Her first thought was: “He’s
going too in a few hours—I needn’t
see him again before he leaves…” At that
moment the possibility of having to look in Darrow’s
face and hear him speak seemed to her more unendurable
than anything else she could imagine. Then,
on the next wave of feeling, came the desire to confront
him at once and wring from him she knew not what:
avowal, denial, justification, anything that should
open some channel of escape to the flood of her pent-up
anguish.
She had told Owen she was tired, and
this seemed a sufficient reason for remaining upstairs
when the motor came to the door and Miss Painter and
Sophy Viner were borne off in it; sufficient also
for sending word to Madame de Chantelle that she would
not come down till after luncheon. Having despatched
her maid with this message, she lay down on her sofa
and stared before her into darkness…
She had been unhappy before, and the
vision of old miseries flocked like hungry ghosts
about her fresh pain: she recalled her youthful
disappointment, the failure of her marriage, the wasted
years that followed; but those were negative sorrows,
denials and postponements of life. She seemed
in no way related to their shadowy victim, she who
was stretched on this fiery rack of the irreparable.
She had suffered before—yes, but lucidly,
reflectively, elegiacally: now she was suffering
as a hurt animal must, blindly, furiously, with the
single fierce animal longing that the awful pain should
stop…
She heard her maid knock, and she
hid her face and made no answer. The knocking
continued, and the discipline of habit at length made
her lift her head, compose her face and hold out her
hand to the note the woman brought her. It was
a word from Darrow—“May I see you?”—and
she said at once, in a voice that sounded thin and
empty: “Ask Mr. Darrow to come up.”
The maid enquired if she wished to
have her hair smoothed first, and she answered that
it didn’t matter; but when the door had closed,
the instinct of pride drew her to her feet and she
looked at herself in the glass above the mantelpiece
and passed her hands over her hair. Her eyes
were burning and her face looked tired and thinner;
otherwise she could see no change in her appearance,
and she wondered that at such a moment her body should
seem as unrelated to the self that writhed within
her as if it had been a statue or a picture.
The maid reopened the door to show
in Darrow, and he paused a moment on the threshold,
as if waiting for Anna to speak. He was extremely
pale, but he looked neither ashamed nor uncertain,
and she said to herself, with a perverse thrill of
appreciation: “He’s as proud as I
am.”
Aloud she asked: “You wanted to see me?”
“Naturally,” he replied in a grave voice.
“Don’t! It’s
useless. I know everything. Nothing you
can say will help.”
At the direct affirmation he turned
even paler, and his eyes, which he kept resolutely
fixed on her, confessed his misery.
“You allow me no voice in deciding that?”
“Deciding what?”
“That there’s nothing
more to be said?” He waited for her to answer,
and then went on: “I don’t even know
what you mean by ’everything’.”
“Oh, I don’t know what
more there is! I know enough. I implored
her to deny it, and she couldn’t…What can you
and I have to say to each other?” Her voice
broke into a sob. The animal anguish was upon
her again—just a blind cry against her
pain!
Darrow kept his head high and his
eyes steady. “It must be as you wish;
and yet it’s not like you to be afraid.”
“Afraid?”
“To talk things out—to face them.”
“It’s for you to face this—not
me!”
“All I ask is to face it—but
with you.” Once more he paused.
“Won’t you tell me what Miss Viner told
you?”
“Oh, she’s generous—to
the utmost!” The pain caught her like a physical
throe. It suddenly came to her how the girl
must have loved him to be so generous—what
memories there must be between them!
“Oh, go, please go. It’s
too horrible. Why should I have to see you?”
she stammered, lifting her hands to her eyes.
With her face hidden she waited to
hear him move away, to hear the door open and close
again, as, a few hours earlier, it had opened and
closed on Sophy Viner. But Darrow made no sound
or movement: he too was waiting. Anna felt
a thrill of resentment: his presence was an outrage
on her sorrow, a humiliation to her pride. It
was strange that he should wait for her to tell him
so!
“You want me to leave Givre?”
he asked at length. She made no answer, and
he went on: “Of course I’ll do as
you wish; but if I go now am I not to see you again?”
