
-creative of life, and the grim air of permanence, the width and solidity
-of the great thoroughfare, were more oppressive to Gavan’s nerves, its
-ugliness fiercer, more menacing, than the narrower meanness of the
-streets where life seemed to huddle with more despondency.</p>
-
-<p>In one of these he found that he had, apparently, lost his way.<a name="page_194" id="page_194"></a></p>
-
-<p>A random turn brought him to a squalid court with sloping, wet pavement
-and open doors disgorging, from inner darkness, swarms of children. They
-ran; tottered on infantile, bandy legs; locked in scuffling groups,
-screaming shrilly, or squatted on the ground, absorbed in some game.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan surveyed them vaguely as he wandered seeking an outlet. His eye
-showed neither shrinking nor tenderness, rather a bleak, hard, unmoved
-pity, like that of the sky above. He was as alien from that swarming,
-vivid life as the sky; but, worn as he was with months of nervous
-overstrain, he felt rising within him now and then a faint sense of
-nausea such as one might feel in contemplating a writhing clot of
-maggots.</p>
-
-<p>He threaded his way among them all, and at a corner of the court found a
-narrow exit. This covered passage led, apparently, to another and fouler
-court, and emerging from it, coming suddenly face to face with him, was
-Eppie. She was as startling, seen here, as “a lily in the mouth of
-Tartarus,” and he had a shock of delight in her mere aspect. For Eppie
-was as exquisite as a flower. Her garments had in no way adapted
-themselves to mud and misery. Her rough dress of Japanese blue showed at
-the open neck of its jacket a white linen blouse; her short, kilted
-skirt swung with the grace of petals; her little upturned cap of blue
-made her look like a Rosalind ready for a background of woodland glade,
-streams, and herds of deer.</p>
-
-<p>And here she stood, under that cruel sky, among the unimaginable
-ugliness of this City of Dreadful Night.<a name="page_195" id="page_195"></a></p>
-
-<p>In her great surprise she did not smile, saying, as she gave him her
-hand, “Gavan! by all that’s wonderful!”</p>
-
-<p>“You asked me to come and see you when I was next in London.”</p>
-
-<p>“So I did.”</p>
-
-<p>“So here I am. I had a day off by chance; some business that had to be
-seen to.”</p>
-
-<p>“And your father?”</p>
-
-<p>“Slowly going.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you have come down here, for how long?”</p>
-
-<p>“For as long as you’ll keep me. I needn’t go back till night.”</p>
-
-<p>Her eye now wandered away from him to the maggots, one of whom, Gavan
-observed, had attached itself to her skirt, while a sufficiently dense
-crowd surrounded them, staring.</p>
-
-<p>“You have a glimpse of our children,” said Eppie, surveying them with,
-not exactly a maternal, but, as it were, a fraternal eye of affectionate
-familiarity.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that, Annie?” in answer to a husky whisper. “Do I expect you
-to-night? Rather! Is that the doll, Ada? Well, I can’t say that you’ve
-kept it very tidy. Where’s its pinafore?” She took the soiled object
-held up to her and examined its garments. “Where’s its petticoat?”</p>
-
-<p>“Please, Miss, Hemly took them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Took them away from you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Miss.”</p>
-
-<p>“For her own doll, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Miss.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie cogitated. “I’ll speak to Emily about it presently. You shall have
-them back.<a name="page_196" id="page_196"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“Please, Miss, I called her a thief.”</p>
-
-<p>“You spoke the truth. How are you, Billy? You look decidedly better.
-Gavan, my hands are full for the next hour or so and I can’t even offer
-to take you with me, for I’m going to sick people. But I shall be back
-and through with all my work by tea-time, if you don’t mind going to my
-place and waiting. You’ll find Maude Allen there. She lives down here,
-and with me when I am here. She is a nice girl, though she will talk
-your head off.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do I find her? I don’t mind waiting.”</p>
-
-<p>“You follow this to the end, take the first turning to the right, and
-that will bring you to my place. I’ll meet you there at five.”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, thus directed, made his way to the dingy little house occupied by
-the group of energetic women whom Eppie joined yearly for her three
-months of&mdash;dissipation? he asked himself, amused by her variegated
-vigor.</p>
-
-<p>The dingy little house looked on a dingy little square&mdash;shell of former
-respectable affluence from which the higher form of life had shriveled.
-The sooty trees were thickly powdered with young green, and uneven
-patches of rough, unkempt grass showed behind broken iron railings. A
-cat’s-meat man called his dangling wares along the street, and Gavan,
-noticing a thin and furtive cat, that stole from a window-ledge, stopped
-him and bought a large three-penny-worth, upon which he left the cat
-regaling itself with an odd, fastidious ferocity.</p>
-
-<p>He entered another world when he entered Eppie’s sitting-room. Here was
-life at its most austerely<a name="page_197" id="page_197"></a> sweet. Books lined the walls, bowls of
-primroses and delicate Japanese bronzes set above their shelves;
-chintz-covered chairs were drawn before the fire; the latest reviews lay
-on a table, and on the piano stood open music; there were wide windows
-in the little room, and crocuses, growing in flat, earthenware dishes,
-blew out their narrow chalices against the sunlit muslin curtains.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Allen sat sewing near the crocuses, and, shy and voluble, rose to
-greet him. She was evidently accustomed to Eppie’s guests&mdash;accustomed,
-too, perhaps, to taking them off her hands, for though she was shy her
-volubility showed a familiarity with the situation. She was almost as
-funny a contrast to Eppie as the slum children had been an ugly one. She
-wore a spare, drab-colored skirt and a cotton shirt, its high, hard
-collar girt about by a red tie that revealed bone buttons before and
-behind. Her sleek, fair hair, relentlessly drawn back, looked like a
-varnish laid upon her head. Her features, at once acute and kindly, were
-sharp and pink.</p>
-
-<p>She was sewing on solid and distressingly ugly materials.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I am usually at home. Miss Gifford is the head and I am the hands,
-you see,” she smiled, casting quick, upward glances at the long, pale
-young man in his chair near the fire. “Miss Henderson, Miss Grey, and I
-live here all year round, and I do so look forward to Miss Gifford’s
-coming. Oh, yes, it’s a most interesting life. Do you do anything of the
-sort? Are you going to take up a club? Perhaps you are going into the
-Church?<a name="page_198" id="page_198"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Allen asked her swift succession of questions as if in a mild
-desperateness.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan admitted that his interest was wholly in Miss Gifford.</p>
-
-<p>“She <i>is</i> interesting,” Miss Allen, all comprehension, agreed. “So many
-people find her inspiring. Do you know Mr. Grainger, the M.P.? He comes
-here constantly. He is a cousin, you know. He has known her, of course,
-ever since she was a child. I think it’s very probable that she
-influences his political life&mdash;oh, quite in a right sense, I mean. He is
-such a conscientious man&mdash;everybody says that. And then she isn’t at all
-eccentric, you know, as so many fashionable women who come down here
-are; they do give one so much trouble when they are like that,&mdash;all
-sorts of fads that one has to manage to get on with. She isn’t at all
-faddish. And she isn’t sentimental, either. I think the sentimental ones
-are worst&mdash;for the people, especially, giving them all sorts of foolish
-ideas. And it’s not that she doesn’t <i>care</i>. She cares such a lot.
-That’s the secret of her not getting discouraged, you see. She never
-loses her spirit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it such discouraging work?” Gavan questioned from his chair. With
-his legs crossed, his hat and stick held on his knee, he surveyed Miss
-Allen and the crocuses.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, not to me,” she answered; “but that’s very different, for I have
-religious faith. Miss Gifford hasn’t that, so of course she must care a
-great deal to make up for it. When one hasn’t a firm faith it is far
-more difficult, I always think, to see<a name="page_199" id="page_199"></a> any hope in it all. I think she
-would find it far easier if she had that. She can’t resign herself to
-things. She is rather hot-tempered at times,” Miss Allen added, with one
-of her sharp, shy glances.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, amused by the idea that Eppie lacked religious faith, inquired
-whether the settlement were religious in intention, and Miss Allen
-sighed a little in answering no,&mdash;Miss Grey, indeed, was a Positivist.
-“But we Anglicans are very broad, you know,” she said. “I can work in
-perfectly with them all&mdash;better with Miss Grey and Miss Gifford than
-with Miss Henderson, who is very, very Low. Miss Gifford goes in more
-for social conditions and organization&mdash;trades-unions, all that sort of
-thing; that’s where she finds Mr. Grainger so much of a help, I think.”
-And he gathered from Miss Allen’s further conversation, from its very
-manner of vague though admiring protest, a clearer conception of Eppie’s
-importance down here. To Miss Allen, she evidently embodied a splendid,
-pagan force, ambiguous in its splendor. He saw her slightly shrinking
-vision of an intent combatant; no loving sister of charity, but a young
-Bellona, the latest weapons of sociological warfare in her hands, its
-latest battle-cry on her lips. And all for what? thought Gavan, while,
-with a sense of contrasting approval, he looked at Miss Allen’s tidy
-little head against the sunlit crocuses and watched the harmless
-occupation of her hands. All for life, more life; the rousing of desire;
-the struggling to higher forms of consciousness. She was in it, the
-strife, the struggle. He had seen on her face to-day, with all its
-surprise, perhaps its<a name="page_200" id="page_200"></a> gladness, that alien look of grave preoccupation
-that passed from him to the destinies she touched. In thinking of it all
-he felt particularly at peace, though there was the irony of his
-assurance that Eppie’s efforts among this suffering life where he found
-her only resulted in a fiercer hold on suffering. Physical degradation
-and its resultant moral apathy were by no means the most unendurable of
-human calamities. Miss Allen’s anodynes&mdash;the mere practical petting,
-soothing, telling of pretty tales&mdash;were, in their very
-short-sightedness, more fitted to the case.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Allen little thought to what a context her harmless prattle was
-being adjusted. She would have been paralyzed with horror could she have
-known that to the gentle young man, sitting there so unalarmingly, she
-herself was only a rather simple symptom of life that he was quietly
-studying. In so far from suspecting, her shyness went from her; he was
-so unalarming&mdash;differing in this from so many people&mdash;that she found it
-easy to talk to him. And she still had a happy little hope of a closer
-community of interest than he had owned to. He looked, she thought, very
-High Church. Perhaps he was in the last stages of conversion.</p>
-
-<p>She had talked on for nearly an hour when another visitor was announced.
-This proved to be a young man slightly known to Gavan, a graceful,
-mellifluous youth, whose artificiality of manner and great personal
-beauty suggested a mingling of absinthe and honey. People had rather
-bracketed Gavan and Basil Mayburn together; one could easily deal with
-both as lumped in the same category,&mdash;charming<a name="page_201" id="page_201"></a> drifters, softly
-disdainful of worldly aims and efforts. Mayburn himself took sympathy
-for granted, though disconcerted at times by finding his grasp of the
-older man to be on a sliding, slippery surface. Palairet had, to be
-sure, altogether the proper appreciations of art and literature, the
-rhythm of highly evolved human intercourse; the aroma distilled for the
-esthete from the vast tragic comedy of life; so that he had never quite
-satisfied himself as to why he could get no nearer on this common
-footing. Palairet was always charming, always interested, always
-courteous; but one’s hold did slip.</p>
-
-<p>And to Gavan, Basil Mayburn, with his fluent ecstasies, seemed a
-sojourner in a funny half-way house. To Mayburn the hallucination of
-life was worth while esthetically. His own initial appeal to life had
-been too fundamentally spiritual for the beautiful to be more to him
-than a second-rate illusion.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Allen greeted Mr. Mayburn with a coolness that at once
-discriminated for Gavan between her instinctive liking for himself and
-her shrinking from a man who perplexed and displeased her.</p>
-
-<p>Mayburn was all glad sweetness: delighted to see Miss Allen; delighted
-to see Palairet; delighted to wait in their company for the delightful
-Miss Gifford; and, turning to Miss Allen, he went on to say, as a thing
-that would engage her sympathies, that he had just come from a service
-at the Oratory.</p>
-
-<p>“I often go there,” he said; “one gets, as nowhere else that I know of
-in London, the quintessence of aspiration<a name="page_202" id="page_202"></a>&mdash;the age-long yearning of the
-world. How are your schemes for having that little church built down
-here succeeding? I do so believe in it. Don’t let any ugly sect steal a
-march on you.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Allen primly replied that the plans for the church were prospering;
-and adding that Miss Gifford would be here in a moment and that she must
-leave them, she gathered up her work and departed with some emphasis.</p>
-
-<p>“Nice, dear little creature, that,” said Mayburn, “though she does so
-dislike me. I hope I didn’t say the wrong thing. I never quite know how
-far her Anglicanism goes; such a pity that it doesn’t go a little
-further and carry her into a nunnery of the Catholic Church. She is the
-nun type. She ought to be done up in their delicious costume; it would
-lend her the flavor she lacks so distressingly now. Did you notice her
-collar and her hair? Astonishing the way that Eppie makes use of all
-these funny, <i>guindée</i> creatures whom she gets hold of down here. Have
-you ever seen Miss Grey?&mdash;dogmatic, utilitarian, strangely ugly Miss
-Grey, another nun type corrupted by our silly modern conditions. She
-reeks of Comte and looks like a don. And all the rest of them,&mdash;the
-solemn humanitarians, the frothy socialists, the worldly, benign old
-ecclesiastics,&mdash;Eppie works them all; she has a genius for
-administration. It’s an art in her. It almost consoles one for seeing
-her wasted down here for so much of the year.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why wasted?” Gavan queried. “She enjoys it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly. That’s the alleviation. Wasted for<a name="page_203" id="page_203"></a> us, I mean. You have known
-her for a long time, haven’t you, Palairet?”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, irked by the question and by the familiarity of Mayburn’s
-references to their absent hostess, answered dryly that he had known
-Miss Gifford since childhood; and Mayburn, all tact, passed at once to
-less personal topics, inquiring with a new earnestness whether Palairet
-had seen Selby’s Goya, and expatiating on its exquisite horror until the
-turning of a key in the hall-door, quick steps on the stairs leading up
-past the sitting-room, announced Eppie’s arrival.</p>
-
-<p>She was with them in a moment, cap and jacket doffed, her muddy shoes
-changed for slender patent-leather, fresh in her white blouse. She
-greeted Mayburn, turning to Gavan with, “I’m so glad you waited. You
-shall both have tea directly.”</p>
-
-<p>With all her crisp kindliness, Gavan fancied a change in her since the
-greeting of an hour and a half before. Things hadn’t gone well with her.
-And he could flatter himself, also, with the suspicion that she was
-vexed at finding their tête-à-tête interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>Mayburn loitered about the room after her while she straightened the
-shade on the student’s lamp, just brought in, and made the tea, telling
-her about people, about what was going on in the only world that
-counted, telling her about Chrissie Bentworth’s astounding elopement,
-and, finally, about the Goya. “You really must see it soon,” he assured
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, adjusting the flame of her kettle, said that she didn’t want to
-see it.<a name="page_204" id="page_204"></a></p>
-
-<p>“You don’t care for Goya, dear lady?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not just now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, of course I don’t mean just now. I mean after you have burned out
-this particular flame. But, really, it’s a sensation before you and you
-mustn’t miss having it. An exquisite thing. Horror made beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to see it made beautiful,” Eppie, with cheerful rudeness,
-objected.</p>
-
-<p>“Now that,” said Mayburn, drawing up to the tea-table with an
-appreciative glance for the simple but inviting fare spread upon
-it&mdash;“now that is just where I always must argue with you. Don’t you
-agree with me, Palairet, that life is beautiful&mdash;that it’s only in terms
-of beauty that it has significance?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you happen to see it so,” Gavan ambiguously assented.</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly; I accept your amendment&mdash;if you happen to have the good
-fortune to see it so; if you have the faculty that gives the vision; if,
-like Siegfried, the revealing dragon’s-blood has touched your lips.
-Eppie has the gift and shouldn’t wilfully atrophy it. She shouldn’t
-refuse to share the vision of the Supreme Artist, to whom all horror and
-tragedy are parts of the picture that his eternal joy contemplates; she
-should not refuse to listen with the ear of the Supreme Musician, to
-whom all the discords that each one of us is, before we taste the
-dragon’s-blood,&mdash;for what is man but a dissonance, as our admirable
-Nietzsche says,&mdash;to whom all these discords melt into the perfect
-phrase. All art, all<a name="page_205" id="page_205"></a> truth is there. I’m rather dithyrambic, but, in
-your more reticent way, you agree with me, don’t you, Palairet?”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie’s eye, during this speech, had turned with observant irony upon
-Gavan.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you like your echo, Gavan?” she inquired, and she answered for
-him: “Of course he agrees, but in slightly different terms. He doesn’t
-care a fig about the symphony or about the Eternal Goya. There isn’t a
-touch of the ‘lyric rapture’ about him. Now pray don’t ask him to define
-his own conceptions, and drink your tea. And don’t say one word to me,
-either, about your gigantic, Bohemian deity. You have spoken of
-Nietzsche, and I know too well what you are coming to: the Apollonian
-spirit of the world of Appearances in which the Dionysiac spirit of
-Things-in-Themselves mirrors its vital ecstasy. Spare me, I’m not at all
-in the humor to see horror in terms of loveliness.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Ay de mi!</i>” Mayburn murmured, “you make me feel that I’m still a
-dissonance when you talk like this.”</p>
-
-<p>“A very wholesome realization.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are cross with life to-day, and therefore with me, its poor little
-appreciator.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m never cross with life.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only with me, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only with you, to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>Mayburn, folding his slice of bread-and-butter, took her harshness with
-Apollonian serenity. “At least let me know that I’ve an ally in you,” he
-appealed to Gavan, while Eppie refilled her cup with<a name="page_206" id="page_206"></a> the business-like
-air of stoking an engine that paused for a moment near wayside
-trivialities.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan had listened to the dithyrambics with some uneasiness, conscious
-of Eppie’s observation, and now owned that he felt little interest in
-the Eternal Goya.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t, don’t, I pray of you, let him take the color out of life for
-you,” Mayburn pleaded, turning from this rebuff, tea-cup in hand, to
-Eppie; and Eppie, with a rather grim smile, again full of reminiscences
-for Gavan, declared that neither of them could take anything out of it
-for her.</p>
-
-<p>She kept, after that, the talk in pleasant enough shallows; but Mayburn
-fancied, more than once, that he heard the grating of his keel on an
-unpropitious shore. Eppie didn’t want him to-day, that was becoming
-evident; she wasn’t going to push him off into decorative sailing. And
-presently, wondering a little if his tact had already been too long at
-fault, wondering anew about the degree of intimacy between the childhood
-friends, who had, evidently, secrets in which he did not share, he
-gracefully departed.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie leaned back in her chair, folded her arms, and closed her eyes as
-though to give herself the relief of a long silence.</p>
-
-<p>Her hair softly silhouetted against the green shade and the flickering
-illumination of the firelight upon her, her passive face showed a stern
-wistfulness. Things had gone wrong with her.</p>
-
-<p>Looking at her, Gavan’s memory went back to the last time they had been
-together, alone, in firelight, to his impulse and her startlingly acute
-interpretation<a name="page_207" id="page_207"></a> of it. Her very aspect now, her closed eyes and folded
-arms, seemed to show him how completely she disowned, for both of them,
-even the memory of such an unfitting episode. More keenly than ever he
-recognized the fineness in her, the generosity, the willingness to
-outlive trifles, to put them away forever; and the contagion of her
-somber peace enveloped him.</p>
-
-<p>She remarked presently, not opening her eyes: “I should like to make a
-bon-fire of all the pictures in the world, all the etchings, the
-carvings, the tapestries, the bric-à-brac in general,&mdash;and Basil
-Mayburn, in sackcloth and ashes, should light it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What puritanic savagery, Eppie!”</p>
-
-<p>“I prefer the savage puritan to the Basil Mayburn type; at least I do
-just now.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” Gavan asked, after a little pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Do I show it so evidently?” she asked, with a faint smile. “Everything
-is the matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“What, in particular, has gone wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie did not reply at first, and he guessed that she chose only to show
-him a lesser trouble when she said, “I’ve had a great quarrel with Miss
-Grey, for one thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“The positivistic lady?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; did Maude tell you that? She really is a very first-rate
-person&mdash;and runs this place; but I lost my temper with her&mdash;a stupid
-thing to do, and not suddenly, either, which made it the less
-excusable.<a name="page_208" id="page_208"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“Are your theories so different that you came to a clash?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course they are different, though it was apparently only over a
-matter of practical administration that we fought.” Eppie drew a long
-breath, opening her eyes. “I shall stay on here this spring&mdash;I usually
-go to my cousin Alicia for the season. But one can’t expect things to go
-as one wants them unless one keeps one’s hand on the engine most of the
-time. She has almost a right to consider me a meddling outsider, I
-suppose. I shall stay on till the end of the summer.”</p>
-
-<p>“And smash Miss Grey?”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, aware of his amusement, turned an unresentful glance upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“No, don’t think me merely brutally dominant. I really like her. I only
-want to use her to the best advantage.”</p>
-
-<p>At this he broke into a laugh. “Not brutally dominant, I know; but I’m
-sorry for Miss Grey.”</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Grey can well take care of herself, I assure you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What else has gone wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>Again Eppie chose something less wrong to show him. “The factory where
-some of my club-girls work has shut down half of its machinery. There
-will be a great deal of suffering. And we have pulled them above a
-flippant acceptance of state relief.”</p>
-
-<p>“And because you have pulled them up, they are to suffer more?”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly, if you choose to put it so,” said Eppie.<a name="page_209" id="page_209"></a></p>
-
-<p>He saw that she had determined that he should not frighten her again,
-or, at all events, that he should never see it if he did frighten her;
-and he had himself determined that his mist should never again close
-round her. She should not see, even if she guessed at it pretty clearly,
-the interpretation that he put upon the afternoon’s frictions and
-failures, and, on the plane of a matter-of-fact agreement as to
-practice, he drew her on to talk of her factory-girls, of the standards
-of wages, the organization of woman’s labor, so that she presently said,
-“What a pleasure it is to hear you talking sense, Gavan!”</p>
-
-<p>“You have heard me talk a great deal of nonsense, I’m sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“A great deal. Worse than Basil Mayburn’s.”</p>
-
-<p>“I saw too clearly to-day the sorry figure I must have cut in your eyes.
-I have learned to hold my tongue. When one can only say things that
-sound particularly silly that is an obvious duty.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad to hear you use the word, my dear Gavan; use it, even though
-it means nothing to you. <i>Glissez mortel, n’appuyez pas</i> should be your
-motto for a time; then, after some wholesome skating about on what seems
-the deceptive, glittering surface of things you will find, perhaps, that
-it isn’t an abyss the ice stretches over, but a firm meadow, the ice
-melted off it and no more need of skates.”</p>
-
-<p>He was quite willing that she should so see his case; he was easier to
-live with, no doubt, on this assumption of his curability.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, still leaning back, still with folded arms, had once more closed
-her eyes, involuntarily sighing,<a name="page_210" id="page_210"></a> as though under her own words the
-haunting echo of the abyss had sounded for her.</p>
-
-<p>She had not yet shown him what the real trouble was, and he asked her
-now, in this second lull of their talk, “What else is there besides the
-factory-girls and Miss Grey?”</p>
-
-<p>She was silent for a moment, then said, “You guess that there is
-something else.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can see it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you are sorry?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry, dear Eppie? Of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a child, a cripple,” said Eppie. “It had been ill for a long time,
-but we thought that we could save it. It died this morning. I didn’t
-know. I didn’t get there in time. I only found out after leaving you
-this afternoon. And it cried for me.” She had turned her head from him
-as it leaned against the chair, but he saw the tears slowly rolling down
-her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“I am so sorry, dear Eppie,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“The most darling child, Gavan.” His grave pity had brought him near and
-it gave her relief to speak. “It had such a wistful, dear little face. I
-used to spend hours with it; I never cared for any child so much. What I
-can’t bear is to think that it cried for me.” Her voice broke. Without a
-trace, now, of impulse or glamour, he took her hand, repeating his
-helpless phrase of sympathy. Yes, he thought, while she wept, here was
-the fatal flaw in any Tolstoian half-way house that promised peace. Love
-for others didn’t help their suffering; suffering with them didn’t stop
-it. Here was the brute fact of life that<a name="page_211" id="page_211"></a> to all peace-mongers sternly
-said, Where there is love there is no peace.</p>
-
-<p>It was only after her hand had long lain in his fraternal clasp that she
-drew it away, drying her tears and trying to smile her thanks at him.
-Looking before her into the fire, and back into a retrospect of sadness,
-she said: “How often you and I meet death together, Gavan. The poor
-monkey, and Bobbie, and Elspeth even, ought to count.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must think of me and death together,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>He felt in a moment that the words had for her some significance that he
-had not intended. In her silence was a shock, and in her voice, when she
-spoke, a startled thing determinedly quieted.</p>
-
-<p>“Not more than you must think of me and it together.”</p>
-
-<p>“You and death, dear Eppie! You are its very antithesis!”</p>
-
-<p>She did not look at him, and he could not see her eyes, but he knew,
-with the almost uncanny intuition that he so often had in regard to her,
-that a rising strength, a strength that threatened something, strove
-with a sudden terror.</p>
-
-<p>“Life conquers death,” she said at last.</p>
-
-<p>He armed himself with lightness. “Of course, dear Eppie,” he said; “of
-course it does; always and always. The poor baby dies, and&mdash;I wonder how
-many other babies are being born at this moment? Conquers death? I
-should think it did!”</p>
-
-<p>“I did not mean in that way,” she answered. She<a name="page_212" id="page_212"></a> had risen, and, looking
-at the clock, seemed to show him that their time was over. “But we won’t
-discuss life and death now,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that it’s late and that I must go?” he smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I mean only that I don’t want to discuss,” she smiled back.
-“Though&mdash;yes, indeed, it is late; almost seven. I have a great many
-things to do this evening, so that I must rest before dinner, and let
-you go.”</p>
-
-<p>“I may come again?”</p>
-
-<p>“Whenever you will. Thank you for being so kind to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kind, dear Eppie?”</p>
-
-<p>“For being sorry, I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who but a brute would not have been?”</p>
-
-<p>“And you are not a brute.”</p>
-
-<p>The shaded light cast soft upward shadows on her face, revealing sweet
-oddities of expression. In their shadow he could not fathom her eyes;
-but a tenderness, peaceful, benignant, even a recovered gaiety, hovered
-on her brow, her upper lip, her cheeks. It was like a reflection of
-sunlight in a deep pool, this dim smiling of gratitude and gaiety.</p>
-
-<p>He had a queer feeling, and a profounder one than in their former moment
-when she had repudiated his helpless emotion, that she spared him, that
-she restrained some force that might break upon this fraternal nearness.
-For an instant he wondered if he wanted to be spared, and with the
-wonder was once more the wrench at leaving her there, alone, in her
-fire-lit room. But it was her strength that carried<a name="page_213" id="page_213"></a> them over all these
-dubious undercurrents, and he so relied on it that, holding her hand in
-good-by, he said, “I will come soon. I like it here.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you are coming to Kirklands this summer. Uncle expects it. You
-mustn’t disappoint him, and me. I shall be there for a month.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jim Grainger will be there, too. You remember Jim. You can fight with
-him from morning till night, but you and I will fight about nothing,
-absolutely nothing, Gavan. We will&mdash;<i>glisser</i>. We will talk about Goya!
-We will be perfectly comfortable.”</p>
-
-<p>He really believed that they might be, so happily convincing was her
-tone.</p>
-
-<p>“Grainger is a great chum of yours, isn’t he?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“You remember, he and his brother were old playmates; Clarence has
-turned out a poor creature; he’s a nobody in the church. I’m very fond
-of Jim. And I admire him tremendously. He is the conquering type, you
-know&mdash;the type that tries for the high grapes.”</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t set him at me, to mangle me for your recreation?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do I seem such a pitiless person?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it would be for my good, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“You may come with no fear of manglings. You sha’n’t be worried or
-reformed.”</p>
-
-<p>They had spoken as if the captain were non-existent, but Gavan put the
-only qualifying touch to his assurance of seeing her at Kirklands. “I’ll
-come&mdash;if I can get there by then.<a name="page_214" id="page_214"></a>”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="XII-2" id="XII-2"></a>XII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00b.png"
-width="75"
-height="77"
-alt="B"
-title="B"
-/></span>UT he did not go to her again in the slums. The final phases of his
-father’s long illness kept him in Surrey, and he found, on thinking it
-over, that he was content to rest in the peace of that last seeing of
-her.</p>
-
-<p>It was clear to him that, were it not for that paralysis of the heart
-and will, he would have been her lover. Like a veiled, exquisite
-picture, the impossible love was with him always; he could lift the veil
-and look upon it with calmness. That he owed something of this calmness
-to Eppie he well knew. She loved him,&mdash;that, too, was evident,&mdash;but as a
-sister might love, perhaps as a mother might. He was her child, her sick
-child or brother, and he smiled over the simile, well content, and with
-an odd sense of safety in his assurance. Peace was to be their final
-word, and in the long months of a still, hot summer, this soft,
-persistent note of peace was with him and filled a lassitude greater
-than any he had known.</p>
-
-<p>Monotonously the days went by like darkly<a name="page_215" id="page_215"></a> freighted boats on a sultry
-sea&mdash;low-lying boats, sliding with the current under sleepy sails.</p>
-
-<p>He watched consciousness fade from his father’s body and found strange,
-sly analogies (they were like horrid nudges in the dark)&mdash;with his
-mother’s death, the worthless man, the saintly woman, mingling in the
-sameness of their ending, the pitifulness, after all, of the final
-insignificance that overtook them both. And so glassy was the current,
-so sleepy the wind, that the analogy shook hardly a tremor of pain
-through him.</p>
-
-<p>In the hour of his father’s death, a more trivial memory came&mdash;trivial,
-yet it lent a pathos, even a dignity, to the dying man. In the captain’s
-eyes, turned wonderingly on him, in the automatic stretching out of his
-wasted hand for his,&mdash;Gavan held it to the end&mdash;was the reminiscence of
-the poor monkey’s far-away death, the little tropical creature that had
-drooped and died at Kirklands.</p>
-
-<p>On the day of the funeral, Gavan sat in the library at dusk, and the
-lassitude had become so deep, partly through the breakdown of sheer
-exhaustion, that the thought of going on watching his own machinery
-work&mdash;toward that same end,&mdash;the end of the monkey, of his father, his
-mother,&mdash;was profoundly disgusting.</p>
-
-<p>It was a positively physical disgust, a nausea of fatigue, that had
-overtaken him as he watched the rooks, above the dark yet gilded woods,
-wheel against a sunset sky.</p>
-
-<p>Almost automatically, with no sense of choice or effort, he had unlocked
-a drawer of the writing-table<a name="page_216" id="page_216"></a> beside him and taken out a case of
-pistols, merely wondering if the machine were going to take the final
-and only logical move of stopping itself.</p>
-
-<p>He was a little interested to observe, as he opened the case, that he
-felt no emotion at all. He had quite expected that at such a last moment
-life would concentrate, gather itself for a final leap on him, a final
-clinging. He had expected to have a bout with the elemental, the thing
-that some men called faith in life and some only desire of life, and,
-indeed, for a moment, his mind wandered in vague, Buddhistic fancies
-about the wheel of life to which all desire bound one, desire, the
-creator of life, so that as long as the individual felt any pulse of it
-life might always suck him back into the vortex. The fancy gave him his
-one stir of uneasiness. Suppose that the act of departure were but the
-final act of will. Could it be that such self-affirmation might tie him
-still to the wheel he strove to escape, and might the drama still go on
-for his unwilling spirit in some other dress of flesh? To see the fear
-as the final bout was to quiet it; it was a fear symptomatic of life, a
-lure to keep him going; and, besides, how meaningless such surmises, on
-their ethical basis of voluntary choice, as if in the final decision one
-would not be, as always, the puppet of the underlying will. His mind
-dropped from the thread-like interlacing of teasing metaphysical
-conjecture to a calm as quiet and deep as though he were about to turn
-on his pillow and fall asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Now, like the visions in a dreamy brain, the memories of the day trooped
-through the emptiness of<a name="page_217" id="page_217"></a> thought. He was aware, while he watched the
-visions, of himself sitting there, to a spectator a tragic or a morbid
-figure. Morbid was of course the word that a frightened or merely stupid
-humanity would cast at him. And very morbid he was, to be sure, if life
-were desirable and to cease to desire it abnormal.</p>
-
-<p>He saw himself no longer in either guise. He was looking now at his
-father’s coffin lowered into the earth of the little churchyard beside
-his mother’s grave; the fat, genial face of the sexton, the decorous
-sadness on the little rector’s features. Overhead had been the quietly
-stirring elms; sheep grazed beyond the churchyard wall and on the
-horizon was the pastoral blue of distant hills. He saw the raw, new
-grave and the heave of the older grave’s green sod, the old stone, with
-its embroidery of yellow lichen and its text of eternal faith.</p>
-
-<p>And suddenly the thought of that heave of sod, that headstone, what it
-stood for in his life, the tragic memory, the love, the agony,&mdash;all
-sinking into mere dust, into the same dust as the father whom he had
-hated,&mdash;struck with such unendurable anguish upon him that, as if under
-heavy churchyard sod a long-dead heart strove up in a tormented
-resurrection, life rushed appallingly upon him and, involuntarily, as a
-drowning man’s hand seizes a spar and clings, his hand closed on the
-pistol under it. Leave it, leave it,&mdash;this dream where such
-resurrections were possible.</p>
-
-<p>He had lifted the pistol, pausing for a moment in an uncertainty as to
-whether head or heart were the<a name="page_218" id="page_218"></a> surer exit, when a quiet step at the
-door arrested him.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I bring the lamps, sir?” asked Howson’s quiet voice.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan could but admire his own deftness in tossing a newspaper over the
-pistol. He found himself perfectly prepared to keep up the last
-appearances. He said that he didn’t want the lamps yet and that Howson
-could leave the curtains undrawn. “It’s sultry this evening,” he added.</p>
-
-<p>“It is, sir; I expect we’ll have thunder in the night,” said Howson,
-whose voice partook of the day’s decorous gloom. He had brought in the
-evening mail and laid the letters and newspapers beside Gavan, slightly
-pushing aside the covered pistol to make room for them, an action that
-Gavan observed with some intentness. But Howson saw nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Left alone again, Gavan, not moving in his chair, glanced at the letters
-and papers neatly piled beside his elbow.</p>
-
-<p>After the rending agony of that moment of hideous realization, when, in
-every fiber, he had felt his own woeful humanity, an odd sleepiness
-almost overcame him.</p>
-
-<p>He felt much more like going to sleep than killing himself, and,
-yawning, stretching, he shivered a little from sheer fatigue.</p>
-
-<p>The edge of the newspaper that covered the pistol was weighted down by
-the pile of papers, and in putting out his hand for it, automatically,
-he pushed the letters aside, then, yawning again, picked them up instead
-of the pistol. He glanced over the envelops,<a name="page_219" id="page_219"></a> not opening them,&mdash;the
-last hand at cards, that could hold no trumps for him. It was with as
-mechanical an interest as that of the condemned criminal who, on the way
-to the scaffold, turns his head to look at some unfamiliar sight. But at
-the last letter he paused. The post-mark was Scotch; the writing was
-Eppie’s.</p>
-
-<p>He might have considered at that moment that the shock he felt was a
-warning that life was by no means done with him, and that his way of
-safety lay in swift retreat.</p>
-
-<p>But after the wrench of agony and the succeeding sliding languor, he did
-not consider anything. It was like a purely physical sensation, what he
-felt, as he held the letter and looked at Eppie’s writing. Soft,
-recurrent thrills went through him, as though a living, vibrating thing
-were in his hands. Eppie; Kirklands; the heather under a summer sky. Was
-it desire, or a will-less drifting with a new current that the new
-vision brought? He could not have told.</p>
-
-<p>He opened the letter and read Eppie’s matter-of-fact yet delicate
-sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>He must be worn out. She begged him to remember his promise and to come
-to them at once.</p>
-
-<p>At once, thought Gavan. It must be that, indeed, or not at all. He
-glanced at the clock. He could really go at once. He could catch the
-London train, the night express for Scotland, and he could be at
-Kirklands at noon next day. He rose and rang the bell, looking out at
-the darker pink of the sky, where the rooks no longer wheeled, until
-Howson appeared.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to Scotland to-night, at once.” He<a name="page_220" id="page_220"></a> found himself repeating
-the summons of the letter. “Pack up my things. Order the trap.”</p>
-
-<p>Howson showed no surprise. A flight from the house of death was only
-natural.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, when he was gone, went to the table and closed the box of pistols
-with a short, decisive snap&mdash;a decision in sharp contrast to the mist in
-which his mind was steeped.</p>
-
-<p>The peace the pistols promised, the peace of the northern sky and the
-heather: why did he choose the latter? But then he did not choose.
-Something had chosen for him. Something had called him back. Was it that
-he was too weary to resist? or did all his strength consist in yielding?
-He could not have told. Let the play go on. Its next act would be sweet
-to watch. Of that he was sure.<a name="page_221" id="page_221"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="PART_III" id="PART_III"></a>PART III</h2>
-
-<p><a name="page_222" id="page_222"></a></p>
-
-<p><a name="page_223" id="page_223"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="I-3" id="I-3"></a>I</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00t.png"
-width="75"
-height="80"
-alt="T"
-title="T"
-/></span>HE moor was like an amethyst under a radiant August sky, and the air,
-with its harmony of wind and sunlight, was like music.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie walked beside him and Peter trotted before. The forms were
-changed, but it might almost have been little Eppie, the boy Gavan, and
-Robbie himself who went together through the heather. The form was
-changed, but the sense of saneness so strong that it would have seemed
-perfectly natural to pass an arm about a child Eppie’s neck and to talk
-of the morning’s reading in the Odyssey.</p>
-
-<p>Never had the feeling of reality been so vague or the dream sense been
-so beautiful. His instinctive choice of this peace, instead of the
-other, had been altogether justified. It was all like a delightful game
-they had agreed to play, and the only rule of the game was to take each
-other’s illusions for granted and, in so doing, to put them altogether
-aside.</p>
-
-<p>It was as if they went in a dream that tallied while, outside their
-dream, the sad life of waking slept. It was all limpid, all effortless,
-all clear sunlight and clear wind: limpid, like a happy dream,<a name="page_224" id="page_224"></a> yet
-deliciously muddled too, as a happy dream is often muddled, with its
-mazed consciousness that, since it is a dream, ordinary impossibilities
-may become quite possible, that one only has to direct a little the
-turnings of the fairy-tale to have them lead one where one will, and yet
-that to all strange happenings there hovers a background of
-contradiction that makes them the more of an enchanted perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>In the old white house the general and Miss Barbara would soon be
-expecting them back to tea, both older, both vaguer, both, to Gavan’s
-appreciation, more and more the tapestried figures, the background to
-the young life that still moved, felt, thought in the foreground until
-it, too, should sink and fade into a tapestry for other dramas, other
-fairy-tales.</p>
-
-<p>The general retold his favorite anecdotes with shorter intervals between
-the tellings; cared more openly, with an innocent greediness, about the
-exactitudes of his diet; was content to sit idly with an unremembering,
-indifferent benignancy of gaze. All the sturdier significances of life
-were fast slipping from him, all the old martial activities; it was like
-seeing the undressing of a child, the laying aside of the toy trumpet
-and the soldier’s kilt preparatory to bed. Miss Barbara was sweeter than
-ever&mdash;a sweetness even less touched with variations than last year. And
-she was sillier, poor old darling; her laugh had in it at moments the
-tinkling, feeble foolishness of age.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan saw it all imperturbably&mdash;how, in boyhood, the apprehension of it
-would have cut into him!&mdash;and it all seemed really very good&mdash;as the
-furniture<a name="page_225" id="page_225"></a> to a fairy-tale; the sweet, dim, silly tapestry was part of
-the peace. How Eppie saw it he didn’t know; he didn’t care; and she
-seemed willing not to care, either, about what he saw or thought. Eppie
-had for him in their fairy-tale all the unexacting loveliness of summer
-nature, healing, sunny, smiling. He had been really ill, he knew that
-now, and that the peace was in part the languor of convalescence, and,
-for the sake of his recovery, she seemed to have become a part of
-nature, to ask no questions and demand no dues.</p>
-
-<p>To have her so near, so tender, so untroubling, was like holding in his
-hands a soft, contented wild bird. He could, he thought, have held it
-against his heart, and the heart would not have throbbed the faster.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing in her now of the young Valkyrie of mists and frosts,
-shaking spears and facing tragedy with stern eyes. She threatened
-nothing. She saw no tragedy. It was all again as if, in a bigger, more
-beautiful way, she gave him milk to drink from a silver cup. Together
-they drank, no potion, no enchanted, perilous potion, but, from the cup
-of innocent summer days, the long, sweet dream of an Eternal Now.</p>
-
-<p>To-day, for the first time, the hint of a cloud had crept into the sky.</p>
-
-<p>“And to-morrow, Eppie, ends our tête-à-tête,” he said. “Or will Grainger
-make as little of a third as the general and Miss Barbara?”</p>
-
-<p>“He sha’n’t spoil things, if that’s what you mean,” said Eppie.</p>
-
-<p>She wore a white dress and a white hat wreathed<a name="page_226" id="page_226"></a> with green; the emerald
-drops trembled in the shadow of her hair. She made him think of some
-wandering princess in an Irish legend, with the white and green and the
-tranquil shining of her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Not our things, perhaps; but can’t he interfere with them? He will want
-to talk with you about all the things we go on so happily without
-talking of.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll talk to him and go on happily with you.”</p>
-
-<p>It was almost on his lips to ask her if she could marry Grainger and
-still go on happily, like this, with him, Gavan. That it should have
-seemed possible to ask it showed how far into fairy-land they had
-wandered; but it was one of the turnings that one didn’t choose to take;
-one was warned in one’s sleep of lurking dangers on that road. It might
-lead one straight out of fairy-land, straight into uncomfortable waking.</p>
-
-<p>“How happily we do go on, Eppie,” was what he did choose to say. “More
-happily than ever before. What a contrast this&mdash;to East London.”</p>
-
-<p>She glanced at him. “And to Surrey.”</p>
-
-<p>“And to Surrey,” he accepted.</p>
-
-<p>“Surrey was worse than East London,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know how much of a strain it had been until I got away from
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“One saw it all in your face.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘One’ meaning a clever Eppie, I suppose. But, yes, I had a bad moment
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>The memory of that heave of sod had no place in fairy-land, even less
-place than the forecast of an Eppie married to Jim Grainger, and he
-didn’t let<a name="page_227" id="page_227"></a> his thought dwell on it even when he owned to the bad
-moment, and he was thinking, really with amusement over her
-unconsciousness, of the two means of escape from it that he had found to
-his hand,&mdash;the pistol and her letter,&mdash;when she took up his words with a
-quiet, “Yes, I knew you had.”</p>
-
-<p>“Knew that I had had a strain, you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, had a bad moment,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p>“You saw it in my face?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I knew. Before I saw you.”</p>
-
-<p>He smiled at her. “You have a clairvoyant streak in your Scotch blood?”</p>
-
-<p>She smiled back. “Probably. I knew, you see.”</p>
-
-<p>Her assurance, with its calm over what it knew, really puzzled him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what did you know?”</p>
-
-<p>She had kept on quietly smiling while she looked at him, and, though she
-now became grave, it was not as if for pain but for thankfulness. “It
-was in the evening, the day after I wrote to you, the day your father
-was buried. I went to my room to dress for dinner, my room next yours,
-you know. And I was looking out,&mdash;at the pine-tree, the summer-house
-where we played, and, in especial, I remember, at the white roses that I
-could smell in the evening so distinctly,&mdash;when I knew, or saw, I don’t
-know which, that you were in great suffering. It was most of all as if I
-were in you, feeling it myself, rather than seeing or knowing. Then,”
-her voice went on in its unshaken quiet, “I did seem to see&mdash;a grave;
-not your father’s grave. You were seeing it, too,&mdash;a green grave. And
-then I came back into myself and<a name="page_228" id="page_228"></a> knew. You were in some way,&mdash;going. I
-stood there and looked at the roses and seemed only to wait intensely,
-to watch intensely. And after that came a great calm, and I knew that
-you were not going.”</p>
-
-<p>She quietly looked at him again,&mdash;her eyes had not been on him while she
-spoke,&mdash;and, though he had paled a little, he looked as quietly back.</p>
-
-<p>He found himself accepting, almost as a matter of course, this deep,
-subconscious bond between them.</p>
-
-<p>But in another moment, another realization came. He took her hand and
-raised it to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>“I always make you suffer.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” she answered, though she, now, was a little pale, “I didn’t
-suffer. I was beyond, above all that. Whatever happened, we were really
-safe. That was another thing I knew.”</p>
-
-<p>He relinquished the kissed hand. “Dear Eppie, dear, dear Eppie, I am
-glad that this happened.”</p>
-
-<p>It had been, perhaps, to keep the dream safely around them that she had
-shown him only the calm; for now she asked, and he felt the echo of that
-suffering&mdash;that shared suffering&mdash;in it, “You had, then, chosen to go?”</p>
-
-<p>Somehow he knew that they were safe in the littler sense, that she would
-keep the dream unawakened, even if they spoke of the outside life.
-“Yes,” he said, “you saw what was happening to me, Eppie. I had chosen
-to go. But your letter came, and, instead, I chose to come to you.”</p>
-
-<p>She asked no further question, walking beside him with all her
-tranquillity.<a name="page_229" id="page_229"></a></p>
-
-<p>But, to her, it was not in a second childhood, not in a fairy-tale, that
-they went. She was tranquil, for him; a child, for him; healing,
-unexacting nature, for him. But she knew she had not needed his
-admission to know it, that it was life and death that went together.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes, as they walked, the whole glory of the day melted into a
-phantasmagoria, unreal, specious, beside the intense reality of their
-unspoken thoughts, his thoughts and hers; those thoughts that left them
-only this little strip of fairy-land where they could meet in peace.
-Thoughts only, not dislikes, not indifferences, sundered them. Their
-natures, through all nature’s gamut, chimed; they looked upon each
-other&mdash;when in fairy-land&mdash;with eyes of love. But above this accord was
-a region where her human breath froze in an icy airlessness, where her
-human flesh shattered itself against ghastly precipices. To see those
-thoughts of Gavan’s was like having the lunar landscape suddenly glare
-at one through a telescope. His thoughts and hers were as real as life
-and death; they alone were real; only&mdash;and this was why, under its
-burden, Eppie’s heart throbbed more deeply, more strongly,&mdash;only, life
-conquered death. No, more still,&mdash;for so the strange evening vision had
-borne its speechless, sightless witness,&mdash;life had already conquered
-death. She had not needed him to tell her that, either.</p>
-
-<p>And these days were life; not the dream he thought them, not the
-fairy-tale, but balmy dawn stealing in, fresh, revivifying, upon his
-long, arctic<a name="page_230" id="page_230"></a> night; the flush of spring over the lunar landscape. So
-she saw it with her eyes of faith.</p>
-
-<p>The mother was strong in her. She could bide her time. She could see
-death near him and, so that he should not see her fear, smile at him.
-She could play games with him, and wait.<a name="page_231" id="page_231"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="II-3" id="II-3"></a>II</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00j.png"
-width="79"
-height="76"
-alt="J"
-title="J"
-/></span>IM GRAINGER arrived that evening, and Gavan was able to observe, at the
-closest sort of quarters, his quondam rival.</p>
-
-<p>His condition was so obvious that its very indifference to observation
-took everybody into its confidence. Nobody counted with Mr. Grainger
-except his cousin, and since he held open before her eyes&mdash;with angry
-constancy, gloomy patience&mdash;the page of his devotion, the rest of the
-company were almost forced to read with her. One couldn’t see Mr.
-Grainger without seeing that page.</p>
-
-<p>He held it open, but the period of construing had evidently passed. All
-that there was to understand she understood long since, so that he was,
-for the most part, silent.</p>
-
-<p>In Eppie’s presence he would wander aimlessly about, look with an oddly
-irate, unseeing eye at books or pictures, and fling himself into deep
-chairs, where he sat, his arms folded in a sort of clutch, his head bent
-forward, gazing at her with an air of dogged, somber resolve.</p>
-
-<p>He was not by nature so taciturn. It was amusing to see the vehemence of
-reaction that would overtake<a name="page_232" id="page_232"></a> him in the smoking-room, where his
-volubility became almost as overbearing and oppressive as his silences.</p>
-
-<p>He was a man at once impatient and self-controlled. His face was all
-made up of short, resolute lines. His nose, chopped off at the tip; his
-lips, curled yet compressed; the energetic modeling of his brows with
-their muscular protuberances; the clefted chin; the crest of chestnut
-hair,&mdash;all expressed a wilful abruptness, an arrested force, the more
-vehement for its repression.</p>
-
-<p>And at present his appearance accurately expressed him as a determined
-but exasperated lover.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” Miss Barbara said, in whispered confidence to Gavan,
-mingled pity and reprobation in her voice, “as her cousin he comes when
-he wishes to do so. But she has refused him twice already&mdash;he told me so
-himself; and, simply, he will not accept it. He only spoke of it once,
-and it was quite distressing. It really grieved me to hear him. He said
-that he would hang on till one or the other of them was dead.”
-Grainger’s words in Miss Barbara’s voice were the more pathetic for
-their incongruity.</p>
-
-<p>“And you don’t think she will have him,&mdash;if he does hang on?” Gavan
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barbara glanced at him with a soft, scared look, as though his
-easy, colloquial question had turned a tawdry light on some tender,
-twilight dreaming of her own.</p>
-
-<p>He had wondered, anew of late, what Miss Barbara did think about him and
-Eppie, and what she<a name="page_233" id="page_233"></a> had thought he now saw in her eyes, that showed
-their little shock, as at some rather graceless piece of pretence. He
-was quite willing that she should think him pretending, and quite
-willing that she should place him in Grainger’s hopeless category, if
-future events would be most easily so interpreted for her; so that he
-remained silent, as if over his relief, when she assured him, “Oh, I am
-sure not. Eppie does not change her mind.”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger’s presence, for all its ineffectuality, thus witnessed to by
-Miss Barbara, was as menacing to peace and sunshine as a huge
-thunder-cloud that suddenly heaves itself up from the horizon and hangs
-over a darkened landscape. But Eppie ignored the thunder-cloud; and,
-hanging over fairy-land, it became as merely decorative as an enchanted
-giant tethered at a safe distance and almost amusing in his huge
-helplessness.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie continued to give most of her time to Gavan, coloring her manner
-with something of a hospital nurse’s air of devotion to an obvious duty,
-and leaving Grainger largely to the general’s care while she and Gavan
-sat reading for hours in the shade of the birch-woods.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger often came upon them so; Eppie in her white dress, her hat cast
-aside, a book open upon her knees, and Gavan, in his white flannels,
-lying beside her, frail and emaciated, not looking at her,&mdash;Grainger
-seldom saw him look at her,&mdash;but down at the heather that he softly
-pulled and wrenched at. They were as beautiful, seen thus together, as
-any fairy-tale couple; flakes of gold wavering over their<a name="page_234" id="page_234"></a> whiteness,
-the golden day all about their illumined shade, and rivulets from the
-sea of purple that surrounded them running in among the birches, making
-purple pools and eddies.</p>
-
-<p>Very beautiful, very strange, very pathetic, with all their serenity;
-even the unimaginative Grainger so felt them when, emerging from the
-gold and purple, he would pause before them, swinging his stick and
-eying them oddly, like people in a fairy-tale upon whom some strange
-enchantment rested. One might imagine&mdash;but Grainger’s imagination never
-took him so far&mdash;that they would always sit there among the birches,
-spellbound in their peace, their smiling, magic peace.</p>
-
-<p>“Come and listen to Faust, Jim. We are polishing up our German,” Eppie
-would cheerfully suggest; but Grainger, remarking that he had none to
-polish, would pass on, carrying the memory of Gavan’s impassive, upward
-glance at him and the meaning in Eppie’s eyes&mdash;eyes in which, yes, he
-was sure of it, and it was there he felt the pathos, some consciousness
-seemed at once to hide from and to challenge him.</p>
-
-<p>“Is he ill, your young Palairet?” he asked her one day, when they were
-alone together in the library. His rare references to his own emotions
-made the old, cousinly intimacy a frequent meeting-ground.</p>
-
-<p>He noticed that a faint color drifted into Eppie’s cheek when he named
-Gavan.</p>
-
-<p>“He is as old as you are, Jim,” she remarked.<a name="page_235" id="page_235"></a></p>
-
-<p>“He looks like a person to be taken care of, all the same.”</p>
-
-<p>“He has been ill. He took care of some one else, as it happens. He
-nursed his father for months.”</p>
-
-<p>“Um,” Grainger gave an inarticulate grunt, “just about what he’s fit
-for, isn’t it? to help dying people out of the world.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie received this in silence, and he went on: “He looks rather like a
-priest, or a poet&mdash;something decorative and useless.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would you call Buddha decorative and useless?”</p>
-
-<p>“After all, Palairet isn’t a Hindoo. One expects something more normal
-from a white man.”</p>
-
-<p>His odd penetration was hurting her, but she laughed at his complacent
-Anglo-Saxondom. “If you want a white man, what do you make of the one
-who wrote the Imitation?”</p>
-
-<p>“Make of him? Nothing. Nor any one else, I fancy. What does your young
-Palairet do?” Grainger brought the subject firmly back from her
-digression.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie was sitting in the window-seat, and, leaning her head back, framed
-in an arabesque of creepers, she now owned, after a little pause, and as
-if with a weariness of evasion she was willing to let him see as she
-did: “Nothing, really.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does he care about anything?” Grainger placed himself opposite her,
-folding his arms with an air of determined inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>And again Eppie owned, “He believes in nothing, so how can he care?<a name="page_236" id="page_236"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“Believes in nothing? What do you mean by that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” with a real sense of amusement over the inner icy weight, she
-was ready to put it in its crudest, most inclusive terms, “he doesn’t
-believe in immortality.”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger stared, taken aback by the ingenuous avowal.</p>
-
-<p>“Immortality? No more do I,” he retorted.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, you do,” said Eppie, looking not at him but out at the summer
-sky. “You believe in life and so you do believe in immortality, even
-though you don’t know that you do. You are, like most energetic people,
-too much preoccupied with living to know what your life means, that’s
-all.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear child,”&mdash;Grainger was fond of this form of appellation, an
-outlet for the pent-up forces of his baffled tenderness,&mdash;“any one who
-is alive finds life worth while without a Paradise to complete it, and
-any one who isn’t a coward doesn’t turn from it because it’s also
-unhappy.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you think that Gavan does that you mistake the very essence of his
-skepticism, or, if you like to call it so, of his faith. It’s not
-because he finds it unhappy that he turns from it, but because he finds
-it meaningless.”</p>
-
-<p>“Meaningless?&mdash;a place where one can work, achieve, love, suffer?”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger jerked out the words from an underlying growl of protest.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie now looked from the sky to him, her unconscious ally. “Dear old
-Jim, I like to hear you.<a name="page_237" id="page_237"></a> You’ve got it, all. Every word you say implies
-immortality. It’s all a question of being conscious of one’s real needs
-and then of trusting them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Life, here, now, could satisfy my needs,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>She kept her eyes on his, at this, for a grave moment, letting it have
-its full stress as she took it up with, “Could it? With death at the end
-of it?” and without waiting for his answer she passed from the personal
-moment. “You said that life was worth while, and you meant, I suppose,
-that it was worth while because we were capable of making it good rather
-than evil.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, of course,” said Grainger.</p>
-
-<p>“And a real choice between good and evil is only possible to a real
-identity, you’ll own?”</p>
-
-<p>“If you are going to talk metaphysics I’ll cut and run, I warn you.
-Socratic methods of tripping one up always infuriate me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m only trying to talk common-sense.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, go on. I agree to what you say of a real identity. We’ve that, of
-course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, can an identity destroyed at death by the destruction of
-the body be called real? It can’t, Jim. It’s either only a result of the
-body, a merely materialistic phenomenon, or else it is a transient,
-unreal aspect of some supremely real World-Self and its good and its
-evil just as fated by that Self’s way of thinking it as the color of its
-hair and eyes is fated by nature. And if that were so the sense of
-freedom, of identity, that gives us our only sanction for goodness,
-truth, and worth, would be a mere illusion.<a name="page_238" id="page_238"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>Her earnestness, as she worked it out for him, held his eyes more than
-her words his thoughts. He was observing her with such a softening of
-expression as rarely showed itself on his virile countenance.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve thought it all out, haven’t you?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve tried to. Knowing Gavan has made me. It has converted me,” she
-smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“So that’s your conversion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, more than that. I know that I’m <i>in</i> life; <i>for</i> it, and that’s
-more than all such reasoning.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you believe that you’ll go on forever as you are now,” he said. His
-eyes dwelt on her: “Young and beautiful.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Forever</i>; what queer words we must use to try to express it. We are in
-Forever now. It’s just that one casts in one’s lot, open-eyed, with
-life.”</p>
-
-<p>“And has Palairet cast in his with death?”</p>
-
-<p>Again the change of color was in her cheek, but it was to pallor now.</p>
-
-<p>“He thinks so.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he doesn’t frighten you?”</p>
-
-<p>She armed herself to smile over Gavan’s old question. “Why should he?”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger left her for some moments of aimless, silent wandering. He came
-back and paused again before her. He did not answer her.</p>
-
-<p>“I throw in my lot with life, too, Eppie,” he said, “and I ask no more
-of it than the here and the now of our human affair. But that I do ask
-with all my might, and if might can give it to me, I’ll get it.<a name="page_239" id="page_239"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at him gravely, without challenge, with a sympathy too
-deep for pity.</p>
-
-<p>“At all events,” he added slowly, “at all events, in so far, our lots
-are cast together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” she assented.</p>
-
-<p>His eyes studied hers; his keen mind questioned itself: Could a woman
-look so steadily, with such a clear, untroubled sympathy, upon such a
-love as his, were there no great emotion within her, controlling her,
-absorbing her, making her indifferent to all lesser appeals? Had this
-negative, this aimless, this ambiguous man, captured, without any fight
-for it, her strong, her reckless heart? So he questioned, while Eppie
-still answered his gaze with eyes that showed him nothing but their
-grave, deep friendship.</p>
-
-<p>“So it’s a contest between life and death?” he said at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Between me and Gavan you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>The shield of their personal question had dropped from her again, and
-the quick flush was in her cheek.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I come into it, too,” he ventured.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t, in any way, depend on it, Jim.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you say.” His eyes still mercilessly perused her. “That remains to
-be seen. If you lose, perhaps I shall come into it.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie found no answer.<a name="page_240" id="page_240"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="III-3" id="III-3"></a>III</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00i.png"
-width="76"
-height="75"
-alt="I"
-title="I"
-/></span>T was night, and Eppie, Gavan, and Jim Grainger were on the lawn before
-the house waiting for a display of fireworks.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger was feeling sore for his own shutting-out from the happy
-child-world of games and confidences that the other two inhabited, for
-it had been to Gavan that she had spoken of her love for fireworks and
-he who had at once sent for them.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger was sore and his heart heavy, and not only it seemed to him, on
-his own account. Since the encounter in the library there had been a
-veil between him and Eppie, and through it he seemed to see her face as
-waiting the oncoming of some unknown fate. Grainger could not feel that
-fate, whatever the form it took, as a happy one.</p>
-
-<p>She stood between them now, in her white dress, wrapped around with a
-long, white Chinese shawl, and the light from the open window behind
-them fell upon her hair, her neck, her shoulders, and the shawl’s soft,
-thick embroideries that were like frozen milk.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan and Grainger leaned against the deep creepers of the old walls,
-Gavan’s cigarette a steady<a name="page_241" id="page_241"></a> little point of light, the glow of
-Grainger’s pipe, as he puffed, coming and going in sharp pulses of
-color.</p>
-
-<p>Aunt Barbara sat within at the open window, and beyond the gates, at the
-edge of the moor, the general and the gardener, dark figures fitfully
-revealed by the light of lanterns, superintended the preparations.</p>
-
-<p>The moment was like that in which one watches a poised orchestra, in
-which one waits, tense and expectant, for the fall of the conductor’s
-bâton and for the first, sweeping note.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to break upon the stillness, sound made visible, when the
-herald rocket soared up from the dark earth, up to the sky of stars.</p>
-
-<p>Bizarre, exquisite, glorious, it caught one’s breath with the swiftness,
-the strength, the shining, of its long, exultant flight; its languor of
-attainment; its curve and droop; the soft shock of its blossoming into
-an unearthly metamorphosis of splendor far and high on the zenith.</p>
-
-<p>The note was struck and after it the symphony followed.</p>
-
-<p>Like a ravished Ganymede, the sense of sight soared amazed among
-dazzling ecstasies of light and movement.</p>
-
-<p>Thin ribbons of fire streaked the sky; radiant sheaves showered drops of
-multitudinous gold; fierce constellations of color whirled themselves to
-stillness on the night’s solemn permanence; a rain of stars drifted
-wonderfully, with the softness of falling snow, down gulfs of space. And
-then again the<a name="page_242" id="page_242"></a> rockets, strong, suave, swift, and their blossoming
-lassitude.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie gazed, silent and motionless, her uplifted profile like a child’s
-in its astonished joy. Once or twice she looked round at Gavan and at
-Grainger,&mdash;always first at Gavan,&mdash;smiling, and speechless with delight.
-Her folded arms had dropped to her sides and the shawl fell straightly
-from her shoulders. She made one think of some young knight, transfixed
-before a heavenly vision, a benediction of revealed beauty. The trivial
-occasion lent itself to splendid analogies. The strange light from above
-bathed her from head to foot in soft, intermittent, heavenly color.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, in darkness, Grainger seized her hand. She had hardly felt the
-pressure, short, sharp with all the exasperation of his worship, before
-it was gone.</p>
-
-<p>She did not turn to look at him. More than the unjustifiableness of the
-action, its unexpectedness, she felt a pain, a perplexity, as for
-something mocking, incongruous. And as if in instinctive seeking she
-turned her eyes on Gavan and found that he was looking at her.</p>
-
-<p>Was it, then, her eyes, seeking and perplexed, that compelled him; was
-it his own enfranchised impulse; was it only a continuation of
-fairy-land fitness, the child instinct of sharing in a unison of touch a
-mutual wonder? In the fringes of her shawl his hand sought and found her
-hand. Another rose of joy had expanded on the sky; and they stood so,
-hand in hand, looking up.<a name="page_243" id="page_243"></a></p>
-
-<p>Eppie looked up steadily; but now the outer vision was but a dim symbol,
-a reflection, vaguely seen, of the inner vision that, in a miracle of
-accomplished growth, broke upon her. She did not think or know. Her
-heart seemed to dilate, to breathe itself away in long throbs, that
-worshiped, that trembled, that prayed. Her strength was turned to
-weakness and her weakness rose to strength, and, as she looked up at the
-sky, the stars, the dream-like constellations that bloomed and drifted
-away, universes made and unmade on the void, her mind, her heart, her
-spirit were all one prayer and its strength and its humility were one.</p>
-
-<p>She had known that she loved him, but not till now that she loved him
-with a depth that passed beyond knowledge; she had known that he loved
-her, but not till now had she felt that all that lived in him was hers
-forever. His voice, his eyes, might hide, might deny, but the seeking,
-instinctive hand confessed, dumbly, to all.</p>
-
-<p>She had drawn him to her by her will; she had held him back from death
-by her love. His beloved hand clasped hers; she would never let him go.</p>
-
-<p>Looking up at the night, the stars, holding his hand, she gave herself
-to the new life, to all that it might mean of woe and tragedy. Let it
-lead her where it would, she was beside him forever.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, though her spirit held the sky, the stars, her heart, suffocated
-and appalled with love, seemed to lie at his feet, and the inarticulate
-prayer, running through all, said only, over and over, “O God, God.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Grainger leaned against the wall, puffing<a name="page_244" id="page_244"></a> doggedly at his
-pipe, unrepentant and unsatisfied.</p>
-
-<p>“There, that is the end,” Miss Barbara sighed. “How very, very pretty.
-But they have made me quite sleepy.”</p>
-
-<p>A few fumes still smoldered at the edge of the moor, and the night, like
-an obscure ocean, was engulfing the lights, the movements; after the
-radiance the darkness was thick, oppressive.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie knew, as Gavan released her hand, that his eyes again sought hers,
-but she would not look at him. What could they say, here and now?</p>
-
-<p>He went on into the house, and Grainger, lingering outside, detained her
-on the steps. “You forgive me?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>She had almost forgotten for what, but fixing her eyes and thoughts upon
-him, she said, “Yes, Jim, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t stand it,&mdash;you were so lovely,” said Grainger; “I didn’t
-know that I was such a sentimental brute. But I had no business not to
-stand it. It’s my business in life to stand it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am so sorry, Jim,” Eppie murmured. “You know, I can do
-nothing&mdash;except forgive you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am not ungrateful. I know how good it is of you to put up with me. Do
-I bother you too much, Eppie?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Jim dear; you don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>He stood aside for her to enter the house. He saw that, with all her
-effort to be kind, her thought passed from him. Pausing to knock the
-ashes of his pipe<a name="page_245" id="page_245"></a> against the wall, he softly murmured, “Damn,” before
-following her into the house.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie, in her own room, put out her candle and went to the window.</p>
-
-<p>Leaning out, she could see the soft maze of tree-tops emerge from the
-dim abyss beneath. The boughs of the pine-tree made the starlit sky pale
-with their blackness.</p>
-
-<p>This was the window where she and Gavan had stood on the morning of
-Robbie’s death. Here Gavan had shuddered, sobbing, in her arms. He had
-suffered, he had been able to love and suffer then.</p>
-
-<p>The long past went before her, this purpose in it all, her purpose; in
-all the young, unconscious beginnings, in the reunion, in her growing
-consciousness of something to oppose, to conquer, to save. And to-night
-had consecrated her to that sacred trust. What lived in him was hers.
-But could she keep him in life? The memory, a dark shadow, of the deep
-indifference that she had seen in his contemplative eyes went with a
-chill over her.</p>
-
-<p>Leaning out, she conquered her own deep fear, looking up at the stars
-and still praying, “O God, God.<a name="page_246" id="page_246"></a>”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="IV-3" id="IV-3"></a>IV</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00s.png"
-width="77"
-height="76"
-alt="S"
-title="S"
-/></span>HE could not read his face next day. It showed a change, but the
-significance of the change was hidden from her. He knew that she knew;
-was that it? or did he think that they could still pretend at the
-unchanged fairy-tale where one clasped hands simply, like children? Or
-did he trust her to spare them both, now that she knew?</p>
-
-<p>When they were alone, this, more than all, the pale, jaded face seemed
-to tell her, it would be able to hide nothing; but its strength was in
-evasion; he would not be alone with her.</p>
-
-<p>All the morning he spent with the general and in the afternoon he went
-away, a book under his arm, down to the burn.</p>
-
-<p>From the library window Eppie watched him go. She could see for a long
-time the flicker of his white figure among the distant birches.</p>
-
-<p>She sat in a low chair in the deep embrasure of the window-seat, silent
-and motionless. She felt, after the night’s revelation, an apathy,
-mental and physical; a willing pause; a lull of the spirit, that rested
-in its accepted fate, should it be joyful or<a name="page_247" id="page_247"></a> tragic. The very fact of
-such acceptance partook of both tragedy and joy.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger was with her, walking, as usual, up and down the room, glancing
-at her as he passed and repassed.</p>
-
-<p>He felt, all about him, within and without, the pressure of some crisis;
-and his ignorance, his intuitions, struggling within him, made a
-consciousness, oddly mingled, of sharp pain, deep dread, and,
-superficially, a suffocating irritation, continually rising and
-continually repressed.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie’s aspect intensified the mingled consciousness. Her figure, in its
-thin dress of black and white, showed lassitude. With her head thrown
-back against the chair, her hands, long, white, inert, lying along the
-chair-arms, she looked out from the cool shadow of the room at the day,
-fierce in its blue and gold, its sunlight and its wind.</p>
-
-<p>He had seen Gavan pass, so strangely alone; he had watched her watching
-of him. She was languid; but she was patient, she was strong. That was
-part of the suffocation, that such strength, such patience, should be
-devoted to ends so undeserving. More than by mere jealousy, though that
-seethed in him, he was oppressed by the bitter sense of waste, of the
-futile spending of noble capacity; for, more than all, she was piteous;
-there came the part of pain and dread, the presage of doom that weighed
-on his heart.</p>
-
-<p>In her still figure, her steady look out at the empty, splendid vault of
-blue, the monotonous purple stretches of the moor, his unesthetic,
-accurate mind felt, with the sharp intuition that carried him so<a name="page_248" id="page_248"></a> much
-further than any conscious appreciation, a symbol of the human soul
-contemplating the ominous enigma of its destiny. She made him dimly
-think of some old picture he had seen, a saint, courageous, calm,
-enraptured, in the luminous pause before a dark, accepted martyrdom. He
-did violence to the simile, shaking it off vehemently, with a clutch at
-the sane impatience of silly fancies.</p>
-
-<p>Stopping abruptly before her, though hardly knowing for what end, he
-found himself saying, and the decisive words, as he heard, rather than
-thought them, had indeed the effect of shattering foolish visions, “I
-shall go to-day, Eppie.”</p>
-
-<p>In seeing her startled, pained, expostulatory, he saw her again, very
-sanely, as an unfortunate woman bent on doing for herself and unable to
-hide her situation from his keen-sightedness. For really he didn’t know
-whether a hopeless love-affair or a hopeless marriage would the more
-completely “do” for her.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Jim, why to-day?” Eppie asked in a tone of kindest protest.</p>
-
-<p>He was glad to have drawn her down to the solid ground of his own
-grievances. She hurt him less there.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not to-day?” he retorted.</p>
-
-<p>She replied that, if for no better reason, the weather was too lovely
-not to be enjoyed by them all together.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, but I don’t care about the weather. Nor do I care,” Grainger
-went on, taking the sorry comfort that his own mere ill-temper afforded
-him, “to<a name="page_249" id="page_249"></a> watch other people’s enjoyment&mdash;of more than weather. I’m not
-made of such selfless stuff as that.”</p>
-
-<p>She understood, of course; perhaps she had all along understood what he
-was feeling more clearly than clumsy he had, and she met all that was
-beneath the mannerless words with her air of sad kindliness.</p>
-
-<p>“You can share it, Jim.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I can’t share it. I share nothing&mdash;except the weather.”</p>
-
-<p>She murmured, as she had the night before, that she was sorry, adding
-that she must have failed; but he interrupted her with: “It’s not that.
