And it seemed to her to be in
tune with the mood, with the hour, and with the woman
in front of her to say that she knew Edward was dying
of love for her and that she was dying of love for
Edward. For that fact had suddenly slipped into
place and become real for her as the niched marker
on a whist tablet slips round with the pressure of
your thumb. That rubber at least was made.
And suddenly Leonora seemed to have
become different and she seemed to have become different
in her attitude towards Leonora. It was as if
she, in her frail, white, silken kimono, sat beside
her fire, but upon a throne. It was as if Leonora,
in her close dress of black lace, with the gleaming
white shoulders and the coiled yellow hair that the
girl had always considered the most beautiful thing
in the world—it was as if Leonora had become
pinched, shrivelled, blue with cold, shivering, suppliant.
Yet Leonora was commanding her. It was no good
commanding her. She was going on the morrow to
her mother who was in Glasgow.
Leonora went on saying that she must
stay there to save Edward, who was dying of love
for her. And, proud and happy in the thought
that Edward loved her, and that she loved him, she
did not even listen to what Leonora said. It
appeared to her that it was Leonora’s business
to save her husband’s body; she, Nancy, possessed
his soul—a precious thing that she would
shield and bear away up in her arms—as
if Leonora were a hungry dog, trying to spring up
at a lamb that she was carrying. Yes, she felt
as if Edward’s love were a precious lamb that
she were bearing away from a cruel and predatory
beast. For, at that time, Leonora appeared to
her as a cruel and predatory beast. Leonora,
Leonora with her hunger, with her cruelty had driven
Edward to madness. He must be sheltered by his
love for her and by her love—her love
from a great distance and unspoken, enveloping him,
surrounding him, upholding him; by her voice speaking
from Glasgow, saying that she loved, that she adored,
that she passed no moment without longing, loving,
quivering at the thought of him.
Leonora said loudly, insistently,
with a bitterly imperative tone:
“You must stay here; you must
belong to Edward. I will divorce him.”
The girl answered:
“The Church does not allow of
divorce. I cannot belong to your husband.
I am going to Glasgow to rescue my mother.”
The half-opened door opened noiselessly
to the full. Edward was there. His devouring,
doomed eyes were fixed on the girl’s face; his
shoulders slouched forward; he was undoubtedly half
drunk and he had the whisky decanter in one hand,
a slanting candlestick in the other. He said,
with a heavy ferocity, to Nancy:
“I forbid you to talk about
these things. You are to stay here until I hear
from your father. Then you will go to your father.”
The two women, looking at each other,
like beasts about to spring, hardly gave a glance
to him. He leaned against the door-post.
He said again:
“Nancy, I forbid you to talk
about these things. I am the master of this
house.” And, at the sound of his voice,
heavy, male, coming from a deep chest, in the night
with the blackness behind him, Nancy felt as if her
spirit bowed before him, with folded hands.
She felt that she would go to India, and that she
desired never again to talk of these things.
Leonora said:
“You see that it is your duty
to belong to him. He must not be allowed to go
on drinking.”
Nancy did not answer. Edward
was gone; they heard him slipping and shambling on
the polished oak of the stairs. Nancy screamed
when there came the sound of a heavy fall. Leonora
said again: “You see!”
The sounds went on from the hall below;
the light of the candle Edward held flickered up
between the hand rails of the gallery. Then they
heard his voice:
“Give me Glasgow . . .
Glasgow, in Scotland . . I want the number of
a man called White, of Simrock Park, Glasgow . . .
Edward White, Simrock Park, Glasgow . . . ten minutes
. . . at this time of night . . .” His
voice was quite level, normal, and patient. Alcohol
took him in the legs, not the speech. “I
can wait,” his voice came again. “Yes,
I know they have a number. I have been in communication
with them before.”
“He is going to telephone to
your mother,” Leonora said. “He will
make it all right for her.” She got up
and closed the door. She came back to the fire,
and added bitterly: “He can always make
it all right for everybody, except me—excepting
me!”
The girl said nothing. She sat
there in a blissful dream. She seemed to see
her lover sitting as he always sat, in a round-backed
chair, in the dark hall—sitting low, with
the receiver at his ear, talking in a gentle, slow
voice, that he reserved for the telephone—and
saving the world and her, in the black darkness.
She moved her hand over the bareness of the base of
her throat, to have the warmth of flesh upon it and
upon her bosom.
She said nothing; Leonora went on talking. . . .
God knows what Leonora said.
She repeated that the girl must belong to her husband.
She said that she used that phrase because, though
she might have a divorce, or even a dissolution of
the marriage by the Church, it would still be adultery
that the girl and Edward would be committing.
But she said that that was necessary; it was the
price that the girl must pay for the sin of having
made Edward love her, for the sin of loving her husband.
She talked on and on, beside the fire. The girl
must become an adulteress; she had wronged Edward
by being so beautiful, so gracious, so good.
It was sinful to be so good. She must pay the
price so as to save the man she had wronged.
