“I don’t say it wasn’t
straight, yet don’t say it was straight.
It was business.”
Mary, at the words, lifted her head
with a start, and looked intently at the speaker.
When, half an hour before, a card
with “Mr. Parvis” on it had been brought
up to her, she had been immediately aware that the
name had been a part of her consciousness ever since
she had read it at the head of Boyne’s unfinished
letter. In the library she had found awaiting
her a small neutral-tinted man with a bald head and
gold eye-glasses, and it sent a strange tremor through
her to know that this was the person to whom her husband’s
last known thought had been directed.
Parvis, civilly, but without vain
preamble,—in the manner of a man who has
his watch in his hand,—had set forth the
object of his visit. He had “run over”
to England on business, and finding himself in the
neighborhood of Dorchester, had not wished to leave
it without paying his respects to Mrs. Boyne; without
asking her, if the occasion offered, what she meant
to do about Bob Elwell’s family.
The words touched the spring of some
obscure dread in Mary’s bosom. Did her
visitor, after all, know what Boyne had meant by his
unfinished phrase? She asked for an elucidation
of his question, and noticed at once that he seemed
surprised at her continued ignorance of the subject.
Was it possible that she really knew as little as
she said?
“I know nothing—you
must tell me,” she faltered out; and her visitor
thereupon proceeded to unfold his story. It threw,
even to her confused perceptions, and imperfectly
initiated vision, a lurid glare on the whole hazy
episode of the Blue Star Mine. Her husband had
made his money in that brilliant speculation at the
cost of “getting ahead” of some one less
alert to seize the chance; the victim of his ingenuity
was young Robert Elwell, who had “put him on”
to the Blue Star scheme.
Parvis, at Mary’s first startled
cry, had thrown her a sobering glance through his
impartial glasses.
“Bob Elwell wasn’t smart
enough, that’s all; if he had been, he might
have turned round and served Boyne the same way.
It’s the kind of thing that happens every day
in business. I guess it’s what the scientists
call the survival of the fittest,” said Mr. Parvis,
evidently pleased with the aptness of his analogy.
Mary felt a physical shrinking from
the next question she tried to frame; it was as though
the words on her lips had a taste that nauseated her.
“But then—you accuse
my husband of doing something dishonorable?”
Mr. Parvis surveyed the question dispassionately.
“Oh, no, I don’t. I don’t even
say it wasn’t straight.” He glanced
up and down the long lines of books, as if one of
them might have supplied him with the definition he
sought. “I don’t say it wasn’t
straight, and yet I don’t say it was
straight. It was business.” After all,
no definition in his category could be more comprehensive
than that.
Mary sat staring at him with a look
of terror. He seemed to her like the indifferent,
implacable emissary of some dark, formless power.
“But Mr. Elwell’s lawyers
apparently did not take your view, since I suppose
the suit was withdrawn by their advice.”
“Oh, yes, they knew he hadn’t
a leg to stand on, technically. It was when they
advised him to withdraw the suit that he got desperate.
You see, he’d borrowed most of the money he lost
in the Blue Star, and he was up a tree. That’s
why he shot himself when they told him he had no show.”
The horror was sweeping over Mary
in great, deafening waves.
“He shot himself? He killed
himself because of that?”
“Well, he didn’t kill
himself, exactly. He dragged on two months before
he died.” Parvis emitted the statement as
unemotionally as a gramophone grinding out its “record.”
“You mean that he tried to kill
himself, and failed? And tried again?”
“Oh, he didn’t have to
try again,” said Parvis, grimly.
They sat opposite each other in silence,
he swinging his eye-glass thoughtfully about his finger,
she, motionless, her arms stretched along her knees
in an attitude of rigid tension.
“But if you knew all this,”
she began at length, hardly able to force her voice
above a whisper, “how is it that when I wrote
you at the time of my husband’s disappearance
you said you didn’t understand his letter?”
Parvis received this without perceptible
discomfiture. “Why, I didn’t understand
it—strictly speaking. And it wasn’t
the time to talk about it, if I had. The Elwell
business was settled when the suit was withdrawn.
Nothing I could have told you would have helped you
to find your husband.”
Mary continued to scrutinize him.
“Then why are you telling me now?”
Still Parvis did not hesitate.
“Well, to begin with, I supposed you knew more
than you appear to—I mean about the circumstances
of Elwell’s death. And then people are
talking of it now; the whole matter’s been raked
up again. And I thought, if you didn’t know,
you ought to.”
She remained silent, and he continued:
“You see, it’s only come out lately what
a bad state Elwell’s affairs were in. His
wife’s a proud woman, and she fought on as long
as she could, going out to work, and taking sewing
at home, when she got too sick—something
with the heart, I believe. But she had his bedridden
mother to look after, and the children, and she broke
down under it, and finally had to ask for help.
That attracted attention to the case, and the papers
took it up, and a subscription was started. Everybody
out there liked Bob Elwell, and most of the prominent
names in the place are down on the list, and people
began to wonder why—”
Parvis broke off to fumble in an inner
pocket. “Here,” he continued, “here’s
an account of the whole thing from the ’Sentinel’—a
little sensational, of course. But I guess you’d
better look it over.”
He held out a newspaper to Mary, who
unfolded it slowly, remembering, as she did so, the
evening when, in that same room, the perusal of a
clipping from the “Sentinel” had first
shaken the depths of her security.
As she opened the paper, her eyes,
shrinking from the glaring head-lines, “Widow
of Boyne’s Victim Forced to Appeal for Aid,”
ran down the column of text to two portraits inserted
in it. The first was her husband’s, taken
from a photograph made the year they had come to England.
