THERE came a reaction in which she
decided to write to him. She even sketched out
a letter of sisterly, almost motherly, remonstrance,
in which she reminded him that he “still had
all his life before him.” But she reflected
that so, after all, had she; and that seemed to weaken
the argument.
In the end she decided not to send
the letter. He had never spoken to her of his
engagement to Gwendolen Matcher, and his letters had
contained no allusion to any sentimental disturbance
in his life. She had only his few broken words,
that night by the river, on which to build her theory
of the case. But illuminated by the phrase “an
unfortunate attachment” the theory towered up,
distinct and immovable, like some high landmark by
which travellers shape their course. She had
been loved—extraordinarily loved. But
he had chosen that she should know of it by his silence
rather than by his speech. He had understood
that only on those terms could their transcendant
communion continue—that he must lose her
to keep her. To break that silence would be like
spilling a cup of water in a waste of sand. There
would be nothing left for her thirst.
Her life, thenceforward, was bathed
in a tranquil beauty. The days flowed by like
a river beneath the moon—each ripple caught
the brightness and passed it on. She began to
take a renewed interest in her familiar round of duties.
The tasks which had once seemed colourless and irksome
had now a kind of sacrificial sweetness, a symbolic
meaning into which she alone was initiated. She
had been restless—had longed to travel;
now she felt that she should never again care to leave
Wentworth. But if her desire to wander had ceased,
she travelled in spirit, performing invisible pilgrimages
in the footsteps of her friend. She regretted
that her one short visit to England had taken her
so little out of London—that her acquaintance
with the landscape had been formed chiefly through
the windows of a railway carriage. She threw
herself into the architectural studies of the Higher
Thought Club, and distinguished herself, at the spring
meetings, by her fluency, her competence, her inexhaustible
curiosity on the subject of the growth of English
Gothic. She ransacked the shelves of the college
library, she borrowed photographs of the cathedrals,
she pored over the folio pages of “The Seats
of Noblemen and Gentlemen.” She was like
some banished princess who learns that she has inherited
a domain in her own country, who knows that she will
never see it, yet feels, wherever she walks, its soil
beneath her feet.
May was half over, and the Higher
Thought Club was to hold its last meeting, previous
to the college festivities which, in early June, agreeably
disorganized the social routine of Wentworth.
The meeting was to take place in Margaret Ransom’s
drawing-room, and on the day before she sat upstairs
preparing for her dual duties as hostess and orator—for
she had been invited to read the final paper of the
course. In order to sum up with precision her
conclusions on the subject of English Gothic she had
been rereading an analysis of the structural features
of the principal English cathedrals; and she was murmuring
over to herself the phrase: “The longitudinal
arches of Lincoln have an approximately elliptical
form,” when there came a knock on the door,
and Maria’s voice announced: “There’s
a lady down in the parlour.”
Margaret’s soul dropped from
the heights of the shadowy vaulting to the dead level
of an afternoon call at Wentworth.
“A lady? Did she give no name?”
Maria became confused. “She
only said she was a lady—” and in
reply to her mistress’s look of mild surprise:
“Well, ma’am, she told me so three or
four times over.”
Margaret laid her book down, leaving
it open at the description of Lincoln, and slowly
descended the stairs. As she did so, she repeated
to herself: “The longitudinal arches are
elliptical.”
On the threshold below, she had the
odd impression that her bare and inanimate drawing-room
was brimming with life and noise—an impression
produced, as she presently perceived, by the resolute
forward dash—it was almost a pounce—of
the one small figure restlessly measuring its length.
The dash checked itself within a yard
of Margaret, and the lady—a stranger—held
back long enough to stamp on her hostess a sharp impression
of sallowness, leanness, keenness, before she said,
in a voice that might have been addressing an unruly
committee meeting: “I am Lady Caroline
Duckett—a fact I found it impossible to
make clear to the young woman who let me in.”
A warm wave rushed up from Margaret’s
heart to her throat and forehead. She held out
both hands impulsively. “Oh, I’m so
glad—I’d no idea—”
Her voice sank under her visitor’s impartial
scrutiny.
“I don’t wonder,”
said the latter drily. “I suppose she didn’t
mention, either, that my object in calling here was
to see Mrs. Ransom?”
“Oh, yes—won’t
you sit down?” Margaret pushed a chair forward.
She seated herself at a little distance, brain and
heart humming with a confused interchange of signals.
This dark sharp woman was his aunt—the
“clever aunt” who had had such a hard life,
but had always managed to keep her head above water.
Margaret remembered that Guy had spoken of her kindness—perhaps
she would seem kinder when they had talked together
a little. Meanwhile the first impression she
produced was of an amplitude out of all proportion
to her somewhat scant exterior. With her small
flat figure, her shabby heterogeneous dress, she was
as dowdy as any Professor’s wife at Wentworth;
but her dowdiness (Margaret borrowed a literary analogy
to define it), her dowdiness was somehow “of
the centre.” Like the insignificant emissary
of a great power, she was to be judged rather by her
passports than her person.
