Madame de Chantelle and Anna had planned,
for the afternoon, a visit to a remotely situated
acquaintance whom the introduction of the motor had
transformed into a neighbour. Effie was to pay
for her morning’s holiday by an hour or two
in the school-room, and Owen suggested that he and
Darrow should betake themselves to a distant covert
in the desultory quest for pheasants.
Darrow was not an ardent sportsman,
but any pretext for physical activity would have been
acceptable at the moment; and he was glad both to
get away from the house and not to be left to himself.
When he came downstairs the motor
was at the door, and Anna stood before the hall mirror,
swathing her hat in veils. She turned at the
sound of his step and smiled at him for a long full
moment.
“I’d no idea you knew
Miss Viner,” she said, as he helped her into
her long coat.
“It came back to me, luckily,
that I’d seen her two or three times in London,
several years ago. She was secretary, or something
of the sort, in the background of a house where I
used to dine.”
He loathed the slighting indifference
of the phrase, but he had uttered it deliberately,
had been secretly practising it all through the interminable
hour at the luncheon-table. Now that it was spoken,
he shivered at its note of condescension. In
such cases one was almost sure to overdo…But Anna
seemed to notice nothing unusual.
“Was she really? You must
tell me all about it—tell me exactly how
she struck you. I’m so glad it turns out
that you know her.”
“‘Know’ is rather
exaggerated: we used to pass each other on the
stairs.”
Madame de Chantelle and Owen appeared
together as he spoke, and Anna, gathering up her wraps,
said: “You’ll tell me about that,
then. Try and remember everything you can.”
As he tramped through the woods at
his young host’s side, Darrow felt the partial
relief from thought produced by exercise and the obligation
to talk. Little as he cared for shooting, he
had the habit of concentration which makes it natural
for a man to throw himself wholly into whatever business
he has in hand, and there were moments of the afternoon
when a sudden whirr in the undergrowth, a vivider
gleam against the hazy browns and greys of the woods,
was enough to fill the foreground of his attention.
But all the while, behind these voluntarily emphasized
sensations, his secret consciousness continued to
revolve on a loud wheel of thought. For a time
it seemed to be sweeping him through deep gulfs of
darkness. His sensations were too swift and
swarming to be disentangled. He had an almost
physical sense of struggling for air, of battling
helplessly with material obstructions, as though the
russet covert through which he trudged were the heart
of a maleficent jungle…
Snatches of his companion’s
talk drifted to him intermittently through the confusion
of his thoughts. He caught eager self-revealing
phrases, and understood that Owen was saying things
about himself, perhaps hinting indirectly at the hopes
for which Darrow had been prepared by Anna’s
confidences. He had already become aware that
the lad liked him, and had meant to take the first
opportunity of showing that he reciprocated the feeling.
But the effort of fixing his attention on Owen’s
words was so great that it left no power for more
than the briefest and most inexpressive replies.
Young Leath, it appeared, felt that
he had reached a turning-point in his career, a height
from which he could impartially survey his past progress
and projected endeavour. At one time he had
had musical and literary yearnings, visions of desultory
artistic indulgence; but these had of late been superseded
by the resolute determination to plunge into practical
life.
“I don’t want, you see,”
Darrow heard him explaining, “to drift into
what my grandmother, poor dear, is trying to make
of me: an adjunct of Givre. I don’t
want—hang it all!—to slip into
collecting sensations as my father collected snuff-boxes.
I want Effie to have Givre—it’s my
grandmother’s, you know, to do as she likes with;
and I’ve understood lately that if it belonged
to me it would gradually gobble me up. I want
to get out of it, into a life that’s big and
ugly and struggling. If I can extract beauty
out of that, so much the better: that’ll
prove my vocation. But I want to make beauty,
not be drowned in the ready-made, like a bee in a
pot of honey.”
Darrow knew that he was being appealed
to for corroboration of these views and for encouragement
in the course to which they pointed. To his
own ears his answers sounded now curt, now irrelevant:
at one moment he seemed chillingly indifferent, at
another he heard himself launching out on a flood
of hazy discursiveness. He dared not look at
Owen, for fear of detecting the lad’s surprise
at these senseless transitions. And through
the confusion of his inward struggles and outward
loquacity he heard the ceaseless trip-hammer beat
of the question: “What in God’s name
shall I do?”...
