She had promised to see him again;
but the promise did not imply that she had rejected
his offer of freedom. In the first rush of misery
she had not fully repossessed herself, had felt herself
entangled in his fate by a hundred meshes of association
and habit; but after a sleepless night spent with
the thought of him—that dreadful bridal
of their souls—she woke to a morrow in
which he had no part. She had not sought her freedom,
nor had he given it; but a chasm had opened at their
feet, and they found themselves on different sides.
Now she was able to scan the disaster
from the melancholy vantage of her independence.
She could even draw a solace from the fact that she
had ceased to love Denis. It was inconceivable
that an emotion so interwoven with every fibre of
consciousness should cease as suddenly as the flow
of sap in an uprooted plant; but she had never allowed
herself to be tricked by the current phraseology of
sentiment, and there were no stock axioms to protect
her from the truth.
It was probably because she had ceased
to love him that she could look forward with a kind
of ghastly composure to seeing him again. She
had stipulated, of course, that the wedding should
be put off, but she had named no other condition beyond
asking for two days to herself—two days
during which he was not even to write. She wished
to shut herself in with her misery, to accustom herself
to it as she had accustomed herself to happiness.
But actual seclusion was impossible: the subtle
reactions of life almost at once began to break down
her defences. She could no more have her wretchedness
to herself than any other emotion: all the lives
about her were so many unconscious factors in her sensations.
She tried to concentrate herself on the thought as
to how she could best help poor Denis; for love, in
ebbing, had laid bare an unsuspected depth of pity.
But she found it more and more difficult to consider
his situation in the abstract light of right and wrong.
Open expiation still seemed to her the only possible
way of healing; but she tried vainly to think of Mrs.
Peyton as taking such a view. Yet Mrs. Peyton
ought at least to know what had happened: was
it not, in the last resort, she who should pronounce
on her son’s course? For a moment Kate
was fascinated by this evasion of responsibility;
she had nearly decided to tell Denis that he must begin
by confessing everything to his mother. But almost
at once she began to shrink from the consequences.
There was nothing she so dreaded for him as that any
one should take a light view of his act: should
turn its irremediableness into an excuse. And
this, she foresaw, was what Mrs. Peyton would do.
The first burst of misery over, she would envelop
the whole situation in a mist of expediency.
Brought to the bar of Kate’s judgment, she at
once revealed herself incapable of higher action.
Kate’s conception of her was
still under arraignment when the actual Mrs. Peyton
fluttered in. It was the afternoon of the second
day, as the girl phrased it in the dismal re-creation
of her universe. She had been thinking so hard
of Mrs. Peyton that the lady’s silvery insubstantial
presence seemed hardly more than a projection of the
thought; but as Kate collected herself, and regained
contact with the outer world, her preoccupation yielded
to surprise. It was unusual for Mrs. Peyton to
pay visits. For years she had remained enthroned
in a semi-invalidism which prohibited effort while
it did not preclude diversion; and the girl at once
divined a special purpose in her coming.
Mrs. Peyton’s traditions would
not have permitted any direct method of attack; and
Kate had to sit through the usual prelude of ejaculation
and anecdote. Presently, however, the elder lady’s
voice gathered significance, and laying her hand on
Kate’s she murmured: “I have come
to talk to you of this sad affair.”
Kate began to tremble. Was it
possible that Denis had after all spoken? A rising
hope checked her utterance, and she saw in a flash
that it still lay with him to regain his hold on her.
But Mrs. Peyton went on delicately: “It
has been a great shock to my poor boy. To be brought
in contact with Arthur’s past was in itself
inexpressibly painful; but this last dreadful business—that
woman’s wicked act—”
“Wicked?” Kate exclaimed.
Mrs. Peyton’s gentle stare reproved
her. “Surely religion teaches us that suicide
is a sin? And to murder her child! I ought
not to speak to you of such things, my dear.
No one has ever mentioned anything so dreadful in my
presence: my dear husband used to screen me so
carefully from the painful side of life. Where
there is so much that is beautiful to dwell upon, we
should try to ignore the existence of such horrors.
But nowadays everything is in the papers; and Denis
told me he thought it better that you should hear
the news first from him.”
Kate nodded without speaking.
“He felt how dreadful
it was to have to tell you. But I tell him he
takes a morbid view of the case. Of course one
is shocked at the woman’s crime—but,
if one looks a little deeper, how can one help seeing
that it may have been designed as the means of rescuing
that poor child from a life of vice and misery?
That is the view I want Denis to take: I want
him to see how all the difficulties of life disappear
when one has learned to look for a divine purpose
in human sufferings.”
Mrs. Peyton rested a moment on this
period, as an experienced climber pauses to be overtaken
by a less agile companion; but presently she became
aware that Kate was still far below her, and perhaps
needed a stronger incentive to the ascent.
