The day dwelt in her memory as a long
stretch of aimless hours: blind alleys of time
that led up to a dead wall of inaction.
Toward afternoon she remembered that
she had promised to dine out and go to the opera.
At first she felt that the contact of life would be
unendurable; then she shrank from shutting herself
up with her misery. In the end she let herself
drift passively on the current of events, going through
the mechanical routine of the day without much consciousness
of what was happening.
At twilight, as she sat in the drawing-room,
the evening paper was brought in, and in glancing
over it her eye fell on a paragraph which seemed printed
in more vivid type than the rest. It was headed,
The New Museum of Sculpture, and underneath
she read: “The artists and architects selected
to pass on the competitive designs for the new Museum
will begin their sittings on Monday, and tomorrow
is the last day on which designs may be sent in to
the committee. Great interest is felt in the competition,
as the conspicuous site chosen for the new building,
and the exceptionally large sum voted by the city
for its erection, offer an unusual field for the display
of architectural ability.”
She leaned back, closing her eyes.
It was as though a clock had struck, loud and inexorably,
marking off some irrecoverable hour. She was seized
by a sudden longing to seek Dick out, to fall on her
knees and plead with him: it was one of those
physical obsessions against which the body has to
stiffen its muscles as well as the mind its thoughts.
Once she even sprang up to ring for a cab; but she
sank back again, breathing as if after a struggle,
and gripping the arms of her chair to keep herself
down.
“I can only wait for him—only
wait for him—” she heard herself say;
and the words loosened the sobs in her throat.
At length she went upstairs to dress
for dinner. A ghostlike self looked back at her
from her toilet-glass: she watched it performing
the mechanical gestures of the toilet, dressing her,
as it appeared, without help from her actual self.
Each little act stood out sharply against the blurred
background of her brain: when she spoke to her
maid her voice sounded extraordinarily loud.
Never had the house been so silent; or, stay—yes,
once she had felt the same silence, once when Dick,
in his school-days, had been ill of a fever, and she
had sat up with him on the decisive night. The
silence had been as deep and as terrible then; and
as she dressed she had before her the vision of his
room, of the cot in which he lay, of his restless
head working a hole in the pillow, his face so pinched
and alien under the familiar freckles. It might
be his death-watch she was keeping: the doctors
had warned her to be ready. And in the silence
her soul had fought for her boy, her love had hung
over him like wings, her abundant useless hateful
life had struggled to force itself into his empty veins.
And she had succeeded, she had saved him, she had poured
her life into him; and in place of the strange child
she had watched all night, at daylight she held her
own boy to her breast.
That night had once seemed to her
the most dreadful of her life; but she knew now that
it was one of the agonies which enrich, that the passion
thus spent grows fourfold from its ashes. She
could not have borne to keep this new vigil alone.
She must escape from its sterile misery, must take
refuge in other lives till she regained courage to
face her own. At the opera, in the illumination
of the first entr’acte, as she gazed about
the house, wondering through the numb ache of her
wretchedness how others could talk and smile and be
indifferent, it seemed to her that all the jarring
animation about her was suddenly focussed in the face
of Clemence Verney. Miss Verney sat opposite,
in the front of a crowded box, a box in which, continually,
the black-coated background shifted and renewed itself.
Mrs. Peyton felt a throb of anger at the girl’s
bright air of unconcern. She forgot that she
too was talking, smiling, holding out her hand to
newcomers, in a studied mimicry of life, while her
real self played out its tragedy behind the scenes.
Then it occurred to her that, to Clemence Verney,
there was no tragedy in the situation. According
to the girl’s calculations, Dick was virtually
certain of success; and unsuccess was to her the only
conceivable disaster.
All through the opera the sense of
that opposing force, that negation of her own beliefs,
burned itself into Mrs. Peyton’s consciousness.
The space between herself and the girl seemed to vanish,
the throng about them to disperse, till they were
face to face and alone, enclosed in their mortal enmity.
At length the feeling of humiliation and defeat grew
unbearable to Mrs. Peyton. The girl seemed to
flout her in the insolence of victory, to sit there
as the visible symbol of her failure. It was better
after all to be at home alone with her thoughts.
