They began to jog down the winding
road to the valley at old Dan’s languid pace.
Charity felt herself sinking into deeper depths of
weariness, and as they descended through the bare woods
there were moments when she lost the exact sense of
things, and seemed to be sitting beside her lover
with the leafy arch of summer bending over them.
But this illusion was faint and transitory. For
the most part she had only a confused sensation of
slipping down a smooth irresistible current; and she
abandoned herself to the feeling as a refuge from the
torment of thought.
Mr. Royall seldom spoke, but his silent
presence gave her, for the first time, a sense of
peace and security. She knew that where he was
there would be warmth, rest, silence; and for the
moment they were all she wanted. She shut her
eyes, and even these things grew dim to her….
In the train, during the short run
from Creston to Nettleton, the warmth aroused her,
and the consciousness of being under strange eyes gave
her a momentary energy. She sat upright, facing
Mr. Royall, and stared out of the window at the denuded
country. Forty-eight hours earlier, when she
had last traversed it, many of the trees still held
their leaves; but the high wind of the last two nights
had stripped them, and the lines of the landscape’
were as finely pencilled as in December. A few
days of autumn cold had wiped out all trace of the
rich fields and languid groves through which she had
passed on the Fourth of July; and with the fading
of the landscape those fervid hours had faded, too.
She could no longer believe that she was the being
who had lived them; she was someone to whom something
irreparable and overwhelming had happened, but the
traces of the steps leading up to it had almost vanished.
When the train reached Nettleton and
she walked out into the square at Mr. Royall’s
side the sense of unreality grew more overpowering.
The physical strain of the night and day had left
no room in her mind for new sensations and she followed
Mr. Royall as passively as a tired child. As
in a confused dream she presently found herself sitting
with him in a pleasant room, at a table with a red
and white table-cloth on which hot food and tea were
placed. He filled her cup and plate and whenever
she lifted her eyes from them she found his resting
on her with the same steady tranquil gaze that had
reassured and strengthened her when they had faced
each other in old Mrs. Hobart’s kitchen.
As everything else in her consciousness grew more
and more confused and immaterial, became more and
more like the universal shimmer that dissolves the
world to failing eyes, Mr. Royall’s presence
began to detach itself with rocky firmness from this
elusive background. She had always thought of
him—when she thought of him at all—as
of someone hateful and obstructive, but whom she could
outwit and dominate when she chose to make the effort.
Only once, on the day of the Old Home Week celebration,
while the stray fragments of his address drifted across
her troubled mind, had she caught a glimpse of another
being, a being so different from the dull-witted enemy
with whom she had supposed herself to be living that
even through the burning mist of her own dreams he
had stood out with startling distinctness. For
a moment, then, what he said—and something
in his way of saying it—had made her see
why he had always struck her as such a lonely man.
But the mist of her dreams had hidden him again, and
she had forgotten that fugitive impression.
It came back to her now, as they sat
at the table, and gave her, through her own immeasurable
desolation, a sudden sense of their nearness to each
other. But all these feelings were only brief
streaks of light in the grey blur of her physical
weakness. Through it she was aware that Mr. Royall
presently left her sitting by the table in the warm
room, and came back after an interval with a carriage
from the station—a closed “hack”
with sun-burnt blue silk blinds—in which
they drove together to a house covered with creepers
and standing next to a church with a carpet of turf
before it. They got out at this house, and the
carriage waited while they walked up the path and
entered a wainscoted hall and then a room full of
books. In this room a clergyman whom Charity had
never seen received them pleasantly, and asked them
to be seated for a few minutes while witnesses were
being summoned.
Charity sat down obediently, and Mr.
Royall, his hands behind his back, paced slowly up
and down the room. As he turned and faced Charity,
she noticed that his lips were twitching a little;
but the look in his eyes was grave and calm.
Once he paused before her and said timidly: “Your
hair’s got kinder loose with the wind,”
and she lifted her hands and tried to smooth back
the locks that had escaped from her braid. There
was a looking-glass in a carved frame on the wall,
but she was ashamed to look at herself in it, and
she sat with her hands folded on her knee till the
clergyman returned. Then they went out again,
along a sort of arcaded passage, and into a low vaulted
room with a cross on an altar, and rows of benches.
The clergyman, who had left them at the door, presently
reappeared before the altar in a surplice, and a lady
who was probably his wife, and a man in a blue shirt
who had been raking dead leaves on the lawn, came
in and sat on one of the benches.