“My dear child,” she said
adroitly, “I said just now that I was sorry you
had been obliged to hear of this sad affair; but after
all it is only you who can avert its consequences.”
Kate drew an eager breath. “Its
consequences?” she faltered.
Mrs. Peyton’s voice dropped
solemnly. “Denis has told me everything,”
she said.
“Everything?”
“That you insist on putting
off the marriage. Oh, my dear, I do implore you
to reconsider that!”
Kate sank back with the sense of having
passed again into a region of leaden shadow.
“Is that all he told you?”
Mrs. Peyton gazed at her with arch
raillery. “All? Isn’t it everything—to
him?”
“Did he give you my reason, I mean?”
“He said you felt that, after
this shocking tragedy, there ought, in decency, to
be a delay; and I quite understand the feeling.
It does seem too unfortunate that the woman should
have chosen this particular time! But you will
find as you grow older that life is full of such sad
contrasts.”
Kate felt herself slowly petrifying
under the warm drip of Mrs. Peyton’s platitudes.
“It seems to me,” the
elder lady continued, “that there is only one
point from which we ought to consider the question—and
that is, its effect on Denis. But for that we
ought to refuse to know anything about it. But
it has made my boy so unhappy. The law-suit was
a cruel ordeal to him—the dreadful notoriety,
the revelation of poor Arthur’s infirmities.
Denis is as sensitive as a woman; it is his unusual
refinement of feeling that makes him so worthy of
being loved by you. But such sensitiveness may
be carried to excess. He ought not to let this
unhappy incident prey on him: it shows a lack
of trust in the divine ordering of things. That
is what troubles me: his faith in life has been
shaken. And—you must forgive me, dear
child—you will forgive me, I know—but
I can’t help blaming you a little—”
Mrs. Peyton’s accent converted
the accusation into a caress, which prolonged itself
in a tremulous pressure of Kate’s hand.
The girl gazed at her blankly. “You blame
me—?”
“Don’t be offended, my
child. I only fear that your excessive sympathy
with Denis, your own delicacy of feeling, may have
led you to encourage his morbid ideas. He tells
me you were very much shocked—as you naturally
would be—as any girl must be—I
would not have you otherwise, dear Kate! It is
beautiful that you should both feel so; most
beautiful; but you know religion teaches us not to
yield too much to our grief. Let the dead bury
their dead; the living owe themselves to each other.
And what had this wretched woman to do with either
of you? It is a misfortune for Denis to have
been connected in any way with a man of Arthur Peyton’s
character; but after all, poor Arthur did all he could
to atone for the disgrace he brought on us, by making
Denis his heir—and I am sure I have no wish
to question the decrees of Providence.”
Mrs. Peyton paused again, and then softly absorbed
both of Kate’s hands. “For my part,”
she continued, “I see in it another instance
of the beautiful ordering of events. Just after
dear Denis’s inheritance has removed the last
obstacle to your marriage, this sad incident comes
to show how desperately he needs you, how cruel it
would be to ask him to defer his happiness.”
She broke off, shaken out of her habitual
placidity by the abrupt withdrawal of the girl’s
hands. Kate sat inertly staring, but no answer
rose to her lips.
At length Mrs. Peyton resumed, gathering
her draperies about her with a tentative hint of leave-taking:
“I may go home and tell him that you will not
put off the wedding?”
Kate was still silent, and her visitor
looked at her with the mild surprise of an advocate
unaccustomed to plead in vain.
“If your silence means refusal,
my dear, I think you ought to realize the responsibility
you assume.” Mrs. Peyton’s voice had
acquired an edge of righteous asperity. “If
Denis has a fault it is that he is too gentle, too
yielding, too readily influenced by those he cares
for. Your influence is paramount with him now—but
if you turn from him just when he needs your help,
who can say what the result will be?”
The argument, though impressively
delivered, was hardly of a nature to carry conviction
to its hearer; but it was perhaps for that very reason
that she suddenly and unexpectedly replied to it by
sinking back into her seat with a burst of tears.
To Mrs. Peyton, however, tears were the signal of
surrender, and, at Kate’s side in an instant
she hastened to temper her triumph with magnanimity.
“Don’t think I don’t
feel with you; but we must both forget ourselves for
our boy’s sake. I told him I should come
back with your promise.”
The arm she had slipped about Kate’s
shoulder fell back with the girl’s start.
Kate had seen in a flash what capital would be made
of her emotion.
“No, no, you misunderstand me.
I can make no promise,” she declared.
The older lady sat a moment irresolute;
then she restored her arm to the shoulder from which
it had been so abruptly displaced.
“My dear child,” she said,
in a tone of tender confidence, “if I have misunderstood
you, ought you not to enlighten me? You asked
me just now if Denis had given me your reason for
this strange postponement. He gave me one reason,
but it seems hardly sufficient to explain your conduct.
