The housekeeper’s reminding
her that Mr. Orme would be at home the next day for
dinner, and did she think he would like the venison
with claret sauce or jelly, roused Kate to the first
consciousness of her surroundings. Her father
would return on the morrow: he would give to the
dressing of the venison such minute consideration
as, in his opinion, every detail affecting his comfort
or convenience quite obviously merited. And if
it were not the venison it would be something else;
if it were not the housekeeper it would be Mr. Orme,
charged with the results of a conference with his
agent, a committee-meeting at his club, or any of the
other incidents which, by happening to himself, became
events. Kate found herself caught in the inexorable
continuity of life, found herself gazing over a scene
of ruin lit up by the punctual recurrence of habit
as nature’s calm stare lights the morrow of
a whirlwind.
Life was going on, then, and dragging
her at its wheels. She could neither check its
rush nor wrench loose from it and drop out—oh,
how blessedly—into darkness and cessation.
She must go bounding on, racked, broken, but alive
in every fibre. The most she could hope was a
few hours’ respite, not from her own terrors,
but from the pressure of outward claims: the
midday halt, during which the victim is unbound while
his torturers rest from their efforts. Till her
father’s return she would have the house to
herself, and, the question of the venison despatched,
could give herself to long lonely pacings of the empty
rooms, and shuddering subsidences upon her pillow.
Her first impulse, as the mist cleared
from her brain, was the habitual one of reaching out
for ultimate relations. She wanted to know the
worst; and for her, as she saw in a flash, the worst
of it was the core of fatality in what had happened.
She shrank from her own way of putting it—nor
was it even figuratively true that she had ever felt,
under faith in Denis, any such doubt as the perception
implied. But that was merely because her imagination
had never put him to the test. She was fond of
exposing herself to hypothetical ordeals, but somehow
she had never carried Denis with her on these adventures.
What she saw now was that, in a world of strangeness,
he remained the object least strange to her. She
was not in the tragic case of the girl who suddenly
sees her lover unmasked. No mask had dropped from
Denis’s face: the pink shades had simply
been lifted from the lamps, and she saw him for the
first time in an unmitigated glare.
Such exposure does not alter the features,
but it lays an ugly emphasis on the most charming
lines, pushing the smile to a grin, the curve of good-nature
to the droop of slackness. And it was precisely
into the flagging lines of extreme weakness that Denis’s
graceful contour flowed. In the terrible talk
which had followed his avowal, and wherein every word
flashed a light on his moral processes, she had been
less startled by what he had done than by the way
in which his conscience had already become a passive
surface for the channelling of consequences. He
was like a child who had put a match to the curtains,
and stands agape at the blaze. It was horribly
naughty to put the match—but beyond that
the child’s responsibility did not extend.
In this business of Arthur’s, where all had
been wrong from the beginning—where self-defence
might well find a plea for its casuistries in the
absence of a definite right to be measured by—it
had been easy, after the first slip, to drop a little
lower with each struggle. The woman—oh,
the woman was—well, of the kind who prey
on such men. Arthur, out there, at his lowest
ebb, had drifted into living with her as a man drifts
into drink or opium. He knew what she was—he
knew where she had come from. But he had fallen
ill, and she had nursed him—nursed him
devotedly, of course. That was her chance, and
she knew it. Before he was out of the fever she
had the noose around him—he came to and
found himself married. Such cases were common
enough—if the man recovered he bought off
the woman and got a divorce. It was all a part
of the business—the marriage, the bribe,
the divorce. Some of those women made a big income
out of it—they were married and divorced
once a year. If Arthur had only got well—but,
instead, he had a relapse and died. And there
was the woman, made his widow by mischance as it were,
with her child on her arm—whose child?—and
a scoundrelly black-mailing lawyer to work up her
case for her. Her claim was clear enough—the
right of dower, a third of his estate. But if
he had never meant to marry her? If he had been
trapped as patently as a rustic fleeced in a gambling-hell?
Arthur, in his last hours, had confessed to the marriage,
but had also acknowledged its folly. And after
his death, when Denis came to look about him and make
inquiries, he found that the witnesses, if there had
been any, were dispersed and undiscoverable.
The whole question hinged on Arthur’s statement
to his brother. Suppress that statement, and
the claim vanished, and with it the scandal, the humiliation,
the life-long burden of the woman and child dragging
the name of Peyton through heaven knew what depths.
He had thought of that first, Denis swore, rather
than of the money. The money, of course, had
made a difference,—he was too honest not
to own it—but not till afterward, he declared—would
have declared on his honour, but that the word tripped
him up, and sent a flush to his forehead.
