When he had gone out of the room Anna
stood where he had left her. “I must believe
him! I must believe him!” she said.
A moment before, at the moment when
she had lifted her arms to his neck, she had been
wrapped in a sense of complete security. All
the spirits of doubt had been exorcised, and her love
was once more the clear habitation in which every
thought and feeling could move in blissful freedom.
And then, as she raised her face to Darrow’s
and met his eyes, she had seemed to look into the
very ruins of his soul. That was the only way
she could express it. It was as though he and
she had been looking at two sides of the same thing,
and the side she had seen had been all light and life,
and his a place of graves…
She didn’t now recall who had
spoken first, or even, very clearly, what had been
said. It seemed to her only a moment later that
she had found herself standing at the other end of
the room—the room which had suddenly grown
so small that, even with its length between them,
she felt as if he touched her—crying out
to him “It is because of you she’s
going!” and reading the avowal in his face.
That was his secret, then, their
secret: he had met the girl in Paris and helped
her in her straits—lent her money, Anna
vaguely conjectured—and she had fallen in
love with him, and on meeting him again had been suddenly
overmastered by her passion. Anna, dropping
back into her sofa-corner, sat staring these facts
in the face.
The girl had been in a desperate plight—frightened,
penniless, outraged by what had happened, and not knowing
(with a woman like Mrs. Murrett) what fresh injury
might impend; and Darrow, meeting her in this distracted
hour, had pitied, counselled, been kind to her, with
the fatal, the inevitable result. There were
the facts as Anna made them out: that, at least,
was their external aspect, was as much of them as
she had been suffered to see; and into the secret
intricacies they might cover she dared not yet project
her thoughts.
“I must believe him…I must
believe him…” She kept on repeating
the words like a talisman. It was natural, after
all, that he should have behaved as he had: defended
the girl’s piteous secret to the last.
She too began to feel the contagion of his pity—the
stir, in her breast, of feelings deeper and more native
to her than the pains of jealousy. From the security
of her blessedness she longed to lean over with compassionate
hands…But Owen? What was Owen’s part
to be? She owed herself first to him—she
was bound to protect him not only from all knowledge
of the secret she had surprised, but also—and
chiefly!—from its consequences. Yes:
the girl must go—there could be no doubt
of it—Darrow himself had seen it from the
first; and at the thought she had a wild revulsion
of relief, as though she had been trying to create
in her heart the delusion of a generosity she could
not feel…
The one fact on which she could stay
her mind was that Sophy was leaving immediately; would
be out of the house within an hour. Once she
was gone, it would be easier to bring Owen to the
point of understanding that the break was final; if
necessary, to work upon the girl to make him see it.
But that, Anna was sure, would not be necessary.
It was clear that Sophy Viner was leaving Givre with
no thought of ever seeing it again…
Suddenly, as she tried to put some
order in her thoughts, she heard Owen’s call
at the door: “Mother!——”
a name he seldom gave her. There was a new note
in his voice: the note of a joyous impatience.
It made her turn hastily to the glass to see what
face she was about to show him; but before she had
had time to compose it he was in the room and she
was caught in a school-boy hug.
“It’s all right!
It’s all right! And it’s all your
doing! I want to do the worst kind of penance—bell
and candle and the rest. I’ve been through
it with her, and now she hands me on to you,
and you’re to call me any names you please.”
He freed her with his happy laugh. “I’m
to be stood in the corner till next week, and then
I’m to go up to see her. And she says
I owe it all to you!”
“To me?” It was the first
phrase she found to clutch at as she tried to steady
herself in the eddies of his joy.
“Yes: you were so patient,
and so dear to her; and you saw at once what a damned
ass I’d been!” She tried a smile, and
it seemed to pass muster with him, for he sent it back
in a broad beam. “That’s not so
difficult to see? No, I admit it doesn’t
take a microscope. But you were so wise and
wonderful—you always are. I’ve
been mad these last days, simply mad—you
and she might well have washed your hands of me!
And instead, it’s all right—all right!”
She drew back a little, trying to
keep the smile on her lips and not let him get the
least glimpse of what it hid. Now if ever, indeed,
it behoved her to be wise and wonderful!
“I’m so glad, dear; so
glad. If only you’ll always feel like
that about me…” She stopped, hardly knowing
what she said, and aghast at the idea that her own
hands should have retied the knot she imagined to
be broken. But she saw he had something more
to say; something hard to get out, but absolutely
necessary to express. He caught her hands, pulled
her close, and, with his forehead drawn into its whimsical
smiling wrinkles, “Look here,” he cried,
“if Darrow wants to call me a damned ass too
you’re not to stop him!”
