THE RELEASE
“By the way,” said Dr.
Ansell one evening when Morel was in Sheffield, “we’ve
got a man in the fever hospital here who comes from
Nottingham—Dawes. He doesn’t
seem to have many belongings in this world.”
“Baxter Dawes!” Paul exclaimed.
“That’s the man—has
been a fine fellow, physically, I should think.
Been in a bit of a mess lately. You know him?”
“He used to work at the place where I am.”
“Did he? Do you know anything
about him? He’s just sulking, or he’d
be a lot better than he is by now.”
“I don’t know anything
of his home circumstances, except that he’s
separated from his wife and has been a bit down, I
believe. But tell him about me, will you?
Tell him I’ll come and see him.”
The next time Morel saw the doctor he said:
“And what about Dawes?”
“I said to him,” answered
the other, “’Do you know a man from Nottingham
named Morel?’ and he looked at me as if he’d
jump at my throat. So I said: ‘I see
you know the name; it’s Paul Morel.’
Then I told him about your saying you would go and
see him. ‘What does he want?’ he said,
as if you were a policeman.”
“And did he say he would see me?” asked
Paul.
“He wouldn’t say anything—good,
bad or indifferent,” replied the doctor.
“Why not?”
“That’s what I want to
know. There he lies and sulks, day in, day out.
Can’t get a word of information out of him.”
“Do you think I might go?” asked Paul.
“You might.”
There was a feeling of connection
between the rival men, more than ever since they had
fought. In a way Morel felt guilty towards the
other, and more or less responsible. And being
in such a state of soul himself, he felt an almost
painful nearness to Dawes, who was suffering and despairing,
too. Besides, they had met in a naked extremity
of hate, and it was a bond. At any rate, the
elemental man in each had met.
He went down to the isolation hospital,
with Dr. Ansell’s card. This sister, a
healthy young Irishwoman, led him down the ward.
“A visitor to see you, Jim Crow,” she
said.
Dawes turned over suddenly with a startled grunt.
“Eh?”
“Caw!” she mocked.
“He can only say ‘Caw!’ I have brought
you a gentleman to see you. Now say ‘Thank
you,’ and show some manners.”
Dawes looked swiftly with his dark,
startled eyes beyond the sister at Paul. His
look was full of fear, mistrust, hate, and misery.
Morel met the swift, dark eyes, and hesitated.
The two men were afraid of the naked selves they had
been.
“Dr. Ansell told me you were
here,” said Morel, holding out his hand.
Dawes mechanically shook hands.
“So I thought I’d come in,” continued
Paul.
There was no answer. Dawes lay staring at the
opposite wall.
“Say ‘Caw!”’ mocked the nurse.
“Say ‘Caw!’ Jim Crow.”
“He is getting on all right?” said Paul
to her.
“Oh yes! He lies and imagines
he’s going to die,” said the nurse, “and
it frightens every word out of his mouth.”
“And you must have somebody to talk to,”
laughed Morel.
“That’s it!” laughed
the nurse. “Only two old men and a boy who
always cries. It is hard lines! Here am
I dying to hear Jim Crow’s voice, and nothing
but an odd ‘Caw!’ will he give!”
“So rough on you!” said Morel.
“Isn’t it?” said the nurse.
“I suppose I am a godsend,” he laughed.
“Oh, dropped straight from heaven!” laughed
the nurse.
Presently she left the two men alone.
Dawes was thinner, and handsome again, but life seemed
low in him. As the doctor said, he was lying
sulking, and would not move forward towards convalescence.
He seemed to grudge every beat of his heart.
“Have you had a bad time?” asked Paul.
Suddenly again Dawes looked at him.
“What are you doing in Sheffield?” he
asked.
“My mother was taken ill at
my sister’s in Thurston Street. What are
you doing here?”
There was no answer.
“How long have you been in?” Morel asked.
“I couldn’t say for sure,” Dawes
answered grudgingly.
He lay staring across at the wall
opposite, as if trying to believe Morel was not there.
Paul felt his heart go hard and angry.
“Dr. Ansell told me you were here,” he
said coldly.
The other man did not answer.
“Typhoid’s pretty bad, I know,”
Morel persisted.
Suddenly Dawes said:
“What did you come for?”
“Because Dr. Ansell said you didn’t know
anybody here. Do you?”
“I know nobody nowhere,” said Dawes.
“Well,” said Paul, “it’s because
you don’t choose to, then.”
There was another silence.
“We s’ll be taking my mother home as soon
as we can,” said Paul.
“What’s a-matter with
her?” asked Dawes, with a sick man’s interest
in illness.
“She’s got a cancer.”
There was another silence.
“But we want to get her home,”
said Paul. “We s’ll have to get a
motor-car.”
Dawes lay thinking.
“Why don’t you ask Thomas Jordan to lend
you his?” said Dawes.
“It’s not big enough,” Morel answered.
Dawes blinked his dark eyes as he lay thinking.
“Then ask Jack Pilkington; he’d lend it
you. You know him.”
“I think I s’ll hire one,” said
Paul.
“You’re a fool if you do,” said
Dawes.
The sick man was gaunt and handsome
again. Paul was sorry for him because his eyes
looked so tired.
“Did you get a job here?” he asked.
“I was only here a day or two before I was taken
bad,” Dawes replied.
“You want to get in a convalescent home,”
said Paul.
The other’s face clouded again.
“I’m goin’ in no convalescent home,”
he said.
“My father’s been in the
one at Seathorpe, an’ he liked it. Dr. Ansell
would get you a recommend.”
Dawes lay thinking. It was evident he dared not
face the world again.
“The seaside would be all right
just now,” Morel said. “Sun on those
sandhills, and the waves not far out.”
The other did not answer.
“By Gad!” Paul concluded,
too miserable to bother much; “it’s all
right when you know you’re going to walk again,
and swim!”
Dawes glanced at him quickly.
The man’s dark eyes were afraid to meet any
other eyes in the world. But the real misery and
helplessness in Paul’s tone gave him a feeling
of relief.
“Is she far gone?” he asked.
“She’s going like wax,” Paul answered;
“but cheerful—lively!”
He bit his lip. After a minute he rose.
“Well, I’ll be going,” he said.
“I’ll leave you this half-crown.”
“I don’t want it,” Dawes muttered.
Morel did not answer, but left the coin on the table.
“Well,” he said, “I’ll
try and run in when I’m back in Sheffield.
Happen you might like to see my brother-in-law?
He works in Pyecrofts.”
“I don’t know him,” said Dawes.
“He’s all right.
Should I tell him to come? He might bring you
some papers to look at.”
The other man did not answer.
Paul went. The strong emotion that Dawes aroused
in him, repressed, made him shiver.
He did not tell his mother, but next
day he spoke to Clara about this interview. It
was in the dinner-hour. The two did not often
go out together now, but this day he asked her to
go with him to the Castle grounds. There they
sat while the scarlet geraniums and the yellow calceolarias
blazed in the sunlight. She was now always rather
protective, and rather resentful towards him.
“Did you know Baxter was in
Sheffield Hospital with typhoid?” he asked.