-You are all right. You give me all you can. It’s merely that you can’t
-give me anything I want. I came to see if there was any chance for me,
-and all I do see is that I may as well be off. I do myself no good by
-staying on,&mdash;harm, rather; you may begin to resent my sulkiness and my
-boorish relapses from even rudimentary good manners.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have resented nothing, Jim. I can’t imagine ever resenting
-anything&mdash;from you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, that’s just the worst of it,” Grainger muttered.</p>
-
-<p>“For your own sake,” Eppie went on, “you are perhaps wise to go. I own
-that I can’t see what happiness you can find in being with me, while you
-feel as you do.”</p>
-
-<p>“While I feel as I do,” he repeated, not ironically, but as if weighing
-the words in a sort of wonder. “That ‘while’ is funny, Eppie. You are
-right. I don’t find happiness, and I came to seek it.” The<a name="page_250" id="page_250"></a> “while” had
-cut deep. He paused, then added, eying her, “So I’ll go, and leave
-Palairet to find the happiness.”</p>
-
-<p>Eppie was silent. Paler than before, her eyes dropped, she seemed to
-accept with a helpless magnanimity whatever he might choose to say. “You
-find me impertinent,”&mdash;Grainger, standing before her, clutched his arms
-across his chest and put his own thought of himself into the
-words,&mdash;“brutal.”</p>
-
-<p>Without looking up at him she answered: “I am so fond of you, so near
-you, that I suppose I give you the right.”</p>
-
-<p>The patient words, so unlike Eppie in their patience, the downcast eyes,
-were a torch to his exasperation.</p>
-
-<p>“I can take it, then&mdash;the right?” he said. “I am near enough to say the
-truth and to ask it, Eppie?”</p>
-
-<p>She rose and walked away from him.</p>
-
-<p>With the sense of hot pursuit that sprang up in him he felt himself as
-ruthless as a boy, pushing through the thickets of reticence, through
-the very supplications of generosity, to the nest of her secret. It was
-not joy he sought, but his own pain, and to see it clearly, finally. He
-must see it. And when Eppie, her back to him, leaning her arm on the
-mantel and looking down into the empty cavern of the great
-chimney-place, answered, accepting all his implications, “Gavan hasn’t
-found any happiness,” he said, “He finds all that he asks for.”</p>
-
-<p>It was as if he had wrenched away the last bough from the nest, and the
-words gave him, with their<a name="page_251" id="page_251"></a> breathless determination, an ugly feeling of
-cruel, breaking malignity.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie’s face was still turned from him so that he could not see how she
-bore the rifling, but in the same dulled and gentle voice she answered,
-“He doesn’t ask what you do.”</p>
-
-<p>At that Grainger’s deepest resentment broke out.</p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t ask your love? No, I suppose not. The man’s a mollusk,&mdash;a
-wretched, diseased creature.”</p>
-
-<p>He had struck at last a flash from her persistent gentleness. She faced
-him, and he saw that she tried to smile over deep anger.</p>
-
-<p>“You say that because Gavan is not in love with me? It is a sick fancy
-that sees every man not in love with me as sick too.”</p>
-
-<p>She had taken up a weapon at last, she really challenged him; and he
-felt, full on that quivering nerve of dread, that she defended at once
-herself and the man she loved from her own and from his unveiling.</p>
-
-<p>It made a sort of rage rise in him.</p>
-
-<p>“A man who cares for you,&mdash;a man who depends on you,&mdash;as he does,&mdash;a man
-whom you care for,&mdash;so much,&mdash;is a bloodless vampire if he
-doesn’t&mdash;respond.”</p>
-
-<p>When he had driven the knife in like that, straight up to the hilt, he
-hardly knew whether his anger or his adoration were the greater; for, as
-if over a disabling wound, she bent her head in utter surrender, quite
-still for a moment, and then saying only, while she looked at him as if
-more sorry for him than for herself, “You hurt me, Jim.<a name="page_252" id="page_252"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>Tears of fury stood in his eyes. “You hurt, too. My love for you&mdash;a
-disease. <i>My</i> love, Eppie!”</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive you! I worship everything you say or do!”</p>
-
-<p>“It was that it hurt too much to see&mdash;what you did, with your eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then&mdash;then&mdash;you don’t deny it,&mdash;if I have eyes to see, he too must
-see&mdash;how much you care?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t deny it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if I have courage enough to ask it, you have courage enough to
-answer me? You love him, Eppie?”</p>
-
-<p>He had come to her, his eyes threatening her, beseeching her, adoring
-her, all at once. She saw it all&mdash;all that he felt, and the furious pity
-that was deeper than his own deep pain. She could resent nothing, deny
-nothing. As she had said, he was so near.</p>
-
-<p>She put her hand on his shoulder, keeping him from her, yet accepting
-him as near, and then all that she found to say&mdash;but it was in a voice
-that brought a rapt pallor to his face&mdash;was, “Dear Jim.”</p>
-
-<p>He understood her&mdash;all that she accepted, all that she avowed. Her hand
-was that of a comrade in misfortune. She forgave brutality from a heart
-as stricken as his. She forgave even his cruelly clear seeing of her own
-desperate case&mdash;a seeing that had revealed to her that it was indeed
-very desperate. But if she too was stricken, she too was resolute, and
-she could do no more for him than look with<a name="page_253" id="page_253"></a> him at the truth. Their
-eyes recognized so many likenesses in each other.</p>
-
-<p>He took the hand at last in both his own, looking down at it, pressing
-it hard.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor darling,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Jim.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; even if he loves you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Even if he doesn’t love me&mdash;and he does love me in a strange, unwilling
-way; but even if he doesn’t love me,&mdash;as you and I mean love,&mdash;I am not
-piteous.”</p>
-
-<p>“Even if he loves you, you are piteous.” All his savagery had fallen
-from him. His quiet was like the slow dropping of tears.</p>
-
-<p>“No, Jim. There is the joy of loving. You know that.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are more piteous than I, Eppie. You, <i>you</i>, to sue to such a man.
-He is the negation of everything you mean. To live with him would be
-like fighting for breath. If you marry him,&mdash;if you bring him to
-it,&mdash;he’ll suffocate you.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Jim,” she repeated,&mdash;and now, looking up, he saw in those beloved
-eyes the deep wells of solemn joy,&mdash;“I am the stronger.”</p>
-
-<p>“In fighting, yes, perhaps. Not in every-day, passive life. He’ll kill
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Even if he kills me he’ll not conquer me.”</p>
-
-<p>He shook away the transcendentalism with a gentle impatience, “Much good
-that would do to me, who would only know that you were gone. Oh,
-Eppie!&mdash;“</p>
-
-<p>He pressed and let fall her hand.<a name="page_254" id="page_254"></a></p>
-
-<p>The words of the crisis were over. Anything else would be only, as it
-were, the filling in of the grave.</p>
-
-<p>He had walked away from her to the window, and said presently, while he
-looked out: “And I thought that you were ambitious. I loved you for it,
-too. I didn’t want a wife who would acquiesce in the common lot or make
-a virtue of incapacity. I wanted a woman who would rather fail,
-open-eyed, in a big venture than rest in security. You would have
-buckled the sword on a man and told him that he must conquer high places
-for you. You would have told him that he must crown you and make you
-shine in the world’s eyes, as well as in his own. And I could do it. You
-are so worthy of all the biggest opportunities and so unfit for little
-places. It’s so stupid, you know,” he finished, “that you aren’t in love
-with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is stupid, I own it,” Eppie acquiesced.</p>
-
-<p>He found a certain relief in following these bitterly comic aspects of
-their case and presently took it up again with: “I am so utterly the man
-for you and he is so utterly not the man. I don’t mean that I’m big
-enough or enough worth your while, but at least I could give you
-something, and I could fight for you. He won’t fight, for you, or for
-anything.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall have to do all the fighting if I get him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You want him so that you don’t mind anything else. I see that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly. For a long time I didn’t know how I loved him just because I
-had always taken all that you are saying for granted, in the funniest,
-most naïvely conceited way; I took it for granted that I<a name="page_255" id="page_255"></a> was a very big
-person and that the man I married must stand for big opportunities. Now,
-you see,” she finished, “he is my big opportunity.”</p>
-
-<p>He was accepting it all now with no protest. “Next to no money, I
-suppose?” he questioned simply.</p>
-
-<p>“Next to none, Jim.”</p>
-
-<p>“It means obscurity, unless a man has ambition.”</p>
-
-<p>“It means all the things I’ve always hated.” She smiled a little over
-these strange old hatreds.</p>
-
-<p>Again a silence fell, and it was again Grainger who broke it.</p>
-
-<p>“You may as well let me have the last drop of gall,” he said. “Own that
-if it hadn’t been for him you might have come to care for me.”</p>
-
-<p>Still he did not look at her, and it was easier, so, to let him have the
-last gulp.</p>
-
-<p>“I probably should.”</p>
-
-<p>He meditated the mixed flavor for some moments; pure gall would have
-been easier to swallow. And he took refuge at last in school-boy
-phraseology. “I should like to break all the furniture in the room.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should like to break some, too,” she rejoined, but she laughed out
-suddenly at this anticlimax, and, even before the unbroken heaviness of
-the gaze now turned on her, that comic aspect of their talk, the dearly,
-sanely comic, carried her laugh into a peal as boyish as his words.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger still gazed at her. “I love that in you,” he said&mdash;“your laugh.
-You could laugh at death.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Jim,” she said, smiling on, though with the laughter tears had come
-to her eyes, “it’s a good<a name="page_256" id="page_256"></a> deal more difficult to laugh at life,
-sometimes. And we both have to do a lot of living before we can laugh at
-death.”</p>
-
-<p>“A lot of living,” he repeated. His stern, firm face had a queer grimace
-of pain at the prospect of it, and again she put out her hand to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me count for as much as I can, always,” she said. “You will always
-count for so much with me.”</p>
-
-<p>He had taken the hand, and he looked at her in a long silence that
-promised, accepted, everything.</p>
-
-<p>But an appeal, a demand, wistful yet insistent, came into his silence as
-he looked&mdash;looked at the odd, pale, dear face, the tawny, russet hair,
-the dear, deep eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going now,” he said, holding to his breast the hand she had given
-him. “And I will ask one thing of you&mdash;a thing I’ve never had and never
-shall, I suppose, again.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Jim?” But before his look she almost guessed and the
-guessing made her blanch.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me take you in my arms and kiss you,” said Grainger.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Jim!” Seeing herself as cruel, ungenerous, she yet, in a recoil of
-her whole nature, seemed to snatch from him a treasure, unclaimed, but
-no longer hers to give.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger eyed her. “You could. You would&mdash;if it weren’t for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You understand that, too, Jim. I could and would.”</p>
-
-<p>“He robs me of even that, then&mdash;your gift of courageous pity.<a name="page_257" id="page_257"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>His comprehension had arrested the recoil. And now the magnanimity she
-felt in him, the tragic force of the love he had seen barred from her
-forever, set free in her something greater than compassion and deeper
-than little loyalties, deeper than the lesser aspects of her own deep
-love. It was that love itself that seemed, with an expansion of power,
-to encircle all life, all need, all sorrow, and to find joy in
-sacrificing what was less to what was greater.</p>
-
-<p>He saw the change that, in its illumined tenderness, shut away his
-craving heart yet drew him near for the benison that it could grant, and
-as she said to him, “No, Jim, he shall not rob you,” his arms went round
-her.</p>
-
-<p>She shut her eyes to the pain there must be in enduring his passion of
-gratitude; but, though he held her close, kissing her cheeks, her brow,
-her hair, it was with a surprising, an exquisite tenderness.</p>
-
-<p>The pain that came for her was when,&mdash;pausing to gaze long into her
-face, printing forever upon his mind the wonderful memory of what she
-could look like, for him&mdash;he kissed her lips; it came in a pang of
-personal longing; in a yearning, that rose and stifled her, for other
-arms, other kisses; and, opening her eyes, she saw, an ironic answer to
-the inner cry, Gavan’s face outside, turned upon her in an instant of
-swift passing.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger had not seen. He did not speak another word to her. The kiss
-upon her lips had been in farewell. He had had his supreme moment. He
-let her go and left her.<a name="page_258" id="page_258"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="V-3" id="V-3"></a>V</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="75"
-height="76"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>AVAN came up from the burn, restless and dissatisfied.</p>
-
-<p>He had wanted solitude, escape; but when he was alone, and walking
-beside the sun-dappled water, the loneliness weighed on him and he had
-seemed to himself walking with his own ghost, looking into eyes familiar
-yet alien, with curiosity and with fear. Was it he or that phantom of
-the solitude who smiled the long, still smile of mockery?</p>
-
-<p>How he wanted something and how he wanted not to want; to be freed from
-the intolerable stirring and striving within him, as of a maimed thing,
-with half-atrophied wings, that could never rise and fly to its goal. It
-was last night that had wakened this turmoil, and as he walked his
-thought turned and turned about those moments under the dazzling sky
-when he had found her hand in the fringes of her shawl.</p>
-
-<p>He knew that there had been a difference in the yielding of her hand, as
-he had known, in his own helpless stretching out for it in the darkness,
-another impulse than that of childlike tenderness. It had been as if
-some deep, primeval will beneath his own had stretched his hand out,
-searching in the dark;<a name="page_259" id="page_259"></a> and with the strange blissfulness of so standing
-with her beneath the stars, there came a strange, new fear, as though he
-no longer knew himself and were become an automaton held by some
-incalculable force.</p>
-
-<p>Wandering through the woods in the hope of reëntering nature’s
-beneficent impersonality, he felt no anodynes&mdash;only that striving and
-stirring within him of maimed limbs and helpless wings.</p>
-
-<p>There was no refuge in nature, and there was none in himself. The
-thought of Eppie as refuge did not form itself, but it was again in
-seeking, as if through darkness for he knew not what, that he turned to
-the house. And then, on all his tangled mood, fell the vibrating shock
-of that vision at the window.</p>
-
-<p>With his quick looking away he did not know whether Eppie had seen him
-see. He went on, knowing nothing definite, until, suddenly, as if some
-fierce beast had seized him, he found himself struggling, choking, torn
-by a hideous, elemental jealousy.</p>
-
-<p>He stood still in the afternoon sunlight as he became aware of this
-phenomenon in himself, his hands involuntarily clenched, staring as if
-at a palpable enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The savage, rudimentary man had sprung up in him. He hated Grainger. He
-longed to beat him into the earth, to crush the breath out of him; and
-for a moment, most horrible of all,&mdash;a moment that seemed to set fangs
-in his throat,&mdash;he could not tell whether he more hated Eppie or more
-desired to tear her from the rival, to seize her and bear her away, with
-a passion untouched by any glamour.</p>
-
-<p>And Gavan was conscious, through it all, that only<a name="page_260" id="page_260"></a> inhuman heights made
-possible such crumbling, crashing falls into savagedom; conscious that
-Grainger could not have known such thoughts. They were as ugly as those
-of a Saint Anthony. Wholesome manhood would recoil from their
-debasement. He, too, recoiled, but the debasement was within him, he
-could not flee from it. The moment of realization, helpless realization,
-was long. Ultra-civilization stood and watched barbarian hordes swarm
-over its devastated ruins. Then, with a feeling of horrible shame, a
-shame that was almost a nausea, he went on into the house.</p>
-
-<p>In his own room he sat down near the window, took his head in his hands,
-the gesture adding poignancy to his humiliation, and gazed at the truth.
-He had stripped himself of all illusion only to make himself the more
-helpless before its lowest forms. More than the realized love was the
-realized jealousy; more than the anguish at the thought of having lost
-her was the rage of the dispossessed, unsatisfied brute. Such love
-insulted the loved woman. He could not escape from it, but he could not
-feel the added grace and piety that, alone, could make it tolerable.
-From the fixed contemplation of his own sensations his mind dropped
-presently to the relief of more endurable thoughts. To feel the mere
-agony of loss was a dignifying and cleansing process. For, apparently,
-he had lost her. It was strange, almost unthinkable, that it should be
-so, and stranger the more he thought. He, who had never claimed, had no
-right to feel a loss. But he had not known till now how deep was his
-consciousness of their union.<a name="page_261" id="page_261"></a></p>
-
-<p>She had long ago guessed the secret of the voiceless, ambiguous love
-that could flutter only as far as pain, that could never rise to
-rapture. She had guessed that behind its half-tortured, momentary smile
-was the impersonal Buddha-gaze; and because she so understood its
-inevitable doom she had guarded herself from its avowal&mdash;guarded herself
-and him. He had trusted her not to forget the doom, and not to let him
-forget it, for a moment. But all the time he had known that in her eyes
-he was captive to some uncanny fate, and that could she release him from
-his chains her love would answer his. He had been sure of it. Hence his
-present perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>Perplexity began to resolve itself into a theory of commonplace
-expediency, and, feeling the irony of such resentment, he resented this
-tame sequel to their mute relationship.</p>
-
-<p>Unconsciously, he had assumed that had he been able to ask her to be his
-wife she would have been able to consent. Her courage, in a sense, would
-have been the reward of his weakness, for what he would see in himself
-as weakness she would see as strength. Courage on her part it certainly
-would have needed, for what a dubious offering would his have been:
-glamour, at its best,&mdash;a helpless, drugged glamour,&mdash;and, at its worst,
-the mere brute instinct that, blessedly, this winding path of thought
-led him away from.</p>
-
-<p>But she had probably come to despair of releasing him from chains, had
-come to see clearly that at the end of every avenue she walked with him
-the Buddha statue would be waiting in a serenity appalling and<a name="page_262" id="page_262"></a>
-permanent; and, finding last night the child friendship dangerously
-threatened, discovering that the impossible love was dangerously real
-and menaced both their lives, she had swiftly drawn back, she had
-retreated to the obvious safeguards of an advantageous marriage. He
-couldn’t but own that she was wise and right; more wise, more
-right,&mdash;there was the odd part of it, the unadjusted bit where
-perplexity stung him,&mdash;than he could have expected her to be. Ambition
-and the common-sense that is the very staff of life counted for much, of
-course; but he hadn’t expected them to count so soon, so punctually, as
-it were.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps,&mdash;and his mind, disentangled from the personal clutch where such
-an interpretation might have hurt or horrified, safe once more on its
-Stylites pillar, dwelt quite calmly on this final aspect,&mdash;perhaps, with
-her, too, sudden glamour and instinct had counted, answering the appeal
-of Grainger’s passion. He suspected the whole fabric of the love between
-men and women to be woven of these blind, helpless impulses,&mdash;impulses
-that created their own objects. Her mind, with its recognition of
-danger, had chosen Grainger as a fitting mate, and, in his arms, she had
-felt that justification by the senses that people so funnily took for
-the final sanctification of choice.</p>
-
-<p>This monkish understanding of the snares of life was quite untouched by
-monkish reprobation; even the sense of resentment had faded. And it
-spoke much for the long training of his thought in the dissecting and
-destroying of transitory desires that he<a name="page_263" id="page_263"></a> was presently able to
-contemplate his loss&mdash;as he still must absurdly term it&mdash;with an icy
-tranquillity.</p>
-
-<p>A breathlessness, as from some drastic surgical operation, was beneath
-it, but that was of the nature of a mere physical symptom, destined to
-readjust itself to lopped conditions; and with the full turning of his
-mind from himself came the fuller realization of how well it was with
-Eppie and a cold, acquiescent peace that, in his nature, was the
-equivalent for an upwelling of religious gratitude, for her salvation.</p>
-
-<p>But the stress of the whole strange seizure, wrench and renouncement had
-told on him mentally and physically. Every atom of his being, as if from
-some violent concussion, seemed altered, shifted.</p>
-
-<p>The change was in his face when, in the closing dusk of the day, he went
-down to the library. It was not steeled to the hearing of the news that
-must await him: such tension of endurance had passed swiftly into his
-habitual ease; but a look of death had crossed and marked it. It looked
-like a still, drowned face, sinking under deep waters, and Eppie, in her
-low chair near the window, where she had sat for many hours, saw in his
-eyes the awful, passionless detachment from life.</p>
-
-<p>After his pause at the unexpected sight of her, sitting there alone, a
-pause in which she did not speak, although he saw that her eyes were on
-him, he went on softly down the room, glancing out at each window as he
-passed it; and he looked, as he went, like an evening moth, drifting,
-aimless, uncanny.</p>
-
-<p>Outside, the moor stretched like a heavily sighing<a name="page_264" id="page_264"></a> ocean, desolate and
-dark, to the horizon where, from behind the huge rim of the world, the
-sun’s dim glow, a gloomy, ominous red, mounted far into the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Within the room, a soft, magical color pervaded the dusk, touching
-Eppie’s hair, her hands, the vague folds and fallings of her dress.</p>
-
-<p>He waited for her to speak, though it seemed perfectly fitting that
-neither should. In the silence, the sadness of this radiant gloom, they
-needed no words to make more clear the accepted separation, and the
-silence, the sadness, were like a bleeding to quiet, desired death.</p>
-
-<p>The day was dying, and the instable, impossible love was dying, too.</p>
-
-<p>She had let go, and he quietly sank.</p>
-
-<p>But when she spoke her words were like sharp air cutting into drowned
-lungs.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw you pass this afternoon, Gavan.”</p>
-
-<p>From the farthest window, where he had paused, he turned to her.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you, Eppie?”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you see that I did?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t sure.” He heard the flavor of helplessness in his own voice
-and felt in her a hard hostility, pleased to play with his helplessness.</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you not speak of what you saw?” Her anger against him was
-almost like a palpable presence between them in the dark, glowing room.
-He began to feel that through some ugly blunder he was very much at her
-mercy, and that, for the first time, he should find little mercy in her;
-and, for the first<a name="page_265" id="page_265"></a> time, too, a quick hostility rose in him to answer
-hers. It was as if he had tasted too deeply of release; all his strength
-was with him to fight off the threat of the returning grasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I?” he asked, letting her see in his gaze at her that just
-such a hard placidity would meet any interpretation she chose to give.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you care to understand?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought that I did understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you think, then?” Eppie asked.</p>
-
-<p>He had to give her the helpless answer. “That you had accepted him.”</p>
-
-<p>He knew, now, that she hadn’t, and that for him to have thought so was
-to have cruelly wronged her; and she took it in a long silence, as
-though she must give herself time to see it clearly, to adjust herself
-to it and to all that it meant&mdash;in him, for her.</p>
-
-<p>What it meant, in her and for him, was filling his thoughts with a dizzy
-enough whirl of readjustment, and there mingled with it a strange
-after-flavor of the jealousy, and of the resentment against her; for,
-after all, though he had probably now an added reason for considering
-himself a warped wretch, there had been some reason for his mistake: if
-she hadn’t accepted him, why had he seen her so?</p>
-
-<p>“Jim is gone,” she said at last.</p>
-
-<p>“Because&mdash;It was unwillingly, then?”</p>
-
-<p>The full flame of her scorn blazed out at that, but he felt, like an
-echo of tears in himself, that she would have burst into tears of
-wretchedness if she had not been able so to scorn him.</p>
-
-<p>“Unwillingly! Why should you think him insolent<a name="page_266" id="page_266"></a> and me helpless? Can
-you conceive of nothing noble?” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry, Eppie. I have been stupid.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have&mdash;more than stupid. He was going and he asked me for that. And
-I gave it&mdash;proudly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry,” Gavan repeated. “I see, of course. Of course it was
-noble.”</p>
-
-<p>“You should be more than sorry. You knew that I did not love him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am more than sorry. I am ashamed,” he answered gravely.</p>
-
-<p>He had the dignity of full contrition; but under it, unshaken after all,
-was the repudiation of the nearness that her explanation revealed. His
-heart throbbed heavily, for he saw, as never before, how near it was;
-yet he had never feared her less. He had learned too much that afternoon
-to fear her. He was sure of his power to save her from what he had so
-fully learned.</p>
-
-<p>He looked away from her and for long out at the ebbing red, and it was
-the unshaken resolve that spoke at last. “But all the same I am sorry
-that it was only that. He would have made you happy.”</p>
-
-<p>“You knew that I did not love him,” Eppie repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“With time, as his wife, you might love him.” Facing her, now, folding
-his arms, he leaned back against the mantel at his far end of the room.
-“I know that I’ve seemed odiously to belittle and misunderstand you, and
-I am ashamed, Eppie&mdash;more ashamed than you can guess; but, in another
-way, it wasn’t so belittling, either. I thought you very<a name="page_267" id="page_267"></a> wise and
-courageous. I thought that you had determined to take the real thing
-that life offered you and to turn your back, for once and for all,
-on&mdash;on unreal things.” He stopped at that, as though to let it have its
-full drop, and Eppie, her eyes still fixed on him from her distant
-chair, made no answer and no sign of dissent.</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke a queer, effervescent blitheness had come to him, a light
-indifference to his own cruelty; and the hateful callousness of his
-state gave him a pause of wonder and interest. However, he couldn’t help
-it; it was the reaction, no doubt, from the deep disgust of his
-abasement, and it helped him, as nothing else would have done,
-thoroughly to accomplish his task.</p>
-
-<p>“He can give you all the things you need,” he went on, echoing poor
-Grainger’s <i>naïf</i> summing up of his own advantages. “He has any amount
-of money, and a very big future before him; and then, really above all,
-you do care for him so much. You see the same things in life. You
-believe in the same things; want the same things. If you would take him
-he would never fail you in anything.”</p>
-
-<p>Still her heavy silence was unbroken. He waited in vain for a sign from
-her, and in the silence the vibration of her dumb agony seemed to reach
-him, so that, with all the callousness, he had to conquer an impulse to
-go to her and see if she wept. But when he said, “I wish you would take
-him, Eppie,” and she at last answered him, there were no tears in her
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“I will never take him.<a name="page_268" id="page_268"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say that,” he replied. “One changes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that a taunt?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a taunt&mdash;a reminder.”</p>
-
-<p>She rose and came to him, walking down the long room, past the somber
-illuminations of the windows, straight to him. They stood face to face,
-bathed in the unearthly light. All their deep antagonism was there
-between them, almost a hatred, and the love that swords clashed over.</p>
-
-<p>“You do not believe that of me,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>He was ready and unfaltering, and was able to smile at her, a bright,
-odd smile. “I believe it of any one.”</p>
-
-<p>It was love that eyed him&mdash;love more stern, more relentless in its
-silence than if she had spoken it, and never had she been so near as
-when, sending her clarion of open warfare across the abyss, she said, “I
-will never change&mdash;to you.”</p>
-
-<p>The words, the look,&mdash;a look of solemn defiance,&mdash;shattered forever the
-palace of pretence that they had dwelt in for so long. Till now, it
-might have stood for them. In its rainbow chambers they might still have
-smiled and sorrowed and eluded each other, only glanced through the
-glittering casements at the dark realities outside; but when the word of
-truth was spoken, casements, chambers, turrets, fell together and
-reality rushed in. She had spoken the word. After that it was impossible
-to pretend anything.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan, among the wreck, had grown pale; but he kept his smile fixed,
-even while he, too, spoke the new language of reality.<a name="page_269" id="page_269"></a></p>
-
-<p>“I am afraid of you, then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you are afraid of me.”</p>
-
-<p>Still he smiled. “I am afraid <i>for</i> you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you are. You have your moments of humanity.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have. And so I shall go to-morrow,” said Gavan.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him in silence, her face taking on its haggard,
-unbeautiful aspect of strange, rocky endurance. And never had his mind
-been more alert, more mocking, more aloof from any entanglement of
-feeling than while he saw her love and his; saw her sorrow and his
-sorrow&mdash;his strange, strange sorrow that, like a sick, helpless child,
-longed, in its darkness, its loneliness, to hide its head on her breast
-and to feel her arms go round it. Love and sorrow were far, far away&mdash;so
-far that it was as if they had no part at all in himself, as if it were
-not he that felt them.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you so afraid as that?” Eppie asked.</p>
-
-<p>“After last night?” he answered. “After what I felt when I saw you here,
-with him? After this? Of course I am as afraid as that. I must flee&mdash;for
-your life, Eppie. I am its shadow&mdash;its fatal shadow.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I am yours. Life is the shadow to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, on both sides, then, we must be afraid,” he assented.</p>
-
-<p>She made no gesture, no appeal. Her face was like a rock. It was only
-that deep endurance and, under it, that deep threat. Never, never would
-she allure; never draw him to her; never build in her<a name="page_270" id="page_270"></a> cathedral a
-Venusberg for him. He must come to her. He must kneel, with her, before
-her altar. He must worship, with her, her God of suffering and triumph.
-And, the dying light making her face waver before his eyes with a
-visionary strangeness, stern and angelic, he seemed to see, deep in her
-eyes, the burning of high, sacramental candles.</p>
-
-<p>That was the last he saw. In silence she turned and went. And what she
-left with him was the sad, awed sense of beauty that he knew when
-watching kneeling multitudes bowed before the great myth of the
-Church,&mdash;in silence, beneath dim, soaring heights. He was near humanity
-in such moments of self-losing, when the cruder myth of the great world,
-built up by desire, slipped from it. And Eppie, in this symbolic seeing
-of her, was nearer than when he desired or feared her. Beauty, supreme
-and disenfranchising, he saw. He did not know what he felt.</p>
-
-<p>Far away, on the horizon, in the gloomy waste of embers, the sun’s deep
-core still burned, and in his heart was a deep fatigue, like the sky’s
-slow smoldering to gray.<a name="page_271" id="page_271"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="VI-3" id="VI-3"></a>VI</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="76"
-height="75"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>RAINGER had gone, and Gavan announced his departure for the next
-morning. The situation was simplified, he felt, by Eppie’s somber
-preoccupation. He was very willing that she should be seen as a gloomy
-taker of scalps and that his own should be supposed to be hanging at her
-girdle. The resultant muteness and melancholy in the general and Miss
-Barbara were really a comfort. The dear old figures in the tapestry
-seemed fading to-night into mere plaintive shadows, fixing eyes of sad
-but unquestioning contemplation upon the latent tragedies of the
-foreground figures.</p>
-
-<p>It was a comfort to have the tapestry so reticent and so submissive,
-but, all the same, it made the foreground tragedy, for his eyes,
-painfully distinct. He could look at nothing else. Eppie seemed to
-stand, with her broken and bleeding heart, in the very center of the
-design. For the first time he saw what the design was&mdash;saw all of it,
-from the dim reaches of the past, as working to this end.</p>
-
-<p>The weaving of fate was accomplished. There she stood, suffering,
-speechless, and he, looking at her, fatal shuttle of her doom that he
-was, felt under all the ashes a dull throbbing.<a name="page_272" id="page_272"></a></p>
-
-<p>After dinner he smoked a cigar with the general, who, tactfully, as to
-one obviously maimed, spoke only of distant and impersonal matters.
-Gavan left him over some papers in the quiet light of the smoking-room
-and went to the library. Eppie, with her broken heart, was not there.
-The night was very hot. By an open window Miss Barbara sat dozing, her
-hands upturned with an appealing laxity on her knees, sad even in her
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie was not there and she had not spoken one word to him since those
-last words of the afternoon. Perhaps she intended to speak no more, to
-see him no more. Pausing on the threshold, he was now conscious of a
-slow, rising misery.</p>
-
-<p>If he was to be spared the final wrench, he was also to be robbed of
-something. He hadn’t known, till then, of how much. He hadn’t known,
-while she stood there before him, this fully revealed Eppie, this Eppie
-who loved far beyond his imagining, far beyond prudence, ambition, even
-happiness, what it would be not to see her again, to part from her
-speechlessly, and with a sort of enmity unresolved between them.</p>
-
-<p>The cathedral simile was still with him, not in her interpretation of
-it, as the consecration of human love, but in his own, as a place of
-peace, where together they might still kneel in farewell.</p>
-
-<p>But she barred him out from that; she wouldn’t accept such peace. He
-could only submit and own that she was perhaps altogether right in
-risking no more battles and in proudly denying to him the opportunity of
-any reconciling. She was right to<a name="page_273" id="page_273"></a> have it end there; but the core among
-the embers ached.</p>
-
-<p>He wandered out into the dark, vague night, sorrowfully restless.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a radiant night. The trees and the long undulations of the
-moorland melted into the sky, making all about a sea of enveloping
-obscurity. The moor might have been the sky but for its starlessness;
-and there were few stars to-night, and these, large and soft, seemed to
-float like helpless expanded flowers on a still ocean.</p>
-
-<p>A night for wandering griefs to hide in, to feel at one with, and, with
-an instinct that knew that it sorrowed but hardly knew that it sought,
-Gavan went on around the house, through the low door in the garden wall,
-and into the garden.</p>
-
-<p>Here all the warmth and perfume of the summer day seemed still to exhale
-itself in a long sigh like that of a peaceful sleeper. Earth, trees,
-fruit, and flowers gave out their drowsy balms. Veiled beauty, dreaming
-life, were beneath, above, about him, and the high walls inclosed a
-place of magic, a shadow paradise.</p>
-
-<p>He walked on, past white phlox, white pansies, and white foxglove,
-through the little trellis where white jasmine starred its festoons of
-frail, melancholy foliage, and under the low boughs of the small,
-gnarled fruit-trees. Near the summer-house he paused, looking in at the
-darkness and seeing there the figures of the past&mdash;two children at play.
-His heart ached on dully, the smoldering sorrow rising neither to
-passionate regret nor to passionate longing,<a name="page_274" id="page_274"></a> acquiescing in its own
-sorrow that was part of the vision. Moved by that retrospect, he stepped
-inside.</p>
-
-<p>The sweet old odor, so well remembered, half musty, half fresh, of
-cobwebbed wood, lichened along the lintels and doorway beams, assailed
-him while he groped lightly around the walls, automatically reaching out
-his hand to the doll’s locker, the little row of shelves, the low,
-rustic bench and the table that, he remembered as it rocked slightly
-under his touch, had always been unsteady. All were in their old,
-accustomed places, and among them he saw himself a ghost, some
-sightless, soundless creature hovering in the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>The darkness and the familiar forms he evoked from it grew oppressive,
-and he stepped out again into the night, where, by contrast with the
-uncanny blindness, he found a new distinctness of form, almost of color,
-and where a memory, old and deep, seemed to seize him with gentle,
-compelling hands, in the fragrance of the white roses growing near the
-summer-house. Wine-like and intoxicating, it filled the air with magic;
-and he had gone but a few steps farther when, like a picture called up
-by the enchantment, he saw the present, the future too, it seemed, and,
-with a shock that for all its quiet violence was not unexpected, stood
-still to gaze, to feel in the one moment of memory and forecast all his
-life gathered into his contemplation.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie sat on a low garden bench in the garden’s most hidden corner. With
-the fresh keenness of sight he could see the clustering white roses on
-the<a name="page_275" id="page_275"></a> wall behind her, see against them the darkness of her hair, the
-whiter whiteness of her dress, as she sat there with head a little bent,
-looking down, the long white shawl folded about her.</p>
-
-<p>It was no longer the Eppie of the past, not even the Eppie of the
-present: the present was only that long pause. It was the future that
-waited there, silent, motionless, almost as if asleep; waited for the
-word and touch that would reveal it.</p>
-
-<p>She had not heard his light step, and it seemed to be in the very
-stillness of his pause that the sense of his presence came to her.
-Raising her head she looked round at him.</p>
-
-<p>He could only see the narrow oval of her face, but he felt her look; it
-seized him, compelling as the fragrance had been&mdash;compelling but not
-gentle. He felt it like firm hands upon him while he walked on slowly
-toward her, and not until he was near her, not until he had sat down
-beside her, did he see as well as feel her fixed and hostile gaze.</p>
-
-<p>All swathed and infolded as she was, impalpable and unsubstantial in the
-darkness, her warm and breathing loveliness was like the aroma of a
-midnight flower. She was so beautiful sitting there, a blossoming of the
-darkness, that her beauty seemed aware of itself and of its appeal; and
-it was as if her soul, gazing at him, dominated the appeal; menaced him
-should he yield to it; yet loved, ah, loved him with a love the greater
-for the courage, the will, that could discipline it into this set, stern
-stillness.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, here was the future, and what was he to do<a name="page_276" id="page_276"></a> with it? or, rather,
-what was it to do with him? He was at her mercy.</p>
-
-<p>He had leaned near her, his hand on the bench, to look into her eyes,
-and in a shaken, supplicating voice he said, “Eppie, Eppie, what do you
-want?”</p>
-
-<p>Without change, looking deeply at him, she answered, “You.”</p>
-
-<p>That crashed through him. He was lost, drowned, in the mere sense of
-beauty&mdash;the beauty of the courage that could so speak and so hold him at
-the point of a sword heroically drawn. And with the word the future
-seized him. He hid his face upon her shoulder and his arms went round
-her. Her breast heaved. For a moment she sat as if stricken with
-astonishment. Then, but with sternness, as of a just and angry mother,
-she clasped him, holding him closely but untenderly.</p>
-
-<p>“I did not mean this,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“No; but you <i>are</i> it,” Gavan murmured.</p>
-
-<p>She held him in the stern, untender clasp, her head drawn back from him,
-while, slowly, seeking her words over the tumult she subdued, she said:
-“It’s <i>you</i> I want&mdash;not your unwilling longing, not your unwilling love.
-I want you so that I can be really myself; I want you so that you can be
-really yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>He strained her to him, hiding his face on her breast.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you live? Can’t you be&mdash;if I help you?” she asked him.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time he was silent, only pressing closely<a name="page_277" id="page_277"></a> to her as though
-to hide himself from her questions&mdash;from his own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>He said at last: “I can’t think, Eppie. Your words go like birds over my
-head. Your suffering, my longing, hurt me; but it’s like the memory of a
-hurt. I am apart from it, even while I feel it. Even while I love
-you&mdash;oh, Eppie! Eppie!&mdash;I don’t care. But when we are like this&mdash;at last
-like this&mdash;I am caught back into it all, all that I thought I’d got over
-forever, this afternoon,&mdash;all the dreadful dream&mdash;the beautiful dream.
-It’s for this I’ve longed&mdash;you have known it: to hold you, to feel your
-breath on me, to dream with you. How beautiful you are, how sweet! Kiss
-me, Eppie,&mdash;darling, darling Eppie!”</p>
-
-<p>“I will not kiss you. It would be real to me.”</p>
-
-<p>He had raised his head and was seeing now the suffering of her shadowy
-eyes, the shadowy lips she refused him tragically compressed lest they
-should tremble. Behind her pale head and its heavy cloud of hair were
-the white roses giving out&mdash;how his mind reeled with the memory of
-it&mdash;the old, sweet, wine-like fragrance.</p>
-
-<p>He closed his eyes to the vision, bending his lips to her hand, saying:
-“Yes, that’s why I wanted to spare you&mdash;wanted to run away.”</p>
-
-<p>In the little distance now of his drawing from her, even while he still
-held her, his cheek on her hand, she could speak more easily.</p>
-
-<p>“It is that that enrages me,&mdash;your mystic sickness. I am awake, but you
-aren’t even dreaming.<a name="page_278" id="page_278"></a> You are drugged&mdash;drugged with thought not strong
-enough to find its real end. You have paralyzed yourself. No argument
-could cure you. No thought could cure you. Only life could cure you. You
-must get life, and to get it you must want it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want it. I can’t want it. I only want you,” said Gavan, with
-such a different echo.</p>
-
-<p>She understood, more fully than he, perhaps, the helpless words.</p>
-
-<p>Above his bowed head, her face set, she looked out into the night. Her
-mind measured, coldly it seemed to her, the strength of her own faith
-and of his negation.</p>
-
-<p>Her love, including but so far transcending all natural cravings, had
-its proud recoil from the abasement&mdash;oh, she saw it all!&mdash;that his
-limitation would bring to it. Yet, like the mother again, adapting truth
-to the child’s dim apprehension, leading it on by symbols, she brooded
-over her deep thoughts of redemption and looked clearly at all dangers
-and all hopes. Faith must face even his unspiritual seeing. Faith must
-endure his worse than pagan love. Bound to her by every natural tie, her
-strength must lift him, through them, to their spiritual aspect, to
-their reality. Life was her ally. She must put her trust in life. She
-consecrated herself to it anew. Let it lead her where it would.</p>
-
-<p>The long moment of steady forecast had, after its agony of shame and
-fear, its triumph over both.</p>
-
-<p>He felt the deep sigh that lifted her breast&mdash;it was almost a sob; but
-now her arms took him closely,<a name="page_279" id="page_279"></a> gently, to her and her voice had the
-steadfastness, no longer of rejection, but of acceptance.</p>
-
-<p>“Gavan, dream with me, then; that’s better than being drugged. Perhaps
-you will wake some day. There, I kiss you.”</p>
-
-<p>She said it, and with the words his lips were on hers.</p>
-
-<p>In the long moment of their embrace he had a strange intuition.
-Something was accomplished; some destiny that had led them to this hour
-was satisfied and would have no more to do with them. He seemed almost
-to hear this thought of finality, like the far, distant throbbing of a
-funeral bell, though the tolling only shut them the more closely into
-the silence of the wonderful moment.</p>
-
-<p>Drugged? No, he was not drugged. But was she really dragging him down
-again, poor child, into her own place of dreams?</p>
-
-<p>After the ecstasy, in the darkness of her breast and arms, he knew again
-the horrible surge of suffering that life had always meant to him. He
-saw, as though through deep waters, the love, the strife, the clinging
-to all that went; he saw the withering of dreams, and death, and the
-implacable, devouring thought that underlay all life and found its joy
-in the rending sorrow of the tragedy it triumphed over.</p>
-
-<p>It was like a wave catching him, sucking him down into a gulf of
-blackness. The dizziness of the whirlpool reeled its descending spiral
-through his brain. Eppie was the sweet, the magical, the sinister
-mermaid; she held him, triumphing, and he clung to her, helpless; while,
-like the music of rushing waters,<a name="page_280" id="page_280"></a> the horror and enchantment of life
-rang in his ears. But the horror grew and grew. The music rang on to a
-multitudinous world-cry of despair,&mdash;the cry of all the torments of the
-world turning on their rack of consciousness,&mdash;and, in a crash of
-unendurable anguish, came the thought of what it all would mean; what it
-all might mean now&mdash;now&mdash;unless he could save her; for he guessed that
-her faith, put to the test, might accept any risk, might pay any price,
-to keep him. And the anguish was for her.</p>
-
-<p>He started from her, putting away her arms, yet pinioning her, holding
-her from him with a fierceness of final challenge and looking in the
-darkness into her darker eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose I do,” he said. “Suppose I marry you,”&mdash;for he must show her
-that some tests she should not be put to. “Suppose I take you and
-reënter the dream. Look at it, Eppie. Look at your life with me. It
-won’t stay like this, you know. Look far, far ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no. You don’t. You can’t. It would, for a year, perhaps, perhaps
-only for a day, be dream and ecstasy,&mdash;ah, Eppie, don’t imagine that I
-don’t know what it would be,&mdash;the beauty, the joy, the forgetfulness, a
-radiant mist hanging over an abyss. Your will could keep me in it&mdash;for a
-year, perhaps. But then, the inevitable fading. See what comes. Eppie,
-don’t you know, don’t you feel, that I’m dead&mdash;dead?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; not while you suffer. You are suffering now&mdash;for me.<a name="page_281" id="page_281"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“The shadow of a shadow. It will pass. No, don’t speak; wait; as you
-said, we can’t argue, we can’t, now, go into the reasons of it. As you
-said, thought can’t cure me; it’s probably something far deeper than our
-little thought: it’s probably the aspect we are fated to be by that one
-reality that makes and unmakes our dreams. And I’m not of the robust
-Western stuff that can work in its dream,&mdash;create more dream, and find
-it worth while. I’ve not enough life in me to create the illusion of
-realities to strive for. Action, to me, brings no proof of life’s
-reality; it’s merely a symptom of life, its result, not its cause or its
-sanction. And the power of action is dead in me because the desire of
-life is dead,&mdash;unless you are there to infect me with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am here, Gavan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you are,&mdash;can I forget it? And I’m yours&mdash;while you want me. But,
-Eppie, look at it; look at it straight. See the death that I will bring
-into the very heart of your life. See the children we may have; see what
-they would mean to you, and what they would mean to me: Transient
-appearances; creatures lovely and pathetic, perhaps, but empty of all
-the significance that you would find in them. I would have no love for
-our children, Eppie, as you understand love. We will grow old, and all
-the glamour will go&mdash;all the passion that holds us together now. I will
-be kind&mdash;and sorry; but you will know that, beside you, I watch you
-fading into listlessness, indifference, death, and know that even if I
-am to weep over you, dead, I will feel only that you have escaped
-forever, from me, from consciousness,<a name="page_282" id="page_282"></a> from life. Eppie, don’t delude
-yourself with one ray of hope. To me your faith is a mirage. And it all
-comes to that. Have you faith enough to foresee all the horror of
-emptiness that you’ll find in me for the sake of one year of ecstasy?”</p>
-
-<p>She had not moved while he spoke&mdash;spoke with a passion, a vehemence,
-that was like a sudden rushing into flame of a forest fire. There was
-something lurid and terrible in such passion, such vehemence, from him.
-It shook him as the forest is shaken and was like the ruinous force of
-the flames. She sat, while he held her, looking at it, as he had told
-her, “straight.” She knew that she looked at everything. Her eyes went
-back to his eyes as she gave him her answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Not for the sake of the year of ecstasy; in spite of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“For what, then?” he asked, stammering suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes, with their look of dedication, held him fast.</p>
-
-<p>“For the sake of life&mdash;the long life&mdash;together; the life without the
-glamour, when my faith may altogether infect you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You believe, Eppie, that you are so much stronger than I?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not that I’m strong; but life is stronger than anything; life is
-the only reality. I am on the winning side.”</p>
-
-<p>“So you will hope?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hope! Of course I hope. You could never make me stop hoping&mdash;not even
-if you broke my heart. You may call it a mirage if you like&mdash;<a name="page_283" id="page_283"></a>that’s
-only a word. I’ll fill your trance with my mirage, I’ll flood your
-whiteness with my color, and, God grant, you will feel life and know
-that you are at last awake. You are right&mdash;life <i>is</i> endless contest,
-endless pain; it’s only at that price that we can have it; but you will
-know that it’s worth the price. I see it all, Gavan, and I accept. I
-accept not only the certainty of my own suffering, but the certainty of
-yours.”</p>
-
-<p>Through the night they gazed at each other, his infinite sadness, her
-infinite valor. Their faces were like strange, beautiful dreams&mdash;dreams
-holding in their dimness such deep, such vivid significance. They more
-saw the significance&mdash;that sadness, that valor&mdash;than its embodiment in
-eyes and lips.</p>
-
-<p>It was finally with a sense of realization so keen that it trembled on
-the border of oblivion, of the fainting from over-consciousness, that
-Gavan once more laid his head upon her breast. He, too, accepting, held
-her close,&mdash;held her and all that she signified, while, leaning above
-him, her cheek against his hair, she said in a voice that over its depth
-upon depth of steadiness trembled at last a little: “I see it all.
-Imagine what a faith it is that is willing to make the thing it loves
-most in the whole world suffer&mdash;suffer horribly&mdash;so that it may live.”</p>
-
-<p>He gave a long sigh. At its height emotion dissolved into a rapt
-contemplation. “How beautiful,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Beautiful?” she repeated, with almost a gentle mockery for the word.
-“Well, begin with beauty if you will. You will find that&mdash;and more
-besides&mdash;as an end of it all.<a name="page_284" id="page_284"></a>”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="VII-3" id="VII-3"></a>VII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00s.png"
-width="77"
-height="76"
-alt="S"
-title="S"
-/></span>HE left him in the garden. They had talked quietly, of the past, of
-their childhood, and, as quietly, of the future&mdash;their immediate
-marriage and departure for long, wonderful voyages together. His head
-lay on her breast, and often, while they spoke of that life together, of
-the homecoming to Cheylesford Lodge and when he heard her voice tremble
-a little, he kissed the dear hand he held.</p>
-
-<p>When she rose at last and stood before him, he said, still holding her
-hands, that he would sit on there in the darkness and think of her.</p>
-
-<p>She felt the languor of his voice and told him that he was very tired
-and would do much better to go to bed and forget about her till morning;
-but, looking up at her, he shook his head, smiling: “I couldn’t sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>So she left him; but, before she went, after the last gazing pause in
-which there seemed now no discord, no strife, nothing to hide or to
-threaten, she had suddenly put her arms around his neck, bending to him
-and murmuring, “Oh, I love you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I seem to have loved you forever, Eppie,” he said.<a name="page_285" id="page_285"></a></p>
-
-<p>But, once more, in all the strange oblivion of his acceptance, there had
-been for him in their kiss and their embrace the undertone of anguish,
-the distant tolling&mdash;as if for something accomplished, over forever&mdash;of
-a funeral bell.</p>
-
-<p>He watched her figure&mdash;white was not the word for it in this midnight
-world&mdash;pass away into the darkness. And, as she disappeared, the bell
-seemed still to toll, “Gone. Gone. Gone.”</p>
-
-<p>So he was alone.</p>
-
-<p>He was alone. The hours went by and he still sat there. The white roses
-near him, they, too, only a strange blossoming of darkness, symbolized,
-in their almost aching sweetness, the departed presence. He breathed in
-their fragrance; and, as he listened to his own quiet breaths, they
-seemed those of the night made conscious in him. The roses remembered
-for him; the night breathed through him; it was an interchange, a
-mingling. Above were the deep vaults of heaven, the profundities of
-distance, the appalling vastness, strewn with its dust of stars. And it,
-too, was with him, in him, as the roses were, as his own breath came and
-went.</p>
-
-<p>The veils had now lifted from the night and it was radiant, all its
-stars visible; and veil after veil seemed drifting from before his soul.</p>
-
-<p>A cool, light breeze stirred his hair.</p>
-
-<p>Closing his eyes, at last, his thought plunged, as his sight had
-plunged, into gulf under gulf of vacancy.</p>
-
-<p>After the unutterable fatigue, like the sinking under anæsthesia, of his
-final yielding, he could not<a name="page_286" id="page_286"></a> know what was happening to him, nor care.
-It had often happened before, only never quite like this. It was, once
-more, the great peace, lapping wave after wave, slow, sliding,
-immeasurable waves, through and through him; dissolving thought and
-feeling; dissolving all discord, all pain, all joy and beauty.</p>
-
-<p>The hours went by, and, as they went, Eppie’s face, like a drift of
-stars, sank, sank into the gulf. What had he said to her? what promised?
-Only the fragrance of the roses seemed to remember, nothing in himself.
-For what had he wanted? He wanted nothing now. Her will, her life, had
-seized him; but no, no, no,&mdash;the hours quietly, in their passing seemed
-to say it,&mdash;they had not kept him. He had at last, after a lifelong
-resistance, abandoned himself to her, and the abandonment had been the
-final step toward complete enfranchisement. For, with no effort now of
-his own at escape, no will at all to be free, he had left her far behind
-him, as if through the waters of the whirlpool his soul, like a light
-bubble, had softly, surely, risen to the air. It had lost itself, and
-her.</p>
-
-<p>He thought of her, but now with no fear, no anguish. A vast indifference
-filled him. It was no longer a question of tearing himself from her, no
-longer a question of saving himself and her. There was no question, nor
-any one to save. He was gone away, from her, from everything.</p>
-
-<p>When the dawn slowly stole into the garden, so that the ghosts of day
-began to take shape and color, Gavan rose among them. The earth was damp
-with<a name="page_287" id="page_287"></a> dew; his hair and clothes were damp. Overhead the sky was white,
-and the hills upon it showed a flat, shadowless green. Between the
-night’s enchantments of stillness, starriness, veiled, dreaming beauty
-and the sunlit, voluble enchantments of the day,&mdash;songs and flights of
-birds, ripple and shine of water, the fugitive, changing color of land
-and sky,&mdash;this hour was poor, bare, monotonous. There wasn’t a ray of
-enchantment in it. It was like bleak canvas scenery waiting for the
-footlights and a decorated stage.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan looked before him, down the garden path, shivering a little. He
-was cold, and the sensation brought him back to the old fact of life,
-that, after all, was there as long as one saw it. The coming of the
-light seemed to retwist once more his own palely tinted prism of
-personality, and with the cold, with the conscious looking back at the
-night and forward to the day, came a long, dull ache of sadness. It was
-more physical than mental; hunger and chill played their part in it, he
-knew, while, as the prism twined its colors, the fatiguing faculty of
-analysis once more built up the world of change and diversity. He looked
-up at the pale walls of the old house, laced with their pattern of
-creepers. The pine-tree lay like an inky shadow across it, and, among
-the branches, were the windows of Eppie’s room, the window where he and
-she had stood together on the morning of Robbie’s death&mdash;a white,
-dew-drenched morning like this. There she slept, dear, beautiful, the
-shadow of life. And here he stood, still living, after all, in their
-mutual mirage; still to hurt her.<a name="page_288" id="page_288"></a> He didn’t think of her face, her
-voice, her aspect. The only image that came was of a shadow&mdash;something
-darkly beautiful that entranced and suffocated, something that,
-enveloping one, shut out peace and vacancy.</p>
-
-<p>His cold hands thrust into his pockets, he stood thinking for a moment,
-of how he would have to hurt her, and of how much less it was to be than
-if what they had seen in the night’s glamour had been possible.</p>
-
-<p>He wondered why the mere fact of the night’s revelation&mdash;all those
-passing-bell hours&mdash;had made it so impossible for him to go on, by sheer
-force of will, with the play. Why couldn’t he, for her sake, act the
-lifelong part? In her arms he would know again the moments of glamour.
-But, at the mere question, a sickness shuddered through him. He saw now,
-clearly, what stood in the way: suffering, hideous suffering, for both
-of them&mdash;permanent, all-pervading suffering. The night had proved too
-irrevocably that any union between them was only momentary, only a
-seeming, and with her, feeling her faith, her hope, her love, he could
-know nothing but the undurable discord of their united and warring
-notes.</p>
-
-<p>Could life and death be made one flesh?</p>
-
-<p>The horror of the thought spurred him from his rigor of contemplation.
-That, at least, had been spared her. Destiny, then, had not meant for
-them that final, tragic consummation.</p>
-
-<p>He threaded his way rapidly among the paths, the flower-beds, under the
-low boughs of the old fruit-trees.<a name="page_289" id="page_289"></a> She had left the little door near
-the morning-room open for him, and through it he entered the still
-house.</p>
-
-<p>It wasn’t escape, now, from her, but from that pressing horror, as of
-something, that, unless he hastened, might still overtake them both. Yet
-outside her door he paused, bent his head, listened with a strange
-curiosity, helpless before the nearness of that loved, that dreaded
-being, the warring note that he sought yet fled from.</p>
-
-<p>She slept. Not a sound stirred in the room.</p>
-
-<p>He closed his eyes, seeing, with a vividness that was almost a
-hallucination, her face, her wonderful face, asleep, with the dark
-rivers of her hair flowing about it.</p>
-
-<p>And, fixed as he was in his frozen certainty of truth, he felt, once
-more like the striking of a hand across a harp, a longing, wild and
-passionate, to enter, to take her, sleeping, in his arms, to see her
-eyes open on him; to hide himself in life, as in the darkness of her
-breast and arms, and to forget forever the piercing of inexorable
-thought.</p>
-
-<p>He found that his hand was on the lock and that he was violently
-trembling.</p>
-
-<p>It was inexorable thought, the knowledge of the horror that would await
-them, that conquered the leap of blind instinct.</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later a thin, intense light rimmed all the eastern hills,
-and a cold, clear cheerfulness spread over the earth. The moors were
-purple and the sky overhead palely, immaculately blue. About the tall
-lime-trees the rooks circled, cawing, and a<a name="page_290" id="page_290"></a> skylark sang far and high,
-a floating atom of ecstasy.</p>
-
-<p>And in the clearness Gavan’s figure showed, walking rapidly away from
-the white house, down the road that led through the heather and past the
-birch-woods, walking away from it forever.<a name="page_291" id="page_291"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="VIII-3" id="VIII-3"></a>VIII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="75"
-height="76"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>RAINGER stood in Eppie’s little sitting-room, confronting, as Gavan had
-confronted the spring before, Miss Allen’s placidly sewing figure.</p>
-
-<p>The flowers against which her uneventful head now bent were autumnal.
-Thickly growing Michaelmas daisies, white and purple, screened the lower
-section of the square outside. Above were the shabby tree-tops, that
-seemed heavily painted upon an equally solid sky. The square was dusty,
-the trees were dusty, the very blue of the sky looked grimed with dust.</p>
-
-<p>The hot air; the still flowers, not stirred by a breath of breeze; Miss
-Allen’s figure, motionless but for its monotonously moving hand, were
-harmonious in their quiet, and in contrast to them Grainger’s pervasive,
-restless, irritable presence was like a loud, incessant jangling.</p>
-
-<p>He walked back and forth; he picked up the photographs on the
-mantel-shelf, the books on the table, flinging them down in a succession
-of impatient claps. He threw himself heavily into chairs,&mdash;so heavily
-that Miss Allen glanced round, alarmed for the security of the
-furniture,&mdash;and he asked her half a dozen times if Miss Gifford would be
-in at five.<a name="page_292" id="page_292"></a></p>
-
-<p>“She is seldom late,” or, “I expect her then,” Miss Allen would answer
-in the tone of mild severity that one might employ toward an unseemly
-child over whom one had no authority.</p>
-
-<p>But though there was severity in Miss Allen’s voice, the acute glances
-that she stole at the clamorous guest were not unsympathetic. She placed
-him. She pitied and she rather admired him. Even while emphasizing the
-dismay of her involuntary starts when the table rattled and the chairs
-groaned, she felt a satisfaction in these symptoms of passion; for that
-she was in the presence of a passion, a hopeless and rather magnificent
-passion, she made no doubt. She associated such passions with Eppie,&mdash;it
-was trailing such clouds of glory that she descended upon the arid life
-of the little square,&mdash;and none had so demonstrated itself, none had so
-performed its part for her benefit. She was sorry that it was hopeless;
-but she was glad that it was there, in all its Promethean wrathfulness,
-for her to observe. Miss Allen felt pretty sure that this was the
-nearest experience of passion she would ever know.</p>
-
-<p>“In at five, as a rule, you say?” Grainger repeated for the fourth time,
-springing from the chair where, with folded arms, he had sat for a few
-moments scowling unseeingly at the pansies.</p>
-
-<p>He stationed himself now beside her and, over her head, stared out at
-the square. It was at once alarming and delightful,&mdash;as if the Titan
-with his attendant vulture had risen from his rock to join her.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve no idea from which direction she is coming?<a name="page_293" id="page_293"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“None,” said Miss Allen, decisively but not unkindly. “It’s really no
-good for you to think of going out to meet her. She is doing a lot of
-different things this afternoon and might come from any direction. You
-would almost certainly miss her.” And she went on, unemphatically, but,
-for all the colorless quality of her voice, so significantly that
-Grainger, realizing for the first time the presence of an understanding
-sympathy, darted a quick look at her. “She gets in at five, just as I go
-out. She knows that I depend on her to be here by then.”</p>
-
-<p>So she would not be in the way, this little individual. She made him
-think, now that he looked at her more attentively, as she sat there with
-her trimly, accurately moving hand, of a beaver he had once seen swiftly
-and automatically feeding itself; her sleek head, her large, smooth
-front teeth, were like a beaver’s. It was really very decent of her to
-see that he wanted her out of the way; so decent that, conscious of the
-link it had made between them, he said presently, abruptly and rather
-roughly, “How is she?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, of course she has not recovered,” said Miss Allen.</p>
-
-<p>“Recovered? But she wasn’t actually ill.” Grainger had a retorting air.</p>
-
-<p>“No; I suppose not. It was nervous prostration, I suppose&mdash;if that’s not
-an illness.”</p>
-
-<p>“This isn’t the place for her to recover from nervous prostration in.”
-He seemed to fasten an accusation, but Miss Allen understood perfectly.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not. I’ve tried to make her see that.<a name="page_294" id="page_294"></a> But,”&mdash;she was making
-now quite a chain of links,&mdash;“she feels she must work, must lose herself
-in something. Of course she overdoes it. She overdoes everything.”</p>
-
-<p>“Overwork, do you think? The cause, I mean?”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger jerked this out, keeping his eyes on the square.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Allen, not in any discreet hesitation, but in sincere uncertainty,
-paused over her answer.</p>
-
-<p>“It couldn’t be, quite. She was well enough when she went away in the
-summer, though she really isn’t at all strong,&mdash;not nearly so strong as
-she looks. She broke down, you know, at her uncle’s, in Scotland”; and
-Miss Allen added, in a low-pitched and obviously confidential voice, “I
-think it was some shock that nobody knows anything about.”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger stood still for some moments, and then plunging back into the
-little room, he crossed and re-crossed it with rapid strides. Her
-guessing and his knowledge came too near.</p>
-
-<p>Only after a long pause did Miss Allen say, “She’s really frightfully
-changed.” The clock was on the stroke. Rising, gathering up her work,
-dropping, with neat little clicks, her scissors, her thimble, into her
-work-box, she added, and she fixed her eyes on him for a moment as she
-spoke, “Do, if you can, make her&mdash;“</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what? Go away?” he demanded. “I’ve no authority&mdash;none. Her people
-ought to kidnap her. That’s what I’d do. Lift her out of this hole.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Allen’s eyes dwelt on his while she nerved<a name="page_295" id="page_295"></a> herself to a height of
-adventurous courage that, in looking back at it, amazed her. “Here she
-is,” she said, and almost whispering, “Well, kidnap her, then. That’s
-what she needs&mdash;some one stronger than herself to kidnap her.”</p>
-
-<p>She slid her hand through his, a panic of shyness overtaking her, and
-darted out, followed by the flutter of a long, white strip of muslin.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger stood looking at the open door, through which in a moment Eppie
-entered.</p>
-
-<p>His first feeling was one of relief. He did not, in that first moment,
-see that she was “frightfully changed.” Even her voice seemed the same,
-as she said with all the frank kindness of her welcome and surprise,
-“Why, Jim, this is good of you,” and all her tact was there, too, giving
-him an impression of the resource and flexibility of happy vitality, in
-her ignoring by glance or tone of their parting.</p>
-
-<p>She wore, on the hot autumn day, a white linen frock, the loose bodice
-belted with green, a knot of green at her throat, and, under the white
-and green of her little hat, her face showed color and its dear smile.</p>
-
-<p>Relief was so great, indeed, that Grainger found himself almost clinging
-to her hand in his sudden thankfulness.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not so ill, then,” he brought out. “I heard it&mdash;that you had
-broken down&mdash;and I came back. I was in the Dolomites. I hadn’t had news
-of you since I left.”</p>
-
-<p>“So ill! Nonsense,” said Eppie, giving his hand a reassuring shake and
-releasing her own to pull off<a name="page_296" id="page_296"></a> her soft, loose gloves. “It was a
-breakdown I had, but nothing serious. I believe it to have been an
-attack of biliousness, myself. People don’t like to own to liver when
-they can claim graceful maladies like nervous prostration,&mdash;so it was
-called. But liver, only, I fear it was. And I’m all right now, thank
-goodness, for I loathe being ill and am a horrid patient.”</p>
-
-<p>She had taken off her hat, pushing back her hair from her forehead and
-sinking into a chair that was against the light. The Michaelmas daisies
-made a background for the bronze and white of her head, for, as she
-rested, the color that her surprise and her swift walking had given her
-died. She was glad to rest, her smile said that, and he saw, indeed,
-that she was utterly tired.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, as he looked at her, seeing the great fatigue, seeing the
-pallor, seeing the smile only stay as if with determination, the truth
-of Miss Allen’s description was revealed to him. She was frightfully
-changed. Her smile, her courage, made him think of a <i>danse macabre</i>.
-The rhythm, the gaiety of life were there, but life itself was gone.</p>
-
-<p>The revelation came to him, but he felt himself clutch it silently, and
-he let her go on talking.</p>
-
-<p>She went on, indeed, very volubly, talking of her breakdown, of how good
-the general and her aunt had been to her, and of how getting back to her
-work had picked her up directly.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I’ll finally pitch my tent here,” she went on. “The interest
-grows all the time,&mdash;and the ties, the responsibility. One can’t do
-things by half<a name="page_297" id="page_297"></a> measures; you know that, thorough person that you are. I
-mustn’t waste my mite of income by gadding about. I’m going to chuck all
-the rest and give myself altogether to this.”</p>
-
-<p>“You used to think that the rest helped you in this,” said Grainger.</p>
-
-<p>“To a certain extent it did, and will, for I’ve had so much that it will
-last me for a long time.”</p>
-
-<p>“You intend to live permanently down here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall have my holidays, and I shall run up to civilization for a
-dinner or two now and then. It’s not that I’ve any illusions about my
-usefulness or importance. It’s that all this is so useful to me. It’s
-something I can do with all my might and main, and I’ve such masses of
-energy you know, Jim, that need employment. And then, though of course
-one works at the wrong side of the tapestry and has to trust that the
-pattern is coming right, I do believe that, to a certain extent, it does
-need me.”</p>
-
-<p>He leaned back in his chair opposite her, listening to the voice that
-rattled on so cheerfully. With his head bent, he kept that old gaze upon
-her and clutched the clearer and clearer revelation: Eppie&mdash;Eppie in
-torment; Eppie shattered;&mdash;Eppie&mdash;why, it was as if she sat there before
-him smiling and rattling over a huge hole in her chest. And, finally,
-the consciousness of the falsity in her own tone made her falter a
-little. She couldn’t continue so glibly while his eyes were saying to
-her: “Yes; I see, I see. You are wounded to death.” But if she faltered
-it was only, in the pause, to look about for another shield.<a name="page_298" id="page_298"></a></p>
-
-<p>“And you?” she said. “Have you done a great deal of climbing? Tell me
-about yourself, dear Jim.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a dangerous note to strike and the “dear Jim” gave away her sense
-of insecurity. It was almost an appeal to him not to see, or, at all
-events, not to tell her that he saw.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk about me,” he said very rudely. She knew the significance of
-his rudeness.</p>
-
-<p>“Let us talk of whatever you will.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of you, then. Don’t try to shut me out, Eppie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Am I shutting you out?”</p>
-
-<p>“You are trying to. You have succeeded with the rest, I suppose; but, as
-of course you know, you can’t succeed with me. I know too much. I care
-too much.”</p>
-
-<p>His rough, tense voice beat down her barriers. She sat silent, oddly
-smiling.</p>
-
-<p>He rose and came to her and stood above her, pressing the tips of his
-fingers heavily down upon her shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“You must tell me. I must know. I won’t stand not knowing.”</p>
-
-<p>Motionless, without looking up at him, she still smiled before her.</p>
-
-<p>“That&mdash;that coward has broken your heart,” he said. There were tears in
-his voice, and, looking up now, the smile stiffened to a resolute
-grimace, she saw them running down his cheeks. But her own face did not
-soften. With a glib dryness she answered:</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Jim; that’s it.<a name="page_299" id="page_299"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh&mdash;“ It was a long growl over her head.</p>
-
-<p>She had looked away again, and continued in the same crisp voice: “I’d
-lie if I could, you may be sure. But you put it so, you look so, that I
-can’t. I’m at your mercy. You know what I feel, so I can’t hide it from
-you. I hate any one, even you, to know what I feel. Help me to hide it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What has he done?” Grainger asked on the muffled, growling note.</p>
-
-<p>“Gavan? Done? He’s done nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“But something happened. You aren’t where you were when I left you. You
-weren’t breaking down then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hope deferred, Jim&mdash;“</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not that. Don’t fence, to shield him. It’s not hope deferred. It’s
-hope dead. Something happened. What was it?”</p>
-
-<p>“All that happened was that he went, when I thought that he was going to
-stay, forever.”</p>
-
-<p>“He went, knowing&mdash;“</p>
-
-<p>“That I loved him? Yes; I told him.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he told you that he didn’t love you?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, there you were wrong. He told me that he did. But he saw what you
-saw. So what would you have asked of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Saw what I saw? What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“That he would suffocate me. That he was the negation of everything I
-believed in.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean to tell me,” said Grainger, his fingers still pressing down
-upon her shoulder, “that it all came out,&mdash;that you had it there between
-you,&mdash;and then that he ran away?<a name="page_300" id="page_300"></a>”</p>
-
-<p>“From the fear of hurting my life. Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“From the fear of life itself, you mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“If that was it, wasn’t it enough?”</p>
-
-<p>“The coward. The mean, bloodless coward,” said Jim Grainger.</p>
-
-<p>“I let you say it because I understand; it’s your relief. But he is not
-a coward. He is only&mdash;a saint. A saint without a saint’s perquisites. A
-Spinoza without a God. An imitator of Christ without a Christ. I have
-been thinking, thinking it all out, seeing it all, ever since.”</p>
-
-<p>“Spinoza! What has he to do with it! Don’t talk rot, dear child, to
-comfort yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Be patient, Jim. Perhaps I can help you. It calms one when one
-understands. I have been reading up all the symptoms. Listen to this, if
-you think that Spinoza has nothing to do with it. On the contrary, he
-knew all about it and would have seen very much as Gavan does.”</p>
-
-<p>She took up one of the books that had been so frequently flung down by
-Grainger in his waiting and turned its pages while he watched her with
-the enduring look of a mother who humors a sick child’s foolish fancies.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to Spinoza, Jim,” she said, and he obediently bent his lowering
-gaze to the task. “‘When a thing is not loved, no strife arises about
-it; there is no pang if it perishes, no envy if another bears it away,
-no fear, no hate; yes, in a word, no tumult of soul. These things all
-come from loving that which perishes.’ And now the Imitation: ‘What
-canst thou see anywhere which can continue long under the<a name="page_301" id="page_301"></a> sun? Thou
-believest, perchance, that thou shalt be satisfied, but thou wilt never
-be able to attain unto this. If thou shouldst see all things before thee
-at once, what would it be but a vain vision?’ And this: ‘Trust not thy
-feeling, for that which is now will be quickly changed into somewhat
-else.’”</p>
-
-<p>Her voice, as she read on to him,&mdash;and from page to page she went,
-plucking for him, it seemed, their cold, white blossoms, fit flowers to
-lay on the grave of love,&mdash;had lost the light dryness as of withered
-leaves rustling. It seemed now gravely to understand, to acquiesce. A
-chill went over the man, as though, under his hand, he felt her, too,
-sliding from warm life into that place of shadows where she must be to
-be near the one she loved.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut the books, for God’s sake, Eppie,” he said. “Don’t tell me that
-you’ve come to see as he has.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at him, and now, in the dear, deep eyes, he saw all the
-old Eppie, the Eppie of life and battle.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you think it, Jim? It’s because I see so clearly what he sees that
-I hate it and repudiate it and fight it with every atom of my being.
-It’s that hatred, that repudiation, that fight, that is life. I believe
-in it, I’m for it, as I never believed before, as I never was before.”</p>
-
-<p>He was answering her look, seeing her as life’s wounded champion,
-standing, shot through, on the ramparts of her beleaguered city. She
-would shake her banner high in the air as she fell. The pity, the fury,
-the love of his eyes dwelt on her.</p>
-
-<p>And suddenly, under that look, her eyes closed.<a name="page_302" id="page_302"></a> She shrank together in
-her chair; she bowed down her head upon her knees, covering her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Jim,” she said, “my heart is broken.”</p>
-
-<p>He knew that he had brought her to this, that never before an onlooker
-had she so fallen into her own misery. He had forced her to show the
-final truth that, though she held the banner, she was shot through and
-through. And he could do nothing but stand on above her, his face set to
-a flintier, sharper endurance, as he heard the great sobs shake her.</p>
-
-<p>He left her presently and walked up and down the room while she wept,
-crouched over upon her knees. It was not for long. The tempest passed,
-and, when she sat in quiet, her head in her hands, her face still
-hidden, he said, “You must set about mending now, Eppie.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t mend. I’ll live; but I can’t mend.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say it, Eppie. This may pass as&mdash;well&mdash;other things in your life
-have passed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you, too, talk Spinoza to me, Jim?”</p>
-
-<p>“Damn Spinoza! I’m talking life to you&mdash;the life we both believe in. I’m
-not telling you to turn your back on it because it has crippled you. You
-won’t, I know it. I know that you are brave. Eppie, Eppie,”&mdash;before her,
-now, he bent to her, then knelt beside her chair,&mdash;“let me be the
-crutch. Let me have the fragments. Let’s try, together, to mend them. I
-ask nothing of you but that trying, with my help, to mend. He isn’t for
-you. He’s never for you. I’ll say no more brutalities of him. I’ll use
-your own words and say that he can’t,&mdash;that his saintship can’t. So
-won’t you, simply, let me take<a name="page_303" id="page_303"></a> you? Even if you’re broken for life, let
-me have the broken Eppie.”</p>
-
-<p>She had never, except in the moment of the kiss, seen this deepest thing
-in him, this gentleness, this reverent tenderness that, under the
-bullying, threatening, angry aspects of his love, now supplicated with a
-beauty that revealed all the angel in humanity. Strange&mdash;she could think
-it in all her sorrow&mdash;that the thing that held him to her was the thing
-that held her to Gavan, the deep, the mysterious, the unchangeable
-affinity. For him, as for her, there could be but one, and for that one
-alone could these depths and heights of the heart open themselves.</p>
-
-<p>“Jim, dear, dear Jim, never, never,” she said. “I am his, only his,
-fragments, all of me, for as long as I am I.”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger hid his face on the arm of her chair.</p>
-
-<p>“And he is mine,” said Eppie. “He knows it, and that is why he fears me.