It brought her back to a sharper sense
of her central peril: of the secret to be kept
from him at whatever cost to her racked nerves.
“Oh, you know, he doesn’t
always wait for orders!” On the whole it sounded
better than she’d feared.
“You mean he’s called
me one already?” He accepted the fact with
his gayest laugh. “Well, that saves a lot
of trouble; now we can pass to the order of the day——”
he broke off and glanced at the clock—“which
is, you know, dear, that she’s starting in about
an hour; she and Adelaide must already be snatching
a hasty sandwich. You’ll come down to
bid them good-bye?”
“Yes—of course.”
There had, in fact, grown upon her
while he spoke the urgency of seeing Sophy Viner again
before she left. The thought was deeply distasteful:
Anna shrank from encountering the girl till she had
cleared a way through her own perplexities.
But it was obvious that since they had separated,
barely an hour earlier, the situation had taken a
new shape. Sophy Viner had apparently reconsidered
her decision to break amicably but definitely with
Owen, and stood again in their path, a menace and
a mystery; and confused impulses of resistance stirred
in Anna’s mind. She felt Owen’s touch
on her arm. “Are you coming?”
“Yes…yes…presently.”
“What’s the matter? You look so
strange.”
“What do you mean by strange?”
“I don’t know: startled—surprised
” She read what her look must be by its sudden reflection
in his face.
“Do I? No wonder! You’ve given
us all an exciting morning.”
He held to his point. “You’re
more excited now that there’s no cause for it.
What on earth has happened since I saw you?”
He looked about the room, as if seeking
the clue to her agitation, and in her dread of what
he might guess she answered: “What has
happened is simply that I’m rather tired.
Will you ask Sophy to come up and see me here?”
While she waited she tried to think
what she should say when the girl appeared; but she
had never been more conscious of her inability to
deal with the oblique and the tortuous. She had
lacked the hard teachings of experience, and an instinctive
disdain for whatever was less clear and open than
her own conscience had kept her from learning anything
of the intricacies and contradictions of other hearts.
She said to herself: “I must find out——”
yet everything in her recoiled from the means by which
she felt it must be done…
Sophy Viner appeared almost immediately,
dressed for departure, her little bag on her arm.
She was still pale to the point of haggardness, but
with a light upon her that struck Anna with surprise.
Or was it, perhaps, that she was looking at the girl
with new eyes: seeing her, for the first time,
not as Effie’s governess, not as Owen’s
bride, but as the embodiment of that unknown peril
lurking in the background of every woman’s thoughts
about her lover? Anna, at any rate, with a sudden
sense of estrangement, noted in her graces and snares
never before perceived. It was only the flash
of a primitive instinct, but it lasted long enough
to make her ashamed of the darknesses it lit up in
her heart…
She signed to Sophy to sit down on
the sofa beside her. “I asked you to come
up to me because I wanted to say good-bye quietly,”
she explained, feeling her lips tremble, but trying
to speak in a tone of friendly naturalness.
The girl’s only answer was a
faint smile of acquiescence, and Anna, disconcerted
by her silence, went on: “You’ve
decided, then, not to break your engagement?”
Sophy Viner raised her head with a
look of surprise. Evidently the question, thus
abruptly put, must have sounded strangely on the lips
of so ardent a partisan as Mrs. Leath! “I
thought that was what you wished,” she said.
“What I wished?” Anna’s
heart shook against her side. “I wish,
of course, whatever seems best for Owen…It’s
natural, you must understand, that that consideration
should come first with me…”
Sophy was looking at her steadily.
“I supposed it was the only one that counted
with you.”
The curtness of retort roused Anna’s
latent antagonism. “It is,” she
said, in a hard voice that startled her as she heard
it. Had she ever spoken so to any one before?
She felt frightened, as though her very nature had
changed without her knowing it…Feeling the girl’s
astonished gaze still on her, she continued:
“The suddenness of the change has naturally
surprised me. When I left you it was understood
that you were to reserve your decision——”
“Yes.”
“And now——?”
Anna waited for a reply that did not come. She
did not understand the girl’s attitude, the edge
of irony in her short syllables, the plainly premeditated
determination to lay the burden of proof on her interlocutor.
Anna felt the sudden need to lift their intercourse
above this mean level of defiance and distrust.
She looked appealingly at Sophy.