She looked at him with startled grey
eyes, and her face went pale.
“No,” she said, frightened.
“He’s getting better. I went to see
him yesterday—the doctor told me.”
Clara seemed stricken by the news.
“Is he very bad?” she asked guiltily.
“He has been. He’s mending now.”
“What did he say to you?”
“Oh, nothing! He seems to be sulking.”
There was a distance between the two
of them. He gave her more information.
She went about shut up and silent.
The next time they took a walk together, she disengaged
herself from his arm, and walked at a distance from
him. He was wanting her comfort badly.
“Won’t you be nice with me?” he
asked.
She did not answer.
“What’s the matter?” he said, putting
his arm across her shoulder.
“Don’t!” she said, disengaging herself.
He left her alone, and returned to his own brooding.
“Is it Baxter that upsets you?” he asked
at length.
“I have been vile to him!” she
said.
“I’ve said many a time you haven’t
treated him well,” he replied.
And there was a hostility between
them. Each pursued his own train of thought.
“I’ve treated him—no,
I’ve treated him badly,” she said.
“And now you treat me badly. It serves
me right.”
“How do I treat you badly?” he said.
“It serves me right,”
she repeated. “I never considered him worth
having, and now you don’t consider me.
But it serves me right. He loved me a thousand
times better than you ever did.”
“He didn’t!” protested Paul.
“He did! At any rate, he did respect me,
and that’s what you don’t do.”
“It looked as if he respected you!” he
said.
“He did! And I made
him horrid—I know I did! You’ve
taught me that. And he loved me a thousand times
better than ever you do.”
“All right,” said Paul.
He only wanted to be left alone now.
He had his own trouble, which was almost too much
to bear. Clara only tormented him and made him
tired. He was not sorry when he left her.
She went on the first opportunity
to Sheffield to see her husband. The meeting
was not a success. But she left him roses and
fruit and money. She wanted to make restitution.
It was not that she loved him. As she looked
at him lying there her heart did not warm with love.
Only she wanted to humble herself to him, to kneel
before him. She wanted now to be self-sacrificial.
After all, she had failed to make Morel really love
her. She was morally frightened. She wanted
to do penance. So she kneeled to Dawes, and it
gave him a subtle pleasure. But the distance
between them was still very great—too great.
It frightened the man. It almost pleased the
woman. She liked to feel she was serving him across
an insuperable distance. She was proud now.
Morel went to see Dawes once or twice.
There was a sort of friendship between the two men,
who were all the while deadly rivals. But they
never mentioned the woman who was between them.
Mrs. Morel got gradually worse.
At first they used to carry her downstairs, sometimes
even into the garden. She sat propped in her
chair, smiling, and so pretty. The gold wedding-ring
shone on her white hand; her hair was carefully brushed.
And she watched the tangled sunflowers dying, the
chrysanthemums coming out, and the dahlias.
Paul and she were afraid of each other.
He knew, and she knew, that she was dying. But
they kept up a pretence of cheerfulness. Every
morning, when he got up, he went into her room in
his pyjamas.
“Did you sleep, my dear?” he asked.
“Yes,” she answered.
“Not very well?”
“Well, yes!”
Then he knew she had lain awake.
He saw her hand under the bedclothes, pressing the
place on her side where the pain was.
“Has it been bad?” he asked.
“No. It hurt a bit, but nothing to mention.”
And she sniffed in her old scornful
way. As she lay she looked like a girl.
And all the while her blue eyes watched him. But
there were the dark pain-circles beneath that made
him ache again.
“It’s a sunny day,” he said.
“It’s a beautiful day.”
“Do you think you’ll be carried down?”
“I shall see.”
Then he went away to get her breakfast.
All day long he was conscious of nothing but her.
It was a long ache that made him feverish. Then,
when he got home in the early evening, he glanced
through the kitchen window. She was not there;
she had not got up.
He ran straight upstairs and kissed her. He was
almost afraid to ask:
“Didn’t you get up, pigeon?”
“No,” she said, “it was that morphia;
it made me tired.”
“I think he gives you too much,” he said.
“I think he does,” she answered.
He sat down by the bed, miserably.
She had a way of curling and lying on her side, like
a child. The grey and brown hair was loose over
her ear.
“Doesn’t it tickle you?” he said,
gently putting it back.
“It does,” she replied.
His face was near hers. Her blue
eyes smiled straight into his, like a girl’s—warm,
laughing with tender love. It made him pant with
terror, agony, and love.
“You want your hair doing in a plait,”
he said. “Lie still.”
And going behind her, he carefully
loosened her hair, brushed it out. It was like
fine long silk of brown and grey. Her head was
snuggled between her shoulders. As he lightly
brushed and plaited her hair, he bit his lip and felt
dazed. It all seemed unreal, he could not understand
it.
At night he often worked in her room,
looking up from time to time. And so often he
found her blue eyes fixed on him. And when their
eyes met, she smiled. He worked away again mechanically,
producing good stuff without knowing what he was doing.
Sometimes he came in, very pale and
still, with watchful, sudden eyes, like a man who
is drunk almost to death. They were both afraid
of the veils that were ripping between them.
Then she pretended to be better, chattered
to him gaily, made a great fuss over some scraps of
news. For they had both come to the condition
when they had to make much of the trifles, lest they
should give in to the big thing, and their human independence
would go smash. They were afraid, so they made
light of things and were gay.
Sometimes as she lay he knew she was
thinking of the past. Her mouth gradually shut
hard in a line. She was holding herself rigid,
so that she might die without ever uttering the great
cry that was tearing from her. He never forgot
that hard, utterly lonely and stubborn clenching of
her mouth, which persisted for weeks. Sometimes,
when it was lighter, she talked about her husband.
Now she hated him. She did not forgive him.
She could not bear him to be in the room. And
a few things, the things that had been most bitter
to her, came up again so strongly that they broke
from her, and she told her son.
He felt as if his life were being
destroyed, piece by piece, within him. Often
the tears came suddenly. He ran to the station,
the tear-drops falling on the pavement. Often
he could not go on with his work. The pen stopped
writing. He sat staring, quite unconscious.
And when he came round again he felt sick, and trembled
in his limbs. He never questioned what it was.
His mind did not try to analyse or understand.
He merely submitted, and kept his eyes shut; let the
thing go over him.
His mother did the same. She
thought of the pain, of the morphia, of the next day;
hardly ever of the death. That was coming, she
knew. She had to submit to it. But she would
never entreat it or make friends with it. Blind,
with her face shut hard and blind, she was pushed towards
the door. The days passed, the weeks, the months.
Sometimes, in the sunny afternoons,
she seemed almost happy.
“I try to think of the nice
times—when we went to Mablethorpe, and
Robin Hood’s Bay, and Shanklin,” she said.
“After all, not everybody has seen those beautiful
places. And wasn’t it beautiful! I
try to think of that, not of the other things.”
Then, again, for a whole evening she
spoke not a word; neither did he. They were together,
rigid, stubborn, silent. He went into his room
at last to go to bed, and leaned against the doorway
as if paralysed, unable to go any farther. His
consciousness went. A furious storm, he knew
not what, seemed to ravage inside him. He stood
leaning there, submitting, never questioning.
