“Henry dear—” was her greeting.
He had finished his breakfast, and
was beginning the Times. His sister-in-law was
packing. Margaret knelt by him and took the paper
from him, feeling that it was unusually heavy and thick.
Then, putting her face where it had been, she looked
up in his eyes.
“Henry dear, look at me.
No, I won’t have you shirking. Look at
me. There. That’s all.”
“You’re referring to last
evening,” he said huskily. “I have
released you from your engagement. I could find
excuses, but I won’t. No, I won’t.
A thousand times no. I’m a bad lot, and
must be left at that.”
Expelled from his old fortress, Mr.
Wilcox was building a new one. He could no longer
appear respectable to her, so he defended himself
instead in a lurid past. It was not true repentance.
“Leave it where you will, boy.
It’s not going to trouble us; I know what I’m
talking about, and it will make no difference.”
“No difference?” he inquired.
“No difference, when you find that I am not
the fellow you thought?” He was annoyed with
Miss Schlegel here. He would have preferred her
to be prostrated by the blow, or even to rage.
Against the tide of his sin flowed the feeling that
she was not altogether womanly. Her eyes gazed
too straight; they had read books that are suitable
for men only. And though he had dreaded a scene,
and though she had determined against one, there was
a scene, all the same. It was somehow imperative.
“I am unworthy of you,”
he began. “Had I been worthy, I should
not have released you from your engagement. I
know what I am talking about. I can’t bear
to talk of such things. We had better leave it.”
She kissed his hand. He jerked
it from her, and, rising to his feet, went on:
“You, with your sheltered life, and refined
pursuits, and friends, and books, you and your sister,
and women like you—I say, how can you guess
the temptations that lie round a man?”
“It is difficult for us,”
said Margaret; “but if we are worth marrying,
we do guess.”
“Cut off from decent society
and family ties, what do you suppose happens to thousands
of young fellows overseas? Isolated. No one
near. I know by bitter experience, and yet you
say it makes ’no difference.’”
“Not to me.”
He laughed bitterly. Margaret
went to the sideboard and helped herself to one of
the breakfast dishes. Being the last down, she
turned out the spirit-lamp that kept them warm.
She was tender, but grave. She knew that Henry
was not so much confessing his soul as pointing out
the gulf between the male soul and the female, and
she did not desire to hear him on this point.
“Did Helen come?” she asked.
He shook his head.
“But that won’t do at
all, at all! We don’t want her gossiping
with Mrs. Bast.”
“Good God! no!” he exclaimed,
suddenly natural. Then he caught himself up.
“Let them gossip, my game’s up, though
I thank you for your unselfishness—little
as my thanks are worth.”
“Didn’t she send me a message or anything?”
“I heard of none.”
“Would you ring the bell, please?”
“What to do?”
“Why, to inquire.”
He swaggered up to it tragically,
and sounded a peal. Margaret poured herself out
some coffee. The butler came, and said that Miss
Schlegel had slept at the George, so far as he had
heard. Should he go round to the George?
“I’ll go, thank you,” said Margaret,
and dismissed him.
“It is no good,” said
Henry. “Those things leak out; you cannot
stop a story once it has started. I have known
cases of other men—I despised them once,
I thought that I’m different, I shall never
be tempted. Oh, Margaret—” He
came and sat down near her, improvising emotion.
She could not bear to listen to him. “We
fellows all come to grief once in our time. Will
you believe that? There are moments when the
strongest man— ’Let him who standeth,
take heed lest he fall.’ That’s true,
isn’t it? If you knew all, you would excuse
me. I was far from good influences—
far even from England. I was very, very lonely,
and longed for a woman’s voice. That’s
enough. I have told you too much already for
you to forgive me now.”
“Yes, that’s enough, dear.”
“I have”—he lowered his voice—“I
have been through hell.”
Gravely she considered this claim.
Had he? Had he suffered tortures of remorse,
or had it been, “There! that’s over.
Now for respectable life again”? The latter,
if she read him rightly. A man who has been through
hell does not boast of his virility. He is humble
and hides it, if, indeed, it still exists. Only
in legend does the sinner come forth penitent, but
terrible, to conquer pure woman by his resistless
power. Henry was anxious to be terrible, but
had not got it in him. He was a good average
Englishman, who had slipped. The really culpable
point—his faithlessness to Mrs. Wilcox—never
seemed to strike him. She longed to mention Mrs.
Wilcox.
And bit by bit the story was told
her. It was a very simple story. Ten years
ago was the time, a garrison town in Cyprus the place.
Now and then he asked her whether she could possibly
forgive him, and she answered, “I have already
forgiven you, Henry.” She chose her words
carefully, and so saved him from panic. She played
the girl, until he could rebuild his fortress and
hide his soul from the world. When the butler
came to clear away, Henry was in a very different
mood—asked the fellow what he was in such
a hurry for, complained of the noise last night in
the servants’ hall. Margaret looked intently
at the butler. He, as a handsome young man, was
faintly attractive to her as a woman—an
attraction so faint as scarcely to be perceptible,
yet the skies would have fallen if she had mentioned
it to Henry.
