“Don’t go on with
this”
Of these things, as of others, she
had come to her solitude to think. She looked
out over the marshes scarcely seeing the wandering
or resting sheep, scarcely hearing the crying plover,
because so much seemed to confront her, and she must
look it all well in the face. She had fulfilled
the promise she had made to herself as a child.
She had come in search of Rosy, she had found her
as simple and loving of heart as she had ever been.
The most painful discoveries she had made had been
concealed from her mother until their aspect was modified.
Mrs. Vanderpoel need now feel no shock at the sight
of the restored Rosy. Lady Anstruthers had been
still young enough to respond both physically and
mentally to love, companionship, agreeable luxuries,
and stimulating interests. But for Nigel’s
antagonism there was now no reason why she should
not be taken home for a visit to her family, and her
long-yearned-for New York, no reason why her father
and mother should not come to Stornham, and thus establish
the customary social relations between their daughter’s
home and their own. That this seemed out of the
question was owing to the fact that at the outset of
his married life Sir Nigel had allowed himself to
commit errors in tactics. A perverse egotism,
not wholly normal in its rancour, had led him into
deeds which he had begun to suspect of having cost
him too much, even before Betty herself had pointed
out to him their unbusinesslike indiscretion.
He had done things he could not undo, and now, to
his mind, his only resource was to treat them boldly
as having been the proper results of decision founded
on sound judgment, which he had no desire to excuse.
A sufficiently arrogant loftiness of bearing would,
he hoped, carry him through the matter. This
Betty herself had guessed, but she had not realised
that this loftiness of attitude was in danger of losing
some of its effectiveness through his being increasingly
stung and spurred by circumstances and feelings connected
with herself, which were at once exasperating and
at times almost overpowering. When, in his mingled
dislike and admiration, he had begun to study his sister-in-law,
and the half-amused weaving of the small plots which
would make things sufficiently unpleasant to be used
as factors in her removal from the scene, if necessary,
he had not calculated, ever so remotely, on the chance
of that madness besetting him which usually besets
men only in their youth. He had imagined no other
results to himself than a subtly-exciting private
entertainment, such as would give spice to the dullness
of virtuous life in the country. But, despite
himself and his intentions, he had found the situation
alter. His first uncertainty of himself had arisen
at the Dunholm ball, when he had suddenly realised
that he was detesting men who, being young and free,
were at liberty to pay gallant court to the new beauty.
Perhaps the most disturbing thing
to him had been his consciousness of his sudden leap
of antagonism towards Mount Dunstan, who, despite his
obvious lack of chance, somehow especially roused in
him the rage of warring male instinct. There
had been admissions he had been forced, at length,
to make to himself. You could not, it appeared,
live in the house with a splendid creature like this
one—with her brilliant eyes, her beauty
of line and movement before you every hour, her bloom,
her proud fineness holding themselves wholly in their
own keeping—without there being the devil
to pay. Lately he had sometimes gone hot and cold
in realising that, having once told himself that he
might choose to decide to get rid of her, he now knew
that the mere thought of her sailing away of her own
choice was maddening to him. There was the
devil to pay! It sometimes brought back to him
that hideous shakiness of nerve which had been a feature
of his illness when he had been on the Riviera with
Teresita.
Of all this Betty only knew the outward
signs which, taken at their exterior significance,
were detestable enough, and drove her hard as she
mentally dwelt on them in connection with other things.
How easy, if she stood alone, to defy his evil insolence
to do its worst, and leaving the place at an hour’s
notice, to sail away to protection, or, if she chose
to remain in England, to surround herself with a bodyguard
of the people in whose eyes his disrepute relegated
a man such as Nigel Anstruthers to powerless nonentity.
Alone, she could have smiled and turned her back upon
him. But she was here to take care of Rosy.
She occupied a position something like that of a woman
who remains with a man and endures outrage because
she cannot leave her child. That thought, in itself,
brought Ughtred to her mind. There was Ughtred
to be considered as well as his mother. Ughtred’s
love for and faith in her were deep and passionate
things. He fed on her tenderness for him, and
had grown stronger because he spent hours of each
day talking, reading, and driving with her. The
simple truth was that neither she nor Rosalie could
desert Ughtred, and so long as Nigel managed cleverly
enough, the law would give the boy to his father.
“You are obliged to prove things,
you know, in a court of law,” he had said, as
if with casual amiability, on a certain occasion.
“Proving things is the devil. People lose
their tempers and rush into rows which end in lawsuits,
and then find they can prove nothing. If I were
a villain,” slightly showing his teeth in an
agreeable smile—“instead of a man
of blameless life, I should go in only for that branch
of my profession which could be exercised without
leaving stupid evidence behind.”