Thus, in broken phrases, he flung
his defence at her: a defence improvised, pieced
together as he went along, to mask the crude instinctiveness
of his act. For with increasing clearness Kate
saw, as she listened, that there had been no real
struggle in his mind; that, but for the grim logic
of chance, he might never have felt the need of any
justification. If the woman, after the manner
of such baffled huntresses, had wandered off in search
of fresh prey, he might, quite sincerely, have congratulated
himself on having saved a decent name and an honest
fortune from her talons. It was the price she
had paid to establish her claim that for the first
time brought him to a startled sense of its justice.
His conscience responded only to the concrete pressure
of facts.
It was with the anguish of this discovery
that Kate Orme locked herself in at the end of their
talk. How the talk had ended, how at length she
had got him from the room and the house, she recalled
but confusedly. The tragedy of the woman’s
death, and of his own share in it, were as nothing
in the disaster of his bright irreclaimableness.
Once, when she had cried out, “You would have
married me and said nothing,” and he groaned
back, “But I have told you,” she
felt like a trainer with a lash above some bewildered
animal.
But she persisted savagely. “You
told me because you had to; because your nerves gave
way; because you knew it couldn’t hurt you to
tell.” The perplexed appeal of his gaze
had almost checked her. “You told me because
it was a relief; but nothing will really relieve you—nothing
will really help you—till you have told
some one who—who will hurt you.”
“Who will hurt me—?”
“Till you have told the truth as—as
openly as you lied.”
He started up, ghastly with fear. “I don’t
understand you.”
“You must confess, then—publicly—openly—you
must go to the judge. I don’t know how
it’s done.”
“To the judge? When they’re
both dead? When everything is at an end?
What good could that do?” he groaned.
“Everything is not at an end
for you—everything is just beginning.
You must clear yourself of this guilt; and there is
only one way—to confess it. And you
must give back the money.”
This seemed to strike him as conclusive
proof of her irrelevance. “I wish I had
never heard of the money! But to whom would you
have me give it back? I tell you she was a waif
out of the gutter. I don’t believe any one
knew her real name—I don’t believe
she had one.”
“She must have had a mother and father.”
“Am I to devote my life to hunting
for them through the slums of California? And
how shall I know when I have found them? It’s
impossible to make you understand. I did wrong—I
did horribly wrong—but that is not the
way to repair it.”
“What is, then?”
He paused, a little askance at the
question. “To do better—to do
my best,” he said, with a sudden flourish of
firmness. “To take warning by this dreadful—”
“Oh, be silent,” she cried
out, and hid her face. He looked at her hopelessly.
At last he said: “I don’t
know what good it can do to go on talking. I have
only one more thing to say. Of course you know
that you are free.”
He spoke simply, with a sudden return
to his old voice and accent, at which she weakened
as under a caress. She lifted her head and gazed
at him. “Am I?” she said musingly.
“Kate!” burst from him; but she raised
a silencing hand.
“It seems to me,” she
said, “that I am imprisoned—imprisoned
with you in this dreadful thing. First I must
help you to get out—then it will be time
enough to think of myself.”
His face fell and he stammered: “I don’t
understand you.”
“I can’t say what I shall
do—or how I shall feel—till I
know what you are going to do and feel.”
“You must see how I feel—that I’m
half dead with it.”
“Yes—but that is only half.”
He turned this over for a perceptible
space of time before asking slowly: “You
mean that you’ll give me up, if I don’t
do this crazy thing you propose?”
She paused in turn. “No,”
she said; “I don’t want to bribe you.
You must feel the need of it yourself.”
“The need of proclaiming this thing publicly?”
“Yes.”
He sat staring before him. “Of
course you realize what it would mean?” he began
at length.
“To you?” she returned.
“I put that aside. To others—to
you. I should go to prison.”
“I suppose so,” she said simply.
“You seem to take it very easily—I’m
afraid my mother wouldn’t.”
“Your mother?” This produced the effect
he had expected.
“You hadn’t thought of her, I suppose?
It would probably kill her.”
“It would have killed her to think that you
could do what you have done!”
“It would have made her very unhappy; but there’s
a difference.”
Yes: there was a difference;
a difference which no rhetoric could disguise.
The secret sin would have made Mrs. Peyton wretched,
but it would not have killed her. And she would
have taken precisely Denis’s view of the elasticity
of atonement: she would have accepted private
regrets as the genteel equivalent of open expiation.
Kate could even imagine her extracting a “lesson”
from the providential fact that her son had not been
found out.
“You see it’s not so simple,”
he broke out, with a tinge of doleful triumph.
“No: it’s not simple,” she
assented.
“One must think of others,”
he continued, gathering faith in his argument as he
saw her reduced to acquiescence.
She made no answer, and after a moment
he rose to go. So far, in retrospect, she could
follow the course of their talk; but when, in the
act of parting, argument lapsed into entreaty, and
renunciation into the passionate appeal to give him
at least one more hearing, her memory lost itself
in a tumult of pain, and she recalled only that, when
the door closed on him, he took with him her promise
to see him once again.