She had indeed needed to be told:
the surprise was complete and overwhelming. She
sat silent under it, her hands trembling in his, till
the blood mounted to his face and she felt his confident
grasp relax.
“You didn’t guess it,
then?” he exclaimed, starting up and moving away
from her.
“No; I didn’t guess it,”
she confessed in a dead-level voice.
He stood above her, half challenging,
half defensive. “And you haven’t a
word to say to me? Mother!” he adjured her.
She rose too, putting her arms about
him with a kiss. “Dick! Dear Dick!”
she murmured.
“She imagines you don’t
like her; she says she’s always felt it.
And yet she owns you’ve been delightful, that
you’ve tried to make friends with her.
And I thought you knew how much it would mean to me,
just now, to have this uncertainty over, and that
you’d actually been trying to help me, to put
in a good word for me. I thought it was you who
had made her decide.”
“I?”
“By your talk with her the other day. She
told me of your talk with her.”
His mother’s hands slipped from
his shoulders and she sank back into her seat.
She felt the cruelty of her silence, but only an inarticulate
murmur found a way to her lips. Before speaking
she must clear a space in the suffocating rush of
her sensations. For the moment she could only
repeat inwardly that Clemence Verney had yielded before
the final test, and that she herself was somehow responsible
for this fresh entanglement of fate. For she
saw in a flash how the coils of circumstance had tightened;
and as her mind cleared it was filled with the perception
that this, precisely, was what the girl intended,
that this was why she had conferred the crown before
the victory. By pledging herself to Dick she had
secured his pledge in return: had put him on
his honour in a cynical inversion of the term.
Kate saw the succession of events spread out before
her like a map, and the astuteness of the girl’s
policy frightened her. Miss Verney had conducted
the campaign like a strategist. She had frankly
owned that her interest in Dick’s future depended
on his capacity for success, and in order to key him
up to his first achievement she had given him a foretaste
of its results.
So much was almost immediately clear
to Mrs. Peyton; but in a moment her inferences had
carried her a point farther. For it was now plain
to her that Miss Verney had not risked so much without
first trying to gain her point at less cost:
that if she had had to give herself as a prize, it
was because no other bribe had been sufficient.
This then, as the mother saw with a throb of hope,
meant that Dick, who since Darrow’s death had
held to his purpose unwaveringly, had been deflected
from it by the first hint of Clemence Verney’s
connivance. Kate had not miscalculated: things
had happened as she had foreseen. In the light
of the girl’s approval his act had taken an
odious look. He had recoiled from it, and it was
to revive his flagging courage that she had had to
promise herself, to take him in the meshes of her
surrender.
Kate, looking up, saw above her the
young perplexity of her boy’s face, the suspended
happiness waiting to brim over. With a fresh touch
of misery she said to herself that this was his hour,
his one irrecoverable moment, and that she was darkening
it by her silence. Her memory went back to the
same hour in her own life: she could feel its
heat in her pulses still. What right had she
to stand in Dick’s light? Who was she to
decide between his code and hers? She put out
her hand and drew him down to her.
“She’ll be the making
of me, you know, mother,” he said, as they leaned
together. “She’ll put new life in
me—she’ll help me get my second wind.
Her talk is like a fresh breeze blowing away the fog
in my head. I never knew any one who saw so straight
to the heart of things, who had such a grip on values.
She goes straight up to life and catches hold of it,
and you simply can’t make her let go.”
He got up and walked the length of
the room; then he came back and stood smiling above
his mother.
“You know you and I are rather
complicated people,” he said. “We’re
always walking around things to get new views of them—we’re
always rearranging the furniture. And somehow
she simplifies life so tremendously.” He
dropped down beside her with a deprecating laugh.
“Not that I mean, dear, that it hasn’t
been good for me to argue things out with myself, as
you’ve taught me to—only the man
who stops to talk is apt to get shoved aside nowadays,
and I don’t believe Milton’s archangels
would have had much success in active business.”
He had begun in a strain of easy confidence,
but as he went on she detected an effort to hold the
note, she felt that his words were being poured out
in a vain attempt to fill the silence which was deepening
between them. She longed, in her turn, to pour
something into that menacing void, to bridge it with
a reconciling word or look; but her soul hung back,
and she had to take refuge in a vague murmur of tenderness.
“My boy! My boy!”
she repeated; and he sat beside her without speaking,
their hand-clasp alone spanning the distance which
had widened between their thoughts.
* * * *
*
The engagement, as Kate subsequently
learned, was not to be made known till later.
Miss Verney had even stipulated that for the present
there should be no recognition of it in her own family
or in Dick’s. She did not wish to interfere
with his final work for the competition, and had made
him promise, as he laughingly owned, that he would
not see her again till the drawings were sent in.
His mother noticed that he made no other allusion to
his work; but when he bade her good-night he added
that he might not see her the next morning, as he
had to go to the office early. She took this as
a hint that he wished to be left alone, and kept her
room the next day till the closing door told her that
he was out of the house.
She herself had waked early, and it
seemed to her that the day was already old when she
came downstairs. Never had the house appeared
so empty. Even in Dick’s longest absences
something of his presence had always hung about the
rooms: a fine dust of memories and associations,
which wanted only the evocation of her thought to
float into a palpable semblance of him. But now
he seemed to have taken himself quite away, to have
broken every fibre by which their lives had hung together.
Where the sense of him had been there was only a deeper
emptiness: she felt as if a strange man had gone
out of her house.
She wandered from room to room, aimlessly,
trying to adjust herself to their solitude. She
had known such loneliness before, in the years when
most women’s hearts are fullest; but that was
long ago, and the solitude had after all been less
complete, because of the sense that it might still
be filled. Her son had come: her life had
brimmed over; but now the tide ebbed again, and she
was left gazing over a bare stretch of wasted years.
Wasted! There was the mortal pang, the stroke
from which there was no healing. Her faith and
hope had been marsh-lights luring her to the wilderness,
her love a vain edifice reared on shifting ground.
In her round of the rooms she came
at last to Dick’s study upstairs. It was
full of his boyhood: she could trace the history
of his past in its quaint relics and survivals, in
the school-books lingering on his crowded shelves,
the school-photographs and college-trophies hung among
his later treasures. All his successes and failures,
his exaltations and inconsistencies, were recorded
in the warm huddled heterogeneous room. Everywhere
she saw the touch of her own hand, the vestiges of
her own steps. It was she alone who held the
clue to the labyrinth, who could thread a way through
the confusions and contradictions of his past; and
her soul rejected the thought that his future could
ever escape from her. She dropped down into his
shabby college armchair and hid her face in the papers
on his desk.