While Margaret was receiving these
impressions, Lady Caroline, with quick bird-like twists
of her head, was gathering others from the pale void
spaces of the drawing-room. Her eyes, divided
by a sharp nose like a bill, seemed to be set far
enough apart to see at separate angles; but suddenly
she bent both of them on Margaret.
“This is Mrs. Ransom’s
house?” she asked, with an emphasis on the verb
that gave a distinct hint of unfulfilled expectations.
Margaret assented.
“Because your American houses,
especially in the provincial towns, all look so remarkably
alike, that I thought I might have been mistaken;
and as my time is extremely limited—in fact
I’m sailing on Wednesday—”
She paused long enough to let Margaret
say: “I had no idea you were in this country.”
Lady Caroline made no attempt to take
this up. “And so much of it,” she
carried on her sentence, “has been wasted in
talking to people I really hadn’t the slightest
desire to see, that you must excuse me if I go straight
to the point.”
Margaret felt a sudden tension of
the heart. “Of course,” she said
while a voice within her cried: “He is dead—he
has left me a message.”
There was another pause; then Lady
Caroline went on, with increasing asperity: “So
that—in short—if I could
see Mrs. Ransom at once—”
Margaret looked up in surprise.
“I am Mrs. Ransom,” she said.
The other stared a moment, with much
the same look of cautious incredulity that had marked
her inspection of the drawing-room. Then light
came to her.
“Oh, I beg your pardon.
I should have said that I wished to see Mrs. Robert
Ransom, not Mrs. Ransom. But I understood that
in the States you don’t make those distinctions.”
She paused a moment, and then went on, before Margaret
could answer: “Perhaps, after all, it’s
as well that I should see you instead, since you’re
evidently one of the household—your son
and his wife live with you, I suppose? Yes, on
the whole, then, it’s better—I shall
be able to talk so much more frankly.”
She spoke as if, as a rule, circumstances prevented
her giving rein to this propensity. “And
frankness, of course, is the only way out of this—this
extremely tiresome complication. You know, I
suppose, that my nephew thinks he’s in love
with your daughter-in-law?”
Margaret made a slight movement, but
her visitor pressed on without heeding it. “Oh,
don’t fancy, please, that I’m pretending
to take a high moral ground—though his
mother does, poor dear! I can perfectly imagine
that in a place like this—I’ve just
been driving about it for two hours—a young
man of Guy’s age would have to provide
himself with some sort of distraction, and he’s
not the kind to go in for anything objectionable.
Oh, we quite allow for that—we should allow
for the whole affair, if it hadn’t so preposterously
ended in his throwing over the girl he was engaged
to, and upsetting an arrangement that affected a number
of people besides himself. I understand that
in the States it’s different—the young
people have only themselves to consider. In England—in
our class, I mean—a great deal may depend
on a young man’s making a good match; and in
Guy’s case I may say that his mother and sisters
(I won’t include myself, though I might) have
been simply stranded—thrown overboard—by
his freak. You can understand how serious it is
when I tell you that it’s that and nothing else
that has brought me all the way to America. And
my first idea was to go straight to your daughter-in-law,
since her influence is the only thing we can count
on now, and put it to her fairly, as I’m putting
it to you. But, on the whole, I dare say it’s
better to see you first—you might give
me an idea of the line to take with her. I’m
prepared to throw myself on her mercy!”
Margaret rose from her chair, outwardly
rigid in proportion to her inward tremor.
“You don’t understand—”
she began.
Lady Caroline brushed the interruption
aside. “Oh, but I do—completely!
I cast no reflection on your daughter-in-law.
Guy has made it quite clear to us that his attachment
is—has, in short, not been rewarded.
But don’t you see that that’s the worst
part of it? There’d be much more hope of
his recovering if Mrs. Robert Ransom had—had—”
Margaret’s voice broke from
her in a cry. “I am Mrs. Robert Ransom,”
she said.
If Lady Caroline Duckett had hitherto
given her hostess the impression of a person not easily
silenced, this fact added sensibly to the effect produced
by the intense stillness which now fell on her.
She sat quite motionless, her large
bangled hands clasped about the meagre fur boa she
had unwound from her neck on entering, her rusty black
veil pushed up to the edge of a “fringe”
of doubtful authenticity, her thin lips parted on
a gasp that seemed to sharpen itself on the edges
of her teeth. So overwhelming and helpless was
her silence that Margaret began to feel a motion of
pity beneath her indignation—a desire at
least to facilitate the excuses which must terminate
their disastrous colloquy. But when Lady Caroline
found voice she did not use it to excuse herself.
“You can’t be,” she said,
quite simply.