Since his return to Stornham the outward
decorum of his own conduct had entertained him and
he had kept it up with an increasing appreciation of
its usefulness in the present situation. Whatsoever
happened in the end, it was the part of discretion
to present to the rural world about him an appearance
of upright behaviour. He had even found it amusing
to go to church and also to occasionally make amiable
calls at the vicarage. It was not difficult,
at such times, to refer delicately to his regret that
domestic discomfort had led him into the error of remaining
much away from Stornham. He knew that he had
been even rather touching in his expression of interest
in the future of his son, and the necessity of the
boy’s being protected from uncontrolled hysteric
influences. And, in the years of Rosalie’s
unprotected wretchedness, he had taken excellent care
that no “stupid evidence” should be exposed
to view.
Of all this Betty was thinking and
summing up definitely, point after point. Where
was the wise and practical course of defence?
The most unthinkable thing was that one could find
one’s self in a position in which action seemed
inhibited. What could one do? To send for
her father would surely end the matter—but
at what cost to Rosy, to Ughtred, to Ffolliott, before
whom the fair path to dignified security had so newly
opened itself? What would be the effect of sudden
confusion, anguish, and public humiliation upon Rosalie’s
carefully rebuilt health and strength—upon
her mother’s new hope and happiness? At
moments it seemed as if almost all that had been done
might be undone. She was beset by such a moment
now, and felt for the time, at least, like a creature
tied hand and foot while in full strength.
Certainly she was not prepared for
the event which happened. Roland stiffened his
ears, and, beginning a rumbling growl, ended it suddenly,
realising it an unnecessary precaution.
He knew the man walking up the incline
of the mound from the side behind them. So did
Betty know him. It was Sir Nigel looking rather
glowering and pale and walking slowly. He had
discovered where she had meant to take refuge, and
had probably ridden to some point where he could leave
his horse and follow her at the expense of taking a
short cut which saved walking.
As he climbed the mound to join her,
Betty rose to her feet.
“My dear girl,” he said,
“don’t get up as if you meant to go away.
It has cost me some exertion to find you.”
“It will not cost you any exertion
to lose me,” was her light answer. “I
am going away.”
He had reached her, and stood still
before her with scarcely a yard’s distance between
them. He was slightly out of breath and even a
trifle livid. He leaned on his stick and his
look at her combined leaping bad temper with something
deeper.
“Look here!” he broke
out, “why do you make such a point of treating
me like the devil?”
Betty felt her heart give a hastened
beat, not of fear, but of repulsion. This was
the mood and manner which subjugated Rosalie.
He had so raised his voice that two men in the distance,
who might be either labourers or sportsmen, hearing
its high tone, glanced curiously towards them.
“Why do you ask me a question
which is totally absurd?” she said.
“It is not absurd,” he
answered. “I am speaking of facts, and I
intend to come to some understanding about them.”
For reply, after meeting his look
a few seconds, she simply turned her back and began
to walk away. He followed and overtook her.
“I shall go with you, and I
shall say what I want to say,” he persisted.
“If you hasten your pace I shall hasten mine.
I cannot exactly see you running away from me across
the marsh, screaming. You wouldn’t care
to be rescued by those men over there who are watching
us. I should explain myself to them in terms
neither you nor Rosalie would enjoy. There!
I knew Rosalie’s name would pull you up.
Good God! I wish I were a weak fool with a magnificent
creature protecting me at all risks.”
If she had not had blood and fire
in her veins, she might have found it easy to answer
calmly. But she had both, and both leaped and
beat furiously for a few seconds. It was only
human that it should be so. But she was more
than a passionate girl of high and trenchant spirit,
and she had learned, even in the days at the French
school, what he had never been able to learn in his
life—self-control. She held herself
in as she would have held in a horse of too great
fire and action. She was actually able to look—as
the first Reuben Vanderpoel would have looked—at
her capital of resource. But it meant taut holding
of the reins.
“Will you tell me,” she
said, stopping, “what it is you want?”
“I want to talk to you.
I want to tell you truths you would rather be told
here than on the high road, where people are passing—or
at Stornham, where the servants would overhear and
Rosalie be thrown into hysterics. You will not
run screaming across the marsh, because I should run
screaming after you, and we should both look silly.
Here is a rather scraggy tree. Will you sit on
the mound near it—for Rosalie’s sake?”
“I will not sit down,”
replied Betty, “but I will listen, because it
is not a bad idea that I should understand you.
But to begin with, I will tell you something.”
She stopped beneath the tree and stood with her back
against its trunk. “I pick up things by
noticing people closely, and I have realised that
all your life you have counted upon getting your own
way because you saw that people—especially
women—have a horror of public scenes, and
will submit to almost anything to avoid them.
That is true very often, but not always.”
Her eyes, which were well opened,
were quite the blue of steel, and rested directly
upon him. “I, for instance, would let you
make a scene with me anywhere you chose—in
Bond Street—in Piccadilly—on
the steps of Buckingham Palace, as I was getting out
of my carriage to attend a drawing-room—and
you would gain nothing you wanted by it—nothing.
You may place entire confidence in that statement.”