In the morning they were both normal
again, though her face was grey with the morphia,
and her body felt like ash. But they were bright
again, nevertheless. Often, especially if Annie
or Arthur were at home, he neglected her. He
did not see much of Clara. Usually he was with
men. He was quick and active and lively; but when
his friends saw him go white to the gills, his eyes
dark and glittering, they had a certain mistrust of
him. Sometimes he went to Clara, but she was almost
cold to him.
“Take me!” he said simply.
Occasionally she would. But she
was afraid. When he had her then, there was something
in it that made her shrink away from him—something
unnatural. She grew to dread him. He was
so quiet, yet so strange. She was afraid of the
man who was not there with her, whom she could feel
behind this make-belief lover; somebody sinister, that
filled her with horror. She began to have a kind
of horror of him. It was almost as if he were
a criminal. He wanted her—he had her—and
it made her feel as if death itself had her in its
grip. She lay in horror. There was no man
there loving her. She almost hated him. Then
came little bouts of tenderness. But she dared
not pity him.
Dawes had come to Colonel Seely’s
Home near Nottingham. There Paul visited him
sometimes, Clara very occasionally. Between the
two men the friendship developed peculiarly.
Dawes, who mended very slowly and seemed very feeble,
seemed to leave himself in the hands of Morel.
In the beginning of November Clara
reminded Paul that it was her birthday.
“I’d nearly forgotten,” he said.
“I’d thought quite,” she replied.
“No. Shall we go to the seaside for the
week-end?”
They went. It was cold and rather
dismal. She waited for him to be warm and tender
with her, instead of which he seemed hardly aware of
her. He sat in the railway-carriage, looking
out, and was startled when she spoke to him.
He was not definitely thinking. Things seemed
as if they did not exist. She went across to
him.
“What is it dear?” she asked.
“Nothing!” he said. “Don’t
those windmill sails look monotonous?”
He sat holding her hand. He could
not talk nor think. It was a comfort, however,
to sit holding her hand. She was dissatisfied
and miserable. He was not with her; she was nothing.
And in the evening they sat among
the sandhills, looking at the black, heavy sea.
“She will never give in,” he said quietly.
Clara’s heart sank.
“No,” she replied.
“There are different ways of
dying. My father’s people are frightened,
and have to be hauled out of life into death like cattle
into a slaughter-house, pulled by the neck; but my
mother’s people are pushed from behind, inch
by inch. They are stubborn people, and won’t
die.”
“Yes,” said Clara.
“And she won’t die.
She can’t. Mr. Renshaw, the parson, was
in the other day. ‘Think!’ he said
to her; ’you will have your mother and father,
and your sisters, and your son, in the Other Land.’
And she said: ’I have done without them
for a long time, and can do without them now.
It is the living I want, not the dead.’
She wants to live even now.”
“Oh, how horrible!” said Clara, too frightened
to speak.
“And she looks at me, and she
wants to stay with me,” he went on monotonously.
“She’s got such a will, it seems as if
she would never go—never!”
“Don’t think of it!” cried Clara.
“And she was religious—she
is religious now—but it is no good.
She simply won’t give in. And do you know,
I said to her on Thursday: ‘Mother, if
I had to die, I’d die. I’d will
to die.’ And she said to me, sharp:
’Do you think I haven’t? Do you think
you can die when you like?’”
His voice ceased. He did not
cry, only went on speaking monotonously. Clara
wanted to run. She looked round. There was
the black, re-echoing shore, the dark sky down on
her. She got up terrified. She wanted to
be where there was light, where there were other people.
She wanted to be away from him. He sat with his
head dropped, not moving a muscle.
“And I don’t want her
to eat,” he said, “and she knows it.
When I ask her: ‘Shall you have anything’
she’s almost afraid to say ‘Yes.’
’I’ll have a cup of Benger’s,’
she says. ‘It’ll only keep your strength
up,’ I said to her. ’Yes’—and
she almost cried—’but there’s
such a gnawing when I eat nothing, I can’t bear
it.’ So I went and made her the food.
It’s the cancer that gnaws like that at her.
I wish she’d die!”
“Come!” said Clara roughly. “I’m
going.”
He followed her down the darkness
of the sands. He did not come to her. He
seemed scarcely aware of her existence. And she
was afraid of him, and disliked him.
In the same acute daze they went back
to Nottingham. He was always busy, always doing
something, always going from one to the other of his
friends.
On the Monday he went to see Baxter
Dawes. Listless and pale, the man rose to greet
the other, clinging to his chair as he held out his
hand.
“You shouldn’t get up,” said Paul.
Dawes sat down heavily, eyeing Morel with a sort of
suspicion.
“Don’t you waste your
time on me,” he said, “if you’ve
owt better to do.”
“I wanted to come,” said Paul. “Here!
I brought you some sweets.”
The invalid put them aside.
“It’s not been much of a week-end,”
said Morel.
“How’s your mother?” asked the other.
“Hardly any different.”
“I thought she was perhaps worse, being as you
didn’t come on Sunday.”
“I was at Skegness,” said Paul. “I
wanted a change.”
The other looked at him with dark
eyes. He seemed to be waiting, not quite daring
to ask, trusting to be told.
“I went with Clara,” said Paul.
“I knew as much,” said Dawes quietly.
“It was an old promise,” said Paul.
“You have it your own way,” said Dawes.
This was the first time Clara had
been definitely mentioned between them.
“Nay,” said Morel slowly; “she’s
tired of me.”
Again Dawes looked at him.
“Since August she’s been getting tired
of me,” Morel repeated.
The two men were very quiet together.
Paul suggested a game of draughts. They played
in silence.
“I s’ll go abroad when my mother’s
dead,” said Paul.
“Abroad!” repeated Dawes.
“Yes; I don’t care what I do.”
They continued the game. Dawes was winning.
“I s’ll have to begin
a new start of some sort,” said Paul; “and
you as well, I suppose.”
He took one of Dawes’s pieces.
“I dunno where,” said the other.
“Things have to happen,”
Morel said. “It’s no good doing anything—at
least—no, I don’t know. Give
me some toffee.”
The two men ate sweets, and began another game of
draughts.
“What made that scar on your mouth?” asked
Dawes.
Paul put his hand hastily to his lips, and looked
over the garden.
“I had a bicycle accident,” he said.
Dawes’s hand trembled as he moved the piece.
“You shouldn’t ha’ laughed at me,”
he said, very low.
“When?”
“That night on Woodborough Road,
when you and her passed me—you with your
hand on her shoulder.”
“I never laughed at you,” said Paul.
Dawes kept his fingers on the draught-piece.
“I never knew you were there
till the very second when you passed,” said
Morel.
“It was that as did me,” Dawes said, very
low.
Paul took another sweet.
“I never laughed,” he said, “except
as I’m always laughing.”
They finished the game.
That night Morel walked home from
Nottingham, in order to have something to do.