If there is any other,—and I know you well
enough to feel sure there is,—will you
not trust me with it? If my boy has been unhappy
enough to displease you, will you not give his mother
the chance to plead his cause? Remember, no one
should be condemned unheard. As Denis’s
mother, I have the right to ask for your reason.”
“My reason? My reason?”
Kate stammered, panting with the exhaustion of the
struggle. Oh, if only Mrs. Peyton would release
her! “If you have the right to know it,
why doesn’t he tell you?” she cried.
Mrs. Peyton stood up, quivering.
“I will go home and ask him,” she said.
“I will tell him he had your permission to speak.”
She moved toward the door, with the
nervous haste of a person unaccustomed to decisive
action. But Kate sprang before her.
“No, no; don’t ask him!
I implore you not to ask him,” she cried.
Mrs. Peyton turned on her with sudden
authority of voice and gesture. “Do I understand
you?” she said. “You admit that you
have a reason for putting off your marriage, and yet
you forbid me—me, Denis’s mother—to
ask him what it is? My poor child, I needn’t
ask, for I know already. If he has offended you,
and you refuse him the chance to defend himself, I
needn’t look farther for your reason: it
is simply that you have ceased to love him.”
Kate fell back from the door which
she had instinctively barricaded.
“Perhaps that is it,”
she murmured, letting Mrs. Peyton pass.
* * * *
*
Mr. Orme’s returning carriage-wheels
crossed Mrs. Peyton’s indignant flight; and
an hour later Kate, in the bland candle-light of the
dinner-hour, sat listening with practised fortitude
to her father’s comments on the venison.
She had wondered, as she awaited him
in the drawing-room, if he would notice any change
in her appearance. It seemed to her that the flagellation
of her thoughts must have left visible traces.
But Mr. Orme was not a man of subtle perceptions,
save where his personal comfort was affected:
though his egoism was clothed in the finest feelers,
he did not suspect a similar surface in others.
His daughter, as part of himself, came within the normal
range of his solicitude; but she was an outlying region,
a subject province; and Mr. Orme’s was a highly
centralized polity.
News of the painful incident—he
often used Mrs. Peyton’s vocabulary—had
reached him at his club, and to some extent disturbed
the assimilation of a carefully ordered breakfast;
but since then two days had passed, and it did not
take Mr. Orme forty-eight hours to resign himself to
the misfortunes of others. It was all very nasty,
of course, and he wished to heaven it hadn’t
happened to any one about to be connected with him;
but he viewed it with the transient annoyance of a
gentleman who has been splashed by the mud of a fatal
runaway.
Mr. Orme affected, under such circumstances,
a bluff and hearty stoicism as remote as possible
from Mrs. Peyton’s deprecating evasion of facts.
It was a bad business; he was sorry Kate should have
been mixed up with it; but she would be married soon
now, and then she would see that life wasn’t
exactly a Sunday-school story. Everybody was exposed
to such disagreeable accidents: he remembered
a case in their own family—oh, a distant
cousin whom Kate wouldn’t have heard of—a
poor fellow who had got entangled with just such a
woman, and having (most properly) been sent packing
by his father, had justified the latter’s course
by promptly forging his name—a very nasty
affair altogether; but luckily the scandal had been
hushed up, the woman bought off, and the prodigal,
after a season of probation, safely married to a nice
girl with a good income, who was told by the family
that the doctors recommended his settling in California.
Luckily the scandal was hushed
up: the phrase blazed out against the dark
background of Kate’s misery. That was doubtless
what most people felt—the words represented
the consensus of respectable opinion. The best
way of repairing a fault was to hide it: to tear
up the floor and bury the victim at night. Above
all, no coroner and no autopsy!
She began to feel a strange interest
in her distant cousin. “And his wife—did
she know what he had done?”
Mr. Orme stared. His moral pointed,
he had returned to the contemplation of his own affairs.
“His wife? Oh, of course
not. The secret has been most admirably kept;
but her property was put in trust, so she’s
quite safe with him.”
Her property! Kate wondered if
her faith in her husband had also been put in trust,
if her sensibilities had been protected from his possible
inroads.
“Do you think it quite fair
to have deceived her in that way?”
Mr. Orme gave her a puzzled glance:
he had no taste for the by-paths of ethical conjecture.
“His people wanted to give the
poor fellow another chance; they did the best they
could for him.”
“And—he has done nothing dishonourable
since?”
“Not that I know of: the
last I heard was that they had a little boy, and that
he was quite happy. At that distance he’s
not likely to bother us, at all events.”
Long after Mr. Orme had left the topic,
Kate remained lost in its contemplation. She
had begun to perceive that the fair surface of life
was honeycombed by a vast system of moral sewage.