His voice was firm: his pride
was answering her pride!
She faltered: “You must see it’s
useless——”
“I might remind you that you’re
dismissing me without a hearing——”
“Without a hearing? I’ve heard you
both!”
——“but I won’t,”
he continued, “remind you of that, or of anything
or any one but Owen.”
“Owen?”
“Yes; if we could somehow spare him——”
She had dropped her hands and turned
her startled eyes on him. It seemed to her an
age since she had thought of Owen!
“You see, don’t you,”
Darrow continued, “that if you send me away
now——”
She interrupted: “Yes,
I see——” and there was a long
silence between them. At length she said, very
low: “I don’t want any one else to
suffer as I’m suffering…”
“Owen knows I meant to leave
tomorrow,” Darrow went on. “Any sudden
change of plan may make him think…”
Oh, she saw his inevitable logic:
the horror of it was on every side of her! It
had seemed possible to control her grief and face
Darrow calmly while she was upheld by the belief that
this was their last hour together, that after he had
passed out of the room there would be no fear of seeing
him again, no fear that his nearness, his look, his
voice, and all the unseen influences that flowed from
him, would dissolve her soul to weakness. But
her courage failed at the idea of having to conspire
with him to shield Owen, of keeping up with him, for
Owen’s sake, a feint of union and felicity.
To live at Darrow’s side in seeming intimacy
and harmony for another twenty-four hours seemed harder
than to live without him for all the rest of her days.
Her strength failed her, and she threw herself down
and buried her sobs in the cushions where she had
so often hidden a face aglow with happiness.
“Anna——”
His voice was close to her. “Let me talk
to you quietly. It’s not worthy of either
of us to be afraid.”
Words of endearment would have offended
her; but her heart rose at the call to her courage.
“I’ve no defense to make,”
he went on. “The facts are miserable enough;
but at least I want you to see them as they are.
Above all, I want you to know the truth about Miss
Viner——”
The name sent the blood to Anna’s
forehead. She raised her head and faced him.
“Why should I know more of her than what she’s
told me? I never wish to hear her name again!”
“It’s because you feel
about her in that way that I ask you —in
the name of common charity—to let me give
you the facts as they are, and not as you’ve
probably imagined them.”
“I’ve told you I don’t
think uncharitably of her. I don’t want
to think of her at all!”
“That’s why I tell you you’re afraid.”
“Afraid?”
“Yes. You’ve always
said you wanted, above all, to look at life, at the
human problem, as it is, without fear and without
hypocrisy; and it’s not always a pleasant thing
to look at.” He broke off, and then began
again: “Don’t think this a plea for
myself! I don’t want to say a word to lessen
my offense. I don’t want to talk of myself
at all. Even if I did, I probably couldn’t
make you understand—I don’t, myself,
as I look back. Be just to me—it’s
your right; all I ask you is to be generous to Miss
Viner…”
She stood up trembling. “You’re
free to be as generous to her as you please!”
“Yes: you’ve made
it clear to me that I’m free. But there’s
nothing I can do for her that will help her half as
much as your understanding her would.”
“Nothing you can do for her?
You can marry her!”
His face hardened. “You
certainly couldn’t wish her a worse fate!”
“It must have been what she
expected…relied on…”He was silent, and she broke
out: “Or what is she? What are you?
It’s too horrible! On your way here…to
me...” She felt the tears in her
throat and stopped.
“That was it,” he said
bluntly. She stared at him.
“I was on my way to you—after
repeated delays and postponements of your own making.
At the very last you turned me back with a mere word—and
without explanation. I waited for a letter;
and none came. I’m not saying this to
justify myself. I’m simply trying to make
you understand. I felt hurt and bitter and bewildered.
I thought you meant to give me up. And suddenly,
in my way, I found some one to be sorry for, to be
of use to. That, I swear to you, was the way
it began. The rest was a moment’s folly…a
flash of madness…as such things are. We’ve
never seen each other since…”
Anna was looking at him coldly.
“You sufficiently describe her in saying that!”
“Yes, if you measure her by
conventional standards—which is what you
always declare you never do.”
“Conventional standards?
