At two o’clock in the morning
the freckled boy from Creston stopped his sleepy horse
at the door of the red house, and Charity got out.
Harney had taken leave of her at Creston River, charging
the boy to drive her home. Her mind was still
in a fog of misery, and she did not remember very
clearly what had happened, or what they said to each
other, during the interminable interval since their
departure from Nettleton; but the secretive instinct
of the animal in pain was so strong in her that she
had a sense of relief when Harney got out and she drove
on alone.
The full moon hung over North Dormer,
whitening the mist that filled the hollows between
the hills and floated transparently above the fields.
Charity stood a moment at the gate, looking out into
the waning night. She watched the boy drive off,
his horse’s head wagging heavily to and fro;
then she went around to the kitchen door and felt under
the mat for the key. She found it, unlocked the
door and went in. The kitchen was dark, but she
discovered a box of matches, lit a candle and went
upstairs. Mr. Royall’s door, opposite hers,
stood open on his unlit room; evidently he had not
come back. She went into her room, bolted her
door and began slowly to untie the ribbon about her
waist, and to take off her dress. Under the bed
she saw the paper bag in which she had hidden her
new hat from inquisitive eyes….
She lay for a long time sleepless
on her bed, staring up at the moonlight on the low
ceiling; dawn was in the sky when she fell asleep,
and when she woke the sun was on her face.
She dressed and went down to the kitchen.
Verena was there alone: she glanced at Charity
tranquilly, with her old deaf-looking eyes. There
was no sign of Mr. Royall about the house and the
hours passed without his reappearing. Charity
had gone up to her room, and sat there listlessly,
her hands on her lap. Puffs of sultry air fanned
her dimity window curtains and flies buzzed stiflingly
against the bluish panes.
At one o’clock Verena hobbled
up to see if she were not coming down to dinner; but
she shook her head, and the old woman went away, saying:
“I’ll cover up, then.”
The sun turned and left her room,
and Charity seated herself in the window, gazing down
the village street through the half-opened shutters.
Not a thought was in her mind; it was just a dark whirlpool
of crowding images; and she watched the people passing
along the street, Dan Targatt’s team hauling
a load of pine-trunks down to Hepburn, the sexton’s
old white horse grazing on the bank across the way,
as if she looked at these familiar sights from the
other side of the grave.
She was roused from her apathy by
seeing Ally Hawes come out of the Frys’ gate
and walk slowly toward the red house with her uneven
limping step. At the sight Charity recovered
her severed contact with reality. She divined
that Ally was coming to hear about her day: no
one else was in the secret of the trip to Nettleton,
and it had flattered Ally profoundly to be allowed
to know of it.
At the thought of having to see her,
of having to meet her eyes and answer or evade her
questions, the whole horror of the previous night’s
adventure rushed back upon Charity. What had been
a feverish nightmare became a cold and unescapable
fact. Poor Ally, at that moment, represented
North Dormer, with all its mean curiosities, its furtive
malice, its sham unconsciousness of evil. Charity
knew that, although all relations with Julia were
supposed to be severed, the tender-hearted Ally still
secretly communicated with her; and no doubt Julia
would exult in the chance of retailing the scandal
of the wharf. The story, exaggerated and distorted,
was probably already on its way to North Dormer.
Ally’s dragging pace had not
carried her far from the Frys’ gate when she
was stopped by old Mrs. Sollas, who was a great talker,
and spoke very slowly because she had never been able
to get used to her new teeth from Hepburn. Still,
even this respite would not last long; in another
ten minutes Ally would be at the door, and Charity
would hear her greeting Verena in the kitchen, and
then calling up from the foot of the stairs.
Suddenly it became clear that flight,
and instant flight, was the only thing conceivable.
The longing to escape, to get away from familiar faces,
from places where she was known, had always been strong
in her in moments of distress. She had a childish
belief in the miraculous power of strange scenes and
new faces to transform her life and wipe out bitter
memories. But such impulses were mere fleeting
whims compared to the cold resolve which now possessed
her. She felt she could not remain an hour longer
under the roof of the man who had publicly dishonoured
her, and face to face with the people who would presently
be gloating over all the details of her humiliation.
Her passing pity for Mr. Royall had
been swallowed up in loathing: everything in
her recoiled from the disgraceful spectacle of the
drunken old man apostrophizing her in the presence
of a band of loafers and street-walkers. Suddenly,
vividly, she relived again the horrible moment when
he had tried to force himself into her room, and what
she had before supposed to be a mad aberration now
appeared to her as a vulgar incident in a debauched
and degraded life.
While these thoughts were hurrying
through her she had dragged out her old canvas school-bag,
and was thrusting into it a few articles of clothing
and the little packet of letters she had received from
Harney. From under her pincushion she took the
library key, and laid it in full view; then she felt
at the back of a drawer for the blue brooch that Harney
had given her. She would not have dared to wear
it openly at North Dormer, but now she fastened it
on her bosom as if it were a talisman to protect her
in her flight. These preparations had taken but
a few minutes, and when they were finished Ally Hawes
was still at the Frys’ corner talking to old
Mrs. Sollas….