The clergyman opened a book and signed
to Charity and Mr. Royall to approach. Mr. Royall
advanced a few steps, and Charity followed him as
she had followed him to the buggy when they went out
of Mrs. Hobart’s kitchen; she had the feeling
that if she ceased to keep close to him, and do what
he told her to do, the world would slip away from beneath
her feet.
The clergyman began to read, and on
her dazed mind there rose the memory of Mr. Miles,
standing the night before in the desolate house of
the Mountain, and reading out of the same book words
that had the same dread sound of finality:
“I require and charge you both,
as ye will answer at the dreadful day of judgment
when the secrets of all hearts shall be disclosed,
that if either of you know any impediment whereby
ye may not be lawfully joined together…”
Charity raised her eyes and met Mr.
Royall’s. They were still looking at her
kindly and steadily. “I will!” she
heard him say a moment later, after another interval
of words that she had failed to catch. She was
so busy trying to understand the gestures that the
clergyman was signalling to her to make that she no
longer heard what was being said. After another
interval the lady on the bench stood up, and taking
her hand put it in Mr. Royall’s. It lay
enclosed in his strong palm and she felt a ring that
was too big for her being slipped on her thin finger.
She understood then that she was married….
Late that afternoon Charity sat alone
in a bedroom of the fashionable hotel where she and
Harney had vainly sought a table on the Fourth of
July. She had never before been in so handsomely
furnished a room. The mirror above the dressing-table
reflected the high head-board and fluted pillow-slips
of the double bed, and a bedspread so spotlessly white
that she had hesitated to lay her hat and jacket on
it. The humming radiator diffused an atmosphere
of drowsy warmth, and through a half-open door she
saw the glitter of the nickel taps above twin marble
basins.
For a while the long turmoil of the
night and day had slipped away from her and she sat
with closed eyes, surrendering herself to the spell
of warmth and silence. But presently this merciful
apathy was succeeded by the sudden acuteness of vision
with which sick people sometimes wake out of a heavy
sleep. As she opened her eyes they rested on the
picture that hung above the bed. It was a large
engraving with a dazzling white margin enclosed in
a wide frame of bird’s-eye maple with an inner
scroll of gold. The engraving represented a young
man in a boat on a lake over-hung with trees.
He was leaning over to gather water-lilies for the
girl in a light dress who lay among the cushions in
the stern. The scene was full of a drowsy midsummer
radiance, and Charity averted her eyes from it and,
rising from her chair, began to wander restlessly about
the room.
It was on the fifth floor, and its
broad window of plate glass looked over the roofs
of the town. Beyond them stretched a wooded landscape
in which the last fires of sunset were picking out
a steely gleam. Charity gazed at the gleam with
startled eyes. Even through the gathering twilight
she recognized the contour of the soft hills encircling
it, and the way the meadows sloped to its edge.
It was Nettleton Lake that she was looking at.
She stood a long time in the window
staring out at the fading water. The sight of
it had roused her for the first time to a realization
of what she had done. Even the feeling of the
ring on her hand had not brought her this sharp sense
of the irretrievable. For an instant the old
impulse of flight swept through her; but it was only
the lift of a broken wing. She heard the door
open behind her, and Mr. Royall came in.
He had gone to the barber’s
to be shaved, and his shaggy grey hair had been trimmed
and smoothed. He moved strongly and quickly, squaring
his shoulders and carrying his head high, as if he
did not want to pass unnoticed.
“What are you doing in the dark?”
he called out in a cheerful voice. Charity made
no answer. He went up to the window to draw the
blind, and putting his finger on the wall flooded
the room with a blaze of light from the central chandelier.
In this unfamiliar illumination husband and wife faced
each other awkwardly for a moment; then Mr. Royall
said: “We’ll step down and have some
supper, if you say so.”
The thought of food filled her with
repugnance; but not daring to confess it she smoothed
her hair and followed him to the lift.
An hour later, coming out of the glare
of the dining-room, she waited in the marble-panelled
hall while Mr. Royall, before the brass lattice of
one of the corner counters, selected a cigar and bought
an evening paper. Men were lounging in rocking
chairs under the blazing chandeliers, travellers coming
and going, bells ringing, porters shuffling by with
luggage. Over Mr. Royall’s shoulder, as
he leaned against the counter, a girl with her hair
puffed high smirked and nodded at a dapper drummer
who was getting his key at the desk across the hall.
Charity stood among these cross-currents
of life as motionless and inert as if she had been
one of the tables screwed to the marble floor.
All her soul was gathered up into one sick sense of
coming doom, and she watched Mr. Royall in fascinated
terror while he pinched the cigars in successive boxes
and unfolded his evening paper with a steady hand.