In between her pauses the girl could
hear the voice of Edward, droning on, indistinguishably,
with jerky pauses for replies. It made her glow
with pride; the man she loved was working for her.
He at least was resolved; was malely determined; knew
the right thing. Leonora talked on with her eyes
boring into Nancy’s. The girl hardly looked
at her and hardly heard her. After a long time
Nancy said—after hours and hours:
“I shall go to India as soon
as Edward hears from my father. I cannot talk
about these things, because Edward does not wish it.”
At that Leonora screamed out and wavered
swiftly towards the closed door. And Nancy found
that she was springing out of her chair with her white
arms stretched wide. She was clasping the other
woman to her breast; she was saying:
“Oh, my poor dear; oh, my poor
dear.” And they sat, crouching together
in each other’s arms, and crying and crying;
and they lay down in the same bed, talking and talking,
all through the night. And all through the night
Edward could hear their voices through the wall.
That was how it went. . . . Next morning they
were all three as if nothing had happened. Towards
eleven Edward came to Nancy, who was arranging some
Christmas roses in a silver bowl. He put a telegram
beside her on the table. “You can uncode
it for yourself,” he said. Then, as he
went out of the door, he said: “You can
tell your aunt I have cabled to Mr Dowell to come
over. He will make things easier till you leave.”
The telegram when it was uncoded, read, as far as
I can remember: “Will take Mrs Rufford
to Italy. Undertake to do this for certain.
Am devotedly attached to Mrs Rufford. Have no
need of financial assistance. Did not know there
was a daughter, and am much obliged to you for pointing
out my duty.—White.” It was
something like that. Then the household resumed
its wonted course of days until my arrival.
V it is this part of the story
that makes me saddest of all. For I ask myself
unceasingly, my mind going round and round in a weary,
baffled space of pain—what should these
people have done? What, in the name of God, should
they have done?
The end was perfectly plain to each
of them—it was perfectly manifest at this
stage that, if the girl did not, in Leonora’s
phrase, “belong to Edward,” Edward must
die, the girl must lose her reason because Edward
died—and, that after a time, Leonora, who
was the coldest and the strongest of the three, would
console herself by marrying Rodney Bayham and have
a quiet, comfortable, good time. That end, on
that night, whilst Leonora sat in the girl’s
bedroom and Edward telephoned down below—that
end was plainly manifest. The girl, plainly,
was half-mad already; Edward was half dead; only
Leonora, active, persistent, instinct with her cold
passion of energy, was “doing things”.
What then, should they have done? worked out in the
extinction of two very splendid personalities—for
Edward and the girl were splendid personalities,
in order that a third personality, more normal, should
have, after a long period of trouble, a quiet, comfortable,
good time.
I am writing this, now, I should say,
a full eighteen months after the words that end my
last chapter. Since writing the words “until
my arrival”, which I see end that paragraph,
I have seen again for a glimpse, from a swift train,
Beaucaire with the beautiful white tower, Tarascon
with the square castle, the great Rhone, the immense
stretches of the Crau. I have rushed through
all Provence—and all Provence no longer
matters. It is no longer in the olive hills
that I shall find my Heaven; because there is only
Hell. . . .
Edward is dead; the girl is gone—oh,
utterly gone; Leonora is having a good time with
Rodney Bayham, and I sit alone in Branshaw Teleragh.
I have been through Provence; I have seen Africa;
I have visited Asia to see, in Ceylon, in a darkened
room, my poor girl, sitting motionless, with her wonderful
hair about her, looking at me with eyes that did
not see me, and saying distinctly: “Credo
in unum Deum omnipotentem. . . . Credo in unum
Deum omnipotentem.” Those are the only
reasonable words she uttered; those are the only
words, it appears, that she ever will utter.
I suppose that they are reasonable words; it must
be extraordinarily reasonable for her, if she can
say that she believes in an Omnipotent Deity.
Well, there it is. I am very tired of it. all.
. . .
For, I daresay, all this may sound
romantic, but it is tiring, tiring, tiring to have
been in the midst of it; to have taken the tickets;
to have caught the trains; to have chosen the cabins;
to have consulted the purser and the stewards as
to diet for the quiescent patient who did nothing
but announce her belief in an Omnipotent Deity.
That may sound romantic—but it is just
a record of fatigue.
I don’t know why I should always
be selected to be serviceable. I don’t
resent it—but I have never been the least
good. Florence selected me for her own purposes,
and I was no good to her; Edward called me to come
and have a chat with him, and I couldn’t stop
him cutting his throat.
And then, one day eighteen months
ago, I was quietly writing in my room at Branshaw
when Leonora came to me with a letter. It was
a very pathetic letter from Colonel Rufford about
Nancy. Colonel Rufford had left the army and
had taken up an appointment at a tea-planting estate
in Ceylon. His letter was pathetic because it
was so brief, so inarticulate, and so business-like.
He had gone down to the boat to meet his daughter,
and had found his daughter quite mad. It appears
that at Aden Nancy had seen in a local paper the
news of Edward’s suicide. In the Red Sea
she had gone mad. She had remarked to Mrs Colonel
Luton, who was chaperoning her, that she believed
in an Omnipotent Deity. She hadn’t made
any fuss; her eyes were quite dry and glassy.
