The funeral took place the next morning,
and on the return from the cemetery Dick told his
mother that he must go and look over things at Darrow’s
office. He had heard the day before from his friend’s
aunt, a helpless person to whom telegraphy was difficult
and travel inconceivable, and who, in eight pages
of unpunctuated eloquence, made over to Dick what
she called the melancholy privilege of winding up her
nephew’s affairs.
Mrs. Peyton looked anxiously at her
son. “Is there no one who can do this for
you? He must have had a clerk or some one who
knows about his work.”
Dick shook his head. “Not
lately. He hasn’t had much to do this winter,
and these last months he had chucked everything to
work alone over his plans.”
The word brought a faint colour to
Mrs. Peyton’s cheek. It was the first allusion
that either of them had made to Darrow’s bequest.
“Oh, of course you must do all
you can,” she murmured, turning alone into the
house.
The emotions of the morning had stirred
her deeply, and she sat at home during the day, letting
her mind dwell, in a kind of retrospective piety,
on the thought of poor Darrow’s devotion.
She had given him too little time while he lived,
had acquiesced too easily in his growing habits of
seclusion; and she felt it as a proof of insensibility
that she had not been more closely drawn to the one
person who had loved Dick as she loved him. The
evidence of that love, as shown in Darrow’s letter,
filled her with a vain compunction. The very
extravagance of his offer lent it a deeper pathos.
It was wonderful that, even in the urgency of affection,
a man of his almost morbid rectitude should have overlooked
the restrictions of professional honour, should have
implied the possibility of his friend’s overlooking
them. It seemed to make his sacrifice the more
complete that it had, unconsciously, taken the form
of a subtle temptation.
The last word arrested Mrs. Peyton’s
thoughts. A temptation? To whom? Not,
surely, to one capable, as her son was capable, of
rising to the height of his friend’s devotion.
The offer, to Dick, would mean simply, as it meant
to her, the last touching expression of an inarticulate
fidelity: the utterance of a love which at last
had found its formula. Mrs. Peyton dismissed
as morbid any other view of the case. She was
annoyed with herself for supposing that Dick could
be ever so remotely affected by the possibility at
which poor Darrow’s renunciation hinted.
The nature of the offer removed it from practical
issues to the idealizing region of sentiment.
Mrs. Peyton had been sitting alone
with these thoughts for the greater part of the afternoon,
and dusk was falling when Dick entered the drawing-room.
In the dim light, with his pallour heightened by the
sombre effect of his mourning, he came upon her almost
startlingly, with a revival of some long-effaced impression
which, for a moment, gave her the sense of struggling
among shadows. She did not, at first, know what
had produced the effect; then she saw that it was
his likeness to his father.
“Well—is it over?”
she asked, as he threw himself into a chair without
speaking.
“Yes: I’ve looked
through everything.” He leaned back, crossing
his hands behind his head, and gazing past her with
a look of utter lassitude.
She paused a moment, and then said
tentatively: “Tomorrow you will be able
to go back to your work.”
“Oh—my work,”
he exclaimed, as if to brush aside an ill-timed pleasantry.
“Are you too tired?”
“No.” He rose and
began to wander up and down the room. “I’m
not tired.—Give me some tea, will you?”
He paused before her while she poured the cup, and
then, without taking it, turned away to light a cigarette.
“Surely there is still time?”
she suggested, with her eyes on him.
“Time? To finish my plans?
Oh, yes—there’s time. But they’re
not worth it.”
“Not worth it?” She started
up, and then dropped back into her seat, ashamed of
having betrayed her anxiety. “They are worth
as much as they were last week,” she said with
an attempt at cheerfulness.
“Not to me,” he returned. “I
hadn’t seen Darrow’s then.”
There was a long silence. Mrs.
Peyton sat with her eyes fixed on her clasped hands,
and her son paced the room restlessly.
“Are they so wonderful?” she asked at
length.
“Yes.”
She paused again, and then said, lifting
a tremulous glance to his face: “That makes
his offer all the more beautiful.”
Dick was lighting another cigarette,
and his face was turned from her. “Yes—I
suppose so,” he said in a low tone.
“They were quite finished, he
told me,” she continued, unconsciously dropping
her voice to the pitch of his.
“Yes.”
“Then they will be entered, I suppose?”
“Of course—why not?” he answered
almost sharply.
“Shall you have time to attend to all that and
to finish yours too?”
“Oh, I suppose so. I’ve
told you it isn’t a question of tune. I
see now that mine are not worth bothering with.”
She rose and approached him, laying
her hands on his shoulders. “You are tired
and unstrung; how can you judge? Why not let me
look at both designs to-morrow?”
Under her gaze he flushed abruptly
and drew back with a half-impatient gesture.