-He is mine forever.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad for your sake that you can believe that,” Grainger muttered,
-“and glad, for my own, that I don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Jim?”</p>
-
-<p>“I could hardly live if I thought that you were going to love him in
-eternity and that I was, forever, to be shut away. Thank goodness that
-it’s only for a lifetime that my tragedy lasts.”</p>
-
-<p>She closed her eyes to these perplexities, laying her hand on his.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. We can only think and act for this life. It’s this we
-have to shape. Perhaps in eternity, really in eternity, whatever that
-may mean,<a name="page_304" id="page_304"></a> I won’t need to shut you out. Dear, dear Jim, it’s hard that
-it must seem that to you now. You know what I feel about you. And who
-could feel it as I do? We are in the same boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, for he, at least, loves no one else. You haven’t that to bear. As
-far as he goes,&mdash;and it isn’t far,&mdash;he is yours. We are not at all in
-the same boat. But that’s enough of me. I suppose I am done for, as you
-say, forever.”</p>
-
-<p>He had got upon his feet, and, as if at their mutual wreckage, looked
-down with a face that had found again its old shield of grimness.</p>
-
-<p>“As for you,” he went on, “I sha’n’t, at all events, see you
-suffocating. You must mend alone, then, as best you can. Really, you’re
-not as tragic as you might have been.”</p>
-
-<p>Then, after this salutary harshness, and before he turned from her to
-go, he added, as once before, “Poor darling.<a name="page_305" id="page_305"></a>”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="IX-3" id="IX-3"></a>IX</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="75"
-height="76"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>RAINGER hardly knew why he had come and, as he walked up the deep
-Surrey lane from the drowsy village station, his common-sense warred
-with the instinct, almost the obsession, that was taking him to
-Cheylesford Lodge. Eppie had been persistently in his thoughts since
-their meeting of the week before, and from his own hopelessness had
-sprung the haunting of a hope for her. Turn from it as he would, accuse
-himself angrily of madness, morbidity, or a mere tendency to outrageous
-meddling,&mdash;symptomatic of shattered nerves,&mdash;he couldn’t escape it. By
-day and night it was with him, until he saw himself, in a lurid vision,
-as responsible for Eppie’s very life if he didn’t test its validity. For
-where she had failed might not a man armed with the strength of his
-selfless love succeed?</p>
-
-<p>He had said, in his old anger, that as Gavan’s wife Gavan would kill
-her; but he hadn’t really meant that literally; now, literally, the new
-fear had come that she might die of Gavan’s loss. Her will hadn’t
-snapped, but her vitality was like the flare of the candle in its
-socket. To love, the eremite of Cheylesford Lodge wouldn’t
-yield&mdash;perhaps for very pity<a name="page_306" id="page_306"></a>’s sake; but if he were made to see the
-other side of it?&mdash;Grainger found a grim amusement in the paradox&mdash;the
-lover, in spite of love, might yield to pity. Couldn’t his own manliness
-strike some spark of manliness from Gavan? Couldn’t he and Eppie between
-them, with their so different appeals,&mdash;she to what was soft, he to what
-was tough,&mdash;hoist his tragically absurd head above water, as it were,
-into the air of real life, that might, who knew? fill and sustain his
-aquatic lungs? It gave him a vindictive pleasure to see the drowning
-simile in the most ludicrous aspects&mdash;Gavan, draped in the dramatic
-robes of his twopenny-halfpenny philosophies, holding his head in a
-basin of water, there resolved to die. Grainger felt that as far as his
-own inclinations were concerned it would have given him some pleasure to
-help to hold him under, to see that, while he was about it, he did it
-thoroughly; but the question wasn’t one of his own inclinations: it was
-for Eppie’s sake that he must try to drag out the enraptured suicide. It
-was Eppie, bereft and dying,&mdash;so it seemed to him in moments of deep
-fear,&mdash;whose very life depended on the submerged life. And to see if he
-could fish it up for her he had come on this undignified, this
-ridiculous errand.</p>
-
-<p>Very undignified and very ridiculous he felt the errand to be, as he
-strode on through the lane, its high hedge-rows all dusty with the
-autumn drought; but he was indifferent enough to that side of it. He
-felt no confusion. He was completely prepared to speak his mind.</p>
-
-<p>Coming to a turning of the lane, where he stood<a name="page_307" id="page_307"></a> for a moment,
-uncertain, at branching paths, he was joined by an alert little parson
-who asked him courteously if he could direct him on his way. They were
-both, it then appeared, going to Cheylesford Lodge; and the Reverend
-John Best, after introducing himself as the rector of Dittleworth
-parish, and receiving Grainger’s name, which had its reverberations,
-with affable interest, surmised that it was to another friend of Mr.
-Palairet’s that he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. No. That is to say, I’ve known him after a fashion for years, but
-seen little of him. Has he been here all summer?” Grainger asked, as
-they walked on.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that Gavan had only returned from the Continent the week
-before, but Mr. Best went on to say, with an evidently temperamental
-loquacity, that he was there for most of the time as a rule and was
-found a very charming neighbor and a very excellent parishioner.</p>
-
-<p>This last was a rôle in which Gavan seemed extremely incongruous, and
-Grainger looked his perplexity, murmuring, “Parishioner?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not, I fear, that we can claim him as an altogether orthodox one,” Mr.
-Best said, smiling tolerantly upon his companion’s probable narrowness.
-“We ask for the spirit, rather than the letter, nowadays, Mr. Grainger;
-and Mr. Palairet is, at heart, as good a Christian as any of us, of that
-I am assured: better than many of us, as far as living the Christian
-life goes. Christianity, in its essence, is a life. Ah, if only you
-statesmen, you active men of the world, would realize that; would look
-past the<a name="page_308" id="page_308"></a> symbols to the reality. We, who see life as a spiritual
-organization, are able to break down the limitations of the dry,
-self-centered individualism that, for so many years, has obscured the
-glorious features of our faith. And it is the spirit of the Church that
-Mr. Palairet has grasped. Time only is needed, I am convinced, to make
-him a partaker of her gifts.”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger walked on in a sardonic silence, and Mr. Best, all
-unsuspecting, continued to embroider his congenial theme with
-illustrations: the village poor, to whom Mr. Palairet was so devoted;
-the village hospital, of which he was to talk over the plans to-day; the
-neighborly thoughtfulness and unfailing kindness and charity he showed
-toward high and low.</p>
-
-<p>“Palairet always seemed to me very ineffectual,” said Grainger when, in
-a genial pause, he felt that something in the way of response was
-expected of him.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, I fear you judge by the worldly standard of outward attainment, Mr.
-Grainger.”</p>
-
-<p>“What other is there for us human beings to judge by?”</p>
-
-<p>“The standard of our unhappy modern plutocratic society is not that by
-which to measure the contemplative type of character.”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger felt a slight stress of severity in the good little parson’s
-affability.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I think its standards aren’t at all unwholesome,” he made reply. He
-could have justified anything, any standard, against Gavan and his
-standards.<a name="page_309" id="page_309"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Unwholesome, my dear Mr. Grainger? That is just what they are. See the
-beauty of a life like our friend’s here. It judges your barbarous
-Christless civilization. He lives laborious, simple days. He does his
-work, he has his friends. His influence upon them counts for more than
-an outside observer could compute. Great men are among them. I met Lord
-Taunton at his house last Sunday. A most impressive personality. Even
-though Mr. Palairet has abandoned the political career, one can’t call
-him ineffectual when such a man is among his intimates.”</p>
-
-<p>“The monkish type doesn’t appeal to me, I own.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, there you touch the point that has troubled me. It is not good for
-a man to live alone. My chief wish for him is that he may marry. I often
-urge it on him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well done.”</p>
-
-<p>“One did hear,” Mr. Best went on, his small, ruddy face taking on a look
-of retrospective reprobation, “that there was an attachment to a certain
-young woman&mdash;the tale was public property&mdash;only as such do I allude to
-it&mdash;a very fashionable, very worldly young woman. I was relieved indeed
-when the rumor came to nothing. He escaped finally, I can’t help
-fancying it, this summer. I was much relieved.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why so, pray?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am rural, old-fashioned, my dear young man, and that type of young
-woman is one toward which, I own it, I find it difficult to feel
-charitably. She represents the pagan, the Christless element that I
-spoke of in our modern world. Her charm could not<a name="page_310" id="page_310"></a> have been a noble
-one. Had our friend here succumbed to it, she could only have meant
-disaster in his life. She would have urged him into ambition,
-pleasure-seeking, dissipation. Of course I only cite what I have heard
-in my quiet corner, though I have had glimpses of her, passing with a
-friend, a very frivolous person, in a motor-car. She looked completely
-what I had imagined.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you mean Miss Gifford,” said Grainger, trying for temperateness, “I
-happen to know her. She is anything but a pleasure-seeker, anything but
-frivolous, anything, above all, but a pagan. If Palairet had been lucky
-enough to marry her it would have been the best thing that ever happened
-to him in his life, and a very dubious thing for her. She is a thousand
-times too good for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Mr. Grainger, pardon me; I had no idea that you knew the lady.
-But,” Mr. Best had flushed a little under this onslaught, “I cannot but
-think you a partisan.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you call a woman frivolous who spends half of her time working in
-the slums?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is a phase, I hear, of the ultra-smart young woman. But no doubt
-rumor has been unjust. I must beg you to pardon me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t mind that. You heard, no doubt, the surface things. But no
-one who knows Miss Gifford can think of them, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if I have been betrayed into injustice, I hope that you will
-reconsider a little more charitably your impression of Mr. Palairet,”
-said Mr. Best, in whom, evidently, Grainger’s roughness rankled.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger laughed grimly. “I can’t consider him<a name="page_311" id="page_311"></a> anything but a thousand
-times too bad for Miss Gifford.”</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the entrance to Cheylesford Lodge on this final and
-discordant phrase. Mr. Best kept a grieved silence and Grainger’s
-thoughts passed from him.</p>
-
-<p>He had had in his life no training in appreciation and was indifferent
-to things of the eye, but even to his insensible nature the whole aspect
-of the house that they approached between high yew hedges, its dreaming
-quiet, the tones of its dim old bricks, the shadowed white of paneled
-walls within, spoke of pensive beauty, of a secure content in things of
-the mind. He felt it suddenly as oppressive and ominous in its assured
-quietness. It had some secret against the probes of feeling. Its magic
-softly shut away suffering and encircled safely a treasure of
-tranquillity.</p>
-
-<p>That was the secret, that the magic; it flashed vaguely for
-Grainger&mdash;though by its light he saw more vividly his own errand as
-ridiculous&mdash;that a life of thought, pure thought, if one could only
-achieve it, was the only <i>safe</i> life. Where, in this adjusted system of
-beauty and contemplation, would his appeals find foothold?</p>
-
-<p>He dashed back the crowding doubts, summoning his own crude forces.</p>
-
-<p>The man who admitted them said that Mr. Palairet was in the garden, and
-stepping from opened windows at the back of the house, they found
-themselves on the sunny spaces of the lawn with its encompassing trees
-and its wandering border of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan was sitting with a book in the shade of the<a name="page_312" id="page_312"></a> great yew-tree. In
-summer flannels, a panama hat tilted over his eyes, he was very white,
-very tenuous, very exquisite. And he was the center of it all, the
-secret securely his, the magic all at his disposal.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing them he rose, dropping his book into his chair, strolling over
-the miraculous green to meet them, showing no haste, no hesitation, no
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve come on particular business,” Grainger said, “and I’ll stroll
-about until you and Mr. Best are done with the hospital.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Best, still with sadness in his manner, promised not to keep Mr.
-Palairet long and they went inside.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger was left standing under the yew-tree. He took up Gavan’s book,
-while the sense of frustration, and of rebellion against it, rose in
-him. The book was French and dealt with an obscure phase of Byzantine
-history. Gavan’s neat notes marked passages concerning some contemporary
-religious phenomena.</p>
-
-<p>Grainger flung down the book, careless of crumpled leaves, and wandered
-off abruptly, among the hedges and into the garden. It was a very
-different garden from the old Scotch one where a sweet pensiveness
-seemed always to hover and where romance whispered and beckoned. This
-garden, steeped in sunlight, and where plums and pears on the hot rosy
-walls shone like jewels among their crisp green leaves, was unshadowed,
-unhaunted, smiling and decorous&mdash;the garden of placid wisdom and
-Epicurean calm. Grainger, as he walked, felt at his heart a tug of
-strange homesickness and yearning for that<a name="page_313" id="page_313"></a> Northern garden, its dim
-gray walls and its disheveled nooks and corners. Were they all done with
-it forever?</p>
-
-<p>By the time he had returned to the lawn Gavan was just emerging from the
-house. They met in the shadow of the yew.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad to see you, Grainger,” Gavan said, with a smile that struck
-Grainger as faded in quality. “This place is a sort of harbor for tired
-workers, you know. You should have looked me up before, or are you never
-tired enough for that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t feel the need of harbors, yet. One never sees you in London.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, the lounging life down here suits me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your little parson doesn’t see it in that light. He has been telling me
-how you live up to your duties as neighbor and parishioner.”</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t require much effort. Nice little fellow, isn’t he, Best? He
-tells me that you walked up together.”</p>
-
-<p>“We did,” said Grainger, with his own inner sense of grim humor at the
-memory. “I should think you would find him rather limited.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I’m limited, too,” said Gavan, mildly. “I like being with people so
-neatly adapted to their functions. There are no loose ends about Best;
-nothing unfulfilled or uncomfortable. He’s all there&mdash;all that there is
-of him to be there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a very lively companion.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not a lively companion, either,” Gavan once more, with his mild
-gaiety, retorted.<a name="page_314" id="page_314"></a></p>
-
-<p>Grainger at this gave a harsh laugh. “No, you certainly aren’t,” he
-agreed.</p>
-
-<p>They had twice paced the length of the yew-tree shadow and Gavan had
-asked no question; and Grainger felt, as the pause grew, that Gavan
-never would ask questions. Any onus for a disturbance of the atmosphere
-must rest entirely on himself, and to disturb it he would have to be
-brutal.</p>
-
-<p>He jerked aside the veils of the placid dialogue with sudden violence.
-“I’ve seen Eppie,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>He had intended to use her formal name only, but the nearer word rushed
-out and seemed to shatter the magic that held him off.</p>
-
-<p>Gavan’s face grew a shade paler. “Have you?” he said.</p>
-
-<p>“You knew that she had been ill?”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard of it, recently, from General Carmichael. It was nothing
-serious, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>“It will be serious.” Grainger stood still and gazed into his eyes. “Do
-you want to kill her?”</p>
-
-<p>It struck him, when he had said it, and while Gavan received the words
-and seemed to reflect on them, that however artificial his atmosphere
-might be he would never evade any reality brought forcibly into it. He
-contemplated this one and did not pretend not to understand.</p>
-
-<p>“I want Eppie to be happy,” he said presently.</p>
-
-<p>“Happy, yes. So do I,” broke from Grainger with a groan.</p>
-
-<p>They stood now near the great trunk of the yew-tree, and turning away,
-striking the steel-gray bark monotonously with his fist, he went on: “I
-love her,<a name="page_315" id="page_315"></a> as you know. And she loves you. She told me&mdash;I made her tell
-me. But any one with eyes could see it; even your gossiping little fool
-of a parson here had heard of it&mdash;was relieved for your escape. But who
-cares for the cackling? And you have crippled her, broken her. You have
-tossed aside that woman whose little finger is worth more to the world
-than your whole being. I wish to God she’d never seen you.”</p>
-
-<p>“So do I,” Gavan said.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d kill you with the greatest pleasure&mdash;if it could do her any good.”</p>
-
-<p>There was relief for Grainger in getting out these fundamental things.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,&mdash;I quite understand that. So would I,” Gavan acquiesced,&mdash;“kill
-myself, I mean,&mdash;if it would do her any good.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t try that. It wouldn’t. She’s beyond all help but one. So I am
-here to put it to you.”</p>
-
-<p>The still, hot day encompassed their shadow and with its quiet made more
-intense Grainger’s sense of his own passion&mdash;passion and its negation,
-the stress between the two. Their words, though they spoke so quietly,
-seemed to fill the world.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry,” Gavan said; “I can do nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger beat at the tree.</p>
-
-<p>“You love her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not as she must be loved. I only want her, when I am selfish. When I
-think for her I have no want at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give her your selfishness.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, even that fades. That’s what I found out.<a name="page_316" id="page_316"></a> I can’t count on my
-selfishness. I’ve tried to do it. It didn’t work.”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger turned his bloodshot eyes upon him; these moments under the
-yew-tree, that white figure with its pale smile, its comprehending
-gravity confronting him, would count in his life, he knew, among its
-most racking memories.</p>
-
-<p>“I consider you a madman,” he now said.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I am one. You don’t think it for Eppie’s happiness to marry a
-madman?”</p>
-
-<p>“My God, I don’t know what to think! I want to save her.”</p>
-
-<p>“But so do I,” Gavan’s voice had its first note of eagerness. “<i>I</i> want
-to save her. And I want her to marry you. That’s her chance, and
-yours&mdash;and mine, though mine really doesn’t count. That’s what I hope
-for.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no hope there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have patience. Wait. She will, perhaps, get over me.”</p>
-
-<p>Grainger’s eyes, with their hot, jaded look of baffled purpose, so
-selfless that it transcended jealousy and hatred, were still on him, and
-he thought now that he detected on the other’s face the strain of some
-inner tension. He wasn’t so dead, then. He was suffering. No, more yet,
-and the final insight came in another vague flash that darkly showed the
-trouble at the heart of all the magic, the beauty, he, too, more really
-than Eppie, perhaps, was dying for love. Madman, devoted madman that he
-was, he was dying for love of the woman from whom he must always flee.
-It was strange to feel one’s sane,<a name="page_317" id="page_317"></a> straightforward mind forced along
-this labyrinth of dazed comprehension, turning in the cruelly knotted
-paradox of this impossible love-story. Yet, against his very will, he
-was so forced to follow and almost to understand.</p>
-
-<p>There wasn’t much more to say. And he had his own paradoxical
-satisfaction in the sight of the canker at the core of thought. So, at
-all events, one wasn’t safe even so.</p>
-
-<p>“She won’t get over you,” he said. “It isn’t a mere love-affair. It’s
-her life. She may not die of it; that’s a figure of speech that I had no
-right, I suppose, to use. At all events, she’ll try her best not to die.
-But she won’t get over you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not even if I get out of the way forever?”</p>
-
-<p>Gavan put the final proposition before him, but Grainger, staring at the
-sunlight, shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“The very fact that you’re alive makes her hold the tighter. No, you
-can’t save her in that way. I wish you could.<a name="page_318" id="page_318"></a>”</p>
-
-<h3><a name="X-3" id="X-3"></a>X</h3>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra"><img src="images/00g.png"
-width="75"
-height="76"
-alt="G"
-title="G"
-/></span>RAINGER had had his insight, but, outwardly, in the year that followed,
-Gavan’s life was one of peace, of achieved escape.</p>
-
-<p>The world soon ceased to pull at him, to plead or protest. With a kindly
-shrug of the shoulders the larger life passed him by as one more proved
-ineffectual. The little circle that clung about him, as the flotsam and
-jetsam of a river drift from the hurrying current around the stability
-and stillness of a green islet, was, in the main, composed of the
-defeated or the indifferent. One or two cynical fighters moored their
-boats, for a week-end, at his tranquil shores, and the powerful old
-statesman who believed nothing, hoped nothing, felt very little, and
-who, behind his show-life of patriotic and hard-working nobleman, smiled
-patiently at the whole foolish comedy, was his most intimate companion.
-To the world at large, Lord Taunton was the witty Tory, the devoted
-churchman, the wise upholder of all the hard-won props of civilization;
-to Gavan, he was the skeptical and pessimistic metaphysician; together
-they watched the wheels go round.</p>
-
-<p>Mayburn came down once or twice to see his poor,<a name="page_319" id="page_319"></a> queer, dear old
-Palairet, and in London boasted much of the experience. “He’s too, too
-wonderful,” he said. “He has achieved a most delicate, recondite
-harmony. One never heard anything just like it before, and can’t, for
-the life of one, tell just what the notes are. Effort, constant effort,
-amidst constant quiet and austerity. Work is his passion, and yet never
-was any creature so passionless. He’s like a rower, rowing easily,
-indefatigably, down a long river, among lilies, while he looks up at the
-sky.”</p>
-
-<p>But Mayburn felt the quiet and austerity a little disturbing. He didn’t,
-after all, come to look at quiet and austerity unless some one were
-there to hear him talk about them; and his host, all affability, never
-seemed quite there.</p>
-
-<p>So a year, more than a year, went by.</p>
-
-<p>It was on an early spring morning that Gavan found on his
-breakfast-table a letter written in a faltering hand,&mdash;a hand that
-faltered with the weeping that shook it,&mdash;Miss Barbara’s old, faint
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>He read, at first, hardly comprehending.</p>
-
-<p>It was of Eppie she wrote: of her overwork&mdash;they thought it must be
-that&mdash;in the winter, of the resultant fragility that had made her
-succumb suddenly to an illness contracted in some hotbed of epidemic in
-the slums. They had all thought that she would come through it. People
-had been very kind. Eppie had so many, many friends. Every one loved
-her. She had been moved to Lady Alicia’s house in Grosvenor Street. She,
-Aunt Barbara, had come up to town at once, and the general was with
-her.<a name="page_320" id="page_320"></a></p>
-
-<p>It was with a fierce impatience that he went on through the phrases that
-were like the slow trickling of tear after tear, as if he knew, yet
-refused to know, the tragedy that the trivial tears flowed for, knew
-what was coming, resented its insufferable delay, yet spurned its bare
-possibility. At the end, and only then, it came. Her strength had
-suddenly failed. There was no hope. Eppie was dying and had asked to see
-him&mdash;at once.</p>
-
-<p>A bird, above the window open to the dew and sunlight, sang and whistled
-while he read, a phrase, not joyous, not happy, yet strangely full of
-triumph, of the innocent praise of life. Gavan, standing still, with the
-letter in his hand, listened, while again and again, monotonously,
-freshly, the bird repeated its song.</p>
-
-<p>He seemed at first to listen quietly, with pleasure, appreciative of
-this heraldry of spring; then memory, blind, numbed from some dark
-shock, stirred, stole out to meet it&mdash;the memory of Eppie’s morning
-voice on the hillside, the voice monotonous yet triumphant with its
-sense of life; and at each reiteration, the phrase seemed a dagger
-plunged into his heart.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, memory! Oh, cruel thought! Cruel life!</p>
-
-<p>After he had ordered the trap, and while waiting for it, he walked out
-into the freshness and back and forth, over and over across the lawn,
-with the patient, steady swiftness of an animal caged and knowing that
-the bars are about it. So this was to be the end. But, though already he
-acquiesced, it seemed in some way a strange, inapt ending. He couldn<a name="page_321" id="page_321"></a>’t
-think of Eppie and death. He couldn’t see her dead. He could only see
-her looking at death.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="nind">T<small>HE</small> early train he caught got him to London by eleven, and in twenty
-minutes he was in Grosvenor Street. He had wired from the country, and
-Miss Barbara met him in the drawing-room of the house, hushed in its
-springtime gaiety. She was the frail ghost of her shadowy old self, her
-voice tremulous, her face blurred with tears and sleepless nights. Yet
-he saw, under the woe, the essential listlessness of age, the placidity
-beneath the half-mechanical tears. “Oh, Gavan,” she said, taking his
-hand and holding it in both her own&mdash;“Oh, Gavan, we couldn’t have
-thought of this, could we, that she would go first.” And that his own
-face showed some sharp fixity of woe he felt from its reflection on
-hers&mdash;like a sword-flash reflected in a shallow pool.</p>
-
-<p>She told him that it was now an affair of hours only. “I would have sent
-for you long ago, Gavan; I knew&mdash;I knew that you would want it. But she
-wouldn’t&mdash;not while there was hope. I think she was afraid of hurting
-you. You know she had never been the same since&mdash;since&mdash;“</p>
-
-<p>“Since what?” he asked, knowing.</p>
-
-<p>“Since you went away. She was so ill then. Poor child! She never found
-herself, you see, Gavan. She did not know what she wanted. She has worn
-herself out in looking for it.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Barbara was very ignorant. He himself could not know, probably
-Eppie herself didn’t know, what had killed her, though she had so well<a name="page_322" id="page_322"></a>
-known what she wanted; but he suspected that Grainger had been right,
-and that it was on him that Eppie’s life had shattered itself.</p>
-
-<p>Her will, evidently, still ruled those about her, for when Miss Barbara
-had led him up-stairs she said, pausing in the passage, that Eppie would
-see him alone; the nurse would leave them. She had insisted on that, and
-there was now no reason why she should not have her way. The nurse came
-out to them, telling him that Miss Gifford waited; and, just before she
-let him go, Miss Barbara drew his head down to hers and kissed him,
-murmuring to him to be brave. He really didn’t know whether he were more
-the felon, or more the victim that she thought him. Then the door closed
-behind him and he was alone with Eppie.</p>
-
-<p>Eppie was propped high on pillows, her hair twisted up from her brows
-and neck and folded in heavy masses on her head.</p>
-
-<p>In the wide, white room, among her pillows, so white herself, and
-strange with a curious thinness, he had never received a more prodigious
-impression of life than in meeting her eyes, where all the forces of her
-soul looked out. So motionless, she was like music, like all that moves,
-that strives and is restless; so white, she was like skies at dawn, like
-deep seas under sunlight. In the stillness, the whiteness, the emptiness
-of the room she was illusion itself, life and beauty, a wonderful
-rainbow thing staining “the white radiance of eternity.” And as if,
-before its final shattering, every color flamed, her whole being was
-concentrated in the mere fact of its existence&mdash;its existence that
-defied death. A deep, quiet<a name="page_323" id="page_323"></a> excitement, almost a gaiety, breathed from
-her. In the tangled rivers of her hair, the intertwined currents of dark
-and gold winding in a lovely disorder,&mdash;in the white folds of lawn that
-lay so delicately about her; in the emerald slipping far down her
-finger, the emeralds in her ears, shaking faintly with her ebbing
-heart-beats, there was even a sort of wilful and heroic coquetry. She
-was, in her dying, triumphantly beautiful, yet, as always, through her
-beauty went the strength of her reliance on deeper significances.</p>
-
-<p>She lay motionless as Gavan approached her, and he guessed that she
-saved all her strength. Only as he took the chair beside her, horror at
-his heart, the old familiar horror, she put out her hand to him.</p>
-
-<p>He took it silently, looking up, after a little while, from its
-marvelous lightness and whiteness to her eyes, her smile. Then, at last,
-she spoke to him.</p>
-
-<p>“So you think that you have got the better of me at last, don’t you,
-Gavan dear?” she said. Her voice was strange, as though familiar notes
-were played on some far-away flute, sweet and melancholy among the
-hills. The voice was strange and sad, but the words were not. In them
-was a caress, as though she pitied his pity for her; but the old
-antagonism, too, was there&mdash;a defiance, a willingness to be cruel to
-him. “I did play fair, you see,” she went on. “I wouldn’t have you come
-till there was no danger, for you, any more. And now this is the end of
-it all, you think. You will soon be able to say of me, Gavan,</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i6">“her words to Scorn<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Are scattered, and her mouth is stopt with Dust!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_324" id="page_324"></a></p>
-
-<p>His hand shut involuntarily, painfully, on hers, and as though his
-breath cut him, he said, “Don’t&mdash;don’t, Eppie.”</p>
-
-<p>But with her gaiety she insisted: “Oh, but let us have the truth. You
-must think it. What else could you think?” and, again with the note of
-pity that would atone for the cruel lightness, “Poor Gavan! My poor,
-darling Gavan! And I must leave you with your thoughts&mdash;your empty
-thoughts, alone.”</p>
-
-<p>He had taken a long breath over the physical pang her words had
-inflicted, and now he looked down at her hand, gently, one after the
-other, as though unseeingly, smoothing her fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“While I go on,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, dear,” he assented.</p>
-
-<p>“You humor me with that. You are so glad, for me, that I go with all my
-illusions about me. Aren’t you afraid that, because of them, I’ll be
-caught in the mill again and ground round and round in incarnations
-until, only after such a long time, I come out all clean and white and
-selfless, not a scrap of dangerous life about me&mdash;Alone with the Alone.”</p>
-
-<p>He felt now the fever in her clearness, the hovering on the border of
-hallucination. The colors flamed indeed, and her thoughts seemed to
-shoot up in strange flickerings, a medley of inconsequent memories and
-fancies strung on their chain of unnatural lucidity.</p>
-
-<p>He answered with patient gentleness, “I’m not afraid for you, Eppie. I
-don’t think all that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor I for myself,” she retorted. “I love the mill and its grindings.
-But what you think,&mdash;I know<a name="page_325" id="page_325"></a> perfectly what you think. You can’t keep it
-from me, Gavan. You can’t keep anything from me. And I found something
-that said it all. I can remember it. Shall I say it to you?”</p>
-
-<p>He bowed his head, smoothing her hand, not looking up at her while, in
-that voice of defiance, of fever, yet of such melancholy and echoing
-sweetness, she repeated:</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Ne suis-je pas un faux accord<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Dans la divine symphonie,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Grâce à la vorace Ironie<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Qui me secoue et qui me mord?<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Elle est dans ma voix, la criarde!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">C’est tout mon sang, ce poison noir!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Je suis le sinistre miroir<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Où la mégère se regarde!<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Je suis la plaie et le couteau!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Je suis le soufflet et la joue!<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Je suis les membres et la roue,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Et le victime et le bourreau!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>She paused after it, smiling intently upon him, and he met the smile to
-say:</p>
-
-<p>“That’s only one side of it, dear.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, it’s a side I know about, too! Didn’t I see it, feel it? Haven’t I
-been all through it&mdash;with you, for you, because of you? Ah, when you
-left me&mdash;when you left me, Gavan&mdash;“</p>
-
-<p>Still she smiled, with brilliant eyes, repeating,</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“Qui me secoue et qui me mord.”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><a name="page_326" id="page_326"></a></p>
-
-<p>He was silent, sitting with his pallid, drooping head; and suddenly she
-put her other hand on his, on the hand that gently, mechanically,
-smoothed her fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“You caress me, you try to comfort me,&mdash;while I am tormenting you. It’s
-strange that I should want to torment you. Is it that I’m so afraid you
-sha’n’t feel? I want you to feel. I want you to suffer. It is so
-horrible to leave you. It is so horrible to be afraid&mdash;sometimes
-afraid&mdash;that I shall never, never see you again. When you feel, when you
-suffer, I am not so lonely. But you feel nothing, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>He did not answer her.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you ever miss me, Gavan?”</p>
-
-<p>He did not answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you even remember me?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p>And still he did not answer, sitting with downcast eyes. And she saw
-that he could not, and in his silence, of a dumb torture, was his reply.
-He looked the stricken saint, pierced through with arrows. And which of
-them was the victim, which the executioner?</p>
-
-<p>With her question a clearness, quieter, deeper, came to her, as though
-in the recoil of its engulfing anguish she pushed her way from among
-vibrating discords to a sudden harmony that, in holy peace, resolved
-them all in unison. Her eyelids fluttered down while, for an instant,
-she listened. Yes, under it all, above it all, holding them all about,
-there it was. She seemed to see the pain mounting, circling, flowing
-from its knotted root into strength and splendor. But though he was with
-her in it he was<a name="page_327" id="page_327"></a> also far away,&mdash;he was blind, and deaf,&mdash;held fast by
-cruel bonds.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at me,” she commanded him gently.</p>
-
-<p>And now, reluctantly, he looked up into her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>They held him, they drew him, they flooded him. With the keenness of
-life they cut into his heart, and like the surging up of blood his love
-answered hers. As helpless as he had ever been before her, he laid his
-head on her breast, his arms encircling her, while, with closed eyes, he
-said: “Don’t think that I don’t feel. Don’t think that I don’t suffer.
-It’s only that;&mdash;I have only to see you;&mdash;something grasps me, and
-tortures me&mdash;“</p>
-
-<p>“Something,” she said, her voice like the far flute echo of the voice
-that had spoken on that night in the old Scotch garden, “that brings you
-to life&mdash;to God.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Eppie, what can I say to you?” he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“You can say nothing. But you will have to wake. It will have to
-come,&mdash;the sorrow, the joy of reality,&mdash;God&mdash;and me.”</p>
-
-<p>It was his face, with closed eyes, with its stricken, ashen agony, that
-seemed the dying face. Hers, turned gently toward him, had all the
-beneficence, the radiance of life. But when she spoke again there was in
-her voice a tranced stillness as though already it spoke from another
-world.</p>
-
-<p>“You love me, Gavan.”</p>
-
-<p>“I love you. You have that. That is yours, forever. I long for you,
-always, always,&mdash;even when I think that I am at peace. You are in
-everything: I<a name="page_328" id="page_328"></a> hear a bird, and I think of your voice; I see a flower,
-or the sky, and it’s of your face I think. I am yours, Eppie&mdash;yours
-forever.”</p>
-
-<p>“You make me happy,” she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Eppie, my darling Eppie, die now, die in my arms, dearest&mdash;in your
-happiness.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, not yet; I can’t go yet&mdash;though I wish it, too,” she said. “There
-are still horrid bits&mdash;dreadful dark places&mdash;like the dreadful poem&mdash;the
-poem of you, Gavan&mdash;where I lose myself; burning places, edges of pain,
-where I fight to find myself again; long, dim places where I
-dream&mdash;dream&mdash;. I won’t have you see me like that; you might think that
-you watched the scattering of the real me. I won’t have you remember me
-all dim and broken.”</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was sinking from her into an abyss of languor, and she felt
-the swirl of phantom thoughts blurring her mind even while she spoke.</p>
-
-<p>As on that far-away night when he held her hand and they stood together
-under the stars, she said, speaking now her prayer, “O God! God!”; and
-seeming in the effort of her will to lift a weight that softly,
-inexorably, like the lid of a tomb, pressed down upon her, “I am here,”
-she said. “You are mine. I will not be afraid. Remember me. So good-by,
-Gavan.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will remember,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>His arms still held her. And through his mind an army seemed to rush,
-galloping, with banners, with cries of lamentations, agony, regret,
-passionate rebellion. It crashed in conflict, blood beneath it, and
-above it tempests and torn banners. And the banners<a name="page_329" id="page_329"></a> were desperate
-hopes riddled with bullets; and the blood was love poured out and the
-tempest was his heart. It was, he thought, even while he saw, listened,
-felt, the last onslaught upon his soul. She was going&mdash;the shadow of
-life was sliding from her&mdash;and from him, for she was life and its terror
-and beauty. Above the turmoil was the fated peace. He had won it,
-unwillingly. He could not be kept from it even by the memory that would
-stay.</p>
-
-<p>But though he knew, and, in knowing, saw his contemplative soul far from
-this scene of suffocating misery, Eppie, his dear, his beautiful, was in
-his arms, her eyes, her lips, her heart. He would never see her again.</p>
-
-<p>He raised his head to look his last, and, like a faint yet piercing
-perfume, her soul’s smile still dwelt on him as she lay there
-speechless. For the moment&mdash;and was not the moment eternity?&mdash;the
-triumph was all hers. The moment, when long, long past, would still be
-part of him and her triumph in it eternal. To spare her the sight of his
-anguish would be to rob her. Anguish had been and was the only offering
-he could make her. He felt&mdash;felt unendurably, she would see that; he
-suffered, he loved her, unspeakably; she had that, too, while, in their
-last long silence, he held her hands against his heart. And her eyes,
-still smiling on him with their transcendent faith, showed that her
-triumph was shadowless.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="nind">H<small>E</small> heard next day that she had died during the night.</p>
-
-<p>Peace did not come to him for long; the wounds<a name="page_330" id="page_330"></a> of the warring interlude
-of life had been too deep. He forgot himself at last in the treadmill
-quiet of days all serene laboriousness, knowing that it could not be for
-many years that he should watch the drama. She had shattered herself on
-him; but he, too, had felt that in himself something had broken. And he
-forgot the wounds, except when some sight or sound, the song of a bird
-in Spring, a spray of heather, a sky of stars, startled them to deep
-throbbing. And then a hand, stretched out from the past, would seize
-him, a shudder, a pang, would shake him, and he would know that he was
-alone and that he remembered.</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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@@ -1,9645 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Shadow of Life
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: June 17, 2013 [EBook #42965]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SHADOW OF LIFE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-BY
-
-Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-AUTHOR OF "THE RESCUE," "THE CONFOUNDING OF
-CAMELIA," "PATHS OF JUDGEMENT," ETC.
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-NEW YORK
-
-The Century Co.
-
-1906
-
-Copyright, 1906, by
-The Century Co.
-
-_Published February, 1906_
-
-THE DE VINNE PRESS
-
-
-
-
-
-THE SHADOW OF LIFE
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-The Shadow of Life
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-Elspeth Gifford was five years old when she went to live at Kirklands.
-Her father, an army officer, died in her babyhood, and her mother a few
-years later. The uncle and aunts in Scotland, all three much her
-mother's seniors, were the child's nearest relatives.
-
-To such a little girl death had meant no more than a bewildered
-loneliness, but the bewilderment was so sharp, the loneliness so aching,
-that she cried herself into an illness. She had seen her dead mother,
-the sweet, sightless, silent face, familiar yet amazing, and more than
-any fear or shrinking had been the suffocating mystery of feeling
-herself forgotten and left behind. Her uncle Nigel, sorrowful and grave,
-but so large and kind that his presence seemed to radiate a restoring
-warmth, came to London for her and a fond nurse went with her to the
-North, and after a few weeks the anxious affection of her aunts Rachel
-and Barbara built about her, again, a child's safe universe of love.
-
-Kirklands was a large white house and stood on a slope facing south,
-backed by a rise of thickly wooded hill and overlooking a sea of
-heathery moorland. It was a solitary but not a melancholy house. Lichens
-yellowed the high-pitched slate roof and creepers clung to the roughly
-"harled" walls. On sunny days the long rows of windows were golden
-squares in the illumined white, and, under a desolate winter sky, glowed
-with an inner radiance.
-
-In the tall limes to the west a vast colony of rooks made their nests;
-and to Eppie these high nests, so dark against the sky in the vaguely
-green boughs of spring or in the autumn's bare, swaying branches, had a
-weird, fairy-tale charm. They belonged neither to the earth nor to the
-sky, but seemed to float between, in a place of inaccessible romance,
-and the clamor, joyous yet irritable, at dawn and evening seemed full of
-quaint, strange secrets that only a wandering prince or princess would
-have understood.
-
-Before the house a round of vivid green was encircled by the drive that
-led through high stone gates to the moorland road. A stone wall, running
-from gate to gate, divided the lawn from the road, and upon each pillar
-a curiously carved old griffin, its back and head spotted with yellow
-lichens, held stiffly up, for the inspection of passers-by, the family
-escutcheon. From the windows at the back of the house one looked up at
-the hilltop, bare but for a group of pine-trees, and down into a deep
-garden. Here, among utilitarian squares of vegetable beds, went
-overgrown borders of flowers--bands of larkspurs, lupins, stocks, and
-columbines. The golden-gray of the walls was thickly embroidered with
-climbing fruit-trees, and was entirely covered, at one end of the
-garden, by a small snow-white rose, old-fashioned, closely petaled; and
-here in a corner stood a thatched summer-house, where Eppie played with
-her dolls, and where, on warm summer days, the white roses filled the
-air with a fragrance heavy yet fresh in its wine-like sweetness. All
-Eppie's early memories of Kirklands centered about the summer-house and
-were mingled with the fragrance of the roses. Old James, the gardener,
-put up there a little locker where her toys were stored, and shelves
-where she ranged her dolls' dishes. There were rustic seats, too, and a
-table--a table always rather unsteady on the uneven wooden floor. The
-sun basked in that sheltered, windless corner, and, when it rained, the
-low, projecting eaves ranged one safely about with a silvery fringe of
-drops through which one looked out over the wet garden and up at the
-white walls of the house, crossed by the boughs of a great, dark
-pine-tree.
-
-Inside the house the chief room was the fine old library, where, from
-long windows, one looked south over the purples and blues of the
-moorland. Books filled the shelves from floor to ceiling--old-fashioned
-tomes in leather bindings, shut away, many of them, behind brass
-gratings and with all the delightful sense of peril connected with the
-lofty upper ranges, only to be reached by a courageous use of the
-library steps.
-
-Here Uncle Nigel gave Eppie lessons in Greek and history every morning,
-aided in the minor matters of her education by a submissive nursery
-governess, an Englishwoman, High Church in doctrine and plaintive in a
-country of dissent.
-
-A door among the book-shelves led from the library into the morning-room
-or boudoir, where Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara sewed, read, dispensed
-small charities and lengthy advice to the village poor--a cheerful
-little room in spite of its northern aspect and the shadowing trunk of
-the great pine-tree just outside its windows. It was all faded chintzes,
-gilt carvings, porcelain ornaments in corner cabinets; its paper was
-white with a fine gilt line upon it; and even though to Eppie it had sad
-associations with Bible lessons and Sunday morning collects, it retained
-always its aspect of incongruous and delightful gaiety--almost of
-frivolity. Sitting there in their delicate caps and neatly appointed
-dresses, with their mild eyes and smoothly banded hair, Aunt Rachel and
-Aunt Barbara gathered a picture-book charm--seemed to count less as
-personalities and more as ornaments. On the other side of the hall,
-rather bare and bleak in its antlered spaciousness, were the dining-and
-smoking-rooms, the first paneled in slightly carved wood, painted white,
-the last a thoroughly modern room, redolent of shabby comforts, with
-deep leather chairs, massive mid-century furniture, and an aggressively
-cheerful paper.
-
-The drawing-room, above the library, was never used--a long, vacant
-room, into which Eppie would wander with a pleasant sense of
-trespassing and impertinence; a trivial room, for all the dignity of its
-shrouded shapes and huge, draped chandelier. Its silver-flecked gray
-paper and oval gilt picture-frames recalled an epoch nearer and uglier
-than that of the grave library and sprightly boudoir below, though even
-its ugliness had a charm. Eppie was fond of playing by herself there,
-and hid sundry secrets under the Chinese cabinet, a large, scowling
-piece of furniture, its black lacquered panels inlaid with
-mother-of-pearl. Once it was a quaintly cut cake, neatly sealed in a
-small jeweler's box, that she thrust far away under it; and once a
-minute china doll, offspring of a Christmas cracker and too minute for
-personality, was swaddled mummy fashion in a ribbon and placed beside
-the box. Much excitement was to be had by not looking to see if the
-secrets were still there and in hastily removing them when a cleaning
-threatened.
-
-The day-nursery, afterward the school-room, was over the dining-room,
-and the bedrooms were at the back of the house.
-
-The Carmichaels were of an ancient and impoverished family, their
-estates, shrunken as they were, only kept together by careful economy,
-but there was no touch of dreariness in Eppie's home. She was a happy
-child, filling her life with imaginative pastimes and finding on every
-side objects for her vigorous affections. Her aunts' mild disciplines
-weighed lightly on her. Love and discipline were sundered principles in
-the grandmotherly administration, and Eppie soon learned that the
-formalities of the first were easily evaded and to weigh the force of
-her own naughtiness against it. Corporal punishment formed part of the
-Misses Carmichael's conception of discipline, but though, on the rare
-occasions when it could not be escaped, Eppie bawled heart-rendingly
-during the very tremulous application, it was with little disturbance of
-spirit that she endured the reward of transgression.
-
-At an early age she understood very clearly the simple characters around
-her. Aunt Rachel and Aunt Barbara were both placid, both pious, both
-full of unsophisticated good works, both serenely acquiescent in their
-lots. In Aunt Barbara, indeed, placidity was touched with wistfulness;
-she was the gentler, the more yielding of the two. Aunt Rachel could be
-inspired with the greater ruthlessness of conscientious conviction. It
-was she who insisted upon the letter of the law in regard to the Sunday
-collect, the Sunday church-going, who mingled reproof with her village
-charities, who could criticize with such decision the short-comings,
-doctrinal and domestic, of Mr. MacNab, minister of the little
-established church that stood near the village. Aunt Barbara was far
-less assured of the forms of things; she seemed to search and fumble a
-little for further, fuller outlets, and yet to have found a greater
-serenity. Aunt Rachel was fond of pointing out to her niece such facts
-of geology, botany, and natural history in general as the country life
-and her own somewhat rudimentary knowledge suggested to her as useful;
-Aunt Barbara, on the contrary, told pretty, allegorical tales about
-birds and flowers--tales with a heavy cargo of moral insinuation, to
-which, it must be confessed, Eppie listened with an inner sense of
-stubborn realism. It was Aunt Barbara who sought to impress upon her
-that the inclusive attribute of Deity was love, and who, when Eppie
-asked her where God was, answered, "In your heart, dear child." Eppie
-was much puzzled by anatomical considerations in reflecting upon this
-information. Aunt Rachel, with clear-cut, objective facts from Genesis,
-was less mystifying to inquisitive, but pagan childhood. Eppie could not
-help thinking of God as somewhat like austere, gray-bearded old James,
-the gardener, whose vocation suggested that pictorial chapter in the
-Bible, and who, when he found her one day eating unripe fruit, warned
-her with such severity of painful retribution.
-
-The aunts spent year after year at Kirklands, with an infrequent trip to
-Edinburgh. Neither had been South since the death of the beloved younger
-sister. Uncle Nigel, the general, older than either, was russet-faced,
-white-haired, robust. He embodied a sound, well-nurtured type and
-brought to it hardly an individual variation. He taught his niece,
-re-read a few old books, followed current thought in the "Quarterly" and
-the "Scotsman," and wrote his memoirs, that moved with difficulty from
-boyhood, so detailed were his recollections and so painstaking his
-recording of inessential fact.
-
-For their few neighbors, life went on as slowly as for the Carmichaels.
-The Carstons of Carlowrie House were in touch with a larger outside
-life: Sir Alec Carston was member for the county; but the inmates of
-Brechin House, Crail Hill, and Newton Lowry were fixtures. These dim
-personages hardly counted at all in young Eppie's experience. She saw
-them gathered round the tea-table in the library when she was summoned
-to appear with tidy hair and fresh frock: stout, ruddy ladies in
-driving-gloves and boat-shaped hats; dry, thin young ladies in
-hard-looking muslins and with frizzed fringes; a solid laird or two.
-They were vague images in her world.
-
-People who really counted were the village people, and on the basis of
-her aunts' charitable relationship Eppie built up for herself with most
-of them a tyrannous friendship. The village was over two miles away; one
-reached it by the main road that ran along the moor, past the
-birch-woods, the tiny loch, and then down a steep bit of hill to the
-handful of huddled gray roofs. There was the post-office, the sweet-shop
-with its dim, small panes, behind which, to Eppie's imagination, the
-bull's-eyes and toffee and Edinburgh rock looked, in their jars, like
-odd fish in an aquarium; there was the carpenter's shop, the floor all
-heaped with scented shavings, through which one's feet shuffled in
-delightful, dry rustlings; there the public-house, a lurid corner
-building, past which Miss Grimsby always hurried her over-interested
-young charge, and there the little inn where one ordered the dusty,
-lurching, capacious old fly that conveyed one to the station, five miles
-away. Eppie was far more in the village than her share of her aunts'
-charities at all justified, and was often brought in disgrace from
-sheer truancy. The village babies, her dolls, and Robbie, her Aberdeen
-terrier, were the realities at once serious and radiant of life. She
-could do for them, love them as she would. Her uncle and aunts and the
-fond old nurse were included in an unquestioning tenderness, but they
-could not be brought under its laws, and their independence made them
-more remote.
-
-Remote, too, though by no means independent, and calling forth little
-tenderness, were her cousins, who spent part of their holidays each
-summer at Kirklands. They were English boys, coming from an English
-school, and Eppie was very stanchly Scotch. The Graingers, Jim and
-Clarence, were glad young animals. They brought from a home of small
-means and overflowing sisters uncouth though not bad manners and an
-assured tradition of facile bullying. The small Scotch cousin was at
-first seen only in the light of a convenience. She was to be ignored,
-save for her few and rudimentary uses. But Eppie, at eight years old,
-when the Graingers first came, had an opposed and firmly established
-tradition. In her own domain, she was absolute ruler, and not for a
-moment did her conception of her supremacy waver. Her assurance was so
-complete that it left no room for painful struggle or dispute. From
-helpless stupor to a submission as helpless, the cousins fell by degrees
-to a not unhappy dependence. Eppie ran, climbed, played, as good a boy
-as either; and it was she who organized games, she who invented
-wonderful new adventures, all illumined by thrilling recitatives while
-in progress, she who, though their ally, and a friendly one, was the
-brains of the alliance, and, as thinker, dominated. Brains, at their
-age, being rudimentary in the young male, Eppie had some ground for her
-consciousness of kindly disdain. She regarded Jim and Clarence as an
-animated form of toy, more amusing than other toys because of
-possibilities of unruliness, or as a mere audience, significant only as
-a means for adding to the zest of life. Clarence, the younger, even from
-the first dumb days of reconstruction, was the more malleable. He was
-formed for the part of dazzled subjection to a strong and splendid
-despotism. Eppie treated her subject races to plenty of pomp and glory.
-Clarence listened, tranced, to her heroic stories, followed her
-leadership with docile, eager fidelity, and finally, showing symptoms of
-extreme romanticism, declared himself forever in love with her. Eppie,
-like the ascendant race again, made prompt and shameless use of the
-avowed and very apparent weakness. She bartered rare and difficult
-favors for acts of service, and on one occasion--a patch of purple in
-young Clarence's maudlin days--submitted, with a stony grimace, to being
-kissed; for this treasure Clarence paid by stealing down to the
-forbidden public-house and there buying a bottle of beer which Eppie and
-Jim were to consume as robbers in a cave,--Clarence the seized and
-despoiled traveler. Eppie was made rather ill by her share of the beer,
-but, standing in a bed-gown at her window, she called to her cousins, in
-the garden below, such cheerful accounts of her malady, the slight
-chastisement that Aunt Rachel had inflicted, and her deft evasion of
-medicines, that her luster was heightened rather than dimmed by the
-disaster. Jim never owned, for a moment, to there being any luster. He
-was a square-faced boy, with abrupt nose, and lips funnily turning up at
-the corners, yet funnily grim,--most unsmiling of lips. He followed
-Eppie's lead with the half-surly look of a slave in bondage, and seemed
-dumbly to recognize that his own unfitness rather than Eppie's right
-gave her authority. He retaliated on Clarence for his sense of
-subjection and cruelly teased and scoffed at him. Clarence, when pushed
-too far, would appeal to Eppie for protection, and on these occasions,
-even while she sheltered him, a strange understanding seemed to pass
-between her and the tormentor as though, with him, she found Clarence
-ludicrous. Jim, before her stinging reproofs, would stand tongue-tied
-and furious, but, while she stung him, Eppie liked the sullen culprit
-better than the suppliant victim.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-When Eppie was ten years old, she heard one day that a boy, a new boy,
-was coming to spend the spring and summer--a boy from India, Gavan
-Palairet. His mother and her own had been dear friends, and his father,
-as hers had been, was in the army; and these points of contact mitigated
-for Eppie the sense of exotic strangeness.
-
-Eppie gathered that a cloud rested upon Mrs. Palairet, and the boy,
-though exotic, seemed to come from the far, brilliant country with his
-mother's cloud about him.
-
-"Ah, poor Fanny!" the general sighed over the letter he read at the
-breakfast-table. "How did she come to marry that brute! It will be a
-heart-breaking thing for her to send the boy from her."
-
-Eppie, listening with keen interest, gathered further, from the
-reminiscent talk that went on between the sisters and brother, that Mrs.
-Palairet, for some years of her boy's babyhood, lived in England; then
-it had been India and the effort to keep him near her in the hills, and
-now his delicacy and the definite necessity of schooling had braced her
-to the parting. The general said, glancing with fond pride at his
-niece, that Eppie would be a fine playmate for him and would be of great
-service in cheering him before his plunge into school. Fanny had begged
-for much gentleness and affection for him. Apparently the boy was as
-heartbroken as she.
-
-Eppie had very little diffidence about her own powers as either playmate
-or cheerer: she was well accustomed to both parts; but her eagerness to
-sustain and amuse the invalid was touched with a little shyness. The sad
-boy from India--her heart and mind rushed out in a hundred plans of
-welcome and consolation; but she suspected that a sad boy from India
-would require subtler methods than those sufficing for a Jim or a
-Clarence. From the first moment of hearing about him she had felt, as if
-instinctively, that he would not be at all like Jim and Clarence.
-
-He came on a still, sunny spring day. The general went to meet him at
-the station, and while he was gone Eppie made excitement endurable by
-vigorous action. Again and again she visited the fresh little room
-overlooking the hills, the garden, the pine-tree boughs, standing in a
-thoughtful surveyal of its beauties and comforts or darting off to add
-to them. She herself chose the delightful piece of green soap from the
-store-cupboard and the books for the table; and she gathered the
-daffodils in the birch-woods, filling every vase with them, so that the
-little room with its white walls and hangings of white dimity seemed
-lighted by clusters of pale, bright flames.
-
-When the old fly rumbled at last through the gates and around the drive,
-Miss Rachel and Miss Barbara were in the doorway, and Eppie stood
-before them on the broad stone step, Robbie beside her.
-
-Eppie was a lithe, sturdy, broad-shouldered child, with russet,
-sun-streaked hair, dark yet radiant, falling to her waist. She had a
-pale, freckled face and the woodland eyes of a gay, deep-hearted dog.
-To-day she wore a straight white frock, and her hair, her frock, dazzled
-with sunlight. No more invigorating figure could have greeted a jaded
-traveler.
-
-That it was a very jaded traveler she saw at once, while the general
-bundled out of the fly and handed rugs, dressing-cases, and cages to the
-maid, making a passage for Gavan's descent. The boy followed him,
-casting anxious glances at the cages, and Eppie's eyes, following his,
-saw tropical birds in one and in the other a quaint, pathetic little
-beast--a lemur-like monkey swaddled in flannel and motionless with fear.
-Its quick, shining eyes met hers for a moment, and she looked away from
-them with a sense of pity and repulsion.
-
-Gavan, as he ascended the steps, looked at once weary, frightened, and
-composed. He had a white, thin face and thick black hair--the sort of
-face and hair, Eppie thought, that the wandering prince of one of her
-own stories, the prince who understood the rooks' secrets, would have.
-He was dressed in a long gray traveling-cloak with capes. The eager
-welcome she had in readiness for him seemed out of place before his
-gentle air of self-possession, going as it did with the look of almost
-painful shrinking. She was a little at a loss and so were the aunts, as
-she saw. They took his hand in turn, they smiled, they murmured vague
-words of kindness; but they did not venture to kiss him. He did not seem
-as little a boy as they had expected. The same expression of restraint
-was on Uncle Nigel's hearty countenance. The sad boy was frozen and he
-chilled others.
-
-He was among them now, in the hall, his cages and rugs and boxes about
-him, and, with all the cheery bustling to and fro, he must feel himself
-dreadfully alone. Eppie, too, was chilled and knew, indeed, the
-childish, panic impulse to run away, but her imagination of his
-loneliness was so strong as to nerve quite another impulse. Once she saw
-him as so desolate she could not hesitate. With resolute gravity she
-took his hand, saying, "I am so glad that you have come, Gavan," and, as
-resolutely and as gravely, she kissed him on the cheek. He flushed so
-deeply that for a moment all her panic came back with the fear that she
-had wounded his pride; but in a moment he said, glancing at her, "You
-are very kind. I am glad to be here, too."
-
-His pride was not at all wounded. Eppie felt that at all events the
-worst of the ice was broken.
-
-"May I feed your animals for you while you rest?" she asked him, as,
-with Aunt Barbara, they went up-stairs to his room. Gavan carried the
-lemur himself. Eppie had the birds in their cage.
-
-"Thanks, so much. It only takes a moment; I can do it. My monkey would
-be afraid of any one else," he answered, adding, "The journey has been
-too much for him; he has been very strange all day."
-
-"He will soon get well here," said Eppie, encouragingly--"this is such a
-healthy place. But Scotland will be a great change from India for him,
-won't it?"
-
-"Very great. I am afraid he is going to be ill." And again Gavan's eye
-turned its look of weary anxiety upon the lemur.
-
-But his anxiety did not make him forget his courtesy. "What a beautiful
-view," he said, when they reached his room, "and what beautiful
-flowers!"
-
-"I have this view, too," said Eppie. "The school-room has the view of
-the moor; but I like this best, for early morning when one gets up. You
-will see how lovely it is to smell the pine-tree when it is all wet with
-dew."
-
-Gavan agreed that it must be lovely, and looked out with her at the
-blue-green boughs; but even while he looked and admired, she felt more
-courtesy than interest.
-
-They left him in his room to rest till tea-time, and in the library Aunt
-Rachel and Aunt Barbara exclaimed over his air of fragility.
-
-"He is fearfully tired, poor little fellow," said the general; "a day or
-two of rest will set him up."
-
-"He looks a very intelligent boy, Nigel," said Miss Rachel, "but not a
-cheerful disposition."
-
-"How could one expect that from him now, poor, dear child!" Aunt Barbara
-expostulated. "He has a beautiful nature, I am sure--such a sensitive
-mouth and such fine eyes."
-
-And the general said: "He is wonderfully like his mother. I am glad to
-see that he takes after Claude Palairet in nothing."
-
-Eppie asked if Captain Palairet were very horrid and was told that he
-was, with the warning that no intimation of such knowledge on her part
-was to be given to her new playmate; a warning that Eppie received with
-some indignation. No one, she was sure, could feel for Gavan as she did,
-or know so well what to say and what not to say to him.
-
-She was gratified to hear that he was not to go down to dinner but was
-to share the school-room high-tea with her and Miss Grimsby. But in the
-wide school-room, ruddy with the hues of sunset and hung with its maps
-and its childish decorations of Caldecott drawings and colored Christmas
-supplements from the "Graphic,"--little girls on stairs with dogs, and
-"Cherry Ripe,"--he was almost oppressively out of place. Not that he
-seemed to find himself so. He made, evidently, no claims to maturity.
-But Eppie felt a strange sense of shrunken importance as she listened to
-him politely answering Miss Grimsby's questions about his voyage and
-giving her all sorts of information about religious sects in India. She
-saw herself relegated to a humbler role than any she had conceived
-possible for herself. She would be lucky if she succeeded in cheering at
-all this remote person; it was doubtful if she could ever come near
-enough to console. She took this first blow to her self-assurance very
-wholesomely. Her interest in the sad boy was all the keener for it. She
-led him, next morning, about the garden, over a bit of the moor, and
-into the fairyland of the birch-woods--their young green all tremulous
-in the wind and sunlight. And she showed him, among the pines and
-heather, the winding path, its white, sandy soil laced with black
-tree-roots, that led to the hilltop. "When you are quite rested, we will
-go up there, if you like," she said. "The burn runs beside this path
-almost all the way--you can't think how pretty it is; and when you get
-to the top you can see for miles and miles all about, all over the
-moors, and the hills, away beyond there, and you can see two villages
-besides ours, and such a beautiful windmill."
-
-Gavan, hardly noticing the kind little girl, except to know that she was
-kind, assented to all her projects, indifferent to them and to her.
-
-A day or two after his arrival, he and Eppie were united in ministering
-to the dying lemur. The sad creature lay curled up in its basket,
-motionless, refusing food, only from time to time stretching out a
-languid little hand to its master; and when Gavan took it, the delicate
-animal miniature lay inert in his. Its eyes, seeming to grow larger and
-brighter as life went, had a strange look of question and wonder.
-
-Eppie wept loudly when it was dead; but Gavan had no tears. She
-suspected him of a suffering all the keener and that his self-control
-did not allow him the relief of emotion before her. She hoped, at least,
-to be near him in the formalities of grief, and proposed that they
-should bury the lemur together, suggesting a spot among birch-trees and
-heather where some rabbits of her own were interred. When she spoke of
-the ceremony, Gavan hesitated; to repulse her, or to have her with him
-in the task of burial, were perhaps equally painful to him. "If you
-don't mind, I think I would rather do it by myself," he said in his
-gentle, tentative way.
-
-Eppie felt her lack of delicacy unconsciously rebuked. She recognized
-that, in spite of her most genuine grief, the burial of the lemur had
-held out to her some of the satisfactory possibilities of a solemn game.
-She had been gross in imagining that Gavan could share in such divided
-instincts. Her tears fell for her own just abasement, as well as for the
-lemur, while she watched Gavan walking away into the woods--evidently
-avoiding the proximity of the rabbits--with the small white box under
-his arm.
-
-The day after this was Sunday, a day of doom to Eppie. It meant that
-morning recitation of hymn and collect in the chintz and gilt boudoir
-and then the bleak and barren hours in church. Even Aunt Barbara's
-mildness could, on this subject, become inflexible, and Aunt Rachel's
-aspect reminded Eppie of the stern angel with the flaming sword driving
-frail, reluctant humanity into the stony wilderness. A flaming sword was
-needed. Every Sunday saw the renewal of her protest, and there were
-occasions on which her submission was only extorted after disgraceful
-scenes. Eppie herself, on looking back, had to own that she had indeed
-disgraced herself when she had taken refuge under her bed and lain
-there, her hat all bent, her fresh dress all crumpled, fiercely
-shrieking her refusal; and disgrace had been deeper on another day when
-she had actually struck out at her aunts while they mutely and in pale
-indignation haled her toward the door. It was dreadful to remember that
-Aunt Barbara had burst into tears. Eppie could not forgive herself for
-that. She had a stoic satisfaction in the memory of the smart whipping
-that she had borne without a whimper, and perhaps did not altogether
-repent the heavier slap she had dealt Aunt Rachel; but the thought of
-Aunt Barbara's tears--they had continued so piteously to flow while Aunt
-Rachel whipped her--quelled physical revolt forever. She was older now,
-too, and protest only took the form of dejection and a hostile gloom.
-
-On this Sunday the gloom was shot with a new and, it seemed, a most
-legitimate hope. Boys were usually irreligious; the Grainger cousins
-certainly were so: they had once run away on Sunday morning. She could
-not, to be sure, build much upon possible analogies of behavior between
-Gavan and the Graingers; yet the facts of his age and sex were there:
-normal, youthful manliness might be relied upon. If Gavan wished to
-remain it seemed perfectly probable that the elders might yield as a
-matter of course, and as if to a grown-up guest. Gavan was hardly
-treated as a child by any of them.
-
-"You are fond of going to church, I hope, Gavan," Aunt Rachel said at
-breakfast. The question had its reproof for Eppie, who, with large eyes,
-over her porridge, listened for the reply.
-
-"Yes, very," was the doom that fell.
-
-Eppie flushed so deeply that Gavan noticed it. "I don't mind a bit not
-going if Eppie doesn't go and would like to have me stay at home with
-her," he hastened, with an almost uncanny intuition of her
-disappointment, to add.
-
-Aunt Rachel cast an eye of comprehension upon Eppie's discomfited
-visage. "That would be a most inappropriate generosity, my dear Gavan.
-Eppie comes with us always."
-
-Gavan still looked at Eppie, who, with downcast eyes, ate swiftly.
-
-"Now I'll be bound that she has been wheedling you to get her off,
-Gavan," said the general, with genial banter. "She is a little rebel to
-the bone. She knows that it's no good to rebel, so she put you up to
-pleading for her"; and, as Gavan protested, "Indeed, indeed, sir, she
-didn't," he still continued, "Oh, Eppie, you baggage, you! Isn't that
-it, eh? Didn't you hope that you could stay with him if he stayed
-behind?"
-
-"Yes, I did," Eppie said, without contrition.
-
-"She didn't tell me so," said Gavan, full of evident sympathy for
-Eppie's wounds under this false accusation.
-
-She repelled his defense with a curt, "I would have, if it would have
-done any good."
-
-"Ah, that's my brave lassie," laughed the general; but Aunt Rachel ended
-the unseemly exposure with a decisive, "Be still now, Eppie; we know too
-well what you feel about this subject. There is nothing brave in such
-naughtiness."
-
-Gavan said no more; from Eppie's unmoved expression he guessed that such
-reproofs did not cut deep. He joined her after breakfast as she stood
-in the open doorway, looking out at the squandered glories of the day.
-
-"Do you dislike going to church so much?" he asked her. The friendly
-bond of his sympathy at the table would have cheered her heart at
-another time; it could do no more for her now than make frankness easy
-and a relief.
-
-"I hate it," she answered.
-
-"But why?"
-
-"It's so long--so stupid."
-
-Gavan loitered about before her on the door-step, his hands in his
-pockets. Evidently he could find no ready comment for her accusation.
-
-"Every one looks so silly and so sleepy," she went on. "Mr. MacNab is so
-ugly. Besides, he is an unkind man: he whips his children all the time;
-not whippings when they deserve it--like mine,"--Gavan looked at her,
-startled by this impersonally just remark,--"he whips them because he is
-cross himself. Why should he tell us about being good if he is as
-ill-tempered as possible? And he has a horrid voice,--not like the
-village people, who talk in a dear, funny way,--he has a horrid, pretend
-voice. And you stand up and sit down and have nothing to do for ages and
-ages. I don't see how anybody _can_ like church."
-
-Gavan kicked vaguely at the lichen spots.
-
-"Do you really _like_ it?"
-
-"Yes," he answered, with his shy abruptness.
-
-"But why? It's different, I know, for old people--I don't suppose that
-they mind things any longer; but I don't see how a boy, a young
-boy"--and Eppie allowed herself a reproachful emphasis--"can possibly
-like it."
-
-"I'm used to it, you see, and I don't think of it in your way at all."
-Gavan could not speak to this funny child of its sacred associations. In
-church he had always felt that he and his mother had escaped to a place
-of reality and peace. He entered, through his love for her, into the
-love of the sense of sanctuary from an ominous and hostile world. And he
-was a boy with a deep, sad sense of God.
-
-"But you don't _like_ it," said the insistent Eppie.
-
-"I more than like it."
-
-She eyed him gravely. "I suppose it is because you are so grown up. Yet
-you are only four years older than I am. I wonder if I will ever get to
-like it. I hope not."
-
-"Well, it will be more comfortable for you if you do,--since you have to
-go," said Gavan, with his faint, wintry smile.
-
-She felt the kindness of his austere banter, and retorting, "I'd rather
-not be comfortable, then," joined him in the sunlight on the broad,
-stone step, going on with quite a sense of companionship: "Only one
-thing I don't so much mind--and that is the hymns. I am so glad when
-they come that I almost shout them. Sometimes--I'm telling you as quite
-a secret, you know--I shout as loud as I possibly can on purpose to
-disturb Aunt Rachel. I know it's wrong, so don't bother to tell me so;
-besides, it's partly because I really like to shout. But I always do
-hope that some day they may leave me at home rather than have me making
-such a noise. People often turn round to look."
-
-Gavan laughed.
-
-"You think that wicked no doubt?"
-
-"No, I think it funny, and quite useless, I'm sure."
-
-After all, Gavan wasn't a muff, as a boy fond of church might have been
-suspected of being.
-
-Yet after the walk through the birch-woods and over a corner of moor to
-the bare little common where the church stood, and when they were all
-installed in the hard, familiar pew, a new and still more alienating
-impression came to her--alienating yet fascinating. A sense of awe crept
-over her and she watched Gavan in an absorbed, a dreamy wonder.
-
-Eppie only associated prayers with a bedside; they were part of the
-toilet, so to speak--went in with the routine of hair-and tooth-brushing
-and having one's bath. To pray in church, if one were a young person,
-seemed a mystifying, almost an abnormal oddity. She was accustomed to
-seeing in the sodden faces of the village children an echo to her own
-wholesome vacuity. But Gavan really prayed; that was evident. He buried
-his face in his arms. He thought of no one near him.
-
-It was Eppie's custom to vary the long monotony of Mr. MacNab's dreary,
-nasal, burring voice by sundry surreptitious occupations, such as
-drawing imaginary pictures with her forefinger upon the lap of her
-frock, picking out in the Bible all the words of which her aunts said
-she could only know the meaning when she grew up, counting the number of
-times that Mr. MacNab stiffly raised his hand in speaking, seeing how
-often she could softly kick the pew in front of her before being told to
-stop; and then there was the favorite experiment suggested to her by the
-advertisement of a soap where, after fixing the eyes upon a red spot
-while one counted thirty, one found, on looking at a blank white space,
-that the spot appeared transformed, ghost-like and floating, to a vivid
-green. Eppie's fertile imagination had seen in Mr. MacNab's thin, red
-face a substitute for the spot, and most diverting results had followed
-when, after a fixed stare at his countenance, one transferred him, as it
-were, to the pages of one's prayer-book. To see Mr. MacNab dimly
-hovering there, a green emanation, made him less intolerable in reality:
-found, at least, a use for him. This discovery had been confided to the
-Graingers, and they had been grateful for it. And when all else failed
-and even Mr. MacNab's poor uses had palled, there was one bright moment
-to look forward to in the morning's suffocating tedium. Just before the
-sermon, Uncle Nigel, settling himself in his corner, would feel, as if
-absently, in his waistcoat pocket and then slip a lime-drop into her
-hand. The sharply sweet flavor filled her with balmy content, and could,
-with discretion in the use of the tongue, be prolonged for ten minutes.
-
-But to-day her eyes and thoughts were fixed on Gavan; and when the
-lime-drop was in her mouth she crunched it mechanically and heedlessly:
-how he held his prayer-book, his pallid, melancholy profile bent above
-it, how he sat gravely listening to Mr. MacNab, how he prayed and sang.
-Only toward the end of the sermon was the tension of her spirit relieved
-by seeing humanizing symptoms of weariness. She was sure that he was
-hearing as little as she was--his thoughts were far away; and when he
-put up a hand to hide a yawn her jaws stretched themselves in quick
-sympathy. Gavan's eyes at this turned on her and he smiled openly and
-delightfully at her. Delightfully; yet the very fact of his daring to
-smile made him more grown up than ever. Such maturity, such strange
-spiritual assurance, could afford lightnesses. He brought with him, into
-the fresh, living world outside, his aura of mystery.
-
-Eppie walked beside her uncle and still observed Gavan as he went before
-them with the aunts.
-
-"How do you like your playmate, Eppie?" the general asked.
-
-"He isn't a playmate," Eppie gravely corrected him.
-
-"Not very lively? But a nice boy, eh?"
-
-"I think he is very nice; but he is too big to care about me."
-
-"Nonsense; he's but three years older."
-
-"Four, Uncle Nigel. That makes a great deal of difference at our ages,"
-said Eppie, wisely.
-
-"Nonsense," the general repeated. "He is only a bit down on his luck;
-he's not had time to find you out yet. To-morrow he joins you in your
-Greek and history, and I fancy he'll see that four years' difference
-isn't such a difference when it comes to some things. Not many chits of
-your age are such excellent scholars."
-
-"But I think that we will always be very different," said Eppie, though
-at her uncle's commendation her spirits had risen.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Greek and history proved, indeed, a bond. The two children, during the
-hours in the library, met on a more equal footing, for Gavan was
-backward with his studies. But the question of inequality had not come
-up in Gavan's consciousness. "I'm only afraid that I shall bore her," he
-hastened, in all sincerity, to say when the general appealed to a
-possible vanity in him by hoping that he didn't mind being kind to a
-little girl and going about with her. "She's the only companion we have
-for you, you see. And we all find her very good company, in spite of her
-ten years."
-
-And at this Gavan said, with a smile that protested against any idea
-that he should not find her so: "I'm only afraid that I'm not good
-company for any one. She is a dear little girl."
-
-It was in the wanderings over the moors and in the birch-woods and up
-the hillside, where Eppie took him to see her views, that the bond
-really drew to closeness. Here nature and little Eppie seemed together
-to thaw him, to heal him, to make him unconsciously happy. A fugitive
-color dawned in his wasted cheeks; a fragile gaiety came to his manner.
-He began to find it easy to talk, easy to be quite a little boy. And
-once he did talk, Gavan talked a great deal, quickly, with a sort of
-nervous eagerness. There grew, in Eppie's mind, a vast mirage-like
-picture of the strange land he came from: the great mountains about
-their high summer home; the blue-shadowed verandas; the flowers he and
-his mother grew in the garden; the rides at dawn; the long, hot days;
-the gentle, softly moving servants, some of whom he loved and told her a
-great deal about. Then the crowds, the swarming colors of the bazaars in
-the great cities.
-
-"No, no; don't wish to go there," he said, taking his swift, light
-strides through the heather, his head bent, his eyes looking before
-him--he seldom looked at one, glanced only; "I hate it,--more than you
-do church!" and though his simile was humorous he didn't laugh with it.
-"I hate the thought of any one I care about being there." He had still,
-for Eppie, his mystery, and she dimly felt, too, that his greater ease
-with her made more apparent his underlying sadness; but the sense of
-being an outsider was gone, and she glowed now at the implication that
-she was one he cared about.
-
-"It's vast and meaningless," said Gavan, who often used terms curiously
-unboyish. "I can't describe it to you. It's like a dream; you expect all
-the time to wake up and find nothing."
-
-"I know that I should never love anything so much as Scotland--as
-heather and pines and sky with clouds. Still, I should like to see
-India. I should like to see everything that there is to be seen--if I
-could be sure of always coming back here."
-
-"Ah, yes, if one could be sure of that."
-
-"I shall always live here, Gavan," said Eppie, feeling the skepticism of
-his "if."
-
-"Well, that may be so," he returned, with the manner that made her
-realize so keenly the difference that was more than a matter of four
-years.
-
-She insisted now: "I shall live here until I am grown up. Then I shall
-travel everywhere, all over the world--India, Japan, America; then I
-shall marry and come back here to live and have twelve children. I don't
-believe you care for children as I do, Gavan. How they would enjoy
-themselves here, twelve of them all together--six boys and six girls."
-
-Gavan laughed. "Well, I hope all that will come true," he assented. "Why
-twelve?"
-
-"I don't know; but I've always thought of there being twelve. I would
-like as many as possible, and one could hardly remember the names of
-more. I don't believe that there are more than twelve names that I care
-for. But with twelve we should have a birthday-party once a month, one
-for each month. Did you have birthday-cakes in India, Gavan, with
-candles for your age?"
-
-"Yes; my mother always had a cake for my birthday." His voice, in
-speaking of his mother, seemed always to steel itself, as though to
-speak of her hurt him. Eppie had felt this directly, and now, regretting
-her allusion, said, "When is your birthday, Gavan?" thinking of a cake
-with fifteen candles--how splendid!--to hear disappointingly that the
-day was not till January, when he would have been gone--long since.
-
-On another time, as they walked up the hillside, beside the burn, she
-said: "I thought you were not going to like us at all, when you first
-came."
-
-"I was horribly afraid of you all," said Gavan. "Everything was so
-strange to me."
-
-"No, you weren't afraid," Eppie objected--"not really afraid. I don't
-believe you are ever really afraid of people."
-
-"Yes, I am--afraid of displeasing them, trying them in some way. And I
-was miserable on that day, too, with anxiety about my poor monkey. I'm
-sorry I seemed horrid."
-
-"Not a bit horrid, only very cold and polite."
-
-"I didn't realize things much. You see--" Gavan paused.
-
-"Yes, of course; you weren't thinking of us. You were thinking of--what
-you had left."
-
-"Yes," he assented, not looking at her.
-
-He went on presently, turning his eyes on her and smiling over a sort of
-alarm at his own advance to personalities: "_You_ weren't horrid. I
-remember that I thought you the nicest little girl I had ever seen. You
-were all that I did see--standing there in the sun, with a white dress
-like Alice in Wonderland and with your hair all shining. I never saw
-hair like it."