Even when she was mad Nancy could behave herself.
Colonel Rufford said the doctor did
not anticipate that there was any chance of his child’s
recovery. It was, nevertheless, possible that
if she could see someone from Branshaw it might soothe
her and it might have a good effect. And he
just simply wrote to Leonora: “Please come
and see if you can do it.”
I seem to have lost all sense of the
pathetic; but still, that simple, enormous request
of the old colonel strikes me as pathetic. He
was cursed by his atrocious temper; he had been cursed
by a half-mad wife, who drank and went on the streets.
His daughter was totally mad—and yet he
believed in the goodness of human nature. He
believed that Leonora would take the trouble to go
all the way to Ceylon in order to soothe his daughter.
Leonora wouldn’t. Leonora didn’t
ever want to see Nancy again. I daresay that that,
in the circumstances, was natural enough. At
the same time she agreed, as it were, on public grounds,
that someone soothing ought to go from Branshaw to
Ceylon. She sent me and her old nurse, who had
looked after Nancy from the time when the girl, a
child of thirteen, had first come to Branshaw.
So off I go, rushing through Provence, to catch the
steamer at Marseilles. And I wasn’t the
least good when I got to Ceylon; and the nurse wasn’t
the least good. Nothing has been the least good.
The doctors said, at Kandy, that if Nancy could be
brought to England, the sea air, the change of climate,
the voyage, and all the usual sort of things, might
restore her reason. Of course, they haven’t
restored her reason. She is, I am aware, sitting
in the hall, forty paces from where I am now writing.
I don’t want to be in the least romantic about
it. She is very well dressed; she is quite quiet;
she is very beautiful. The old nurse looks after
her very efficiently.
Of course you have the makings of
a situation here, but it is all very humdrum, as
far as I am concerned. I should marry Nancy if
her reason were ever sufficiently restored to let
her appreciate the meaning of the Anglican marriage
service. But it is probable that her reason will
never be sufficiently restored to let her appreciate
the meaning of the Anglican marriage service.
Therefore I cannot marry her, according to the law
of the land.
So here I am very much where I started
thirteen years ago. I am the attendant, not
the husband, of a beautiful girl, who pays no attention
to me. I am estranged from Leonora, who married
Rodney Bayham in my absence and went to live at Bayham.
Leonora rather dislikes me, because she has got it
into her head that I disapprove of her marriage with
Rodney Bayham. Well, I disapprove of her marriage.
Possibly I am jealous. Yes, no doubt I am jealous.
In my fainter sort of way I seem to perceive myself
following the lines of Edward Ashburnham. I suppose
that I should really like to be a polygamist; with
Nancy, and with Leonora, and with Maisie Maidan and
possibly even with Florence. I am no doubt like
every other man; only, probably because of my American
origin I am fainter. At the same time I am able
to assure you that I am a strictly respectable person.
I have never done anything that the most anxious
mother of a daughter or the most careful dean of
a cathedral would object to. I have only followed,
faintly, and in my unconscious desires, Edward Ashburnham.
Well, it is all over. Not one of us has got what
he really wanted. Leonora wanted Edward, and
she has got Rodney Bayham, a pleasant enough sort
of sheep. Florence wanted Branshaw, and it is
I who have bought it from Leonora. I didn’t
really want it; what I wanted mostly was to cease
being a nurse-attendant. Well, I am a nurse-attendant.
Edward wanted Nancy Rufford, and I have got her.
Only she is mad. It is a queer and fantastic
world. Why can’t people have what they
want? The things were all there to content everybody;
yet everybody has the wrong thing. Perhaps you
can make head or tail of it; it is beyond me.
Is there any terrestial paradise where,
amidst the whispering of the olive-leaves, people
can be with whom they like and have what they like
and take their ease in shadows and in coolness?
Or are all men’s lives like the lives of us
good people—like the lives of the Ashburnhams,
of the Dowells, of the Ruffords—broken,
tumultuous, agonized, and unromantic, lives, periods
punctuated by screams, by imbecilities, by deaths,
by agonies? Who the devil knows?
For there was a great deal of imbecility
about the closing scenes of the Ashburnham tragedy.
Neither of those two women knew what they wanted.
It was only Edward who took a perfectly clear line,
and he was drunk most of the time. But, drunk
or sober, he stuck to what was demanded by convention
and by the traditions of his house. Nancy Rufford
had to be exported to India, and Nancy Rufford hadn’t
to hear a word of love from him. She was exported
to India and she never heard a word from Edward Ashburnham.
It was the conventional line; it was
in tune with the tradition of Edward’s house.
I daresay it worked out for the greatest good of the
body politic. Conventions and traditions, I suppose,
work blindly but surely for the preservation of the
normal type; for the extinction of proud, resolute
and unusual individuals.
Edward was the normal man, but there
was too much of the sentimentalist about him; and
society does not need too many sentimentalists.