“Oh, I’m afraid that wouldn’t
help me; you’d be sure to think mine best,”
he said with a laugh.
“But if I could give you good reasons?”
she pressed him.
He took her hand, as if ashamed of
his impatience. “Dear mother, if you had
any reasons their mere existence would prove that they
were bad.”
His mother did not return his smile.
“You won’t let me see the two designs
then?” she said with a faint tinge of insistence.
“Oh, of course—if
you want to—if you only won’t talk
about it now! Can’t you see that I’m
pretty nearly dead-beat?” he burst out uncontrollably;
and as she stood silent, he added with a weary fall
in his voice, “I think I’ll go upstairs
and see if I can’t get a nap before dinner.”
* * * *
*
Though they had separated upon the
assurance that she should see the two designs if she
wished it, Mrs. Peyton knew they would not be shown
to her. Dick, indeed, would not again deny her
request; but had he not reckoned on the improbability
of her renewing it? All night she lay confronted
by that question. The situation shaped itself
before her with that hallucinating distinctness which
belongs to the midnight vision. She knew now why
Dick had suddenly reminded her of his father:
had she not once before seen the same thought moving
behind the same eyes? She was sure it had occurred
to Dick to use Darrow’s drawings. As she
lay awake in the darkness she could hear him, long
after midnight, pacing the floor overhead: she
held her breath, listening to the recurring beat of
his foot, which seemed that of an imprisoned spirit
revolving wearily in the cage of the same thought.
She felt in every fibre that a crisis in her son’s
life had been reached, that the act now before him
would have a determining effect on his whole future.
The circumstances of her past had raised to clairvoyance
her natural insight into human motive, had made of
her a moral barometer responding to the faintest fluctuations
of atmosphere, and years of anxious meditation had
familiarized her with the form which her son’s
temptations were likely to take. The peculiar
misery of her situation was that she could not, except
indirectly, put this intuition, this foresight, at
his service. It was a part of her discernment
to be aware that life is the only real counsellor,
that wisdom unfiltered through personal experience
does not become a part of the moral tissues.
Love such as hers had a great office, the office of
preparation and direction; but it must know how to
hold its hand and keep its counsel, how to attend
upon its object as an invisible influence rather than
as an active interference.
All this Kate Peyton had told herself
again and again, during those hours of anxious calculation
in which she had tried to cast Dick’s horoscope;
but not in her moments of most fantastic foreboding
had she figured so cruel a test of her courage.
If her prayers for him had taken precise shape, she
might have asked that he should be spared the spectacular,
the dramatic appeal to his will-power: that his
temptations should slip by him in a dull disguise.
She had secured him against all ordinary forms of baseness;
the vulnerable point lay higher, in that region of
idealizing egotism which is the seat of life in such
natures.
Years of solitary foresight gave her
mind a singular alertness in dealing with such possibilities.
She saw at once that the peril of the situation lay
in the minimum of risk it involved. Darrow had
employed no assistant in working out his plans for
the competition, and his secluded life made it almost
certain that he had not shown them to any one, and
that she and Dick alone knew them to have been completed.
Moreover, it was a part of Dick’s duty to examine
the contents of his friend’s office, and in doing
this nothing would be easier than to possess himself
of the drawings and make use of any part of them that
might serve his purpose. He had Darrow’s
authority for doing so; and though the act involved
a slight breach of professional probity, might not
his friend’s wishes be invoked as a secret justification?
Mrs. Peyton found herself almost hating poor Darrow
for having been the unconscious instrument of her
son’s temptation. But what right had she,
after all, to suspect Dick of considering, even for
a moment, the act of which she was so ready to accuse
him? His unwillingness to let her see the drawings
might have been the accidental result of lassitude
and discouragement. He was tired and troubled,
and she had chosen the wrong moment to make the request.
His want of readiness might even be due to the wish
to conceal from her how far his friend had surpassed
him. She knew his sensitiveness on this point,
and reproached herself for not having foreseen it.
But her own arguments failed to convince her.
Deep beneath her love for her boy and her faith in
him there lurked a nameless doubt. She could
hardly now, in looking back, define the impulse upon
which she had married Denis Peyton: she knew
only that the deeps of her nature had been loosened,
and that she had been borne forward on their current
to the very fate from which her heart recoiled.
But if in one sense her marriage remained a problem,
there was another in which her motherhood seemed to
solve it. She had never lost the sense of having
snatched her child from some dim peril which still
lurked and hovered; and he became more closely hers
with every effort of her vigilant love. For the
act of rescue had not been accomplished once and for
all in the moment of immolation: it had not been
by a sudden stroke of heroism, but by ever-renewed
and indefatigable effort, that she had built up for
him the miraculous shelter of her love. And now
that it stood there, a hallowed refuge against failure,
she could not even set a light in the pane, but must
let him grope his way to it unaided.