-
-"Do you think it pretty?" Eppie asked eagerly.
-
-"Very--all those rivers of gold in the dark."
-
-"I _am_ glad. I think it pretty, too, and nurse is afraid that I am
-vain, I think, for she always takes great pains to tell me that it is
-striped hair and that she hopes it may grow to be the same color when
-I'm older."
-
-"_I_ hope not," said Gavan, gallantly.
-
-Many long afternoons were spent in the garden, where Eppie initiated him
-into the sanctities of the summer-house. Gavan's sense of other people's
-sanctities was wonderful. She would never have dreamed of showing her
-dolls to her cousins; but she brought them out and displayed them to
-Gavan, and he looked at them and their appurtenances carefully, gravely
-assenting to all the characteristics that she pointed out. So kind,
-indeed, so comprehending was he, that Eppie, a delightful project
-dawning in her mind, asked: "Have you ever played with dolls? I mean
-when you were very little?"
-
-"No, never."
-
-"I've always had to play by myself," said Eppie, "and it's rather dull
-sometimes, having to carry on all the conversations alone." And with a
-rush she brought out, rather aghast at her own hardihood, "I suppose you
-couldn't think of playing with me?"
-
-Gavan, at this, showed something of the bashful air of a young bachelor
-asked to hold a baby, but in a moment he said, "I shouldn't mind at all,
-though I'm afraid I shall be stupid at it."
-
-Eppie flushed, incredulous of such good fortune, and almost reluctant to
-accept it. "You _really_ don't mind, Gavan? Boys hate dolls, as a rule,
-you know."
-
-"I don't mind in the least," he laughed. "I am sure I shall enjoy it.
-How do we begin? You must teach me."
-
-"I'll teach you everything. You are the very kindest person I ever knew,
-Gavan. Really, I wouldn't ask you to if I didn't believe you would like
-it when once you had tried it. It is such fun. And now we can make them
-do all sorts of things, have all sorts of adventures, that they never
-could have before." She suspected purest generosity, but so trusted in
-the enchantments he was to discover that she felt herself justified in
-profiting by it. She placed in his hand Agnes, the fairest of all the
-dolls, golden-haired, blue-eyed. Agnes was good, and her own daughter,
-Elspeth, named after herself, was bad. "As bad as possible," said Eppie.
-"I have to whip her a great deal."
-
-Gavan, holding his charge rather helplessly and looking at Elspeth, a
-doll of sturdier build, with short hair, dark eyes, and, for a doll, a
-mutinous face, remarked, with his touch of humor, "I thought you didn't
-approve of whipping."
-
-"I don't,--not real children, or dolls either, except when they are
-really bad. Mr. MacNab whips his all the time, and they are not a bit
-bad, really, as Elspeth is." And Elspeth proceeded to demonstrate how
-really bad she was by falling upon Agnes with such malicious kicks and
-blows that Gavan, in defense of his own doll, dealt her a vigorous slap.
-
-"Well done, Mr. Palairet; she richly deserves it! Come here directly,
-you naughty child," and after a scuffling flight around the
-summer-house, Elspeth was secured, and so soundly beaten that Gavan at
-last interceded for her with the ruthless mother.
-
-"Not until she says that she is sorry."
-
-"Oh, Elspeth, say that you are sorry," Gavan supplicated, while he
-laughed. "Really, Eppie, you are savage. I feel as if you were really
-hurting some one. Please forgive her now; Agnes has, I am sure."
-
-"I hurt her because I love her and want her to be a good child. She will
-come to no good end when she grows up if she cannot learn to control her
-temper. What is it I hear you say, Elspeth?"
-
-Elspeth, in a low, sullen voice that did not augur well for permanent
-amendment, whispered that she was sorry, and was led up, crestfallen, to
-beg Agnes's pardon and to receive a reconciling kiss.
-
-The table was then brought out and laid. Eppie had her small store of
-biscuits and raisins, and Elspeth and Agnes were sent into the garden to
-pick currants and flowers. To Agnes was given the task of making a
-nosegay for the place of each guest. There were four of these guests,
-bidden to the feast with great ceremony: three, pink and curly, of
-little individuality, and the fourth a dingy, armless old rag-doll,
-reverently wrapped in a fine shawl, and with a pathetic,
-half-obliterated face.
-
-"Very old and almost deaf," Eppie whispered to Gavan. "Everybody loves
-her. She lost her arms in a great fire, saving a baby's life."
-
-Gavan was entering into all the phases of the game with such spirit,
-keeping up Agnes's character for an irritating perfection so aptly that
-Eppie forgot to wonder if his enjoyment were as real as her own. But
-suddenly the doorway was darkened, and glancing up, she saw her uncle's
-face, long-drawn with jocular incredulity, looking in upon them. Then,
-and only then, under the eyes of an uncomprehending sex, did the true
-caliber of Gavan's self-immolation flash upon her. A boy, a big boy, he
-was playing dolls with a girl; it was monstrous; as monstrous as the
-general's eyes showed that he found it. Stooping in his tall slightness,
-as he assisted Agnes's steps across the floor, he seemed, suddenly, a
-fairy prince decoyed and flouted. What would Uncle Nigel think of him?
-She could almost have flung herself before him protectingly.
-
-The general had burst into laughter. "Now, upon my word, this is too bad
-of you, Eppie!" he cried, while Gavan, not abandoning his hold on
-Agnes's arm, turned his eyes upon the intruder with perfect serenity.
-"You are the most unconscionable little tyrant. You kept the Grainger
-boys under your thumb; but I didn't think you could carry wheedling or
-bullying as far as this. Gavan, my dear boy, you are too patient with
-her."
-
-Eppie stood at the table, scarlet with anger and compunction. Gavan had
-raised himself, and, still holding Agnes, looked from one to the other.
-
-"But she hasn't bullied me; she hasn't wheedled me," he said. "I like
-it."
-
-"At your age, my dear boy! Like doll-babies!"
-
-"Indeed I do."
-
-"This is the finest bit of chivalry I've come across for a long time.
-The gentleman who jumped into the lions' den for his mistress's glove
-was hardly pluckier. Drop that ridiculous thing and come away. I'll
-rescue you."
-
-"But I don't want to be rescued. I really am enjoying myself. It's not a
-case of courage at all," Gavan protested.
-
-This was too much. He should not tarnish himself to shield her, and
-Eppie burst out: "Nonsense, Gavan. I asked you to. You are only doing it
-because you are so kind, and to please me. It was very wrong of me. Put
-her down as Uncle Nigel says."
-
-"There, our little tyrant is honest, at all events. Drop it, Gavan. You
-should see the figure you cut with that popinjay in your arms. Come,
-you've won your spurs. Come away with me."
-
-But Gavan, smiling, shook his head. "No, I don't want to, thanks. I did
-it to please her, if you like; but now I do it to please myself. Playing
-with dolls is a most amusing game,--and you are interrupting us at a
-most interesting point," he added. He seemed, funnily, doll and all,
-older than the general as he said it. Incredulous but mystified, Uncle
-Nigel was forced to beat a retreat, and Gavan was left confronting his
-playmate.
-
-"Why did you tell him that you enjoyed it?" she cried. "He'll think you
-unmanly."
-
-"My dear Eppie, he won't think me unmanly at all. Besides, I don't care
-if he does."
-
-"_I_ care."
-
-"But, Eppie, you take it too hard. Why should you care? It's only funny.
-Why shouldn't we amuse ourselves as we like? We are only children."
-
-"You are much more than a child. Uncle Nigel thinks so, too, I am sure."
-
-"All the more reason, then, for my having a right to amuse myself as I
-please. And I am a child, for I do amuse myself."
-
-Eppie stood staring out rigidly at the blighted prospect, and he took
-her unyielding hand. "Poor Elspeth is lying on her face. Do let us go
-on. I want you to hear what Agnes has to say next."
-
-She turned to him now. "I don't believe a word you say. You only did it
-for me. You are only doing it for me now."
-
-"Well, what if I did? What if I do? Can't I enjoy doing things for you?
-And really, really, Eppie, I do think it fun. I assure you I do."
-
-"I think you are a hero," Eppie said solemnly, and at this absurdity he
-burst into his high, shrill laugh, and renewed his supplications; but
-supplications were in vain. She refused to let him play with her again.
-He might do things for the dolls,--yes, she reluctantly consented to
-that at last,--he might take the part of robber or of dangerous wild
-beast in the woods, but into domestic relations, as it were, he should
-not enter with them; and from this determination Gavan could not move
-her.
-
-As far as his dignity in the eyes of others went, he might have gone on
-playing dolls with her all summer; Eppie realized, with surprise and
-relief, that Gavan's assurance had been well founded. Uncle Nigel,
-evidently, did not think him unmanly, and there was no chaffing. It
-really was as he had said, he was so little a child that he could do as
-he chose. His dignity needed no defense.
-
-But though the doll episode was not to be repeated, other and more equal
-ties knit her friendship with Gavan. Wide vistas of talk opened from
-their lessons, from their readings together. As they rambled through the
-heather they would talk of the Odyssey, of Plutarch's Lives, of nearer
-great people and events in history. Gavan listened with smiling interest
-while Eppie expressed her hatreds and her loves, correcting her
-vehemence, now and then, by a reference to mitigatory circumstance.
-Penelope was one of the people she hated. "See, Gavan, how she neglected
-her husband's dog while he was away--let him starve to death on a
-dunghill."
-
-Gavan surmised that the Homeric Greeks had little sense of
-responsibility about dogs.
-
-"They were horrid, then," said Eppie. "Dear Argos! Think of him trying
-to wag his tail when he was dying and saw Ulysses; _he_ was horrid, too,
-for he surely might have just stopped for a moment and patted his head.
-I'm glad that Robbie didn't live in those times. You wouldn't let Robbie
-die on a dunghill if _I_ were to go away!"
-
-"No, indeed, Eppie!" Gavan smiled.
-
-"I think you really love Robbie as much as I do, Gavan. You love him
-more than Uncle Nigel does. One can always see in people's eyes how much
-they love a dog. That fat, red Miss Erskine simply feels nothing for
-them, though she always says 'Come, come,' to Robbie. But her eyes are
-like stones when she looks at him. She is really thinking about her
-tea, and watching to see that Aunt Rachel puts in plenty of cream. I
-suppose that Penelope looked like her, when she used to see Argos on the
-dunghill."
-
-Robbie was plunging through the heather before them and paused to look
-round at them, his delicate tongue lapping in little pants over his
-teeth.
-
-"Darling Robbie," said Gavan. "Our eyes aren't like stones when we look
-at you! See him smile, Eppie, when I speak to him. Wouldn't it be funny
-if we smiled with our ears instead of with our mouths."
-
-Gavan, after a moment, sighed involuntarily and deeply.
-
-"What is the matter?" Eppie asked quickly, for she had grown near enough
-to ask it. And how near they were was shown after a little silence, by
-Gavan saying: "I was only wishing that everything could be happy at
-once, Eppie. I was thinking about my mother and wishing that she might
-be here with you and me and Robbie." His voice was steadied to its cold
-quiet as he said it, though he knew how safe from any hurt he was with
-her. And she said nothing, and did not look at him, only, in silence,
-putting a hand of comradeship on his shoulder while they walked.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Once a week, on the days of the Indian mail, Eppie's understanding
-hovered helplessly about Gavan, seeing pain for him and powerless to
-shield him from it. Prayers took place in the dining-room ten minutes
-before breakfast, and with the breakfast the mail was brought in, so
-that Gavan's promptest descent could not secure him a solitary reading
-of the letter that, Eppie felt, he awaited with trembling eagerness.
-
-"A letter from India, Gavan dear," Miss Rachel, the distributer of the
-mail would say. "Tell us your news." And before them all, in the midst
-of the general's comments on politics, crops, and weather, the rustling
-of newspapers, the pouring of tea, he was forced to open and read his
-letter and to answer, even during the reading, the kindly triviality of
-the questions showered upon him. "Yes, thank you, very well indeed. Yes,
-in Calcutta. Yes, enjoying herself, I think, thanks." His pallor on
-these occasions, his look of hardened endurance, told Eppie all that it
-did not tell the others. And that his eagerness was too great for him to
-wait until after breakfast, she saw, too. A bright thought of rescue
-came to her at last. On the mornings when the Indian mail was due, she
-was up a good hour before her usual time. Long before the quaint,
-musical gong sounded its vague, blurred melody for prayers, she was out
-of the house and running through the birch-woods to the village road,
-where, just above the church, she met the postman. He was an old friend,
-glad to please the young lady's love of importance, and the mail was
-trusted to her care. Eppie saved all her speed for the return. Every
-moment counted for Gavan's sheltered reading. She felt as if, her back
-to its door, she stood before the sheltered chamber of their meeting,
-guarding their clasp and kiss, sweet and sorrowful, from alien eyes.
-Flushed, panting, she darted up to his room, handing his letter in to
-him, while she said in an easy, matter-of-fact tone, "Your mail, Gavan."
-
-Gavan, like the postman, attributed his good luck to Eppie's love of
-importance, and only on the third morning discovered her manoeuver.
-
-He came down early himself to get his own letter, found that the mail
-had not arrived, and, strolling disappointedly down the drive, was
-almost knocked down by Eppie rushing in at the gate. She fell back,
-dismayed at the revelation that must force the fullness of her sympathy
-upon him--almost as if she herself glanced in at the place of meeting.
-
-"I've got the letters," she said, leaning on the stone pillar and
-recovering her breath. "There's one for you." And she held it out.
-
-But for once Gavan's concentration seemed to be for her rather than for
-the letter. "My mother's letter?" he said.
-
-She nodded.
-
-"It was you, then. I wondered why they came so much earlier."
-
-"I met the postman; he likes to be saved that much of his walk."
-
-"You must have to go a long way to get them so early. You went on
-purpose for me, I think."
-
-Looking aside, she now had to own: "I saw that you hated reading them
-before us all. I would hate it, too."
-
-"Eppie, my dearest Eppie," said Gavan. Glancing at him, she saw tears in
-his eyes, and joy and pride flamed up in her. He opened the letter and
-read it, walking beside her, his hand on her shoulder, showing her that
-he did not count her among "us all."
-
-After that they went together to meet the postman, and, unasked, Gavan
-would read to her long pieces from what his mother said.
-
-It was a few weeks later, on one of these days, that she knew, from his
-face while he read, and from his silence, that bad news had come. He
-left her at the house, making no confidence, and at breakfast, when he
-came down to it later, she could see that he had been struggling for
-self-mastery. This pale, controlled face, at which she glanced furtively
-while they did their lessons in the library, made her think of the
-Spartan boy, calm over an agony. Even the general noticed the mechanical
-voice and the pallor and asked him if he were feeling tired this
-morning. Gavan owned to a headache.
-
-"Off to the moors directly, then," said the general; "and you, too,
-Eppie. Have a morning together."
-
-Eppie sat over her book and said that perhaps Gavan would rather go
-without her; but Gavan, who had risen, said quickly that he wanted her
-to come. "Let us go to the hilltop," he said, when they were outside in
-the warm, scented sunlight.
-
-They went through the woods, where the burn ran, rippling loudly, and
-the shadows were blue on the little, sandy path that wound among pines
-and birches. Neither spoke while they climbed the gradual ascent. They
-came out upon the height that ran in a long undulation to the far lift
-of mountain ranges. Under a solitary group of pines they sat down.
-
-The woods of Kirklands were below them, and then the vast sea of purple,
-heaving in broad, long waves to the azure, intense and clear, of the
-horizon. The wind sighed, soft and shrill, through the pines above them,
-and far away they heard a sheep-bell tinkle. Beyond the delicate
-miniature of the village a wind-mill turned slow, gray sails. The whole
-world, seemed a sunlit island floating in the circling blue. Robbie sat
-at their feet, alert, upright, silhouetted against the sky.
-
-"Robbie, Robbie," said Gavan, gently, as he leaned forward and stroked
-the dog's back. Eppie, too, stroked with him. The silence of his unknown
-grief weighed heavily on her heart and she guessed that though for him
-the pain of silence was great, the pain of speech seemed greater.
-
-He presently raised himself again, clasping both hands about his knees
-and looking away into the vast distance. His head, with its thick hair,
-its fine, aquiline nose and delicately jutting chin, made Eppie think,
-vaguely, of a picture she had seen of a young Saint Sebastian, mutely
-enduring arrows, on a background of serene sky. With the thought, the
-silence became unendurable; she strung herself to speak. "Tell me,
-Gavan," she said, "have you had bad news?"
-
-He cast her a frightened glance, and, looking down, began to pull at the
-heather. "No, not bad news, exactly."
-
-Eppie drew a breath of dubious relief. "But you are so unhappy about
-something."
-
-Gavan nodded.
-
-"But why, if it's not bad news?"
-
-After a pause he said, and she knew, with all the pain of it, what the
-relief of speaking must be: "I guess at things. I always feel if she is
-hiding things."
-
-"Perhaps you are only imagining."
-
-"I wish I could think it; but I know not. I know what is happening to
-her."
-
-He was still wrenching away at the heather, tossing aside the purple
-sprays with their finely tangled sandy roots. Suddenly he put his head
-on his knees, hiding his face.
-
-"Oh, Gavan! Oh, don't be so unhappy," Eppie whispered, drawing near him,
-helpless and awe-struck.
-
-"How can I be anything but unhappy when the person I care most for is
-miserable--miserable, and I am so far from her?" His shoulders heaved;
-she saw that he was weeping.
-
-Eppie, at first, gazed, motionless, silent, frozen with a child's quick
-fear of demonstrated grief. A child's quick response followed. Throwing
-her arms around him, she too burst into tears.
-
-It was strange to see how the boy's reserves melted in the onslaught of
-this hot, simple sympathy. He turned to her, hiding his face on her
-shoulder, and they cried together.
-
-"I didn't want to make you unhappy, too," Gavan said at last in a
-weakened voice. His tears were over first and he faintly smiled as he
-met Robbie's alarmed, beseeching eyes. Robbie had been scrambling over
-them, scratching, whining, licking their hands and cheeks in an
-exasperation of shut-out pity.
-
-"I'm not nearly so unhappy as when you don't say anything and I know
-that you are keeping things back," Eppie choked, pushing Robbie away
-blindly. "I'd much rather _be_ unhappy if you are."
-
-It was Gavan, one arm around the rejected Robbie, who had to dry her
-tears, trying to console her with: "Perhaps I did imagine more than
-there actually is. One can't help imagining--at this distance." He
-smiled at her, as he had smiled at Robbie, and holding her hand, he went
-on: "She is so gentle, and so lonely, and so unhappy. I could help her
-out there. Here, I am so helpless."
-
-"Make her come here!" Eppie cried. "Write at once and make her come.
-Send a wire, Gavan. Couldn't she be here very soon, if you wired that
-she must--_must_ come? I wouldn't bear it if I were you."
-
-"She can't come. She must stay with my father."
-
-All the barriers were down now, so that Eppie could insist: "She would
-rather be with you. You want her most."
-
-"Yes, I want her most. But he needs her most," said Gavan. "He is
-extravagant and weak and bad. He drinks and he gambles, and if she left
-him he would probably soon ruin himself--and us; for my mother has no
-money. She could not leave him if she would. And though he is often very
-cruel to her, he wants her with him." Gavan spoke with all his quiet,
-but he had flushed as if from a still anger. "Money is an odious thing,
-Eppie. That's what I want to do, as soon as I can: make money for her."
-He added presently: "I pray for strength to help her."
-
-There was a long silence after this. Gavan lay back on the heather, his
-hat tilted over his tired eyes. Eppie sat above him, staring out at the
-empty blue. Her longing, her pity, her revolt from this suffering,--for
-herself and for him,--her vague but vehement desires, flew out--out; she
-almost seemed to see them, like strong, bright birds flying so far at
-last that the blue engulfed them. The idea hurt her. She turned away
-from the dissolving vastness before which it was impossible to think or
-feel, turned her head to look down at the long, white form beside her,
-exhausted and inert. Darling Gavan. How he suffered. His poor mother,
-too. She saw Gavan's mother in a sort of padlocked palanquin under a
-burning sky, surrounded by dazzling deserts, a Blue-beard, bristling
-with swords, reeling in a drunken sentinelship round her prison.
-Considering Gavan, with his hidden face, the thought of his last words
-came more distinctly to her. A long time had passed, and his breast was
-rising quietly, almost as if he slept. Conjecture grew as to the odd
-form of action in which he evidently trusted. "Do you pray a great deal,
-Gavan?" she asked.
-
-He nodded under the hat.
-
-"Do you feel as if there was a God--quite near you--who listened?"
-
-"I wouldn't want to live unless I could feel that."
-
-Eppie paused at this, perplexed, and asked presently, with a slight
-embarrassment, "Why not?"
-
-"Nothing would have any meaning," said Gavan.
-
-"No meaning, Gavan? You would still care for your mother and want to
-help her, wouldn't you?"
-
-"Yes, but without God there would be no hope of helping her, no hope of
-strength. Why, Eppie," came the voice from behind the hat, "without God
-life would be death."
-
-Eppie retired to another discomfited silence. "I am afraid I don't think
-much about God," she confessed at last. "I always feel as if I had
-strength already--I suppose, heaps and heaps of strength.
-Only--to-day--I do know more what you mean. If only God would do
-something for you and your mother. You want something so big to help you
-if you are very, very unhappy."
-
-"Yes, and some one to turn to when you are lonely."
-
-Again Eppie hesitated. "Well, but, Gavan, while you're here you have me,
-you know."
-
-At this Gavan pushed aside his hat almost to laugh at her. "What a
-funny little girl you are, Eppie! What a dear little girl! Yes, of
-course, I have you. But when I go away? And even while I'm here,--what
-if we were both lonely together? Can't you imagine that? The feeling of
-being lost in a great forest at night. You have such quaint ideas about
-God."
-
-"I've never had any ideas at all. I've only thought of Some One who was
-there,--Some One I didn't need yet. I've always thought of God as being
-more for grown-up people. Lost in a forest together? I don't think I
-would mind that so much, Gavan. I don't think I would be frightened, if
-we were together."
-
-"I didn't exactly mean it literally,--not a real forest, perhaps." He
-had looked away from her, and, his thin, white face sunken among the
-heather, his eyes were on the blue immensities where her thoughts had
-lost themselves. "I am so often frightened. I get so lost sometimes that
-I can hardly believe that that Some One is near me. And then the fear
-becomes a sort of numbness, so that I hardly seem there myself; it's
-only loneliness, while I melt and melt away into nothing. Even now, when
-I look at that sky, the feeling creeps and creeps, that dreadful
-loneliness, where there isn't any I left to know that it's lonely--only
-a feeling." He shut his eyes resolutely. "My mother always says that it
-is when one has such fancies that one must pray and have faith."
-
-Eppie hardly felt that he spoke to her, and she groped among his strange
-thoughts, seizing the most concrete of them, imitating his shutting out
-of the emptiness by closing her own eyes. "Yes," she said, reflecting in
-the odd, glowing dimness, "I am quite sure that you have much more
-feeling about God when you think hard, inside yourself, than when you
-look at the sky."
-
-"Only then, there are chasms inside, too." Gavan's hand beside him was
-once more restlessly pulling at the heather. "Even inside, one can fall,
-and fall, and fall."
-
-The strange tone of his voice--it was indeed like the far note of a
-falling bell, dying in an abyss--roused Eppie from her experiments. She
-shook his shoulder. "Open your eyes, Gavan; please, at once. You make me
-feel horridly. I would rather have you look at the sky than fall inside
-like that."
-
-He raised himself on an arm now, with a gaze, for a moment, vague,
-deadened, blank, then sprang to his feet. "Don't let's look. Don't let's
-fall. We must pray and have faith. Eppie, I have made you so pale. Dear
-Eppie, to care so much. Please forgive me for going to pieces like
-that."
-
-Eppie was on her feet, too. "But I want you to. You know what I mean:
-never hide things. Oh, Gavan, if I could only help you."
-
-"You do. It is because you care, just in the way you do, that I _could_
-go to pieces,--and it has helped me to be so selfish."
-
-"Please be selfish, often, often, then. I always am caring. And just
-wait till I am grown up. I shall do something for you then. _I'll_ make
-money, too, Gavan."
-
-"Eppie, you are the dearest little girl," he repeated, in a shaken
-voice; and at that she put her arms around his neck and kissed him. The
-boy's eyes filled with tears. They stood under the sighing pines, high
-in the blue, and the scent of the heather was strong, sweet, in the
-sunny air. Gavan did not return the kiss, but holding her face between
-his hands, stammering, he said, "Eppie, how can I bear ever to leave
-you?"
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-In looking back, after long years, at their summer, Eppie could see,
-more clearly than when she lived in it, that sadness and Gavan had
-always gone together. He had, as it were, initiated her into suffering.
-Sadness was the undertone of their sweet comradeship. Their happy
-stories came to tragic endings. Death and disaster, though in trivial
-forms, followed him.
-
-With his returning strength, and perhaps with a sense of atonement to
-her for what he had called his selfishness, Gavan plunged eagerly into
-any outer interest that would please her. He spent hours in building for
-her a little hut on the banks of the brae among the birches: the dolls'
-Petit Trianon he called it, as the summer-house was their Versailles.
-They had been reading about the French Revolution. Eppie objected to the
-analogy. "I should always imagine that Elspeth's head were going to be
-cut off if I called it that."
-
-Gavan said that Elspeth need not be the queen, but a less exalted, more
-fortunate court lady. "We'll imagine that she escaped early from France
-with all her family, saw none of the horrors, was a happy _emigree_ in
-England and married there," he said; and he went on, while he hammered
-at the pine boughs, with a desultory and reassuring account of Elspeth's
-English adventures. But poor Elspeth came to as sad an end as any victim
-of the guillotine. Eppie was carrying her one day when she and Gavan had
-followed Aunt Barbara on some housewifely errand up to the highest attic
-rooms. Outside the low sills of the dormer-windows ran a narrow stone
-gallery looking down over the pine-tree and the garden. The children
-squeezed out through the window to hang in delighted contemplation over
-the birds'-eye view, and then Eppie crawled to a farther corner where
-one could see round to the moorland and find oneself on a level, almost,
-with the rooks' nests in the lime-trees. She handed Elspeth to Gavan to
-hold for her while she went on this adventure.
-
-He had just risen to his feet, looking down from where he stood over the
-low parapet, when a sudden cry from Eppie--a great bird sailing by that
-she called to him to look at--made him start, almost losing his balance
-on the narrow ledge. Elspeth fell from his arms.
-
-She was picked up on the garden path, far, far beneath, with a shattered
-head. Gavan, perhaps, suffered more from the disaster than Eppie
-herself. He was sick with dismay and self-reproach. She was forced to
-make light of her grief to soothe his. But she did not feel that her
-soothing hoodwinked or comforted him. Indeed, after that hour on the
-hilltop, when he showed her his sorrow and his fear, Eppie felt that
-though near, very near him, she was also held away. It was as if he felt
-a discomfort in the nearness, or a dread that through it he might hurt
-again or be hurt. He was at once more loving and more reticent. His
-resolute cheerfulness, when they could be cheerful, was a wall between
-them.
-
-Once more, and only once, before their childhood together ended, was she
-to see all, feel all, suffer all with him. Toward the end of the summer
-Robbie sickened and died. For three nights the children sat up with him,
-taking turns at sleep, refusing alien help. By candle-light, in Eppie's
-room, they bent over Robbie's basket, listening to his laboring breath.
-The general, protesting against the folly of the sleepless nights, yet
-tiptoed in and out, gruffly kind, moved by the pathos of the young
-figures. He gave medical advice and superintended the administering of
-teaspoonfuls of milk and brandy. That he thought Robbie's case a
-hopeless one the children knew, for all his air of reassuring good
-cheer.
-
-Robbie died early on the morning of the fourth day. A little while
-before, he faintly wagged his tail when they spoke to him, raising eyes
-unendurably sad.
-
-Eppie, during the illness, had been constantly in tears; Gavan had shown
-a stoic fortitude. But when all was over and Eppie was covering Robbie
-with the white towel that was to be his shroud, Gavan suddenly broke
-down. Casting his arms around her, hiding his face against her, he burst
-into sobs, saying in a shuddering voice, while he clung to her, shaken
-all through with the violence of his weeping: "Oh, I can't bear it,
-Eppie! I can't bear it!"
-
-Before this absolute shattering Eppie found her own self-control.
-Holding him to her,--and she almost thought that he would have fallen if
-she had not so held him,--she murmured, "Gavan, darling Gavan, I know, I
-know."
-
-"Oh, Eppie," he gasped, "we will never see him again."
-
-She had drawn him down to the window-seat, where they leaned together,
-and she was silent for a moment at his last words. But suddenly her arms
-tightened around him with an almost vindictive tenderness. "We _will_,"
-she said.
-
-"Never! Never!" Gavan gasped. "His eyes, Eppie,--his eyes seemed to know
-it; they were saying good-by forever. And, oh, Eppie, they were so
-astonished--so astonished," he repeated, while the sobs shook him.
-
-"We will," Eppie said again, pressing the boy's head to hers, while she
-shut her eyes over the poignant memory. "Why, Gavan, I don't know much
-about God, but I do know about heaven. Animals will go to heaven; it
-wouldn't be heaven unless they were there."
-
-That memory of the astonishment in Robbie's eyes seemed to put knives in
-her heart, but over the sharpness she grasped her conviction.
-
-In all the despair of his grief, the boy had, in answering her, the
-disciplined logic of his more formal faith, more clearly seen fact.
-
-"Dear Eppie, animals have no souls."
-
-"How do you know?" she retorted, almost with anger.
-
-"One only has to think. They stop, as Robbie has."
-
-"How do you know he has stopped? It's only," said Eppie, groping, "that
-he doesn't want his body any longer."
-
-"But it's Robbie in his body that we want. It's his body, with Robbie in
-it, that we know. God has done with wanting him--that's it, perhaps; but
-we want him. Oh, Eppie, it's no good: as we know him, as we want him, he
-is dead--dead forever. Besides,"--in speaking this Gavan straightened
-himself,--"we shall forget him." He turned, in speaking, from her
-consolations, as though their inefficiency hurt him.
-
-"I won't forget him," said Eppie.
-
-Gavan made no reply. He had risen, and standing now at the widely opened
-window, looked out over the chill, misty dawn. Beneath was the garden,
-its golden-gray walls rippling with green traceries, the clotted color
-of the hanging fruit among them. Over the hilltop, the solitary group of
-pines, the running wave of mountain, was a great piece of palest blue,
-streaked with milky filaments. The boughs of the pine-tree were just
-below the window, drenched with dew through all their fragrant darkness.
-
-Eppie, too, rose, and stood beside him.
-
-The hardened misery on his young face hurt her childish, yet
-comprehending heart even more than Robbie's supplicating and astonished
-eyes had done. She could imagine that look of steeled endurance freezing
-through it forever, and an answering hardness of opposition rose in her
-to resist and break it. "We won't forget him."
-
-"People do forget," Gavan answered.
-
-She found a cruel courage. "Could you forget your mother?"
-
-Gavan continued to look stonily out of the window and did not answer
-her.
-
-"Could you?" she repeated.
-
-"Don't, Eppie, don't," he said.
-
-She saw that she had stirred some black terror in him, and her ignorant,
-responsive fear made her pitiless: "Could you forget her if she died?
-Never. Never as long as you lived."
-
-"Already," he said, as though the words were forced from him by her
-will, "I haven't remembered her all the time."
-
-"She is there. You haven't forgotten her."
-
-"Years and years come. New things come. Old things fade and fade,--all
-but the deepest things. They couldn't fade. No," he repeated, "they
-couldn't. Only, even they might get dimmer."
-
-She saw that he spoke from an agony of doubt, and he seemed to wrench
-the knife she had stabbed him with from his heart as he added: "But
-Robbie is such a little thing. And little things people do forget, I am
-sure of it. It's that that makes them so sad."
-
-"Well, then,"--Eppie, too, felt the relief of the lesser pain,--"they
-will remember again. When you see Robbie in heaven you will remember all
-about him. But I won't forget him," she repeated once more, swallowing
-the sob that rose chokingly at the thought of how long it would be till
-they should see Robbie in heaven.
-
-Gavan had now a vague, chill smile for the pertinacity of her faith.
-Something had broken in him, as if, with Robbie's passing, a veil had
-been drawn from reality, an illusion of confidence dispelled forever. He
-leaned out of the window and breathed in the scent of the wet pine-tree,
-looking, with an odd detachment and clearness of observation,--as if
-through that acceptation of tragedy all his senses had grown keener,--at
-the bluish bloom the dew made upon the pine-needles; at the flowers and
-fruit in the garden below, the thatched roof of the summer-house, the
-fragile whiteness of the roses growing near it, like a bridal veil blown
-against the ancient wall. It was, in a moment of strange, suspended
-vision, as if he had often and often seen tragic dawn in the garden
-before and was often to see it again. What was he? Where was he? All the
-world was like a dream and he seemed to see to its farthest ends and
-back to its beginnings.
-
-Eppie stood silent beside him.
-
-He was presently conscious of her silence, and then, the uncanny
-crystal, gazing sense slipping from him, of a possible unkindness in his
-repudiating grief. He looked round at her. The poor child's eyes, heavy
-with weeping and all the weight of the dark, encompassing woe he had
-shown her, dwelt on him with a somber compassionateness.
-
-"Poor, darling little Eppie," he said, putting an arm about her, "what a
-brute, a selfish brute, I am."
-
-"Why a brute, Gavan?"
-
-"Making you suffer--more. I'm always making you suffer, Eppie, always;
-and you are really such a happy person. Come, let us go out for a walk.
-Let us go out on the moor. It will be delicious in the heather now. I
-want to see it and smell it. It will do us good."
-
-She resented his wisdom. "But you won't forget Robbie, while we walk."
-
-For a moment, as if in great weariness, Gavan leaned his head against
-her shoulder. "Don't talk of Robbie, please. We must forget him--just
-now, or try to, or else we can't go on at all."
-
-Still she persisted, for she could not let it go like that: "I can think
-of him and go on too. I don't want to run away from Robbie because he
-makes me unhappy."
-
-Gavan sighed, raising his head. "You are stronger than I am, Eppie. I
-must--I must run away." He took her hand and drew her to the door, and
-she followed him, though glancing back, as she went, at the little form
-under the shroud.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Robbie's death overshadowed the last days of Gavan's stay. Eppie did not
-feel, after it, after his avowed and helpless breakdown, the barrier
-sense so strongly. He didn't attempt to hide dejection; but that was
-probably because she too was dejected and there was no necessity for
-keeping up appearances that would only jar and hurt. Eppie gave herself
-whole-heartedly to her griefs, and this was her grief as well as his. He
-could share it. It was no longer the holding her at arm's length from a
-private woe. Yet the grief was not really shared, Eppie knew, for it was
-not the same grief that they felt. Of the difference they did not speak
-again. Then there came the sadness of the parting, so near now and for
-the first time realized in all its aspects.
-
-Eppie gathered, from chance remarks of the general's, that this parting
-was to be indefinite. The summer at Kirklands was no precedent for
-future summers, as she and Gavan had quite taken for granted. An uncle
-of Gavan's, his father's eldest brother, was to give him his home in
-England. This uncle had been traveling in the East this summer, and
-Gavan did not formally come under his jurisdiction until autumn. But the
-general conjectured that the jurisdiction would be well defined and
-tolerably stringent. Sir James Palairet had clearly cut projects for
-Gavan; they would, perhaps, not include holidays at Kirklands. The
-realization was, for Gavan, too, a new one.
-
-"Am I not to come back here next summer?" he asked.
-
-"I'm afraid not, Gavan; we haven't first claim, you see. Perhaps Sir
-James will lend you to us now and then; but from what I know of him I
-imagine that he will want to do a lot with you, to put you through a
-great deal. There won't be much time for this sort of thing. You will
-probably travel with him."
-
-They were in the library and, speaking from the depths of her fear,
-Eppie asked: "Do you like Sir James, Uncle Nigel?" She suspected a
-pitying quality in the cogitating look that the general bent upon Gavan.
-
-"I hardly know him, my dear. He is quite an eminent man. A little
-severe, perhaps,--something of a martinet,--but just, conscientious. It
-is a great thing for Gavan," the general continued, making the best of a
-rather bleak prospect, "to have such an uncle to give him a start in
-life. It means the best sort of start."
-
-Directly the two children were alone, both sitting in the deep
-window-seat, Gavan said, "Don't worry, Eppie. Of course I'll come
-back--soon." His face took on the hardness that its delicacy could so
-oddly express. He was confronting his ambiguous fate in an attitude of
-cold resolution. For his sake, Eppie controlled useless outcries. "You
-have seen your uncle, Gavan?"
-
-"Yes, once; in India. He came up to Darjeeling one summer."
-
-"Is he nice--nicer than Uncle Nigel made out, I mean?"
-
-"He isn't like my father," said Gavan, after a moment.
-
-"You mean that he isn't wicked?" Eppie asked baldly.
-
-"Oh, a good deal more than that. He is just and conscientious, as the
-general said. That's what my mother felt; that's why she could bear it,
-my going to him. And the general is right, you know, Eppie, about its
-being a great thing for me. He is a very important person, in his way,
-and he is going to put me through. He is determined that my father
-sha'n't spoil my life. And, as you know, Eppie, my mother's life, any
-chance for her, depends on me. To make her life, to atone to her in any
-way for all she has had to bear, I must make my own. My uncle will help
-me."
-
-The steeliness of his resolves made his face almost alien. Eppie felt
-this unknown future, where he must fight alone, for objects in which she
-had no share, shutting her out, and a child's sick misery of desolation
-filled her, bringing back the distant memory of her mother's death, that
-suffocating sense of being left behind and forgotten; but, keeping her
-eyes on his prospect, she managed in a firm voice to question him about
-the arid uncle, learned that he was married, childless, had a house in
-the country and one in London, and sat in Parliament. He was vastly
-busy, traveled a great deal, and wrote books of travel; not books about
-foreign people and the things they ate and wore, as Eppie with her
-courageous interest hopefully surmised, but books of dry, colorless
-fact, with lots of statistics in them, Gavan said.
-
-"He wants me to go in for the same sort of thing--politics and public
-life."
-
-"You are going to be a Pitt--make laws, Gavan, like Pitt?" Eppie kept up
-her dispassionate tone.
-
-He smiled at the magnified conception. "I'll try for a seat, probably,
-or some governmental office; that is, if I turn out to be worth
-anything."
-
-How the vague vastness shut her out! What should she do, meanwhile? How
-carve for herself a future that would keep her near him in the great
-outside world? And would he want her near him in it when he was to be so
-great, too? This question brought the irrepressible tears to her eyes at
-last, though she turned away her head and would not let them fall. But
-Gavan glanced at her and leaned forward to look, and then she saw, as
-her eyes met his, that the hard resolve was for her, too, and did not
-shut her out, but in.
-
-"I'm coming back, Eppie," he said, taking her hand and holding it
-tightly. "Next to my mother, it's _you_,--you know it."
-
-"I haven't any mother," said Eppie, keeping up the bravery, though it
-was really harder not to cry now. He understood where she placed him.
-
-Eppie was glad that it was raining on the last morning. Sunshine would
-have been a mockery, and this tranquilly falling rain, that turned the
-hills to pale, substanceless ghosts and brought the end of the moor,
-where it disappeared into the white, so near, was not tragic. Gavan was
-coming back. She would think only of that. She would not--would not cry.
-He should see how brave she could be. When he was gone--well, she
-allowed herself a swift thought of the Petit Trianon, its hidden refuge.
-There, all alone, she would, of course, howl. There was a grim comfort
-in this vision of herself, rolling upon the pine-needle carpet of the
-Petit Trianon and shrieking her woes aloud.
-
-At breakfast Gavan showed a tense, calm face. She was impressed anew
-with the sense of his strength, for, in spite of his resolves, he was
-suffering, perhaps more keenly than herself. Suffering, with him,
-partook of horror. She could live in hopes, and on them. To Gavan, this
-parting was the going into a dark cavern that he must march through in
-fear. And then, he would never roll and shriek.
-
-After breakfast, they hardly spoke to each other. Indeed, what was there
-to say? Eppie filled the moments in superintending the placing of fruit
-and sandwiches in his dressing-case. The carriage was a little late, so
-that when the final moment came, there was a hurried conventionality of
-farewell. Gavan was kissed by the aunts and shook hands with Miss
-Grimsby, while the general called out that there was no time to lose.
-
-"Come back to us, dear boy; keep your feet dry on the journey," said
-Miss Rachel, while Miss Barbara, holding his hand, whispered gently
-that she would always pray for him.
-
-Eppie and Gavan had not looked at each other, and when the moment came
-for their farewell, beneath the eyes of aunts, uncle, Miss Grimsby, and
-the servants, it seemed the least significant of all, was the shortest,
-the most formal. They looked, they held hands for a moment, and Gavan
-faltered out some words. Eppie did not speak and kept her firm smile.
-Only when he had followed the general into the carriage and it was
-slowly grinding over the gravel did something hot, stinging, choking,
-flare up in her, something that made her know this smooth parting to be
-intolerable--not to be borne.
-
-She darted out into the rain. Bobbie was dead; Gavan was gone; why, she
-was alone--alone--and a question was beating through her as she ran down
-the drive and, with a leap to its step, caught the heavy old carriage in
-its careful turning at the gate. Gavan saw, at the window, her white,
-freckled face, her startled eyes, her tossed hair all beaded with the
-finely falling rain--like an apparition on the ghostly background of
-mist.
-
-"Oh, Gavan, don't forget me!" That had been the flaring terror.
-
-He had just time to catch her hand, to lean to her, to kiss her. He did
-not speak. Mutely he looked at the little comrade all the things he
-could not say: what she was to him, what he felt for her, what he would
-always feel,--always, always, always, his eyes said to hers as she
-stepped back to the road and was gone.
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-He had never seen Eppie again, and sixteen years had passed.
-
-It was of this that Gavan was thinking as the Scotch express bore him
-northward on a dark October night.
-
-A yellow-bound, half-cut volume of French essays lay beside him. He had
-lighted a cigar and, his feet warmly ensconced on the hot-water tin, his
-legs enfolded in rugs, the fur collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears, he leaned back, well fortified against the sharp air that struck
-in from the half-opened window.
-
-Gavan, at thirty, had oddly maintained all the more obvious
-characteristics of his boyhood. He was long, pale, emaciated, as he had
-been at fourteen. His clean-shaved face was the boy's face, matured, but
-unchanged in essentials. The broad, steep brow, the clear, aquiline jut
-of nose and chin, the fineness and strength of the jaw, sculptured now
-by the light overhead into vehement relief and shadow, were more
-emphatic, only, than they had been.
-
-At fourteen his face had surprised with its maturity and at thirty it
-surprised with its quality of wistful boyishness. This was the obvious.
-The changes were there, but they were subtle, consisting more in a
-certain hardening of youth's hesitancy into austerity; as though the
-fine metal of the countenance had been tempered by time into a fixed,
-enduring type. His pallor was the scholar's, but his emaciation the
-athlete's; the fragility, now, was a braced and disciplined fragility.
-No sedentary softness was in him. In his body, as in his face, one felt
-a delicacy as strong as it was fine. The great change was that hardening
-to fixity.
-
-To-night, he was feeling the change himself. The journey to Kirklands,
-after the long gap that lay between it and his farewell, made something
-of an epoch for his thoughts. He did not find it significant, but the
-mere sense of comparison was arresting.
-
-The darkness of the October night, speeding by outside, the solitude of
-the bright railway carriage, London two hours behind and, before, the
-many hours of his lonely journey,--time and place were like empty
-goblets, only waiting to be filled with the still wine of memory.
-
-Gavan had not cast aside his book, lighted his cigar, and, leaning back,
-drawn his rugs about him with the conscious intention of yielding
-himself to retrospect. On the contrary, he had, at first, pushed aside
-the thoughts that, softly, persistently, pressed round him. Then the
-languor, the opportunity of the hour seized him. He allowed himself to
-drift hither and thither, as first one eddy lapped over him and then
-another. And finally he abandoned himself to the full current and, once
-it had him, it carried him far.
-
-It was, at the beginning, as far back as Eppie and childhood that it
-carried him, to the sunny summer days and to the speechless parting of
-the rainy autumn morning. And, with all that sense of change, he was
-surprised to find how very much one thing had held firm. He had never
-forgotten. He had kept the mute promise of that misty morning. How well
-he had kept it he hadn't known until he found the chain of memory hold
-so firm as he pulled upon it. The promise had been made to himself as
-well as to her, given in solemn hostage to his own childish fears. Even
-then what an intuitive dread had been upon him of the impermanence of
-things. But it wasn't impermanent after all, that vision.
-
-Dear little Eppie. It was astonishing now to find how well he
-remembered, how clearly he could see, in looking back,--more clearly
-than even his acute child's perception had made evident to him,--what a
-dear little Eppie she had been. She lived in his memory, and probably
-nowhere else: in the present Eppie he didn't fancy that he should find
-much trace of the child Eppie, and it was sad, in its funny way, to
-think that he, who had, with all his forebodings, so felt the need of a
-promise, should so well remember her who, undoubtedly, had long ago
-forgotten him. He took little interest in the present Eppie. But the
-child wore perfectly with time.
-
-Dear child Eppie and strange, distant boy, groping toward the present
-Gavan; unhappy little boy, of deep, inarticulate, passionate affections
-and of deep hopes and dreads. There they walked, knee-deep in heather;
-he smelled it, the sun warm upon it, Eppie in her white,
-Alice-in-Wonderland frock and her "striped" hair. And there went Robbie,
-plunging through the heather before them.
-
-Robbie. Eppie had been right, then. He had not forgotten him at all. He
-and Eppie stood at the window looking out at the dawn; the scent of the
-wet pine-tree was in the air, and their eyes were heavy with weeping.
-How near they had been. Had any one, in all his life, ever been nearer
-him than Eppie?
-
-Curious, when he had so well kept the promise never to forget, that the
-other promise, the promise to return, he had not been able to keep. In
-making it, he had not imagined, even with his foreboding, what manacles
-of routine and theory were to be locked upon him for the rest of his
-boyhood. He had soon learned that protest, pleading, rebellion, were
-equally vain, and that outward conformity was the preservative of inner
-freedom. He could not jeopardize the purpose of his life--his mother's
-rescue--by a persistence that, in his uncle's not unkind and not
-unhumorous eyes, was merely foolish. He was forced to swallow his own
-longings and to endure, as best he could, his pangs of fear lest Eppie
-should think him slack, or even faithless. He submitted to the treadmill
-of a highly organized education, that could spare no time for
-insignificant summers in Scotland. Every moment in Gavan's youth was to
-be made significant by tangible achievement. The distilled knowledge of
-the past, the intellectual trophies of civilization, were to be his; if
-he didn't want them, they, in the finished and effective figure of his
-uncle, wanted him, and, in the sense of the fulfilment of his uncle's
-hopes, they got him.
-
-During those years Gavan wrote to Eppie, tried to make her share with
-him in all the lonely and rather abstract interests of his life. But he
-found that the four years of difference, counting for nothing in the
-actual intercourse of word and look, counted for everything against any
-reality of intercourse in writing. Translated into that formality, the
-childish affection became as unlike itself as a pressed flower is unlike
-a fresh one. Eppie's letters, punctual and very fond, were far more
-immature than she herself. These letters gave accounts of animals,
-walks, lessons, very bald and concise, and of the Grainger cousins and
-their doings, and then of her new relation, cousin Alicia, whose
-daughters, children of Eppie's own age, soon seemed to poor Gavan, in
-his distant prison, to fill his place. Eppie went away with these
-cousins to Germany, where they all heard wonderful music, and after that
-they came to Kirklands for the summer. Altogether, when Gavan's
-opportunity came and, with the dignity of seventeen to back his request,
-he had his uncle's consent to his spending of a month in Scotland, he
-felt himself, even as he made it, rather silly in his determination to
-cling at all costs to something precious but vanishing. Then it was that
-Eppie had been swept away by the engulfing relative. At the very moment
-of his own release, she was taken to the Continent for three years of
-travel and study. The final effort of childhood to hold to its own
-meaning was frustrated. The letters, after that, soon ceased. Silence
-ended the first chapter.
-
-Gavan glanced out at the rushing darkness on either side. It was like
-the sliding of a curtain before the first act of a drama. His cigar was
-done and he did not light another. His eyes on that darkness that passed
-and passed, he gave himself up to the long vision of the nearer years.
-Through them went always the link with childhood, the haunting phrase
-that sounded in every scene--that fear of life, that deep dread of its
-evil and its pain that he had tried to hide from Eppie, but that,
-together, they had glanced at.
-
-In that first chapter, whose page he had just turned, he had seen
-himself as a very unhappy boy--unhappy from causes as apparent as a cage
-about a pining bird. His youth had been weighted with an over-mature
-understanding of wrong and sorrow. His childish faith in supreme good
-had shaped itself to a conception of life as a place of probation where
-oneself and, far worse, those one loved were burned continually in the
-fiery furnace of inexplicable affliction. One couldn't say what God
-might not demand of one in the way of endurance. He had, helpless, seen
-his fragile, shrinking mother hatefully bullied and abused or more
-hatefully caressed. He had been parted from her to brood and tremble
-over her distant fate. Loved things had died; loved things had all, it
-seemed, been taken from him; the soulless machinery of his uncle's
-system had ground and polished at his stiffening heart. No wonder that
-the boy of that first chapter had been very unhappy. But in the later
-chapters, to which he had now come, the causes for unhappiness were not
-so obvious, yet the gloom that overhung them deepened. He saw himself at
-Eton in the hedged-round world of buoyant youth, standing apart,
-preoccupied, indifferent. He had been oddly popular there. His
-selflessness, his gentle candor, his capacity for a highly keyed
-joy,--strung, though it was, over an incapacity for peace,--endeared
-him; but even to his friends he remained a veiled and ambiguous
-personality. He seemed to himself to stand on the confines of that
-artificially happy domain, listening always for the sound of sorrow in
-the greater world outside. History, growing before his growing mind,
-loomed blood-stained, cruel, disastrous. The defeat of goodness, its
-degradation by the triumphant forces of evil, haunted him. The
-dependence of mind, of soul, on body opened new and ominous vistas. For
-months he was pursued by morbid fears of what a jostled brain-cell or a
-diseased body might do to one. One might become a fiend, it seemed, or
-an imbecile, if one's atoms were disarranged too much. Life was a tragic
-duty,--he held to that blindly, fiercely at times; but what if life's
-chances made even goodness impossible? what if it were to rob one of
-one's very selfhood? It became to him a thing dangerous, uncertain, like
-an insecurely chained wild beast that one must lie down with and rise
-with and that might spring at one's throat at any moment.
-
-Under the pressure of this new knowledge, crude enough in its
-materialistic forms, and keen, new thought, already subtle, already
-passing from youthful crudity, the skeptical crash of his religious
-faith came at last upon him. Religion had meant too much to him for its
-loss to be the merely disturbing epoch of readjustment that it is in
-much young development. He found himself in a reeling horror of darkness
-where the only lights were the dim beacons of science and the fantastic
-will-o'-the-wisps of estheticism. In the midst of the chaos he saw his
-mother again. He dreaded the longed-for meeting. How could he see her
-and hide from her the inner desolation? And when she came, at last,
-after all these years, a desperate pity nerved him to act a part. She
-was changed; the years had told on her more than even his imagination
-had feared. She drooped like a tired, fading flower. She was fading,
-that he saw at the first glance. Mentally as well as physically, there
-was an air of withering about her, and the look of sorrow was stamped
-ineffaceably upon her aging features. To know that he had lost his
-faith, his hold on life, his trust in good, would have been, he thought,
-to kill her. He kept from her a whisper of his desolation; and to a
-fundamental skepticism like his, acting was facile. But when she was
-gone, back to her parched life, he knew that to her, as well as to him,
-something essential had lacked. Her love, again and again, must have
-fluttered, however blindly, against that barrier between them. The years
-of separation had been sad, but, in looking back at it, the summer of
-meeting was saddest of all.
-
-The experience put an edge to his hardening strength. He must fail her
-in essentials; they could never meet in the blessed nearness of shared
-hopes; but he wouldn't fail her in all the lesser things of life. The
-time of her deliverance was near. Love and beauty would soon be about
-her. He worked at Oxford with the inner passion of a larger purpose than
-mere scholarship that is the soul of true scholarship. He felt the
-sharp, cold joy of high achievement, the Alpine, precipitous scaling of
-the mind. And here he embarked upon the conscious quest for truth, his
-skepticism grown to a doubt of its own premises.
-
-Gavan looked quietly back upon the turmoil of that quest.
-
-He watched himself in those young years pressing restlessly, eagerly,
-pursued by the phantoms of death and nothingness, through spiral after
-spiral of human thought: through Spinoza's horror of the meaninglessness
-of life and through Spinoza's barren peace; through Kant's skepticism
-that would not let him rest in Kant's super-rational assurance;
-precipitated from Hegel's dialectics--building their pyramid of paradox
-to the apex of an impersonal Absolute--into Schopenhauer's petulant
-despair. And more and more clearly he saw, through all the forms of
-thought, that the finite self dissolved like mist in the one
-all-embracing, all-transcending Subject. Science, philosophy, religion,
-seemed, in their final development, to merge in a Monism that conceived
-reality as spirit, but as impersonal spirit, a conception that, if in
-western thought it did not reduce to illusion every phase of
-experience, yet reduced the finite self to a contradiction and its sense
-of moral freedom, upon which were built all the valuations of life and
-all its sanctions, to a self-deception. His own dual life deepened his
-abiding intuition of unreality. There was the Gavan of the river, the
-debate, the dinner, popular among his fellows, gentle, debonair; already
-the man of the world through the fineness of his perception, his
-instinct for the fitting, his perfection of mannerless manner that was
-the flower of selflessness. And there was the Gavan of the inner
-thought, fixed, always, in its knot of torturing perplexity. To the
-inner Gavan, the Gavan of human relations was a wraith-like figure. Now
-began for him the strange experience at which childish terrors had
-hinted. It was in the exhaustions that followed a long wrench of
-thought, or after an illness, a shock of sorrow that left one pulseless
-and inert, that these pauses of an awful peace would come to him. One
-faced, then, the dread vision, and it seized one, as when, in the deep
-stillness of the night, the world drops from one and only a
-consciousness, dispassionate and contemplative, seeing all life as
-dream, remains. It was when life was thus stilled, its desires quenched
-by weakness or great sorrow, that this peace stole into the empty
-chambers, and whispered that all pain, all evil, all life were dreams
-and that the dreams were made by the strife and restlessness of the
-fragmentary self in its endless discord. See oneself as discord, as part
-of the whole, every thought, every act, every feeling determined by it,
-and one entered, as it were, into the unwilling redemption. Desire,
-striving, hope, and fear fell from one. One found the secret of the
-Eternal Now, holding in its timelessness the vast vision of a world of
-change. But to Gavan, in these moments, the sorrow, the striving, the
-agony of life was sweet and desirable; for, to the finite life that
-strove, and hoped, and suffered the vision became the sightless gaze of
-death, and nothingness was the guerdon of such attainment. To turn, with
-an almost physical sickness of horror, from the hypnotic spell, to
-forcibly forget thought, to clasp life about him like a loved
-Nessus-robe, was a frequent solution during these years of struggle; to
-reenter the place of joy and sorrow, taking it, so to speak, at its own
-terms. But the specter was never far from the inner Gavan, who more and
-more suspected that the longing for reality, for significance, that
-flamed up in him with each renewal of personal force and energy, was the
-mere result of life, not its sanction. And more and more, when, in such
-renewals, his nature turned with a desperate trust to action, as a
-possible test of worth, he saw that it was not action, not faith, that
-created life and the trust in life, but life, the force and will
-incarnated in one, that created faith and action. The very will to act
-was the will to live, and the will to live was the will of the Whole
-that the particular discord of one's personal self should continue to
-strive and suffer.
-
-Life, indeed, clutched him, and that quite without any artificial effort
-of his own, when his mother came home to England to die.
-
-Gavan had just left Oxford. He was exquisitely equipped for the best
-things of life, and, with the achievement, his long dependence on his
-uncle suddenly ceased. An eccentric old cousin, a scholarly recluse, who
-had taken a fancy to him, died, leaving him a small estate in Surrey and
-fifteen hundred pounds a year.
-
-With the good fortune came the bitter irony that turned it to dust and
-ashes. All his life he had longed to help his mother, to smooth her
-rough path and put power over fate into her hand. Now he could only help
-her to die in peace.
-
-He took her to the quiet old house, among its lawns, its hedges, its
-high-walled gardens and deep woods. He gave her all that it was now too
-late to give--beauty, ease, and love.
-
-She was changed by disease, more changed than by life and sorrow;
-gentle, very patient, but only by an effort showing her appreciation of
-the loveliness, only by an effort answering his love.
-
-Of all his fears the worst had been the fear that, with the conviction
-of the worthlessness of life, the capacity for love had left him. Now,
-as with intolerable anguish, her life ebbed from her, there was almost
-relief in his own despair; in feeling it to the full; in seeing the
-heartlessness of thought wither in the fierce flame of his agony.
-
-It seemed to him that he had never before known what it was to love. It
-was as if he were more her than himself. He relived her life and its
-sorrows. He relived her miserable married years, the long loneliness,
-parted from her child, her terror of the final parting, coming so
-cruelly upon them; and he lived the pains of her dissolution. He
-understood as he had never understood, all that she was and felt; he
-yearned as he had never yearned, to hold and keep her with him in joy
-and security; he suffered as he had never suffered.
-
-Such passionate rebellion filled him that he would walk for hours about
-the country, while merciful anesthetics gave her oblivion, in a blind
-rage of mere feeling--feeling at a white heat, a core of tormented life.
-And the worst was that her life of martyrdom was not to be crowned by a
-martyr's happy death; the worst was that her own light died away from
-before her feet, that she groped in darkness, and that, since he was to
-lose her, he might not even have her to the end.
-
-For months he watched the slow fading of all that had made her herself,
-her relapse into the instinctive, almost into the animal. Her lips, for
-many days, kept the courage of their smile, but it was at last only an
-automatic courage, showing no sweetness, no caress. Her eyes, in the
-first tragic joy of their reunion, had longed, grieved, yearned over the
-son who hid his sorrow for her sake. Afterward, all feeling, except a
-sort of chill resentment, died from her look. For the last days of her
-life, when, in great anguish, she never spoke at all, these eyes would
-turn on him with a strange immensity of indifference. It was as if
-already his mother were gone and as if a ghost had stolen into his life.
-She died at last, after a long night of unconsciousness, without a word
-or look that brought them near.
-
-Gavan lived through all that followed in a stupor.
-
-On the day of her funeral, when all was over, he walked out into the
-spring woods.
-
-The day was sweet and mild. Pools of shallow water shone here and there
-in the hollows, among the slender tree-stems. Pale slips of blue were
-seen among the fine, gray branches, and pushing up from last year's
-leaves were snowdrops growing everywhere, white and green among the
-russet leaves, lovely, lovely snowdrops. Seeing them, in his swift,
-aimless wandering, Gavan paused.
-
-The long nights and days had worn him to that last stage of exhaustion
-where every sense is stretched fine and sharp as the highest string of a
-musical instrument. Leaning against a tree, his arms folded, he looked
-at the snowdrops, at their vivid green, and their white, as fresh, as
-delicate as flakes of newly fallen snow.
-
-"Lovely, lovely," he said, and, looking all about him, at the fretwork
-of gray branches on the blue, the pale, shining water,--a little bird
-just hopping to its edge among the shorter grass to drink,--he repeated,
-"Lovely," while the anguish in his heart and the sweet beauty without
-combined in the sharp, exquisite tension of a mood about to snap, the
-fineness of a note, unendurably high, held to an unendurable length.
-
-A dimness overtook him: as if the note, no longer keenly singing, sank
-to an insect-like buzz, a chaos of minute, whirring vibrations that made
-a queer, dizzy rhythm; and, in a daze of sudden indifference, both to
-beauty and anguish, he seemed to see himself standing there, collapsed
-against the tree, his frail figure outworn with misery,--to see himself,
-and the trees, the pools of water, the drinking bird, and the snowy
-flowers,--like a picture held before calm, dying eyes.
-
-"Yes," he thought, "she saw it like this,--me, herself, life; that is
-why she didn't care any longer."
-
-He continued to look, and from the dimness and the buzzing the calm grew
-clear--clear as a sharply cut hallucination. He knew the experience, he
-had often before known it; but he had never yet felt it so unutterably,
-so finally. Something in him had done struggling forever; something was
-relinquished; he had accepted something. "Yes, it is like that," he
-thought on; "they are all of them right."
-
-With the cold eye of contemplation he gazed on the illusion of life:
-joy, suffering, beauty, good and evil. His individual life, enfranchised
-from its dream of a separate self, drifted into the life about him. He
-was part of it all; in him, as in those other freed ones, the self
-suddenly knew itself as fleeting and unsubstantial as a dream, knew its
-own profound irrationality and the suffering that its striving to be
-must always mean.
-
-He was perfectly at peace, he who had never known peace. "I am as dead
-as she is," he thought.
-
-In his peace he was conscious of no emotion, yet he found himself
-suddenly leaning his head against the tree and weeping. He wept, but he
-knew that it was no longer with grief or longing. He watched the
-exhausted machine give way, and noted its piteous desolation of
-attitude,--not pitying it,--while he thought, "I shall feel, perhaps
-suffer, perhaps enjoy again; but I shall always watch myself from above
-it all."
-
-The mystic experience had come overwhelmingly to him and his mind was
-never to lose the effect of that immediacy of consciousness,
-untransmissible, unspeakable, ineffaceable. And that with which he found
-himself one was far from any human thoughts or emotions; rather it was
-the negation of them, the infinite negation of finite restlessness.
-
-He went back to the house, to the darkened, empty room. The memories
-that crowded there, of pity and love and terror, were now part of the
-picture he looked at, as near and yet as far, as the vision of the
-snowdrops, the bird, and the spring sky.
-
-All was quiet. She was gone as he would go. The laboring breath was
-stilled forever.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Gavan did not address himself to an ascetic remodeling of his life. He
-pursued the path traced out before him. He yielded placidly to the calls
-of life, willing to work, to accomplish, willing even to indulge his
-passions, since there could lurk for him no trap among the shows of
-life. His taste soon drew back, disdainful and delicate, from his
-experience of youthful dissipation; his ironic indifference made him
-deaf to the lures of ambition; but he was an accurate and steady worker
-and a tolerably interested observer of existence.
-
-As he had ceased to have value for himself, so others had no value in
-his eyes. Social effort and self-realization were, as ideals, equally
-meaningless to him; and though pity was always with him, it was a pity
-gentle and meditative, hopeless of alleviation: for suffering was life,
-and to cure one, one must abolish the other. Material remedies seemed to
-him worse than useless; they merely renewed the craving forces. The
-Imitation of Christ was a fitter panacea than organized charities and
-progressive legislation.
-
-Physical pain in the helpless, the dumbly conscious, in children or
-animals, hurt him and made him know that he, too, lived; and he would
-spend himself to give relief to any suffering thing. He sought no
-further in metaphysical systems; he desired no further insight. Now and
-then, finding their pensive pastures pleasant, he would read some Hindoo
-or medieval mystic; but ecstasies were as alien to him as materialism:
-both were curious forms of self-deception--one the inflation of the
-illusory self into the loss of any sense of relation, and the other the
-self's painful concentration into imbecilely selfish aims. The people
-most pleasing to him were the people who, without self-doubt and without
-self-consciousness, performed some inherited function in the state; the
-simply great in life; or those who, by natural gift, the fortunately
-finished, the inevitably distinguished, followed some beautifully
-complex calling. The mediocre and the pretentious were unpleasing
-phenomena, and the ideals of democracy mere barbarous nonsense.
-
-His own pursuits were those of a fashionable and ambitious man, and, to
-the casual observer, the utter absence of any of the pose of
-disillusionized youth made all the more apparent what seemed to be a man
-of the world cynicism. Those who knew him better found him charming and
-perplexing. He seemed to have no barriers, yet one could not come near
-him. His center receded before pursuit. And he was much pursued. He
-aroused conjecture, interest, attachment. His exquisite head, the chill
-sweetness of his manner, the strange, piercing charm of his smile, drew
-eyes and hearts to him. Idly amused, he saw himself, all inert, boosted
-from step to step, saw friends swarm about him and hardly an enemy's
-face.
-
-It was rare for him to meet dislike. One young man, vaguely known at
-Oxford, noticed with interest as a relative of Eppie's, he had, indeed,
-by merely being, it seemed, antagonized. Gavan had really felt something
-of a shy, derivative affection for this Jim Grainger, a dogged, sullen,
-strenuous youth; because of the dear old memory, he had made one or two
-delicate, diffident approaches--approaches repulsed with bull-dog
-defiance. Gavan, who understood most things, quite understood that to
-the serious, the plain, the obviously laborious son of an impecunious
-barrister, he might have given the impression, so funnily erroneous, of
-a sauntering dilettantism, an aristocratic _flanerie_. At all events,
-Grainger was intrenched in a resolute disapproval, colored, perhaps,
-with some tinge of reminiscent childish jealousy. When their paths again
-crossed in London and Gavan found his suavity encountered by an even
-more scowling sarcasm, jealousy, of another type, was an obvious cause.
-Grainger, scornful of social dexterities and weapons, had worked himself
-to skin and bone in preparation for a career, and a career that he
-intended to be of serious significance. And at its outset he found
-himself in apparent competition with Gavan for a post that, significant
-indeed to him, as the first rung on the political ladder, could only be
-decorative to his rival--the post of secretary to a prominent
-cabinet-minister. Grainger had his justified hopes, and he was, except
-for outward graces, absolutely fitted for the place.
-
-In his path he found the listless figure of the well-remembered and
-heartily disliked Gavan--a gilded youth, pure and simple, and as such
-being lifted, by all accounts, onto the coveted rung of the coveted
-ladder. Gavan's scholarly fitness for the post Grainger only half
-credited. Of the sturdy professional class, with a streak of the easily
-suspicious bourgeois about him, he was glad to believe tales of
-drawing-room influence. He expressed himself with disgusted openness as
-to the fatal effect of a type like Palairet's on public life. Gavan
-heard a little and guessed more. He found himself sympathizing with
-Grainger; he had always liked him. With an effort that he had never used
-on his own behalf, he managed to get him fitted into the pair of shoes
-that were standing waiting for his own feet. It had been, indeed, though
-in superficial ways, an affair of drawing-room influence. The wife of
-the great statesman, as well as that high personage himself, was one of
-Gavan's devoted and baffled friends. She said that he made her think of
-a half-frozen bird that one longed to take in one's hands and warm, and
-she hopefully communed with her husband as to the invigorating effect of
-a career upon him. She suspected Gavan--his influence over her
-husband--when she found that an alien candidate was being foisted upon
-her.
-
-"Grainger!" she exclaimed, vexed and incredulous. "Why Grainger? Why not
-anybody as well as Grainger? Yes, I've seen the young man. He looks
-like a pugilistic Broad-Church parson. All he wants is to climb and to
-reform everything."
-
-"Exactly the type for British politics," Gavan rejoined. "He is in
-earnest about politics, and I'm not; you know I'm not." His friend
-helplessly owned that he was exasperating. Grainger, had he known to
-whom he was indebted for his lift, would have felt, perhaps, a
-heightened wrath against "drawing-room influence."
-
-Happily and justifiably unconscious, he proceeded to climb.
-
-Meanwhile another pair of shoes was swiftly found for Gavan. He went out
-to India as secretary to the viceroy.
-
-Here, in the surroundings of his early youth, the second great moral
-upheaval of his life came to him. Three years had passed since his
-mother's death. He was twenty-six years old.
-
-During a long summer among the mountains of Simla, he met Alice Grafton.
-She was married, a year older than himself, but a girl still in mind and
-appearance--fragile, hesitant, exquisite. Gavan at his very first seeing
-of her felt something knocking in his heart. It seemed like pity,
-instinctive pity, the bond between him and life, and for some time he
-deluded himself with this comparatively safe interpretation. He did not
-quite know why he should pity Mrs. Grafton. That she should look like a
-girl was hardly a reason, nor that her husband, large, masterful,
-embossed with decorations, was uninteresting. She had been married to
-him--by all accounts the phrase applied--at nineteen and could not find
-him sympathetic; but, after all, many cheerful women were in that
-situation. He was a kindly, an admiring husband, and her life was set in
-luxurious beauty. Yet piteousness was there. She was all promise and
-unfulfilment; and dimly, mutely, she seemed to feel that the promise
-would never be fulfilled, as though a too-early primrose smiled
-wistfully through a veil of ice. Should she never become consciously
-unhappy that would be but another symptom of permanent immaturity.
-
-Gavan rode with her and talked with her, and read with her in her fresh,
-flower-filled drawing-room. Their tastes were not at all alike; but he
-did not in the least mind that when she lifted her lovely eyes to him
-over poor poetry; and when she played and sang to him her very
-ineffectuality added a pathos, full of charm, to the obvious ballads
-that she liked. It was sweet, too, and endearing, to watch her, by
-degrees, molding her taste to his until it became a delightful and
-intuitive echo.
-
-He almost wondered if it was also in echo that she began to feel for
-herself his own appreciation of her. Certainly she matured to
-consciousness of lack. She began to confide; not with an open frankness,
-but vaguely, as though she groped toward the causes of her sadness. She
-shrank, and knew now why she shrank, when her loud-voiced, cheerful
-husband came tramping into the room. Then she began to see that she was
-horribly lonely. Unconsciously, in the confidences now, she plead for
-help, for reassurance. She probed him constantly as to religious hopes
-and the real significance of life. Her soft voice, with its endearing
-little stammer, grew to Gavan nearer and dearer than all the voices of
-the world. At first it appealed, and then it possessed him. He had
-thought that what he felt for her was only pity. He had thought himself
-too dead to all earthly pangs for the rudimentary one of love to reach
-him. But when, one day, he found her weeping, alone, among her flowers,
-he took her into his arms and the great illusion seized him once more.
-
-It seized him, though he knew it for illusion. He laughed at the specter
-of nothingness and gloried in the beauty of the rainbow moment. This
-human creature needed him and he her: that was, for them, the only
-reality; who cared for the blank background where their lives flashed
-and vanished? The flash was what mattered. He sprang from the dead self,
-as from a tomb, when he kissed her lips. Life might mean sorrow and
-defeat, but its tragedy was atoned for by a moment of such joy.
-
-"Gavan, Gavan, do we love each other? Do we?" she wept.
-
-He saw illusion and joy where her woman's heart felt only reality and
-terror in the joy.
-
-They obviously loved each other, though it was without a word of love
-that they found themselves in each other's arms. Had ever two beings so
-lonely so needed love? Her sweet, stunned eyes were a rapture of
-awakening to him, and though, under all, ran the deep, buried river of
-knowledge, whispering forever, "Vanity of vanities," he was far above it
-in the sunlight of the upper air. He felt himself, knew himself only as
-the longing to look forever into her eyes, to hold her to him forever.
-That, on the day of awakening, seemed all that life meant.
-
-Later on he found that more fundamental things had clutched him through
-the broken barriers of thought--jealousies and desires that showed him
-his partaking of the common life of humanity.
-
-Gavan's skepticism had not come face to face with a moral test as yet,
-and he could but contemplate curiously in himself the strong,
-instinctive revolt of all the man of hereditary custom and conscience
-from any dishonorable form of illegal love. He couldn't justify it, but
-it was there, as strong as his longing for the woman.
-
-It was not that he cared a rap, so he analyzed it, for laws or
-conventions: it was merely that he could not do anything that he felt as
-dishonorable.
-
-He told Alice that she must leave her husband and come openly to him.
-They would go back to Europe; live in Italy--the land of happy outcasts
-from unhappy forms; there they would study and travel and make beauty
-grow about them. Holding her hands gently, he put it all before her with
-a reverent devotion that gave the proposal a matrimonial dignity.
-
-"You know me well enough, dear Alice," he said, "to know that you need
-fear none of the usual dangers in such cases. I don't care about
-anything but you; I never will--ambition, country, family. Nothing
-outside me, or inside me, could make me fail you. All I want, or shall
-ever want, is to make you happy, and to be happy with you."
-
-But the things he put away as meaningless dreams the poor woman with the
-girl's mind saw as grim realities. It was easy for Gavan to barter a
-mirage for the one thing he cared to have; the world was not a mirage to
-her, and even her love could not make it so. Her thin young nature knew
-only the craving to keep and not the revulsion from a hidden wrong.
-Every fiber in her shrank from the facing of a hostile order of things,
-the bearing through life of a public dishonor. It was as if it were he
-who purposed the worse disgrace, not she.
-
-She wept and wept in his arms, hoping, perhaps, to weaken him by her
-feebleness and her abandonment, so that an open avowal of cowardice, an
-open appeal that he should yield to it, might be needless; but at last,
-since he would not speak, only stroking her hair, her hand, sharing her
-sorrow, she moaned out, "Oh, Gavan, I can't, I can't."
-
-He only half understood, feeling his heart freeze in the renunciation
-that she might demand. But when she sobbed on brokenly, "Don't leave me.