Nancy was a splendid creature, but she had about
her a touch of madness. Society does not need
individuals with touches of madness about them.
So Edward and Nancy found themselves steamrolled
out and Leonora survives, the perfectly normal type,
married to a man who is rather like a rabbit.
For Rodney Bayham is rather like a rabbit, and I
hear that Leonora is expected to have a baby in three
months’ time.
So those splendid and tumultuous creatures
with their magnetism and their passions—those
two that I really loved—have gone from
this earth. It is no doubt best for them.
What would Nancy have made of Edward if she had succeeded
in living with him; what would Edward have made of
her? For there was about Nancy a touch of cruelty—a
touch of definite actual cruelty that made her desire
to see people suffer. Yes, she desired to see
Edward suffer. And, by God, she gave him hell.
She gave him an unimaginable hell.
Those two women pursued that poor devil and flayed
the skin off him as if they had done it with whips.
I tell you his mind bled almost visibly. I seem
to see him stand, naked to the waist, his forearms
shielding his eyes, and flesh hanging from him in
rags. I tell you that is no exaggeration of
what I feel. It was as if Leonora and Nancy banded
themselves together to do execution, for the sake
of humanity, upon the body of a man who was at their
disposal. They were like a couple of Sioux who
had got hold of an Apache and had him well tied to
a stake. I tell you there was no end to the
tortures they inflicted upon him.
Night after night he would hear them
talking; talking; maddened, sweating, seeking oblivion
in drink, he would lie there and hear the voices going
on and on. And day after day Leonora would come
to him and would announce the results of their deliberations.
They were like judges debating over
the sentence upon a criminal; they were like ghouls
with an immobile corpse in a tomb beside them.
I don’t think that Leonora was any more to blame
than the girl—though Leonora was the more
active of the two. Leonora, as I have said, was
the perfectly normal woman. I mean to say that
in normal circumstances her desires were those of
the woman who is needed by society. She desired
children, decorum, an establishment; she desired
to avoid waste, she desired to keep up appearances.
She was utterly and entirely normal even in her utterly
undeniable beauty. But I don’t mean to say
that she acted perfectly normally in this perfectly
abnormal situation. All the world was mad around
her and she herself, agonized, took on the complexion
of a mad woman; of a woman very wicked; of the villain
of the piece. What would you have? Steel
is a normal, hard, polished substance. But,
if you put it in a hot fire it will become red, soft,
and not to be handled. If you put it in a fire
still more hot it will drip away. It was like
that with Leonora. She was made for normal circumstances—for
Mr Rodney Bayham, who will keep a separate establishment,
secretly, in Portsmouth, and make occasional trips
to Paris and to Budapest.
In the case of Edward and the girl,
Leonora broke and simply went all over the place.
She adopted unfamiliar and therefore extraordinary
and ungraceful attitudes of mind. At one moment
she was all for revenge. After haranguing the
girl for hours through the night she harangued for
hours of the day the silent Edward. And Edward
just once tripped up, and that was his undoing.
Perhaps he had had too much whisky that afternoon.
She asked him perpetually what he wanted. What
did he want? What did he want? And all
he ever answered was: “I have told you”.
He meant that he wanted the girl to go to her father
in India as soon as her father should cable that
he was ready to receive her. But just once he
tripped up. To Leonora’s eternal question
he answered that all he desired in life was that—that
he could pick himself together again and go on with
his daily occupations if—the girl, being
five thousand miles away, would continue to love him.
He wanted nothing more, He prayed his God for nothing
more. Well, he was a sentimentalist.
And the moment that she heard that,
Leonora determined that the girl should not go five
thousand miles away and that she should not continue
to love Edward. The way she worked it was this:
She continued to tell the girl that
she must belong to Edward; she was going to get a
divorce; she was going to get a dissolution of marriage
from Rome. But she considered it to be her duty
to warn the girl of the sort of monster that Edward
was. She told the girl of La Dolciquita, of Mrs
Basil, of Maisie Maidan, of Florence. She spoke
of the agonies that she had endured during her life
with the man, who was violent, overbearing, vain,
drunken, arrogant, and monstrously a prey to his
sexual necessities. And, at hearing of the miseries
her aunt had suffered—for Leonora once more
had the aspect of an aunt to the girl—with
the swift cruelty of youth and, with the swift solidarity
that attaches woman to woman, the girl made her resolves.
Her aunt said incessantly: “You must save
Edward’s life; you must save his life.
All that he needs is a little period of satisfaction
from you. Then he will tire of you as he has
of the others. But you must save his life.”
And, all the while, that wretched
fellow knew—by a curious instinct that
runs between human beings living together—exactly
what was going on. And he remained dumb; he stretched
out no finger to help himself. All that he required
to keep himself a decent member of society was, that
the girl, five thousand miles away, should continue
to love him. They were putting a stopper upon
that.
I have told you that the girl came
one night to his room. And that was the real
hell for him. That was the picture that never
left his imagination—the girl, in the
dim light, rising up at the foot of his bed.
