Anna stood looking from one to the
other. It had become apparent to her in a flash
that Owen’s retort, though it startled Sophy,
did not take her by surprise; and the discovery shot
its light along dark distances of fear.
The immediate inference was that Owen
had guessed the reason of Darrow’s disapproval
of his marriage, or that, at least, he suspected Sophy
Viner of knowing and dreading it. This confirmation
of her own obscure doubt sent a tremor of alarm through
Anna. For a moment she felt like exclaiming:
“All this is really no business of mine, and
I refuse to have you mix me up in it—”
but her secret fear held her fast.
Sophy Viner was the first to speak.
“I should like to go now,”
she said in a low voice, taking a few steps toward
the door.
Her tone woke Anna to the sense of
her own share in the situation. “I quite
agree with you, my dear, that it’s useless to
carry on this discussion. But since Mr. Darrow’s
name has been brought into it, for reasons which I
fail to guess, I want to tell you that you’re
both mistaken if you think he’s not in sympathy
with your marriage. If that’s what Owen
means to imply, the idea’s a complete delusion.”
She spoke the words deliberately and
incisively, as if hoping that the sound of their utterance
would stifle the whisper in her bosom.
Sophy’s only answer was a vague
murmur, and a movement that brought her nearer to
the door; but before she could reach it Owen had placed
himself in her way.
“I don’t mean to imply
what you think,” he said, addressing his step-mother
but keeping his eyes on the girl. “I don’t
say Darrow doesn’t like our marriage; I say it’s
Sophy who’s hated it since Darrow’s been
here!”
He brought out the charge in a tone
of forced composure, but his lips were white and he
grasped the doorknob to hide the tremor of his hand.
Anna’s anger surged up with
her fears. “You’re absurd, Owen!
I don’t know why I listen to you. Why
should Sophy dislike Mr. Darrow, and if she does,
why should that have anything to do with her wishing
to break her engagement?”
“I don’t say she dislikes
him! I don’t say she likes him; I don’t
know what it is they say to each other when they’re
shut up together alone.”
“Shut up together alone?”
Anna stared. Owen seemed like a man in delirium;
such an exhibition was degrading to them all.
But he pushed on without seeing her look.
“Yes—the first evening
she came, in the study; the next morning, early, in
the park; yesterday, again, in the spring-house, when
you were at the lodge with the doctor…I don’t
know what they say to each other, but they’ve
taken every chance they could to say it…and to say
it when they thought that no one saw them.”
Anna longed to silence him, but no
words came to her. It was as though all her confused
apprehensions had suddenly taken definite shape.
There was “something”—yes,
there was “something”...Darrow’s reticences
and evasions had been more than a figment of her doubts.
The next instant brought a recoil
of pride. She turned indignantly on her step-son.
“I don’t half understand
what you’ve been saying; but what you seem to
hint is so preposterous, and so insulting both to
Sophy and to me, that I see no reason why we should
listen to you any longer.”
Though her tone steadied Owen, she
perceived at once that it would not deflect him from
his purpose. He spoke less vehemently, but with
all the more precision.
“How can it be preposterous,
since it’s true? Or insulting, since I
don’t know, any more than you, the meaning
of what I’ve been seeing? If you’ll
be patient with me I’ll try to put it quietly.
What I mean is that Sophy has completely changed
since she met Darrow here, and that, having noticed
the change, I’m hardly to blame for having tried
to find out its cause.”
Anna made an effort to answer him
with the same composure. “You’re
to blame, at any rate, for so recklessly assuming
that you have found it out. You seem to
forget that, till they met here, Sophy and Mr. Darrow
hardly knew each other.”
“If so, it’s all the stranger
that they’ve been so often closeted together!”
“Owen, Owen—” the girl sighed
out.
He turned his haggard face to her.
“Can I help it, if I’ve seen and known
what I wasn’t meant to? For God’s
sake give me a reason—any reason I can
decently make out with! Is it my fault if, the
day after you arrived, when I came back late through
the garden, the curtains of the study hadn’t
been drawn, and I saw you there alone with Darrow?”
Anna laughed impatiently. “Really,
Owen, if you make it a grievance that two people who
are staying in the same house should be seen talking
together——!”
“They were not talking. That’s the
point——”
“Not talking? How do you
know? You could hardly hear them from the garden!”
“No; but I could see.
He was sitting at my desk, with his face in his
hands. She was standing in the window,
looking away from him…”
He waited, as if for Sophy Viner’s
answer; but still she neither stirred nor spoke.
“That was the first time,”
he went on; “and the second was the next morning
in the park. It was natural enough, their meeting
there. Sophy had gone out with Effie, and Effie
ran back to look for me. She told me she’d
left Sophy and Darrow in the path that leads to the
river, and presently we saw them ahead of us.