-Stay with me. I can't live without you. No one need ever know," he
-understood.
-
-Standing white and motionless, it was he now who repeated, "I can't. I
-can't. I can't."
-
-She wept on, incredulous, supplicating, reproachful. "You will not leave
-me! You will not abandon me!"
-
-"I cannot--stay with you."
-
-"You win my heart--humiliate me,--see that I'm yours--only yours,--and
-then cast me off!"
-
-"Don't speak so cruelly, Alice. Cast you off? I, who only pray you to
-let me take you with me?"
-
-"A target for the world!"
-
-"Darling, poor darling, I know that I ask all--all; but what else is
-there--unless I leave you?"
-
-She hid her face on his shoulder, sobbing miserably, her sobs her only
-answer, and to it he rejoined: "We can't go on, you know that; and to
-stay, to deceive your husband, to drag you through all the baseness, the
-ugliness, the degradation, Alice, of a hidden intrigue--I can't do that;
-it's the only thing I can't do for you."
-
-"You despise me; you think me wicked--because I can't have such horrible
-courage. I think what you ask is more wicked; I think it hurts everybody
-more; I think that it would degrade us more. People can't live like
-that--cut off from everything--and not be degraded in the end."
-
-It was a new species of torture that now tore at Gavan's heart and mind.
-He saw too clearly the force of the arguments that underlay her specious
-appeal--more clearly, far, than she could see. It was horribly true that
-the life of happy outlawry he proposed might wither and debase more than
-a conscious sin. The organized, crafty wisdom of life was on her side.
-And on his was a mere matter of taste. He could find no sanction for his
-resistance to her and to himself except in that instinctive recoil from
-what he felt as dishonor. He was sacrificing them both to a silly,
-subjective figment. The lurid realization, that burned and froze, went
-through him, and with it the unanswerable necessity. He must, he must,
-sacrifice them. And he must talk the language of right and wrong as
-though he believed in it. He acted as if he did, yet nothing was further
-from him than such belief; that was the strange agony that wrenched his
-brain as he said: "You are blind, not wicked. Some day you will thank me
-if I make it possible for you to let me go." And, he too incredulous, he
-cried, "Alice, Alice, will you really let me go without you?"
-
-She would not consent to the final alternative, and the struggle lasted
-for a week, through their daily meetings--the dream-like, deft meetings
-under the eyes of others,--and while they rode alone over the
-hills--long, sad rides, when both, often in a moody silence, showed at
-once their hope and their resistance.
-
-Her fear won at last. "And I can't even pretend that it's goodness," she
-said, her voice trembling with self-scorn. "You've abased me to the
-dust, Gavan. Yes, it's true, if you like--my fear is greater than my
-love." Irony, a half-felt anger, helped her to bear the blow, for, to
-the end, she could not believe that he would find strength to leave her.
-
-The parting came suddenly. Wringing her hands, looking hard into her
-face, where he saw still a fawning hope and a half-stupefied despair, he
-left her, and felt that he had torn his heart up by the very roots.
-
-And he had sacrificed her and himself, to what? Gavan could ask himself
-the question at leisure during the following year.
-
-Yet, from the irrational sacrifice was born a timid, trembling trust, a
-dim hope that the unbannered combat had not been in vain, that even the
-blind holding to the ambiguous right might blossom in a better life for
-her than if he had taken the joy held out to him. The trust was as
-irrational as the sacrifice, but it was dear to him. He cherished it,
-and it fluttered in him, sweet, intangible, during all the desolate
-year. Then, at the year's end, he met Alice, suddenly, unexpectedly, and
-found her ominously changed. Her girlhood was gone. A hard, glittering
-surface, competent, resourceful, hid something.
-
-The strength of his renouncement was so rooted that he felt no personal
-fear, and for her, too, he no longer felt fear in his nearness. What he
-felt was a new pity--a pity suffocating and horrible. Whispers of
-discreet scandal enlightened him. Alice was in no danger of what she
-most shrank from--a public pillory; but she was among those of whom the
-world whispers, with a half-condoning smile and shrug.
-
-Gavan saw her riding one morning with a famous soldier, a Nietzschian
-type of strength, splendor, and high indifference. And now he understood
-all. He knew the man. He was one who would have stared light irony at
-Gavan's chivalrous willingness to sacrifice his life to a woman; to such
-a charming triviality as an intrigue he would sacrifice just enough and
-no more. He knew the rules of the game and with him Alice was safe from
-any open pillory. People would never do more than whisper.
-
-A bitter daylight flooded for Gavan that sweet, false dawn, and once
-again the cruelty, the caprice at the heart of all things were revealed
-to him. He knew the flame of impotent remorse. He had tossed the
-miserable child to this fate, and though remorse, like all else, was
-meaningless, he loathed himself for his futile, empty magnanimity.
-
-She had seen his eyes upon her as she rode. She sent for him, and, alone
-with him, the glitter, the hardness, broke to dreadful despair.
-
-She confessed all at his knees. Hardness and glitter had been the shield
-of the racked, terror-stricken heart. The girl was a woman and knew the
-use of shields.
-
-"And Gavan, Gavan, worst of all,--far worst,--I don't love him; I never
-loved him. It was simply--simply"--she could hardly speak--"that he
-frightened and flattered me. It was vanity--recklessness--I don't know
-what it was."
-
-After the confession, she waited, her face hidden, for his reproach or
-anger. Neither came. Instead, she felt, in the long silence, that
-something quiet enveloped her.
-
-She looked up to see his eyes far from her.
-
-"Gavan, can you forgive me?" she whispered.
-
-Once more he was looking at it all--all the cruel, the meaningless drama
-in which he had been enmeshed for a little while. Once more his thought
-had risen far above it, and the old peace, the old, dead peace, with no
-trembling of the hopes that meant only a deeper delusion, was regained.
-He knew how deep must be the reattained tranquillity, when, the woman he
-had loved at his feet, he felt no shrinking, no reproach, no desire,
-only an immense, an indifferent pity.
-
-"Forgive you, Alice? Poor, poor Alice. Perhaps you should forgive me;
-but it isn't a question of that. Don't cry; don't cry," he repeated
-mechanically, gently stroking her hair--hair whose profuse, wonderful
-gold he had once kissed with a lover's awed delight.
-
-"You forgive me--you do forgive me, Gavan?"
-
-"It isn't a question of forgiveness; but of course I forgive you, dear
-Alice."
-
-"Gavan, tell me that you love me still. Can you love me? Oh, say that I
-haven't lost that."
-
-He did not reply, looking away and lifting his hand from her hair.
-
-The woman, leaning on his knees, felt a stealing sense of awe, worse
-than any fear of his anger. And worse than a vehement disavowal of love,
-worse than a spurning of her from him, were his words: "I want you not
-to suffer, dear Alice; I want you to find peace."
-
-"Peace! What peace can I find?"
-
-He looked at her now, wondering if she would understand and willing to
-put it before her as he himself saw it: "The peace of seeing it all, and
-letting it all go."
-
-"Gavan, I swear to you that I will never see him again. Oh, Gavan, what
-do you mean? If you would forgive me--really forgive me--and take me
-now, I would follow you anywhere. I am not afraid any longer. I have
-found out that the only thing to be afraid of is oneself. If I have you,
-nothing else matters."
-
-He looked steadily at her, no longer touching her. "You have said what I
-mean. You have found it out. The only thing to be afraid of is
-ourselves. You will not see this man again? You will keep that promise
-to me?"
-
-"Any promise! Anything you ask! And, indeed, indeed, I could not see him
-now," she shuddered. "Gavan, you will take me away with you?"
-
-He wondered at her that she did not see how far he was from her--how
-far, and yet how one with her, how merged in her through his
-comprehension of the essential unity that bound all life together, that
-made her suffering part of him, even while he looked down upon it from
-an almost musing height.
-
-He felt unutterable gentleness and unutterable ruthlessness. "I don't
-mean that, Alice. You won't lose yourself by clinging to me, by clinging
-to what you want."
-
-"You don't love me! Oh, you don't love me! I have killed your love!" she
-wailed out, rising to her feet, pierced by her full realization. She
-stepped back from him to gaze at him with a sort of horror. "You talk as
-if you had become a priest."
-
-He appreciated what his attitude must seem to her--priestly indeed,
-almost sleek in its lack of personal emotion, its trite recourse to the
-preaching of renunciation. And, almost with a sense of humor, that he
-felt as hateful at such a moment, the perception came that he might
-serve her through the very erroneousness of her seeing of him. The sense
-of humor was hateful, and his skilful seizing of her suggestion had a
-grotesque aspect as well. Even in his weariness, he was aware that the
-cup of contemplation was full when it could hold its drop of realized
-irony.
-
-"I think that I have become a priest, Alice," he said. "I see everything
-differently. And weren't you brought up in a religious way--to go to
-church, seek props, say your prayers, sacrifice yourself and live for
-others? Can't you take hold of that again? It's the only way."
-
-Her quick flaming was justified, he knew; one shouldn't speak of help
-when one was so far away; he had exaggerated the sacerdotal note. "Oh,
-you despise me! It is because of that, and you are trying to hide it
-from me! What is religion to me, what is anything--anything in the world
-to me--if I have lost you, Gavan? Why are you so cruel, so horrible? I
-can't understand it! I can't bear it! Oh, I can't! Why are our lives
-wrecked like this? Why did you leave me? Why have I become wicked? I was
-never, never meant to be wicked." Tears, not of abasement, not of
-appeal, but of pure anguish ran down her face.
-
-He was nearer to that elemental sadness and could speak with a more
-human tone. "You are not wicked--no more--no less--than any one. I don't
-despise you. Believe me, Alice. If I hadn't changed, this would have
-drawn me to you; I should have felt a deeper tenderness because you
-needed me more. But think of me as a priest: I have changed as much as
-that. And remember that what you have yourself found out is true--the
-only thing to be afraid of is oneself, and the only escape from fear is
-to--is to"--he paused, hearing the triteness of his own words and
-wondering with a new wonder at their truth, their gray antiquity, their
-ever-verdant youth--"is to renounce," he finished.
-
-He was standing now, ready for departure. In her eyes he saw at last the
-dignity of hopelessness, of an accepted doom, a pain far above panic.
-
-"Dear Alice," he said, taking her hand--"dear Alice." And, with all the
-delicacy of his shrinking from a too great directness, his eyes had a
-steadiness of demand that sank into the poor woman's tossed, unstable
-soul, he added, "Don't ever do anything ugly--or foolish--again."
-
-Her lover lost,--the very slightness of the words "ugly," "foolish,"
-told her how utterly lost,--a deep thrill of emotional exaltation went
-through the emptiness he left. She longed to clasp the lost lover and to
-sink at the knees of the priest.
-
-"I will be good. I will renounce myself," she said, as though it were a
-creed before an altar; and hurriedly she whispered, poor child, "Perhaps
-in heaven--we will find each other."
-
-Gavan often thought of that pathetic human clutch. So was the dream of
-an atoning heaven built. It kept its pathos, even its beauty, for him,
-when the whole tale ended in the world's shrug and smile. He heard first
-that Alice had become an emotionally devout churchwoman;--that lasted
-for a year;--and then, alas! alas!--but, after all, the smile and shrug
-was the best philosophy,--that she rode once more with the Nietzschian
-lover. He had one short note from her: he would have heard--perhaps, at
-any rate, he would know what to think when he did hear that she saw the
-man again. And she wanted him to know from her that it was not as he
-might think: she really loved him now--the other; not as she had loved
-Gavan,--that would always be first,--but very much; and she needed love,
-she must have it in her life, and she was lifting this man who loved
-her, was helping his life, and she had broader views now and did not
-believe in creeds or in the shibboleths that guided the vulgar. And she
-was harming no one, no one knew. Life was far too complicated, the
-intricacies of modern civilization far too enmeshing, for duty to be
-seen in plain black and white. The whole question of marriage was an
-open one, and one had a right to interpret one's duty according to one's
-own lights. Gavan saw the hand of the new master through it all. Shortly
-after, the death of Alice's husband, killed while tiger-shooting, set
-her free, and the new master proved himself at all events a fond one by
-promptly marrying her. So ended Alice in his life.
-
-There was not much more to look back on after that. His return to
-England; his entering the political arena, with neither desire nor
-reluctance; his standing for the town his uncle's influence marked out
-for him; the fight and the very gallant failure,--there had been, for
-him, an amused interest in the game of it all. The last year he had
-spent in his Surrey home, usually in company with a really pathetic
-effigy of the past--his father, poor and broken in health, the old
-serpent of Gavan's childhood basking now in torpid insignificance, its
-fangs drawn.
-
-People probably thought that he had been soured by an initial defeat.
-Gavan knew that the game had merely ceased to amuse him. What amused him
-most was concentrated and accurate scholarship. He was writing a book on
-some of the obscurer phases of religious enthusiasm, studying from a
-historical and psychological point of view the origin and formation of
-queer little sects,--failures in the struggle for survival,--their
-brief, ambiguous triumphs and their disintegrations.
-
-His unruffled stepping-back from the arena of political activity was to
-the more congenial activity of understanding and observation. But there
-burned in him none of the observer's, the thinker's passion. He worked
-as he rode or ate his breakfast. Work was part of the necessary fuel
-that kept life's flame bright. While he lived he didn't want a feeble,
-flickering flame. But at his heart, he was profoundly indifferent to
-work, as to all else.
-
- * * * * *
-
-GAVAN'S mind, as he leaned back in the railway carriage, had passed over
-the visual aspect of this long retrospect, not in meditation, but in a
-passive seeing of its scenes and faces. Eppie's face, fading in the
-mist; Robbie, silhouetted on the sky; the sulky Grainger; his uncle; his
-mother, and the vision of the spring day where he had wandered in the
-old dream of pain and into its cessation; finally, Alice, her pale hair
-and wistful eyes and her look when, at parting, she had said that they
-might be together in heaven.
-
-He had rarely known a greater lucidity than in those swift, lonely
-hours of night. It was like a queer, long pause between a past
-accomplished and a future not yet begun--as though one should sunder
-time and stand between its cloven waves. The figures crossed the stage,
-and he seemed to see them all in the infinite leisure of an eternal
-moment.
-
-This future, its figures just about to emerge from the wings into full
-view, slightly troubled his reverie. It was at dawn that his mind again
-turned to it with a conjecture half amused and half reluctant. There was
-something disturbing in the linkage he must make between that child's
-face on the mist and the Miss Gifford he was so soon to see. That she
-would, at all events in her own conception, dominate the stage, he felt
-sure; she might even expect a special attention from a spectator whose
-memory could join hers in that far first act. He was pretty sure that
-his memory would have to do service for both; and quite sure that memory
-would not hold for her, as it did for him, a distinct tincture of pain,
-of restlessness, as though there strove in it something shackled and
-unfulfilled.
-
-One's thoughts, at four o'clock in the morning, after hours of
-sleeplessness, became fantastic, and Gavan found himself watching, with
-some shrinking, this image of the past, suddenly released, brought
-gasping and half stupefied to the air, to freedom, to new, strong
-activity, after having been, for so long, bound and gagged and thrust
-into an underground prison.
-
-He turned to a forecast of what Eppie would probably be like. He had
-heard a good deal about her, and he had not cared for what he had
-heard. The fact that one did hear a good deal was not pleasing. Every
-one, in describing her, used the word charming; he had gathered that it
-meant, as applied to her, more than mere prettiness, wit, or social
-deftness; and it was precisely for the more that it meant that he did
-not care.
-
-Apparently what really distinguished her was her energy. She traveled
-with her cousin, Lady Alicia Waring, a worldly, kindly dabbler in art
-and politics; she rushed from country-house to country-house; she worked
-in the slums; she sat on committees; she canvassed for parliamentary
-friends; she hunted, she yachted, she sang, she broke hearts, and, by
-all accounts, had high and resolute matrimonial ambitions. Would Eppie
-Gifford "get" So-and-so was a question that Gavan had heard more than
-once repeated, with the graceless terseness of our modern colloquialism,
-and it spoke much for Eppie's popularity that it was usually asked in
-sympathy.
-
-This reputation for a direct and vigorous worldliness was only thrown
-into more pungent relief by the startling tale of her love-affair. She
-had fallen in love, helplessly in love, with an impecunious younger son,
-an officer in the Guards--a lazy, lovable, petulant nobody, the last
-type one would have expected her to lose her head over. He was not
-stupid, but he didn't count and never would. The match would have been a
-reckless one, for Eppie had, practically, only enough to pay for her
-clothes and her traveling expenses. The handsome guardsman had not even
-prospects. Yet, deliberately sacrificing all her chances, she had fallen
-in love, been radiantly engaged, and then, from the radiance, flung into
-stupefying humiliation. He had thrown her over, quite openly, for an
-ugly little heiress from Liverpool. Poor Eppie had carried off her
-broken heart--and she didn't deny that it was broken--for a year or so
-of travel. This had happened four years ago. She had mended as bravely
-as possible,--it wasn't a deep break after all,--and on the thrilling
-occasion of her first meeting with the faithless lover and his bride was
-magnificently sweet and regal to the ugly heiress. It was surmised that
-the husband was as uncomfortable as he deserved to be. But this capacity
-for recklessness, this picture of one so dauntless, dazed and
-discomfited, hardly redeemed the other, the probably fundamental aspect.
-She had lost her head; but that didn't prove that when she had it she
-would not make the best possible use of it. There was talk now--Eppie's
-was the publicity of popularity--of Gavan's old-time rival, Grainger,
-who had inherited an immense fortune and, unvarnished and defiantly
-undecorative on his lustrous background, was one of the world's prizes.
-All that he had was at Eppie's feet, and some more brilliant alternative
-could be the only cause for hesitation in a young woman seared by
-misfortune and cured forever of folly.
-
-So the talk went, and Gavan took such gabble with a large pinch of
-ironic incredulity; but at the same time the gossip left its trail. The
-impetuous and devastating young lady, with her assurance and her aim at
-large successes, was to him a distasteful figure. There was pain in
-linking it with little Eppie. It stood waiting in the wings and was
-altogether novel and a little menacing to one's peace of mind. He really
-did not want to see Miss Gilford; she belonged to a modern type
-intensely wearisome to him. But she was staying with her uncle and
-aunt--only Miss Barbara was left--at Kirklands, and the general, after a
-meeting in London, had written begging him to pay them all a visit, and,
-since there had seemed no reason for not going, here he was.
-
-Here he was, and round the corner of the wing the new Eppie stood
-waiting. Poor little Eppie of childhood--she was lost forever.
-
-But all the clearness of the night concentrated, at dawn, into that
-vivid memory of the past where they had wandered together, sharing joy
-and sorrow.
-
-That was long, long over. To-morrow was already here, and to-morrow
-belonged to the new Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-Gavan spent the morning in Edinburgh, seeing an old relative, and
-reached Kirklands at six.
-
-It was a cold October evening, the moors like a dark, sullenly heaving
-ocean and a heavy bar of sunset lying along the horizon.
-
-The windows of the old white house mirrored the dying color, and here
-and there the inner light of fire and candle seemed like laughter on a
-grave face. With all its loneliness it was a happy-looking house; he
-remembered that; and in the stillness of the vast moors and the coming
-night it made him think of a warmly throbbing heart filling with courage
-and significance a desolate life.
-
-The general came from the long oak library, book in hand, to welcome
-him. Gavan was almost automatically observant of physical processes and
-noted now the pronounced limp, the touch of garrulity--symptoms of the
-fine old organism's placid disintegration. Life was leaving it
-unreluctantly, and the mild indifference of age made his cordiality at
-once warmer and more impersonal than of old.
-
-As he led Gavan to his room, the room of boyhood, near Eppie's,
-overlooking the garden and the wooded hills, he told him that Eppie and
-Miss Barbara were dressing and that he would have time for a talk with
-them before dinner at eight.
-
-"It's changed since you were here, Gavan. Ah! time goes--it goes. Poor
-Rachel! we lost her five years ago. If Eppie didn't look after us so
-well we should be lonely, Barbara and I. We seldom get away now. Too old
-to care for change. But Eppie always gives us three or four months, and
-a letter once a week while she's away. She puts us first. This is home,
-she says. She sees clever people at Alicia Waring's, has the world at
-her feet,--you've heard, no doubt,--but she loves Kirklands best. She
-gardens with me--a great gardener Eppie, but she is good at anything she
-sets herself to; she drives her aunt about, she reads to us and sings to
-us,--you have heard of her singing, too,--keeps us in touch with life.
-Eppie is a wonderful person for sharing happiness," the general
-monologued, looking about the fire-lit room; and Gavan felt that, from
-this point of view, some of the little Eppie might still have survived.
-
-"So you have given up the idea of the House?" the general went on.
-
-"I'm no good at it," said Gavan; "I've proved it."
-
-"Proved it? Nonsense. Wait till you are fifty before saying that. Why,
-you've everything in your favor. You weren't enough in earnest; that was
-the trouble. You didn't care enough; you played into your opponents'
-hands. The British public doesn't understand idealism or irony. Eppie
-told us all about it."
-
-"Eppie? How did Eppie know?" He found himself using her little name as a
-matter of course.
-
-"She knows everything," the general rejoined, with his air of happy,
-derived complacency; "even when she's not in England, she never loses
-touch. Eppie is very much behind the scenes."
-
-The simile recalled to Gavan his own vision of the stage and the waiting
-figure. "Even behind my scenes!" he ejaculated, smiling at so much
-omniscience.
-
-"From the moment you came into public life, yes."
-
-"And she knows why I failed at it? Idealism and irony?"
-
-"That's what she says; and I usually find Eppie right." The general,
-after the half-humorous declaration, had a pause, and before leaving his
-guest, he added, "Right, except about her own affairs. She is a child
-there yet."
-
-Eppie's disaster must have been keenly felt and keenly resented at
-Kirklands. The general made no further reference to it and Gavan asked
-no question.
-
-There was a fire, a lamp, and several clusters of candles in the long,
-dark library when Gavan entered it an hour later, so that the darkness
-was full of light; yet he had wandered slowly down its length, looking
-about him at the faded tan, russet, and gilt of well-remembered books,
-at the massive chairs and tables, all in their old places, all so
-intimately familiar, before seeing that he was not alone in the room.
-
-Some one in white was sitting, half submerged in a deep chair, behind
-the table with its lamp--some one who had been watching him as he
-wandered, and who now rose to meet him, taking him so unawares that she
-startled him, all the light in the dim room seeming suddenly to center
-upon her and she herself to throw everything, even his former thoughts
-of her, into the background.
-
-It was Eppie, of course, and all that he had heard of her, all that he
-had conjectured, fell back before the impression that held him in a
-moment, long, really dazzled, yet very acute.
-
-Her face was narrow, pale, faintly freckled; the jaw long, the nose
-high-bridged, the lips a little prominent; and, as he now saw, a clear
-flush sprang easily to her cheeks. Eyes, lips, and hair were vivid with
-color: the hair, with its remembered rivulets of russet and gold, piled
-high on her head, framing the narrow face and the long throat; the eyes
-gray or green or gold, like the depths of a mountain stream.
-
-He had heard many analogies for the haunting and fugitive charm of Miss
-Gifford's face--a charm that could only, apparently, be caught with the
-subtleties of antithesis. One appreciator had said that she was like an
-angelic jockey; another, that with a statesman's gaze she had a baby's
-smile; another, that she was a Flying Victory done by Velasquez. And
-with his own dominant impression of strength, sweetness, and daring,
-there crowded other similes. Her eyes had the steeplechaser's hard,
-smiling scrutiny of the next jump; the halloo of the hunt under a
-morning sky was in them, the joyous shouts of Spartan boys at play; yet,
-though eyes of heroism and laughter, they were eyes sad and almost
-tragically benignant.
-
-She was tall, with the spare lightness of a runner poised for a race,
-and the firm, ample breast of a hardy nymph. She suggested these pagan,
-outdoor similes while, at the same time, luxuriously feminine in her
-more than fashionable aspect, the last touches of modernity were upon
-her: her dress, the eighteenth-century, interpreted by Paris, her
-decorations all discretion and distinction--a knot of silver-green at
-her breast, an emerald ring on her finger, and emerald earrings, two
-drops of smooth, green light, trembling in the shadows of her hair.
-
-Altogether Gavan was able to grasp the impression even further, to
-simplify it, to express at once its dazzled quality and its acuteness,
-as various and almost violent, as if, suddenly, every instrument in an
-orchestra were to strike one long, clear, vibrating note.
-
-His gaze had been prolonged, and hers had answered it with as open an
-intentness. And it was at last she who took both his hands, shook them a
-little, holding them while, not shyly, but with that vivid flush on her
-cheek, "_You_," she said.
-
-For she was startled, too. It _was_ he. She remembered, as if she had
-seen them yesterday, his air of quick response, surface-shrinking, deep
-composure, the old delicious smile, and the glance swiftly looking and
-swiftly averted.
-
-"And _you_," Gavan repeated. "I haven't changed so much, though," he
-said.
-
-"And I have? Really much? Long skirts and turned up hair are a
-transformation. It's wonderful to see you, Gavan. It makes one get hold
-of the past and of oneself in it."
-
-"Does it?"
-
-"_Doesn't_ it?" She let go his hands, and moving to the fire and
-standing before it while she surveyed him, she went on, not waiting for
-an answer:
-
-"But I don't suppose that you have my keenness of memory. It all rushes
-back--our walks, our games, our lessons, the smell of the heather, the
-very taste of the heather-honey we ate at tea, and all the things you
-did and said and looked; your building the Petit Trianon, and your
-playing dolls with me that day; your Agnes, in her pink dress, and my
-Elspeth, whom I used to whip so."
-
-"I remember it all," said Gavan, "and I remember how I broke poor
-Elspeth."
-
-"Do you?"
-
-"All of it: the attic windows and the pine-tree under them, and the
-great white bird, and the dreadful, soft little thud on the garden
-path."
-
-"Yes, I can see your face looking down. You were quite silent and
-frozen. I screamed and screamed. Aunt Barbara thought that _you_ had
-fallen at first from the way I screamed."
-
-"Poor little Eppie. Yes, I remember; it was horrid."
-
-Their eyes, smiling, quizzical, yet sad, watched, measured each other,
-while they exchanged these trophies from the past. He had joined her
-beside the fire, and, turning, she leaned her hands on the mantel and
-looked into the flames. So looking, her face had its aspect of almost
-tragic brooding. It was as if, Gavan thought, under the light memories,
-all those visions of his night were there before her, as if,
-astonishingly, and in almost uncanny measure, she shared them.
-
-"And do you remember Robbie?" she asked presently.
-
-"I was just thinking of Robbie," Gavan answered. It was her face that
-had brought back the old sorrow, and that memory, more than any, linked
-them over all that was new and strange. They glanced at each other.
-
-"I am so glad," said Eppie.
-
-"Because I remember?"
-
-"Yes, that you haven't forgotten. You said you would."
-
-"Did I?" he asked, though he quite remembered that, too.
-
-"Yes; and I should have felt Robbie more dead if you had forgotten him."
-
-This was wonderfully not the Miss Gifford, and wonderfully the old
-Eppie. She saw that thought, too, answering it with, "Things haven't
-really changed so much, have they? It's all so very near--all of that."
-
-So near, that its sudden sharing was making Gavan a little
-uncomfortable, with the discomfort of the night before justified,
-intensified.
-
-He hadn't imagined such familiar closeness with a woman really unknown,
-nor that, sweeping away all the formalities that might have grown up
-between them, she should call him Gavan and make it natural for him to
-call her Eppie. He didn't really mind. It was amusing, charming perhaps,
-perhaps even touching--yes, of course it was that; but she was rather
-out of place: much nearer than where he had imagined she would be, on
-the stage before him.
-
-Passing to another memory, she now said, "I clung for years, you know,
-to your promise to come back."
-
-"I couldn't come--really and simply could not."
-
-"I never for a moment thought you could, any more than I thought you
-could forget Robbie."
-
-"And when I could come, you were gone."
-
-"How miserable that made me! I was in Rome when I had the news from
-Uncle Nigel."
-
-He felt bound fully to exonerate the past. "I had the life, during my
-boyhood, of a sumptuous galley-slave. I had everything except liberty
-and leisure. I was put into a system and left there until it had had its
-will of me. And when I was free I imagined that you had forgotten all
-about me. To a shy, warped boy, a grown-up Eppie was an alarming idea."
-
-"I never thought you had forgotten _me_!" said Eppie, smiling.
-
-Again she actually disturbed him; but, lightly, he replied with the
-truth, feeling a certain satisfaction in its lightness: "Never, never;
-though, of course, you fell into a background. You can't deny that _I_
-did."
-
-"Oh, no, I don't deny it." Her smile met his, seemed placidly to
-perceive its meaning. She did not for a moment imply, by her admissions,
-any more than he did; the only question was, What did his admissions
-imply?
-
-She left them there, going on in an apparent sequence, "Have you heard
-much about me, Gavan?"
-
-"A good deal," he owned.
-
-"I ask because I want to pick up threads; I want to know how many
-stitches are dropped, so to speak. Since you have heard, I want to know
-just what; I often seem to leave reverberations behind me. Some rather
-ugly ones, I fear. You heard, perhaps, that I was that rather ambiguous
-being, the young woman of fashion, materialistic, ambitious, hard." Her
-gaze, with its cool scrutiny, was now upon him.
-
-"Those are really too ugly names for what I heard. I gathered, on the
-whole, that you were merely very vigorous and that you had more
-opportunities than most people for vigor."
-
-"I'm glad that you saw it so; but all the same, the truth, at times,
-hasn't been beautiful. I have, often, been too indifferent toward people
-who didn't count for me, and too diplomatic toward those who did. You
-see, Gavan," she put it placidly before him, not at all as if drawing
-near in confidence,--she was much further in her confidences than in her
-memories,--but merely as if she unrolled a map before him so that he
-might clearly see where, at present, they found themselves, "you see, I
-am a nearly penniless girl--just enough to dress and go about. Of course
-if I didn't dress and didn't go about I could keep body and soul
-together; but to the shrewd eyes of the world, a girl living on her
-friends, making capital of her personality, while she seeks a husband
-who will give her the sort of place she wants--oh, yes, the world isn't
-so unfair, either, when one takes off the veils. And this girl, with the
-personality that pays, was put early in a place from where she could see
-all sorts of paths at once, see the world, in its ladder aspect, before
-her--all the horridness of low rungs and all the satisfaction of high
-ones. I have been tempted through complexity of understanding; perhaps I
-still am. One wants the best; and when one doesn't see clearly what the
-best is, one is in danger of becoming ugly. But echoes are often
-distorting."
-
-Miss Gifford was now very fully before him, as she had evidently
-intended to be. It was as if she herself had drawn between them the
-barrier of the footlights and as if, on her chosen stage, she swept a
-really splendid curtsey. And this frank and panoplied young woman of the
-world was far easier to deal with than the reminiscent Eppie. He could
-comfortably smile and applaud from his stall, once more the mere
-spectator--easiest of attitudes.
-
-"The echoes, on the whole, were rather magnificent, as if an Amazon had
-galloped across mountains and left them calling her prowess from peak to
-peak."
-
-Her eyes, quickly on his, seemed to measure the conscious artificiality,
-to compare it with what he had already, more helplessly, shown her. He
-felt his rather silly deftness penetrated and that she guessed that the
-mountain calls had not at all enchanted him. She owned to her own
-acuteness in her next words:
-
-"And you don't like young ladies to gallop across mountains. Well, I
-love galloping, though I'm sorry that I leave over-loud echoes. You, at
-all events, are noiseless. You seem to have sailed over my head in an
-air-boat. It was hard for me to keep any trace of you."
-
-"But I don't at all mean that I dislike Amazons to have their rides."
-
-"Let us talk of you now. I have had an eye on you, you know, even when
-you disappeared into the Indian haze; you had just disappeared when I
-first came to London. I only heard of lofty things--scholarly
-distinction, diplomatic grace, exquisite indifference to the world's
-prizes and to noisy things in general. It's all true, I can see."
-
-"Well, I'm not indifferent to you," said Gavan, smiling, tossing his
-appropriate bouquet.
-
-She had at this another, but a sharper, of her penetrative pauses. It
-was pretty to see her, rather like a deer arrested in its careless
-speed, suddenly wary, its head high. And, in another moment, he saw that
-the quick flush, almost violently, sprang to her cheek. Turning her head
-a little from him, she looked away, almost as if his glib acceptance of
-a frivolous meaning in her words abashed her--and more for him than for
-herself; as if she suddenly suspected him of being stupid enough to
-accept her at the uglier valuation of those echoes he had heard. She had
-not meant to say that she was one of the world's prizes, and she had
-perhaps meant to say, generously, that if he found her noisy she
-wouldn't resent indifference. Perhaps she had meant to say nothing of
-herself at all. She certainly wasn't on the stage, and in thinking her
-so he felt that he had shown himself disloyal to something that she,
-more nobly, had taken for granted. The flush, so vivid, that stayed made
-him feel himself a blunderer.
-
-But, in a moment, she went on with a lightness of allusion to his speech
-that yet oddly answered the last turn of his self-reproach. "Oh, you are
-loyal, I am sure, even to a memory. I wasn't thinking of particulars,
-but of universals. My whole impression of you was of something fragrant,
-elusive, impalpable. I never felt that I had a glimpse of really _you_.
-It was almost gross in comparison actually to see your name in the
-papers, to read of your fight for Camley, to think of you in that
-earthly scuffle. It was like roast-beef after roses; and I was glad,
-because I'm gross. I like roast-beef."
-
-He was grateful to her for the lightness that carried him so kindly over
-his own blunder.
-
-"It was only the fragrance of the roast, too, you see, since I was
-defeated," he said.
-
-"You didn't mind a bit, did you?"
-
-"It would sound, wouldn't it, rather like sour grapes to say it?"
-
-"You can say it. It was so obvious that you might have had the bunch by
-merely stretching out your hand--they were under it, not over your head.
-You simply wouldn't play the game." She left him now, reaching her chair
-with a long stride and a curving, gleaming turn of her white skirts,
-suggesting a graceful adaptation of some outdoor dexterity. As she
-leaned back in her chair, fixing him with that look of cheerful
-hardness, she made him think so strongly of the resolute, winning type,
-that almost involuntarily he said, "You would have played it, wouldn't
-you?"
-
-"I should think so! I care for the grapes, you see. It's what I
-said--you didn't care enough."
-
-"Well, it's kind of you to see ineffectuality in that light." Still
-examining the steeplechaser quality, he added, "You do care, don't you,
-a lot?"
-
-"Yes, a lot. I am worldly to my finger-tips." Her eyes challenged
-him--gaily, not defiantly--to misunderstand her again.
-
-"What do you mean, exactly, by worldly?" he asked.
-
-"I mean by it that I believe in the world, that I love the world; I
-believe that its grapes are worth while,--and by grapes I mean the
-things that people strive for and that the strong attain. The higher
-they hang and the harder the climb, the more I like them."
-
-Gavan received these interpretations without comment. "A seat in the
-House isn't very high, though, is it?" he remarked.
-
-"That depends on the sitter. It might be a splendid or a trivial thing."
-
-"And in my case, if I'd got it, what would it have been? Can you see
-that, too, you very clear-sighted young woman?"
-
-He stood above her, smiling, but now without suavity or artificiality;
-looking at her as though she were a pretty gipsy whose palm he had
-crossed with silver. And Eppie answered, quite like a good-natured
-gipsy, conscious of an admiring but skeptical questioner, "I think it
-would have been neither."
-
-"But what then? What would this sitter have made of it?"
-
-"A distraction? An experiment upon himself? I'm sure I don't know.
-Indeed, I don't pretend to know you at all yet. Perhaps I will in time."
-
-Once more he was conscious of the discomfort, slight and stealing, as
-though the gipsy knew too much already. But he protested, and with
-sincerity: "If there is anything to find you will certainly find it. I
-hope that you will find it worth your while. I hope that we shall be
-great friends."
-
-She smiled up at him, clearly and quietly: "I have always been your
-great friend."
-
-"Always? All this while?"
-
-"All this while. Never mind if you haven't felt it; I have. I will do
-for both."
-
-Her smile, her look, made him finally and completely understand the
-application of the well-worn word to her. She was charming. She could be
-lavish, pour out unasked bounty upon one, and yet, in no way
-undervaluing it, be full of delicacy, of humor, in her generosity.
-
-"I thought I hadn't any right to feel it," said Gavan. "I thought you
-would not have remembered."
-
-"Well, you will find out--I always remember, it's my strong point," said
-Eppie.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-Next morning at breakfast he had quite a new impression of her.
-
-Pale sunlight flooded the square, white room where, in all its dignified
-complexity of appurtenance, the simple meal was laid out. From the
-windows one saw the clear sky, the moor, its summer purple turned to
-rich browns and golds, and, nearer, the griffins with their shields.
-
-Eppie was a little late in coming, and Gavan, while he and the general
-finished their wandering consumption of porridge and sat down to bacon
-and eggs, had time to observe by daylight in Miss Barbara, behind her
-high silver urn, the changes that in her were even more emphatic than in
-her brother. She was sweeter than ever, more appealing, more
-affirmative, with all manner of futile, fluttering little gestures and
-gentle, half-inarticulate little ejaculations of pleasure, approbation,
-or distress. Her smile, rather silly, worked too continually, as though
-moved by slackened wires. Her hands defined, described, ejaculated;
-over-expression had become automatic with her.
-
-Eppie, when she appeared, said that she had had a walk, stooping to
-kiss her aunt and giving Gavan a firm, chill hand on her way to the same
-office for the general. She took her seat opposite Gavan, whistling an
-Irish-terrier to her from the door and, before she began to eat,
-dropping large fragments of bannock into his mouth. Her loose, frieze
-clothes smelled of peat and sunshine; her hair seemed to have the
-sparkle of the dew on it; she suggested mountain tarns, skylarks,
-morning gladness: but, with all this, Gavan, for the first time, now
-that she faced the hard, high light, saw how deeply, too, she suggested
-sadness.
-
-Her face had moments of looking older than his own. It was fresh, it was
-young, but it had lived a great deal, and felt things to the bone, as it
-were.
-
-There were little wrinkles about her eyes; her white brow, under its
-sweep of hair, was faintly lined; the oval of her cheek, long and fine,
-took, at certain angles, an almost haggard sharpness. It was not a faded
-face, nor a face to wither with years: every line of it spoke of a
-permanent beauty; but, with all the color that the chill morning air had
-brought into it, it yet made one think of bleak uplands, of
-weather-beaten cliffs. Life had engraved it with ineffaceable symbols.
-Storms had left their mark, bitter conflicts and bitter endurances.
-
-While she ate, with great appetite, she talked incessantly, to the
-general, to Miss Barbara, to Gavan, but not so much to him, tossing, in
-the intervals of her knife and fork and cup, bits of food to the
-attentive terrier. He saw why the old people adored her. She was the
-light, the movement of their monotonous days. Not only did she bring
-them her life: it was their own that she vivified with her interest. The
-interest was not assumed, dutiful. There was no touch of the conscious
-being kind. She questioned as eagerly as she told. She knew and cared
-for every inch of the country, every individual in the country-side. She
-was full of sagacity and suggestion, full of anecdote and a nipping
-Scotch humor. And one felt strongly in her the quality of old race.
-Experience was in her blood, an inheritance of instinct, and, that so
-significant symptom, the power of playfulness--the intellectual
-detachment that, toward firm convictions, could afford a lightness
-scandalous to more crudely compacted natures, could afford gaieties and
-audacities, like the flights of a bird tethered by an invisible thread
-to a strong hand.
-
-Miss Barbara, plaintively repining over village delinquencies, was lured
-to see comedy lurking in the cases of insubordination and
-thriftlessness, though at the mention of Archie MacHendrie, the local
-drunkard and wife-beater, Eppie's brow grew black--with a blackness
-beside which Miss Barbara's gloom was pallid. Eppie said that she wished
-some one would give Archie a thrashing, and Gavan could almost see her
-doing it herself.
-
-From local topics she followed the general to politics, while he glanced
-down the columns of the "Scotsman," so absorbed and so vehement that,
-meeting at last Gavan's meditative eye, she seemed to become aware of an
-irony he had not at all intended, and said, "A crackling of thorns under
-a pot, all this, Gavan thinks, and, what does it all matter? You have
-become a philosopher, Gavan; I can see that."
-
-"Well, my dear, from Plato down philosophers have thought that politics
-did matter," said the general, incredulous of indifference to such a
-topic.
-
-"Unless they were of a school that thought that nothing did," said
-Eppie.
-
-"Gavan's not of that weak-kneed persuasion."
-
-"Oh, he isn't weak-kneed!" laughed Eppie.
-
-She drove her aunt all morning in the little pony-cart and wrote letters
-after lunch, Gavan being left to the general's care. It was not until
-later that she assumed toward him the more personal offices of deputy
-hostess, meeting him in the hall as she emerged from the morning-room,
-her thick sheaf of letters in her hand, and proposing a walk before tea.
-She took him up the well-remembered path beside the burn; but now, in
-the clear autumnal afternoon, he seemed further from her than last night
-before the fire. Already he had seen that the sense of nearness or
-distance depended on her will rather than his own; so that it was now
-she who chose to talk of trivial things, not referring by word or look
-to the old memories, deepest of all, that crowded about him on the
-hilltop, not even when, breasting the wind, they passed the solitary
-group of pine-trees, where she had so deeply shared his suffering, so
-wonderfully comprehended his fears.
-
-She strode against the twisted flappings of her skirt, tawny strands of
-hair whipping across her throat, her hands deeply thrust into her
-pockets, her head unbowed before the enormous buffets of the wind, and
-he felt anew the hardy energy that would make tender, lingering touches
-upon the notes of the past rare things with her.
-
-In the uproar of air, any sequence of talk was difficult. Her clear
-voice seemed to shout to him, like the cold shocks of a mountain stream
-leaping from ledge to ledge, and the trivial things she said were like
-the tossing of spray upon that current of deep, joyful energy.
-
-"Isn't it splendid!" she exclaimed at last. They had walked two miles
-along the crest of the hill, and, smiling in looking round at him, her
-face, all the sky behind it, all the wind around it, made the word match
-his own appreciation.
-
-"Splendid," he assented, thinking of her glance and poise.
-
-Still bending her smile upon him, she said, "You already look
-different."
-
-"Different from what?" he asked, amused by her expression, as of a
-kindly, diagnosing young doctor.
-
-"From last night. From what I felt of you. One might have thought that
-you had lost the capacity for feeling splendor."
-
-"Why should you have imagined me so deadened?" He kept his cheerful
-curiosity.
-
-"I don't know. I did. There,"--she paused to point,--"do you remember
-the wind-mill, Gavan? The old miller is dead and his son is the miller
-now; but the mill looks just as it did when we were little. It makes one
-think of birds and ships, doesn't it?--with the beauty that it stays and
-doesn't pass. When I was a child--did I ever confide it to you?--my
-dream was to catch one of the sails as it came down and let it carry me
-up, up, and right around. What fun it would have been! I suppose that
-one could have held on."
-
-"In pretty grim earnest, after the first fun."
-
-"It would be the sense of coming grimness that would make the desperate
-thrill of it."
-
-"You are fond of thrills and perils."
-
-"Not fond, exactly; the love of risk is a deeper thing--something
-fundamental in us, I suppose."
-
-She had walked on, down the hillside, where gorse bushes pulled at her
-skirts, and he was putting together last night's impressions with
-to-day's, and thinking that if she embodied the instinctive, the
-life-loving, it wasn't in the simple, unreflecting forms that the words
-usually implied. She was simple, but not in the least guileless, and her
-directness was a choice among recognized complexities. It was no
-spontaneous child of nature who, on the quieter hillside, where they
-could talk, talked of India, now, of his life there, the people he had
-known, many of whom she too knew. He knew that he was being managed,
-being made to talk of what she wanted to hear, that she was still
-engaged in penetrating. He was quite willing to be managed,
-penetrated,--for as far as she could get; he could rely on his own
-deftness in retreat before too deep a probe, though, should she discover
-that for him the lessons of life had resulted in an outlook perhaps the
-antipodes from her own, he guessed that her own would show no wavering.
-Still, she should run, if possible, no such risk. They were to be
-friends, good friends: that was, as she had said, not only an
-accomplished, but a long-accomplished fact; but, even more than in
-childhood, she would be a friend held at arm's-length.
-
-Meanwhile, unconscious, no doubt, of these barriers, Eppie walked beside
-him and made him talk about himself. She knew, of course, of his
-mother's death; she did not speak of that: many barriers were her
-own--she was capable of most delicate avoidances. But she asked after
-his father. "He is still alive, I hear."
-
-"Yes, indeed, and gives me a good deal of his company."
-
-"Oh." She was a little at a loss. He could guess at what she had heard
-of his father. He went on, though choosing his words in a way that
-showed a slight wincing behind his wish to be very frank and friendly
-with her, for even yet his father made him wince, standing, as he did,
-for the tragedy of his mother's life: "He is very much alive for a
-person so gone to pieces. But I can put up with him far more comfortably
-than when he was less pitiable."
-
-"How much do you have to put up with him?" she asked, trying to image,
-as he saw, his menage in Surrey, in the house he had just been
-describing to her, its old bricks all vague pinks and mauves, its
-high-walled gardens clustering near it, its wonderful hedges, that, he
-said, it ruined him to keep up to their reputation of exquisite
-formality; and, within, its vast library--all the house a brain,
-practically, the other rooms like mere places for life's renewal before
-centering in the intellectual workshop. She evidently found it difficult
-to place, among the hedges, the lawns, the long walls of the library, a
-father, gone to pieces perhaps, but displaying all the more helplessly
-his general unworthiness. Even in lenient circles, Captain Palairet was
-thought to have an undignified record.
-
-"Oh, he is there for most of the time. He is there now," said Gavan,
-without pathos. "He has no money left, and now that I've a little I'm
-the obvious thing to retire to."
-
-"I hope that it's not very horrid for you."
-
-"I can't say that it's horrid at all. I don't see much of him, and, in
-many respects, he has remained, for the onlooker, rather a charming
-creature. He gives me very little trouble--smokes, eats, plays
-billiards. When we meet, we are very affable."
-
-Eppie did not say, "You tolerate him because he is piteous," but he
-imagined that she guessed it.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-He was awakened early next morning by the sound of singing in the garden
-below.
-
-His windows were widely opened and a cold, pure air filled the room. He
-lay dreamily listening for some moments before recognizing Eppie's
-voice--recognizing it, though he had never heard her sing.
-
-Fresh and strong, it put a new vitality into the simple sadness of an
-old Scotch ballad, as though in the very sorrow it found joy. It was not
-an emotional voice. Clearly and firmly it sounded, and seemed a part of
-the frosty, sunny morning, part of the sky that was like a great chalice
-filled with light, of the whitened hills, the aromatic pine-woods, and
-the distant, rushing burn. He had sprung up after the first dreamy
-listening and looked out at it all, and at her walking through the
-garden, her dog at her heels. She went out by the little gate sunken
-deep in the wall, and disappeared in the woods; and still the voice
-reached him, singing on, and at each repetition of the monotonous,
-departing melody, a sadder, sweeter sense of pain strove in his heart.
-
-He listened, looking down at the pine-tree beneath the window, at the
-garden, the summer-house, the withered tangle of the rose upon the wall,
-and up at the hilltop, at the crystalline sky; and such a sudden pang of
-recollection pierced him that tears came to his eyes.
-
-What was it that he remembered? or, rather, what did he not? Things deep
-and things trivial, idle smiles, wrenching despairs, youth, sorrow,
-laughter,--all the past was in the pang, all the future, too, it seemed,
-and he could not have said whether his mother, Alice, Eppie with her
-dolls, and little Robbie, or the clairvoyant intuition of a future
-waiting for him here--whether presage or remembrance--were its greater
-part.
-
-Not until the voice had died, in faintest filaments of sound, far away
-among the woods, did the pain fade, leaving him shaken. Such moods were
-like dead things starting to life, and reminded him too vividly of the
-fact that as long as one was alive, one was, indeed, in danger from
-life; and though his thought was soon able to disentangle itself from
-the knot of awakened emotions that had entwined it for a moment, a vague
-sense of fear remained with him. Something had been demanded of
-him--something that he had, involuntarily, found himself giving. This it
-was to have still a young nature, sensitive to impressions. He
-understood. Yet it was with a slight, a foolishly boyish reluctance, as
-he told himself, that he went down some hours later to meet Eppie at
-breakfast.
-
-There was an unlooked-for refuge for him when he found her hardly
-noticing him, and very angry over some village misdemeanor. The anger
-held her far away. She dilated on the subject all during breakfast,
-pouring forth her wrath, without excitement, but with a steady
-vehemence. It was an affair of a public-house, and Eppie accused the
-publican of enticing his clients to drink, of corrupting the village
-sobriety, and she urged the general, as local magistrate, to take
-immediate action, showing a very minute knowledge of the technicalities
-of the case.
-
-"My dear," the general expostulated, "indeed I don't think that the man
-has done anything illegal; we are powerless about the license in such a
-case. You must get more evidence."
-
-"I have any amount of evidence. The man is a public nuisance. Poor Mrs.
-MacHendrie was crying to me about it this morning. Archie is hardly ever
-sober now. I shall drive over to Carlowrie and see Sir Alec about it; as
-the wretch's landlord he can make it uncomfortable for him, and I'll see
-that he makes it as uncomfortable as possible."
-
-Laughingly, but slightly harassed, the general said: "You see, we have a
-tyrant here. Eppie is really a bit too hard on the man. He is an
-unpleasant fellow, I own, a most unpleasant manner--a beast, if you
-will, but a legal beast."
-
-"The most unpleasant form of animal, isn't it? It's very good of Eppie
-to care so much," said Gavan.
-
-"You don't care, I suppose," she said, turning her eyes on him, as
-though she saw him for the first time that morning.
-
-"I should feel more hopeless about it, perhaps."
-
-"Why, pray?"
-
-"At all events, I shouldn't be able to feel so much righteous
-indignation."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"He is pretty much of a product, isn't he?--not worse, I suppose, than
-the men whose weakness enriches him. It's a pity, of course, that one
-can't painlessly pinch such people out of existence, as one would
-offensive insects."
-
-Eppie, across the table, eyed him, her anger quieted. "He is a product
-of a good many things," she said, now in her most reasonable manner,
-"and he is going to be a product of some more before I'm done with
-him,--a product of my hatred for him and his kind, for one thing. That
-will be a new factor in his development. Gavan," she smiled, "you and I
-are going to quarrel."
-
-"Dear Eppie!" Miss Barbara interposed. "Gavan, you must not take her
-seriously; she so often says extravagant things just to tease one."
-Really dismayed, alternately nodding and shaking her head in reassurance
-and protest, she looked from one to the other. "And don't, dear, say
-such unchristian things of anybody. She is not so hard and unforgiving
-as she sounds, Gavan."
-
-"Aunt Barbara! Aunt Barbara!" laughed Eppie, leaning her elbows on the
-table, her eyes still on Gavan, "my hatred for Macdougall isn't nearly
-as unchristian as Gavan's indifference. I don't want to pinch him
-painlessly out of life at all. I think that life has room for us both. I
-want to have him whipped, or made uncomfortable in some way, until he
-becomes less horrid."
-
-"Whipped, dear! People are never whipped nowadays! It was a very
-barbarous punishment indeed, and, thank God, we have outgrown it. We
-will outgrow it all some day. And as to any punishment, I don't know, I
-really don't. Resist not evil," Miss Barbara finished in a vague,
-helpless murmur, uncertain as to what course would at once best apply to
-Macdougall's case and satisfy the needs of public sobriety.
-
-"Perhaps one owes it to people to resist them," Eppie answered.
-
-"Oh, Eppie dear, if only you cared a little more for Maeterlinck!"
-sighed Miss Barbara, the more complex readings of whose later years had
-been somewhat incongruously adapted to her early simple faiths. "Do you
-remember that beautiful thing he says,--and Gavan's attitude reminds me
-of it,--'_Le sage qui passe interrompt mille drames'?_"
-
-"You will be quoting Tolstoi to me next, Aunt Barbara. I suspect that
-such sages would interrupt a good deal more than dramas."
-
-"I hope that you care for Tolstoi, Gavan," said Miss Barbara, not
-forgetful of his boyish pieties. "Not the novels,--they are very, very
-sad, and so long, and the characters have such a number of names it is
-most confusing,--but the dear little books on religion. It is all there:
-love of all men, and non-resistance of evil, and self-renunciation."
-
-"Yes," Gavan assented, while Eppie looked rather gravely at him.
-
-"How beautiful this world would be if we could see it so--no hatred, no
-strife, no evil."
-
-Again Gavan assented with, "None."
-
-"None; and no life either," Eppie finished for them.
-
-She rose, thrusting her hands into alternate pockets looking for a
-note-book, which she found and consulted. "I'm off for the fray, Uncle
-Nigel, for hatred and strife. You and Gavan are going to shoot, so I'll
-bring you your lunch at the corner of the Carlowrie woods."
-
-"So that you and Gavan may continue your quarrel there. Very well. I
-prefer listening."
-
-"Gavan understands that Eppie must not be taken seriously," Miss Barbara
-interposed; but Eppie rejoined, drawing on her gloves, "Indeed, I intend
-to be taken seriously. I quarrel with people I like as well as with
-those I hate."
-
-"You are going to be a factor in my development, too?" said Gavan.
-
-"Of course, as you are in mine, as we all are in one another's. We can't
-help that. And my attack on you shall be conscious."
-
-These open threats didn't at all alarm him. It was what was unconscious
-in her that stirred disquiet.
-
-When Eppie had departed and the general had gone off to see to
-preparations for the morning's shoot, Miss Barbara, still sitting rather
-wistfully behind her urn, said: "I hope, dear Gavan, that you will be
-able to influence Eppie a little. I am so thankful to find you unchanged
-about all the deeper things of life. You could help her, I am sure. She
-needs guidance. She is so loving, so clever, a joy to Nigel and to me;
-but she is very headstrong, very reckless and wilful,--a will in
-subjection to nothing but her own sense of right. It's not that she is
-altogether irreligious,--thank Heaven for that,--but she hasn't any of
-the happiness of religion. There is no happiness, is there, Gavan--I
-feel sure that you see it as I do,--but in having our lives stayed on
-the Eternal?"
-
-Gavan, as it was very easy to do, assented again.
-
-He spent the morning with the general in shooting over the rather scant
-covers, and at two, in a sheltered bend of the woods, where the sunlight
-lay still and bright, Eppie joined them, bringing the lunch-basket in
-her dog-cart.
-
-She was in a very good humor, and while, sitting above them, she
-dispensed rations, announced to her uncle the result of her visit to Sir
-Alec.
-
-"He thinks he can turn him out if any flagrant ease of drunkenness
-occurs again. We talked over the conditions of his lease."
-
-"Carston, I am sure, doesn't care a snap of his fingers about it."
-
-"Of course not; but he cares that I care."
-
-"You see, Gavan, by what strings the world is pulled. Carston hasn't two
-ideas in his head."
-
-"Luckily I am here to use his empty head to advantage. I wheedled Lady
-Carston, too,--the bad influence Macdougall had on church-going. Lady
-Carston's one idea, Gavan, is the keeping of the Sabbath. Altogether it
-was an excellent morning's work." Eppie was cheerful and triumphant. She
-was eating from a plate on her knees and drinking milk out of a little
-silver cup. "Do you think me a tiresome, managing busybody, Gavan?" She
-smiled down at him, and her lashes catching the sunlight, an odd, misty
-glitter half veiled her eyes. "You look," she added, "as you used to
-look when you were a little boy. The years collapsed just then."
-
-He was conscious that, under her sudden glance, he had, indeed, looked
-shy. It was not her light question, but the strange depth of her
-half-closed eyes.
-
-"I find a great deal of the old Eppie in you: I remember that you used
-to want to bully the village people for their good."
-
-"I'm still a bully, I think, but a more discreet one. Won't you have
-some milk, Gavan? You used to love milk when you were a little boy. Have
-you outgrown that?"
-
-"Not at all. I should still love some; but don't rob yourself."
-
-"There 's heaps here. I've no spare glass. Do you mind?" She held out to
-him the silver cup, turning its untouched edge to him, something
-maternal in the gesture, in the down-looking of her sun-dazed eyes.
-
-He felt himself foolishly flushing while he drank the milk; and when,
-really seized by a silly childish shyness, he protested that he wanted
-no more, she placidly, with an emphasizing of her air of sweet,
-comprehending authority, said, "Oh, but you must; it holds almost
-nothing."
-
-For the second time that day, as he obediently took from her hand the
-innocent little cup, Gavan had the unreasoning impulse of tears.
-
-The sunny afternoon was silent. Overhead, the sky had its chalice look,
-clear, benignant, brimmed with light. The general, the lolling dogs,
-were part of the background, with the heather and the wood of larches,
-the finely falling sprays delicately blurred upon the sky.
-
-It was again something sweet, sweet, simple and profound, that brought
-again that pang of presage and of pain. But the pain was like a joy, and
-the tears like tears of happiness in the sunny stillness, where her firm
-and gentle hand gave him milk in a silver cup.
-
-The actual physical sensation of a rising saltness was an alarm signal
-that, with a swift reversal of mental wheels, brought a revulsion of
-consciousness. He saw himself threatened once more by nature's
-enchantments: wily nature, luring one always back to life with looks
-from comrade eyes, touches from comrade fingers, pastoral drinks all
-seeming innocence, and embracing sunlight. Wily Circe. With a long
-breath, the mirage was seen as mirage and the moment's dangerous
-blossoming withered as if dust had been strewn over it.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-To see his own susceptibility so plainly was, he told himself, to be
-safe from it; not safe from its pang, perhaps, but safe from its power,
-and that was the essential thing.
-
-It was not to Eppie, as he further assured himself, that he was
-susceptible. Eppie stood for life, personified its appeals; he could
-feel, yet be unmoved, by all life's blandishments.
-
-Meanwhile on a very different plane--the after all remote plane of
-mental encounters and skirmishes--he felt, with relief, that he was
-entirely master of his own meaning. There were many of these skirmishes,
-and though he did not believe any of them planned, believe that she was
-carrying out her threat of conscious attack, he was aware that she was
-alert and inquisitive, and dexterously quick at taking any occasion that
-offered for further penetration.
-
-The first of these occasions was on Sunday evening when, after tea and
-in the gloaming, they sat together in the deep window-seat of one of the
-library windows and listened to Miss Barbara softly touching the chords
-of a hymn on the plaintive old piano and softly singing--a most
-unobtrusive accompaniment, at her distance and with her softness, for
-any talk or any thoughts of theirs. They had talked very little,
-watching the sunset burn itself out over the frosty moorland, and Gavan
-presently, while he listened, closed his eyes and leaned his head back
-upon the oak recess. Eppie, looking now from the sunset to him, observed
-him with an open, musing curiosity. His head, leaning back in the dusk,
-was like the ivory carving of a dead saint--a saint young, beautiful, at
-peace after long sorrow. Peace; that was the quality that his whole
-being expressed, though, with opened eyes, his face had the more human
-look of patience, verging now and then on a quiet dejection that would
-overspread his features like a veil. In boyhood, the peace, the placid
-dejection, had not been there; his face then had shown the tension of
-struggle and endurance.
-
- "Till in the ocean of thy love
- We lose ourselves in heaven above,"
-
-Miss Barbara quavered, and Gavan, opening his eyes at the closing
-cadence, found Eppie's bent upon him. He smiled, and looked still more,
-she thought, the sad saint, all benediction and indifference, and an
-impulse of antagonism to such sainthood made her say, though smiling
-back, "How I dislike those words."
-
-"Do you?" said Gavan.
-
-"Hate them? Why, dear child?" asked Miss Barbara, who had heard through
-the sigh of her held-down pedal.
-
-"I don't want to lose myself," said Eppie. "But I didn't mean that I
-wanted you to stop, Aunt Barbara. Do go on. I love to hear you sing,
-however much I disapprove of the words."
-
-But Miss Barbara, clasping and unclasping her hands a little nervously,
-and evidently finding the moment too propitious to be passed over,
-backed as she was by an ally, rose and came to them.
-
-"That is the very point you are so mistaken about, dear. It's the self,
-you know, that keeps us from love."
-
-"It's the self that makes love possible," said Eppie, taking her hand
-and looking up at her. "Do you want to lose me, Aunt Barbara? If you
-lose yourself you will have to lose me too, you know."
-
-Miss Barbara stood perplexed but not at all convinced by these
-subtleties, turning mild eyes of query upon Gavan and evidently
-expecting him to furnish the obvious retort.
-
-"We will all be at one with God," she reverently said at length, finding
-that her ally left the defense to her.
-
-Eppie met this large retort cheerfully. "You can't love God unless you
-have a self to love him with. I know what you mean, and perhaps I agree
-with what you really mean; but I want to correct your Buddhistic
-tendencies and to keep you a good Christian."
-
-"I humbly hope I'm that. You shouldn't jest on such subjects, Eppie
-dear."
-
-"I'm not one bit jesting," Eppie protested. And now Gavan asked, while
-Miss Barbara looked gratefully at him, sure of his backing, though she
-might not quite be able to understand his methods, "Are they such
-different creeds?"
-
-Still holding her aunt's hand and still looking up into her face, Eppie
-answered: "One is despair of life, the other trust in life. One takes
-all meaning out of life and the other fills it with meaning. The secret
-of one is to lose life, and the secret of the other to gain it. There is
-all the difference in the world between them; all the difference between
-life and death."
-
-"As interpreted by Western youth and vigor, yes; but what of the
-mystics? I suppose you would call them Christians?"
-
-"Yes, dear, they are Christians. What of them?" Miss Barbara echoed,
-though slightly perturbed by this alliance with heathendom.
-
-"Buddhists, not Christians," Eppie retorted.
-
-"That's what I mean; in essentials they are the same creed: the
-differences are only the differences of the races or individuals who
-hold them."
-
-At this Miss Barbara's free hand began to flutter and protest. "Oh, but,
-Gavan dear, there I'm quite sure that you are wrong. Buddhism is, I
-don't doubt, a very noble religion, but it's not the true one. Indeed
-they are not the same, Gavan, though Christianity, of course, is founded
-on the renunciation of self. 'Lose your life to gain it,' Eppie dear."
-
-"Yes, to gain it, that's just the point. One renounces, and one wins a
-realer self."
-
-"What is real? What is life?" Gavan asked, really curious to hear her
-definition.
-
-She only needed a moment to find it, and, with her answer, gave him her
-first glance during their battledore colloquy with innocent Aunt Barbara
-as the shuttlecock. "Selves and love."
-
-"Well, of course, dear," Miss Barbara cried. "That's what heaven will
-be. All love and peace and rest."
-
-"But you have left out the selves; you won't get love without them. And
-as for rest and peace--Love is made by difference, so that as long as
-there is love there must be restlessness."
-
-"Isn't it made by sameness?" Gavan asked.
-
-"No, by incompleteness: one loves what could complete oneself and what
-one could complete; or so it seems to me."
-
-"And as long as there are selves, will there be suffering, too?"
-
-Her eyes met his thought fearlessly.
-
-"That question, I am sure, is the basis for all the religions of
-cowardice, religions that deny life because of their craving for peace."
-
-"Isn't the craving for peace as legitimate as the craving for life?"
-
-"Nothing that denies life can be legitimate. Life is the one arbitrator.
-And restlessness need not mean suffering. A symphony is all
-restlessness--a restlessness made by difference in harmony; forgive the
-well-worn metaphor, but it is a good one. And, suppose that it did mean
-suffering, all of it. Isn't it worth it?" Her eyes measured him, not in
-challenge, but quietly.
-
-"What a lover of life you are," he said. It was like seeing him go into
-his house and, not hastily, but very firmly, shut the door. And as if,
-rather rudely, she hurled a stone at the shut door, she asked, "Do you
-love anything?"
-
-He smiled. "Please don't quarrel with me."
-
-"I wish I could make you quarrel. I suspect you of loving everything,"
-Eppie declared.
-
-She didn't pursue him further on this occasion, when, indeed, he might
-accuse himself of having given her every chance; but on the next day, as
-they sat out at the edge of the birch-wood in a wonderfully warm
-afternoon sun, he, she, and Peter the dog (what a strange, changed echo
-it was), she returned, very lightly, to their discussion, tossing merely
-a few reconnoitering flowers in at his open window.
-
-She had never, since their remeeting, seemed to him so young. Holding a
-little branch of birch, she broke off and aimed bits of its bark at a
-tall gorse-bush near them. Peter basked, full length, in the sunlight at
-their feet. The day had almost the indolent quiet of summer.
-
-Eppie said, irrelevantly, for they had not been talking of that, but of
-people again, gossiping pleasantly, with gossip tempered to the day's
-mildness: "I can't bear the religions of peace, you see--any faith that
-takes the fight out of people. That Molly Carruthers I was telling you
-about has become a Christian Scientist, and she is in an imbecile
-condition of beatitude all the time. 'Isn't the happiness that comes of
-such a faith proof enough?' she says to me. As if happiness were a
-proof! A drunkard is happy. Some people seem to me spiritually tipsy,
-and as unfit for usefulness as the drunkard. I think I distrust anything
-that gives a final satisfaction."
-
-She amused him in her playing with half-apprehended thoughts. Her
-assurance was as light as though they were the bits of birch-bark she
-tossed.
-
-"You make me think a little of Nietzsche," he said.
-
-"I should rather like Nietzsche right side up, I think. As he is
-standing on his head most of the time, it's rather confusing. If it is a
-blind, unconscious force that has got hold of us, we get hold of it, and
-of ourselves, when we consciously use it for our own ends. But I'm not a
-bit a Nietzschian, Gavan, for, as an end, an Overman doesn't at all
-appeal to me and I don't intend to make myself a bridge for him to march
-across. Of course Nietzsche might reply, 'You are the bridge, whether
-you want to be or not.' He might say, 'It's better to walk willingly to
-your inevitable holocaust than to be rebelliously haled along; whatever
-you do, you are only the refuse whose burning makes the flame.' I reply
-to that, that if the Overman is sure to come, why should I bother about
-him? I wouldn't lift my finger for a distant perfection in which I
-myself, and all those I loved, only counted as fuel. But, on the other
-hand, I do believe that each one of us is going to grow into an
-Overman--in a quite different sense. Peter, too, will be an Overdog, and
-will, no doubt, sometime be more conscious than we are now."
-
-Gavan glanced at her and at Peter with his vague, half-unseeing glance.
-
-"Why don't you smile?" Eppie asked. "Not that you don't smile, often.
-But you haven't a scrap of gaiety, Gavan. Do stop soaring in the sky and
-come down to real things, to the earth, to me, to dear little
-rudimentary Overdogs."
-
-"Do you think that dear little rudimentary dogs are nearer reality than
-the sky?" He did smile now.
-
-"Much nearer. The sky is only a background, an emptiness that shows up
-their meaning."
-
-She had brought him down, for his eyes lingered on her as she leaned to
-Peter and pulled him up from his sun-baked recumbency. "Come, sit up,
-Peter; don't be so comfortable. Watch how well I've trained him, Gavan.
-Now, Peter, sit up nicely. A dog on all fours is a darling heathen; but
-a dog sitting up on his hind legs is an ethical creature, and well on
-his way to Overdogdom. Peter on his hind legs is worth all your tiresome
-Hindoos--aren't you, dear, Occidental dog?"
-
-He knew that through her gaiety she was searching him, feeling her way,
-with a merry hostility that she didn't intend him to answer. It was as
-if she wouldn't take seriously, not for a moment, the implications of
-his thought--implications that he suspected her of already pretty
-sharply guessing at. To herself, and to him, she pretended that such
-thoughts were a game he played at, until she should see just how
-seriously she might be forced to take them.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-For the next few days he found himself involved in Eppie's sleuth-hound
-pursuit of the transgressing publican, amused, but quite
-willing,--somewhat, he saw, to her surprise,--to help her in her
-crusade. Not only did he tramp over the country with her in search of
-evidence, and expound the Gothenberg system to Sir Alec, to the general,
-to the rather alarmed quarry himself,--not unwilling to come to
-terms,--but the application of his extraordinarily practical good-sense
-to the situation was, she couldn't help seeing, far more effective than
-her own not altogether temperate zeal.
-
-She was surprised and she was pleased; and at the same time, throughout
-all the little drama, she had the suspicion that it meant for him what
-that playing of dolls with her in childhood had meant--mere kindliness,
-and a selfless disposition to do what was agreeable to anybody.
-
-It was on the Saturday following the talk in the library that an
-incident occurred that made her vision of his passivity flame into
-something more ambiguous--an incident that gave margins for
-possibilities in him, for whose bare potentiality she had begun to
-fear.
-
-They were at evening in the gray, bleak village street, and outside one
-of the public-houses found a small crowd collected, watching, with the
-apathy of custom, the efforts of Archie MacHendrie's wife to lead him
-home. Archie, a large, lurching man, was only slightly drunk, but his
-head, the massive granite of its Scotch peasant type, had been
-brutalized by years of hard drinking. It showed, as if the granite were
-crumbling into earth, sodden depressions and protuberances; his eye was
-lurid, heavy, yet alert. Mrs. MacHendrie's face, looking as though
-scantily molded in tallow as the full glare of the bar-room lights beat
-upon it, was piteously patient. The group, under the cold evening sky,
-in the cold, steep street, seemed a little epitome of life's
-degradation; the sordid glare of debasing pleasure lit it; the mean
-monotony of its daily routine surrounded it in the gaunt stone cottages;
-above it was the blank, hard sky.
-
-Gavan saw all the unpleasing picture, placed it, its past, its future,
-as he and Eppie approached; saw more, too, than degradation: for the
-wife's face, in its patience, symbolized humanity's heroism. Both
-heroism and degradation were results as necessary as the changes in a
-chemical demonstration; neither had value: one was a toadstool growth,
-the other, a flower; this was the fact to him, though the flower touched
-him and the toadstool made him shrink.
-
-"There, there, Archie mon," Mrs. MacHendrie was pleading, "come awa
-hame, do."
-
-Archie was declaiming on some wrong he had suffered and threatened to do
-for an enemy.
-
-That these flowers and toadstools were of vital significance to Eppie,
-Gavan realized as she left him in the middle of the street and strode to
-the center of the group. It fell aside for her air of facile, friendly
-authority, and in answer to her decisive, "What's the matter?" one of
-the apathetic onlookers explained in his deliberate Scotch: "It's nobbut
-Archie, Miss Eppie; he's swearin' he'll na go hame na sleep gin he's
-lickit Tam Donel'. He's a wee bit the waur for the drink and Tam'll soon
-be alang, and the dei'll be in it gar his gudewife gets him ben."
-
-"Well, she must get him ben," said Eppie, her eye measuring Archie, who
-shook a menacing fist in the direction of his expected antagonist.
-
-"We must get him home between us, Mrs. MacHendrie. He'll think better of
-it in the morning."
-
-"Fech, an' it's that I'm aye tellin' him, Miss Eppie; it's the mornin'
-he'll hae the sair head. Ay, Miss Eppie, he's an awfu' chiel when he's a
-wee bittie fou." Mrs. MacHendrie put the fringe of her shawl to her
-eyes.
-
-Archie's low thunder had continued during this dialogue without a pause,
-and Eppie now addressed herself to him in authoritative tones. "Come on,
-Archie. Go home and get a sleep, at all events, before you fight Tom."
-
-"It's that I'm aye tellin' you, Archie mon," Mrs. MacHendrie wept.
-
-Archie now brought his eye round to the speakers and observed them in an
-ominous silence, his thoughts turned from more distant grievances. From
-his wife his eye traveled back to Eppie, who met it with a firm
-severity.
-
-"Damn ye for an interferin' fishwife!" suddenly and with startling force
-he burst out. "Ye're no but a meddlesome besom. Awa wi' ye!" and from
-this broadside he swung round to his wife with uplifted fists. Flinging
-herself between them, Eppie found herself swept aside. Gavan was in the
-midst of the sudden uproar. Like a David before Goliath, he confronted
-Archie with a quelling eye. Mrs. MacHendrie had slipped into the dusk,
-and the bald, ugly light now fell on Gavan's contrasting head.
-
-"_Un sage qui passe interrompt mille drames_," flashed in Eppie's mind.
-But on this occasion, the sage had to do more than pass--was forced,
-indeed, to provide the drama. He was speaking in a voice so
-dispassionately firm that had Archie been a little less drunk or a
-little less sober it must have exerted an almost hypnotic effect upon
-him. But the command to go home reached a brain inflamed and hardly
-dazed. Goliath fell upon David, and Eppie, with a curious mingling of
-exultation and panic, saw the two men locked in an animal struggle. For
-a moment Gavan's cool alertness and scientific resource were overborne
-by sheer brute force; in another he had recovered himself, and Archie's
-face streamed suddenly with blood. Another blow, couched like a lance,
-it seemed, was in readiness, wary and direct, when Mrs. MacHendrie, from
-behind, seized Gavan around the neck and, with a shrill scream, hung to
-him and dragged him back. Helpless and enmeshed, he received a savage
-blow from her husband, and, still held in the wife's strangling clutch,
-he and she reeled back together. At this flagrant violation of fair play
-the onlookers interposed. Archie was dragged off, and Eppie, catching
-Gavan as he staggered free of his encumbrance, turned, while she held
-him by the shoulders, fiercely on Mrs. MacHendrie. "You well deserve
-every thrashing you get," she said, her voice stilled by the very force
-of its intense anger.