He said that it seemed to have a greenish sort of
effect as if there were a greenish tinge in the shadows
of the tall bedposts that framed her body. And
she looked at him with her straight eyes of an unflinching
cruelty and she said: “I am ready to belong
to you—to save your life.”
He answered: “I don’t
want it; I don’t want it; I don’t want
it.”
And he says that he didn’t want
it; that he would have hated himself; that it was
unthinkable. And all the while he had the immense
temptation to do the unthinkable thing, not from the
physical desire but because of a mental certitude.
He was certain that if she had once submitted to him
she would remain his for ever. He knew that.
She was thinking that her aunt had
said he had desired her to love him from a distance
of five thousand miles. She said: “I
can never love you now I know the kind of man you
are. I will belong to you to save your life.
But I can never love you.”
It was a fantastic display of cruelty.
She didn’t in the least know what it meant—to
belong to a man. But, at that Edward pulled himself
together. He spoke in his normal tones; gruff,
husky, overbearing, as he would have done to a servant
or to a horse.
“Go back to your room,”
he said. “Go back to your room and go to
sleep. This is all nonsense.”
They were baffled, those two women.
And then I came on the scene.
VI my coming on the scene certainly
calmed things down—for the whole fortnight
that intervened between my arrival and the girl’s
departure. I don’t mean to say that the
endless talking did not go on at night or that Leonora
did not send me out with the girl and, in the interval,
give Edward a hell of a time. Having discovered
what he wanted—that the girl should go five
thousand miles away and love him steadfastly as people
do in sentimental novels, she was determined to smash
that aspiration. And she repeated to Edward
in every possible tone that the girl did not love him;
that the girl detested him for his brutality, his
overbearingness, his drinking habits. She pointed
out that Edward in the girl’s eyes, was already
pledged three or four deep. He was pledged to
Leonora herself, to Mrs Basil, and to the memories
of Maisie Maidan and to Florence. Edward never
said anything.
Did the girl love Edward, or didn’t
she? I don’t know. At that time I
daresay she didn’t though she certainly had done
so before Leonora had got to work upon his reputation.
She certainly had loved him for what I call the public
side of his record—for his good soldiering,
for his saving lives at sea, for the excellent landlord
that he was and the good sportsman. But it is
quite possible that all those things came to appear
as nothing in her eyes when she discovered that he
wasn’t a good husband. For, though women,
as I see them, have little or no feeling of responsibility
towards a county or a country or a career—although
they may be entirely lacking in any kind of communal
solidarity—they have an immense and automatically
working instinct that attaches them to the interest
of womanhood. It is, of course, possible for
any woman to cut out and to carry off any other woman’s
husband or lover. But I rather think that a
woman will only do this if she has reason to believe
that the other woman has given her husband a bad time.
I am certain that if she thinks the man has been a
brute to his wife she will, with her instinctive
feeling for suffering femininity, “put him back”,
as the saying is. I don’t attach any particular
importance to these generalizations of mine.
They may be right, they may be wrong; I am only an
ageing American with very little knowledge of life.
You may take my generalizations or leave them.
But I am pretty certain that I am right in the case
of Nancy Rufford—that she had loved Edward
Ashburnham very deeply and tenderly.
It is nothing to the point that she
let him have it good and strong as soon as she discovered
that he had been unfaithful to Leonora and that his
public services had cost more than Leonora thought
they ought to have cost. Nancy would be bound
to let him have it good and strong then. She
would owe that to feminine public opinion; she would
be driven to it by the instinct for self-preservation,
since she might well imagine that if Edward had been
unfaithful to Leonora, to Mrs Basil and to the memories
of the other two, he might be unfaithful to herself.
And, no doubt, she had her share of the sex instinct
that makes women be intolerably cruel to the beloved
person. Anyhow, I don’t know whether, at
this point, Nancy Rufford loved Edward Ashburnham.
I don’t know whether she even loved him when,
on getting, at Aden, the news of his suicide she
went mad. Because that may just as well have
been for the sake of Leonora as for the sake of Edward.
Or it may have been for the sake of both of them.
I don’t know. I know nothing. I am
very tired. Leonora held passionately the doctrine
that the girl didn’t love Edward. She
wanted desperately to believe that. It was a
doctrine as necessary to her existence as a belief
in the personal immortality of the soul. She
said that it was impossible that Nancy could have
loved Edward after she had given the girl her view
of Edward’s career and character. Edward,
on the other hand, believed maunderingly that some
essential attractiveness in himself must have made
the girl continue to go on loving him—to
go on loving him, as it were, in underneath her official
aspect of hatred. He thought she only pretended
to hate him in order to save her face and he thought
that her quite atrocious telegram from Brindisi was
only another attempt to do that—to prove
that she had feelings creditable to a member of the
feminine commonweal. I don’t know.
I leave it to you. There is another point that
worries me a good deal in the aspects of this sad
affair. Leonora says that, in desiring that the
girl should go five thousand miles away and yet continue
to love him, Edward was a monster of selfishness.