It was the picture of him that she liked best, the
one that stood on the writing-table up-stairs in her
bedroom. As the eyes in the photograph met hers,
she felt it would be impossible to read what was said
of him, and closed her lids with the sharpness of
the pain.
“I thought if you felt disposed
to put your name down—” she heard
Parvis continue.
She opened her eyes with an effort,
and they fell on the other portrait. It was that
of a youngish man, slightly built, in rough clothes,
with features somewhat blurred by the shadow of a
projecting hat-brim. Where had she seen that outline
before? She stared at it confusedly, her heart
hammering in her throat and ears. Then she gave
a cry.
“This is the man—the man who came
for my husband!”
She heard Parvis start to his feet,
and was dimly aware that she had slipped backward
into the corner of the sofa, and that he was bending
above her in alarm. With an intense effort she
straightened herself, and reached out for the paper,
which she had dropped.
“It’s the man! I
should know him anywhere!” she cried in a voice
that sounded in her own ears like a scream.
Parvis’s voice seemed to come
to her from far off, down endless, fog-muffled windings.
“Mrs. Boyne, you’re not
very well. Shall I call somebody? Shall I
get a glass of water?”
“No, no, no!” She threw
herself toward him, her hand frantically clenching
the newspaper. “I tell you, it’s the
man! I know him! He spoke to me in
the garden!”
Parvis took the journal from her,
directing his glasses to the portrait. “It
can’t be, Mrs. Boyne. It’s Robert
Elwell.”
“Robert Elwell?” Her white
stare seemed to travel into space. “Then
it was Robert Elwell who came for him.”
“Came for Boyne? The day
he went away?” Parvis’s voice dropped as
hers rose. He bent over, laying a fraternal hand
on her, as if to coax her gently back into her seat.
“Why, Elwell was dead! Don’t you
remember?”
Mary sat with her eyes fixed on the
picture, unconscious of what he was saying.
“Don’t you remember Boyne’s
unfinished letter to me—the one you found
on his desk that day? It was written just after
he’d heard of Elwell’s death.”
She noticed an odd shake in Parvis’s unemotional
voice. “Surely you remember that!”
he urged her.
Yes, she remembered: that was
the profoundest horror of it. Elwell had died
the day before her husband’s disappearance; and
this was Elwell’s portrait; and it was the portrait
of the man who had spoken to her in the garden.
She lifted her head and looked slowly about the library.
The library could have borne witness that it was also
the portrait of the man who had come in that day to
call Boyne from his unfinished letter. Through
the misty surgings of her brain she heard the faint
boom of half-forgotten words—words spoken
by Alida Stair on the lawn at Pangbourne before Boyne
and his wife had ever seen the house at Lyng, or had
imagined that they might one day live there.
“This was the man who spoke to me,” she
repeated.
She looked again at Parvis. He
was trying to conceal his disturbance under what he
imagined to be an expression of indulgent commiseration;
but the edges of his lips were blue. “He
thinks me mad; but I’m not mad,” she reflected;
and suddenly there flashed upon her a way of justifying
her strange affirmation.
She sat quiet, controlling the quiver
of her lips, and waiting till she could trust her
voice to keep its habitual level; then she said, looking
straight at Parvis: “Will you answer me
one question, please? When was it that Robert
Elwell tried to kill himself?”
“When—when?” Parvis stammered.
“Yes; the date. Please try to remember.”
She saw that he was growing still
more afraid of her. “I have a reason,”
she insisted gently.
“Yes, yes. Only I can’t
remember. About two months before, I should say.”
“I want the date,” she repeated.
Parvis picked up the newspaper.
“We might see here,” he said, still humoring
her. He ran his eyes down the page. “Here
it is. Last October—the—”
She caught the words from him.
“The 20th, wasn’t it?” With a sharp
look at her, he verified. “Yes, the 20th.
Then you did know?”
“I know now.” Her
white stare continued to travel past him. “Sunday,
the 20th—that was the day he came first.”
Parvis’s voice was almost inaudible.
“Came here first?”
“Yes.”
“You saw him twice, then?”
“Yes, twice.” She
breathed it at him with dilated eyes. “He
came first on the 20th of October. I remember
the date because it was the day we went up Meldon
Steep for the first time.” She felt a faint
gasp of inward laughter at the thought that but for
that she might have forgotten.
Parvis continued to scrutinize her,
as if trying to intercept her gaze.
“We saw him from the roof,”
she went on. “He came down the lime-avenue
toward the house. He was dressed just as he is
in that picture. My husband saw him first.
He was frightened, and ran down ahead of me; but there
was no one there. He had vanished.”
“Elwell had vanished?” Parvis faltered.
“Yes.” Their two
whispers seemed to grope for each other. “I
couldn’t think what had happened. I see
now. He tried to come then; but he wasn’t
dead enough—he couldn’t reach us.
He had to wait for two months; and then he came back
again—and Ned went with him.”
She nodded at Parvis with the look
of triumph of a child who has successfully worked
out a difficult puzzle. But suddenly she lifted
her hands with a desperate gesture, pressing them to
her bursting temples.
“Oh, my God! I sent him
to Ned—I told him where to go! I sent
him to this room!” she screamed out.
She felt the walls of the room rush
toward her, like inward falling ruins; and she heard
Parvis, a long way off, as if through the ruins, crying
to her, and struggling to get at her. But she
was numb to his touch, she did not know what he was
saying. Through the tumult she heard but one
clear note, the voice of Alida Stair, speaking on
the lawn at Pangbourne.
“You won’t know till afterward,”
it said. “You won’t know till long,
long afterward.”