The furnaces flared in a red blotch over Bulwell; the
black clouds were like a low ceiling. As he went
along the ten miles of highroad, he felt as if he
were walking out of life, between the black levels
of the sky and the earth. But at the end was only
the sick-room. If he walked and walked for ever,
there was only that place to come to.
He was not tired when he got near
home, or He did not know it. Across the field
he could see the red firelight leaping in her bedroom
window.
“When she’s dead,” he said to himself,
“that fire will go out.”
He took off his boots quietly and
crept upstairs. His mothers door was wide open,
because she slept alone still. The red firelight
dashed its glow on the landing. Soft as a shadow,
he peeped in her doorway.
“Paul!” she murmured.
His heart seemed to break again. He went in and
sat by the bed.
“How late you are!” she murmured.
“Not very,” he said.
“Why, what time is it?” The murmur came
plaintive and helpless.
“It’s only just gone eleven.”
That was not true; it was nearly one o’clock.
“Oh!” she said; “I thought it was
later.”
And he knew the unutterable misery of her nights that
would not go.
“Can’t you sleep, my pigeon?” he
said.
“No, I can’t,” she wailed.
“Never mind, Little!”
He said crooning. “Never mind, my love.
I’ll stop with you half an hour, my pigeon;
then perhaps it will be better.”
And he sat by the bedside, slowly,
rhythmically stroking her brows with his finger-tips,
stroking her eyes shut, soothing her, holding her
fingers in his free hand. They could hear the
sleepers’ breathing in the other rooms.
“Now go to bed,” she murmured,
lying quite still under his fingers and his love.
“Will you sleep?” he asked.
“Yes, I think so.”
“You feel better, my Little, don’t you?”
“Yes,” she said, like a fretful, half-soothed
child.
Still the days and the weeks went
by. He hardly ever went to see Clara now.
But he wandered restlessly from one person to another
for some help, and there was none anywhere. Miriam
had written to him tenderly. He went to see her.
Her heart was very sore when she saw him, white, gaunt,
with his eyes dark and bewildered. Her pity came
up, hurting her till she could not bear it.
“How is she?” she asked.
“The same—the same!”
he said. “The doctor says she can’t
last, but I know she will. She’ll be here
at Christmas.”
Miriam shuddered. She drew him
to her; she pressed him to her bosom; she kissed him
and kissed him. He submitted, but it was torture.
She could not kiss his agony. That remained alone
and apart. She kissed his face, and roused his
blood, while his soul was apart writhing with the agony
of death. And she kissed him and fingered his
body, till at last, feeling he would go mad, he got
away from her. It was not what he wanted just
then—not that. And she thought she
had soothed him and done him good.
December came, and some snow.
He stayed at home all the while now. They could
not afford a nurse. Annie came to look after her
mother; the parish nurse, whom they loved, came in
morning and evening. Paul shared the nursing
with Annie. Often, in the evenings, when friends
were in the kitchen with them, they all laughed together
and shook with laughter. It was reaction.
Paul was so comical, Annie was so quaint. The
whole party laughed till they cried, trying to subdue
the sound. And Mrs. Morel, lying alone in the
darkness heard them, and among her bitterness was a
feeling of relief.
Then Paul would go upstairs gingerly,
guiltily, to see if she had heard.
“Shall I give you some milk?” he asked.
“A little,” she replied plaintively.
And he would put some water with it,
so that it should not nourish her. Yet he loved
her more than his own life.
She had morphia every night, and her
heart got fitful. Annie slept beside her.
Paul would go in in the early morning, when his sister
got up. His mother was wasted and almost ashen
in the morning with the morphia. Darker and darker
grew her eyes, all pupil, with the torture. In
the mornings the weariness and ache were too much to
bear. Yet she could not—would not—weep,
or even complain much.
“You slept a bit later this
morning, little one,” he would say to her.
“Did I?” she answered, with fretful weariness.
“Yes; it’s nearly eight o’clock.”
He stood looking out of the window.
The whole country was bleak and pallid under the snow.
Then he felt her pulse. There was a strong stroke
and a weak one, like a sound and its echo. That
was supposed to betoken the end. She let him
feel her wrist, knowing what he wanted.
Sometimes they looked in each other’s
eyes. Then they almost seemed to make an agreement.
It was almost as if he were agreeing to die also.
But she did not consent to die; she would not.
Her body was wasted to a fragment of ash. Her
eyes were dark and full of torture.
“Can’t you give her something
to put an end to it?” he asked the doctor at
last.
But the doctor shook his head.
“She can’t last many days now, Mr. Morel,”
he said.
Paul went indoors.
“I can’t bear it much longer; we shall
all go mad,” said Annie.
The two sat down to breakfast.
“Go and sit with her while we
have breakfast, Minnie,” said Annie. But
the girl was frightened.
Paul went through the country, through
the woods, over the snow. He saw the marks of
rabbits and birds in the white snow. He wandered
miles and miles. A smoky red sunset came on slowly,
painfully, lingering. He thought she would die
that day. There was a donkey that came up to him
over the snow by the wood’s edge, and put its
head against him, and walked with him alongside.
He put his arms round the donkey’s neck, and
stroked his cheeks against his ears.
His mother, silent, was still alive,
with her hard mouth gripped grimly, her eyes of dark
torture only living.
It was nearing Christmas; there was
more snow. Annie and he felt as if they could
go on no more. Still her dark eyes were alive.
Morel, silent and frightened, obliterated himself.
Sometimes he would go into the sick-room and look
at her. Then he backed out, bewildered.
She kept her hold on life still.
The miners had been out on strike, and returned a
fortnight or so before Christmas. Minnie went
upstairs with the feeding-cup. It was two days
after the men had been in.
“Have the men been saying their
hands are sore, Minnie?” she asked, in the faint,
querulous voice that would not give in. Minnie
stood surprised.
“Not as I know of, Mrs. Morel,” she answered.
“But I’ll bet they are
sore,” said the dying woman, as she moved her
head with a sigh of weariness. “But, at
any rate, there’ll be something to buy in with
this week.”
Not a thing did she let slip.
“Your father’s pit things
will want well airing, Annie,” she said, when
the men were going back to work.
“Don’t you bother about that, my dear,”
said Annie.
One night Annie and Paul were alone. Nurse was
upstairs.
“She’ll live over Christmas,”
said Annie. They were both full of horror.
“She won’t,” he replied grimly.
“I s’ll give her morphia.”
“Which?” said Annie.
“All that came from Sheffield,” said Paul.
“Ay—do!” said Annie.
The next day he was painting in the
bedroom. She seemed to be asleep. He stepped
softly backwards and forwards at his painting.
Suddenly her small voice wailed:
“Don’t walk about, Paul.”
He looked round. Her eyes, like
dark bubbles in her face, were looking at him.
“No, my dear,” he said
gently. Another fibre seemed to snap in his heart.
That evening he got all the morphia
pills there were, and took them downstairs. Carefully
he crushed them to powder.
“What are you doing?” said Annie.
“I s’ll put ’em in her night milk.”
Then they both laughed together like
two conspiring children. On top of all their
horror flicked this little sanity.
Nurse did not come that night to settle
Mrs. Morel down. Paul went up with the hot milk
in a feeding-cup. It was nine o’clock.