On her return from the George the
building operations were complete, and the old Henry
fronted her, competent, cynical, and kind. He
had made a clean breast, had been forgiven, and the
great thing now was to forget his failure, and to send
it the way of other unsuccessful investments.
Jacky rejoined Howards End and Dude Street, and the
vermilion motor-car, and the Argentine Hard Dollars,
and all the things and people for whom he had never
had much use and had less now. Their memory hampered
him. He could scarcely attend to Margaret, who
brought back disquieting news from the George.
Helen and her clients had gone.
“Well, let them go—the
man and his wife, I mean, for the more we see of your
sister the better.”
“But they have gone separately—Helen
very early, the Basts just before I arrived.
They have left no message. They have answered
neither of my notes. I don’t like to think
what it all means.”
“What did you say in the notes?”
“I told you last night.”
“Oh—ah—yes! Dear,
would you like one turn in the garden?”
Margaret took his arm. The beautiful
weather soothed her. But the wheels of Evie’s
wedding were still at work, tossing the guests outwards
as deftly as they had drawn them in, and she could
not be with him long. It had been arranged that
they should motor to Shrewsbury, whence he would go
north, and she back to London with the Warringtons.
For a fraction of time she was happy. Then her
brain recommenced.
“I am afraid there has been
gossiping of some kind at the George. Helen would
not have left unless she had heard something.
I mismanaged that. It is wretched. I ought
to have parted her from that woman at once.”
“Margaret!” he exclaimed,
loosing her arm impressively.
“Yes—yes, Henry?”
“I am far from a saint—in
fact, the reverse—but you have taken me,
for better or worse. Bygones must be bygones.
You have promised to forgive me. Margaret, a
promise is a promise. Never mention that woman
again.”
“Except for some practical reason—never.”
“Practical! You practical!”
“Yes, I’m practical,”
she murmured, stooping over the mowing-machine and
playing with the grass which trickled through her
fingers like sand.
He had silenced her, but her fears
made him uneasy. Not for the first time, he was
threatened with blackmail. He was rich and supposed
to be moral; the Basts knew that he was not, and might
find it profitable to hint as much.
“At all events, you mustn’t
worry,” he said. “This is a man’s
business.” He thought intently. “On
no account mention it to anybody.”
Margaret flushed at advice so elementary,
but he was really paving the way for a lie. If
necessary he would deny that he had ever known Mrs.
Bast, and prosecute her for libel. Perhaps he
never had known her. Here was Margaret, who behaved
as if he had not. There the house. Round
them were half a dozen gardeners, clearing up after
his daughter’s wedding. All was so solid
and spruce, that the past flew up out of sight like
a spring-blind, leaving only the last five minutes
unrolled.
Glancing at these, he saw that the
car would be round during the next five, and plunged
into action. Gongs were tapped, orders issued,
Margaret was sent to dress, and the housemaid to sweep
up the long trickle of grass that she had left across
the hall. As is Man to the Universe, so was the
mind of Mr. Wilcox to the minds of some men—a
concentrated light upon a tiny spot, a little Ten
Minutes moving self-contained through its appointed
years. No Pagan he, who lives for the Now, and
may be wiser than all philosophers. He lived
for the five minutes that have past, and the five
to come; he had the business mind.
How did he stand now, as his motor
slipped out of Oniton and breasted the great round
hills? Margaret had heard a certain rumour, but
was all right. She had forgiven him, God bless
her, and he felt the manlier for it. Charles
and Evie had not heard it, and never must hear.
No more must Paul. Over his children he felt
great tenderness, which he did not try to track to
a cause; Mrs. Wilcox was too far back in his life.
He did not connect her with the sudden aching love
that he felt for Evie. Poor little Evie! he trusted
that Cahill would make her a decent husband.
And Margaret? How did she stand?
She had several minor worries.
Clearly her sister had heard something. She dreaded
meeting her in town. And she was anxious about
Leonard, for whom they certainly were responsible.
Nor ought Mrs. Bast to starve. But the main situation
had not altered. She still loved Henry.
His actions, not his disposition, had disappointed
her, and she could bear that. And she loved her
future home. Standing up in the car, just where
she had leapt from it two days before, she gazed back
with deep emotion upon Oniton. Besides the Grange
and the Castle keep, she could now pick out the church
and the black-and-white gables of the George.
There was the bridge, and the river nibbling its green
peninsula. She could even see the bathing-shed,
but while she was looking for Charles’s new
spring-board, the forehead of the hill rose and hid
the whole scene.
She never saw it again. Day and
night the river flows down into England, day after
day the sun retreats into the Welsh mountains, and
the tower chimes, See the Conquering Hero. But
the Wilcoxes have no part in the place, nor in any
place. It is not their names that recur in the
parish register. It is not their ghosts that
sigh among the alders at evening. They have swept
into the valley and swept out of it, leaving a little
dust and a little money behind.