He was desiring the ruin of a young life. Edward
on the other hand put it to me that, supposing that
the girl’s love was a necessity to his existence,
and, if he did nothing by word or by action to keep
Nancy’s love alive, he couldn’t be called
selfish. Leonora replied that showed he had
an abominably selfish nature even though his actions
might be perfectly correct. I can’t make
out which of them was right. I leave it to you.
it is, at any rate, certain that Edward’s
actions were perfectly—were monstrously,
were cruelly—correct. He sat still
and let Leonora take away his character, and let
Leonora damn him to deepest hell, without stirring
a finger. I daresay he was a fool; I don’t
see what object there was in letting the girl think
worse of him than was necessary. Still there
it is. And there it is also that all those three
presented to the world the spectacle of being the
best of good people. I assure you that during
my stay for that fortnight in that fine old house,
I never so much as noticed a single thing that could
have affected that good opinion. And even when
I look back, knowing the circumstances, I can’t
remember a single thing any of them said that could
have betrayed them. I can’t remember, right
up to the dinner, when Leonora read out that telegram—not
the tremor of an eyelash, not the shaking of a hand.
It was just a pleasant country house-party.
And Leonora kept it up jolly well,
for even longer than that—she kept it up
as far as I was concerned until eight days after Edward’s
funeral. Immediately after that particular dinner—the
dinner at which I received the announcement that
Nancy was going to leave for India on the following
day—I asked Leonora to let me have a word
with her. She took me into her little sitting-room
and I then said—I spare you the record
of my emotions—that she was aware that
I wished to marry Nancy; that she had seemed to favour
my suit and that it appeared to be rather a waste
of money upon tickets and rather a waste of time
upon travel to let the girl go to India if Leonora
thought that there was any chance of her marrying
me.
And Leonora, I assure you, was the
absolutely perfect British matron. She said
that she quite favoured my suit; that she could not
desire for the girl a better husband; but that she
considered that the girl ought to see a little more
of life before taking such an important step.
Yes, Leonora used the words “taking such an
important step”. She was perfect. Actually,
I think she would have liked the girl to marry me
enough but my programme included the buying of the
Kershaw’s house about a mile away upon the
Fordingbridge road, and settling down there with the
girl. That didn’t at all suit Leonora.
She didn’t want to have the girl within a mile
and a half of Edward for the rest of their lives.
Still, I think she might have managed to let me know,
in some periphrasis or other, that I might have the
girl if I would take her to Philadelphia or Timbuctoo.
I loved Nancy very much—and Leonora knew
it. However, I left it at that. I left
it with the understanding that Nancy was going away
to India on probation. It seemed to me a perfectly
reasonable arrangement and I am a reasonable sort
of man. I simply said that I should follow Nancy
out to India after six months’ time or so.
Or, perhaps, after a year. Well, you see, I did
follow Nancy out to India after a year. . . .
I must confess to having felt a little angry with
Leonora for not having warned me earlier that the
girl would be going. I took it as one of the
queer, not very straight methods that Roman Catholics
seem to adopt in dealing with matters of this world.
I took it that Leonora had been afraid I should propose
to the girl or, at any rate, have made considerably
greater advances to her than I did, if I had known
earlier that she was going away so soon. Perhaps
Leonora was right; perhaps Roman Catholics, with their
queer, shifty ways, are always right. They are
dealing with the queer, shifty thing that is human
nature. For it is quite possible that, if I had
known Nancy was going away so soon, I should have
tried making love to her. And that would have
produced another complication. It may have been
just as well.
It is queer the fantastic things that
quite good people will do in order to keep up their
appearance of calm pococurantism. For Edward
Ashburnham and his wife called me half the world over
in order to sit on the back seat of a dog-cart whilst
Edward drove the girl to the railway station from
which she was to take her departure to India.
They wanted, I suppose, to have a witness of the
calmness of that function. The girl’s luggage
had been already packed and sent off before.
Her berth on the steamer had been taken. They
had timed it all so exactly that it went like clockwork.
They had known the date upon which Colonel Rufford
would get Edward’s letter and they had known
almost exactly the hour at which they would receive
his telegram asking his daughter to come to him.
It had all been quite beautifully and quite mercilessly
arranged, by Edward himself. They gave Colonel
Rufford, as a reason for telegraphing, the fact that
Mrs Colonel Somebody or other would be travelling
by that ship and that she would serve as an efficient
chaperon for the girl. It was a most amazing
business, and I think that it would have been better
in the eyes of God if they had all attempted to gouge
out each other’s eyes with carving knives.
But they were “good people”. After
my interview with Leonora I went desultorily into
Edward’s gun-room. I didn’t know
where the girl was and I thought I mind find her there.
I suppose I had a vague idea of proposing to her in
spite of Leonora. So, I presume, I don’t
come of quite such good people as the Ashburnhams.
Edward was lounging in his chair smoking a cigar
and he said nothing for quite five minutes. The
candles glowed in the green shades; the reflections
were green in the glasses of the book-cases that
held guns and fishing-rods. Over the mantelpiece
was the brownish picture of the white horse. Those
were the quietest moments that I have ever known.