As she drove away from the opera she
thought of that other vigil which, only a few streets
away, Dick was perhaps still keeping. She wondered
if his work were over, if the final stroke had been
drawn. And as she pictured him there, signing
his pact with evil in the loneliness of the conniving
night, an uncontrollable impulse possessed her.
She must drive by his windows and see if they were
still alight. She would not go up to him,—she
dared not,—but at least she would pass near
to him, would invisibly share his watch and hover
on the edge of his thoughts. She lowered the window
and called out the address to the coachman.
The tall office-building loomed silent
and dark as she approached it; but presently, high
up, she caught a light in the familiar windows.
Her heart gave a leap, and the light swam on her through
tears. The carriage drew up, and for a moment
she sat motionless. Then the coachman bent down
toward her, and she saw that he was asking if he should
drive on. She tried to shape a yes, but her lips
refused it, and she shook her head. He continued
to lean down perplexedly, and at length, under the
interrogation of his attitude, it became impossible
to sit still, and she opened the door and stepped
out. It was equally impossible to stand on the
sidewalk, and her next steps carried her to the door
of the building. She groped for the bell and
rang it, feeling still dimly accountable to the coachman
for some consecutiveness of action, and after a moment
the night watchman opened the door, drawing back amazed
at the shining apparition which confronted him.
Recognizing Mrs. Peyton, whom he had seen about the
building by day, he tried to adapt himself to the
situation by a vague stammer of apology.
“I came to see if my son is still here,”
she faltered.
“Yes, ma’am, he’s
here. He’s been here most nights lately
till after twelve.”
“And is Mr. Gill with him?”
“No: Mr. Gill he went away just after I
come on this evening.”
She glanced up into the cavernous darkness of the
stairs.
“Is he alone up there, do you think?”
“Yes, ma’am, I know he’s
alone, because I seen his men leaving soon after Mr.
Gill.”
Kate lifted her head quickly. “Then I will
go up to him,” she said.
The watchman apparently did not think
it proper to offer any comment on this unusual proceeding,
and a moment later she was fluttering and rustling
up through the darkness, like a night-bird hovering
among rafters. There were ten flights to climb:
at every one her breath failed her, and she had to
stand still and press her hands against her heart.
Then the weight on her breast lifted, and she went
on again, upward and upward, the great dark building
dropping away from her, in tier after tier of mute
doors and mysterious corridors. At last she reached
Dick’s floor, and saw the light shining down
the passage from his door. She leaned against
the wall, her breath coming short, the silence throbbing
in her ears. Even now it was not too late to
turn back. She bent over the stairs, letting her
eyes plunge into the nether blackness, with the single
glimmer of the watchman’s lights in its depths;
then she turned and stole toward her son’s door.
There again she paused and listened,
trying to catch, through the hum of her pulses, any
noise that might come to her from within. But
the silence was unbroken—it seemed as though
the office must be empty. She pressed her ear
to the door, straining for a sound. She knew he
never sat long at his work, and it seemed unaccountable
that she should not hear him moving about the drawing-board.
For a moment she fancied he might be sleeping; but
sleep did not come to him readily after prolonged
mental effort—she recalled the restless
straying of his feet above her head for hours after
he returned from his night work in the office.
She began to fear that he might be
ill. A nervous trembling seized her, and she
laid her hand on the latch, whispering “Dick!”
Her whisper sounded loudly through
the silence, but there was no answer, and after a
pause she called again. With each call the hush
seemed to deepen: it closed in on her, mysterious
and impenetrable. Her heart was beating in short
frightened leaps: a moment more and she would
have cried out. She drew a quick breath and turned
the door-handle.