They didn’t see us at first, because they were
standing looking at each other; and this time they
were not speaking either. We came up close before
they heard us, and all that time they never spoke,
or stopped looking at each other. After that
I began to wonder; and so I watched them.”
“Oh, Owen!” “Oh,
I only had to wait. Yesterday, when I motored
you and the doctor back from the lodge, I saw Sophy
coming out of the spring-house. I supposed she’d
taken shelter from the rain, and when you got out
of the motor I strolled back down the avenue to meet
her. But she’d disappeared—she
must have taken a short cut and come into the house
by the side door. I don’t know why I went
on to the spring-house; I suppose it was what you’d
call spying. I went up the steps and found the
room empty; but two chairs had been moved out from
the wall and were standing near the table; and one
of the Chinese screens that lie on it had dropped
to the floor.”
Anna sounded a faint note of irony.
“Really? Sophy’d gone there for
shelter, and she dropped a screen and moved a chair?”
“I said two chairs——”
“Two? What damning evidence—of
I don’t know what!”
“Simply of the fact that Darrow’d
been there with her. As I looked out of the window
I saw him close by, walking away. He must have
turned the corner of the spring-house just as I got
to the door.”
There was another silence, during
which Anna paused, not only to collect her own words
but to wait for Sophy Viner’s; then, as the
girl made no sign, she turned to her.
“I’ve absolutely nothing
to say to all this; but perhaps you’d like me
to wait and hear your answer?”
Sophy raised her head with a quick
flash of colour. “I’ve no answer
either—except that Owen must be mad.”
In the interval since she had last
spoken she seemed to have regained her self-control,
and her voice rang clear, with a cold edge of anger.
Anna looked at her step-son.
He had grown extremely pale, and his hand fell from
the door with a discouraged gesture. “That’s
all then? You won’t give me any reason?”
“I didn’t suppose it was
necessary to give you or any one else a reason for
talking with a friend of Mrs. Leath’s under
Mrs. Leath’s own roof.”
Owen hardly seemed to feel the retort:
he kept his dogged stare on her face.
“I won’t ask for one,
then. I’ll only ask you to give me your
assurance that your talks with Darrow have had nothing
to do with your suddenly deciding to leave Givre.”
She hesitated, not so much with the
air of weighing her answer as of questioning his right
to exact any. “I give you my assurance;
and now I should like to go,” she said.
As she turned away, Anna intervened.
“My dear, I think you ought to speak.”
The girl drew herself up with a faint
laugh. “To him—or to you?”
“To him.”
She stiffened. “I’ve said all there
is to say.”
Anna drew back, her eyes on her step-son.
He had left the threshold and was advancing toward
Sophy Viner with a motion of desperate appeal; but
as he did so there was a knock on the door.
A moment’s silence fell on the three; then Anna
said: “Come in!”
Darrow came into the room. Seeing
the three together, he looked rapidly from one to
the other; then he turned to Anna with a smile.
“I came up to see if you were
ready; but please send me off if I’m not wanted.”
His look, his voice, the simple sense
of his presence, restored Anna’s shaken balance.
By Owen’s side he looked so strong, so urbane,
so experienced, that the lad’s passionate charges
dwindled to mere boyish vapourings. A moment
ago she had dreaded Darrow’s coming; now she
was glad that he was there.
She turned to him with sudden decision.
“Come in, please; I want you to hear what Owen
has been saying.”
She caught a murmur from Sophy Viner,
but disregarded it. An illuminating impulse urged
her on. She, habitually so aware of her own
lack of penetration, her small skill in reading hidden
motives and detecting secret signals, now felt herself
mysteriously inspired. She addressed herself to
Sophy Viner. “It’s much better for
you both that this absurd question should be cleared
up now ” Then, turning to Darrow, she continued:
“For some reason that I don’t pretend
to guess, Owen has taken it into his head that you’ve
influenced Miss Viner to break her engagement.”
She spoke slowly and deliberately,
because she wished to give time and to gain it; time
for Darrow and Sophy to receive the full impact of
what she was saying, and time to observe its full
effect on them. She had said to herself:
“If there’s nothing between them, they’ll
look at each other; if there is something, they
won’t;” and as she ceased to speak she
felt as if all her life were in her eyes.
Sophy, after a start of protest, remained
motionless, her gaze on the ground. Darrow,
his face grown grave, glanced slowly from Owen Leath
to Anna. With his eyes on the latter he asked:
“Has Miss Viner broken her engagement?”
A moment’s silence followed
his question; then the girl looked up and said:
“Yes!”
Owen, as she spoke, uttered a smothered
exclamation and walked out of the room. She
continued to stand in the same place, without appearing
to notice his departure, and without vouchsafing an
additional word of explanation; then, before Anna
could find a cry to detain her, she too turned and
went out.
“For God’s sake, what’s
happened?” Darrow asked; but Anna, with a drop
of the heart, was saying to herself that he and Sophy
Viner had not looked at each other.