-
-Mrs. MacHendrie had covered her face with her shawl. "My mon was a'
-bluid," she sobbed. "I couldna stan' an' see him done to death."
-
-"Of course you couldn't; it was most natural of you," said Gavan. The
-blood trickled over his brow and cheek as, gently freeing himself from
-Eppie, he straightened his collar and looked at Mrs. MacHendrie with
-sympathetic curiosity.
-
-"Natural!" said Eppie. "It was dastardly. You deserve every thrashing
-you get. I hope no one will interfere for you next time."
-
-"My dear Eppie!" Gavan murmured, while Mrs. MacHendrie continued to weep
-humbly.
-
-"Why shouldn't I say it? I am disgusted with her." Eppie turned almost
-as fierce a stillness of look and tone upon him as upon Mrs. MacHendrie.
-"Let me tie up your head, Gavan. Yes, indeed, you are covered with
-blood. I suppose you never thought, Mrs. MacHendrie, that your husband
-might kill Mr. Palairet." She passed her handkerchief around Gavan's
-forehead as she spoke, knotting it with fingers at once tender and
-vindictive.
-
-"I canna say, Miss Eppie," came Mrs. MacHendrie's muffled voice from
-the shawl. "The wan's my ain mon. It juist cam' ower me, seein' him a'
-bluid."
-
-"Well, you have the satisfaction now of seeing Mr. Palairet a' bluid."
-Eppie tied her knots, and Gavan, submitting a bowed head to her
-ministrations, still kept his look of cogitating pity upon Mrs.
-MacHendrie. "You see how your husband has wounded him," Eppie went on;
-"the handkerchief is red already. Come on, Gavan; lean on me, please.
-Let her get her husband home now as best she can."
-
-But Gavan ignored his angry champion. Mrs. MacHendrie's sorrow, most
-evidently, interested him more than Eppie's indignation. He went to her,
-putting down the hand that held the shawl to the poor, disfigured,
-tallow face, and made her look at him, while he said with a gentle
-reasonableness: "Don't mind what Miss Gifford says; she is angry on my
-account and doesn't really mean to be so hard on you. I'm not at all
-badly hurt,--I can perfectly stand alone, Eppie,--and I'm sorry I had to
-hurt your husband. It was perfectly natural, what you did. Don't cry;
-please don't cry." He smiled at her, comforted her, encouraged her.
-"They are taking your husband home, you see; he is going quite quietly.
-And now we will take you home. Take my arm. You are the worst off of us
-all, Mrs. MacHendrie."
-
-Eppie, in silence, stalked beside him while he led Mrs. MacHendrie,
-dazed and submissive, up the village street. A neighbor's wife was in
-kindly waiting and Archie already slumbering heavily on his bed. Eppie
-suspected, as they went, that she saw a gold piece slipped from Gavan's
-hand to Mrs. MacHendrie's.
-
-"Poor thing," he said, when they were once more climbing the steep
-street, "I 'm afraid I only made things worse for her"; and laughing a
-little, irrepressibly, he looked round at Eppie from under his oddly
-becoming bandage. "My dear Eppie, what a perfect brute you were to her!"
-
-"My dear Gavan, I can't feel pity for such a fool. Oh, yes I can, but I
-don't want to. Please remember that I, too, have impulses, and that I
-saw you 'a' bluid.'"
-
-"Well, then, I'm the brute for scolding you, and you are another poor
-thing."
-
-"Are you incapable of righteous indignation, Gavan?"
-
-"Surely I showed enough to please you in my treatment of Archie."
-
-"You showed none. You looked supremely indifferent as to whether he
-killed you or you him."
-
-"Oh, I think I was quite anxious to do for him."
-
-They were past the village now and upon the country road, and in the
-darkness their contrasting voices rang oddly--hers deep with its
-resentful affection, his light with its amusement. It was as if the
-little drama, that he had made instead of interrupting, struck his sense
-of the ridiculous. Yet, angry with him as she was, a thrill of
-exultation remained, for Eppie, in the thought of his calm, deliberate
-face, beautiful before its foe, and with blood upon it.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Gavan's hurt soon healed, though it made him languid for a day or
-two--days of semi-invalidism, the unemphatic hours, seemingly so
-colorless, when she read to him or merely sat silently at hand occupied
-with her letters or a book, drawing still closer their odd intimacy; it
-could hardly be called sudden, for it had merely skipped intervening
-years, and it couldn't be called a proved intimacy, the intervening
-years were too full, too many for that. But they were very near in their
-almost solitude--a solitude surrounded by gentle reminders of the closer
-past, reminders, in the case of living personalities, who seemed to find
-the intimacy altogether natural and needing no comment. What the general
-and Miss Barbara might really be thinking was a wonder that at moments
-occupied both Gavan and Eppie's ruminations; but it wasn't a wonder that
-needed to go far or deep. What they thought, the dear old people, made
-very little difference--not even the difference of awkwardness or
-self-consciousness under too cogitating eyes. Even if they thought the
-crude and obvious thing it didn't matter, they would so peacefully
-relapse from their false inference once time had set it straight for
-them. Eppie couldn't quite have told herself why its obviousness was so
-crude; in all her former experience such obviousness had never been so
-almost funnily out of the question. But Gavan made so many things almost
-funnily out of the question.
-
-It was this quality in him, of difference from usual things, that drew
-intimacy so near. To talk to him with a wonderful openness, to tell him
-about herself, about her troubles, was like sinking down in a pale,
-peaceful church and sighing out everything that lay heavily on one's
-heart--the things that lay lightly, too, for little things as well as
-great, were understood by that compassionate, musing presence--to the
-downlooking face of an imaged saint.
-
-No claim upon one remained after it; one was freed of the load of
-silence and one hadn't in the least been shackled by retributory
-penances. And if one felt some strange lack in the saint, if his
-sacerdotal quality was more than his humanity, it was just because of
-that that one was able to say anything one liked.
-
-At moments, it is true, she had an odd, fetish-worshiper's impulse to
-smash her saint, and perhaps the reason why she never yielded to it was
-because, under all the seeing him as image, was the deep hoping that he
-was more. If he was more, much more, it might be unwise to smash him,
-for then she would have no pale church in which to take refuge, and,
-above all, if he were more he mustn't find it out--and she
-mustn't--through any act of her own. The saint himself must breathe into
-life and himself step down from his high pedestal. That he cared to
-listen, that he listened lovingly,--just as he had listened lovingly to
-Mrs. MacHendrie,--she knew.
-
-One day when he was again able to be out and when they were again upon
-the hilltop, walking in a mist that enshrouded them, she told him all
-about the wretched drama of her love-affair.
-
-She had never spoken of it to a human being.
-
-It was as if she led him into an empty room, dusty and dark and still,
-with dreary cobwebs stretching over its once festal furniture, and there
-pointed out to him faded blood-stains on the floor. No eyes but his had
-ever seen them.
-
-She told him all, analyzing the man, herself, unflinchingly, putting
-before him her distracted heart, distorted in its distraction. She had
-appalled herself. Her part had not been mere piteous nobility. She would
-have dragged herself through any humiliation to have had him back, the
-man she had helplessly adored. She would have taken him back on almost
-any terms. Only the semblance of pride had been left to her; beneath it,
-with all her scorn of him, was a craving that had been base in its
-despair.
-
-"But that wasn't the worst," said Eppie; "that very baseness had its
-pathos. Worst of all were my mean regrets. I had sacrificed my ambitions
-for him; I had refused a man who would have given me the life I wanted,
-a high place in the world, a great name, power, wide issues,--and I love
-high places, Gavan, I love power. When I refused him, he too married
-some one else, and it was after that that my crash came. Love and faith
-were thrown back at me, and I hadn't in it all even my dignity. I was
-torn by mingled despairs. I loathed myself. Oh, it was too horrible!"
-
-His utter lack of sympathetic emotion, even when she spoke with the
-indignant tears on her cheeks, made it all the easier to say these
-fundamental things, and more than ever like the saint of ebony and ivory
-in the pale church was his head against the great wash of mist about
-them.
-
-"And now it has all dropped from you," he said.
-
-"Yes, all--the love, the regret certainly, even the shame. The ambition,
-certainly not; but in that ugly form of a loveless marriage it's no
-longer a possible temptation for me. My disappointment hasn't driven me
-to worldly materialism. It's a sane thing in nature, that outgrowing of
-griefs, though it's bad for one's pride to see them fade and one's heart
-mend, solidly mend, once more."
-
-"They do go, when one really sees them."
-
-"Some do."
-
-"All, when one really sees them," he repeated unemphatically. "I know
-all about it, Eppie. I've been through the fire, too. Now that it's
-gone, you see that it's only a dream, that love, don't you?"
-
-Eppie gazed before her into the mist, narrowing her eyes as though she
-concentrated her thoughts upon his exact meaning, and she received his
-casual confidence with some moments of silence.
-
-"That would imply that seeing destroyed feeling, wouldn't it?" she said
-at last. "I see that _such_ love is a dream, if you will; but dreams may
-be mirrors of life, not delusions; hints of an awakened reality."
-
-He showed only his unmoved face. This talk, so impersonal, with all its
-revealment of human pathos and weakness, so much a picture that they
-both looked at it together,--a picture of outlived woe,--claimed no more
-than his contemplation; but when her voice seemed to grope toward him,
-questioning in its very clearness of declaration, he felt again the
-flitting fear that he had already recognized, not as danger, but as
-discomfort. It flitted only, hardly stirred the calm he showed her, as
-the wings of a flying bird just skim and ruffle the surface of still,
-deep waters. That restless bird, always hovering, circling near, its
-shadow passing, repassing over the limpid water--he saw and knew it as
-the water might reflect in its stillness the bird's flight. Life; the
-will to live, the will to want, and to strive, and to suffer in
-striving. All the waters of Eppie's soul were broken by the flight of
-this bird of life; its wings, cruel and beautiful, furrowed and cut; its
-plumage, darkly bright, was reflected in every wave.
-
-He said nothing after her last words.
-
-"You think all feelings delusions, Gavan?"
-
-"Not that, perhaps, but very transitory; and to be tied to the
-transitory is to suffer."
-
-"On that plan one ends with nothingness."
-
-"Do you think so?"
-
-"Do _you_ think so?" She turned his question on him and her eyes, with
-the question, fixed hard on his face.
-
-He felt suddenly that after all the parrying and thrusting she had
-struck up his foil and faced him with no mask of gaiety--in deadly
-earnest. There was the click of steel in the question.
-
-He did not know whether he were the more irritated, for her sake, by her
-persistency, or the more fearful that, unwillingly, he should do her
-faith some injury.
-
-"I think," he said, "more or less as Tolstoi thinks. You understood all
-that very well the other evening; so why go into it?"
-
-"You think that our human identity is unreal--an appearance?"
-
-"Most certainly."
-
-"And that the separation between us is the illusion that makes hatred
-and evil, and that with the recognition of the illusion, love would come
-and all selfish effort cease?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And don't you see that what that results in is the Hindoo thing, the
-abolishing of consciousness, the abolishing of life--of individual
-life?"
-
-"Yes, I see that," Gavan smiled, "but I'm a little surprised to see that
-you do. So many people are like Aunt Barbara."
-
-But Eppie was pushing, pushing against the closed doors and would not be
-lured away by lightness. "Above all, Gavan, do you see that he is merely
-an illogical Hindoo when he tries to bridge his abyss with ethics? On
-his own premises he is utterly fatalistic, so that the very turning from
-the evil illusion, the very breaking down of the barrier of self, is
-never, with him, the result of an effort of the will, never a conscious
-choice, but something deep and rudimentary, subconscious, an influx of
-revelation, a vision that sets one free, perhaps, but that can only
-leave one with emptiness."
-
-Above all, as she had said, he saw it; and now he was silent, seeking
-words that might rid him of pursuit, yet not infect her.
-
-She had stopped short before his silence. Smiling, now, on the
-background of mist, her eyes, her lips, her poise challenged him,
-incredulous, actually amused. "Don't you think that _I_ have an
-identity?" she asked.
-
-He was willing at that to face her, for he saw suddenly and clearly,--it
-seemed to radiate from her in the smile, the look,--that he, apparently,
-couldn't hurt her. She was too full of life to be in any danger from
-him, and perhaps the only way of ending pursuit was to fling wide the
-doors and, since she had said the word, show her the emptiness within.
-
-"You force me to talk cheap metaphysics to you, Eppie, but I'll try to
-say what I do think," he said. "I believe that the illusion of a
-separate identity, self-directing and permanent, is the deepest and most
-tenacious of all illusions--the illusion that makes the wheels go round,
-the common illusion that makes the common mirage. The abolishing of the
-identity, of the self, is the final word of science, and of philosophy,
-and of religion, too. The determinism of science, the ecstatic immediacy
-of the mystic consciousness, the monistic systems of the Absolutists,
-all tend toward the final discovery that,--now I'm going to be very glib
-indeed,--but one must use the technical jargon,--that under all the
-transitory appearance is a unity in which, for which, diversity
-vanishes."
-
-Eppie no longer smiled. She had walked on while he spoke, her eyes on
-him, no longer amused or incredulous, with an air now of almost stern
-security.
-
-"Odd," she said presently, "that such a perverse and meaningless Whole
-should be made up of such significant fragments."
-
-"Ah, but I didn't say that Reality was meaningless. It has all possible
-meaning for itself, no doubt; it's our meaning for it that is so
-unpleasantly ambiguous. We are in it and for it, as if we were the
-kaleidoscope it turned, the picture it looked at; and we are and must be
-what it thinks or sees. Your musical simile expressed it very nicely:
-Reality an eternal symphony and our personalities the notes in
-it--discords to our own limited consciousness, but to Reality necessary
-parts of the perfect whole. Reality is just that will to contemplate, to
-think, the infinite variety of life, and it usually thinks us as wanting
-to live. All ethics, all religions, are merely records of the ceasing of
-this want. A man comes to see himself as discord, and with the seeing
-the discord is resolved to silence. One comes to see as the Reality
-sees, and since it is perfectly satisfied, although it is perhaps quite
-unconscious,--or so some people who think a great deal about it
-say,--we, in partaking of its vision, find in unconsciousness the goal,
-and are satisfied."
-
-"You are satisfied with such a death in life?" Eppie asked in her steady
-voice.
-
-"What you call life is what I call death, perhaps, Eppie."
-
-"Your metaphysics may be very cheap; I know very little about them. But
-if all that were true, I should still say that the illusion is more real
-than that nothingness--for to us such a reality would be nothingness.
-And I should say, let us live our reality all the more intensely, since,
-for us, there is no other."
-
-"How you care for life," said Gavan, as he had said it once before. He
-looked at her marching through the mist like a defiant Valkyrie.
-
-"Care for it? I've hated it at times, the bits that came to me."
-
-"Yet you want it, always."
-
-"Always," she repeated. "Always. I have passed a great part of my life
-in being very unhappy--that is to say, in wanting badly something I've
-not got. Yet I am more glad than I can say to have lived."
-
-"Probably because you still expect to get what you want."
-
-"Of course." She smiled a little now, though a veiled, ambiguous smile.
-And as they began the steep descent, the mist infolding them more
-closely, even the semblance of the smile faded, leaving a new sadness.
-
-"Poor Gavan," she said.
-
-He just hesitated. "Why?"
-
-"Your religion is a hatred, a distrust of life; mine is trust in it,
-love of it. You see it as a sort of murderous uncle, beckoning to the
-babes in the wood; I own that I wouldn't stir a step to follow it if I
-suspected it of such a character. And I see life--" She paused here,
-looking down, musing, it seemed, on what she saw, and the pause grew
-long. In it, suddenly, Gavan knew again the invasion of emotion. Her
-downcast, musing face pervaded his consciousness with that sense of
-trembling. "You see life as what?" he asked her, not because he wanted
-to know, but because her words were always less to him than her
-silences.
-
-Eppie, unconscious, was finding words.
-
-"As something mysterious, beautiful. Something strange, yet near, like
-the thought of a mother about her unborn child, but, more still, like
-the thought of an unborn child about its unknown mother. We are such
-unborn children. And this something mysterious and beautiful says: Come;
-through thorns, over chasms, past terrors, and in darkness. So, one
-goes."
-
-Gavan was silent. Looking up at him, her eyes full of her own vision,
-she saw tears in his.
-
-For a moment the full benignity, sweet, austere, of a maternal thing in
-her rested on him, so that it might have been she who said "Come." Then,
-looking away from him again, knowing that she had seen more than he had
-meant to show, she said, "Own that if it's all illusion, mine's the best
-to live with."
-
-He had never seen her so beautiful as at this moment when she did not
-pursue, but looked away, quiet in her strength, and he answered
-mechanically, conscious only of that beauty, that more than beauty,
-alluring when it no longer pursued: "No; there are no thorns, nor
-chasms, nor terrors any longer for me. I am satisfied, Eppie."
-
-She was walking now, a little ahead of him, down the thread-like path
-that wound among phantom bracken. The islet of space where they could
-see seemed like a tiny ship gliding forward with them into a white,
-boundless ocean. Such, thought Gavan, was human life.
-
-In a long silence he felt that her mood had changed. Over her shoulder
-she looked round at him at last with her eyes of the spiritual
-steeplechaser. "It's war to the knife, Gavan."
-
-She hurt him in saying it. "You only have the knife," he answered, and
-his gentleness might have reproached the sudden challenge.
-
-"You have poison."
-
-"I never put it to your lips, dear."
-
-She saw his pain. "Oh, don't be afraid for me," she said. "I drink your
-poison, and it is a tonic, a wine, that fills me with greater ardor for
-the fight."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-They were on the path that led to the deeply sunken garden gate, and
-they had not spoken another word while they followed it, while they
-stooped a little under the tangle of ivy that drooped from the stone
-lintel, while they went past the summer-house and on between the rows of
-withered plants and the empty, wintry spaces of the garden; only when
-they were nearly at the house, under the great pine-tree, did Eppie
-cheerfully surmise that they would be exactly on time for tea, and by
-her manner imply that tea was far more present to her thoughts than
-daggers or poison.
-
-He felt that in some sense matters had been left in the lurch. He didn't
-quite know where he stood for her with his disastrous darkness about
-him--whether she had really taken up a weapon for open warfare or
-whether she hadn't wisely fallen back upon the mere pleasantness of
-friendly intercourse, turning her eyes away from his accompanying gloom.
-
-He was glad to find her alone that evening after dinner when he had left
-the general in the smoking-room over a review and a cigar. Miss Barbara
-had gone early to bed, so that Eppie, in her white dress, as on the
-night of his arrival, had the dark brightness of the firelit room all to
-herself. He was glad, because the sense of uncertainty needed defining,
-and uncertainty, since that last moment of trembling, had been so acute
-that any sort of definition would be a relief.
-
-An evening alone with her, now that they were really on the plane of
-mutual understanding, would put his vague fears to the test. He would
-learn whether they must be fled from or whether, as mere superficial
-tremors, tricks of the emotions, they could not be outfaced smilingly.
-He really didn't want to run away, especially not until he clearly knew
-from what he ran.
-
-Eppie sat before the fire on the low settle, laying down a book as he
-came in. In her aspect of exquisite worldliness, the white dress
-displaying her arms and shoulders with fashionable frankness, she struck
-him anew as being her most perfectly armed and panoplied self. Out on
-the windy hillside or singing among the woods, nature seemed partially
-to absorb and possess her, so that she became a part of the winds and
-woods; but indoors, finished and fine from head to foot, her mastered
-conventionality made her the more emphatically personal. She embodied
-civilization in her dress, her smile, her speech, her very being; the
-loose coils of her hair and the cut of her satin shoe were both
-significant of choice, of distinctive simplicity; and the very bareness
-of her shoulders--Gavan gave an amused thought to the ferociously
-sensitive Tolstoi--symbolized the armor of the world-lover, the
-world-user. It was she who possessed the charms and weapons of the
-civilization that crumbled to dust in the hand of the Russian mystic. He
-could see her confronting the ascetic's eye with the challenge of her
-radiant and righteous self-assurance. Her whole aspect rebuilt that
-shattered world, its pomp and vanity, perhaps, its towering scale of
-values; each tier narrowing in its elimination of the lower, cruder,
-less conscious, more usual; each pinnacle a finely fretted flowering of
-the rare; a dazzling palace of foam. She embodied all that; but, more
-than all for Gavan, she embodied the deep currents of trust that flowed
-beneath the foam.
-
-Her look welcomed him, though without a smile, as he drew a deep chair
-to the fire and sat down near her, and for a little while they said
-nothing, he watching her and she with gravely downcast eyes.
-
-"What are you thinking of?" he asked at last.
-
-"Of you, of course," she answered. "About our talk this afternoon; we
-haven't finished it yet."
-
-She, too, then, had felt uncertainty that needed relief.
-
-"Are you sharpening your knife?"
-
-She put aside his lightness. "Gavan, we are friends. May I talk as I
-like to you?"
-
-"Of course you may. I've always shown you that."
-
-"No, you have tried to prevent me from talking. But now I will. I have
-been thinking. It seems to me that it is your life that has so twisted
-your mind; it has been so joyless."
-
-"Does that make it unusual?"
-
-"You must love life before you can know it."
-
-"You must love it, and lose it, before you can know it. I have had joy,
-Eppie; I have loved life. My experience has not been peculiarly
-personal; it is merely the history of all thought, pushed far enough."
-
-"Of all mere thought, yes."
-
-She rested her head on her hand as she looked at him, seeming to wonder
-over him and his thought, his mere thought, dispassionately. "Don't be
-shy, or afraid, for me. Why should you mind? I've given you my story;
-give me yours. Tell me about your life."
-
-He felt, suddenly, sunken there in his deep chair, passive and peaceful
-in the firelight, that it would be very easy to tell her. Why shouldn't
-she see it all and understand it all? He couldn't hurt her; it would be
-only a strange, a sorrowful picture to her; and to him, yes, there would
-be a relief in the telling. To speak, for the first time in his life--it
-would be like the strewing of rosemary on a grave, a commemoration that
-would have its sweetness and its balm.
-
-But he hesitated, feeling the helplessness of his race before verbal
-self-expression.
-
-Eppie lent him a hand.
-
-"Begin with when you left me."
-
-"What was I then? I hardly remember. A tiresome, self-centered boy."
-
-"No; you weren't self-centered. You believed in God, then, and you loved
-your mother. Why have both of them, as personalities, become illusions
-to you?"
-
-She saw facts clearly and terribly. She was really inside the doors at
-last, and though it would be all the easier to make her understand the
-facts she saw, Gavan paled a little before the sudden, swift presence.
-
-For, yes, God was gone, and yes,--worse, far worse, as he knew she felt
-it,--his mother, too--except as that ghost, that pang of memory.
-
-She saw his pallor and helped him again, to the first and easier avowal.
-
-"How did you lose your faith? What happened to you when you left me?"
-
-"It's a commonplace enough story, that."
-
-"Of course it is. But when loss of faith becomes permanent and
-permanently means a loss of feeling, it's not so commonplace."
-
-"Oh, I think it is--more commonplace than people know, in temperaments
-as unvital and as logical as mine."
-
-"You are not unvital."
-
-"My reason isn't often blurred by my instincts."
-
-"That is because you are strong--terribly strong. It's not that your
-vitality is so little as that your thought is so abnormal."
-
-"No, no; it's merely that I understand my own experience."
-
-But she had put his feet upon the road, and, turning his eyes from her
-as he looked, he contemplated its vista.
-
-It was easy enough, after all, to gather into words that retrospect of
-the train; it was easy to be brief and lucid with such a comprehending
-listener,--to be very impersonal, too; simply to hold up before her eyes
-the picture that he saw.
-
-His eyes met hers seldom while he told her all that was essential to her
-true seeing. It was wonderful, the sense of her secure, strong life that
-made it possible to tell her all.
-
-The stages of his young, restless, tortured thought were swiftly
-sketched for an intelligence so quick, and the growing intuition of the
-capriciousness, the suffering of life. He only hesitated when it came to
-the reunion with his mother, the change that had crept between them; and
-her illness, her death; choosing his words with a reticence that bit
-them the more deeply into the listening mind.
-
-But, in the days that followed the death,--days ghost-like, yet
-sharp,--he lingered, so that she paused with him in that pause of
-stillness in his life, that morning in the spring woods when everything
-had softly, gently shown an abiding strangeness. He told her all about
-that: about the look of the day, not knowing why he so wanted her to see
-it, too, but it seemed to explain more than anything else--the pale,
-high sky, the gray branches, the shining water and the little bird that
-hopped to drink. He himself looked ghost-like while he spoke--sunken,
-long, dark, impalpable, in the deep chair, his thin white fingers
-lightly interlocked, his face showing only the oddity of its strange yet
-beautiful oval and its shadowy eyes and lips. All whiteness and shadow,
-he might have been a projection from the thought of the woman, who,
-before him, leaned her head on her hand, warm, breathing, vivid with
-color, her steady eyes seeing phantoms unafraid.
-
-After that there wasn't much left to explain, it seemed--except Alice,
-that last convulsive effort of life to seize and keep him; and that
-didn't take long--made, as it were, a little allegory, with nameless
-abstractions to symbolize the old drama of the soul entrameled and
-finally set free again. The experience of the spring woods had really
-been the decisive one. He came back to that again, at the end of his
-story. "It's really, that experience, what in another kind of
-temperament is called conversion."
-
-Her eyes had looked away from him at last. "No," she said, "conversion
-is something that gives life."
-
-"No," he rejoined, "it's something that lifts one above it."
-
-The fundamental contest spoke again, and after that they were both
-silent. He, too, had looked away from her when the story was over, and
-he knew, from her deep, slow breathing, that the story had meant a great
-deal to her. It was not a laboring breath, nor broken by pain to sighs;
-but it seemed, in its steady rhythm, to accept and then to conquer what
-he had put before her. That he should so hear it, not looking at her,
-filled the silence with more than words; and, as in the afternoon, he
-sought the relief of words.
-
-"So you see," he said, in his lighter voice, "thorns and precipices and
-terrors dissolve like dreams." She had seen everything and he was
-ushering her out. But his eyes now met hers, looking across the little
-space at him.
-
-"And I? Do I, too, dissolve like a dream?" she said.
-
-His smile now was lighter than his voice had been. "Absolutely. Though I
-own that you are a highly colored phantom. Your color is very vivid
-indeed. Sometimes it almost masters my thought."
-
-He had not, in his mere wish for ease, quite known what he meant to say,
-and now her look did not show him any deepened consciousness; but,
-suddenly, he felt that under his lightness and her quiet the current ran
-deeply.
-
-"I master your thought?" she repeated. "Doesn't that make you distrust
-thought sometimes?"
-
-"No," he laughed. "It makes me distrust you, dear Eppie."
-
-There were all sorts of things before them now. What they were he really
-didn't know; perhaps she didn't, either. At all events he kept his eyes
-off them, and shaking his crossed foot a little, he still looked at her,
-smiling.
-
-"Why?" she asked.
-
-He felt that he must now answer her, and himself, in words that wouldn't
-imply more than he could face.
-
-"Well, the very force of your craving for life, the very force of your
-will, might sweep me along for a bit. I might be caught up for a whirl
-on the wheel of illusion; not that you could ever bind me to it: it
-would need my own will, blind again, for that."
-
-Her eyes had met his so steadily that he had imagined only contemplation
-or perhaps that maternal severity behind the steadiness. But the way in
-which they received these last tossed pebbles of metaphor showed him
-unrealized profundities. They deepened, they darkened, they widened on
-him. They seemed to engulf him in a sudden abyss of pain. And pain in
-her was indeed a color that could infect him.
-
-"How horrible you are, Gavan," she said, and her voice went with the
-words and with the look.
-
-"Eppie!" he exclaimed on a tense, indrawn breath, as if over the sudden
-stab of a knife. "Have I hurt you?"
-
-Her eyes turned from him. "Not what you say, or do. What you are."
-
-"You didn't see, before, what I am?"
-
-"Never--like this."
-
-He leaned toward her. "Dear Eppie, why do you make me talk? Let me be
-still. I only ask to be still."
-
-"You are worse still. Don't you think I see what stillness means?"
-
-She had pushed her low seat from him,--for he stretched his hands to her
-with his supplication,--and, rising to her feet, stepping back, she
-stood before the fire, somberly looking down at him.
-
-Gavan, too, rose. Compunction, supplication, a twist of perplexity and
-suffering, made him careless of discretion. Face to face, laying his
-hands on her shoulders, he said: "Don't let me frighten you. It would be
-horrible if I could convince you, shatter you."
-
-Standing erect under his hands, she looked hard into his face.
-
-"You could frighten me, horribly; but you couldn't shatter me. You are
-ambiguous, veiled, all in mists. I am as clear, as sharp--."
-
-Her dauntlessness, the old defiance, were a relief--a really delicious
-relief. He was able to smile at her, a smile that pled for reassurance.
-"How can I frighten you, then?"
-
-Her somber gaze did not soften. "Your mists come round me, chill,
-suffocating. They corrode my clearness."
-
-"No; no; it's you who come into them. Don't. Don't. Keep away from me."
-
-"I'm not so afraid of you as that," she answered.
-
-His hands were still on her shoulders and their eyes on each other--his
-with their appealing, uncertain smile, and hers unmoved, unsmiling; and
-suddenly that sense of danger came upon him: as if, in the mist, he felt
-upon him the breathing, warm, sweet, ominous, of some unseen creature.
-And in the fear was a strange delight, and like a hand drawn, with slow,
-deep pressure, across a harp, the nearness drew across his heart,
-stirring its one sad note--its dumb, its aching note--to a sudden
-ascending murmur of melody.
-
-He was caught swiftly from this inner tumult by its reflection in her
-face. She flushed, deeply, painfully. She drew back sharply, pushing
-his hands from her.
-
-Gavan sought his own equilibrium in an ignoring of that undercurrent.
-
-"Now you are not frightened; but why are you angry?" he asked.
-
-For a moment she did not speak.
-
-"Eppie, I am so sorry. What is it? You are really angry, Eppie!"
-
-Then, after that pause of speechlessness, she found words.
-
-"If I think of you as mist you must not think of me as glamour." This
-she gave him straight.
-
-Only after disengaging her train from the settle, from his feet, after
-wheeling aside his chair to make a clear passage for her departure, did
-she add: "I have read your priggish Schopenhauer."
-
-She gave him no time for reply or protestation. Quite mistress of
-herself, leaving him with all the awkwardness of the situation--if he
-chose to consider it awkward--upon his hands, very fully the finished
-mondaine and very beautifully the fearless and assured nymph of the
-hillside, she went to the piano, turned and rejected, in looking over
-it, some music, and sitting down, striking a long, full chord, she began
-to sing, in her voice of frosty dawn, the old Scotch ballad.
-
-He might go or listen as he liked. She had put him away, him and his
-mists, his ambiguous hold upon her, his ambiguous look at her. She sang
-to please herself as much as when she had gone up through the woodlands.
-And if the note of anger still thrilled in her voice she turned it to
-the uses of her song and made a higher triumph of sadness.
-
-She was still singing when the general came in.
-
- * * * * *
-
-SHE had been quite right; she had seen with her perfect sharpness and
-clearness indeed, and no wonder that she had been angry. He himself saw
-clearly, directly the hand was off the harp. It was laughably simple. He
-was a man, she a woman; they were both young and she was beautiful. That
-summed it up, sufficiently and brutally; and no wonder, again, that she
-had felt such summing an offense. It wasn't in the light of such
-summings that she regarded herself.
-
-With him she had never, for a moment, made use of glamour. His was the
-rudimentary impulse, and Gavan's sensitive cheek echoed her flush when
-he thought of it. Never again, he promised himself, after this full
-comprehension of it, should such an impulse dim their friendship. He
-would make it up to her by helping her to forget it.
-
-But for all that, it was with the strangest mixture of relief and dismay
-that he found upon the breakfast-table next morning an urgent summons
-for his return home. It was the affable little rector of the parish in
-Surrey who wrote to tell him of his father's sudden breakdown,--softening
-of the brain. When Eppie appeared, a little grave, but all clear
-composure, he was able to show her the letter and to tell her of his
-immediate departure with a composure as assured as her own, but he
-wondered, while he spoke, if to her also the parting would mean any form
-of relief. At all events, for her, it couldn't mean any form of wrench.
-
-Looking in swift glances at her face, while she questioned him about his
-father, suggested trains and nurses, and gave practical advice for his
-journey, he was conscious that the relief was the result of a pretty
-severe strain, and that though it was relieved it hadn't stopped aching.
-
-The very fact that Eppie's narrow face, the hair brushed back from brow
-and temples, showed, in the clear morning light, more of its oddity than
-its beauty, made its charm cling the more closely. Her eyes looked
-small, her features irregular; he saw the cliff-like modeling of her
-temples, the cheeks, a little flat, pale, freckled; the long, queer
-lines of her chin. Bare, exposed, without a flicker of sunlight on her
-delicate analogies of ruggedness, of weather-beaten strength, she might
-almost have been called ugly; and, with every glance, he was feeling her
-as sweetness, sweetness deep and reticent, embodied.
-
-The general and Miss Barbara were late. She poured out his coffee, saw
-him embarked on a sturdy breakfast, insisted, now with the irradiating
-smile that in a moment made her lovely, that he should eat a great deal
-before his journey, made him think anew of that maternal quality in
-her,--the tolerance, the tenderness. And in the ambiguous relief came
-the sharpened dismay of seeing how great was the cause for it.
-
-He wanted to say a word, only one, about their little drama of last
-night, but the time didn't really seem to come for it; perhaps she saw
-that it shouldn't come. But on the old stone steps with their yellow
-lichen spots, his farewells over to the uncle and aunt, and he and Eppie
-standing out there in a momentary solitude, she said, shaking his hand,
-"Friends, you know. Look me up when you are next in London." She had her
-one word to say, and she had said it when and how she wished. It wasn't
-anything so crude as reassurance; it was rather a sunny assurance, in
-which she wished him to share, that none was needed.
-
-He looked, like the boy of years ago, a real depth of gratitude into her
-eyes. She had given him his chance.
-
-"I'll never frighten you again; I'll never displease you again."
-
-"I know you won't. I won't let you," Eppie smiled.
-
-"I wish I were more worth your while--worth your being kind to me."
-
-"You think you are still--gloomy, tiresome, self-centered?"
-
-"That defines it well enough."
-
-"Well, you serve my purpose," said Eppie, "and that is to have you for
-my friend."
-
-She seemed in this parting to have effaced all memory of glamour, but
-Gavan knew that the deeper one was with him.
-
-It was with him, even while, in the long journey South, he was able to
-unwrap film after film of the mirage from its central core of reality,
-to see Eppie, in all her loveliness, in all her noblest aspects, as a
-sort of incarnation of the world, the flesh, and the devil. He could
-laugh over the grotesque analogy; it proved to him how far from life he
-was when its symbol could show in such unflattering terms, and yet it
-hurt him that he could find it in himself so to symbolize her. It was
-just because she was so lovely, so noble, that he must--he must--. For,
-under all, was the wrench that would take time to stop aching.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Captain Palairet had gone to pieces and was now as unpleasant an object
-as for years he had been a pleasant one.
-
-Gavan's atrophied selfishness felt only a slight shrinking from the
-revolting aspects of dissolution, and his father's condition rather
-interested him. The captain's childish clinging to his son was like an
-animal instinct suddenly asserting itself, an almost vegetable instinct,
-so little more than mere instinct was it. It affected Gavan much as the
-suddenly contracting tentacles of a sea-anemone upon his finger might
-have done. He was not at all touched; but he felt the claim of a
-possible pang of loneliness and desolation in the dimness of decay, and,
-methodically, with all the appearances of a solicitous kindness, he
-responded to the claim.
-
-The man, immersed in his rudimentary universe of sense, showed a host of
-atavistic fears; fears of the dark, of strange faces, fears of sudden
-noises or of long stillness. He often wept, leaning his swollen face on
-Gavan's shoulder, filled with an abject self-pity.
-
-"You know how I love you, Gavan," he would again and again repeat, his
-lax lips fumbling with the words, "always loved you, ever since you were
-a little fellow--out in India, you know. I and your dear mother loved
-you better than life," and, wagging his head, he would repeat, "better
-than life," and break into sobs--sobs that ceased when the nurse brought
-him his wine-jelly. Then it might be again the tone of feeble whining.
-"It doesn't taste right, Gavan. Can't you make it taste right? Do you
-want to starve me between you all?"
-
-Gavan, with scientific scrutiny, diagnosed and observed while he soothed
-him or engaged his vagrant mind in games.
-
-In his intervals of leisure he pursued his own work, and rode and walked
-with all his usual tempered athleticism. He did not feel the days as a
-strain, hardly as disagreeable; he was indifferent or interested. At the
-worst he was bored. The undercurrent of pity he was accustomed to living
-with.
-
-Only at night, in hours of rest, he would sink into a half-dazed
-disgust, find himself on edge, nearly worn out. So the winter passed.
-
-He was playing draughts with his father on a day in earliest spring,
-when he was told that Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford were below.
-
-Gavan was feeling dull and jaded. The conducting of the game needed a
-monotonous patience and tact. The captain would now pick up a draught
-and gaze curiously at it for long periods of time, now move in a
-direction contrary to all the rules of the game and to his own
-advantage. When such mistakes were pointed out to him he would either
-apologize humbly or break into sudden peevish wrath. To-day he was in a
-peculiarly excitable condition and had more than once wept.
-
-Gavan, after the servant's announcement, holding a quietly expectant
-draught in his thin, poised fingers, looked hard at the board that still
-waited for his father's move. He then felt that a deep flush had mounted
-to his face.
-
-In spite of the one or two laconic letters that they had interchanged,
-Eppie had been relegated for many months to her dream-place--a dream, in
-spite of its high coloring, more distant than this nearer dream of ugly
-illness. It was painful to look back at the queer turmoil she had roused
-in him during the autumnal fortnight, and more painful to realize, as in
-his sudden panic of reluctance now, that, though a dream, she was an
-abiding and constant one.
-
-Mrs. Arley he knew, and her motor-car had recently made her a next-door
-neighbor in spite of the thirty miles between them. She was a friend
-with whom Eppie had before stayed on the other side of the county.
-Nothing could be more natural than that she and Eppie should drop in
-upon a solitude that must, to their eyes, have all the finished elements
-of pathos. Yet he was a little vexed by the intrusion, as well as
-reluctant to meet it.
-
-His father broke into vehement protest when he heard that he was to be
-abandoned at an unusual hour, and it needed some time for Gavan and the
-nurse to quiet him. Twenty minutes had passed before he could go down to
-his guests, and he surmised that they would feel in this delay yet
-further grounds for pity.
-
-They were in the hall, before a roaring fire, Eppie standing with her
-back to it, in a familiar attitude, though her long, caped cloak and
-hooded motoring-cap, the folds of gray silk gathered under her chin and
-narrowly framing her face, gave her an unfamiliar aspect. Her eyes met
-his as he turned the spacious staircase and came down to them, and he
-felt that they watched his every movement and noted every trace in him
-of fatigue and dejection.
-
-Mrs. Arley, fluent, flexible, amazingly pretty, for all the light
-powdering and wrinkling of her fifty years, came rustling forward.
-
-"Eppie is staying with me for the week-end,--I wrench her from her slums
-now and then,--and we wanted to hear how you are, to see how you are.
-You look dreadfully fagged; doesn't he, Eppie? How is your father?"
-
-Eppie gave him her hand in silence.
-
-"My father will never be any better, you know," he said. "As for me, I'm
-all right. I should have come over to see you before this, and looked
-you up, too, Eppie, but I can't get away for more than an hour or so at
-a time."
-
-He led them into the library while he spoke,--Mrs. Arley exclaiming that
-such devotion was dear and good of him,--and Eppie looked gravely round
-at the room that he had described to her as the room that he really
-passed his life in. The great spaces of ranged books framed for her, he
-knew, pictures of his own existence. He knew, too, that her gravity was
-the involuntary result of the impression that he made upon her. She was
-sorry for him. Poor Eppie, their relationship since childhood seemed to
-have consisted in that--in the sense of her pursuing pity and in his
-retreat before it, for her sake. He retreated now, as he knew, in his
-determination to show her that pity was misplaced, uncalled for.
-
-Mrs. Arley had thrown off her wrap and loosened her hood in a manner
-that made it almost imperative to ask them to stay with him for
-lunch--an invitation accepted with an assurance showing that it had been
-expected, and it wasn't difficult, in conventional battledore and
-shuttlecock with her, to show a good humor and frivolity that
-discountenanced pathetic interpretations. What Mrs. Arley's
-interpretations were he didn't quite know; her eyes, fatigued yet fresh,
-were very acute behind their trivial meanings, and he could wonder if
-Eppie had shared with her her own sense of his "horribleness," and if,
-in consequence, her conception of Eppie's significance as the opponent
-of that quality was tinged with sentimental associations.
-
-Eppie's gaze, while they rattled on, lost something of its gravity, but
-he was startled, as if by an assurance deeper than any of Mrs. Arley's,
-when she rose to slip off her coat and went across the room to a small
-old mirror that hung near the door to take off her cap as well.
-
-In her manner of standing there with her back to them, untying her
-veils, pushing back her hair, was the assurance, indeed, of a person
-whose feet were firmly planted on certain rights, all the more firmly
-for "knowing her place" as it were, and for having repudiated mistaken
-assumptions. She might almost have been a new sick-nurse come to take up
-her duties by his side. She passed from the mirror to the writing-table,
-examining the books laid there, and then, until lunch was announced,
-stood looking out of the window. Quite the silent, capable, significant
-new nurse, with many theories of her own that might much affect the
-future.
-
-The dining-room at Cheylesford Lodge opened on a wonderful old lawn,
-centuries in its green. Bordered by beds, just alight with pale spring
-flowers, it swept in and out among shrubberies of rhododendron and
-laurel, the emerald nook set in a circle of trees, a high arabesque on
-the sky.
-
-Eppie from her seat at the table faced the sky, the trees, the lawn.
-What a beautiful place, she was thinking. A place for life, sheltered,
-embowered. How she would have loved, as a child, those delicious
-rivulets of green that ran into the thick mysteries of shadow. How she
-would have loved to play dolls on a hot summer afternoon in the shade of
-the great yew-tree that stretched its dark branches half across the sky.
-The house, the garden, made her think of children; she saw white
-pinafores and golden heads glancing in and out among the trees and
-shrubs, and the vision of young life, blossoming, growing in security
-and sunlight, filled her thought with its pictured songs of innocence,
-while, at the same time, under the vision, she was feeling it all--all
-the beauty and sheltered sweetness--as dreadful in its emptiness, its
-worse than emptiness: a casket holding a death's-head. She came back
-with something of a start to hear her work in the slums enthusiastically
-described by Mrs. Arley. "I thought it was only in novels that children
-clung to the heroine's skirts. I never believed they clung in real life
-until seeing Eppie with her ragamuffins; they adore her."
-
-This remark, to whose truth she assented by a vague smile, gave Eppie's
-thoughts a further push that sent them seeing herself among the golden
-heads and white pinafores on the lawn at Cheylesford Lodge; and though
-the vision maintained its loving aunt relationship of the slums, there
-was now a throb and flutter in it, as though she held under her hand a
-strange wild bird that only her own will not to look kept hidden.
-
-These dreams were followed by a nightmare little episode.
-
-In the library, again, the talk was still an airy dialogue, Eppie, her
-eyes on the flames as she drank her coffee, still maintaining her
-ruminating silence. In the midst of her thoughts and their chatter, the
-door opened suddenly and Captain Palairet appeared on the threshold.
-
-His head neatly brushed, a sumptuous dressing-gown of padded and
-embroidered silk girt about him, he stood there with moist eyes and
-lips, faintly and incessantly shaking through all his frame, a troubling
-and startling figure.
-
-Gavan had been wondering all through the visit how his father was
-bearing the abandonment, and his appearance, he saw now, must have been
-the triumphant fruit of contest with the nurse whose face of helpless
-disapprobation hovered outside.
-
-Gavan went to his side, and, leaning on his son's arm, the captain said
-that he had come to pay his respects to Mrs. Arley and to Miss Gifford.
-
-Taking Mrs. Arley's hand, he earnestly reiterated his pleasure in
-welcoming her to his home.
-
-"Gavan's in fact, you know; but he's a good son. Not very much in
-common, perhaps: Gavan was always a book-worm, a fellow of fads and
-theories; I love a broad life, men and things. No, not much in common,
-except our love for his mother, my dear, dead wife; that brought us
-together. We shook hands over her grave, so to speak," said the captain,
-but without his usual sentiment. An air of jaunty cheerfulness pervaded
-his manner. "She is buried near here, you know. You may have seen the
-grave. A very pretty stone; very pretty indeed. Gavan chose it. I was in
-India at the time. A great blow to me. I never recovered from it. I
-forget, for the moment, what the text is; but it's very pretty; very
-appropriate. I knew I could trust Gavan to do everything properly."
-
-Gavan's face had kept its pallid calm.
-
-"You will tire yourself, father," he said. "Let me take you up-stairs
-now. Mrs. Arley and Miss Gifford will excuse us."
-
-The captain resisted his attempt to turn him to the door.
-
-"Miss Gifford. Yes, Miss Gifford," he repeated, turning to where Eppie
-stood attentively watching father and son, "But I want to see Miss
-Elspeth Gifford. It was that I came for." He took her hand and his
-wrecked and restless eyes went over her face. "So this is Miss Elspeth
-Gifford."
-
-"You have heard of me?" Eppie's composure was as successful as Gavan's
-own and lent to the scene a certain matter-of-fact convention.
-
-The captain bowed low. "Heard of you? Yes. I have often heard of you. I
-am glad, glad and proud, to meet at last so much goodness and wit and
-beauty. You have a name in the world, Miss Gifford. Yes, indeed, I have
-heard of you." Suddenly, while he held her hand and gazed at her, his
-look changed. Tears filled his eyes; a muscle in his lip began to shake;
-a flush of maudlin indignation purpled his face.
-
-"And you are the girl my son jilted! And you come to our house! It's a
-noble action. It's a generous action. It's worthy of you, my dear." He
-tightly squeezed her hand, Gavan's attempt--and now no gentle one--to
-draw him away only making his clutch the more determined.
-
-"No, Gavan, I will not go. I will speak my mind. This is my hour. The
-time has come for me to speak my mind. Let's have the truth; truth at
-all costs is my motto. A noble and generous action. But, my dear," he
-leaned his head toward her and spoke in a loud whisper, "you're well rid
-of him, you know--well rid of him. Don't try to patch it up. Don't come
-in that hope. So like a woman--I know, I know. But give it up; that's my
-advice. Give it up. He's a poor fellow--a very poor fellow. He wouldn't
-make you happy; just take that from me--a friend, a true friend. He
-wouldn't make any woman happy. He's a poor creature, and a false
-creature, and I'll say this," the captain, now trembling violently,
-burst into tears: "if he has been a false lover to you he has been a bad
-son to me."
-
-With both hands, sobbing, he clung to her, while, with a look of sick
-distress, Gavan tried, not too violently, to draw him from his hold on
-her.
-
-Eppie had not flushed. "Don't mind," she said, glancing at the helpless
-son, "he has mixed it up, you see." And, bending on the captain eyes
-severe in kindly intention, like the eyes of a nurse firmly
-administering a potion, "You are mistaken about Gavan. It was another
-man who jilted me. Now let him take you up-stairs. You are ill."
-
-But the captain still clung, she, erect in her spare young strength,
-showing no shrinking of repulsion. "No, no," he said; "you always try to
-shield him. A woman's way. He won your heart, and then he broke it, as
-he has mine. He has no heart, or he'd take you now. Give it up. Don't
-come after him. Sir, how dare you! I won't submit to this. How dare you,
-Sir!" Gavan had wrenched him away, and in a flare of silly passion he
-struck at him again and again, like a furious child. It was a wrestle
-with the animal, the vegetable thing, the pinioning of vicious
-tentacles. Mrs. Arley fluttered in helpless consternation, while Eppie,
-firm and adequate, assisted Gavan in securing the wildly striking hands.
-Caught, held, haled toward the door, the captain became, with amazing
-rapidity, all smiles and placidity.
-
-"Gently, gently, my dear boy. This is unseemly, you know, very childish
-indeed. Temper! Temper! You get it from me, no doubt--though your mother
-could be very spiteful at moments. I'll come now. I've said my say. Well
-rid of him, my dear, well rid of him," he nodded from the door.
-
-"Eppie! My dear!" cried Mrs. Arley, when father and son had disappeared.
-"How unutterably hateful. I am more sorry for him than for you, Eppie.
-His face!"
-
-Eppie was shrugging up her shoulders and straightening herself as though
-the captain's grasp still threatened her.
-
-"Hateful indeed; but trivial. Gavan understands that I understand. We
-must make him feel that it's nothing."
-
-"He's quite mad, horrible old man."
-
-"Not quite; more uncomfortably muddled than mad. We must make him see
-that we think nothing of it," Eppie repeated. She turned to Gavan, who
-entered as she spoke, still with his sick flush and showing a speechless
-inability to frame apologies.
-
-"This is what it is to have echoes, Gavan," she said. "My little
-misfortunes have reached your father's ears." She went to him, she took
-his hand, she smiled at him, all her radiance recovered, a garment of
-warmth and ease to cover the shivering the captain's words might have
-made. "Please don't mind. I wasn't a bit bothered, really."
-
-He could almost have wept for the relief of her smile, her sanity. The
-linking of their names in such an unthinkable connection had given him
-the nausea qualm of a terrifying obsession. He could find now only trite
-words in which to tell her that she was very kind and that he was more
-sorry than he could say.
-
-"But you mustn't be. It was such an obvious muddle for a twisted mind.
-He knew," said Eppie, still smiling with the healing radiance, "that I
-had been jilted, and he knew that I was very fond of you, and he put
-together the one and one make two that happened to be before him." She
-saw that his distress had been far greater than her own, that she now
-gave him relief.
-
-Afterward, as she and Mrs. Arley sped away, her own reaction from the
-healing attitude showed in a rather grim silence. She leaned back in the
-swift, keen air, her arms folded in the fullness of her capes.
-
-But Mrs. Arley could not repress her own accumulations of feeling. "My
-dear Eppie," she said, her hand on her shoulder, and with an almost more
-than maternal lack of reticence, "I want you to marry him. Don't glare
-Medusa at me. I hate tact and silences. Heaven knows I would have
-scouted the idea of such a match for you before seeing him to-day. But
-my hard old heart is touched. He is such a dear; so lonely. It's a nice
-little place, too, and there is some money. Jim Grainger is too
-drab-colored a person for you,--all his force, all his sheckles, can't
-gild him,--and Kenneth Langley is penniless. This dear creature is not a
-bit drab and not quite penniless. And you are big enough to marry a man
-who needs you rather than one you need. _Will_ you think of it, Eppie?"
-
-"Grace, you are worse than Captain Palairet," said Eppie, whose eyes
-were firmly fixed on the neat leather back of the chauffeur in front of
-them.
-
-"Don't be cross, Eppie. Why should you mind my prattle?"
-
-"Because I care for him so much."
-
-"Well, that's what I say."
-
-"No; not as I mean it."
-
-"_He_ of course cares, as I mean it."
-
-Eppie did not pause over this.
-
-"It's something different, quite different, from anything else in the
-world. It can't be talked about like that. Please, Grace, never, never
-be like Captain Palairet again. _You_ haven't softening of the brain. I
-shall lose Gavan if my friends and his father have such delusions too
-openly."
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-Gavan went down the noisy, dirty thoroughfare, looking for the turning
-which would lead him, so the last policeman consulted said, to Eppie's
-little square.
-
-It was a May day, suddenly clear after rain, liquid mud below, and above
-a sharply blue sky, looking its relentless contrast at the reeking,
-sordid streets, the ugly, hurrying life of the wide thoroughfare.
-
-All along the gutter was a vociferous fringe of dripping fruit-and
-food-barrows, these more haphazard conveniences faced by a line of
-gaudy, glaring shops.
-
-The blue above was laced with a tangle of tram-wires and cut with the
-jagged line of chimney-pots.
-
-The roaring trams, the glaring shops, seemed part of a cruel machinery
-creative of life, and the grim air of permanence, the width and solidity
-of the great thoroughfare, were more oppressive to Gavan's nerves, its
-ugliness fiercer, more menacing, than the narrower meanness of the
-streets where life seemed to huddle with more despondency.
-
-In one of these he found that he had, apparently, lost his way.
-
-A random turn brought him to a squalid court with sloping, wet pavement
-and open doors disgorging, from inner darkness, swarms of children. They
-ran; tottered on infantile, bandy legs; locked in scuffling groups,
-screaming shrilly, or squatted on the ground, absorbed in some game.
-
-Gavan surveyed them vaguely as he wandered seeking an outlet. His eye
-showed neither shrinking nor tenderness, rather a bleak, hard, unmoved
-pity, like that of the sky above. He was as alien from that swarming,
-vivid life as the sky; but, worn as he was with months of nervous
-overstrain, he felt rising within him now and then a faint sense of
-nausea such as one might feel in contemplating a writhing clot of
-maggots.
-
-He threaded his way among them all, and at a corner of the court found a
-narrow exit. This covered passage led, apparently, to another and fouler
-court, and emerging from it, coming suddenly face to face with him, was
-Eppie. She was as startling, seen here, as "a lily in the mouth of
-Tartarus," and he had a shock of delight in her mere aspect. For Eppie
-was as exquisite as a flower. Her garments had in no way adapted
-themselves to mud and misery. Her rough dress of Japanese blue showed at
-the open neck of its jacket a white linen blouse; her short, kilted
-skirt swung with the grace of petals; her little upturned cap of blue
-made her look like a Rosalind ready for a background of woodland glade,
-streams, and herds of deer.
-
-And here she stood, under that cruel sky, among the unimaginable
-ugliness of this City of Dreadful Night.
-
-In her great surprise she did not smile, saying, as she gave him her
-hand, "Gavan! by all that's wonderful!"
-
-"You asked me to come and see you when I was next in London."
-
-"So I did."
-
-"So here I am. I had a day off by chance; some business that had to be
-seen to."
-
-"And your father?"
-
-"Slowly going."
-
-"And you have come down here, for how long?"
-
-"For as long as you'll keep me. I needn't go back till night."
-
-Her eye now wandered away from him to the maggots, one of whom, Gavan
-observed, had attached itself to her skirt, while a sufficiently dense
-crowd surrounded them, staring.
-
-"You have a glimpse of our children," said Eppie, surveying them with,
-not exactly a maternal, but, as it were, a fraternal eye of affectionate
-familiarity.
-
-"What's that, Annie?" in answer to a husky whisper. "Do I expect you
-to-night? Rather! Is that the doll, Ada? Well, I can't say that you've
-kept it very tidy. Where's its pinafore?" She took the soiled object
-held up to her and examined its garments. "Where's its petticoat?"
-
-"Please, Miss, Hemly took them."
-
-"Took them away from you?"
-
-"Yes, Miss."
-
-"For her own doll, I suppose."
-
-"Yes, Miss."
-
-Eppie cogitated. "I'll speak to Emily about it presently. You shall have
-them back."
-
-"Please, Miss, I called her a thief."
-
-"You spoke the truth. How are you, Billy? You look decidedly better.
-Gavan, my hands are full for the next hour or so and I can't even offer
-to take you with me, for I'm going to sick people. But I shall be back
-and through with all my work by tea-time, if you don't mind going to my
-place and waiting. You'll find Maude Allen there. She lives down here,
-and with me when I am here. She is a nice girl, though she will talk
-your head off."
-
-"How do I find her? I don't mind waiting."
-
-"You follow this to the end, take the first turning to the right, and
-that will bring you to my place. I'll meet you there at five."
-
-Gavan, thus directed, made his way to the dingy little house occupied by
-the group of energetic women whom Eppie joined yearly for her three
-months of--dissipation? he asked himself, amused by her variegated
-vigor.
-
-The dingy little house looked on a dingy little square--shell of former
-respectable affluence from which the higher form of life had shriveled.
-The sooty trees were thickly powdered with young green, and uneven
-patches of rough, unkempt grass showed behind broken iron railings. A
-cat's-meat man called his dangling wares along the street, and Gavan,
-noticing a thin and furtive cat, that stole from a window-ledge, stopped
-him and bought a large three-penny-worth, upon which he left the cat
-regaling itself with an odd, fastidious ferocity.
-
-He entered another world when he entered Eppie's sitting-room. Here was
-life at its most austerely sweet. Books lined the walls, bowls of
-primroses and delicate Japanese bronzes set above their shelves;
-chintz-covered chairs were drawn before the fire; the latest reviews lay
-on a table, and on the piano stood open music; there were wide windows
-in the little room, and crocuses, growing in flat, earthenware dishes,
-blew out their narrow chalices against the sunlit muslin curtains.
-
-Miss Allen sat sewing near the crocuses, and, shy and voluble, rose to
-greet him. She was evidently accustomed to Eppie's guests--accustomed,
-too, perhaps, to taking them off her hands, for though she was shy her
-volubility showed a familiarity with the situation. She was almost as
-funny a contrast to Eppie as the slum children had been an ugly one. She
-wore a spare, drab-colored skirt and a cotton shirt, its high, hard
-collar girt about by a red tie that revealed bone buttons before and
-behind. Her sleek, fair hair, relentlessly drawn back, looked like a
-varnish laid upon her head. Her features, at once acute and kindly, were
-sharp and pink.
-
-She was sewing on solid and distressingly ugly materials.
-
-"Yes, I am usually at home. Miss Gifford is the head and I am the hands,
-you see," she smiled, casting quick, upward glances at the long, pale
-young man in his chair near the fire. "Miss Henderson, Miss Grey, and I
-live here all year round, and I do so look forward to Miss Gifford's
-coming. Oh, yes, it's a most interesting life. Do you do anything of the
-sort? Are you going to take up a club? Perhaps you are going into the
-Church?"
-
-Miss Allen asked her swift succession of questions as if in a mild
-desperateness.
-
-Gavan admitted that his interest was wholly in Miss Gifford.
-
-"She _is_ interesting," Miss Allen, all comprehension, agreed. "So many
-people find her inspiring. Do you know Mr. Grainger, the M.P.? He comes
-here constantly. He is a cousin, you know. He has known her, of course,
-ever since she was a child. I think it's very probable that she
-influences his political life--oh, quite in a right sense, I mean. He is
-such a conscientious man--everybody says that. And then she isn't at all
-eccentric, you know, as so many fashionable women who come down here
-are; they do give one so much trouble when they are like that,--all
-sorts of fads that one has to manage to get on with. She isn't at all
-faddish. And she isn't sentimental, either. I think the sentimental ones
-are worst--for the people, especially, giving them all sorts of foolish
-ideas. And it's not that she doesn't _care_. She cares such a lot.
-That's the secret of her not getting discouraged, you see. She never
-loses her spirit."
-
-"Is it such discouraging work?" Gavan questioned from his chair. With
-his legs crossed, his hat and stick held on his knee, he surveyed Miss
-Allen and the crocuses.
-
-"Well, not to me," she answered; "but that's very different, for I have
-religious faith. Miss Gifford hasn't that, so of course she must care a
-great deal to make up for it. When one hasn't a firm faith it is far
-more difficult, I always think, to see any hope in it all. I think she
-would find it far easier if she had that. She can't resign herself to
-things. She is rather hot-tempered at times," Miss Allen added, with one
-of her sharp, shy glances.
-
-Gavan, amused by the idea that Eppie lacked religious faith, inquired
-whether the settlement were religious in intention, and Miss Allen
-sighed a little in answering no,--Miss Grey, indeed, was a Positivist.
-"But we Anglicans are very broad, you know," she said. "I can work in
-perfectly with them all--better with Miss Grey and Miss Gifford than
-with Miss Henderson, who is very, very Low. Miss Gifford goes in more
-for social conditions and organization--trades-unions, all that sort of
-thing; that's where she finds Mr. Grainger so much of a help, I think."
-And he gathered from Miss Allen's further conversation, from its very
-manner of vague though admiring protest, a clearer conception of Eppie's
-importance down here. To Miss Allen, she evidently embodied a splendid,
-pagan force, ambiguous in its splendor. He saw her slightly shrinking
-vision of an intent combatant; no loving sister of charity, but a young
-Bellona, the latest weapons of sociological warfare in her hands, its
-latest battle-cry on her lips. And all for what? thought Gavan, while,
-with a sense of contrasting approval, he looked at Miss Allen's tidy
-little head against the sunlit crocuses and watched the harmless
-occupation of her hands. All for life, more life; the rousing of desire;
-the struggling to higher forms of consciousness. She was in it, the
-strife, the struggle. He had seen on her face to-day, with all its
-surprise, perhaps its gladness, that alien look of grave preoccupation
-that passed from him to the destinies she touched. In thinking of it all
-he felt particularly at peace, though there was the irony of his
-assurance that Eppie's efforts among this suffering life where he found
-her only resulted in a fiercer hold on suffering. Physical degradation
-and its resultant moral apathy were by no means the most unendurable of
-human calamities. Miss Allen's anodynes--the mere practical petting,
-soothing, telling of pretty tales--were, in their very short-sightedness,
-more fitted to the case.
-
-Miss Allen little thought to what a context her harmless prattle was
-being adjusted. She would have been paralyzed with horror could she have
-known that to the gentle young man, sitting there so unalarmingly, she
-herself was only a rather simple symptom of life that he was quietly
-studying. In so far from suspecting, her shyness went from her; he was
-so unalarming--differing in this from so many people--that she found it
-easy to talk to him. And she still had a happy little hope of a closer
-community of interest than he had owned to. He looked, she thought, very
-High Church. Perhaps he was in the last stages of conversion.
-
-She had talked on for nearly an hour when another visitor was announced.
-This proved to be a young man slightly known to Gavan, a graceful,
-mellifluous youth, whose artificiality of manner and great personal
-beauty suggested a mingling of absinthe and honey. People had rather
-bracketed Gavan and Basil Mayburn together; one could easily deal with
-both as lumped in the same category,--charming drifters, softly
-disdainful of worldly aims and efforts. Mayburn himself took sympathy
-for granted, though disconcerted at times by finding his grasp of the
-older man to be on a sliding, slippery surface. Palairet had, to be
-sure, altogether the proper appreciations of art and literature, the
-rhythm of highly evolved human intercourse; the aroma distilled for the
-esthete from the vast tragic comedy of life; so that he had never quite
-satisfied himself as to why he could get no nearer on this common
-footing. Palairet was always charming, always interested, always
-courteous; but one's hold did slip.
-
-And to Gavan, Basil Mayburn, with his fluent ecstasies, seemed a
-sojourner in a funny half-way house. To Mayburn the hallucination of
-life was worth while esthetically. His own initial appeal to life had
-been too fundamentally spiritual for the beautiful to be more to him
-than a second-rate illusion.
-
-Miss Allen greeted Mr. Mayburn with a coolness that at once
-discriminated for Gavan between her instinctive liking for himself and
-her shrinking from a man who perplexed and displeased her.
-
-Mayburn was all glad sweetness: delighted to see Miss Allen; delighted
-to see Palairet; delighted to wait in their company for the delightful
-Miss Gifford; and, turning to Miss Allen, he went on to say, as a thing
-that would engage her sympathies, that he had just come from a service
-at the Oratory.
-
-"I often go there," he said; "one gets, as nowhere else that I know of
-in London, the quintessence of aspiration--the age-long yearning of the
-world. How are your schemes for having that little church built down
-here succeeding? I do so believe in it. Don't let any ugly sect steal a
-march on you."
-
-Miss Allen primly replied that the plans for the church were prospering;
-and adding that Miss Gifford would be here in a moment and that she must
-leave them, she gathered up her work and departed with some emphasis.
-
-"Nice, dear little creature, that," said Mayburn, "though she does so
-dislike me. I hope I didn't say the wrong thing. I never quite know how
-far her Anglicanism goes; such a pity that it doesn't go a little
-further and carry her into a nunnery of the Catholic Church. She is the
-nun type. She ought to be done up in their delicious costume; it would
-lend her the flavor she lacks so distressingly now. Did you notice her
-collar and her hair? Astonishing the way that Eppie makes use of all
-these funny, _guindee_ creatures whom she gets hold of down here. Have
-you ever seen Miss Grey?--dogmatic, utilitarian, strangely ugly Miss
-Grey, another nun type corrupted by our silly modern conditions. She
-reeks of Comte and looks like a don. And all the rest of them,--the
-solemn humanitarians, the frothy socialists, the worldly, benign old
-ecclesiastics,--Eppie works them all; she has a genius for
-administration. It's an art in her. It almost consoles one for seeing
-her wasted down here for so much of the year."
-
-"Why wasted?" Gavan queried. "She enjoys it."
-
-"Exactly. That's the alleviation. Wasted for us, I mean. You have known
-her for a long time, haven't you, Palairet?"
-
-Gavan, irked by the question and by the familiarity of Mayburn's
-references to their absent hostess, answered dryly that he had known
-Miss Gifford since childhood; and Mayburn, all tact, passed at once to
-less personal topics, inquiring with a new earnestness whether Palairet
-had seen Selby's Goya, and expatiating on its exquisite horror until the
-turning of a key in the hall-door, quick steps on the stairs leading up
-past the sitting-room, announced Eppie's arrival.
-
-She was with them in a moment, cap and jacket doffed, her muddy shoes
-changed for slender patent-leather, fresh in her white blouse. She
-greeted Mayburn, turning to Gavan with, "I'm so glad you waited. You
-shall both have tea directly."
-
-With all her crisp kindliness, Gavan fancied a change in her since the
-greeting of an hour and a half before. Things hadn't gone well with her.
-And he could flatter himself, also, with the suspicion that she was
-vexed at finding their tete-a-tete interrupted.
-
-Mayburn loitered about the room after her while she straightened the
-shade on the student's lamp, just brought in, and made the tea, telling
-her about people, about what was going on in the only world that
-counted, telling her about Chrissie Bentworth's astounding elopement,
-and, finally, about the Goya. "You really must see it soon," he assured
-her.
-
-Eppie, adjusting the flame of her kettle, said that she didn't want to
-see it.
-
-"You don't care for Goya, dear lady?"
-
-"Not just now."
-
-"Well, of course I don't mean just now. I mean after you have burned out
-this particular flame. But, really, it's a sensation before you and you
-mustn't miss having it. An exquisite thing. Horror made beautiful."
-
-"I don't want to see it made beautiful," Eppie, with cheerful rudeness,
-objected.
-
-"Now that," said Mayburn, drawing up to the tea-table with an
-appreciative glance for the simple but inviting fare spread upon
-it--"now that is just where I always must argue with you. Don't you
-agree with me, Palairet, that life is beautiful--that it's only in terms
-of beauty that it has significance?"
-
-"If you happen to see it so," Gavan ambiguously assented.
-
-"Exactly; I accept your amendment--if you happen to have the good
-fortune to see it so; if you have the faculty that gives the vision; if,
-like Siegfried, the revealing dragon's-blood has touched your lips.
-Eppie has the gift and shouldn't wilfully atrophy it. She shouldn't
-refuse to share the vision of the Supreme Artist, to whom all horror and
-tragedy are parts of the picture that his eternal joy contemplates; she
-should not refuse to listen with the ear of the Supreme Musician, to
-whom all the discords that each one of us is, before we taste the
-dragon's-blood,--for what is man but a dissonance, as our admirable
-Nietzsche says,--to whom all these discords melt into the perfect
-phrase. All art, all truth is there. I'm rather dithyrambic, but, in
-your more reticent way, you agree with me, don't you, Palairet?"
-
-Eppie's eye, during this speech, had turned with observant irony upon
-Gavan.
-
-"How do you like your echo, Gavan?" she inquired, and she answered for
-him: "Of course he agrees, but in slightly different terms. He doesn't
-care a fig about the symphony or about the Eternal Goya. There isn't a
-touch of the 'lyric rapture' about him. Now pray don't ask him to define
-his own conceptions, and drink your tea. And don't say one word to me,
-either, about your gigantic, Bohemian deity. You have spoken of
-Nietzsche, and I know too well what you are coming to: the Apollonian
-spirit of the world of Appearances in which the Dionysiac spirit of
-Things-in-Themselves mirrors its vital ecstasy. Spare me, I'm not at all
-in the humor to see horror in terms of loveliness."
-
-"_Ay de mi!_" Mayburn murmured, "you make me feel that I'm still a
-dissonance when you talk like this."
-
-"A very wholesome realization."
-
-"You are cross with life to-day, and therefore with me, its poor little
-appreciator."
-
-"I'm never cross with life."
-
-"Only with me, then?"
-
-"Only with you, to-day."
-
-Mayburn, folding his slice of bread-and-butter, took her harshness with
-Apollonian serenity. "At least let me know that I've an ally in you," he
-appealed to Gavan, while Eppie refilled her cup with the business-like
-air of stoking an engine that paused for a moment near wayside
-trivialities.
-
-Gavan had listened to the dithyrambics with some uneasiness, conscious
-of Eppie's observation, and now owned that he felt little interest in
-the Eternal Goya.
-
-"Don't, don't, I pray of you, let him take the color out of life for
-you," Mayburn pleaded, turning from this rebuff, tea-cup in hand, to
-Eppie; and Eppie, with a rather grim smile, again full of reminiscences
-for Gavan, declared that neither of them could take anything out of it
-for her.
-
-She kept, after that, the talk in pleasant enough shallows; but Mayburn
-fancied, more than once, that he heard the grating of his keel on an
-unpropitious shore. Eppie didn't want him to-day, that was becoming
-evident; she wasn't going to push him off into decorative sailing. And
-presently, wondering a little if his tact had already been too long at
-fault, wondering anew about the degree of intimacy between the childhood
-friends, who had, evidently, secrets in which he did not share, he
-gracefully departed.
-
-Eppie leaned back in her chair, folded her arms, and closed her eyes as
-though to give herself the relief of a long silence.
-
-Her hair softly silhouetted against the green shade and the flickering
-illumination of the firelight upon her, her passive face showed a stern
-wistfulness. Things had gone wrong with her.
-
-Looking at her, Gavan's memory went back to the last time they had been
-together, alone, in firelight, to his impulse and her startlingly acute
-interpretation of it. Her very aspect now, her closed eyes and folded
-arms, seemed to show him how completely she disowned, for both of them,
-even the memory of such an unfitting episode. More keenly than ever he
-recognized the fineness in her, the generosity, the willingness to
-outlive trifles, to put them away forever; and the contagion of her
-somber peace enveloped him.
-
-She remarked presently, not opening her eyes: "I should like to make a
-bon-fire of all the pictures in the world, all the etchings, the
-carvings, the tapestries, the bric-a-brac in general,--and Basil
-Mayburn, in sackcloth and ashes, should light it."
-
-"What puritanic savagery, Eppie!"
-
-"I prefer the savage puritan to the Basil Mayburn type; at least I do
-just now."
-
-"What's the matter?" Gavan asked, after a little pause.
-
-"Do I show it so evidently?" she asked, with a faint smile. "Everything
-is the matter."
-
-"What, in particular, has gone wrong?"
-
-Eppie did not reply at first, and he guessed that she chose only to show
-him a lesser trouble when she said, "I've had a great quarrel with Miss
-Grey, for one thing."
-
-"The positivistic lady?"
-
-"Yes; did Maude tell you that? She really is a very first-rate
-person--and runs this place; but I lost my temper with her--a stupid
-thing to do, and not suddenly, either, which made it the less
-excusable."
-
-"Are your theories so different that you came to a clash?"
-
-"Of course they are different, though it was apparently only over a
-matter of practical administration that we fought." Eppie drew a long
-breath, opening her eyes. "I shall stay on here this spring--I usually
-go to my cousin Alicia for the season. But one can't expect things to go
-as one wants them unless one keeps one's hand on the engine most of the
-time. She has almost a right to consider me a meddling outsider, I
-suppose. I shall stay on till the end of the summer."
-
-"And smash Miss Grey?"
-
-Eppie, aware of his amusement, turned an unresentful glance upon him.
-
-"No, don't think me merely brutally dominant. I really like her. I only
-want to use her to the best advantage."
-
-At this he broke into a laugh. "Not brutally dominant, I know; but I'm
-sorry for Miss Grey."
-
-"Miss Grey can well take care of herself, I assure you."
-
-"What else has gone wrong?"
-
-Again Eppie chose something less wrong to show him. "The factory where
-some of my club-girls work has shut down half of its machinery. There
-will be a great deal of suffering. And we have pulled them above a
-flippant acceptance of state relief."
-
-"And because you have pulled them up, they are to suffer more?"
-
-"Exactly, if you choose to put it so," said Eppie.
-
-He saw that she had determined that he should not frighten her again,
-or, at all events, that he should never see it if he did frighten her;
-and he had himself determined that his mist should never again close
-round her. She should not see, even if she guessed at it pretty clearly,
-the interpretation that he put upon the afternoon's frictions and
-failures, and, on the plane of a matter-of-fact agreement as to
-practice, he drew her on to talk of her factory-girls, of the standards
-of wages, the organization of woman's labor, so that she presently said,
-"What a pleasure it is to hear you talking sense, Gavan!"