Presently he turned and joined her.
“You go right along up to bed—I’m
going to sit down here and have my smoke,” he
said. He spoke as easily and naturally as if
they had been an old couple, long used to each other’s
ways, and her contracted heart gave a flutter of relief.
She followed him to the lift, and he put her in and
enjoined the buttoned and braided boy to show her
to her room.
She groped her way in through the
darkness, forgetting where the electric button was,
and not knowing how to manipulate it. But a white
autumn moon had risen, and the illuminated sky put
a pale light in the room. By it she undressed,
and after folding up the ruffled pillow-slips crept
timidly under the spotless counterpane. She had
never felt such smooth sheets or such light warm blankets;
but the softness of the bed did not soothe her.
She lay there trembling with a fear that ran through
her veins like ice. “What have I done?
Oh, what have I done?” she whispered, shuddering
to her pillow; and pressing her face against it to
shut out the pale landscape beyond the window she lay
in the darkness straining her ears, and shaking at
every footstep that approached….
Suddenly she sat up and pressed her
hands against her frightened heart. A faint sound
had told her that someone was in the room; but she
must have slept in the interval, for she had heard
no one enter. The moon was setting beyond the
opposite roofs, and in the darkness outlined against
the grey square of the window, she saw a figure seated
in the rocking-chair. The figure did not move:
it was sunk deep in the chair, with bowed head and
folded arms, and she saw that it was Mr. Royall who
sat there. He had not undressed, but had taken
the blanket from the foot of the bed and laid it across
his knees. Trembling and holding her breath she
watched him, fearing that he had been roused by her
movement; but he did not stir, and she concluded that
he wished her to think he was asleep.
As she continued to watch him ineffable
relief stole slowly over her, relaxing her strained
nerves and exhausted body. He knew, then… he
knew… it was because he knew that he had married
her, and that he sat there in the darkness to show
her she was safe with him. A stir of something
deeper than she had ever felt in thinking of him flitted
through her tired brain, and cautiously, noiselessly,
she let her head sink on the pillow….
When she woke the room was full of
morning light, and her first glance showed her that
she was alone in it. She got up and dressed, and
as she was fastening her dress the door opened, and
Mr. Royall came in. He looked old and tired in
the bright daylight, but his face wore the same expression
of grave friendliness that had reassured her on the
Mountain. It was as if all the dark spirits had
gone out of him.
They went downstairs to the dining-room
for breakfast, and after breakfast he told her he
had some insurance business to attend to. “I
guess while I’m doing it you’d better step
out and buy yourself whatever you need.”
He smiled, and added with an embarrassed laugh:
“You know I always wanted you to beat all the
other girls.” He drew something from his
pocket, and pushed it across the table to her; and
she saw that he had given her two twenty-dollar bills.
“If it ain’t enough there’s more
where that come from—I want you to beat
’em all hollow,” he repeated.
She flushed and tried to stammer out
her thanks, but he had pushed back his chair and was
leading the way out of the dining-room. In the
hall he paused a minute to say that if it suited her
they would take the three o’clock train back
to North Dormer; then he took his hat and coat from
the rack and went out.
A few minutes later Charity went out,
too. She had watched to see in what direction
he was going, and she took the opposite way and walked
quickly down the main street to the brick building
on the corner of Lake Avenue. There she paused
to look cautiously up and down the thoroughfare, and
then climbed the brass-bound stairs to Dr. Merkle’s
door. The same bushy-headed mulatto girl admitted
her, and after the same interval of waiting in the
red plush parlor she was once more summoned to Dr.
Merkle’s office. The doctor received her
without surprise, and led her into the inner plush
sanctuary.
“I thought you’d be back,
but you’ve come a mite too soon: I told
you to be patient and not fret,” she observed,
after a pause of penetrating scrutiny.
Charity drew the money from her breast.
“I’ve come to get my blue brooch,”
she said, flushing.
“Your brooch?” Dr. Merkle
appeared not to remember. “My, yes—I
get so many things of that kind. Well, my dear,
you’ll have to wait while I get it out of the
safe. I don’t leave valuables like that
laying round like the noospaper.”
She disappeared for a moment, and
returned with a bit of twisted-up tissue paper from
which she unwrapped the brooch.
Charity, as she looked at it, felt
a stir of warmth at her heart. She held out an
eager hand.
“Have you got the change?”
she asked a little breathlessly, laying one of the
twenty-dollar bills on the table.