She was reared up in bed, and he put
the feeding-cup between her lips that he would have
died to save from any hurt. She took a sip, then
put the spout of the cup away and looked at him with
her dark, wondering eyes. He looked at her.
“Oh, it is bitter, Paul!”
she said, making a little grimace.
“It’s a new sleeping draught
the doctor gave me for you,” he said. “He
thought it would leave you in such a state in the morning.”
“And I hope it won’t,” she said,
like a child.
She drank some more of the milk.
“But it is horrid!” she said.
He saw her frail fingers over the cup, her lips making
a little move.
“I know—I tasted
it,” he said. “But I’ll give
you some clean milk afterwards.”
“I think so,” she said,
and she went on with the draught. She was obedient
to him like a child. He wondered if she knew.
He saw her poor wasted throat moving as she drank
with difficulty. Then he ran downstairs for more
milk. There were no grains in the bottom of the
cup.
“Has she had it?” whispered Annie.
“Yes—and she said it was bitter.”
“Oh!” laughed Annie, putting her under
lip between her teeth.
“And I told her it was a new draught. Where’s
that milk?”
They both went upstairs.
“I wonder why nurse didn’t
come to settle me down?” complained the mother,
like a child, wistfully.
“She said she was going to a concert, my love,”
replied Annie.
“Did she?”
They were silent a minute. Mrs. Morel gulped
the little clean milk.
“Annie, that draught was horrid!”
she said plaintively.
“Was it, my love? Well, never mind.”
The mother sighed again with weariness. Her pulse
was very irregular.
“Let us settle you down,” said Annie.
“Perhaps nurse will be so late.”
“Ay,” said the mother—“try.”
They turned the clothes back.
Paul saw his mother LIke a girl curled up in her flannel
nightdress. Quickly they made one half of the
bed, moved her, made the other, straightened her nightgown
over her small feet, and covered her up.
“There,” said Paul, stroking her softly.
“There!—now you’ll sleep.”
“Yes,” she said.
“I didn’t think you could do the bed so
nicely,” she added, almost gaily. Then
she curled up, with her cheek on her hand, her head
snugged between her shoulders. Paul put the long
thin plait of grey hair over her shoulder and kissed
her.
“You’ll sleep, my love,” he said.
“Yes,” she answered trustfully. “Good-night.”
They put out the light, and it was still.
Morel was in bed. Nurse did not
come. Annie and Paul came to look at her at about
eleven. She seemed to be sleeping as usual after
her draught. Her mouth had come a bit open.
“Shall we sit up?” said Paul.
“I s’ll lie with her as I always do,”
said Annie. “She might wake up.”
“All right. And call me if you see any
difference.”
“Yes.”
They lingered before the bedroom fire,
feeling the night big and black and snowy outside,
their two selves alone in the world. At last he
went into the next room and went to bed.
He slept almost immediately, but kept
waking every now and again. Then he went sound
asleep. He started awake at Annie’s whispered,
“Paul, Paul!” He saw his sister in her
white nightdress, with her long plait of hair down
her back, standing in the darkness.
“Yes?” he whispered, sitting up.
“Come and look at her.”
He slipped out of bed. A bud
of gas was burning in the sick chamber. His mother
lay with her cheek on her hand, curled up as she had
gone to sleep. But her mouth had fallen open,
and she breathed with great, hoarse breaths, like
snoring, and there were long intervals between.
“She’s going!” he whispered.
“Yes,” said Annie.
“How long has she been like it?”
“I only just woke up.”
Annie huddled into the dressing-gown,
Paul wrapped himself in a brown blanket. It was
three o’clock. He mended the fire.
Then the two sat waiting. The great, snoring
breath was taken—held awhile—then
given back. There was a space—a long
space. Then they started. The great, snoring
breath was taken again. He bent close down and
looked at her.
“Isn’t it awful!” whispered Annie.
He nodded. They sat down again
helplessly. Again came the great, snoring breath.
Again they hung suspended. Again it was given
back, long and harsh. The sound, so irregular,
at such wide intervals, sounded through the house.
Morel, in his room, slept on. Paul and Annie sat
crouched, huddled, motionless. The great snoring
sound began again—there was a painful pause
while the breath was held—back came the
rasping breath. Minute after minute passed.
Paul looked at her again, bending low over her.
“She may last like this,” he said.
They were both silent. He looked
out of the window, and could faintly discern the snow
on the garden.
“You go to my bed,” he said to Annie.
“I’ll sit up.”
“No,” she said, “I’ll stop
with you.”
“I’d rather you didn’t,” he
said.
At last Annie crept out of the room,
and he was alone. He hugged himself in his brown
blanket, crouched in front of his mother, watching.
She looked dreadful, with the bottom jaw fallen back.
He watched. Sometimes he thought the great breath
would never begin again. He could not bear it—the
waiting. Then suddenly, startling him, came the
great harsh sound. He mended the fire again,
noiselessly. She must not be disturbed.
The minutes went by. The night was going, breath
by breath. Each time the sound came he felt it
wring him, till at last he could not feel so much.
His father got up. Paul heard
the miner drawing his stockings on, yawning.
Then Morel, in shirt and stockings, entered.
“Hush!” said Paul.
Morel stood watching. Then he
looked at his son, helplessly, and in horror.
“Had I better stop a-whoam?” he whispered.
“No. Go to work. She’ll last
through to-morrow.”
“I don’t think so.”
“Yes. Go to work.”
The miner looked at her again, in
fear, and went obediently out of the room. Paul
saw the tape of his garters swinging against his legs.
After another half-hour Paul went
downstairs and drank a cup of tea, then returned.
Morel, dressed for the pit, came upstairs again.
“Am I to go?” he said.
“Yes.”
And in a few minutes Paul heard his
father’s heavy steps go thudding over the deadening
snow. Miners called in the streets as they tramped
in gangs to work. The terrible, long-drawn breaths
continued—heave—heave—heave;
then a long pause—then—ah-h-h-h-h!
as it came back. Far away over the snow sounded
the hooters of the ironworks. One after another
they crowed and boomed, some small and far away, some
near, the blowers of the collieries and the other works.
Then there was silence. He mended the fire.
The great breaths broke the silence—she
looked just the same. He put back the blind and
peered out. Still it was dark. Perhaps there
was a lighter tinge. Perhaps the snow was bluer.
He drew up the blind and got dressed. Then, shuddering,
he drank brandy from the bottle on the wash-stand.
The snow was growing blue. He heard a cart
clanking down the street. Yes, it was seven o’clock,
and it was coming a little bit light. He heard
some people calling. The world was waking.
A grey, deathly dawn crept over the snow. Yes,
he could see the houses. He put out the gas.
It seemed very dark. The breathing came still,
but he was almost used to it. He could see her.
She was just the same. He wondered if he piled
heavy clothes on top of her it would stop. He
looked at her. That was not her—not
her a bit. If he piled the blanket and heavy
coats on her—
Suddenly the door opened, and Annie
entered. She looked at him questioningly.
“Just the same,” he said calmly.
They whispered together a minute,
then he went downstairs to get breakfast. It
was twenty to eight. Soon Annie came down.