-
-"You have heard me talk a great deal of nonsense, I'm sure."
-
-"A great deal. Worse than Basil Mayburn's."
-
-"I saw too clearly to-day the sorry figure I must have cut in your eyes.
-I have learned to hold my tongue. When one can only say things that
-sound particularly silly that is an obvious duty."
-
-"I am glad to hear you use the word, my dear Gavan; use it, even though
-it means nothing to you. _Glissez mortel, n'appuyez pas_ should be your
-motto for a time; then, after some wholesome skating about on what seems
-the deceptive, glittering surface of things you will find, perhaps, that
-it isn't an abyss the ice stretches over, but a firm meadow, the ice
-melted off it and no more need of skates."
-
-He was quite willing that she should so see his case; he was easier to
-live with, no doubt, on this assumption of his curability.
-
-Eppie, still leaning back, still with folded arms, had once more closed
-her eyes, involuntarily sighing, as though under her own words the
-haunting echo of the abyss had sounded for her.
-
-She had not yet shown him what the real trouble was, and he asked her
-now, in this second lull of their talk, "What else is there besides the
-factory-girls and Miss Grey?"
-
-She was silent for a moment, then said, "You guess that there is
-something else."
-
-"I can see it."
-
-"And you are sorry?"
-
-"Sorry, dear Eppie? Of course."
-
-"It's a child, a cripple," said Eppie. "It had been ill for a long time,
-but we thought that we could save it. It died this morning. I didn't
-know. I didn't get there in time. I only found out after leaving you
-this afternoon. And it cried for me." She had turned her head from him
-as it leaned against the chair, but he saw the tears slowly rolling down
-her cheeks.
-
-"I am so sorry, dear Eppie," he said.
-
-"The most darling child, Gavan." His grave pity had brought him near and
-it gave her relief to speak. "It had such a wistful, dear little face. I
-used to spend hours with it; I never cared for any child so much. What I
-can't bear is to think that it cried for me." Her voice broke. Without a
-trace, now, of impulse or glamour, he took her hand, repeating his
-helpless phrase of sympathy. Yes, he thought, while she wept, here was
-the fatal flaw in any Tolstoian half-way house that promised peace. Love
-for others didn't help their suffering; suffering with them didn't stop
-it. Here was the brute fact of life that to all peace-mongers sternly
-said, Where there is love there is no peace.
-
-It was only after her hand had long lain in his fraternal clasp that she
-drew it away, drying her tears and trying to smile her thanks at him.
-Looking before her into the fire, and back into a retrospect of sadness,
-she said: "How often you and I meet death together, Gavan. The poor
-monkey, and Bobbie, and Elspeth even, ought to count."
-
-"You must think of me and death together," he said.
-
-He felt in a moment that the words had for her some significance that he
-had not intended. In her silence was a shock, and in her voice, when she
-spoke, a startled thing determinedly quieted.
-
-"Not more than you must think of me and it together."
-
-"You and death, dear Eppie! You are its very antithesis!"
-
-She did not look at him, and he could not see her eyes, but he knew,
-with the almost uncanny intuition that he so often had in regard to her,
-that a rising strength, a strength that threatened something, strove
-with a sudden terror.
-
-"Life conquers death," she said at last.
-
-He armed himself with lightness. "Of course, dear Eppie," he said; "of
-course it does; always and always. The poor baby dies, and--I wonder how
-many other babies are being born at this moment? Conquers death? I
-should think it did!"
-
-"I did not mean in that way," she answered. She had risen, and, looking
-at the clock, seemed to show him that their time was over. "But we won't
-discuss life and death now," she said.
-
-"You mean that it's late and that I must go?" he smiled.
-
-"Perhaps I mean only that I don't want to discuss," she smiled back.
-"Though--yes, indeed, it is late; almost seven. I have a great many
-things to do this evening, so that I must rest before dinner, and let
-you go."
-
-"I may come again?"
-
-"Whenever you will. Thank you for being so kind to-day."
-
-"Kind, dear Eppie?"
-
-"For being sorry, I mean."
-
-"Who but a brute would not have been?"
-
-"And you are not a brute."
-
-The shaded light cast soft upward shadows on her face, revealing sweet
-oddities of expression. In their shadow he could not fathom her eyes;
-but a tenderness, peaceful, benignant, even a recovered gaiety, hovered
-on her brow, her upper lip, her cheeks. It was like a reflection of
-sunlight in a deep pool, this dim smiling of gratitude and gaiety.
-
-He had a queer feeling, and a profounder one than in their former moment
-when she had repudiated his helpless emotion, that she spared him, that
-she restrained some force that might break upon this fraternal nearness.
-For an instant he wondered if he wanted to be spared, and with the
-wonder was once more the wrench at leaving her there, alone, in her
-fire-lit room. But it was her strength that carried them over all these
-dubious undercurrents, and he so relied on it that, holding her hand in
-good-by, he said, "I will come soon. I like it here."
-
-"And you are coming to Kirklands this summer. Uncle expects it. You
-mustn't disappoint him, and me. I shall be there for a month."
-
-"I'll come."
-
-"Jim Grainger will be there, too. You remember Jim. You can fight with
-him from morning till night, but you and I will fight about nothing,
-absolutely nothing, Gavan. We will--_glisser_. We will talk about Goya!
-We will be perfectly comfortable."
-
-He really believed that they might be, so happily convincing was her
-tone.
-
-"Grainger is a great chum of yours, isn't he?" he asked.
-
-"You remember, he and his brother were old playmates; Clarence has
-turned out a poor creature; he's a nobody in the church. I'm very fond
-of Jim. And I admire him tremendously. He is the conquering type, you
-know--the type that tries for the high grapes."
-
-"You won't set him at me, to mangle me for your recreation?"
-
-"Do I seem such a pitiless person?"
-
-"Oh, it would be for my good, of course."
-
-"You may come with no fear of manglings. You sha'n't be worried or
-reformed."
-
-They had spoken as if the captain were non-existent, but Gavan put the
-only qualifying touch to his assurance of seeing her at Kirklands. "I'll
-come--if I can get there by then."
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-But he did not go to her again in the slums. The final phases of his
-father's long illness kept him in Surrey, and he found, on thinking it
-over, that he was content to rest in the peace of that last seeing of
-her.
-
-It was clear to him that, were it not for that paralysis of the heart
-and will, he would have been her lover. Like a veiled, exquisite
-picture, the impossible love was with him always; he could lift the veil
-and look upon it with calmness. That he owed something of this calmness
-to Eppie he well knew. She loved him,--that, too, was evident,--but as a
-sister might love, perhaps as a mother might. He was her child, her sick
-child or brother, and he smiled over the simile, well content, and with
-an odd sense of safety in his assurance. Peace was to be their final
-word, and in the long months of a still, hot summer, this soft,
-persistent note of peace was with him and filled a lassitude greater
-than any he had known.
-
-Monotonously the days went by like darkly freighted boats on a sultry
-sea--low-lying boats, sliding with the current under sleepy sails.
-
-He watched consciousness fade from his father's body and found strange,
-sly analogies (they were like horrid nudges in the dark)--with his
-mother's death, the worthless man, the saintly woman, mingling in the
-sameness of their ending, the pitifulness, after all, of the final
-insignificance that overtook them both. And so glassy was the current,
-so sleepy the wind, that the analogy shook hardly a tremor of pain
-through him.
-
-In the hour of his father's death, a more trivial memory came--trivial,
-yet it lent a pathos, even a dignity, to the dying man. In the captain's
-eyes, turned wonderingly on him, in the automatic stretching out of his
-wasted hand for his,--Gavan held it to the end--was the reminiscence of
-the poor monkey's far-away death, the little tropical creature that had
-drooped and died at Kirklands.
-
-On the day of the funeral, Gavan sat in the library at dusk, and the
-lassitude had become so deep, partly through the breakdown of sheer
-exhaustion, that the thought of going on watching his own machinery
-work--toward that same end,--the end of the monkey, of his father, his
-mother,--was profoundly disgusting.
-
-It was a positively physical disgust, a nausea of fatigue, that had
-overtaken him as he watched the rooks, above the dark yet gilded woods,
-wheel against a sunset sky.
-
-Almost automatically, with no sense of choice or effort, he had unlocked
-a drawer of the writing-table beside him and taken out a case of
-pistols, merely wondering if the machine were going to take the final
-and only logical move of stopping itself.
-
-He was a little interested to observe, as he opened the case, that he
-felt no emotion at all. He had quite expected that at such a last moment
-life would concentrate, gather itself for a final leap on him, a final
-clinging. He had expected to have a bout with the elemental, the thing
-that some men called faith in life and some only desire of life, and,
-indeed, for a moment, his mind wandered in vague, Buddhistic fancies
-about the wheel of life to which all desire bound one, desire, the
-creator of life, so that as long as the individual felt any pulse of it
-life might always suck him back into the vortex. The fancy gave him his
-one stir of uneasiness. Suppose that the act of departure were but the
-final act of will. Could it be that such self-affirmation might tie him
-still to the wheel he strove to escape, and might the drama still go on
-for his unwilling spirit in some other dress of flesh? To see the fear
-as the final bout was to quiet it; it was a fear symptomatic of life, a
-lure to keep him going; and, besides, how meaningless such surmises, on
-their ethical basis of voluntary choice, as if in the final decision one
-would not be, as always, the puppet of the underlying will. His mind
-dropped from the thread-like interlacing of teasing metaphysical
-conjecture to a calm as quiet and deep as though he were about to turn
-on his pillow and fall asleep.
-
-Now, like the visions in a dreamy brain, the memories of the day trooped
-through the emptiness of thought. He was aware, while he watched the
-visions, of himself sitting there, to a spectator a tragic or a morbid
-figure. Morbid was of course the word that a frightened or merely stupid
-humanity would cast at him. And very morbid he was, to be sure, if life
-were desirable and to cease to desire it abnormal.
-
-He saw himself no longer in either guise. He was looking now at his
-father's coffin lowered into the earth of the little churchyard beside
-his mother's grave; the fat, genial face of the sexton, the decorous
-sadness on the little rector's features. Overhead had been the quietly
-stirring elms; sheep grazed beyond the churchyard wall and on the
-horizon was the pastoral blue of distant hills. He saw the raw, new
-grave and the heave of the older grave's green sod, the old stone, with
-its embroidery of yellow lichen and its text of eternal faith.
-
-And suddenly the thought of that heave of sod, that headstone, what it
-stood for in his life, the tragic memory, the love, the agony,--all
-sinking into mere dust, into the same dust as the father whom he had
-hated,--struck with such unendurable anguish upon him that, as if under
-heavy churchyard sod a long-dead heart strove up in a tormented
-resurrection, life rushed appallingly upon him and, involuntarily, as a
-drowning man's hand seizes a spar and clings, his hand closed on the
-pistol under it. Leave it, leave it,--this dream where such
-resurrections were possible.
-
-He had lifted the pistol, pausing for a moment in an uncertainty as to
-whether head or heart were the surer exit, when a quiet step at the
-door arrested him.
-
-"Shall I bring the lamps, sir?" asked Howson's quiet voice.
-
-Gavan could but admire his own deftness in tossing a newspaper over the
-pistol. He found himself perfectly prepared to keep up the last
-appearances. He said that he didn't want the lamps yet and that Howson
-could leave the curtains undrawn. "It's sultry this evening," he added.
-
-"It is, sir; I expect we'll have thunder in the night," said Howson,
-whose voice partook of the day's decorous gloom. He had brought in the
-evening mail and laid the letters and newspapers beside Gavan, slightly
-pushing aside the covered pistol to make room for them, an action that
-Gavan observed with some intentness. But Howson saw nothing.
-
-Left alone again, Gavan, not moving in his chair, glanced at the letters
-and papers neatly piled beside his elbow.
-
-After the rending agony of that moment of hideous realization, when, in
-every fiber, he had felt his own woeful humanity, an odd sleepiness
-almost overcame him.
-
-He felt much more like going to sleep than killing himself, and,
-yawning, stretching, he shivered a little from sheer fatigue.
-
-The edge of the newspaper that covered the pistol was weighted down by
-the pile of papers, and in putting out his hand for it, automatically,
-he pushed the letters aside, then, yawning again, picked them up instead
-of the pistol. He glanced over the envelops, not opening them,--the
-last hand at cards, that could hold no trumps for him. It was with as
-mechanical an interest as that of the condemned criminal who, on the way
-to the scaffold, turns his head to look at some unfamiliar sight. But at
-the last letter he paused. The post-mark was Scotch; the writing was
-Eppie's.
-
-He might have considered at that moment that the shock he felt was a
-warning that life was by no means done with him, and that his way of
-safety lay in swift retreat.
-
-But after the wrench of agony and the succeeding sliding languor, he did
-not consider anything. It was like a purely physical sensation, what he
-felt, as he held the letter and looked at Eppie's writing. Soft,
-recurrent thrills went through him, as though a living, vibrating thing
-were in his hands. Eppie; Kirklands; the heather under a summer sky. Was
-it desire, or a will-less drifting with a new current that the new
-vision brought? He could not have told.
-
-He opened the letter and read Eppie's matter-of-fact yet delicate
-sympathy.
-
-He must be worn out. She begged him to remember his promise and to come
-to them at once.
-
-At once, thought Gavan. It must be that, indeed, or not at all. He
-glanced at the clock. He could really go at once. He could catch the
-London train, the night express for Scotland, and he could be at
-Kirklands at noon next day. He rose and rang the bell, looking out at
-the darker pink of the sky, where the rooks no longer wheeled, until
-Howson appeared.
-
-"I'm going to Scotland to-night, at once." He found himself repeating
-the summons of the letter. "Pack up my things. Order the trap."
-
-Howson showed no surprise. A flight from the house of death was only
-natural.
-
-Gavan, when he was gone, went to the table and closed the box of pistols
-with a short, decisive snap--a decision in sharp contrast to the mist in
-which his mind was steeped.
-
-The peace the pistols promised, the peace of the northern sky and the
-heather: why did he choose the latter? But then he did not choose.
-Something had chosen for him. Something had called him back. Was it that
-he was too weary to resist? or did all his strength consist in yielding?
-He could not have told. Let the play go on. Its next act would be sweet
-to watch. Of that he was sure.
-
-
-
-
-PART III
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-The moor was like an amethyst under a radiant August sky, and the air,
-with its harmony of wind and sunlight, was like music.
-
-Eppie walked beside him and Peter trotted before. The forms were
-changed, but it might almost have been little Eppie, the boy Gavan, and
-Robbie himself who went together through the heather. The form was
-changed, but the sense of saneness so strong that it would have seemed
-perfectly natural to pass an arm about a child Eppie's neck and to talk
-of the morning's reading in the Odyssey.
-
-Never had the feeling of reality been so vague or the dream sense been
-so beautiful. His instinctive choice of this peace, instead of the
-other, had been altogether justified. It was all like a delightful game
-they had agreed to play, and the only rule of the game was to take each
-other's illusions for granted and, in so doing, to put them altogether
-aside.
-
-It was as if they went in a dream that tallied while, outside their
-dream, the sad life of waking slept. It was all limpid, all effortless,
-all clear sunlight and clear wind: limpid, like a happy dream, yet
-deliciously muddled too, as a happy dream is often muddled, with its
-mazed consciousness that, since it is a dream, ordinary impossibilities
-may become quite possible, that one only has to direct a little the
-turnings of the fairy-tale to have them lead one where one will, and yet
-that to all strange happenings there hovers a background of
-contradiction that makes them the more of an enchanted perplexity.
-
-In the old white house the general and Miss Barbara would soon be
-expecting them back to tea, both older, both vaguer, both, to Gavan's
-appreciation, more and more the tapestried figures, the background to
-the young life that still moved, felt, thought in the foreground until
-it, too, should sink and fade into a tapestry for other dramas, other
-fairy-tales.
-
-The general retold his favorite anecdotes with shorter intervals between
-the tellings; cared more openly, with an innocent greediness, about the
-exactitudes of his diet; was content to sit idly with an unremembering,
-indifferent benignancy of gaze. All the sturdier significances of life
-were fast slipping from him, all the old martial activities; it was like
-seeing the undressing of a child, the laying aside of the toy trumpet
-and the soldier's kilt preparatory to bed. Miss Barbara was sweeter than
-ever--a sweetness even less touched with variations than last year. And
-she was sillier, poor old darling; her laugh had in it at moments the
-tinkling, feeble foolishness of age.
-
-Gavan saw it all imperturbably--how, in boyhood, the apprehension of it
-would have cut into him!--and it all seemed really very good--as the
-furniture to a fairy-tale; the sweet, dim, silly tapestry was part of
-the peace. How Eppie saw it he didn't know; he didn't care; and she
-seemed willing not to care, either, about what he saw or thought. Eppie
-had for him in their fairy-tale all the unexacting loveliness of summer
-nature, healing, sunny, smiling. He had been really ill, he knew that
-now, and that the peace was in part the languor of convalescence, and,
-for the sake of his recovery, she seemed to have become a part of
-nature, to ask no questions and demand no dues.
-
-To have her so near, so tender, so untroubling, was like holding in his
-hands a soft, contented wild bird. He could, he thought, have held it
-against his heart, and the heart would not have throbbed the faster.
-
-There was nothing in her now of the young Valkyrie of mists and frosts,
-shaking spears and facing tragedy with stern eyes. She threatened
-nothing. She saw no tragedy. It was all again as if, in a bigger, more
-beautiful way, she gave him milk to drink from a silver cup. Together
-they drank, no potion, no enchanted, perilous potion, but, from the cup
-of innocent summer days, the long, sweet dream of an Eternal Now.
-
-To-day, for the first time, the hint of a cloud had crept into the sky.
-
-"And to-morrow, Eppie, ends our tete-a-tete," he said. "Or will Grainger
-make as little of a third as the general and Miss Barbara?"
-
-"He sha'n't spoil things, if that's what you mean," said Eppie.
-
-She wore a white dress and a white hat wreathed with green; the emerald
-drops trembled in the shadow of her hair. She made him think of some
-wandering princess in an Irish legend, with the white and green and the
-tranquil shining of her eyes.
-
-"Not our things, perhaps; but can't he interfere with them? He will want
-to talk with you about all the things we go on so happily without
-talking of."
-
-"I'll talk to him and go on happily with you."
-
-It was almost on his lips to ask her if she could marry Grainger and
-still go on happily, like this, with him, Gavan. That it should have
-seemed possible to ask it showed how far into fairy-land they had
-wandered; but it was one of the turnings that one didn't choose to take;
-one was warned in one's sleep of lurking dangers on that road. It might
-lead one straight out of fairy-land, straight into uncomfortable waking.
-
-"How happily we do go on, Eppie," was what he did choose to say. "More
-happily than ever before. What a contrast this--to East London."
-
-She glanced at him. "And to Surrey."
-
-"And to Surrey," he accepted.
-
-"Surrey was worse than East London," she said.
-
-"I didn't know how much of a strain it had been until I got away from
-it."
-
-"One saw it all in your face."
-
-"'One' meaning a clever Eppie, I suppose. But, yes, I had a bad moment
-there."
-
-The memory of that heave of sod had no place in fairy-land, even less
-place than the forecast of an Eppie married to Jim Grainger, and he
-didn't let his thought dwell on it even when he owned to the bad
-moment, and he was thinking, really with amusement over her
-unconsciousness, of the two means of escape from it that he had found to
-his hand,--the pistol and her letter,--when she took up his words with a
-quiet, "Yes, I knew you had."
-
-"Knew that I had had a strain, you mean?"
-
-"No, had a bad moment," she answered.
-
-"You saw it in my face?"
-
-"No. I knew. Before I saw you."
-
-He smiled at her. "You have a clairvoyant streak in your Scotch blood?"
-
-She smiled back. "Probably. I knew, you see."
-
-Her assurance, with its calm over what it knew, really puzzled him.
-
-"Well, what did you know?"
-
-She had kept on quietly smiling while she looked at him, and, though she
-now became grave, it was not as if for pain but for thankfulness. "It
-was in the evening, the day after I wrote to you, the day your father
-was buried. I went to my room to dress for dinner, my room next yours,
-you know. And I was looking out,--at the pine-tree, the summer-house
-where we played, and, in especial, I remember, at the white roses that I
-could smell in the evening so distinctly,--when I knew, or saw, I don't
-know which, that you were in great suffering. It was most of all as if I
-were in you, feeling it myself, rather than seeing or knowing. Then,"
-her voice went on in its unshaken quiet, "I did seem to see--a grave;
-not your father's grave. You were seeing it, too,--a green grave. And
-then I came back into myself and knew. You were in some way,--going. I
-stood there and looked at the roses and seemed only to wait intensely,
-to watch intensely. And after that came a great calm, and I knew that
-you were not going."
-
-She quietly looked at him again,--her eyes had not been on him while she
-spoke,--and, though he had paled a little, he looked as quietly back.
-
-He found himself accepting, almost as a matter of course, this deep,
-subconscious bond between them.
-
-But in another moment, another realization came. He took her hand and
-raised it to his lips.
-
-"I always make you suffer."
-
-"No," she answered, though she, now, was a little pale, "I didn't
-suffer. I was beyond, above all that. Whatever happened, we were really
-safe. That was another thing I knew."
-
-He relinquished the kissed hand. "Dear Eppie, dear, dear Eppie, I am
-glad that this happened."
-
-It had been, perhaps, to keep the dream safely around them that she had
-shown him only the calm; for now she asked, and he felt the echo of that
-suffering--that shared suffering--in it, "You had, then, chosen to go?"
-
-Somehow he knew that they were safe in the littler sense, that she would
-keep the dream unawakened, even if they spoke of the outside life.
-"Yes," he said, "you saw what was happening to me, Eppie. I had chosen
-to go. But your letter came, and, instead, I chose to come to you."
-
-She asked no further question, walking beside him with all her
-tranquillity.
-
-But, to her, it was not in a second childhood, not in a fairy-tale, that
-they went. She was tranquil, for him; a child, for him; healing,
-unexacting nature, for him. But she knew she had not needed his
-admission to know it, that it was life and death that went together.
-
-Sometimes, as they walked, the whole glory of the day melted into a
-phantasmagoria, unreal, specious, beside the intense reality of their
-unspoken thoughts, his thoughts and hers; those thoughts that left them
-only this little strip of fairy-land where they could meet in peace.
-Thoughts only, not dislikes, not indifferences, sundered them. Their
-natures, through all nature's gamut, chimed; they looked upon each
-other--when in fairy-land--with eyes of love. But above this accord was
-a region where her human breath froze in an icy airlessness, where her
-human flesh shattered itself against ghastly precipices. To see those
-thoughts of Gavan's was like having the lunar landscape suddenly glare
-at one through a telescope. His thoughts and hers were as real as life
-and death; they alone were real; only--and this was why, under its
-burden, Eppie's heart throbbed more deeply, more strongly,--only, life
-conquered death. No, more still,--for so the strange evening vision had
-borne its speechless, sightless witness,--life had already conquered
-death. She had not needed him to tell her that, either.
-
-And these days were life; not the dream he thought them, not the
-fairy-tale, but balmy dawn stealing in, fresh, revivifying, upon his
-long, arctic night; the flush of spring over the lunar landscape. So
-she saw it with her eyes of faith.
-
-The mother was strong in her. She could bide her time. She could see
-death near him and, so that he should not see her fear, smile at him.
-She could play games with him, and wait.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Jim Grainger arrived that evening, and Gavan was able to observe, at the
-closest sort of quarters, his quondam rival.
-
-His condition was so obvious that its very indifference to observation
-took everybody into its confidence. Nobody counted with Mr. Grainger
-except his cousin, and since he held open before her eyes--with angry
-constancy, gloomy patience--the page of his devotion, the rest of the
-company were almost forced to read with her. One couldn't see Mr.
-Grainger without seeing that page.
-
-He held it open, but the period of construing had evidently passed. All
-that there was to understand she understood long since, so that he was,
-for the most part, silent.
-
-In Eppie's presence he would wander aimlessly about, look with an oddly
-irate, unseeing eye at books or pictures, and fling himself into deep
-chairs, where he sat, his arms folded in a sort of clutch, his head bent
-forward, gazing at her with an air of dogged, somber resolve.
-
-He was not by nature so taciturn. It was amusing to see the vehemence of
-reaction that would overtake him in the smoking-room, where his
-volubility became almost as overbearing and oppressive as his silences.
-
-He was a man at once impatient and self-controlled. His face was all
-made up of short, resolute lines. His nose, chopped off at the tip; his
-lips, curled yet compressed; the energetic modeling of his brows with
-their muscular protuberances; the clefted chin; the crest of chestnut
-hair,--all expressed a wilful abruptness, an arrested force, the more
-vehement for its repression.
-
-And at present his appearance accurately expressed him as a determined
-but exasperated lover.
-
-"Of course," Miss Barbara said, in whispered confidence to Gavan,
-mingled pity and reprobation in her voice, "as her cousin he comes when
-he wishes to do so. But she has refused him twice already--he told me so
-himself; and, simply, he will not accept it. He only spoke of it once,
-and it was quite distressing. It really grieved me to hear him. He said
-that he would hang on till one or the other of them was dead."
-Grainger's words in Miss Barbara's voice were the more pathetic for
-their incongruity.
-
-"And you don't think she will have him,--if he does hang on?" Gavan
-asked.
-
-Miss Barbara glanced at him with a soft, scared look, as though his
-easy, colloquial question had turned a tawdry light on some tender,
-twilight dreaming of her own.
-
-He had wondered, anew of late, what Miss Barbara did think about him and
-Eppie, and what she had thought he now saw in her eyes, that showed
-their little shock, as at some rather graceless piece of pretence. He
-was quite willing that she should think him pretending, and quite
-willing that she should place him in Grainger's hopeless category, if
-future events would be most easily so interpreted for her; so that he
-remained silent, as if over his relief, when she assured him, "Oh, I am
-sure not. Eppie does not change her mind."
-
-Grainger's presence, for all its ineffectuality, thus witnessed to by
-Miss Barbara, was as menacing to peace and sunshine as a huge
-thunder-cloud that suddenly heaves itself up from the horizon and hangs
-over a darkened landscape. But Eppie ignored the thunder-cloud; and,
-hanging over fairy-land, it became as merely decorative as an enchanted
-giant tethered at a safe distance and almost amusing in his huge
-helplessness.
-
-Eppie continued to give most of her time to Gavan, coloring her manner
-with something of a hospital nurse's air of devotion to an obvious duty,
-and leaving Grainger largely to the general's care while she and Gavan
-sat reading for hours in the shade of the birch-woods.
-
-Grainger often came upon them so; Eppie in her white dress, her hat cast
-aside, a book open upon her knees, and Gavan, in his white flannels,
-lying beside her, frail and emaciated, not looking at her,--Grainger
-seldom saw him look at her,--but down at the heather that he softly
-pulled and wrenched at. They were as beautiful, seen thus together, as
-any fairy-tale couple; flakes of gold wavering over their whiteness,
-the golden day all about their illumined shade, and rivulets from the
-sea of purple that surrounded them running in among the birches, making
-purple pools and eddies.
-
-Very beautiful, very strange, very pathetic, with all their serenity;
-even the unimaginative Grainger so felt them when, emerging from the
-gold and purple, he would pause before them, swinging his stick and
-eying them oddly, like people in a fairy-tale upon whom some strange
-enchantment rested. One might imagine--but Grainger's imagination never
-took him so far--that they would always sit there among the birches,
-spellbound in their peace, their smiling, magic peace.
-
-"Come and listen to Faust, Jim. We are polishing up our German," Eppie
-would cheerfully suggest; but Grainger, remarking that he had none to
-polish, would pass on, carrying the memory of Gavan's impassive, upward
-glance at him and the meaning in Eppie's eyes--eyes in which, yes, he
-was sure of it, and it was there he felt the pathos, some consciousness
-seemed at once to hide from and to challenge him.
-
-"Is he ill, your young Palairet?" he asked her one day, when they were
-alone together in the library. His rare references to his own emotions
-made the old, cousinly intimacy a frequent meeting-ground.
-
-He noticed that a faint color drifted into Eppie's cheek when he named
-Gavan.
-
-"He is as old as you are, Jim," she remarked.
-
-"He looks like a person to be taken care of, all the same."
-
-"He has been ill. He took care of some one else, as it happens. He
-nursed his father for months."
-
-"Um," Grainger gave an inarticulate grunt, "just about what he's fit
-for, isn't it? to help dying people out of the world."
-
-Eppie received this in silence, and he went on: "He looks rather like a
-priest, or a poet--something decorative and useless."
-
-"Would you call Buddha decorative and useless?"
-
-"After all, Palairet isn't a Hindoo. One expects something more normal
-from a white man."
-
-His odd penetration was hurting her, but she laughed at his complacent
-Anglo-Saxondom. "If you want a white man, what do you make of the one
-who wrote the Imitation?"
-
-"Make of him? Nothing. Nor any one else, I fancy. What does your young
-Palairet do?" Grainger brought the subject firmly back from her
-digression.
-
-Eppie was sitting in the window-seat, and, leaning her head back, framed
-in an arabesque of creepers, she now owned, after a little pause, and as
-if with a weariness of evasion she was willing to let him see as she
-did: "Nothing, really."
-
-"Does he care about anything?" Grainger placed himself opposite her,
-folding his arms with an air of determined inquiry.
-
-And again Eppie owned, "He believes in nothing, so how can he care?"
-
-"Believes in nothing? What do you mean by that?"
-
-"Well," with a real sense of amusement over the inner icy weight, she
-was ready to put it in its crudest, most inclusive terms, "he doesn't
-believe in immortality."
-
-Grainger stared, taken aback by the ingenuous avowal.
-
-"Immortality? No more do I," he retorted.
-
-"Oh, yes, you do," said Eppie, looking not at him but out at the summer
-sky. "You believe in life and so you do believe in immortality, even
-though you don't know that you do. You are, like most energetic people,
-too much preoccupied with living to know what your life means, that's
-all."
-
-"My dear child,"--Grainger was fond of this form of appellation, an
-outlet for the pent-up forces of his baffled tenderness,--"any one who
-is alive finds life worth while without a Paradise to complete it, and
-any one who isn't a coward doesn't turn from it because it's also
-unhappy."
-
-"If you think that Gavan does that you mistake the very essence of his
-skepticism, or, if you like to call it so, of his faith. It's not
-because he finds it unhappy that he turns from it, but because he finds
-it meaningless."
-
-"Meaningless?--a place where one can work, achieve, love, suffer?"
-
-Grainger jerked out the words from an underlying growl of protest.
-
-Eppie now looked from the sky to him, her unconscious ally. "Dear old
-Jim, I like to hear you. You've got it, all. Every word you say implies
-immortality. It's all a question of being conscious of one's real needs
-and then of trusting them."
-
-"Life, here, now, could satisfy my needs," he said.
-
-She kept her eyes on his, at this, for a grave moment, letting it have
-its full stress as she took it up with, "Could it? With death at the end
-of it?" and without waiting for his answer she passed from the personal
-moment. "You said that life was worth while, and you meant, I suppose,
-that it was worth while because we were capable of making it good rather
-than evil."
-
-"Well, of course," said Grainger.
-
-"And a real choice between good and evil is only possible to a real
-identity, you'll own?"
-
-"If you are going to talk metaphysics I'll cut and run, I warn you.
-Socratic methods of tripping one up always infuriate me."
-
-"I'm only trying to talk common-sense."
-
-"Well, go on. I agree to what you say of a real identity. We've that, of
-course."
-
-"Well, then, can an identity destroyed at death by the destruction of
-the body be called real? It can't, Jim. It's either only a result of the
-body, a merely materialistic phenomenon, or else it is a transient,
-unreal aspect of some supremely real World-Self and its good and its
-evil just as fated by that Self's way of thinking it as the color of its
-hair and eyes is fated by nature. And if that were so the sense of
-freedom, of identity, that gives us our only sanction for goodness,
-truth, and worth, would be a mere illusion."
-
-Her earnestness, as she worked it out for him, held his eyes more than
-her words his thoughts. He was observing her with such a softening of
-expression as rarely showed itself on his virile countenance.
-
-"You've thought it all out, haven't you?" he said.
-
-"I've tried to. Knowing Gavan has made me. It has converted me," she
-smiled.
-
-"So that's your conversion."
-
-"Oh, more than that. I know that I'm _in_ life; _for_ it, and that's
-more than all such reasoning."
-
-"And you believe that you'll go on forever as you are now," he said. His
-eyes dwelt on her: "Young and beautiful."
-
-"_Forever_; what queer words we must use to try to express it. We are in
-Forever now. It's just that one casts in one's lot, open-eyed, with
-life."
-
-"And has Palairet cast in his with death?"
-
-Again the change of color was in her cheek, but it was to pallor now.
-
-"He thinks so."
-
-"And he doesn't frighten you?"
-
-She armed herself to smile over Gavan's old question. "Why should he?"
-
-Grainger left her for some moments of aimless, silent wandering. He came
-back and paused again before her. He did not answer her.
-
-"I throw in my lot with life, too, Eppie," he said, "and I ask no more
-of it than the here and the now of our human affair. But that I do ask
-with all my might, and if might can give it to me, I'll get it."
-
-She looked up at him gravely, without challenge, with a sympathy too
-deep for pity.
-
-"At all events," he added slowly, "at all events, in so far, our lots
-are cast together."
-
-"Yes," she assented.
-
-His eyes studied hers; his keen mind questioned itself: Could a woman
-look so steadily, with such a clear, untroubled sympathy, upon such a
-love as his, were there no great emotion within her, controlling her,
-absorbing her, making her indifferent to all lesser appeals? Had this
-negative, this aimless, this ambiguous man, captured, without any fight
-for it, her strong, her reckless heart? So he questioned, while Eppie
-still answered his gaze with eyes that showed him nothing but their
-grave, deep friendship.
-
-"So it's a contest between life and death?" he said at last.
-
-"Between me and Gavan you mean?"
-
-The shield of their personal question had dropped from her again, and
-the quick flush was in her cheek.
-
-"Oh, I come into it, too," he ventured.
-
-"You don't, in any way, depend on it, Jim."
-
-"So you say." His eyes still mercilessly perused her. "That remains to
-be seen. If you lose, perhaps I shall come into it."
-
-Eppie found no answer.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-It was night, and Eppie, Gavan, and Jim Grainger were on the lawn before
-the house waiting for a display of fireworks.
-
-Grainger was feeling sore for his own shutting-out from the happy
-child-world of games and confidences that the other two inhabited, for
-it had been to Gavan that she had spoken of her love for fireworks and
-he who had at once sent for them.
-
-Grainger was sore and his heart heavy, and not only it seemed to him, on
-his own account. Since the encounter in the library there had been a
-veil between him and Eppie, and through it he seemed to see her face as
-waiting the oncoming of some unknown fate. Grainger could not feel that
-fate, whatever the form it took, as a happy one.
-
-She stood between them now, in her white dress, wrapped around with a
-long, white Chinese shawl, and the light from the open window behind
-them fell upon her hair, her neck, her shoulders, and the shawl's soft,
-thick embroideries that were like frozen milk.
-
-Gavan and Grainger leaned against the deep creepers of the old walls,
-Gavan's cigarette a steady little point of light, the glow of
-Grainger's pipe, as he puffed, coming and going in sharp pulses of
-color.
-
-Aunt Barbara sat within at the open window, and beyond the gates, at the
-edge of the moor, the general and the gardener, dark figures fitfully
-revealed by the light of lanterns, superintended the preparations.
-
-The moment was like that in which one watches a poised orchestra, in
-which one waits, tense and expectant, for the fall of the conductor's
-baton and for the first, sweeping note.
-
-It seemed to break upon the stillness, sound made visible, when the
-herald rocket soared up from the dark earth, up to the sky of stars.
-
-Bizarre, exquisite, glorious, it caught one's breath with the swiftness,
-the strength, the shining, of its long, exultant flight; its languor of
-attainment; its curve and droop; the soft shock of its blossoming into
-an unearthly metamorphosis of splendor far and high on the zenith.
-
-The note was struck and after it the symphony followed.
-
-Like a ravished Ganymede, the sense of sight soared amazed among
-dazzling ecstasies of light and movement.
-
-Thin ribbons of fire streaked the sky; radiant sheaves showered drops of
-multitudinous gold; fierce constellations of color whirled themselves to
-stillness on the night's solemn permanence; a rain of stars drifted
-wonderfully, with the softness of falling snow, down gulfs of space. And
-then again the rockets, strong, suave, swift, and their blossoming
-lassitude.
-
-Eppie gazed, silent and motionless, her uplifted profile like a child's
-in its astonished joy. Once or twice she looked round at Gavan and at
-Grainger,--always first at Gavan,--smiling, and speechless with delight.
-Her folded arms had dropped to her sides and the shawl fell straightly
-from her shoulders. She made one think of some young knight, transfixed
-before a heavenly vision, a benediction of revealed beauty. The trivial
-occasion lent itself to splendid analogies. The strange light from above
-bathed her from head to foot in soft, intermittent, heavenly color.
-
-Suddenly, in darkness, Grainger seized her hand. She had hardly felt the
-pressure, short, sharp with all the exasperation of his worship, before
-it was gone.
-
-She did not turn to look at him. More than the unjustifiableness of the
-action, its unexpectedness, she felt a pain, a perplexity, as for
-something mocking, incongruous. And as if in instinctive seeking she
-turned her eyes on Gavan and found that he was looking at her.
-
-Was it, then, her eyes, seeking and perplexed, that compelled him; was
-it his own enfranchised impulse; was it only a continuation of
-fairy-land fitness, the child instinct of sharing in a unison of touch a
-mutual wonder? In the fringes of her shawl his hand sought and found her
-hand. Another rose of joy had expanded on the sky; and they stood so,
-hand in hand, looking up.
-
-Eppie looked up steadily; but now the outer vision was but a dim symbol,
-a reflection, vaguely seen, of the inner vision that, in a miracle of
-accomplished growth, broke upon her. She did not think or know. Her
-heart seemed to dilate, to breathe itself away in long throbs, that
-worshiped, that trembled, that prayed. Her strength was turned to
-weakness and her weakness rose to strength, and, as she looked up at the
-sky, the stars, the dream-like constellations that bloomed and drifted
-away, universes made and unmade on the void, her mind, her heart, her
-spirit were all one prayer and its strength and its humility were one.
-
-She had known that she loved him, but not till now that she loved him
-with a depth that passed beyond knowledge; she had known that he loved
-her, but not till now had she felt that all that lived in him was hers
-forever. His voice, his eyes, might hide, might deny, but the seeking,
-instinctive hand confessed, dumbly, to all.
-
-She had drawn him to her by her will; she had held him back from death
-by her love. His beloved hand clasped hers; she would never let him go.
-
-Looking up at the night, the stars, holding his hand, she gave herself
-to the new life, to all that it might mean of woe and tragedy. Let it
-lead her where it would, she was beside him forever.
-
-Yet, though her spirit held the sky, the stars, her heart, suffocated
-and appalled with love, seemed to lie at his feet, and the inarticulate
-prayer, running through all, said only, over and over, "O God, God."
-
-Meanwhile Grainger leaned against the wall, puffing doggedly at his
-pipe, unrepentant and unsatisfied.
-
-"There, that is the end," Miss Barbara sighed. "How very, very pretty.
-But they have made me quite sleepy."
-
-A few fumes still smoldered at the edge of the moor, and the night, like
-an obscure ocean, was engulfing the lights, the movements; after the
-radiance the darkness was thick, oppressive.
-
-Eppie knew, as Gavan released her hand, that his eyes again sought hers,
-but she would not look at him. What could they say, here and now?
-
-He went on into the house, and Grainger, lingering outside, detained her
-on the steps. "You forgive me?" he said.
-
-She had almost forgotten for what, but fixing her eyes and thoughts upon
-him, she said, "Yes, Jim, of course."
-
-"I couldn't stand it,--you were so lovely," said Grainger; "I didn't
-know that I was such a sentimental brute. But I had no business not to
-stand it. It's my business in life to stand it."
-
-"I am so sorry, Jim," Eppie murmured. "You know, I can do
-nothing--except forgive you."
-
-"I am not ungrateful. I know how good it is of you to put up with me. Do
-I bother you too much, Eppie?"
-
-"No, Jim dear; you don't."
-
-He stood aside for her to enter the house. He saw that, with all her
-effort to be kind, her thought passed from him. Pausing to knock the
-ashes of his pipe against the wall, he softly murmured, "Damn," before
-following her into the house.
-
-Eppie, in her own room, put out her candle and went to the window.
-
-Leaning out, she could see the soft maze of tree-tops emerge from the
-dim abyss beneath. The boughs of the pine-tree made the starlit sky pale
-with their blackness.
-
-This was the window where she and Gavan had stood on the morning of
-Robbie's death. Here Gavan had shuddered, sobbing, in her arms. He had
-suffered, he had been able to love and suffer then.
-
-The long past went before her, this purpose in it all, her purpose; in
-all the young, unconscious beginnings, in the reunion, in her growing
-consciousness of something to oppose, to conquer, to save. And to-night
-had consecrated her to that sacred trust. What lived in him was hers.
-But could she keep him in life? The memory, a dark shadow, of the deep
-indifference that she had seen in his contemplative eyes went with a
-chill over her.
-
-Leaning out, she conquered her own deep fear, looking up at the stars
-and still praying, "O God, God."
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-She could not read his face next day. It showed a change, but the
-significance of the change was hidden from her. He knew that she knew;
-was that it? or did he think that they could still pretend at the
-unchanged fairy-tale where one clasped hands simply, like children? Or
-did he trust her to spare them both, now that she knew?
-
-When they were alone, this, more than all, the pale, jaded face seemed
-to tell her, it would be able to hide nothing; but its strength was in
-evasion; he would not be alone with her.
-
-All the morning he spent with the general and in the afternoon he went
-away, a book under his arm, down to the burn.
-
-From the library window Eppie watched him go. She could see for a long
-time the flicker of his white figure among the distant birches.
-
-She sat in a low chair in the deep embrasure of the window-seat, silent
-and motionless. She felt, after the night's revelation, an apathy,
-mental and physical; a willing pause; a lull of the spirit, that rested
-in its accepted fate, should it be joyful or tragic. The very fact of
-such acceptance partook of both tragedy and joy.
-
-Grainger was with her, walking, as usual, up and down the room, glancing
-at her as he passed and repassed.
-
-He felt, all about him, within and without, the pressure of some crisis;
-and his ignorance, his intuitions, struggling within him, made a
-consciousness, oddly mingled, of sharp pain, deep dread, and,
-superficially, a suffocating irritation, continually rising and
-continually repressed.
-
-Eppie's aspect intensified the mingled consciousness. Her figure, in its
-thin dress of black and white, showed lassitude. With her head thrown
-back against the chair, her hands, long, white, inert, lying along the
-chair-arms, she looked out from the cool shadow of the room at the day,
-fierce in its blue and gold, its sunlight and its wind.
-
-He had seen Gavan pass, so strangely alone; he had watched her watching
-of him. She was languid; but she was patient, she was strong. That was
-part of the suffocation, that such strength, such patience, should be
-devoted to ends so undeserving. More than by mere jealousy, though that
-seethed in him, he was oppressed by the bitter sense of waste, of the
-futile spending of noble capacity; for, more than all, she was piteous;
-there came the part of pain and dread, the presage of doom that weighed
-on his heart.
-
-In her still figure, her steady look out at the empty, splendid vault of
-blue, the monotonous purple stretches of the moor, his unesthetic,
-accurate mind felt, with the sharp intuition that carried him so much
-further than any conscious appreciation, a symbol of the human soul
-contemplating the ominous enigma of its destiny. She made him dimly
-think of some old picture he had seen, a saint, courageous, calm,
-enraptured, in the luminous pause before a dark, accepted martyrdom. He
-did violence to the simile, shaking it off vehemently, with a clutch at
-the sane impatience of silly fancies.
-
-Stopping abruptly before her, though hardly knowing for what end, he
-found himself saying, and the decisive words, as he heard, rather than
-thought them, had indeed the effect of shattering foolish visions, "I
-shall go to-day, Eppie."
-
-In seeing her startled, pained, expostulatory, he saw her again, very
-sanely, as an unfortunate woman bent on doing for herself and unable to
-hide her situation from his keen-sightedness. For really he didn't know
-whether a hopeless love-affair or a hopeless marriage would the more
-completely "do" for her.
-
-"My dear Jim, why to-day?" Eppie asked in a tone of kindest protest.
-
-He was glad to have drawn her down to the solid ground of his own
-grievances. She hurt him less there.
-
-"Why not to-day?" he retorted.
-
-She replied that, if for no better reason, the weather was too lovely
-not to be enjoyed by them all together.
-
-"Thanks, but I don't care about the weather. Nor do I care," Grainger
-went on, taking the sorry comfort that his own mere ill-temper afforded
-him, "to watch other people's enjoyment--of more than weather. I'm not
-made of such selfless stuff as that."
-
-She understood, of course; perhaps she had all along understood what he
-was feeling more clearly than clumsy he had, and she met all that was
-beneath the mannerless words with her air of sad kindliness.
-
-"You can share it, Jim."
-
-"No, I can't share it. I share nothing--except the weather."
-
-She murmured, as she had the night before, that she was sorry, adding
-that she must have failed; but he interrupted her with: "It's not that.
-You are all right. You give me all you can. It's merely that you can't
-give me anything I want. I came to see if there was any chance for me,
-and all I do see is that I may as well be off. I do myself no good by
-staying on,--harm, rather; you may begin to resent my sulkiness and my
-boorish relapses from even rudimentary good manners."
-
-"I have resented nothing, Jim. I can't imagine ever resenting
-anything--from you."
-
-"Ah, that's just the worst of it," Grainger muttered.
-
-"For your own sake," Eppie went on, "you are perhaps wise to go. I own
-that I can't see what happiness you can find in being with me, while you
-feel as you do."
-
-"While I feel as I do," he repeated, not ironically, but as if weighing
-the words in a sort of wonder. "That 'while' is funny, Eppie. You are
-right. I don't find happiness, and I came to seek it." The "while" had
-cut deep. He paused, then added, eying her, "So I'll go, and leave
-Palairet to find the happiness."
-
-Eppie was silent. Paler than before, her eyes dropped, she seemed to
-accept with a helpless magnanimity whatever he might choose to say. "You
-find me impertinent,"--Grainger, standing before her, clutched his arms
-across his chest and put his own thought of himself into the
-words,--"brutal."
-
-Without looking up at him she answered: "I am so fond of you, so near
-you, that I suppose I give you the right."
-
-The patient words, so unlike Eppie in their patience, the downcast eyes,
-were a torch to his exasperation.
-
-"I can take it, then--the right?" he said. "I am near enough to say the
-truth and to ask it, Eppie?"
-
-She rose and walked away from him.
-
-With the sense of hot pursuit that sprang up in him he felt himself as
-ruthless as a boy, pushing through the thickets of reticence, through
-the very supplications of generosity, to the nest of her secret. It was
-not joy he sought, but his own pain, and to see it clearly, finally. He
-must see it. And when Eppie, her back to him, leaning her arm on the
-mantel and looking down into the empty cavern of the great
-chimney-place, answered, accepting all his implications, "Gavan hasn't
-found any happiness," he said, "He finds all that he asks for."
-
-It was as if he had wrenched away the last bough from the nest, and the
-words gave him, with their breathless determination, an ugly feeling of
-cruel, breaking malignity.
-
-Eppie's face was still turned from him so that he could not see how she
-bore the rifling, but in the same dulled and gentle voice she answered,
-"He doesn't ask what you do."
-
-At that Grainger's deepest resentment broke out.
-
-"Doesn't ask your love? No, I suppose not. The man's a mollusk,--a
-wretched, diseased creature."
-
-He had struck at last a flash from her persistent gentleness. She faced
-him, and he saw that she tried to smile over deep anger.
-
-"You say that because Gavan is not in love with me? It is a sick fancy
-that sees every man not in love with me as sick too."
-
-She had taken up a weapon at last, she really challenged him; and he
-felt, full on that quivering nerve of dread, that she defended at once
-herself and the man she loved from her own and from his unveiling.
-
-It made a sort of rage rise in him.
-
-"A man who cares for you,--a man who depends on you,--as he does,--a man
-whom you care for,--so much,--is a bloodless vampire if he
-doesn't--respond."
-
-When he had driven the knife in like that, straight up to the hilt, he
-hardly knew whether his anger or his adoration were the greater; for, as
-if over a disabling wound, she bent her head in utter surrender, quite
-still for a moment, and then saying only, while she looked at him as if
-more sorry for him than for herself, "You hurt me, Jim."
-
-Tears of fury stood in his eyes. "You hurt, too. My love for you--a
-disease. _My_ love, Eppie!"
-
-"Forgive me."
-
-"Forgive you! I worship everything you say or do!"
-
-"It was that it hurt too much to see--what you did, with your eyes."
-
-"Then--then--you don't deny it,--if I have eyes to see, he too must
-see--how much you care?"
-
-"I don't deny it."
-
-"And if I have courage enough to ask it, you have courage enough to
-answer me? You love him, Eppie?"
-
-He had come to her, his eyes threatening her, beseeching her, adoring
-her, all at once. She saw it all--all that he felt, and the furious pity
-that was deeper than his own deep pain. She could resent nothing, deny
-nothing. As she had said, he was so near.
-
-She put her hand on his shoulder, keeping him from her, yet accepting
-him as near, and then all that she found to say--but it was in a voice
-that brought a rapt pallor to his face--was, "Dear Jim."
-
-He understood her--all that she accepted, all that she avowed. Her hand
-was that of a comrade in misfortune. She forgave brutality from a heart
-as stricken as his. She forgave even his cruelly clear seeing of her own
-desperate case--a seeing that had revealed to her that it was indeed
-very desperate. But if she too was stricken, she too was resolute, and
-she could do no more for him than look with him at the truth. Their
-eyes recognized so many likenesses in each other.
-
-He took the hand at last in both his own, looking down at it, pressing
-it hard.
-
-"Poor darling," he said.
-
-"No, Jim."
-
-"Yes; even if he loves you."
-
-"Even if he doesn't love me--and he does love me in a strange, unwilling
-way; but even if he doesn't love me,--as you and I mean love,--I am not
-piteous."
-
-"Even if he loves you, you are piteous." All his savagery had fallen
-from him. His quiet was like the slow dropping of tears.
-
-"No, Jim. There is the joy of loving. You know that."
-
-"You are more piteous than I, Eppie. You, _you_, to sue to such a man.
-He is the negation of everything you mean. To live with him would be
-like fighting for breath. If you marry him,--if you bring him to
-it,--he'll suffocate you."
-
-"No, Jim," she repeated,--and now, looking up, he saw in those beloved
-eyes the deep wells of solemn joy,--"I am the stronger."
-
-"In fighting, yes, perhaps. Not in every-day, passive life. He'll kill
-you."
-
-"Even if he kills me he'll not conquer me."
-
-He shook away the transcendentalism with a gentle impatience, "Much good
-that would do to me, who would only know that you were gone. Oh,
-Eppie!--"
-
-He pressed and let fall her hand.
-
-The words of the crisis were over. Anything else would be only, as it
-were, the filling in of the grave.
-
-He had walked away from her to the window, and said presently, while he
-looked out: "And I thought that you were ambitious. I loved you for it,
-too. I didn't want a wife who would acquiesce in the common lot or make
-a virtue of incapacity. I wanted a woman who would rather fail,
-open-eyed, in a big venture than rest in security. You would have
-buckled the sword on a man and told him that he must conquer high places
-for you. You would have told him that he must crown you and make you
-shine in the world's eyes, as well as in his own. And I could do it. You
-are so worthy of all the biggest opportunities and so unfit for little
-places. It's so stupid, you know," he finished, "that you aren't in love
-with me."
-
-"It is stupid, I own it," Eppie acquiesced.
-
-He found a certain relief in following these bitterly comic aspects of
-their case and presently took it up again with: "I am so utterly the man
-for you and he is so utterly not the man. I don't mean that I'm big
-enough or enough worth your while, but at least I could give you
-something, and I could fight for you. He won't fight, for you, or for
-anything."
-
-"I shall have to do all the fighting if I get him."
-
-"You want him so that you don't mind anything else. I see that."
-
-"Exactly. For a long time I didn't know how I loved him just because I
-had always taken all that you are saying for granted, in the funniest,
-most naively conceited way; I took it for granted that I was a very big
-person and that the man I married must stand for big opportunities. Now,
-you see," she finished, "he is my big opportunity."
-
-He was accepting it all now with no protest. "Next to no money, I
-suppose?" he questioned simply.
-
-"Next to none, Jim."
-
-"It means obscurity, unless a man has ambition."
-
-"It means all the things I've always hated." She smiled a little over
-these strange old hatreds.
-
-Again a silence fell, and it was again Grainger who broke it.
-
-"You may as well let me have the last drop of gall," he said. "Own that
-if it hadn't been for him you might have come to care for me."
-
-Still he did not look at her, and it was easier, so, to let him have the
-last gulp.
-
-"I probably should."
-
-He meditated the mixed flavor for some moments; pure gall would have
-been easier to swallow. And he took refuge at last in school-boy
-phraseology. "I should like to break all the furniture in the room."
-
-"I should like to break some, too," she rejoined, but she laughed out
-suddenly at this anticlimax, and, even before the unbroken heaviness of
-the gaze now turned on her, that comic aspect of their talk, the dearly,
-sanely comic, carried her laugh into a peal as boyish as his words.
-
-Grainger still gazed at her. "I love that in you," he said--"your laugh.
-You could laugh at death."
-
-"Ah, Jim," she said, smiling on, though with the laughter tears had come
-to her eyes, "it's a good deal more difficult to laugh at life,
-sometimes. And we both have to do a lot of living before we can laugh at
-death."
-
-"A lot of living," he repeated. His stern, firm face had a queer grimace
-of pain at the prospect of it, and again she put out her hand to him.
-
-"Let me count for as much as I can, always," she said. "You will always
-count for so much with me."
-
-He had taken the hand, and he looked at her in a long silence that
-promised, accepted, everything.
-
-But an appeal, a demand, wistful yet insistent, came into his silence as
-he looked--looked at the odd, pale, dear face, the tawny, russet hair,
-the dear, deep eyes.
-
-"I'm going now," he said, holding to his breast the hand she had given
-him. "And I will ask one thing of you--a thing I've never had and never
-shall, I suppose, again."
-
-"What is it, Jim?" But before his look she almost guessed and the
-guessing made her blanch.
-
-"Let me take you in my arms and kiss you," said Grainger.
-
-"Ah, Jim!" Seeing herself as cruel, ungenerous, she yet, in a recoil of
-her whole nature, seemed to snatch from him a treasure, unclaimed, but
-no longer hers to give.
-
-Grainger eyed her. "You could. You would--if it weren't for him."
-
-"You understand that, too, Jim. I could and would."
-
-"He robs me of even that, then--your gift of courageous pity."
-
-His comprehension had arrested the recoil. And now the magnanimity she
-felt in him, the tragic force of the love he had seen barred from her
-forever, set free in her something greater than compassion and deeper
-than little loyalties, deeper than the lesser aspects of her own deep
-love. It was that love itself that seemed, with an expansion of power,
-to encircle all life, all need, all sorrow, and to find joy in
-sacrificing what was less to what was greater.
-
-He saw the change that, in its illumined tenderness, shut away his
-craving heart yet drew him near for the benison that it could grant, and
-as she said to him, "No, Jim, he shall not rob you," his arms went round
-her.
-
-She shut her eyes to the pain there must be in enduring his passion of
-gratitude; but, though he held her close, kissing her cheeks, her brow,
-her hair, it was with a surprising, an exquisite tenderness.
-
-The pain that came for her was when,--pausing to gaze long into her
-face, printing forever upon his mind the wonderful memory of what she
-could look like, for him--he kissed her lips; it came in a pang of
-personal longing; in a yearning, that rose and stifled her, for other
-arms, other kisses; and, opening her eyes, she saw, an ironic answer to
-the inner cry, Gavan's face outside, turned upon her in an instant of
-swift passing.
-
-Grainger had not seen. He did not speak another word to her. The kiss
-upon her lips had been in farewell. He had had his supreme moment. He
-let her go and left her.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-Gavan came up from the burn, restless and dissatisfied.
-
-He had wanted solitude, escape; but when he was alone, and walking
-beside the sun-dappled water, the loneliness weighed on him and he had
-seemed to himself walking with his own ghost, looking into eyes familiar
-yet alien, with curiosity and with fear. Was it he or that phantom of
-the solitude who smiled the long, still smile of mockery?
-
-How he wanted something and how he wanted not to want; to be freed from
-the intolerable stirring and striving within him, as of a maimed thing,
-with half-atrophied wings, that could never rise and fly to its goal. It
-was last night that had wakened this turmoil, and as he walked his
-thought turned and turned about those moments under the dazzling sky
-when he had found her hand in the fringes of her shawl.
-
-He knew that there had been a difference in the yielding of her hand, as
-he had known, in his own helpless stretching out for it in the darkness,
-another impulse than that of childlike tenderness. It had been as if
-some deep, primeval will beneath his own had stretched his hand out,
-searching in the dark; and with the strange blissfulness of so standing
-with her beneath the stars, there came a strange, new fear, as though he
-no longer knew himself and were become an automaton held by some
-incalculable force.
-
-Wandering through the woods in the hope of reentering nature's
-beneficent impersonality, he felt no anodynes--only that striving and
-stirring within him of maimed limbs and helpless wings.
-
-There was no refuge in nature, and there was none in himself. The
-thought of Eppie as refuge did not form itself, but it was again in
-seeking, as if through darkness for he knew not what, that he turned to
-the house. And then, on all his tangled mood, fell the vibrating shock
-of that vision at the window.
-
-With his quick looking away he did not know whether Eppie had seen him
-see. He went on, knowing nothing definite, until, suddenly, as if some
-fierce beast had seized him, he found himself struggling, choking, torn
-by a hideous, elemental jealousy.
-
-He stood still in the afternoon sunlight as he became aware of this
-phenomenon in himself, his hands involuntarily clenched, staring as if
-at a palpable enemy.
-
-The savage, rudimentary man had sprung up in him. He hated Grainger. He
-longed to beat him into the earth, to crush the breath out of him; and
-for a moment, most horrible of all,--a moment that seemed to set fangs
-in his throat,--he could not tell whether he more hated Eppie or more
-desired to tear her from the rival, to seize her and bear her away, with
-a passion untouched by any glamour.
-
-And Gavan was conscious, through it all, that only inhuman heights made
-possible such crumbling, crashing falls into savagedom; conscious that
-Grainger could not have known such thoughts. They were as ugly as those
-of a Saint Anthony. Wholesome manhood would recoil from their
-debasement. He, too, recoiled, but the debasement was within him, he
-could not flee from it. The moment of realization, helpless realization,
-was long. Ultra-civilization stood and watched barbarian hordes swarm
-over its devastated ruins. Then, with a feeling of horrible shame, a
-shame that was almost a nausea, he went on into the house.
-
-In his own room he sat down near the window, took his head in his hands,
-the gesture adding poignancy to his humiliation, and gazed at the truth.
-He had stripped himself of all illusion only to make himself the more
-helpless before its lowest forms. More than the realized love was the
-realized jealousy; more than the anguish at the thought of having lost
-her was the rage of the dispossessed, unsatisfied brute. Such love
-insulted the loved woman. He could not escape from it, but he could not
-feel the added grace and piety that, alone, could make it tolerable.
-From the fixed contemplation of his own sensations his mind dropped
-presently to the relief of more endurable thoughts. To feel the mere
-agony of loss was a dignifying and cleansing process. For, apparently,
-he had lost her. It was strange, almost unthinkable, that it should be
-so, and stranger the more he thought. He, who had never claimed, had no
-right to feel a loss. But he had not known till now how deep was his
-consciousness of their union.
-
-She had long ago guessed the secret of the voiceless, ambiguous love
-that could flutter only as far as pain, that could never rise to
-rapture. She had guessed that behind its half-tortured, momentary smile
-was the impersonal Buddha-gaze; and because she so understood its
-inevitable doom she had guarded herself from its avowal--guarded herself
-and him. He had trusted her not to forget the doom, and not to let him
-forget it, for a moment. But all the time he had known that in her eyes
-he was captive to some uncanny fate, and that could she release him from
-his chains her love would answer his. He had been sure of it. Hence his
-present perplexity.
-
-Perplexity began to resolve itself into a theory of commonplace
-expediency, and, feeling the irony of such resentment, he resented this
-tame sequel to their mute relationship.
-
-Unconsciously, he had assumed that had he been able to ask her to be his
-wife she would have been able to consent. Her courage, in a sense, would
-have been the reward of his weakness, for what he would see in himself
-as weakness she would see as strength. Courage on her part it certainly
-would have needed, for what a dubious offering would his have been:
-glamour, at its best,--a helpless, drugged glamour,--and, at its worst,
-the mere brute instinct that, blessedly, this winding path of thought
-led him away from.
-
-But she had probably come to despair of releasing him from chains, had
-come to see clearly that at the end of every avenue she walked with him
-the Buddha statue would be waiting in a serenity appalling and
-permanent; and, finding last night the child friendship dangerously
-threatened, discovering that the impossible love was dangerously real
-and menaced both their lives, she had swiftly drawn back, she had
-retreated to the obvious safeguards of an advantageous marriage. He
-couldn't but own that she was wise and right; more wise, more
-right,--there was the odd part of it, the unadjusted bit where
-perplexity stung him,--than he could have expected her to be. Ambition
-and the common-sense that is the very staff of life counted for much, of
-course; but he hadn't expected them to count so soon, so punctually, as
-it were.
-
-Perhaps,--and his mind, disentangled from the personal clutch where such
-an interpretation might have hurt or horrified, safe once more on its
-Stylites pillar, dwelt quite calmly on this final aspect,--perhaps, with
-her, too, sudden glamour and instinct had counted, answering the appeal
-of Grainger's passion. He suspected the whole fabric of the love between
-men and women to be woven of these blind, helpless impulses,--impulses
-that created their own objects. Her mind, with its recognition of
-danger, had chosen Grainger as a fitting mate, and, in his arms, she had
-felt that justification by the senses that people so funnily took for
-the final sanctification of choice.
-
-This monkish understanding of the snares of life was quite untouched by
-monkish reprobation; even the sense of resentment had faded. And it
-spoke much for the long training of his thought in the dissecting and
-destroying of transitory desires that he was presently able to
-contemplate his loss--as he still must absurdly term it--with an icy
-tranquillity.
-
-A breathlessness, as from some drastic surgical operation, was beneath
-it, but that was of the nature of a mere physical symptom, destined to
-readjust itself to lopped conditions; and with the full turning of his
-mind from himself came the fuller realization of how well it was with
-Eppie and a cold, acquiescent peace that, in his nature, was the
-equivalent for an upwelling of religious gratitude, for her salvation.
-
-But the stress of the whole strange seizure, wrench and renouncement had
-told on him mentally and physically. Every atom of his being, as if from
-some violent concussion, seemed altered, shifted.
-
-The change was in his face when, in the closing dusk of the day, he went
-down to the library. It was not steeled to the hearing of the news that
-must await him: such tension of endurance had passed swiftly into his
-habitual ease; but a look of death had crossed and marked it. It looked
-like a still, drowned face, sinking under deep waters, and Eppie, in her
-low chair near the window, where she had sat for many hours, saw in his
-eyes the awful, passionless detachment from life.
-
-After his pause at the unexpected sight of her, sitting there alone, a
-pause in which she did not speak, although he saw that her eyes were on
-him, he went on softly down the room, glancing out at each window as he
-passed it; and he looked, as he went, like an evening moth, drifting,
-aimless, uncanny.
-
-Outside, the moor stretched like a heavily sighing ocean, desolate and
-dark, to the horizon where, from behind the huge rim of the world, the
-sun's dim glow, a gloomy, ominous red, mounted far into the sky.
-
-Within the room, a soft, magical color pervaded the dusk, touching
-Eppie's hair, her hands, the vague folds and fallings of her dress.
-
-He waited for her to speak, though it seemed perfectly fitting that
-neither should. In the silence, the sadness of this radiant gloom, they
-needed no words to make more clear the accepted separation, and the
-silence, the sadness, were like a bleeding to quiet, desired death.
-
-The day was dying, and the instable, impossible love was dying, too.
-
-She had let go, and he quietly sank.
-
-But when she spoke her words were like sharp air cutting into drowned
-lungs.
-
-"I saw you pass this afternoon, Gavan."
-
-From the farthest window, where he had paused, he turned to her.
-
-"Did you, Eppie?"
-
-"Didn't you see that I did?"
-
-"I wasn't sure." He heard the flavor of helplessness in his own voice
-and felt in her a hard hostility, pleased to play with his helplessness.
-
-"Why did you not speak of what you saw?" Her anger against him was
-almost like a palpable presence between them in the dark, glowing room.
-He began to feel that through some ugly blunder he was very much at her
-mercy, and that, for the first time, he should find little mercy in her;
-and, for the first time, too, a quick hostility rose in him to answer
-hers. It was as if he had tasted too deeply of release; all his strength
-was with him to fight off the threat of the returning grasp.
-
-"Why should I?" he asked, letting her see in his gaze at her that just
-such a hard placidity would meet any interpretation she chose to give.
-
-"Didn't you care to understand?"
-
-"I thought that I did understand."
-
-"What did you think, then?" Eppie asked.
-
-He had to give her the helpless answer. "That you had accepted him."
-
-He knew, now, that she hadn't, and that for him to have thought so was
-to have cruelly wronged her; and she took it in a long silence, as
-though she must give herself time to see it clearly, to adjust herself
-to it and to all that it meant--in him, for her.
-
-What it meant, in her and for him, was filling his thoughts with a dizzy
-enough whirl of readjustment, and there mingled with it a strange
-after-flavor of the jealousy, and of the resentment against her; for,
-after all, though he had probably now an added reason for considering
-himself a warped wretch, there had been some reason for his mistake: if
-she hadn't accepted him, why had he seen her so?
-
-"Jim is gone," she said at last.
-
-"Because--It was unwillingly, then?"
-
-The full flame of her scorn blazed out at that, but he felt, like an
-echo of tears in himself, that she would have burst into tears of
-wretchedness if she had not been able so to scorn him.
-
-"Unwillingly! Why should you think him insolent and me helpless? Can
-you conceive of nothing noble?" she said.
-
-"I am sorry, Eppie. I have been stupid."
-
-"You have--more than stupid. He was going and he asked me for that. And
-I gave it--proudly."
-
-"I am sorry," Gavan repeated. "I see, of course. Of course it was
-noble."
-
-"You should be more than sorry. You knew that I did not love him."
-
-"I am more than sorry. I am ashamed," he answered gravely.
-
-He had the dignity of full contrition; but under it, unshaken after all,
-was the repudiation of the nearness that her explanation revealed. His
-heart throbbed heavily, for he saw, as never before, how near it was;
-yet he had never feared her less. He had learned too much that afternoon
-to fear her. He was sure of his power to save her from what he had so
-fully learned.
-
-He looked away from her and for long out at the ebbing red, and it was
-the unshaken resolve that spoke at last. "But all the same I am sorry
-that it was only that. He would have made you happy."
-
-"You knew that I did not love him," Eppie repeated.
-
-"With time, as his wife, you might love him." Facing her, now, folding
-his arms, he leaned back against the mantel at his far end of the room.
-"I know that I've seemed odiously to belittle and misunderstand you, and
-I am ashamed, Eppie--more ashamed than you can guess; but, in another
-way, it wasn't so belittling, either. I thought you very wise and
-courageous. I thought that you had determined to take the real thing
-that life offered you and to turn your back, for once and for all,
-on--on unreal things." He stopped at that, as though to let it have its
-full drop, and Eppie, her eyes still fixed on him from her distant
-chair, made no answer and no sign of dissent.
-
-As he spoke a queer, effervescent blitheness had come to him, a light
-indifference to his own cruelty; and the hateful callousness of his
-state gave him a pause of wonder and interest. However, he couldn't help
-it; it was the reaction, no doubt, from the deep disgust of his
-abasement, and it helped him, as nothing else would have done,
-thoroughly to accomplish his task.
-
-"He can give you all the things you need," he went on, echoing poor
-Grainger's _naif_ summing up of his own advantages. "He has any amount
-of money, and a very big future before him; and then, really above all,
-you do care for him so much. You see the same things in life. You
-believe in the same things; want the same things. If you would take him
-he would never fail you in anything."
-
-Still her heavy silence was unbroken. He waited in vain for a sign from
-her, and in the silence the vibration of her dumb agony seemed to reach
-him, so that, with all the callousness, he had to conquer an impulse to
-go to her and see if she wept. But when he said, "I wish you would take
-him, Eppie," and she at last answered him, there were no tears in her
-voice.
-
-"I will never take him."
-
-"Don't say that," he replied. "One changes."
-
-"Is that a taunt?"
-
-"Not a taunt--a reminder."
-
-She rose and came to him, walking down the long room, past the somber
-illuminations of the windows, straight to him. They stood face to face,
-bathed in the unearthly light. All their deep antagonism was there
-between them, almost a hatred, and the love that swords clashed over.
-
-"You do not believe that of me," she said.
-
-He was ready and unfaltering, and was able to smile at her, a bright,
-odd smile. "I believe it of any one."
-
-It was love that eyed him--love more stern, more relentless in its
-silence than if she had spoken it, and never had she been so near as
-when, sending her clarion of open warfare across the abyss, she said, "I
-will never change--to you."
-
-The words, the look,--a look of solemn defiance,--shattered forever the
-palace of pretence that they had dwelt in for so long. Till now, it
-might have stood for them. In its rainbow chambers they might still have
-smiled and sorrowed and eluded each other, only glanced through the
-glittering casements at the dark realities outside; but when the word of
-truth was spoken, casements, chambers, turrets, fell together and
-reality rushed in. She had spoken the word. After that it was impossible
-to pretend anything.
-
-Gavan, among the wreck, had grown pale; but he kept his smile fixed,
-even while he, too, spoke the new language of reality.
-
-"I am afraid of you, then."
-
-"Of course you are afraid of me."
-
-Still he smiled. "I am afraid _for_ you."
-
-"Of course you are. You have your moments of humanity."
-
-"I have. And so I shall go to-morrow," said Gavan.
-
-She looked at him in silence, her face taking on its haggard,
-unbeautiful aspect of strange, rocky endurance. And never had his mind
-been more alert, more mocking, more aloof from any entanglement of
-feeling than while he saw her love and his; saw her sorrow and his
-sorrow--his strange, strange sorrow that, like a sick, helpless child,
-longed, in its darkness, its loneliness, to hide its head on her breast
-and to feel her arms go round it. Love and sorrow were far, far away--so
-far that it was as if they had no part at all in himself, as if it were
-not he that felt them.
-
-"Are you so afraid as that?" Eppie asked.
-
-"After last night?" he answered. "After what I felt when I saw you here,
-with him? After this? Of course I am as afraid as that. I must flee--for
-your life, Eppie. I am its shadow--its fatal shadow."
-
-"No, I am yours. Life is the shadow to you."
-
-"Well, on both sides, then, we must be afraid," he assented.
-
-She made no gesture, no appeal. Her face was like a rock. It was only
-that deep endurance and, under it, that deep threat. Never, never would
-she allure; never draw him to her; never build in her cathedral a
-Venusberg for him. He must come to her. He must kneel, with her, before
-her altar. He must worship, with her, her God of suffering and triumph.
-And, the dying light making her face waver before his eyes with a
-visionary strangeness, stern and angelic, he seemed to see, deep in her
-eyes, the burning of high, sacramental candles.
-
-That was the last he saw. In silence she turned and went. And what she
-left with him was the sad, awed sense of beauty that he knew when
-watching kneeling multitudes bowed before the great myth of the
-Church,--in silence, beneath dim, soaring heights. He was near humanity
-in such moments of self-losing, when the cruder myth of the great world,
-built up by desire, slipped from it. And Eppie, in this symbolic seeing
-of her, was nearer than when he desired or feared her. Beauty, supreme
-and disenfranchising, he saw. He did not know what he felt.
-
-Far away, on the horizon, in the gloomy waste of embers, the sun's deep
-core still burned, and in his heart was a deep fatigue, like the sky's
-slow smoldering to gray.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-Grainger had gone, and Gavan announced his departure for the next
-morning. The situation was simplified, he felt, by Eppie's somber
-preoccupation. He was very willing that she should be seen as a gloomy
-taker of scalps and that his own should be supposed to be hanging at her
-girdle. The resultant muteness and melancholy in the general and Miss
-Barbara were really a comfort. The dear old figures in the tapestry
-seemed fading to-night into mere plaintive shadows, fixing eyes of sad
-but unquestioning contemplation upon the latent tragedies of the
-foreground figures.
-
-It was a comfort to have the tapestry so reticent and so submissive,
-but, all the same, it made the foreground tragedy, for his eyes,
-painfully distinct. He could look at nothing else. Eppie seemed to
-stand, with her broken and bleeding heart, in the very center of the
-design. For the first time he saw what the design was--saw all of it,
-from the dim reaches of the past, as working to this end.
-
-The weaving of fate was accomplished. There she stood, suffering,
-speechless, and he, looking at her, fatal shuttle of her doom that he
-was, felt under all the ashes a dull throbbing.