“Change? What’d I
want to have change for? I only see two twenties
there,” Dr. Merkle answered brightly.
Charity paused, disconcerted.
“I thought… you said it was five dollars a
visit….”
“For you, as a favour—I
did. But how about the responsibility and the
insurance? I don’t s’pose you ever
thought of that? This pin’s worth a hundred
dollars easy. If it had got lost or stole, where’d
I been when you come to claim it?”
Charity remained silent, puzzled and
half-convinced by the argument, and Dr. Merkle promptly
followed up her advantage. “I didn’t
ask you for your brooch, my dear. I’d a
good deal ruther folks paid me my regular charge than
have ’em put me to all this trouble.”
She paused, and Charity, seized with
a desperate longing to escape, rose to her feet and
held out one of the bills.
“Will you take that?” she asked.
“No, I won’t take that,
my dear; but I’ll take it with its mate, and
hand you over a signed receipt if you don’t trust
me.”
“Oh, but I can’t—it’s
all I’ve got,” Charity exclaimed.
Dr. Merkle looked up at her pleasantly
from the plush sofa. “It seems you got
married yesterday, up to the ’Piscopal church;
I heard all about the wedding from the minister’s
chore-man. It would be a pity, wouldn’t
it, to let Mr. Royall know you had an account running
here? I just put it to you as your own mother
might.”
Anger flamed up in Charity, and for
an instant she thought of abandoning the brooch and
letting Dr. Merkle do her worst. But how could
she leave her only treasure with that evil woman?
She wanted it for her baby: she meant it, in
some mysterious way, to be a link between Harney’s
child and its unknown father. Trembling and hating
herself while she did it, she laid Mr. Royall’s
money on the table, and catching up the brooch fled
out of the room and the house….
In the street she stood still, dazed
by this last adventure. But the brooch lay in
her bosom like a talisman, and she felt a secret lightness
of heart. It gave her strength, after a moment,
to walk on slowly in the direction of the post office,
and go in through the swinging doors. At one
of the windows she bought a sheet of letter-paper,
an envelope and a stamp; then she sat down at a table
and dipped the rusty post office pen in ink.
She had come there possessed with a fear which had
haunted her ever since she had felt Mr. Royall’s
ring on her finger: the fear that Harney might,
after all, free himself and come back to her.
It was a possibility which had never occurred to her
during the dreadful hours after she had received his
letter; only when the decisive step she had taken
made longing turn to apprehension did such a contingency
seem conceivable. She addressed the envelope,
and on the sheet of paper she wrote:
I’m married to Mr. Royall. I’ll always remember you. CHARITY.
The last words were not in the least
what she had meant to write; they had flowed from
her pen irresistibly. She had not had the strength
to complete her sacrifice; but, after all, what did
it matter? Now that there was no chance of ever
seeing Harney again, why should she not tell him the
truth?
When she had put the letter in the
box she went out into the busy sunlit street and began
to walk to the hotel. Behind the plateglass windows
of the department stores she noticed the tempting
display of dresses and dress-materials that had fired
her imagination on the day when she and Harney had
looked in at them together. They reminded her
of Mr. Royall’s injunction to go out and buy
all she needed. She looked down at her shabby
dress, and wondered what she should say when he saw
her coming back empty-handed. As she drew near
the hotel she saw him waiting on the doorstep, and
her heart began to beat with apprehension.
He nodded and waved his hand at her
approach, and they walked through the hall and went
upstairs to collect their possessions, so that Mr.
Royall might give up the key of the room when they
went down again for their midday dinner. In the
bedroom, while she was thrusting back into the satchel
the few things she had brought away with her, she suddenly
felt that his eyes were on her and that he was going
to speak. She stood still, her half-folded night-gown
in her hand, while the blood rushed up to her drawn
cheeks.
“Well, did you rig yourself
out handsomely? I haven’t seen any bundles
round,” he said jocosely.
“Oh, I’d rather let Ally
Hawes make the few things I want,” she answered.
“That so?” He looked at
her thoughtfully for a moment and his eye-brows projected
in a scowl. Then his face grew friendly again.
“Well, I wanted you to go back looking stylisher
than any of them; but I guess you’re right.
You’re a good girl, Charity.”
Their eyes met, and something rose
in his that she had never seen there: a look
that made her feel ashamed and yet secure.
“I guess you’re good,
too,” she said, shyly and quickly. He smiled
without answering, and they went out of the room together
and dropped down to the hall in the glittering lift.
Late that evening, in the cold autumn
moonlight, they drove up to the door of the red house.