A girl who——” She was checked
by a sudden rush of almost physical repugnance.
Suddenly she broke out: “I always thought
her an adventuress!”
“Always?”
“I don’t mean always…but after you came…”
“She’s not an adventuress.”
“You mean that she professes
to act on the new theories? The stuff that awful
women rave about on platforms?”
“Oh, I don’t think she pretended to have
a theory——”
“She hadn’t even that excuse?”
“She had the excuse of her loneliness,
her unhappiness—of miseries and humiliations
that a woman like you can’t even guess.
She had nothing to look back to but indifference or
unkindness—nothing to look forward to but
anxiety. She saw I was sorry for her and it
touched her. She made too much of it—she
exaggerated it. I ought to have seen the danger,
but I didn’t. There’s no possible
excuse for what I did.”
Anna listened to him in speechless
misery. Every word he spoke threw back a disintegrating
light on their own past. He had come to her with
an open face and a clear conscience —come
to her from this! If his security was the security
of falsehood it was horrible; if it meant that he
had forgotten, it was worse. She would have
liked to stop her ears, to close her eyes, to shut
out every sight and sound and suggestion of a world
in which such things could be; and at the same time
she was tormented by the desire to know more, to understand
better, to feel herself less ignorant and inexpert
in matters which made so much of the stuff of human
experience. What did he mean by “a moment’s
folly, a flash of madness”? How did people
enter on such adventures, how pass out of them without
more visible traces of their havoc? Her imagination
recoiled from the vision of a sudden debasing familiarity:
it seemed to her that her thoughts would never again
be pure…
“I swear to you,” she
heard Darrow saying, “it was simply that, and
nothing more.”
She wondered at his composure, his
competence, at his knowing so exactly what to say.
No doubt men often had to make such explanations:
they had the formulas by heart…A leaden lassitude
descended on her. She passed from flame and
torment into a colourless cold world where everything
surrounding her seemed equally indifferent and remote.
For a moment she simply ceased to feel.
She became aware that Darrow was waiting
for her to speak, and she made an effort to represent
to herself the meaning of what he had just said; but
her mind was as blank as a blurred mirror. Finally
she brought out: “I don’t think I
understand what you’ve told me.”
“No; you don’t understand,”
he returned with sudden bitterness; and on his lips
the charge of incomprehension seemed an offense to
her.
“I don’t want to—about such
things!”
He answered almost harshly: “Don’t
be afraid…you never will…” and for an instant
they faced each other like enemies. Then the
tears swelled in her throat at his reproach.
“You mean I don’t feel things—I’m
too hard?”
“No: you’re too high…too
fine…such things are too far from you.”
He paused, as if conscious of the
futility of going on with whatever he had meant to
say, and again, for a short space, they confronted
each other, no longer as enemies—so it
seemed to her—but as beings of different
language who had forgotten the few words they had
learned of each other’s speech.
Darrow broke the silence. “It’s
best, on all accounts, that I should stay till tomorrow;
but I needn’t intrude on you; we needn’t
meet again alone. I only want to be sure I know
your wishes.” He spoke the short sentences
in a level voice, as though he were summing up the
results of a business conference.
Anna looked at him vaguely. “My wishes?”
“As to Owen——
At that she started. “They must never
meet again!”
“It’s not likely they
will. What I meant was, that it depends on you
to spare him…”
She answered steadily: “He
shall never know,” and after another interval
Darrow said: “This is good-bye, then.”
At the word she seemed to understand
for the first time whither the flying moments had
been leading them. Resentment and indignation
died down, and all her consciousness resolved itself
into the mere visual sense that he was there before
her, near enough for her to lift her hand and touch
him, and that in another instant the place where he
stood would be empty.
She felt a mortal weakness, a craven
impulse to cry out to him to stay, a longing to throw
herself into his arms, and take refuge there from
the unendurable anguish he had caused her. Then
the vision called up another thought: “I
shall never know what that girl has known…”
and the recoil of pride flung her back on the sharp
edges of her anguish.
“Good-bye,” she said,
in dread lest he should read her face; and she stood
motionless, her head high, while he walked to the
door and went out.