The outer room, Dick’s private
office, with its red carpet and easy-chairs, stood
in pleasant lamp-lit emptiness. The last time
she had entered it, Darrow and Clemence Verney had
been there, and she had sat behind the urn observing
them. She paused a moment, struck now by a fault
sound from beyond; then she slipped noiselessly across
the carpet, pushed open the swinging door, and stood
on the threshold of the work-room. Here the gas-lights
hung a green-shaded circle of brightness over the great
draughting-table in the middle of the floor. Table
and floor were strewn with a confusion of papers—torn
blue-prints and tracings, crumpled sheets of tracing-paper
wrenched from the draughting-boards in a sudden fury
of destruction; and in the centre of the havoc, his
arms stretched across the table and his face hidden
in them, sat Dick Peyton.
He did not seem to hear his mother’s
approach, and she stood looking at him, her breast
tightening with a new fear.
“Dick!” she said, “Dick!—”
and he sprang up, staring with dazed eyes. But
gradually, as his gaze cleared, a light spread in it,
a mounting brightness of recognition.
“You’ve come—you’ve
come—” he said, stretching his hands
to her; and all at once she had him in her breast
as in a shelter.
“You wanted me?” she whispered as she
held him.
He looked up at her, tired, breathless,
with the white radiance of the runner near the goal.
“I had you, dear!”
he said, smiling strangely on her; and her heart gave
a great leap of understanding.
Her arms had slipped from his neck,
and she stood leaning on him, deep-suffused in the
shyness of her discovery. For it might still be
that he did not wish her to know what she had done
for him.
But he put his arm about her, boyishly,
and drew her toward one of the hard seats between
the tables; and there, on the bare floor, he knelt
before her, and hid his face in her lap. She
sat motionless, feeling the dear warmth of his head
against her knees, letting her hands stray in faint
caresses through his hair.
Neither spoke for awhile; then he
raised his head and looked at her. “I suppose
you know what has been happening to me,” he said.
She shrank from seeming to press into
his life a hair’s-breadth farther than he was
prepared to have her go. Her eyes turned from
him toward the scattered drawings on the table.
“You have given up the competition?” she
said.
“Yes—and a lot more.”
He stood up, the wave of emotion ebbing, yet leaving
him nearer, in his recovered calmness, than in the
shock of their first moment.
“I didn’t know, at first,
how much you guessed,” he went on quietly.
“I was sorry I’d shown you Darrow’s
letter; but it didn’t worry me much because I
didn’t suppose you’d think it possible
that I should—take advantage of it.
It’s only lately that I’ve understood that
you knew everything.” He looked at her
with a smile. “I don’t know yet how
I found it out, for you’re wonderful about keeping
things to yourself, and you never made a sign.
I simply felt it in a kind of nearness—as
if I couldn’t get away from you.—Oh,
there were times when I should have preferred not having
you about—when I tried to turn my back on
you, to see things from other people’s standpoint.
But you were always there—you wouldn’t
be discouraged. And I got tired of trying to
explain things to you, of trying to bring you round
to my way of thinking. You wouldn’t go away
and you wouldn’t come any nearer—you
just stood there and watched everything that I was
doing.”
He broke off, taking one of his restless
turns down the long room. Then he drew up a chair
beside her, and dropped into it with a great sigh.
“At first, you know, I hated
it most awfully. I wanted to be let alone and
to work out my own theory of things. If you’d
said a word—if you’d tried to influence
me—the spell would have been broken.
But just because the actual you kept apart
and didn’t meddle or pry, the other, the you
in my heart, seemed to get a tighter hold on me.
I don’t know how to tell you,—it’s
all mixed up in my head—but old things you’d
said and done kept coming back to me, crowding between
me and what I was trying for, looking at me without
speaking, like old friends I’d gone back on,
till I simply couldn’t stand it any longer.
I fought it off till to-night, but when I came back
to finish the work there you were again—and
suddenly, I don’t know how, you weren’t
an obstacle any longer, but a refuge—and
I crawled into your arms as I used to when things
went against me at school.”
His hands stole back into hers, and
he leaned his head against her shoulder like a boy.
“I’m an abysmally weak
fool, you know,” he ended; “I’m not
worth the fight you’ve put up for me. But
I want you to know that it’s your doing—that
if you had let go an instant I should have gone under—and
that if I’d gone under I should never have come
up again alive.”