She had said to herself, as she always
said in moments of revolt: “I’ll
go to the Mountain—I’ll go back to
my own folks.” She had never really meant
it before; but now, as she considered her case, no
other course seemed open. She had never learned
any trade that would have given her independence in
a strange place, and she knew no one in the big towns
of the valley, where she might have hoped to find
employment. Miss Hatchard was still away; but
even had she been at North Dormer she was the last
person to whom Charity would have turned, since one
of the motives urging her to flight was the wish not
to see Lucius Harney. Travelling back from Nettleton,
in the crowded brightly-lit train, all exchange of
confidence between them had been impossible; but during
their drive from Hepburn to Creston River she had
gathered from Harney’s snatches of consolatory
talk—again hampered by the freckled boy’s
presence—that he intended to see her the
next day. At the moment she had found a vague
comfort in the assurance; but in the desolate lucidity
of the hours that followed she had come to see the
impossibility of meeting him again. Her dream
of comradeship was over; and the scene on the wharf—vile
and disgraceful as it had been—had after
all shed the light of truth on her minute of madness.
It was as if her guardian’s words had stripped
her bare in the face of the grinning crowd and proclaimed
to the world the secret admonitions of her conscience.
She did not think these things out
clearly; she simply followed the blind propulsion
of her wretchedness. She did not want, ever again,
to see anyone she had known; above all, she did not
want to see Harney….
She climbed the hill-path behind the
house and struck through the woods by a short-cut
leading to the Creston road. A lead-coloured sky
hung heavily over the fields, and in the forest the
motionless air was stifling; but she pushed on, impatient
to reach the road which was the shortest way to the
Mountain.
To do so, she had to follow the Creston
road for a mile or two, and go within half a mile
of the village; and she walked quickly, fearing to
meet Harney. But there was no sign of him, and
she had almost reached the branch road when she saw
the flanks of a large white tent projecting through
the trees by the roadside. She supposed that it
sheltered a travelling circus which had come there
for the Fourth; but as she drew nearer she saw, over
the folded-back flap, a large sign bearing the inscription,
“Gospel Tent.” The interior seemed
to be empty; but a young man in a black alpaca coat,
his lank hair parted over a round white face, stepped
from under the flap and advanced toward her with a
smile.
“Sister, your Saviour knows
everything. Won’t you come in and lay your
guilt before Him?” he asked insinuatingly, putting
his hand on her arm.
Charity started back and flushed.
For a moment she thought the evangelist must have
heard a report of the scene at Nettleton; then she
saw the absurdity of the supposition.
“I on’y wish’t I
had any to lay!” she retorted, with one of her
fierce flashes of self-derision; and the young man
murmured, aghast: “Oh, Sister, don’t
speak blasphemy….”
But she had jerked her arm out of
his hold, and was running up the branch road, trembling
with the fear of meeting a familiar face. Presently
she was out of sight of the village, and climbing into
the heart of the forest. She could not hope to
do the fifteen miles to the Mountain that afternoon;
but she knew of a place half-way to Hamblin where
she could sleep, and where no one would think of looking
for her. It was a little deserted house on a
slope in one of the lonely rifts of the hills.
She had seen it once, years before, when she had gone
on a nutting expedition to the grove of walnuts below
it. The party had taken refuge in the house from
a sudden mountain storm, and she remembered that Ben
Sollas, who liked frightening girls, had told them
that it was said to be haunted.
She was growing faint and tired, for
she had eaten nothing since morning, and was not used
to walking so far. Her head felt light and she
sat down for a moment by the roadside. As she
sat there she heard the click of a bicycle-bell, and
started up to plunge back into the forest; but before
she could move the bicycle had swept around the curve
of the road, and Harney, jumping off, was approaching
her with outstretched arms.
“Charity! What on earth are you doing here?”
She stared as if he were a vision,
so startled by the unexpectedness of his being there
that no words came to her.
“Where were you going?
Had you forgotten that I was coming?” he continued,
trying to draw her to him; but she shrank from his
embrace.
“I was going away—I
don’t want to see you—I want you should
leave me alone,” she broke out wildly.
He looked at her and his face grew
grave, as though the shadow of a premonition brushed
it.
“Going away—from me, Charity?”
“From everybody. I want you should leave
me.”
He stood glancing doubtfully up and
down the lonely forest road that stretched away into
sun-flecked distances.
“Where were you going?’
“Home.”
“Home—this way?”
She threw her head back defiantly.
“To my home—up yonder: to the
Mountain.”
As she spoke she became aware of a
change in his face. He was no longer listening
to her, he was only looking at her, with the passionate
absorbed expression she had seen in his eyes after
they had kissed on the stand at Nettleton. He
was the new Harney again, the Harney abruptly revealed
in that embrace, who seemed so penetrated with the
joy of her presence that he was utterly careless of
what she was thinking or feeling.