To get back to the house before Anna’s
return seemed his most pressing necessity. He
did not clearly know why: he simply felt that
he ought to be there. At one moment it occurred
to him that Miss Viner might want to speak to him
alone—and again, in the same flash, that
it would probably be the last thing she would want…At
any rate, he felt he ought to try to speak to her;
or at least be prepared to do so, if the chance should
occur…
Finally, toward four, he told his
companion that he had some letters on his mind and
must get back to the house and despatch them before
the ladies returned. He left Owen with the beater
and walked on to the edge of the covert. At the
park gates he struck obliquely through the trees, following
a grass avenue at the end of which he had caught a
glimpse of the roof of the chapel. A grey haze
had blotted out the sun and the still air clung about
him tepidly. At length the house-front raised
before him its expanse of damp-silvered brick, and
he was struck afresh by the high decorum of its calm
lines and soberly massed surfaces. It made him
feel, in the turbid coil of his fears and passions,
like a muddy tramp forcing his way into some pure
sequestered shrine…
By and bye, he knew, he should have
to think the complex horror out, slowly, systematically,
bit by bit; but for the moment it was whirling him
about so fast that he could just clutch at its sharp
spikes and be tossed off again. Only one definite
immediate fact stuck in his quivering grasp.
He must give the girl every chance—must
hold himself passive till she had taken them…
In the court Effie ran up to him with
her leaping terrier.
“I was coming out to meet you—you
and Owen. Miss Viner was coming, too, and then
she couldn’t because she’s got such a
headache. I’m afraid I gave it to her because
I did my division so disgracefully. It’s
too bad, isn’t it? But won’t you
walk back with me? Nurse won’t mind the
least bit; she’d so much rather go in to tea.”
Darrow excused himself laughingly,
on the plea that he had letters to write, which was
much worse than having a headache, and not infrequently
resulted in one.
“Oh, then you can go and write
them in Owen’s study. That’s where
gentlemen always write their letters.”
She flew on with her dog and Darrow
pursued his way to the house. Effie’s
suggestion struck him as useful. He had pictured
himself as vaguely drifting about the drawing-rooms,
and had perceived the difficulty of Miss Viner’s
having to seek him there; but the study, a small room
on the right of the hall, was in easy sight from the
staircase, and so situated that there would be nothing
marked in his being found there in talk with her.
He went in, leaving the door open,
and sat down at the writing-table. The room
was a friendly heterogeneous place, the one repository,
in the well-ordered and amply-servanted house, of
all its unclassified odds and ends: Effie’s
croquet-box and fishing rods, Owen’s guns and
golf-sticks and racquets, his step-mother’s
flower-baskets and gardening implements, even Madame
de Chantelle’s embroidery frame, and the back
numbers of the Catholic Weekly. The early twilight
had begun to fall, and presently a slanting ray across
the desk showed Darrow that a servant was coming across
the hall with a lamp. He pulled out a sheet
of note-paper and began to write at random, while
the man, entering, put the lamp at his elbow and vaguely
“straightened” the heap of newspapers
tossed on the divan. Then his steps died away
and Darrow sat leaning his head on his locked hands.
Presently another step sounded on
the stairs, wavered a moment and then moved past the
threshold of the study. Darrow got up and walked
into the hall, which was still unlighted. In
the dimness he saw Sophy Viner standing by the hall
door in her hat and jacket. She stopped at sight
of him, her hand on the door-bolt, and they stood for
a second without speaking.
“Have you seen Effie?”
she suddenly asked. “She went out to meet
you.”
“She did meet me, just
now, in the court. She’s gone on to join
her brother.”
Darrow spoke as naturally as he could,
but his voice sounded to his own ears like an amateur
actor’s in a “light” part.
Miss Viner, without answering, drew
back the bolt. He watched her in silence as
the door swung open; then he said: “She
has her nurse with her. She won’t be long.”
She stood irresolute, and he added:
“I was writing in there —won’t
you come and have a little talk? Every one’s
out.”
The last words struck him as not well-chosen,
but there was no time to choose. She paused
a second longer and then crossed the threshold of
the study. At luncheon she had sat with her
back to the window, and beyond noting that she had
grown a little thinner, and had less colour and vivacity,
he had seen no change in her; but now, as the lamplight
fell on her face, its whiteness startled him.
“Poor thing…poor thing…what
in heaven’s name can she suppose?” he
wondered.
“Do sit down—I want
to talk to you,” he said and pushed a chair
toward her.
She did not seem to see it, or, if
she did, she deliberately chose another seat.
He came back to his own chair and leaned his elbows
on the blotter. She faced him from the farther
side of the table.
“You promised to let me hear
from you now and then,” he began awkwardly,
and with a sharp sense of his awkwardness.
A faint smile made her face more tragic.
“Did I? There was nothing to tell.
I’ve had no history—like the happy
countries…”
He waited a moment before asking:
“You are happy here?”
“I was,” she said with a faint emphasis.
“Why do you say ‘was’?
You’re surely not thinking of going? There
can’t be kinder people anywhere.”
Darrow hardly knew what he was saying; but her answer
came to him with deadly definiteness.
“I suppose it depends on you
whether I go or stay.”
“On me?” He stared at
her across Owen’s scattered papers. “Good
God! What can you think of me, to say that?”
The mockery of the question flashed
back at him from her wretched face. She stood
up, wandered away, and leaned an instant in the darkening
window-frame. From there she turned to fling
back at him: “Don’t imagine I’m
the least bit sorry for anything!”