“Can’t be?” Margaret stammered,
with a flushing cheek.
“I mean, it’s some mistake.
Are there two Mrs. Robert Ransoms in the same
town? Your family arrangements are so extremely
puzzling.” She had a farther rush of enlightenment.
“Oh, I see! I ought of course to have
asked for Mrs. Robert Ransom ’Junior’!”
The idea sent her to her feet with
a haste which showed her impatience to make up for
lost time.
“There is no other Mrs. Robert
Ransom at Wentworth,” said Margaret.
“No other—no ‘Junior’?
Are you sure?” Lady Caroline fell back
into her seat again. “Then I simply don’t
see,” she murmured helplessly.
Margaret’s blush had fixed itself
on her throbbing forehead. She remained standing,
while her strange visitor continued to gaze at her
with a perturbation in which the consciousness of indiscretion
had evidently as yet no part.
“I simply don’t see,” she repeated.
Suddenly she sprang up, and advancing
to Margaret laid an inspired hand on her arm.
“But, my dear woman, you can help us out all
the same; you can help us to find out who it is—and
you will, won’t you? Because, as it’s
not you, you can’t in the least mind what I’ve
been saying—”
Margaret, freeing her arm from her
visitor’s hold, drew back a step; but Lady Caroline
instantly rejoined her.
“Of course, I can see that if
it had been, you might have been annoyed:
I dare say I put the case stupidly—but I’m
so bewildered by this new development—by
his using you all this time as a pretext—that
I really don’t know where to turn for light on
the mystery—”
She had Margaret in her imperious
grasp again, but the latter broke from her with a
more resolute gesture.
“I’m afraid I have no
light to give you,” she began; but once more
Lady Caroline caught her up.
“Oh, but do please understand
me! I condemn Guy most strongly for using your
name—when we all know you’d been so
amazingly kind to him! I haven’t a word
to say in his defence—but of course the
important thing now is: who is the woman, since
you’re not?”
The question rang out loudly, as if
all the pale puritan corners of the room flung it
back with a shudder at the speaker. In the silence
that ensued Margaret felt the blood ebbing back to
her heart; then she said, in a distinct and level
voice: “I know nothing of the history of
Mr. Dawnish.”
Lady Caroline gave a stare and a gasp.
Her distracted hand groped for her boa and she began
to wind it mechanically about her long neck.
“It would really be an enormous
help to us—and to poor Gwendolen Matcher,”
she persisted pleadingly. “And you’d
be doing Guy himself a good turn.”
Margaret remained silent and motionless
while her visitor drew on one of the worn gloves she
had pulled off to adjust her veil. Lady Caroline
gave the veil a final twitch.
“I’ve come a tremendously
long way,” she said, “and, since it isn’t
you, I can’t think why you won’t help me.
. . .”
When the door had closed on her visitor
Margaret Ransom went slowly up the stairs to her room.
As she dragged her feet from one step to another,
she remembered how she had sprung up the same steep
flight after that visit of Guy Dawnish’s when
she had looked in the glass and seen on her face the
blush of youth.
When she reached her room she bolted
the door as she had done that day, and again looked
at herself in the narrow mirror above her dressing-table.
It was just a year since then—the elms were
budding again, the willows hanging their green veil
above the bench by the river. But there was no
trace of youth left in her face—she saw
it now as others had doubtless always seen it.
If it seemed as it did to Lady Caroline Duckett, what
look must it have worn to the fresh gaze of young
Guy Dawnish?
A pretext—she had been
a pretext. He had used her name to screen some
one else—or perhaps merely to escape from
a situation of which he was weary. She did not
care to conjecture what his motive had been—everything
connected with him had grown so remote and alien.
She felt no anger—only an unspeakable sadness,
a sadness which she knew would never be appeased.
She looked at herself long and steadily;
she wished to clear her eyes of all illusions.
Then she turned away and took her usual seat beside
her work-table. From where she sat she could look
down the empty elm-shaded street, up which, at this
hour every day, she was sure to see her husband’s
figure advancing. She would see it presently—she
would see it for many years to come. She had a
sudden aching sense of the length of the years that
stretched before her. Strange that one who was
not young should still, in all likelihood, have so
long to live!
Nothing was changed in the setting
of her life, perhaps nothing would ever change in
it. She would certainly live and die in Wentworth.
And meanwhile the days would go on as usual, bringing
the usual obligations. As the word flitted through
her brain she remembered that she had still to put
the finishing touches to the paper she was to read
the next afternoon at the meeting of the Higher Thought
Club.
The book she had been reading lay
face downward beside her, where she had left it an
hour ago. She took it up, and slowly and painfully,
like a child laboriously spelling out the syllables,
she went on with the rest of the sentence:
—“and they spring
from a level not much above that of the springing
of the transverse and diagonal ribs, which are so arranged
as to give a convex curve to the surface of the vaulting
conoid.”