Every respectable household had its special arrangements
for the private disposal of family scandals; it was
only among the reckless and improvident that such hygienic
precautions were neglected. Who was she to pass
judgment on the merits of such a system? The
social health must be preserved: the means devised
were the result of long experience and the collective
instinct of self-preservation. She had meant
to tell her father that evening that her marriage
had been put off; but she now abstained from doing
so, not from any doubt of Mr. Orme’s acquiescence—he
could always be made to feel the force of conventional
scruples—but because the whole question
sank into insignificance beside the larger issue which
his words had raised.
In her own room, that night, she passed
through that travail of the soul of which the deeper
life is born. Her first sense was of a great moral
loneliness—an isolation more complete, more
impenetrable, than that in which the discovery of
Denis’s act had plunged her. For she had
vaguely leaned, then, on a collective sense of justice
that should respond to her own ideas of right and
wrong: she still believed in the logical correspondence
of theory and practice. Now she saw that, among
those nearest her, there was no one who recognized
the moral need of expiation. She saw that to
take her father or Mrs. Peyton into her confidence
would be but to widen the circle of sterile misery
in which she and Denis moved. At first the aspect
of life thus revealed to her seemed simply mean and
base—a world where honour was a pact of
silence between adroit accomplices. The network
of circumstance had tightened round her, and every
effort to escape drew its meshes closer. But as
her struggles subsided she felt the spiritual release
which comes with acceptance: not connivance in
dishonour, but recognition of evil. Out of that
dark vision light was to come, the shaft of cloud
turning to the pillar of fire. For here, at last,
life lay before her as it was: not brave, garlanded
and victorious, but naked, grovelling and diseased,
dragging its maimed limbs through the mud, yet lifting
piteous hands to the stars. Love itself, once
throned aloft on an altar of dreams, how it stole
to her now, storm-beaten and scarred, pleading for
the shelter of her breast! Love, indeed, not in
the old sense in which she had conceived it, but a
graver, austerer presence—the charity of
the mystic three. She thought she had ceased to
love Denis—but what had she loved in him
but her happiness and his? Their affection had
been the garden enclosed of the Canticles,
where they were to walk forever in a delicate isolation
of bliss. But now love appeared to her as something
more than this—something wider, deeper,
more enduring than the selfish passion of a man and
a woman. She saw it in all its far-reaching issues,
till the first meeting of two pairs of young eyes kindled
a light which might be a high-lifted beacon across
dark waters of humanity.
All this did not come to her clearly,
consecutively, but in a series of blurred and shifting
images. Marriage had meant to her, as it means
to girls brought up in ignorance of life, simply the
exquisite prolongation of wooing. If she had
looked beyond, to the vision of wider ties, it was
as a traveller gazes over a land veiled in golden
haze, and so far distant that the imagination delays
to explore it. But now through the blur of sensations
one image strangely persisted—the image
of Denis’s child. Had she ever before thought
of their having a child? She could not remember.
She was like one who wakens from a long fever:
she recalled nothing of her former self or of her
former feelings. She knew only that the vision
persisted—the vision of the child whose
mother she was not to be. It was impossible that
she should marry Denis—her inmost soul rejected
him … but it was just because she was not to be
the child’s mother that its image followed her
so pleadingly. For she saw with perfect clearness
the inevitable course of events. Denis would
marry some one else—he was one of the men
who are fated to marry, and she needed not his mother’s
reminder that her abandonment of him at an emotional
crisis would fling him upon the first sympathy within
reach. He would marry a girl who knew nothing
of his secret—for Kate was intensely aware
that he would never again willingly confess himself—he
would marry a girl who trusted him and leaned on him,
as she, Kate Orme—the earlier Kate Orme—had
done but two days since! And with this deception
between them their child would be born: born to
an inheritance of secret weakness, a vice of the moral
fibre, as it might be born with some hidden physical
taint which would destroy it before the cause should
be detected…. Well, and what of it? Was
she to hold herself responsible? Were not thousands
of children born with some such unsuspected taint?...
Ah, but if here was one that she could save? What
if she, who had had so exquisite a vision of wifehood,
should reconstruct from its ruins this vision of protecting
maternity—if her love for her lover should
be, not lost, but transformed, enlarged, into this
passion of charity for his race? If she might
expiate and redeem his fault by becoming a refuge from
its consequences? Before this strange extension
of her love all the old limitations seemed to fall.
Something had cleft the surface of self, and there
welled up the mysterious primal influences, the sacrificial
instinct of her sex, a passion of spiritual motherhood
that made her long to fling herself between the unborn
child and its fate….
She never knew, then or after, how
she reached this mystic climax of effacement; she
was only conscious, through her anguish, of that lift
of the heart which made one of the saints declare
that joy was the inmost core of sorrow. For it
was indeed a kind of joy she felt, if old names must
serve for such new meanings; a surge of liberating
faith in life, the old credo quia absurdum
which is the secret cry of all supreme endeavour.