He steadied his elbows on the table
and hid his face in his hands. It was harder,
oh, damnably harder, than he had expected! Arguments,
expedients, palliations, evasions, all seemed to be
slipping away from him: he was left face to face
with the mere graceless fact of his inferiority.
He lifted his head to ask at random: “You’ve
been here, then, ever since?”
“Since June; yes. It turned
out that the Farlows were hunting for me—all
the while—for this.”
She stood facing him, her back to
the window, evidently impatient to be gone, yet with
something still to say, or that she expected to hear
him say. The sense of her expectancy benumbed
him. What in heaven’s name could he say
to her that was not an offense or a mockery?
“Your idea of the theatre—you
gave that up at once, then?”
“Oh, the theatre!” She
gave a little laugh. “I couldn’t
wait for the theatre. I had to take the first
thing that offered; I took this.”
He pushed on haltingly: “I’m
glad—extremely glad—you’re
happy here…I’d counted on your letting me know
if there was anything I could do…The theatre, now—if
you still regret it—if you’re not
contented here…I know people in that line in London—I’m
certain I can manage it for you when I get back——”
She moved up to the table and leaned
over it to ask, in a voice that was hardly above a
whisper: “Then you do want me to leave?
Is that it?”
He dropped his arms with a groan.
“Good heavens! How can you think such
things? At the time, you know, I begged you
to let me do what I could, but you wouldn’t hear
of it…and ever since I’ve been wanting to
be of use—to do something, anything, to
help you…”
She heard him through, motionless,
without a quiver of the clasped hands she rested on
the edge of the table.
“If you want to help me, then—you
can help me to stay here,” she brought out with
low-toned intensity.
Through the stillness of the pause
which followed, the bray of a motor-horn sounded far
down the drive. Instantly she turned, with a
last white look at him, and fled from the room and
up the stairs. He stood motionless, benumbed
by the shock of her last words. She was afraid,
then—afraid of him—sick with
fear of him! The discovery beat him down to
a lower depth…
The motor-horn sounded again, close
at hand, and he turned and went up to his room.
His letter-writing was a sufficient pretext for not
immediately joining the party about the tea-table,
and he wanted to be alone and try to put a little
order into his tumultuous thinking.
Upstairs, the room held out the intimate
welcome of its lamp and fire. Everything in
it exhaled the same sense of peace and stability which,
two evenings before, had lulled him to complacent
meditation. His armchair again invited him from
the hearth, but he was too agitated to sit still, and
with sunk head and hands clasped behind his back he
began to wander up and down the room.
His five minutes with Sophy Viner
had flashed strange lights into the shadowy corners
of his consciousness. The girl’s absolute
candour, her hard ardent honesty, was for the moment
the vividest point in his thoughts. He wondered
anew, as he had wondered before, at the way in which
the harsh discipline of life had stripped her of false
sentiment without laying the least touch on her pride.
When they had parted, five months before, she had
quietly but decidedly rejected all his offers of help,
even to the suggestion of his trying to further her
theatrical aims: she had made it clear that she
wished their brief alliance to leave no trace on their
lives save that of its own smiling memory. But
now that they were unexpectedly confronted in a situation
which seemed, to her terrified fancy, to put her at
his mercy, her first impulse was to defend her right
to the place she had won, and to learn as quickly
as possible if he meant to dispute it. While
he had pictured her as shrinking away from him in
a tremor of self-effacement she had watched his movements,
made sure of her opportunity, and come straight down
to “have it out” with him. He was
so struck by the frankness and energy of the proceeding
that for a moment he lost sight of the view of his
own character implied in it.
“Poor thing…poor thing!”
he could only go on saying; and with the repetition
of the words the picture of himself as she must see
him pitiably took shape again.
He understood then, for the first
time, how vague, in comparison with hers, had been
his own vision of the part he had played in the brief
episode of their relation. The incident had
left in him a sense of exasperation and self-contempt,
but that, as he now perceived, was chiefly, if not
altogether, as it bore on his preconceived ideal of
his attitude toward another woman. He had fallen
below his own standard of sentimental loyalty, and
if he thought of Sophy Viner it was mainly as the
chance instrument of his lapse. These considerations
were not agreeable to his pride, but they were forced
on him by the example of her valiant common-sense.
If he had cut a sorry figure in the business, he
owed it to her not to close his eyes to the fact any
longer…
But when he opened them, what did
he see? The situation, detestable at best, would
yet have been relatively simple if protecting Sophy
Viner had been the only duty involved in it.
The fact that that duty was paramount did not do away
with the contingent obligations. It was Darrow’s
instinct, in difficult moments, to go straight to
the bottom of the difficulty; but he had never before
had to take so dark a dive as this, and for the minute
he shivered on the brink…Well, his first duty, at
any rate, was to the girl: he must let her see
that he meant to fulfill it to the last jot, and then
try to find out how to square the fulfillment with
the other problems already in his path…