“Isn’t it awful!
Doesn’t she look awful!” she whispered,
dazed with horror.
He nodded.
“If she looks like that!” said Annie.
“Drink some tea,” he said.
They went upstairs again. Soon
the neighbours came with their frightened question:
“How is she?”
It went on just the same. She
lay with her cheek in her hand, her mouth fallen open,
and the great, ghastly snores came and went.
At ten o’clock nurse came. She looked strange
and woebegone.
“Nurse,” cried Paul, “she’ll
last like this for days?”
“She can’t, Mr. Morel,” said nurse.
“She can’t.”
There was a silence.
“Isn’t it dreadful!”
wailed the nurse. “Who would have thought
she could stand it? Go down now, Mr. Morel, go
down.”
At last, at about eleven o’clock,
he went downstairs and sat in the neighbour’s
house. Annie was downstairs also. Nurse and
Arthur were upstairs. Paul sat with his head
in his hand. Suddenly Annie came flying across
the yard crying, half mad:
“Paul—Paul—she’s
gone!”
In a second he was back in his own
house and upstairs. She lay curled up and still,
with her face on her hand, and nurse was wiping her
mouth. They all stood back. He kneeled down,
and put his face to hers and his arms round her:
“My love—my love—oh,
my love!” he whispered again and again.
“My love—oh, my love!”
Then he heard the nurse behind him, crying, saying:
“She’s better, Mr. Morel, she’s
better.”
When he took his face up from his
warm, dead mother he went straight downstairs and
began blacking his boots.
There was a good deal to do, letters
to write, and so on. The doctor came and glanced
at her, and sighed.
“Ay—poor thing!”
he said, then turned away. “Well, call at
the surgery about six for the certificate.”
The father came home from work at
about four o’clock. He dragged silently
into the house and sat down. Minnie bustled to
give him his dinner. Tired, he laid his black
arms on the table. There were swede turnips for
his dinner, which he liked. Paul wondered if he
knew. It was some time, and nobody had spoken.
At last the son said:
“You noticed the blinds were down?”
Morel looked up.
“No,” he said. “Why—has
she gone?”
“Yes.”
“When wor that?”
“About twelve this morning.”
“H’m!”
The miner sat still for a moment,
then began his dinner. It was as if nothing had
happened. He ate his turnips in silence.
Afterwards he washed and went upstairs to dress.
The door of her room was shut.
“Have you seen her?” Annie asked of him
when he came down.
“No,” he said.
In a little while he went out.
Annie went away, and Paul called on the undertaker,
the clergyman, the doctor, the registrar. It was
a long business. He got back at nearly eight
o’clock. The undertaker was coming soon
to measure for the coffin. The house was empty
except for her. He took a candle and went upstairs.
The room was cold, that had been warm
for so long. Flowers, bottles, plates, all sick-room
litter was taken away; everything was harsh and austere.
She lay raised on the bed, the sweep of the sheet from
the raised feet was like a clean curve of snow, so
silent. She lay like a maiden asleep. With
his candle in his hand, he bent over her. She
lay like a girl asleep and dreaming of her love.
The mouth was a little open as if wondering from the
suffering, but her face was young, her brow clear
and white as if life had never touched it. He
looked again at the eyebrows, at the small, winsome
nose a bit on one side. She was young again.
Only the hair as it arched so beautifully from her
temples was mixed with silver, and the two simple
plaits that lay on her shoulders were filigree of
silver and brown. She would wake up. She
would lift her eyelids. She was with him still.
He bent and kissed her passionately. But there
was coldness against his mouth. He bit his lips
with horror. Looking at her, he felt he could
never, never let her go. No! He stroked
the hair from her temples. That, too, was cold.
He saw the mouth so dumb and wondering at the hurt.
Then he crouched on the floor, whispering to her:
“Mother, mother!”
He was still with her when the undertakers
came, young men who had been to school with him.
They touched her reverently, and in a quiet, businesslike
fashion. They did not look at her. He watched
jealously. He and Annie guarded her fiercely.
They would not let anybody come to see her, and the
neighbours were offended.
After a while Paul went out of the
house, and played cards at a friend’s.
It was midnight when he got back. His father rose
from the couch as he entered, saying in a plaintive
way:
“I thought tha wor niver comin’, lad.”
“I didn’t think you’d sit up,”
said Paul.
His father looked so forlorn.
Morel had been a man without fear—simply
nothing frightened him. Paul realised with a start
that he had been afraid to go to bed, alone in the
house with his dead. He was sorry.
“I forgot you’d be alone, father,”
he said.
“Dost want owt to eat?” asked Morel.
“No.”
“Sithee—I made thee
a drop o’ hot milk. Get it down thee; it’s
cold enough for owt.”
Paul drank it.
After a while Morel went to bed.
He hurried past the closed door, and left his own
door open. Soon the son came upstairs also.
He went in to kiss her good-night, as usual.
It was cold and dark. He wished they had kept
her fire burning. Still she dreamed her young
dream. But she would be cold.
“My dear!” he whispered. “My
dear!”
And he did not kiss her, for fear
she should be cold and strange to him. It eased
him she slept so beautifully. He shut her door
softly, not to wake her, and went to bed.
In the morning Morel summoned his
courage, hearing Annie downstairs and Paul coughing
in the room across the landing. He opened her
door, and went into the darkened room. He saw
the white uplifted form in the twilight, but her he
dared not see. Bewildered, too frightened to
possess any of his faculties, he got out of the room
again and left her. He never looked at her again.
He had not seen her for months, because he had not
dared to look. And she looked like his young wife
again.
“Have you seen her?” Annie
asked of him sharply after breakfast.
“Yes,” he said.
“And don’t you think she looks nice?”
“Yes.”
He went out of the house soon after.
And all the time He seemed to be creeping aside to
avoid it.
Paul went about from place to place,
doing the business of the death. He met Clara
in Nottingham, and they had tea together in a cafe,
when they were quite jolly again. She was infinitely
relieved to find he did not take it tragically.
Later, when the relatives began to
come for the funeral, the affair became public, and
the children became social beings. They put themselves
aside. They buried her in a furious storm of rain
and wind. The wet clay glistened, all the white
flowers were soaked. Annie gripped his arm and
leaned forward. Down below she saw a dark corner
of William’s coffin. The oak box sank steadily.
She was gone. The rain poured in the grave.
The procession of black, with its umbrellas glistening,
turned away. The cemetery was deserted under the
drenching cold rain.
Paul went home and busied himself
supplying the guests with drinks. His father
sat in the kitchen with Mrs. Morel’s relatives,
“superior” people, and wept, and said
what a good lass she’d been, and how he’d
tried to do everything he could for her—everything.
He had striven all his life to do what he could for
her, and he’d nothing to reproach himself with.
She was gone, but he’d done his best for her.
He wiped his eyes with his white handkerchief.
He’d nothing to reproach himself for, he repeated.
All his life he’d done his best for her.
And that was how he tried to dismiss
her. He never thought of her personally.
Everything deep in him he denied. Paul hated his
father for sitting sentimentalising over her.
