Darrow continued to stand by the door
after it had closed. Anna felt that he was looking
at her, and sat still, disdaining to seek refuge in
any evasive word or movement. For the last time
she wanted to let him take from her the fulness of
what the sight of her could give.
He crossed over and sat down on the
sofa. For a moment neither of them spoke; then
he said: “To-night, dearest, I must have
my answer.”
She straightened herself under the
shock of his seeming to take the very words from her
lips.
“To-night?” was all that she could falter.
“I must be off by the early
train. There won’t be more than a moment
in the morning.”
He had taken her hand, and she said
to herself that she must free it before she could
go on with what she had to say. Then she rejected
this concession to a weakness she was resolved to
defy. To the end she would leave her hand in
his hand, her eyes in his eyes: she would not,
in their final hour together, be afraid of any part
of her love for him.
“You’ll tell me to-night,
dear,” he insisted gently; and his insistence
gave her the strength to speak.
“There’s something I must
ask you,” she broke out, perceiving, as she
heard her words, that they were not in the least what
she had meant to say.
He sat still, waiting, and she pressed
on: “Do such things happen to men often?”
The quiet room seemed to resound with
the long reverberations of her question. She
looked away from him, and he released her and stood
up.
“I don’t know what happens
to other men. Such a thing never happened to
me…”
She turned her eyes back to his face.
She felt like a traveller on a giddy path between
a cliff and a precipice: there was nothing for
it now but to go on.
“Had it…had it begun…before
you met her in Paris?”
“No; a thousand times no!
I’ve told you the facts as they were.”
“All the facts?”
He turned abruptly. “What do you mean?”
Her throat was dry and the loud pulses
drummed in her temples.
“I mean—about her…Perhaps
you knew…knew things about her…beforehand.”
She stopped. The room had grown
profoundly still. A log dropped to the hearth
and broke there in a hissing shower.
Darrow spoke in a clear voice.
“I knew nothing, absolutely nothing,”
he said.
She had the answer to her inmost doubt—to
her last shameful unavowed hope. She sat powerless
under her woe.
He walked to the fireplace and pushed
back the broken log with his foot. A flame shot
out of it, and in the upward glare she saw his pale
face, stern with misery.
“Is that all?” he asked.
She made a slight sign with her head
and he came slowly back to her. “Then
is this to be good-bye?”
Again she signed a faint assent, and
he made no effort to touch her or draw nearer.
“You understand that I sha’n’t
come back?”
He was looking at her, and she tried
to return his look, but her eyes were blind with tears,
and in dread of his seeing them she got up and walked
away. He did not follow her, and she stood with
her back to him, staring at a bowl of carnations on
a little table strewn with books. Her tears
magnified everything she looked at, and the streaked
petals of the carnations, their fringed edges and
frail curled stamens, pressed upon her, huge and vivid.
She noticed among the books a volume of verse he
had sent her from England, and tried to remember whether
it was before or after…
She felt that he was waiting for her
to speak, and at last she turned to him. “I
shall see you to-morrow before you go…”
He made no answer.
She moved toward the door and he held
it open for her. She saw his hand on the door,
and his seal ring in its setting of twisted silver;
and the sense of the end of all things came to her.
They walked down the drawing-rooms,
between the shadowy reflections of screens and cabinets,
and mounted the stairs side by side. At the
end of the gallery, a lamp brought out turbid gleams
in the smoky battle-piece above it.
On the landing Darrow stopped; his
room was the nearest to the stairs. “Good
night,” he said, holding out his hand.
As Anna gave him hers the springs
of grief broke loose in her. She struggled with
her sobs, and subdued them; but her breath came unevenly,
and to hide her agitation she leaned on him and pressed
her face against his arm.
“Don’t—don’t,”
he whispered, soothing her.
Her troubled breathing sounded loudly
in the silence of the sleeping house. She pressed
her lips tight, but could not stop the nervous pulsations
in her throat, and he put an arm about her and, opening
his door, drew her across the threshold of his room.
The door shut behind her and she sat down on the
lounge at the foot of the bed. The pulsations
in her throat had ceased, but she knew they would begin
again if she tried to speak.
Darrow walked away and leaned against
the mantelpiece. The red-veiled lamp shone on
his books and papers, on the arm-chair by the fire,
and the scattered objects on his dressing-table.
A log glimmered on the hearth, and the room was warm
and faintly smoke-scented. It was the first time
she had ever been in a room he lived in, among his
personal possessions and the traces of his daily usage.
Every object about her seemed to contain a particle
of himself: the whole air breathed of him, steeping
her in the sense of his intimate presence.
Suddenly she thought: “This
is what Sophy Viner knew”...and with a torturing precision
she pictured them alone in such a scene…Had he taken
the girl to an hotel…where did people go in such
cases? Wherever they were, the silence of night
had been around them, and the things he used had been
strewn about the room…Anna, ashamed of dwelling
on the detested vision, stood up with a confused impulse
of flight; then a wave of contrary feeling arrested
her and she paused with lowered head.
Darrow had come forward as she rose,
and she perceived that he was waiting for her to bid
him good night. It was clear that no other possibility
had even brushed his mind; and the fact, for some
dim reason, humiliated her. “Why not…why
not?” something whispered in her, as though his
forbearance, his tacit recognition of her pride, were
a slight on other qualities she wanted him to feel
in her.
“In the morning, then?” she heard him
say.
“Yes, in the morning,” she repeated.
She continued to stand in the same
place, looking vaguely about the room. For once
before they parted—since part they must—she
longed to be to him all that Sophy Viner had been;
but she remained rooted to the floor, unable to find
a word or imagine a gesture that should express her
meaning. Exasperated by her helplessness, she
thought: “Don’t I feel things as
other women do?”
Her eye fell on a note-case she had
given him. It was worn at the corners with the
friction of his pocket and distended with thickly
packed papers. She wondered if he carried her
letters in it, and she put her hand out and touched
it.
All that he and she had ever felt
or seen, their close encounters of word and look,
and the closer contact of their silences, trembled
through her at the touch. She remembered things
he had said that had been like new skies above her
head: ways he had that seemed a part of the air
she breathed. The faint warmth of her girlish
love came back to her, gathering heat as it passed
through her thoughts; and her heart rocked like a
boat on the surge of its long long memories.
“It’s because I love him in too many ways,”
she thought; and slowly she turned to the door.
She was aware that Darrow was still
silently watching her, but he neither stirred nor
spoke till she had reached the threshold. Then
he met her there and caught her in his arms.
“Not to-night—don’t
tell me to-night!” he whispered; and she leaned
away from him, closing her eyes for an instant, and
then slowly opening them to the flood of light in his.