Then, suddenly, Edward looked me straight in the
eyes and said:
“Look here, old man, I wish
you would drive with Nancy and me to the station
tomorrow.”
I said that of course I would drive
with him and Nancy to the station on the morrow.
He lay there for a long time, looking along the line
of his knees at the fluttering fire, and then suddenly,
in a perfectly calm voice, and without lifting his
eyes, he said:
“I am so desperately in love
with Nancy Rufford that I am dying of it.”
Poor devil—he hadn’t
meant to speak of it. But I guess he just had
to speak to somebody and I appeared to be like a woman
or a solicitor. He talked all night.
Well, he carried out the programme to the last breath.
It was a very clear winter morning,
with a good deal of frost in it. The sun was
quite bright, the winding road between the heather
and the bracken was very hard. I sat on the back-seat
of the dog-cart; Nancy was beside Edward. They
talked about the way the cob went; Edward pointed
out with the whip a cluster of deer upon a coombe
three-quarters of a mile away. We passed the
hounds in the level bit of road beside the high trees
going into Fordingbridge and Edward pulled up the
dog-cart so that Nancy might say good-bye to the
huntsman and cap him a last sovereign. She had
ridden with those hounds ever since she had been
thirteen.
The train was five minutes late and
they imagined that that was because it was market-day
at Swindon or wherever the train came from. That
was the sort of thing they talked about. The
train came in; Edward found her a first-class carriage
with an elderly woman in it. The girl entered
the carriage, Edward closed the door and then she
put out her hand to shake mine. There was upon
those people’s faces no expression of any kind
whatever. The signal for the train’s departure
was a very bright red; that is about as passionate
a statement as I can get into that scene. She
was not looking her best; she had on a cap of brown
fur that did not very well match her hair. She
said:
“So long,” to Edward.
Edward answered: “So long.”
He swung round on his heel and, large,
slouching, and walking with a heavy deliberate pace,
he went out of the station. I followed him and
got up beside him in the high dog-cart. It was
the most horrible performance I have ever seen.
And, after that, a holy peace, like
the peace of God which passes all understanding,
descended upon Branshaw Teleragh. Leonora went
about her daily duties with a sort of triumphant smile—a
very faint smile, but quite triumphant. I guess
she had so long since given up any idea of getting
her man back that it was enough for her to have got
the girl out of the house and well cured of her infatuation.
Once, in the hall, when Leonora was going out, Edward
said, beneath his breath—but I just caught
the words:
“Thou hast conquered, O pale
Galilean.” It was like his sentimentality
to quote Swinburne. But he was perfectly quiet
and he had given up drinking. The only thing
that he ever said to me after that drive to the station
was:
“It’s very odd. I
think I ought to tell you, Dowell, that I haven’t
any feelings at all about the girl now it’s
all over. Don’t you worry about me.
I’m all right.” A long time afterwards
he said: “I guess it was only a flash
in the pan.” He began to look after the
estates again; he took all that trouble over getting
off the gardener’s daughter who had murdered
her baby. He shook hands smilingly with every
farmer in the market-place. He addressed two
political meetings; he hunted twice. Leonora
made him a frightful scene about spending the two
hundred pounds on getting the gardener’s daughter
acquitted. Everything went on as if the girl
had never existed. It was very still weather.
Well, that is the end of the story.
And, when I come to look at it I see that it is a
happy ending with wedding bells and all. The
villains—for obviously Edward and the girl
were villains—have been punished by suicide
and madness. The heroine—the perfectly
normal, virtuous and slightly deceitful heroine—has
become the happy wife of a perfectly normal, virtuous
and slightly deceitful husband. She will shortly
become a mother of a perfectly normal, virtuous slightly
deceitful son or daughter. A happy ending, that
is what it works out at.
I cannot conceal from myself the fact
that I now dislike Leonora. Without doubt I
am jealous of Rodney Bayham. But I don’t
know whether it is merely a jealousy arising from
the fact that I desired myself to possess Leonora
or whether it is because to her were sacrificed the
only two persons that I have ever really loved—Edward
Ashburnham and Nancy Rufford. In order to set
her up in a modern mansion, replete with every convenience
and dominated by a quite respectable and eminently
economical master of the house, it was necessary
that Edward and Nancy Rufford should become, for me
at least, no more than tragic shades.
I seem to see poor Edward, naked and
reclining amidst darkness, upon cold rocks, like
one of the ancient Greek damned, in Tartarus or wherever
it was.
And as for Nancy . . . Well,
yesterday at lunch she said suddenly:
“Shuttlecocks!”
And she repeated the word “shuttlecocks”
three times. I know what was passing in her
mind, if she can be said to have a mind, for Leonora
has told me that, once, the poor girl said she felt
like a shuttlecock being tossed backwards and forwards
between the violent personalities of Edward and his
wife. Leonora, she said, was always trying to
deliver her over to Edward, and Edward tacitly and
silently forced her back again. And the odd thing
was that Edward himself considered that those two
women used him like a shuttlecock. Or, rather,
he said that they sent him backwards and forwards
like a blooming parcel that someone didn’t want
to pay the postage on. And Leonora also imagined
that Edward and Nancy picked her up and threw her
down as suited their purely vagrant moods. So
there you have the pretty picture. Mind, I am
not preaching anything contrary to accepted morality.