He knew he would do it in the public-houses.
For the real tragedy went on in Morel in spite of
himself. Sometimes, later, he came down from his
afternoon sleep, white and cowering.
“I have been dreaming of
thy mother,” he said in a small voice.
“Have you, father? When
I dream of her it’s always just as she was when
she was well. I dream of her often, but it seems
quite nice and natural, as if nothing had altered.”
But Morel crouched in front of the fire in terror.
The weeks passed half-real, not much
pain, not much of anything, perhaps a little relief,
mostly a nuit blanche. Paul went restless
from place to place. For some months, since his
mother had been worse, he had not made love to Clara.
She was, as it were, dumb to him, rather distant.
Dawes saw her very occasionally, but the two could
not get an inch across the great distance between
them. The three of them were drifting forward.
Dawes mended very slowly. He
was in the convalescent home at Skegness at Christmas,
nearly well again. Paul went to the seaside for
a few days. His father was with Annie in Sheffield.
Dawes came to Paul’s lodgings. His time
in the home was up. The two men, between whom
was such a big reserve, seemed faithful to each other.
Dawes depended on Morel now. He knew Paul and
Clara had practically separated.
Two days after Christmas Paul was
to go back to Nottingham. The evening before
he sat with Dawes smoking before the fire.
“You know Clara’s coming
down for the day to-morrow?” he said.
The other man glanced at him.
“Yes, you told me,” he replied.
Paul drank the remainder of his glass of whisky.
“I told the landlady your wife was coming,”
he said.
“Did you?” said Dawes,
shrinking, but almost leaving himself in the other’s
hands. He got up rather stiffly, and reached for
Morel’s glass.
“Let me fill you up,” he said.
Paul jumped up.
“You sit still,” he said.
But Dawes, with rather shaky hand, continued to mix
the drink.
“Say when,” he said.
“Thanks!” replied the other. “But
you’ve no business to get up.”
“It does me good, lad,”
replied Dawes. “I begin to think I’m
right again, then.”
“You are about right, you know.”
“I am, certainly I am,” said Dawes, nodding
to him.
“And Len says he can get you on in Sheffield.”
Dawes glanced at him again, with dark
eyes that agreed with everything the other would say,
perhaps a trifle dominated by him.
“It’s funny,” said
Paul, “starting again. I feel in a lot bigger
mess than you.”
“In what way, lad?”
“I don’t know. I
don’t know. It’s as if I was in a
tangled sort of hole, rather dark and dreary, and
no road anywhere.”
“I know—I understand
it,” Dawes said, nodding. “But you’ll
find it’ll come all right.”
He spoke caressingly.
“I suppose so,” said Paul.
Dawes knocked his pipe in a hopeless fashion.
“You’ve not done for yourself like I have,”
he said.
Morel saw the wrist and the white
hand of the other man gripping the stem of the pipe
and knocking out the ash, as if he had given up.
“How old are you?” Paul asked.
“Thirty-nine,” replied Dawes, glancing
at him.
Those brown eyes, full of the consciousness
of failure, almost pleading for reassurance, for someone
to re-establish the man in himself, to warm him, to
set him up firm again, troubled Paul.
“You’ll just be in your
prime,” said Morel. “You don’t
look as if much life had gone out of you.”
The brown eyes of the other flashed suddenly.
“It hasn’t,” he said. “The
go is there.”
Paul looked up and laughed.
“We’ve both got plenty of life in us yet
to make things fly,” he said.
The eyes of the two men met.
They exchanged one look. Having recognised the
stress of passion each in the other, they both drank
their whisky.
“Yes, begod!” said Dawes, breathless.
There was a pause.
“And I don’t see,”
said Paul, “why you shouldn’t go on where
you left off.”
“What—” said Dawes, suggestively.
“Yes—fit your old home together again.”
Dawes hid his face and shook his head.
“Couldn’t be done,” he said, and
looked up with an ironic smile.
“Why? Because you don’t want?”
“Perhaps.”
They smoked in silence. Dawes showed his teeth
as he bit his pipe stem.
“You mean you don’t want her?” asked
Paul.
Dawes stared up at the picture with a caustic expression
on his face.
“I hardly know,” he said.
The smoke floated softly up.
“I believe she wants you,” said Paul.
“Do you?” replied the other, soft, satirical,
abstract.
“Yes. She never really
hitched on to me—you were always there in
the background. That’s why she wouldn’t
get a divorce.”
Dawes continued to stare in a satirical
fashion at the picture over the mantelpiece.
“That’s how women are
with me,” said Paul. “They want me
like mad, but they don’t want to belong to me.
And she belonged to you all the time. I
knew.”
The triumphant male came up in Dawes.
He showed his teeth more distinctly.
“Perhaps I was a fool,” he said.
“You were a big fool,” said Morel.
“But perhaps even then you were a bigger
fool,” said Dawes.
There was a touch of triumph and malice in it.
“Do you think so?” said Paul.
They were silent for some time.
“At any rate, I’m clearing out to-morrow,”
said Morel.
“I see,” answered Dawes.
Then they did not talk any more.
The instinct to murder each other had returned.
They almost avoided each other.
They shared the same bedroom.
When they retired Dawes seemed abstract, thinking
of something. He sat on the side of the bed in
his shirt, looking at his legs.
“Aren’t you getting cold?” asked
Morel.
“I was lookin’ at these legs,” replied
the other.
“What’s up with ’em? They look
all right,” replied Paul, from his bed.
“They look all right. But there’s
some water in ’em yet.”
“And what about it?”
“Come and look.”
Paul reluctantly got out of bed and
went to look at the rather handsome legs of the other
man that were covered with glistening, dark gold hair.
“Look here,” said Dawes,
pointing to his shin. “Look at the water
under here.”
“Where?” said Paul.
The man pressed in his finger-tips.
They left little dents that filled up slowly.
“It’s nothing,” said Paul.
“You feel,” said Dawes.
Paul tried with his fingers. It made little dents.
“H’m!” he said.
“Rotten, isn’t it?” said Dawes.
“Why? It’s nothing much.”
“You’re not much of a man with water in
your legs.”
“I can’t see as it makes
any difference,” said Morel. “I’ve
got a weak chest.”
He returned to his own bed.
“I suppose the rest of me’s
all right,” said Dawes, and he put out the light.
In the morning it was raining.
Morel packed his bag. The sea was grey and shaggy
and dismal. He seemed to be cutting himself off
from life more and more. It gave him a wicked
pleasure to do it.
The two men were at the station.
Clara stepped out of the train, and came along the
platform, very erect and coldly composed. She
wore a long coat and a tweed hat. Both men hated
her for her composure. Paul shook hands with
her at the barrier. Dawes was leaning against
the bookstall, watching. His black overcoat was
buttoned up to the chin because of the rain.
He was pale, with almost a touch of nobility in his
quietness. He came forward, limping slightly.
“You ought to look better than this,”
she said.
“Oh, I’m all right now.”
The three stood at a loss. She kept the two men
hesitating near her.
“Shall we go to the lodging
straight off,” said Paul, “or somewhere
else?”