He caught her hands with a laugh.
“How do you suppose I found you?” he said
gaily. He drew out the little packet of his letters
and flourished them before her bewildered eyes.
“You dropped them, you imprudent
young person—dropped them in the middle
of the road, not far from here; and the young man who
is running the Gospel tent picked them up just as
I was riding by.” He drew back, holding
her at arm’s length, and scrutinizing her troubled
face with the minute searching gaze of his short-sighted
eyes.
“Did you really think you could
run away from me? You see you weren’t meant
to,” he said; and before she could answer he
had kissed her again, not vehemently, but tenderly,
almost fraternally, as if he had guessed her confused
pain, and wanted her to know he understood it.
He wound his fingers through hers.
“Come let’s walk a little.
I want to talk to you. There’s so much to
say.”
He spoke with a boy’s gaiety,
carelessly and confidently, as if nothing had happened
that could shame or embarrass them; and for a moment,
in the sudden relief of her release from lonely pain,
she felt herself yielding to his mood. But he
had turned, and was drawing her back along the road
by which she had come. She stiffened herself and
stopped short.
“I won’t go back,” she said.
They looked at each other a moment
in silence; then he answered gently: “Very
well: let’s go the other way, then.”
She remained motionless, gazing silently
at the ground, and he went on: “Isn’t
there a house up here somewhere—a little
abandoned house—you meant to show me some
day?” Still she made no answer, and he continued,
in the same tone of tender reassurance: “Let
us go there now and sit down and talk quietly.”
He took one of the hands that hung by her side and
pressed his lips to the palm. “Do you suppose
I’m going to let you send me away? Do you
suppose I don’t understand?”
The little old house—its
wooden walls sun-bleached to a ghostly gray—stood
in an orchard above the road. The garden palings
had fallen, but the broken gate dangled between its
posts, and the path to the house was marked by rose-bushes
run wild and hanging their small pale blossoms above
the crowding grasses. Slender pilasters and an
intricate fan-light framed the opening where the door
had hung; and the door itself lay rotting in the grass,
with an old apple-tree fallen across it.
Inside, also, wind and weather had
blanched everything to the same wan silvery tint;
the house was as dry and pure as the interior of a
long-empty shell. But it must have been exceptionally
well built, for the little rooms had kept something
of their human aspect: the wooden mantels with
their neat classic ornaments were in place, and the
corners of one ceiling retained a light film of plaster
tracery.
Harney had found an old bench at the
back door and dragged it into the house. Charity
sat on it, leaning her head against the wall in a state
of drowsy lassitude. He had guessed that she was
hungry and thirsty, and had brought her some tablets
of chocolate from his bicycle-bag, and filled his
drinking-cup from a spring in the orchard; and now
he sat at her feet, smoking a cigarette, and looking
up at her without speaking. Outside, the afternoon
shadows were lengthening across the grass, and through
the empty window-frame that faced her she saw the Mountain
thrusting its dark mass against a sultry sunset.
It was time to go.
She stood up, and he sprang to his
feet also, and passed his arm through hers with an
air of authority. “Now, Charity, you’re
coming back with me.”
She looked at him and shook her head.
“I ain’t ever going back. You don’t
know.”
“What don’t I know?”
She was silent, and he continued: “What
happened on the wharf was horrible—it’s
natural you should feel as you do. But it doesn’t
make any real difference: you can’t be hurt
by such things. You must try to forget.
And you must try to understand that men… men sometimes…”
“I know about men. That’s why.”
He coloured a little at the retort,
as though it had touched him in a way she did not
suspect.
“Well, then… you must know
one has to make allowances…. He’d been
drinking….”
“I know all that, too.
I’ve seen him so before. But he wouldn’t
have dared speak to me that way if he hadn’t…”
“Hadn’t what? What do you mean?”
“Hadn’t wanted me to be
like those other girls….” She lowered
her voice and looked away from him. “So’s
’t he wouldn’t have to go out….”
Harney stared at her. For a moment
he did not seem to seize her meaning; then his face
grew dark. “The damned hound! The villainous
low hound!” His wrath blazed up, crimsoning
him to the temples. “I never dreamed—good
God, it’s too vile,” he broke off, as if
his thoughts recoiled from the discovery.
“I won’t never go back there,” she
repeated doggedly.
“No——” he assented.
There was a long interval of silence,
during which she imagined that he was searching her
face for more light on what she had revealed to him;
and a flush of shame swept over her.
“I know the way you must feel
about me,” she broke out, “...telling you
such things….”
But once more, as she spoke, she became
aware that he was no longer listening. He came
close and caught her to him as if he were snatching
her from some imminent peril: his impetuous eyes
were in hers, and she could feel the hard beat of
his heart as he held her against it.
“Kiss me again—like
last night,” he said, pushing her hair back as
if to draw her whole face up into his kiss.