-
-After dinner he smoked a cigar with the general, who, tactfully, as to
-one obviously maimed, spoke only of distant and impersonal matters.
-Gavan left him over some papers in the quiet light of the smoking-room
-and went to the library. Eppie, with her broken heart, was not there.
-The night was very hot. By an open window Miss Barbara sat dozing, her
-hands upturned with an appealing laxity on her knees, sad even in her
-sleep.
-
-Eppie was not there and she had not spoken one word to him since those
-last words of the afternoon. Perhaps she intended to speak no more, to
-see him no more. Pausing on the threshold, he was now conscious of a
-slow, rising misery.
-
-If he was to be spared the final wrench, he was also to be robbed of
-something. He hadn't known, till then, of how much. He hadn't known,
-while she stood there before him, this fully revealed Eppie, this Eppie
-who loved far beyond his imagining, far beyond prudence, ambition, even
-happiness, what it would be not to see her again, to part from her
-speechlessly, and with a sort of enmity unresolved between them.
-
-The cathedral simile was still with him, not in her interpretation of
-it, as the consecration of human love, but in his own, as a place of
-peace, where together they might still kneel in farewell.
-
-But she barred him out from that; she wouldn't accept such peace. He
-could only submit and own that she was perhaps altogether right in
-risking no more battles and in proudly denying to him the opportunity of
-any reconciling. She was right to have it end there; but the core among
-the embers ached.
-
-He wandered out into the dark, vague night, sorrowfully restless.
-
-It was not a radiant night. The trees and the long undulations of the
-moorland melted into the sky, making all about a sea of enveloping
-obscurity. The moor might have been the sky but for its starlessness;
-and there were few stars to-night, and these, large and soft, seemed to
-float like helpless expanded flowers on a still ocean.
-
-A night for wandering griefs to hide in, to feel at one with, and, with
-an instinct that knew that it sorrowed but hardly knew that it sought,
-Gavan went on around the house, through the low door in the garden wall,
-and into the garden.
-
-Here all the warmth and perfume of the summer day seemed still to exhale
-itself in a long sigh like that of a peaceful sleeper. Earth, trees,
-fruit, and flowers gave out their drowsy balms. Veiled beauty, dreaming
-life, were beneath, above, about him, and the high walls inclosed a
-place of magic, a shadow paradise.
-
-He walked on, past white phlox, white pansies, and white foxglove,
-through the little trellis where white jasmine starred its festoons of
-frail, melancholy foliage, and under the low boughs of the small,
-gnarled fruit-trees. Near the summer-house he paused, looking in at the
-darkness and seeing there the figures of the past--two children at play.
-His heart ached on dully, the smoldering sorrow rising neither to
-passionate regret nor to passionate longing, acquiescing in its own
-sorrow that was part of the vision. Moved by that retrospect, he stepped
-inside.
-
-The sweet old odor, so well remembered, half musty, half fresh, of
-cobwebbed wood, lichened along the lintels and doorway beams, assailed
-him while he groped lightly around the walls, automatically reaching out
-his hand to the doll's locker, the little row of shelves, the low,
-rustic bench and the table that, he remembered as it rocked slightly
-under his touch, had always been unsteady. All were in their old,
-accustomed places, and among them he saw himself a ghost, some
-sightless, soundless creature hovering in the darkness.
-
-The darkness and the familiar forms he evoked from it grew oppressive,
-and he stepped out again into the night, where, by contrast with the
-uncanny blindness, he found a new distinctness of form, almost of color,
-and where a memory, old and deep, seemed to seize him with gentle,
-compelling hands, in the fragrance of the white roses growing near the
-summer-house. Wine-like and intoxicating, it filled the air with magic;
-and he had gone but a few steps farther when, like a picture called up
-by the enchantment, he saw the present, the future too, it seemed, and,
-with a shock that for all its quiet violence was not unexpected, stood
-still to gaze, to feel in the one moment of memory and forecast all his
-life gathered into his contemplation.
-
-Eppie sat on a low garden bench in the garden's most hidden corner. With
-the fresh keenness of sight he could see the clustering white roses on
-the wall behind her, see against them the darkness of her hair, the
-whiter whiteness of her dress, as she sat there with head a little bent,
-looking down, the long white shawl folded about her.
-
-It was no longer the Eppie of the past, not even the Eppie of the
-present: the present was only that long pause. It was the future that
-waited there, silent, motionless, almost as if asleep; waited for the
-word and touch that would reveal it.
-
-She had not heard his light step, and it seemed to be in the very
-stillness of his pause that the sense of his presence came to her.
-Raising her head she looked round at him.
-
-He could only see the narrow oval of her face, but he felt her look; it
-seized him, compelling as the fragrance had been--compelling but not
-gentle. He felt it like firm hands upon him while he walked on slowly
-toward her, and not until he was near her, not until he had sat down
-beside her, did he see as well as feel her fixed and hostile gaze.
-
-All swathed and infolded as she was, impalpable and unsubstantial in the
-darkness, her warm and breathing loveliness was like the aroma of a
-midnight flower. She was so beautiful sitting there, a blossoming of the
-darkness, that her beauty seemed aware of itself and of its appeal; and
-it was as if her soul, gazing at him, dominated the appeal; menaced him
-should he yield to it; yet loved, ah, loved him with a love the greater
-for the courage, the will, that could discipline it into this set, stern
-stillness.
-
-Yes, here was the future, and what was he to do with it? or, rather,
-what was it to do with him? He was at her mercy.
-
-He had leaned near her, his hand on the bench, to look into her eyes,
-and in a shaken, supplicating voice he said, "Eppie, Eppie, what do you
-want?"
-
-Without change, looking deeply at him, she answered, "You."
-
-That crashed through him. He was lost, drowned, in the mere sense of
-beauty--the beauty of the courage that could so speak and so hold him at
-the point of a sword heroically drawn. And with the word the future
-seized him. He hid his face upon her shoulder and his arms went round
-her. Her breast heaved. For a moment she sat as if stricken with
-astonishment. Then, but with sternness, as of a just and angry mother,
-she clasped him, holding him closely but untenderly.
-
-"I did not mean this," she said.
-
-"No; but you _are_ it," Gavan murmured.
-
-She held him in the stern, untender clasp, her head drawn back from him,
-while, slowly, seeking her words over the tumult she subdued, she said:
-"It's _you_ I want--not your unwilling longing, not your unwilling love.
-I want you so that I can be really myself; I want you so that you can be
-really yourself."
-
-He strained her to him, hiding his face on her breast.
-
-"Can't you live? Can't you be--if I help you?" she asked him.
-
-For a long time he was silent, only pressing closely to her as though
-to hide himself from her questions--from his own thoughts.
-
-He said at last: "I can't think, Eppie. Your words go like birds over my
-head. Your suffering, my longing, hurt me; but it's like the memory of a
-hurt. I am apart from it, even while I feel it. Even while I love
-you--oh, Eppie! Eppie!--I don't care. But when we are like this--at last
-like this--I am caught back into it all, all that I thought I'd got over
-forever, this afternoon,--all the dreadful dream--the beautiful dream.
-It's for this I've longed--you have known it: to hold you, to feel your
-breath on me, to dream with you. How beautiful you are, how sweet! Kiss
-me, Eppie,--darling, darling Eppie!"
-
-"I will not kiss you. It would be real to me."
-
-He had raised his head and was seeing now the suffering of her shadowy
-eyes, the shadowy lips she refused him tragically compressed lest they
-should tremble. Behind her pale head and its heavy cloud of hair were
-the white roses giving out--how his mind reeled with the memory of
-it--the old, sweet, wine-like fragrance.
-
-He closed his eyes to the vision, bending his lips to her hand, saying:
-"Yes, that's why I wanted to spare you--wanted to run away."
-
-In the little distance now of his drawing from her, even while he still
-held her, his cheek on her hand, she could speak more easily.
-
-"It is that that enrages me,--your mystic sickness. I am awake, but you
-aren't even dreaming. You are drugged--drugged with thought not strong
-enough to find its real end. You have paralyzed yourself. No argument
-could cure you. No thought could cure you. Only life could cure you. You
-must get life, and to get it you must want it."
-
-"I don't want it. I can't want it. I only want you," said Gavan, with
-such a different echo.
-
-She understood, more fully than he, perhaps, the helpless words.
-
-Above his bowed head, her face set, she looked out into the night. Her
-mind measured, coldly it seemed to her, the strength of her own faith
-and of his negation.
-
-Her love, including but so far transcending all natural cravings, had
-its proud recoil from the abasement--oh, she saw it all!--that his
-limitation would bring to it. Yet, like the mother again, adapting truth
-to the child's dim apprehension, leading it on by symbols, she brooded
-over her deep thoughts of redemption and looked clearly at all dangers
-and all hopes. Faith must face even his unspiritual seeing. Faith must
-endure his worse than pagan love. Bound to her by every natural tie, her
-strength must lift him, through them, to their spiritual aspect, to
-their reality. Life was her ally. She must put her trust in life. She
-consecrated herself to it anew. Let it lead her where it would.
-
-The long moment of steady forecast had, after its agony of shame and
-fear, its triumph over both.
-
-He felt the deep sigh that lifted her breast--it was almost a sob; but
-now her arms took him closely, gently, to her and her voice had the
-steadfastness, no longer of rejection, but of acceptance.
-
-"Gavan, dream with me, then; that's better than being drugged. Perhaps
-you will wake some day. There, I kiss you."
-
-She said it, and with the words his lips were on hers.
-
-In the long moment of their embrace he had a strange intuition.
-Something was accomplished; some destiny that had led them to this hour
-was satisfied and would have no more to do with them. He seemed almost
-to hear this thought of finality, like the far, distant throbbing of a
-funeral bell, though the tolling only shut them the more closely into
-the silence of the wonderful moment.
-
-Drugged? No, he was not drugged. But was she really dragging him down
-again, poor child, into her own place of dreams?
-
-After the ecstasy, in the darkness of her breast and arms, he knew again
-the horrible surge of suffering that life had always meant to him. He
-saw, as though through deep waters, the love, the strife, the clinging
-to all that went; he saw the withering of dreams, and death, and the
-implacable, devouring thought that underlay all life and found its joy
-in the rending sorrow of the tragedy it triumphed over.
-
-It was like a wave catching him, sucking him down into a gulf of
-blackness. The dizziness of the whirlpool reeled its descending spiral
-through his brain. Eppie was the sweet, the magical, the sinister
-mermaid; she held him, triumphing, and he clung to her, helpless; while,
-like the music of rushing waters, the horror and enchantment of life
-rang in his ears. But the horror grew and grew. The music rang on to a
-multitudinous world-cry of despair,--the cry of all the torments of the
-world turning on their rack of consciousness,--and, in a crash of
-unendurable anguish, came the thought of what it all would mean; what it
-all might mean now--now--unless he could save her; for he guessed that
-her faith, put to the test, might accept any risk, might pay any price,
-to keep him. And the anguish was for her.
-
-He started from her, putting away her arms, yet pinioning her, holding
-her from him with a fierceness of final challenge and looking in the
-darkness into her darker eyes.
-
-"Suppose I do," he said. "Suppose I marry you,"--for he must show her
-that some tests she should not be put to. "Suppose I take you and
-reenter the dream. Look at it, Eppie. Look at your life with me. It
-won't stay like this, you know. Look far, far ahead."
-
-"I do," she said.
-
-"No, no. You don't. You can't. It would, for a year, perhaps, perhaps
-only for a day, be dream and ecstasy,--ah, Eppie, don't imagine that I
-don't know what it would be,--the beauty, the joy, the forgetfulness, a
-radiant mist hanging over an abyss. Your will could keep me in it--for a
-year, perhaps. But then, the inevitable fading. See what comes. Eppie,
-don't you know, don't you feel, that I'm dead--dead?"
-
-"No; not while you suffer. You are suffering now--for me."
-
-"The shadow of a shadow. It will pass. No, don't speak; wait; as you
-said, we can't argue, we can't, now, go into the reasons of it. As you
-said, thought can't cure me; it's probably something far deeper than our
-little thought: it's probably the aspect we are fated to be by that one
-reality that makes and unmakes our dreams. And I'm not of the robust
-Western stuff that can work in its dream,--create more dream, and find
-it worth while. I've not enough life in me to create the illusion of
-realities to strive for. Action, to me, brings no proof of life's
-reality; it's merely a symptom of life, its result, not its cause or its
-sanction. And the power of action is dead in me because the desire of
-life is dead,--unless you are there to infect me with it."
-
-"I am here, Gavan."
-
-"Yes, you are,--can I forget it? And I'm yours--while you want me. But,
-Eppie, look at it; look at it straight. See the death that I will bring
-into the very heart of your life. See the children we may have; see what
-they would mean to you, and what they would mean to me: Transient
-appearances; creatures lovely and pathetic, perhaps, but empty of all
-the significance that you would find in them. I would have no love for
-our children, Eppie, as you understand love. We will grow old, and all
-the glamour will go--all the passion that holds us together now. I will
-be kind--and sorry; but you will know that, beside you, I watch you
-fading into listlessness, indifference, death, and know that even if I
-am to weep over you, dead, I will feel only that you have escaped
-forever, from me, from consciousness, from life. Eppie, don't delude
-yourself with one ray of hope. To me your faith is a mirage. And it all
-comes to that. Have you faith enough to foresee all the horror of
-emptiness that you'll find in me for the sake of one year of ecstasy?"
-
-She had not moved while he spoke--spoke with a passion, a vehemence,
-that was like a sudden rushing into flame of a forest fire. There was
-something lurid and terrible in such passion, such vehemence, from him.
-It shook him as the forest is shaken and was like the ruinous force of
-the flames. She sat, while he held her, looking at it, as he had told
-her, "straight." She knew that she looked at everything. Her eyes went
-back to his eyes as she gave him her answer.
-
-"Not for the sake of the year of ecstasy; in spite of it."
-
-"For what, then?" he asked, stammering suddenly.
-
-Her eyes, with their look of dedication, held him fast.
-
-"For the sake of life--the long life--together; the life without the
-glamour, when my faith may altogether infect you."
-
-"You believe, Eppie, that you are so much stronger than I?"
-
-"It's not that I'm strong; but life is stronger than anything; life is
-the only reality. I am on the winning side."
-
-"So you will hope?"
-
-"Hope! Of course I hope. You could never make me stop hoping--not even
-if you broke my heart. You may call it a mirage if you like--that's
-only a word. I'll fill your trance with my mirage, I'll flood your
-whiteness with my color, and, God grant, you will feel life and know
-that you are at last awake. You are right--life _is_ endless contest,
-endless pain; it's only at that price that we can have it; but you will
-know that it's worth the price. I see it all, Gavan, and I accept. I
-accept not only the certainty of my own suffering, but the certainty of
-yours."
-
-Through the night they gazed at each other, his infinite sadness, her
-infinite valor. Their faces were like strange, beautiful dreams--dreams
-holding in their dimness such deep, such vivid significance. They more
-saw the significance--that sadness, that valor--than its embodiment in
-eyes and lips.
-
-It was finally with a sense of realization so keen that it trembled on
-the border of oblivion, of the fainting from over-consciousness, that
-Gavan once more laid his head upon her breast. He, too, accepting, held
-her close,--held her and all that she signified, while, leaning above
-him, her cheek against his hair, she said in a voice that over its depth
-upon depth of steadiness trembled at last a little: "I see it all.
-Imagine what a faith it is that is willing to make the thing it loves
-most in the whole world suffer--suffer horribly--so that it may live."
-
-He gave a long sigh. At its height emotion dissolved into a rapt
-contemplation. "How beautiful," he said.
-
-"Beautiful?" she repeated, with almost a gentle mockery for the word.
-"Well, begin with beauty if you will. You will find that--and more
-besides--as an end of it all."
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-She left him in the garden. They had talked quietly, of the past, of
-their childhood, and, as quietly, of the future--their immediate
-marriage and departure for long, wonderful voyages together. His head
-lay on her breast, and often, while they spoke of that life together, of
-the homecoming to Cheylesford Lodge and when he heard her voice tremble
-a little, he kissed the dear hand he held.
-
-When she rose at last and stood before him, he said, still holding her
-hands, that he would sit on there in the darkness and think of her.
-
-She felt the languor of his voice and told him that he was very tired
-and would do much better to go to bed and forget about her till morning;
-but, looking up at her, he shook his head, smiling: "I couldn't sleep."
-
-So she left him; but, before she went, after the last gazing pause in
-which there seemed now no discord, no strife, nothing to hide or to
-threaten, she had suddenly put her arms around his neck, bending to him
-and murmuring, "Oh, I love you."
-
-"I seem to have loved you forever, Eppie," he said.
-
-But, once more, in all the strange oblivion of his acceptance, there had
-been for him in their kiss and their embrace the undertone of anguish,
-the distant tolling--as if for something accomplished, over forever--of
-a funeral bell.
-
-He watched her figure--white was not the word for it in this midnight
-world--pass away into the darkness. And, as she disappeared, the bell
-seemed still to toll, "Gone. Gone. Gone."
-
-So he was alone.
-
-He was alone. The hours went by and he still sat there. The white roses
-near him, they, too, only a strange blossoming of darkness, symbolized,
-in their almost aching sweetness, the departed presence. He breathed in
-their fragrance; and, as he listened to his own quiet breaths, they
-seemed those of the night made conscious in him. The roses remembered
-for him; the night breathed through him; it was an interchange, a
-mingling. Above were the deep vaults of heaven, the profundities of
-distance, the appalling vastness, strewn with its dust of stars. And it,
-too, was with him, in him, as the roses were, as his own breath came and
-went.
-
-The veils had now lifted from the night and it was radiant, all its
-stars visible; and veil after veil seemed drifting from before his soul.
-
-A cool, light breeze stirred his hair.
-
-Closing his eyes, at last, his thought plunged, as his sight had
-plunged, into gulf under gulf of vacancy.
-
-After the unutterable fatigue, like the sinking under anaesthesia, of his
-final yielding, he could not know what was happening to him, nor care.
-It had often happened before, only never quite like this. It was, once
-more, the great peace, lapping wave after wave, slow, sliding,
-immeasurable waves, through and through him; dissolving thought and
-feeling; dissolving all discord, all pain, all joy and beauty.
-
-The hours went by, and, as they went, Eppie's face, like a drift of
-stars, sank, sank into the gulf. What had he said to her? what promised?
-Only the fragrance of the roses seemed to remember, nothing in himself.
-For what had he wanted? He wanted nothing now. Her will, her life, had
-seized him; but no, no, no,--the hours quietly, in their passing seemed
-to say it,--they had not kept him. He had at last, after a lifelong
-resistance, abandoned himself to her, and the abandonment had been the
-final step toward complete enfranchisement. For, with no effort now of
-his own at escape, no will at all to be free, he had left her far behind
-him, as if through the waters of the whirlpool his soul, like a light
-bubble, had softly, surely, risen to the air. It had lost itself, and
-her.
-
-He thought of her, but now with no fear, no anguish. A vast indifference
-filled him. It was no longer a question of tearing himself from her, no
-longer a question of saving himself and her. There was no question, nor
-any one to save. He was gone away, from her, from everything.
-
-When the dawn slowly stole into the garden, so that the ghosts of day
-began to take shape and color, Gavan rose among them. The earth was damp
-with dew; his hair and clothes were damp. Overhead the sky was white,
-and the hills upon it showed a flat, shadowless green. Between the
-night's enchantments of stillness, starriness, veiled, dreaming beauty
-and the sunlit, voluble enchantments of the day,--songs and flights of
-birds, ripple and shine of water, the fugitive, changing color of land
-and sky,--this hour was poor, bare, monotonous. There wasn't a ray of
-enchantment in it. It was like bleak canvas scenery waiting for the
-footlights and a decorated stage.
-
-Gavan looked before him, down the garden path, shivering a little. He
-was cold, and the sensation brought him back to the old fact of life,
-that, after all, was there as long as one saw it. The coming of the
-light seemed to retwist once more his own palely tinted prism of
-personality, and with the cold, with the conscious looking back at the
-night and forward to the day, came a long, dull ache of sadness. It was
-more physical than mental; hunger and chill played their part in it, he
-knew, while, as the prism twined its colors, the fatiguing faculty of
-analysis once more built up the world of change and diversity. He looked
-up at the pale walls of the old house, laced with their pattern of
-creepers. The pine-tree lay like an inky shadow across it, and, among
-the branches, were the windows of Eppie's room, the window where he and
-she had stood together on the morning of Robbie's death--a white,
-dew-drenched morning like this. There she slept, dear, beautiful, the
-shadow of life. And here he stood, still living, after all, in their
-mutual mirage; still to hurt her. He didn't think of her face, her
-voice, her aspect. The only image that came was of a shadow--something
-darkly beautiful that entranced and suffocated, something that,
-enveloping one, shut out peace and vacancy.
-
-His cold hands thrust into his pockets, he stood thinking for a moment,
-of how he would have to hurt her, and of how much less it was to be than
-if what they had seen in the night's glamour had been possible.
-
-He wondered why the mere fact of the night's revelation--all those
-passing-bell hours--had made it so impossible for him to go on, by sheer
-force of will, with the play. Why couldn't he, for her sake, act the
-lifelong part? In her arms he would know again the moments of glamour.
-But, at the mere question, a sickness shuddered through him. He saw now,
-clearly, what stood in the way: suffering, hideous suffering, for both
-of them--permanent, all-pervading suffering. The night had proved too
-irrevocably that any union between them was only momentary, only a
-seeming, and with her, feeling her faith, her hope, her love, he could
-know nothing but the undurable discord of their united and warring
-notes.
-
-Could life and death be made one flesh?
-
-The horror of the thought spurred him from his rigor of contemplation.
-That, at least, had been spared her. Destiny, then, had not meant for
-them that final, tragic consummation.
-
-He threaded his way rapidly among the paths, the flower-beds, under the
-low boughs of the old fruit-trees. She had left the little door near
-the morning-room open for him, and through it he entered the still
-house.
-
-It wasn't escape, now, from her, but from that pressing horror, as of
-something, that, unless he hastened, might still overtake them both. Yet
-outside her door he paused, bent his head, listened with a strange
-curiosity, helpless before the nearness of that loved, that dreaded
-being, the warring note that he sought yet fled from.
-
-She slept. Not a sound stirred in the room.
-
-He closed his eyes, seeing, with a vividness that was almost a
-hallucination, her face, her wonderful face, asleep, with the dark
-rivers of her hair flowing about it.
-
-And, fixed as he was in his frozen certainty of truth, he felt, once
-more like the striking of a hand across a harp, a longing, wild and
-passionate, to enter, to take her, sleeping, in his arms, to see her
-eyes open on him; to hide himself in life, as in the darkness of her
-breast and arms, and to forget forever the piercing of inexorable
-thought.
-
-He found that his hand was on the lock and that he was violently
-trembling.
-
-It was inexorable thought, the knowledge of the horror that would await
-them, that conquered the leap of blind instinct.
-
-Half an hour later a thin, intense light rimmed all the eastern hills,
-and a cold, clear cheerfulness spread over the earth. The moors were
-purple and the sky overhead palely, immaculately blue. About the tall
-lime-trees the rooks circled, cawing, and a skylark sang far and high,
-a floating atom of ecstasy.
-
-And in the clearness Gavan's figure showed, walking rapidly away from
-the white house, down the road that led through the heather and past the
-birch-woods, walking away from it forever.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-Grainger stood in Eppie's little sitting-room, confronting, as Gavan had
-confronted the spring before, Miss Allen's placidly sewing figure.
-
-The flowers against which her uneventful head now bent were autumnal.
-Thickly growing Michaelmas daisies, white and purple, screened the lower
-section of the square outside. Above were the shabby tree-tops, that
-seemed heavily painted upon an equally solid sky. The square was dusty,
-the trees were dusty, the very blue of the sky looked grimed with dust.
-
-The hot air; the still flowers, not stirred by a breath of breeze; Miss
-Allen's figure, motionless but for its monotonously moving hand, were
-harmonious in their quiet, and in contrast to them Grainger's pervasive,
-restless, irritable presence was like a loud, incessant jangling.
-
-He walked back and forth; he picked up the photographs on the
-mantel-shelf, the books on the table, flinging them down in a succession
-of impatient claps. He threw himself heavily into chairs,--so heavily
-that Miss Allen glanced round, alarmed for the security of the
-furniture,--and he asked her half a dozen times if Miss Gifford would be
-in at five.
-
-"She is seldom late," or, "I expect her then," Miss Allen would answer
-in the tone of mild severity that one might employ toward an unseemly
-child over whom one had no authority.
-
-But though there was severity in Miss Allen's voice, the acute glances
-that she stole at the clamorous guest were not unsympathetic. She placed
-him. She pitied and she rather admired him. Even while emphasizing the
-dismay of her involuntary starts when the table rattled and the chairs
-groaned, she felt a satisfaction in these symptoms of passion; for that
-she was in the presence of a passion, a hopeless and rather magnificent
-passion, she made no doubt. She associated such passions with Eppie,--it
-was trailing such clouds of glory that she descended upon the arid life
-of the little square,--and none had so demonstrated itself, none had so
-performed its part for her benefit. She was sorry that it was hopeless;
-but she was glad that it was there, in all its Promethean wrathfulness,
-for her to observe. Miss Allen felt pretty sure that this was the
-nearest experience of passion she would ever know.
-
-"In at five, as a rule, you say?" Grainger repeated for the fourth time,
-springing from the chair where, with folded arms, he had sat for a few
-moments scowling unseeingly at the pansies.
-
-He stationed himself now beside her and, over her head, stared out at
-the square. It was at once alarming and delightful,--as if the Titan
-with his attendant vulture had risen from his rock to join her.
-
-"You've no idea from which direction she is coming?"
-
-"None," said Miss Allen, decisively but not unkindly. "It's really no
-good for you to think of going out to meet her. She is doing a lot of
-different things this afternoon and might come from any direction. You
-would almost certainly miss her." And she went on, unemphatically, but,
-for all the colorless quality of her voice, so significantly that
-Grainger, realizing for the first time the presence of an understanding
-sympathy, darted a quick look at her. "She gets in at five, just as I go
-out. She knows that I depend on her to be here by then."
-
-So she would not be in the way, this little individual. She made him
-think, now that he looked at her more attentively, as she sat there with
-her trimly, accurately moving hand, of a beaver he had once seen swiftly
-and automatically feeding itself; her sleek head, her large, smooth
-front teeth, were like a beaver's. It was really very decent of her to
-see that he wanted her out of the way; so decent that, conscious of the
-link it had made between them, he said presently, abruptly and rather
-roughly, "How is she?"
-
-"Well, of course she has not recovered," said Miss Allen.
-
-"Recovered? But she wasn't actually ill." Grainger had a retorting air.
-
-"No; I suppose not. It was nervous prostration, I suppose--if that's not
-an illness."
-
-"This isn't the place for her to recover from nervous prostration in."
-He seemed to fasten an accusation, but Miss Allen understood perfectly.
-
-"Of course not. I've tried to make her see that. But,"--she was making
-now quite a chain of links,--"she feels she must work, must lose herself
-in something. Of course she overdoes it. She overdoes everything."
-
-"Overwork, do you think? The cause, I mean?"
-
-Grainger jerked this out, keeping his eyes on the square.
-
-Miss Allen, not in any discreet hesitation, but in sincere uncertainty,
-paused over her answer.
-
-"It couldn't be, quite. She was well enough when she went away in the
-summer, though she really isn't at all strong,--not nearly so strong as
-she looks. She broke down, you know, at her uncle's, in Scotland"; and
-Miss Allen added, in a low-pitched and obviously confidential voice, "I
-think it was some shock that nobody knows anything about."
-
-Grainger stood still for some moments, and then plunging back into the
-little room, he crossed and re-crossed it with rapid strides. Her
-guessing and his knowledge came too near.
-
-Only after a long pause did Miss Allen say, "She's really frightfully
-changed." The clock was on the stroke. Rising, gathering up her work,
-dropping, with neat little clicks, her scissors, her thimble, into her
-work-box, she added, and she fixed her eyes on him for a moment as she
-spoke, "Do, if you can, make her--"
-
-"Well, what? Go away?" he demanded. "I've no authority--none. Her people
-ought to kidnap her. That's what I'd do. Lift her out of this hole."
-
-Miss Allen's eyes dwelt on his while she nerved herself to a height of
-adventurous courage that, in looking back at it, amazed her. "Here she
-is," she said, and almost whispering, "Well, kidnap her, then. That's
-what she needs--some one stronger than herself to kidnap her."
-
-She slid her hand through his, a panic of shyness overtaking her, and
-darted out, followed by the flutter of a long, white strip of muslin.
-
-Grainger stood looking at the open door, through which in a moment Eppie
-entered.
-
-His first feeling was one of relief. He did not, in that first moment,
-see that she was "frightfully changed." Even her voice seemed the same,
-as she said with all the frank kindness of her welcome and surprise,
-"Why, Jim, this is good of you," and all her tact was there, too, giving
-him an impression of the resource and flexibility of happy vitality, in
-her ignoring by glance or tone of their parting.
-
-She wore, on the hot autumn day, a white linen frock, the loose bodice
-belted with green, a knot of green at her throat, and, under the white
-and green of her little hat, her face showed color and its dear smile.
-
-Relief was so great, indeed, that Grainger found himself almost clinging
-to her hand in his sudden thankfulness.
-
-"You're not so ill, then," he brought out. "I heard it--that you had
-broken down--and I came back. I was in the Dolomites. I hadn't had news
-of you since I left."
-
-"So ill! Nonsense," said Eppie, giving his hand a reassuring shake and
-releasing her own to pull off her soft, loose gloves. "It was a
-breakdown I had, but nothing serious. I believe it to have been an
-attack of biliousness, myself. People don't like to own to liver when
-they can claim graceful maladies like nervous prostration,--so it was
-called. But liver, only, I fear it was. And I'm all right now, thank
-goodness, for I loathe being ill and am a horrid patient."
-
-She had taken off her hat, pushing back her hair from her forehead and
-sinking into a chair that was against the light. The Michaelmas daisies
-made a background for the bronze and white of her head, for, as she
-rested, the color that her surprise and her swift walking had given her
-died. She was glad to rest, her smile said that, and he saw, indeed,
-that she was utterly tired.
-
-Suddenly, as he looked at her, seeing the great fatigue, seeing the
-pallor, seeing the smile only stay as if with determination, the truth
-of Miss Allen's description was revealed to him. She was frightfully
-changed. Her smile, her courage, made him think of a _danse macabre_.
-The rhythm, the gaiety of life were there, but life itself was gone.
-
-The revelation came to him, but he felt himself clutch it silently, and
-he let her go on talking.
-
-She went on, indeed, very volubly, talking of her breakdown, of how good
-the general and her aunt had been to her, and of how getting back to her
-work had picked her up directly.
-
-"I think I'll finally pitch my tent here," she went on. "The interest
-grows all the time,--and the ties, the responsibility. One can't do
-things by half measures; you know that, thorough person that you are. I
-mustn't waste my mite of income by gadding about. I'm going to chuck all
-the rest and give myself altogether to this."
-
-"You used to think that the rest helped you in this," said Grainger.
-
-"To a certain extent it did, and will, for I've had so much that it will
-last me for a long time."
-
-"You intend to live permanently down here?"
-
-"I shall have my holidays, and I shall run up to civilization for a
-dinner or two now and then. It's not that I've any illusions about my
-usefulness or importance. It's that all this is so useful to me. It's
-something I can do with all my might and main, and I've such masses of
-energy you know, Jim, that need employment. And then, though of course
-one works at the wrong side of the tapestry and has to trust that the
-pattern is coming right, I do believe that, to a certain extent, it does
-need me."
-
-He leaned back in his chair opposite her, listening to the voice that
-rattled on so cheerfully. With his head bent, he kept that old gaze upon
-her and clutched the clearer and clearer revelation: Eppie--Eppie in
-torment; Eppie shattered;--Eppie--why, it was as if she sat there before
-him smiling and rattling over a huge hole in her chest. And, finally,
-the consciousness of the falsity in her own tone made her falter a
-little. She couldn't continue so glibly while his eyes were saying to
-her: "Yes; I see, I see. You are wounded to death." But if she faltered
-it was only, in the pause, to look about for another shield.
-
-"And you?" she said. "Have you done a great deal of climbing? Tell me
-about yourself, dear Jim."
-
-It was a dangerous note to strike and the "dear Jim" gave away her sense
-of insecurity. It was almost an appeal to him not to see, or, at all
-events, not to tell her that he saw.
-
-"Don't talk about me," he said very rudely. She knew the significance of
-his rudeness.
-
-"Let us talk of whatever you will."
-
-"Of you, then. Don't try to shut me out, Eppie."
-
-"Am I shutting you out?"
-
-"You are trying to. You have succeeded with the rest, I suppose; but, as
-of course you know, you can't succeed with me. I know too much. I care
-too much."
-
-His rough, tense voice beat down her barriers. She sat silent, oddly
-smiling.
-
-He rose and came to her and stood above her, pressing the tips of his
-fingers heavily down upon her shoulder.
-
-"You must tell me. I must know. I won't stand not knowing."
-
-Motionless, without looking up at him, she still smiled before her.
-
-"That--that coward has broken your heart," he said. There were tears in
-his voice, and, looking up now, the smile stiffened to a resolute
-grimace, she saw them running down his cheeks. But her own face did not
-soften. With a glib dryness she answered:
-
-"Yes, Jim; that's it."
-
-"Oh--" It was a long growl over her head.
-
-She had looked away again, and continued in the same crisp voice: "I'd
-lie if I could, you may be sure. But you put it so, you look so, that I
-can't. I'm at your mercy. You know what I feel, so I can't hide it from
-you. I hate any one, even you, to know what I feel. Help me to hide it."
-
-"What has he done?" Grainger asked on the muffled, growling note.
-
-"Gavan? Done? He's done nothing."
-
-"But something happened. You aren't where you were when I left you. You
-weren't breaking down then."
-
-"Hope deferred, Jim--"
-
-"It's not that. Don't fence, to shield him. It's not hope deferred. It's
-hope dead. Something happened. What was it?"
-
-"All that happened was that he went, when I thought that he was going to
-stay, forever."
-
-"He went, knowing--"
-
-"That I loved him? Yes; I told him."
-
-"And he told you that he didn't love you?"
-
-"No, there you were wrong. He told me that he did. But he saw what you
-saw. So what would you have asked of him?"
-
-"Saw what I saw? What do you mean?"
-
-"That he would suffocate me. That he was the negation of everything I
-believed in."
-
-"You mean to tell me," said Grainger, his fingers still pressing down
-upon her shoulder, "that it all came out,--that you had it there between
-you,--and then that he ran away?"
-
-"From the fear of hurting my life. Yes."
-
-"From the fear of life itself, you mean."
-
-"If that was it, wasn't it enough?"
-
-"The coward. The mean, bloodless coward," said Jim Grainger.
-
-"I let you say it because I understand; it's your relief. But he is not
-a coward. He is only--a saint. A saint without a saint's perquisites. A
-Spinoza without a God. An imitator of Christ without a Christ. I have
-been thinking, thinking it all out, seeing it all, ever since."
-
-"Spinoza! What has he to do with it! Don't talk rot, dear child, to
-comfort yourself."
-
-"Be patient, Jim. Perhaps I can help you. It calms one when one
-understands. I have been reading up all the symptoms. Listen to this, if
-you think that Spinoza has nothing to do with it. On the contrary, he
-knew all about it and would have seen very much as Gavan does."
-
-She took up one of the books that had been so frequently flung down by
-Grainger in his waiting and turned its pages while he watched her with
-the enduring look of a mother who humors a sick child's foolish fancies.
-
-"Listen to Spinoza, Jim," she said, and he obediently bent his lowering
-gaze to the task. "'When a thing is not loved, no strife arises about
-it; there is no pang if it perishes, no envy if another bears it away,
-no fear, no hate; yes, in a word, no tumult of soul. These things all
-come from loving that which perishes.' And now the Imitation: 'What
-canst thou see anywhere which can continue long under the sun? Thou
-believest, perchance, that thou shalt be satisfied, but thou wilt never
-be able to attain unto this. If thou shouldst see all things before thee
-at once, what would it be but a vain vision?' And this: 'Trust not thy
-feeling, for that which is now will be quickly changed into somewhat
-else.'"
-
-Her voice, as she read on to him,--and from page to page she went,
-plucking for him, it seemed, their cold, white blossoms, fit flowers to
-lay on the grave of love,--had lost the light dryness as of withered
-leaves rustling. It seemed now gravely to understand, to acquiesce. A
-chill went over the man, as though, under his hand, he felt her, too,
-sliding from warm life into that place of shadows where she must be to
-be near the one she loved.
-
-"Shut the books, for God's sake, Eppie," he said. "Don't tell me that
-you've come to see as he has."
-
-She looked up at him, and now, in the dear, deep eyes, he saw all the
-old Eppie, the Eppie of life and battle.
-
-"Can you think it, Jim? It's because I see so clearly what he sees that
-I hate it and repudiate it and fight it with every atom of my being.
-It's that hatred, that repudiation, that fight, that is life. I believe
-in it, I'm for it, as I never believed before, as I never was before."
-
-He was answering her look, seeing her as life's wounded champion,
-standing, shot through, on the ramparts of her beleaguered city. She
-would shake her banner high in the air as she fell. The pity, the fury,
-the love of his eyes dwelt on her.
-
-And suddenly, under that look, her eyes closed. She shrank together in
-her chair; she bowed down her head upon her knees, covering her face.
-
-"Oh, Jim," she said, "my heart is broken."
-
-He knew that he had brought her to this, that never before an onlooker
-had she so fallen into her own misery. He had forced her to show the
-final truth that, though she held the banner, she was shot through and
-through. And he could do nothing but stand on above her, his face set to
-a flintier, sharper endurance, as he heard the great sobs shake her.
-
-He left her presently and walked up and down the room while she wept,
-crouched over upon her knees. It was not for long. The tempest passed,
-and, when she sat in quiet, her head in her hands, her face still
-hidden, he said, "You must set about mending now, Eppie."
-
-"I can't mend. I'll live; but I can't mend."
-
-"Don't say it, Eppie. This may pass as--well--other things in your life
-have passed."
-
-"Do you, too, talk Spinoza to me, Jim?"
-
-"Damn Spinoza! I'm talking life to you--the life we both believe in. I'm
-not telling you to turn your back on it because it has crippled you. You
-won't, I know it. I know that you are brave. Eppie, Eppie,"--before her,
-now, he bent to her, then knelt beside her chair,--"let me be the
-crutch. Let me have the fragments. Let's try, together, to mend them. I
-ask nothing of you but that trying, with my help, to mend. He isn't for
-you. He's never for you. I'll say no more brutalities of him. I'll use
-your own words and say that he can't,--that his saintship can't. So
-won't you, simply, let me take you? Even if you're broken for life, let
-me have the broken Eppie."
-
-She had never, except in the moment of the kiss, seen this deepest thing
-in him, this gentleness, this reverent tenderness that, under the
-bullying, threatening, angry aspects of his love, now supplicated with a
-beauty that revealed all the angel in humanity. Strange--she could think
-it in all her sorrow--that the thing that held him to her was the thing
-that held her to Gavan, the deep, the mysterious, the unchangeable
-affinity. For him, as for her, there could be but one, and for that one
-alone could these depths and heights of the heart open themselves.
-
-"Jim, dear, dear Jim, never, never," she said. "I am his, only his,
-fragments, all of me, for as long as I am I."
-
-Grainger hid his face on the arm of her chair.
-
-"And he is mine," said Eppie. "He knows it, and that is why he fears me.
-He is mine forever."
-
-"I am glad for your sake that you can believe that," Grainger muttered,
-"and glad, for my own, that I don't."
-
-"Why, Jim?"
-
-"I could hardly live if I thought that you were going to love him in
-eternity and that I was, forever, to be shut away. Thank goodness that
-it's only for a lifetime that my tragedy lasts."
-
-She closed her eyes to these perplexities, laying her hand on his.
-
-"I don't know. We can only think and act for this life. It's this we
-have to shape. Perhaps in eternity, really in eternity, whatever that
-may mean, I won't need to shut you out. Dear, dear Jim, it's hard that
-it must seem that to you now. You know what I feel about you. And who
-could feel it as I do? We are in the same boat."
-
-"No, for he, at least, loves no one else. You haven't that to bear. As
-far as he goes,--and it isn't far,--he is yours. We are not at all in
-the same boat. But that's enough of me. I suppose I am done for, as you
-say, forever."
-
-He had got upon his feet, and, as if at their mutual wreckage, looked
-down with a face that had found again its old shield of grimness.
-
-"As for you," he went on, "I sha'n't, at all events, see you
-suffocating. You must mend alone, then, as best you can. Really, you're
-not as tragic as you might have been."
-
-Then, after this salutary harshness, and before he turned from her to
-go, he added, as once before, "Poor darling."
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-Grainger hardly knew why he had come and, as he walked up the deep
-Surrey lane from the drowsy village station, his common-sense warred
-with the instinct, almost the obsession, that was taking him to
-Cheylesford Lodge. Eppie had been persistently in his thoughts since
-their meeting of the week before, and from his own hopelessness had
-sprung the haunting of a hope for her. Turn from it as he would, accuse
-himself angrily of madness, morbidity, or a mere tendency to outrageous
-meddling,--symptomatic of shattered nerves,--he couldn't escape it. By
-day and night it was with him, until he saw himself, in a lurid vision,
-as responsible for Eppie's very life if he didn't test its validity. For
-where she had failed might not a man armed with the strength of his
-selfless love succeed?
-
-He had said, in his old anger, that as Gavan's wife Gavan would kill
-her; but he hadn't really meant that literally; now, literally, the new
-fear had come that she might die of Gavan's loss. Her will hadn't
-snapped, but her vitality was like the flare of the candle in its
-socket. To love, the eremite of Cheylesford Lodge wouldn't
-yield--perhaps for very pity's sake; but if he were made to see the
-other side of it?--Grainger found a grim amusement in the paradox--the
-lover, in spite of love, might yield to pity. Couldn't his own manliness
-strike some spark of manliness from Gavan? Couldn't he and Eppie between
-them, with their so different appeals,--she to what was soft, he to what
-was tough,--hoist his tragically absurd head above water, as it were,
-into the air of real life, that might, who knew? fill and sustain his
-aquatic lungs? It gave him a vindictive pleasure to see the drowning
-simile in the most ludicrous aspects--Gavan, draped in the dramatic
-robes of his twopenny-halfpenny philosophies, holding his head in a
-basin of water, there resolved to die. Grainger felt that as far as his
-own inclinations were concerned it would have given him some pleasure to
-help to hold him under, to see that, while he was about it, he did it
-thoroughly; but the question wasn't one of his own inclinations: it was
-for Eppie's sake that he must try to drag out the enraptured suicide. It
-was Eppie, bereft and dying,--so it seemed to him in moments of deep
-fear,--whose very life depended on the submerged life. And to see if he
-could fish it up for her he had come on this undignified, this
-ridiculous errand.
-
-Very undignified and very ridiculous he felt the errand to be, as he
-strode on through the lane, its high hedge-rows all dusty with the
-autumn drought; but he was indifferent enough to that side of it. He
-felt no confusion. He was completely prepared to speak his mind.
-
-Coming to a turning of the lane, where he stood for a moment,
-uncertain, at branching paths, he was joined by an alert little parson
-who asked him courteously if he could direct him on his way. They were
-both, it then appeared, going to Cheylesford Lodge; and the Reverend
-John Best, after introducing himself as the rector of Dittleworth
-parish, and receiving Grainger's name, which had its reverberations,
-with affable interest, surmised that it was to another friend of Mr.
-Palairet's that he spoke.
-
-"Yes. No. That is to say, I've known him after a fashion for years, but
-seen little of him. Has he been here all summer?" Grainger asked, as
-they walked on.
-
-It seemed that Gavan had only returned from the Continent the week
-before, but Mr. Best went on to say, with an evidently temperamental
-loquacity, that he was there for most of the time as a rule and was
-found a very charming neighbor and a very excellent parishioner.
-
-This last was a role in which Gavan seemed extremely incongruous, and
-Grainger looked his perplexity, murmuring, "Parishioner?"
-
-"Not, I fear, that we can claim him as an altogether orthodox one," Mr.
-Best said, smiling tolerantly upon his companion's probable narrowness.
-"We ask for the spirit, rather than the letter, nowadays, Mr. Grainger;
-and Mr. Palairet is, at heart, as good a Christian as any of us, of that
-I am assured: better than many of us, as far as living the Christian
-life goes. Christianity, in its essence, is a life. Ah, if only you
-statesmen, you active men of the world, would realize that; would look
-past the symbols to the reality. We, who see life as a spiritual
-organization, are able to break down the limitations of the dry,
-self-centered individualism that, for so many years, has obscured the
-glorious features of our faith. And it is the spirit of the Church that
-Mr. Palairet has grasped. Time only is needed, I am convinced, to make
-him a partaker of her gifts."
-
-Grainger walked on in a sardonic silence, and Mr. Best, all
-unsuspecting, continued to embroider his congenial theme with
-illustrations: the village poor, to whom Mr. Palairet was so devoted;
-the village hospital, of which he was to talk over the plans to-day; the
-neighborly thoughtfulness and unfailing kindness and charity he showed
-toward high and low.
-
-"Palairet always seemed to me very ineffectual," said Grainger when, in
-a genial pause, he felt that something in the way of response was
-expected of him.
-
-"Ah, I fear you judge by the worldly standard of outward attainment, Mr.
-Grainger."
-
-"What other is there for us human beings to judge by?"
-
-"The standard of our unhappy modern plutocratic society is not that by
-which to measure the contemplative type of character."
-
-Grainger felt a slight stress of severity in the good little parson's
-affability.
-
-"Oh, I think its standards aren't at all unwholesome," he made reply. He
-could have justified anything, any standard, against Gavan and his
-standards.
-
-"Unwholesome, my dear Mr. Grainger? That is just what they are. See the
-beauty of a life like our friend's here. It judges your barbarous
-Christless civilization. He lives laborious, simple days. He does his
-work, he has his friends. His influence upon them counts for more than
-an outside observer could compute. Great men are among them. I met Lord
-Taunton at his house last Sunday. A most impressive personality. Even
-though Mr. Palairet has abandoned the political career, one can't call
-him ineffectual when such a man is among his intimates."
-
-"The monkish type doesn't appeal to me, I own."
-
-"Ah, there you touch the point that has troubled me. It is not good for
-a man to live alone. My chief wish for him is that he may marry. I often
-urge it on him."
-
-"Well done."
-
-"One did hear," Mr. Best went on, his small, ruddy face taking on a look
-of retrospective reprobation, "that there was an attachment to a certain
-young woman--the tale was public property--only as such do I allude to
-it--a very fashionable, very worldly young woman. I was relieved indeed
-when the rumor came to nothing. He escaped finally, I can't help
-fancying it, this summer. I was much relieved."
-
-"Why so, pray?"
-
-"I am rural, old-fashioned, my dear young man, and that type of young
-woman is one toward which, I own it, I find it difficult to feel
-charitably. She represents the pagan, the Christless element that I
-spoke of in our modern world. Her charm could not have been a noble
-one. Had our friend here succumbed to it, she could only have meant
-disaster in his life. She would have urged him into ambition,
-pleasure-seeking, dissipation. Of course I only cite what I have heard
-in my quiet corner, though I have had glimpses of her, passing with a
-friend, a very frivolous person, in a motor-car. She looked completely
-what I had imagined."
-
-"If you mean Miss Gifford," said Grainger, trying for temperateness, "I
-happen to know her. She is anything but a pleasure-seeker, anything but
-frivolous, anything, above all, but a pagan. If Palairet had been lucky
-enough to marry her it would have been the best thing that ever happened
-to him in his life, and a very dubious thing for her. She is a thousand
-times too good for him."
-
-"My dear Mr. Grainger, pardon me; I had no idea that you knew the lady.
-But," Mr. Best had flushed a little under this onslaught, "I cannot but
-think you a partisan."
-
-"Do you call a woman frivolous who spends half of her time working in
-the slums?"
-
-"That is a phase, I hear, of the ultra-smart young woman. But no doubt
-rumor has been unjust. I must beg you to pardon me."
-
-"Oh, don't mind that. You heard, no doubt, the surface things. But no
-one who knows Miss Gifford can think of them, that's all."
-
-"And if I have been betrayed into injustice, I hope that you will
-reconsider a little more charitably your impression of Mr. Palairet,"
-said Mr. Best, in whom, evidently, Grainger's roughness rankled.
-
-Grainger laughed grimly. "I can't consider him anything but a thousand
-times too bad for Miss Gifford."
-
-They had reached the entrance to Cheylesford Lodge on this final and
-discordant phrase. Mr. Best kept a grieved silence and Grainger's
-thoughts passed from him.
-
-He had had in his life no training in appreciation and was indifferent
-to things of the eye, but even to his insensible nature the whole aspect
-of the house that they approached between high yew hedges, its dreaming
-quiet, the tones of its dim old bricks, the shadowed white of paneled
-walls within, spoke of pensive beauty, of a secure content in things of
-the mind. He felt it suddenly as oppressive and ominous in its assured
-quietness. It had some secret against the probes of feeling. Its magic
-softly shut away suffering and encircled safely a treasure of
-tranquillity.
-
-That was the secret, that the magic; it flashed vaguely for
-Grainger--though by its light he saw more vividly his own errand as
-ridiculous--that a life of thought, pure thought, if one could only
-achieve it, was the only _safe_ life. Where, in this adjusted system of
-beauty and contemplation, would his appeals find foothold?
-
-He dashed back the crowding doubts, summoning his own crude forces.
-
-The man who admitted them said that Mr. Palairet was in the garden, and
-stepping from opened windows at the back of the house, they found
-themselves on the sunny spaces of the lawn with its encompassing trees
-and its wandering border of flowers.
-
-Gavan was sitting with a book in the shade of the great yew-tree. In
-summer flannels, a panama hat tilted over his eyes, he was very white,
-very tenuous, very exquisite. And he was the center of it all, the
-secret securely his, the magic all at his disposal.
-
-Seeing them he rose, dropping his book into his chair, strolling over
-the miraculous green to meet them, showing no haste, no hesitation, no
-surprise.
-
-"I've come on particular business," Grainger said, "and I'll stroll
-about until you and Mr. Best are done with the hospital."
-
-Mr. Best, still with sadness in his manner, promised not to keep Mr.
-Palairet long and they went inside.
-
-Grainger was left standing under the yew-tree. He took up Gavan's book,
-while the sense of frustration, and of rebellion against it, rose in
-him. The book was French and dealt with an obscure phase of Byzantine
-history. Gavan's neat notes marked passages concerning some contemporary
-religious phenomena.
-
-Grainger flung down the book, careless of crumpled leaves, and wandered
-off abruptly, among the hedges and into the garden. It was a very
-different garden from the old Scotch one where a sweet pensiveness
-seemed always to hover and where romance whispered and beckoned. This
-garden, steeped in sunlight, and where plums and pears on the hot rosy
-walls shone like jewels among their crisp green leaves, was unshadowed,
-unhaunted, smiling and decorous--the garden of placid wisdom and
-Epicurean calm. Grainger, as he walked, felt at his heart a tug of
-strange homesickness and yearning for that Northern garden, its dim
-gray walls and its disheveled nooks and corners. Were they all done with
-it forever?
-
-By the time he had returned to the lawn Gavan was just emerging from the
-house. They met in the shadow of the yew.
-
-"I'm glad to see you, Grainger," Gavan said, with a smile that struck
-Grainger as faded in quality. "This place is a sort of harbor for tired
-workers, you know. You should have looked me up before, or are you never
-tired enough for that?"
-
-"I don't feel the need of harbors, yet. One never sees you in London."
-
-"No, the lounging life down here suits me."
-
-"Your little parson doesn't see it in that light. He has been telling me
-how you live up to your duties as neighbor and parishioner."
-
-"It doesn't require much effort. Nice little fellow, isn't he, Best? He
-tells me that you walked up together."
-
-"We did," said Grainger, with his own inner sense of grim humor at the
-memory. "I should think you would find him rather limited."
-
-"But I'm limited, too," said Gavan, mildly. "I like being with people so
-neatly adapted to their functions. There are no loose ends about Best;
-nothing unfulfilled or uncomfortable. He's all there--all that there is
-of him to be there."
-
-"Not a very lively companion."
-
-"I'm not a lively companion, either," Gavan once more, with his mild
-gaiety, retorted.
-
-Grainger at this gave a harsh laugh. "No, you certainly aren't," he
-agreed.
-
-They had twice paced the length of the yew-tree shadow and Gavan had
-asked no question; and Grainger felt, as the pause grew, that Gavan
-never would ask questions. Any onus for a disturbance of the atmosphere
-must rest entirely on himself, and to disturb it he would have to be
-brutal.
-
-He jerked aside the veils of the placid dialogue with sudden violence.
-"I've seen Eppie," he said.
-
-He had intended to use her formal name only, but the nearer word rushed
-out and seemed to shatter the magic that held him off.
-
-Gavan's face grew a shade paler. "Have you?" he said.
-
-"You knew that she had been ill?"
-
-"I heard of it, recently, from General Carmichael. It was nothing
-serious, I think."
-
-"It will be serious." Grainger stood still and gazed into his eyes. "Do
-you want to kill her?"
-
-It struck him, when he had said it, and while Gavan received the words
-and seemed to reflect on them, that however artificial his atmosphere
-might be he would never evade any reality brought forcibly into it. He
-contemplated this one and did not pretend not to understand.
-
-"I want Eppie to be happy," he said presently.
-
-"Happy, yes. So do I," broke from Grainger with a groan.
-
-They stood now near the great trunk of the yew-tree, and turning away,
-striking the steel-gray bark monotonously with his fist, he went on: "I
-love her, as you know. And she loves you. She told me--I made her tell
-me. But any one with eyes could see it; even your gossiping little fool
-of a parson here had heard of it--was relieved for your escape. But who
-cares for the cackling? And you have crippled her, broken her. You have
-tossed aside that woman whose little finger is worth more to the world
-than your whole being. I wish to God she'd never seen you."
-
-"So do I," Gavan said.
-
-"I'd kill you with the greatest pleasure--if it could do her any good."
-
-There was relief for Grainger in getting out these fundamental things.
-
-"Yes,--I quite understand that. So would I," Gavan acquiesced,--"kill
-myself, I mean,--if it would do her any good."
-
-"Don't try that. It wouldn't. She's beyond all help but one. So I am
-here to put it to you."
-
-The still, hot day encompassed their shadow and with its quiet made more
-intense Grainger's sense of his own passion--passion and its negation,
-the stress between the two. Their words, though they spoke so quietly,
-seemed to fill the world.
-
-"I am sorry," Gavan said; "I can do nothing."
-
-Grainger beat at the tree.
-
-"You love her."
-
-"Not as she must be loved. I only want her, when I am selfish. When I
-think for her I have no want at all."
-
-"Give her your selfishness."
-
-"Ah, even that fades. That's what I found out. I can't count on my
-selfishness. I've tried to do it. It didn't work."
-
-Grainger turned his bloodshot eyes upon him; these moments under the
-yew-tree, that white figure with its pale smile, its comprehending
-gravity confronting him, would count in his life, he knew, among its
-most racking memories.
-
-"I consider you a madman," he now said.
-
-"Perhaps I am one. You don't think it for Eppie's happiness to marry a
-madman?"
-
-"My God, I don't know what to think! I want to save her."
-
-"But so do I," Gavan's voice had its first note of eagerness. "_I_ want
-to save her. And I want her to marry you. That's her chance, and
-yours--and mine, though mine really doesn't count. That's what I hope
-for."
-
-"There's no hope there."
-
-"Have patience. Wait. She will, perhaps, get over me."
-
-Grainger's eyes, with their hot, jaded look of baffled purpose, so
-selfless that it transcended jealousy and hatred, were still on him, and
-he thought now that he detected on the other's face the strain of some
-inner tension. He wasn't so dead, then. He was suffering. No, more yet,
-and the final insight came in another vague flash that darkly showed the
-trouble at the heart of all the magic, the beauty, he, too, more really
-than Eppie, perhaps, was dying for love. Madman, devoted madman that he
-was, he was dying for love of the woman from whom he must always flee.
-It was strange to feel one's sane, straightforward mind forced along
-this labyrinth of dazed comprehension, turning in the cruelly knotted
-paradox of this impossible love-story. Yet, against his very will, he
-was so forced to follow and almost to understand.
-
-There wasn't much more to say. And he had his own paradoxical
-satisfaction in the sight of the canker at the core of thought. So, at
-all events, one wasn't safe even so.
-
-"She won't get over you," he said. "It isn't a mere love-affair. It's
-her life. She may not die of it; that's a figure of speech that I had no
-right, I suppose, to use. At all events, she'll try her best not to die.
-But she won't get over you."
-
-"Not even if I get out of the way forever?"
-
-Gavan put the final proposition before him, but Grainger, staring at the
-sunlight, shook his head.
-
-"The very fact that you're alive makes her hold the tighter. No, you
-can't save her in that way. I wish you could."
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-Grainger had had his insight, but, outwardly, in the year that followed,
-Gavan's life was one of peace, of achieved escape.
-
-The world soon ceased to pull at him, to plead or protest. With a kindly
-shrug of the shoulders the larger life passed him by as one more proved
-ineffectual. The little circle that clung about him, as the flotsam and
-jetsam of a river drift from the hurrying current around the stability
-and stillness of a green islet, was, in the main, composed of the
-defeated or the indifferent. One or two cynical fighters moored their
-boats, for a week-end, at his tranquil shores, and the powerful old
-statesman who believed nothing, hoped nothing, felt very little, and
-who, behind his show-life of patriotic and hard-working nobleman, smiled
-patiently at the whole foolish comedy, was his most intimate companion.
-To the world at large, Lord Taunton was the witty Tory, the devoted
-churchman, the wise upholder of all the hard-won props of civilization;
-to Gavan, he was the skeptical and pessimistic metaphysician; together
-they watched the wheels go round.
-
-Mayburn came down once or twice to see his poor, queer, dear old
-Palairet, and in London boasted much of the experience. "He's too, too
-wonderful," he said. "He has achieved a most delicate, recondite
-harmony. One never heard anything just like it before, and can't, for
-the life of one, tell just what the notes are. Effort, constant effort,
-amidst constant quiet and austerity. Work is his passion, and yet never
-was any creature so passionless. He's like a rower, rowing easily,
-indefatigably, down a long river, among lilies, while he looks up at the
-sky."
-
-But Mayburn felt the quiet and austerity a little disturbing. He didn't,
-after all, come to look at quiet and austerity unless some one were
-there to hear him talk about them; and his host, all affability, never
-seemed quite there.
-
-So a year, more than a year, went by.
-
-It was on an early spring morning that Gavan found on his
-breakfast-table a letter written in a faltering hand,--a hand that
-faltered with the weeping that shook it,--Miss Barbara's old, faint
-hand.
-
-He read, at first, hardly comprehending.
-
-It was of Eppie she wrote: of her overwork--they thought it must be
-that--in the winter, of the resultant fragility that had made her
-succumb suddenly to an illness contracted in some hotbed of epidemic in
-the slums. They had all thought that she would come through it. People
-had been very kind. Eppie had so many, many friends. Every one loved
-her. She had been moved to Lady Alicia's house in Grosvenor Street. She,
-Aunt Barbara, had come up to town at once, and the general was with
-her.
-
-It was with a fierce impatience that he went on through the phrases that
-were like the slow trickling of tear after tear, as if he knew, yet
-refused to know, the tragedy that the trivial tears flowed for, knew
-what was coming, resented its insufferable delay, yet spurned its bare
-possibility. At the end, and only then, it came. Her strength had
-suddenly failed. There was no hope. Eppie was dying and had asked to see
-him--at once.
-
-A bird, above the window open to the dew and sunlight, sang and whistled
-while he read, a phrase, not joyous, not happy, yet strangely full of
-triumph, of the innocent praise of life. Gavan, standing still, with the
-letter in his hand, listened, while again and again, monotonously,
-freshly, the bird repeated its song.
-
-He seemed at first to listen quietly, with pleasure, appreciative of
-this heraldry of spring; then memory, blind, numbed from some dark
-shock, stirred, stole out to meet it--the memory of Eppie's morning
-voice on the hillside, the voice monotonous yet triumphant with its
-sense of life; and at each reiteration, the phrase seemed a dagger
-plunged into his heart.
-
-Oh, memory! Oh, cruel thought! Cruel life!
-
-After he had ordered the trap, and while waiting for it, he walked out
-into the freshness and back and forth, over and over across the lawn,
-with the patient, steady swiftness of an animal caged and knowing that
-the bars are about it. So this was to be the end. But, though already he
-acquiesced, it seemed in some way a strange, inapt ending. He couldn't
-think of Eppie and death. He couldn't see her dead. He could only see
-her looking at death.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The early train he caught got him to London by eleven, and in twenty
-minutes he was in Grosvenor Street. He had wired from the country, and
-Miss Barbara met him in the drawing-room of the house, hushed in its
-springtime gaiety. She was the frail ghost of her shadowy old self, her
-voice tremulous, her face blurred with tears and sleepless nights. Yet
-he saw, under the woe, the essential listlessness of age, the placidity
-beneath the half-mechanical tears. "Oh, Gavan," she said, taking his
-hand and holding it in both her own--"Oh, Gavan, we couldn't have
-thought of this, could we, that she would go first." And that his own
-face showed some sharp fixity of woe he felt from its reflection on
-hers--like a sword-flash reflected in a shallow pool.
-
-She told him that it was now an affair of hours only. "I would have sent
-for you long ago, Gavan; I knew--I knew that you would want it. But she
-wouldn't--not while there was hope. I think she was afraid of hurting
-you. You know she had never been the same since--since--"
-
-"Since what?" he asked, knowing.
-
-"Since you went away. She was so ill then. Poor child! She never found
-herself, you see, Gavan. She did not know what she wanted. She has worn
-herself out in looking for it."
-
-Miss Barbara was very ignorant. He himself could not know, probably
-Eppie herself didn't know, what had killed her, though she had so well
-known what she wanted; but he suspected that Grainger had been right,
-and that it was on him that Eppie's life had shattered itself.
-
-Her will, evidently, still ruled those about her, for when Miss Barbara
-had led him up-stairs she said, pausing in the passage, that Eppie would
-see him alone; the nurse would leave them. She had insisted on that, and
-there was now no reason why she should not have her way. The nurse came
-out to them, telling him that Miss Gifford waited; and, just before she
-let him go, Miss Barbara drew his head down to hers and kissed him,
-murmuring to him to be brave. He really didn't know whether he were more
-the felon, or more the victim that she thought him. Then the door closed
-behind him and he was alone with Eppie.
-
-Eppie was propped high on pillows, her hair twisted up from her brows
-and neck and folded in heavy masses on her head.
-
-In the wide, white room, among her pillows, so white herself, and
-strange with a curious thinness, he had never received a more prodigious
-impression of life than in meeting her eyes, where all the forces of her
-soul looked out. So motionless, she was like music, like all that moves,
-that strives and is restless; so white, she was like skies at dawn, like
-deep seas under sunlight. In the stillness, the whiteness, the emptiness
-of the room she was illusion itself, life and beauty, a wonderful
-rainbow thing staining "the white radiance of eternity." And as if,
-before its final shattering, every color flamed, her whole being was
-concentrated in the mere fact of its existence--its existence that
-defied death. A deep, quiet excitement, almost a gaiety, breathed from
-her. In the tangled rivers of her hair, the intertwined currents of dark
-and gold winding in a lovely disorder,--in the white folds of lawn that
-lay so delicately about her; in the emerald slipping far down her
-finger, the emeralds in her ears, shaking faintly with her ebbing
-heart-beats, there was even a sort of wilful and heroic coquetry. She
-was, in her dying, triumphantly beautiful, yet, as always, through her
-beauty went the strength of her reliance on deeper significances.
-
-She lay motionless as Gavan approached her, and he guessed that she
-saved all her strength. Only as he took the chair beside her, horror at
-his heart, the old familiar horror, she put out her hand to him.
-
-He took it silently, looking up, after a little while, from its
-marvelous lightness and whiteness to her eyes, her smile. Then, at last,
-she spoke to him.
-
-"So you think that you have got the better of me at last, don't you,
-Gavan dear?" she said. Her voice was strange, as though familiar notes
-were played on some far-away flute, sweet and melancholy among the
-hills. The voice was strange and sad, but the words were not. In them
-was a caress, as though she pitied his pity for her; but the old
-antagonism, too, was there--a defiance, a willingness to be cruel to
-him. "I did play fair, you see," she went on. "I wouldn't have you come
-till there was no danger, for you, any more. And now this is the end of
-it all, you think. You will soon be able to say of me, Gavan,
-
- "her words to Scorn
- Are scattered, and her mouth is stopt with Dust!"
-
-His hand shut involuntarily, painfully, on hers, and as though his
-breath cut him, he said, "Don't--don't, Eppie."
-
-But with her gaiety she insisted: "Oh, but let us have the truth. You
-must think it. What else could you think?" and, again with the note of
-pity that would atone for the cruel lightness, "Poor Gavan! My poor,
-darling Gavan! And I must leave you with your thoughts--your empty
-thoughts, alone."
-
-He had taken a long breath over the physical pang her words had
-inflicted, and now he looked down at her hand, gently, one after the
-other, as though unseeingly, smoothing her fingers.
-
-"While I go on," she said.
-
-"Yes, dear," he assented.
-
-"You humor me with that. You are so glad, for me, that I go with all my
-illusions about me. Aren't you afraid that, because of them, I'll be
-caught in the mill again and ground round and round in incarnations
-until, only after such a long time, I come out all clean and white and
-selfless, not a scrap of dangerous life about me--Alone with the Alone."
-
-He felt now the fever in her clearness, the hovering on the border of
-hallucination. The colors flamed indeed, and her thoughts seemed to
-shoot up in strange flickerings, a medley of inconsequent memories and
-fancies strung on their chain of unnatural lucidity.
-
-He answered with patient gentleness, "I'm not afraid for you, Eppie. I
-don't think all that."
-
-"Nor I for myself," she retorted. "I love the mill and its grindings.
-But what you think,--I know perfectly what you think. You can't keep it
-from me, Gavan. You can't keep anything from me. And I found something
-that said it all. I can remember it. Shall I say it to you?"
-
-He bowed his head, smoothing her hand, not looking up at her while, in
-that voice of defiance, of fever, yet of such melancholy and echoing
-sweetness, she repeated:
-
- "Ne suis-je pas un faux accord
- Dans la divine symphonie,
- Grace a la vorace Ironie
- Qui me secoue et qui me mord?
-
- "Elle est dans ma voix, la criarde!
- C'est tout mon sang, ce poison noir!
- Je suis le sinistre miroir
- Ou la megere se regarde!
-
- "Je suis la plaie et le couteau!
- Je suis le soufflet et la joue!
- Je suis les membres et la roue,
- Et le victime et le bourreau!"
-
-She paused after it, smiling intently upon him, and he met the smile to
-say:
-
-"That's only one side of it, dear."
-
-"Ah, it's a side I know about, too! Didn't I see it, feel it? Haven't I
-been all through it--with you, for you, because of you? Ah, when you
-left me--when you left me, Gavan--"
-
-Still she smiled, with brilliant eyes, repeating,
-
- "Qui me secoue et qui me mord."
-
-He was silent, sitting with his pallid, drooping head; and suddenly she
-put her other hand on his, on the hand that gently, mechanically,
-smoothed her fingers.
-
-"You caress me, you try to comfort me,--while I am tormenting you. It's
-strange that I should want to torment you. Is it that I'm so afraid you
-sha'n't feel? I want you to feel. I want you to suffer. It is so
-horrible to leave you. It is so horrible to be afraid--sometimes
-afraid--that I shall never, never see you again. When you feel, when you
-suffer, I am not so lonely. But you feel nothing, do you?"
-
-He did not answer her.
-
-"Will you ever miss me, Gavan?"
-
-He did not answer.
-
-"Won't you even remember me?" she asked.
-
-And still he did not answer, sitting with downcast eyes. And she saw
-that he could not, and in his silence, of a dumb torture, was his reply.
-He looked the stricken saint, pierced through with arrows. And which of
-them was the victim, which the executioner?
-
-With her question a clearness, quieter, deeper, came to her, as though
-in the recoil of its engulfing anguish she pushed her way from among
-vibrating discords to a sudden harmony that, in holy peace, resolved
-them all in unison. Her eyelids fluttered down while, for an instant,
-she listened. Yes, under it all, above it all, holding them all about,
-there it was. She seemed to see the pain mounting, circling, flowing
-from its knotted root into strength and splendor. But though he was with
-her in it he was also far away,--he was blind, and deaf,--held fast by
-cruel bonds.
-
-"Look at me," she commanded him gently.
-
-And now, reluctantly, he looked up into her eyes.
-
-They held him, they drew him, they flooded him. With the keenness of
-life they cut into his heart, and like the surging up of blood his love
-answered hers. As helpless as he had ever been before her, he laid his
-head on her breast, his arms encircling her, while, with closed eyes, he
-said: "Don't think that I don't feel. Don't think that I don't suffer.
-It's only that;--I have only to see you;--something grasps me, and
-tortures me--"
-
-"Something," she said, her voice like the far flute echo of the voice
-that had spoken on that night in the old Scotch garden, "that brings you
-to life--to God."
-
-"Oh, Eppie, what can I say to you?" he murmured.
-
-"You can say nothing. But you will have to wake. It will have to
-come,--the sorrow, the joy of reality,--God--and me."
-
-It was his face, with closed eyes, with its stricken, ashen agony, that
-seemed the dying face. Hers, turned gently toward him, had all the
-beneficence, the radiance of life. But when she spoke again there was in
-her voice a tranced stillness as though already it spoke from another
-world.
-
-"You love me, Gavan."
-
-"I love you. You have that. That is yours, forever. I long for you,
-always, always,--even when I think that I am at peace. You are in
-everything: I hear a bird, and I think of your voice; I see a flower,
-or the sky, and it's of your face I think. I am yours, Eppie--yours
-forever."
-
-"You make me happy," she said.
-
-"Eppie, my darling Eppie, die now, die in my arms, dearest--in your
-happiness."
-
-"No, not yet; I can't go yet--though I wish it, too," she said. "There
-are still horrid bits--dreadful dark places--like the dreadful poem--the
-poem of you, Gavan--where I lose myself; burning places, edges of pain,
-where I fight to find myself again; long, dim places where I
-dream--dream--. I won't have you see me like that; you might think that
-you watched the scattering of the real me. I won't have you remember me
-all dim and broken."
-
-Her voice was sinking from her into an abyss of languor, and she felt
-the swirl of phantom thoughts blurring her mind even while she spoke.
-
-As on that far-away night when he held her hand and they stood together
-under the stars, she said, speaking now her prayer, "O God! God!"; and
-seeming in the effort of her will to lift a weight that softly,
-inexorably, like the lid of a tomb, pressed down upon her, "I am here,"
-she said. "You are mine. I will not be afraid. Remember me. So good-by,
-Gavan."
-
-"I will remember," he said.
-
-His arms still held her. And through his mind an army seemed to rush,
-galloping, with banners, with cries of lamentations, agony, regret,
-passionate rebellion. It crashed in conflict, blood beneath it, and
-above it tempests and torn banners. And the banners were desperate
-hopes riddled with bullets; and the blood was love poured out and the
-tempest was his heart. It was, he thought, even while he saw, listened,
-felt, the last onslaught upon his soul. She was going--the shadow of
-life was sliding from her--and from him, for she was life and its terror
-and beauty. Above the turmoil was the fated peace. He had won it,
-unwillingly. He could not be kept from it even by the memory that would
-stay.
-
-But though he knew, and, in knowing, saw his contemplative soul far from
-this scene of suffocating misery, Eppie, his dear, his beautiful, was in
-his arms, her eyes, her lips, her heart. He would never see her again.
-
-He raised his head to look his last, and, like a faint yet piercing
-perfume, her soul's smile still dwelt on him as she lay there
-speechless. For the moment--and was not the moment eternity?--the
-triumph was all hers. The moment, when long, long past, would still be
-part of him and her triumph in it eternal. To spare her the sight of his
-anguish would be to rob her. Anguish had been and was the only offering
-he could make her. He felt--felt unendurably, she would see that; he
-suffered, he loved her, unspeakably; she had that, too, while, in their
-last long silence, he held her hands against his heart. And her eyes,
-still smiling on him with their transcendent faith, showed that her
-triumph was shadowless.
-
- * * * * *
-
-He heard next day that she had died during the night.
-
-Peace did not come to him for long; the wounds of the warring interlude
-of life had been too deep. He forgot himself at last in the treadmill
-quiet of days all serene laboriousness, knowing that it could not be for
-many years that he should watch the drama. She had shattered herself on
-him; but he, too, had felt that in himself something had broken. And he
-forgot the wounds, except when some sight or sound, the song of a bird
-in Spring, a spray of heather, a sky of stars, startled them to deep
-throbbing. And then a hand, stretched out from the past, would seize
-him, a shudder, a pang, would shake him, and he would know that he was
-alone and that he remembered.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Shadow of Life, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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