I am not advocating free love in this or any other
case. Society must go on, I suppose, and society
can only exist if the normal, if the virtuous, and
the slightly deceitful flourish, and if the passionate,
the headstrong, and the too-truthful are condemned
to suicide and to madness. But I guess that I
myself, in my fainter way, come into the category
of the passionate, of the headstrong, and the too-truthful.
For I can’t conceal from myself the fact that
I loved Edward Ashburnham—and that I love
him because he was just myself. If I had had
the courage and virility and possibly also the physique
of Edward Ashburnham I should, I fancy, have done
much what he did. He seems to me like a large
elder brother who took me out on several excursions
and did many dashing things whilst I just watched
him robbing the orchards, from a distance. And,
you see, I am just as much of a sentimentalist as he
was. . . .
Yes, society must go on; it must breed,
like rabbits. That is what we are here for.
But then, I don’t like society—much.
I am that absurd figure, an American millionaire,
who has bought one of the ancient haunts of English
peace. I sit here, in Edward’s gun-room,
all day and all day in a house that is absolutely
quiet. No one visits me, for I visit no one.
No one is interested in me, for I have no interests.
In twenty minutes or so I shall walk down to the village,
beneath my own oaks, alongside my own clumps of gorse,
to get the American mail. My tenants, the village
boys and the tradesmen will touch their hats to me.
So life peters out. I shall return to dine and
Nancy will sit opposite me with the old nurse standing
behind her. Enigmatic, silent, utterly well-behaved
as far as her knife and fork go, Nancy will stare
in front of her with the blue eyes that have over
them strained, stretched brows. Once, or perhaps
twice, during the meal her knife and fork will be
suspended in mid-air as if she were trying to think
of something that she had forgotten. Then she
will say that she believes in an Omnipotent Deity
or she will utter the one word “shuttle-cocks”,
perhaps. It is very extraordinary to see the
perfect flush of health on her cheeks, to see the
lustre of her coiled black hair, the poise of the
head upon the neck, the grace of the white hands—and
to think that it all means nothing—that
it is a picture without a meaning. Yes, it is
queer.
But, at any rate, there is always
Leonora to cheer you up; I don’t want to sadden
you. Her husband is quite an economical person
of so normal a figure that he can get quite a large
proportion of his clothes ready-made. That is
the great desideratum of life, and that is the end
of my story. The child is to be brought up as
a Romanist.
It suddenly occurs to me that I have
forgotten to say how Edward met his death. You
remember that peace had descended upon the house;
that Leonora was quietly triumphant and that Edward
said his love for the girl had been merely a passing
phase. Well, one afternoon we were in the stables
together, looking at a new kind of flooring that
Edward was trying in a loose-box. Edward was
talking with a good deal of animation about the necessity
of getting the numbers of the Hampshire territorials
up to the proper standard. He was quite sober,
quite quiet, his skin was clear-coloured; his hair
was golden and perfectly brushed; the level brick-dust
red of his complexion went clean up to the rims of
his eyelids; his eyes were porcelain blue and they
regarded me frankly and directly. His face was
perfectly expressionless; his voice was deep and
rough. He stood well back upon his legs and
said: .
“We ought to get them up to
two thousand three hundred and fifty.”
A stable-boy brought him a telegram and went away.
He opened it negligently, regarded it without emotion,
and, in complete silence, handed it to me. On
the pinkish paper in a sprawled handwriting I read:
“Safe Brindisi. Having rattling good time.
Nancy.”
Well, Edward was the English gentleman;
but he was also, to the last, a sentimentalist, whose
mind was compounded of indifferent poems and novels.
He just looked up to the roof of the stable, as if
he were looking to Heaven, and whispered something
that I did not catch.
Then he put two fingers into the waistcoat
pocket of his grey, frieze suit; they came out with
a little neat pen-knife—quite a small pen-knife.
He said to me:
“You might just take that wire
to Leonora.” And he looked at me with a
direct, challenging, brow-beating glare. I guess
he could see in my eyes that I didn’t intend
to hinder him. Why should I hinder him?
I didn’t think he was wanted
in the world, let his confounded tenants, his rifle-associations,
his drunkards, reclaimed and unreclaimed, get on as
they liked. Not all the hundreds and hundreds
of them deserved that that poor devil should go on
suffering for their sakes.
When he saw that I did not intend
to interfere with him his eyes became soft and almost
affectionate. He remarked:
“So long, old man, I must have
a bit of a rest, you know.”
I didn’t know what to say.
I wanted to say, “God bless you”, for I
also am a sentimentalist. But I thought that
perhaps that would not be quite English good form,
so I trotted off with the telegram to Leonora.
She was quite pleased with it.