“We may as well go home,” said Dawes.
Paul walked on the outside of the
pavement, then Dawes, then Clara. They made polite
conversation. The sitting-room faced the sea,
whose tide, grey and shaggy, hissed not far off.
Morel swung up the big arm-chair.
“Sit down, Jack,” he said.
“I don’t want that chair,” said
Dawes.
“Sit down!” Morel repeated.
Clara took off her things and laid
them on the couch. She had a slight air of resentment.
Lifting her hair with her fingers, she sat down, rather
aloof and composed. Paul ran downstairs to speak
to the landlady.
“I should think you’re
cold,” said Dawes to his wife. “Come
nearer to the fire.”
“Thank you, I’m quite warm,” she
answered.
She looked out of the window at the rain and at the
sea.
“When are you going back?” she asked.
“Well, the rooms are taken until
to-morrow, so he wants me to stop. He’s
going back to-night.”
“And then you’re thinking of going to
Sheffield?”
“Yes.”
“Are you fit to start work?”
“I’m going to start.”
“You’ve really got a place?”
“Yes—begin on Monday.”
“You don’t look fit.”
“Why don’t I?”
She looked again out of the window instead of answering.
“And have you got lodgings in Sheffield?”
“Yes.”
Again she looked away out of the window.
The panes were blurred with streaming rain.
“And can you manage all right?” she asked.
“I s’d think so. I s’ll have
to!”
They were silent when Morel returned.
“I shall go by the four-twenty,” he said
as he entered.
Nobody answered.
“I wish you’d take your boots off,”
he said to Clara.
“There’s a pair of slippers of mine.”
“Thank you,” she said. “They
aren’t wet.”
He put the slippers near her feet. She left them
there.
Morel sat down. Both the men
seemed helpless, and each of them had a rather hunted
look. But Dawes now carried himself quietly, seemed
to yield himself, while Paul seemed to screw himself
up. Clara thought she had never seen him look
so small and mean. He was as if trying to get
himself into the smallest possible compass. And
as he went about arranging, and as he sat talking,
there seemed something false about him and out of
tune. Watching him unknown, she said to herself
there was no stability about him. He was fine
in his way, passionate, and able to give her drinks
of pure life when he was in one mood. And now
he looked paltry and insignificant. There was
nothing stable about him. Her husband had more
manly dignity. At any rate he did not waft
about with any wind. There was something evanescent
about Morel, she thought, something shifting and false.
He would never make sure ground for any woman to stand
on. She despised him rather for his shrinking
together, getting smaller. Her husband at least
was manly, and when he was beaten gave in. But
this other would never own to being beaten. He
would shift round and round, prowl, get smaller.
She despised him. And yet she watched him rather
than Dawes, and it seemed as if their three fates lay
in his hands. She hated him for it.
She seemed to understand better now
about men, and what they could or would do. She
was less afraid of them, more sure of herself.
That they were not the small egoists she had imagined
them made her more comfortable. She had learned
a good deal—almost as much as she wanted
to learn. Her cup had been full. It was still
as full as she could carry. On the whole, she
would not be sorry when he was gone.
They had dinner, and sat eating nuts
and drinking by the fire. Not a serious word
had been spoken. Yet Clara realised that Morel
was withdrawing from the circle, leaving her the option
to stay with her husband. It angered her.
He was a mean fellow, after all, to take what he wanted
and then give her back. She did not remember that
she herself had had what she wanted, and really, at
the bottom of her heart, wished to be given back.
Paul felt crumpled up and lonely.
His mother had really supported his life. He
had loved her; they two had, in fact, faced the world
together. Now she was gone, and for ever behind
him was the gap in life, the tear in the veil, through
which his life seemed to drift slowly, as if he were
drawn towards death. He wanted someone of their
own free initiative to help him. The lesser things
he began to let go from him, for fear of this big
thing, the lapse towards death, following in the wake
of his beloved. Clara could not stand for him
to hold on to. She wanted him, but not to understand
him. He felt she wanted the man on top, not the
real him that was in trouble. That would be too
much trouble to her; he dared not give it her.
She could not cope with him. It made him ashamed.
So, secretly ashamed because he was in such a mess,
because his own hold on life was so unsure, because
nobody held him, feeling unsubstantial, shadowy, as
if he did not count for much in this concrete world,
he drew himself together smaller and smaller.
He did not want to die; he would not give in.
But he was not afraid of death. If nobody would
help, he would go on alone.
Dawes had been driven to the extremity
of life, until he was afraid. He could go to
the brink of death, he could lie on the edge and look
in. Then, cowed, afraid, he had to crawl back,
and like a beggar take what offered. There was
a certain nobility in it. As Clara saw, he owned
himself beaten, and he wanted to be taken back whether
or not. That she could do for him. It was
three o’clock.
“I am going by the four-twenty,”
said Paul again to Clara. “Are you coming
then or later?”
“I don’t know,” she said.
“I’m meeting my father in Nottingham at
seven-fifteen,” he said.
“Then,” she answered, “I’ll
come later.”
Dawes jerked suddenly, as if he had
been held on a strain. He looked out over the
sea, but he saw nothing.
“There are one or two books
in the corner,” said Morel. “I’ve
done with ’em.”
At about four o’clock he went.
“I shall see you both later,” he said,
as he shook hands.
“I suppose so,” said Dawes.
“An’ perhaps—one day—I
s’ll be able to pay you back the money as—”
“I shall come for it, you’ll
see,” laughed Paul. “I s’ll
be on the rocks before I’m very much older.”
“Ay—well—” said
Dawes.
“Good-bye,” he said to Clara.
“Good-bye,” she said,
giving him her hand. Then she glanced at him for
the last time, dumb and humble.
He was gone. Dawes and his wife sat down again.
“It’s a nasty day for travelling,”
said the man.
“Yes,” she answered.
They talked in a desultory fashion
until it grew dark. The landlady brought in the
tea. Dawes drew up his chair to the table without
being invited, like a husband. Then he sat humbly
waiting for his cup. She served him as she would,
like a wife, not consulting his wish.
After tea, as it drew near to six
o’clock, he went to the window. All was
dark outside. The sea was roaring.
“It’s raining yet,” he said.
“Is it?” she answered.
“You won’t go to-night, shall you?”
he said, hesitating.
She did not answer. He waited.
“I shouldn’t go in this rain,” he
said.
“Do you want me to stay?” she asked.
His hand as he held the dark curtain trembled.
“Yes,” he said.
He remained with his back to her.
She rose and went slowly to him. He let go the
curtain, turned, hesitating, towards her. She
stood with her hands behind her back, looking up at
him in a heavy, inscrutable fashion.
“Do you want me, Baxter?” she asked.
His voice was hoarse as he answered:
“Do you want to come back to me?”
She made a moaning noise, lifted her
arms, and put them round his neck, drawing him to
her. He hid his face on her shoulder, holding
her clasped.
“Take me back!” she whispered,
ecstatic. “Take me back, take me back!”
And she put her fingers through his fine, thin dark
hair, as if she were only semi-conscious. He
tightened his grasp on her.
“Do you want me again?” he murmured, broken.