“Isn’t it best that we
should speak quite frankly? It’s this
change on your part that perplexes me. You can
hardly be surprised at that. It’s true,
I asked you not to break with Owen too abruptly—and
I asked it, believe me, as much for your sake as for
his: I wanted you to take time to think over
the difficulty that seems to have arisen between you.
The fact that you felt it required thinking over seemed
to show you wouldn’t take the final step lightly—wouldn’t,
I mean, accept of Owen more than you could give him.
But your change of mind obliges me to ask the question
I thought you would have asked yourself. Is
there any reason why you shouldn’t marry Owen?”
She stopped a little breathlessly,
her eyes on Sophy Viner’s burning face.
“Any reason——? What do you
mean by a reason?”
Anna continued to look at her gravely.
“Do you love some one else?” she asked.
Sophy’s first look was one of
wonder and a faint relief; then she gave back the
other’s scrutiny in a glance of indescribable
reproach. “Ah, you might have waited!”
she exclaimed.
“Waited?”
“Till I’d gone: till
I was out of the house. You might have known…you
might have guessed…” She turned her eyes
again on Anna. “I only meant to let him
hope a little longer, so that he shouldn’t suspect
anything; of course I can’t marry him,”
she said.
Anna stood motionless, silenced by
the shock of the avowal. She too was trembling,
less with anger than with a confused compassion.
But the feeling was so blent with others, less generous
and more obscure, that she found no words to express
it, and the two women faced each other without speaking.
“I’d better go,”
Sophy murmured at length with lowered head.
The words roused in Anna a latent
impulse of compunction. The girl looked so young,
so exposed and desolate! And what thoughts must
she be hiding in her heart! It was impossible
that they should part in such a spirit.
“I want you to know that no
one said anything…It was I who…”
Sophy looked at her. “You
mean that Mr. Darrow didn’t tell you?
Of course not: do you suppose I thought he did?
You found it out, that’s all—I knew
you would. In your place I should have guessed
it sooner.”
The words were spoken simply, without
irony or emphasis; but they went through Anna like
a sword. Yes, the girl would have had divinations,
promptings that she had not had! She felt half
envious of such a sad precocity of wisdom.
“I’m so sorry…so sorry…” she
murmured.
“Things happen that way.
Now I’d better go. I’d like to
say good-bye to Effie.”
“Oh——”
it broke in a cry from Effie’s mother.
“Not like this—you mustn’t!
I feel—you make me feel too horribly:
as if I were driving you away…” The
words had rushed up from the depths of her bewildered
pity.
“No one is driving me away:
I had to go,” she heard the girl reply.
There was another silence, during
which passionate impulses of magnanimity warred in
Anna with her doubts and dreads. At length, her
eyes on Sophy’s face: “Yes, you must
go now,” she began; “but later on…after
a while, when all this is over…if there’s
no reason why you shouldn’t marry Owen——
” she paused a moment on the words—”
I shouldn’t want you to think I stood between
you…”
“You?” Sophy flushed again,
and then grew pale. She seemed to try to speak,
but no words came. “Yes! It was not
true when I said just now that I was thinking only
of Owen. I’m sorry—oh, so sorry!—for
you too. Your life—I know how hard
it’s been; and mine…mine’s so full…Happy
women understand best!” Anna drew near and touched
the girl’s hand; then she began again, pouring
all her soul into the broken phrases: “It’s
terrible now…you see no future; but if, by and bye…you
know best…but you’re so young…and at your
age things do pass. If there’s no
reason, no real reason, why you shouldn’t marry
Owen, I want him to hope, I’ll help him
to hope…if you say so…”
With the urgency of her pleading her
clasp tightened on Sophy’s hand, but it warmed
to no responsive tremor: the girl seemed numb,
and Anna was frightened by the stony silence of her
look. “I suppose I’m not more than
half a woman,” she mused, “for I don’t
want my happiness to hurt her;” and aloud she
repeated: “If only you’ll tell me
there’s no reason——”
The girl did not speak; but suddenly,
like a snapped branch, she bent, stooped down to the
hand that clasped her, and laid her lips upon it in
a stream of weeping. She cried silently, continuously,
abundantly, as though Anna’s touch had released
the waters of some deep spring of pain; then, as Anna,
moved and half afraid, leaned over her with a sound
of pity, she stood up and turned away.
“You’re going, then—for
good—like this?” Anna moved toward
her and stopped. Sophy stopped too, with eyes
that shrank from her.
“Oh——” Anna cried, and
hid her face.
The girl walked across the room and
paused again in the doorway. From there she
flung back: “I wanted it—I chose
it. He was good to me—no one ever
was so good!”
The door-handle turned, and Anna heard her go.