He stared back at her, momentarily
half-magnetised, and then broke forth into a harsh
half-laugh.
“You are so damned handsome
that nothing else matters. I’m hanged if
it does!” and the words were an exclamation.
He drew still nearer to her, speaking with a sort
of savagery. “Cannot you see that you could
do what you pleased with me? You are too magnificent
a thing for a man to withstand. I have lost my
head and gone to the devil through you. That
is what I came to say.”
In the few seconds of silence that
followed, his breath came quickly again and he was
even paler than before.
“You came to me to say that?” asked
Betty.
“Yes—to say it before you drove me
to other things.”
Her gaze was for a moment even slightly
wondering. He presented the curious picture of
a cynical man of the world, for the time being ruled
and impelled only by the most primitive instincts.
To a clear-headed modern young woman of the most powerful
class, he—her sister’s husband—was
making threatening love as if he were a savage chief
and she a savage beauty of his tribe. All that
concerned him was that he should speak and she should
hear—that he should show her he was the
stronger of the two.
“Are you quite mad?” she said.
“Not quite,” he answered;
“only three parts—but I am beyond
my own control. That is the best proof of what
has happened to me. You are an arrogant piece
and you would defy me if you stood alone, but you don’t,
and, by the Lord! I have reached a point where
I will make use of every lever I can lay my hand on—yourself,
Rosalie, Ughtred, Ffolliott—the whole lot
of you!”
The thing which was hardest upon her
was her knowledge of her own strength—of
what she might have allowed herself of flaming words
and instant action—but for the memory of
Rosy’s ghastly little face, as it had looked
when she cried out, “You must not think of me.
Betty, go home—go home!” She held
the white desperation of it before her mental vision
and answered him even with a certain interested deliberateness.
“Do you know,” she inquired,
“that you are talking to me as though you were
the villain in the melodrama?”
“There is an advantage in that,”
he answered, with an unholy smile. “If
you repeat what I say, people will only think that
you are indulging in hysterical exaggeration.
They don’t believe in the existence of melodrama
in these days.”
The cynical, absolute knowledge of
this revealed so much that nerve was required to face
it with steadiness.
“True,” she commented. “Now
I think I understand.”
“No, you don’t,”
he burst forth. “You have spent your life
standing on a golden pedestal, being kowtowed to,
and you imagine yourself immune from difficulties
because you think you can pay your way out of anything.
But you will find that you cannot pay your way out
of this—or rather you cannot pay Rosalie’s
way out of it.”
“I shall not try. Go on,”
said the girl. “What I do not understand,
you must explain to me. Don’t leave anything
unsaid.”
“Good God, what a woman you
are!” he cried out bitterly. He had never
seen such beauty in his life as he saw in her as she
stood with her straight young body flat against the
tree. It was not a matter of deep colour of eye,
or high spirit of profile—but of something
which burned him. Still as she was, she looked
like a flame. She made him feel old and body-worn,
and all the more senselessly furious.
“I believe you hate me,”
he raged. “And I may thank my wife for that.”
Then he lost himself entirely. “Why cannot
you behave well to me? If you will behave well
to me, Rosalie shall go her own way. If you even
looked at me as you look at other men—but
you do not. There is always something under your
lashes which watches me as if I were a wild beast
you were studying. Don’t fancy yourself
a dompteuse. I am not your man. I swear
to you that you don’t know what you are dealing
with. I swear to you that if you play this game
with me I will drag you two down if I drag myself
with you. I have nothing much to lose. You
and your sister have everything.”
“Go on,” Betty said briefly.
“Go on! Yes, I will go
on. Rosalie and Ffolliott I hold in the hollow
of my hand. As for you—do you know
that people are beginning to discuss you? Gossip
is easily stirred in the country, where people are
so bored that they chatter in self-defence. I
have been considered a bad lot. I have become
curiously attached to my sister-in-law. I am seen
hanging about her, hanging over her as we ride or
walk alone together. An American young woman
is not like an English girl—she is used
to seeing the marriage ceremony juggled with.
There’s a trifle of prejudice against such young
women when they are too rich and too handsome.
Don’t look at me like that!” he burst
forth, with maddened sharpness, “I won’t
have it!”
The girl was regarding him with the
expression he most resented—the reflection
of a normal person watching an abnormal one, and studying
his abnormality.
“Do you know that you are raving?”
she said, with quiet curiosity—“raving?”
Suddenly he sat down on the low mound
near him, and as he touched his forehead with his
handkerchief, she saw that his hand actually shook.
“Yes,” he answered, panting,
“but ’ware my ravings! They mean what
they say.”
“You do yourself an injury when
you give way to them”—steadily, even
with a touch of slow significance—“a
physical injury. I have noticed that more than
once.”
He sprang to his feet again.
Every drop of blood left his face. For a second
he looked as if he would strike her. His arm actually
flung itself out—and fell.
“You devil!” he gasped.
“You count on that? You she-devil!”
She left her tree and stood before him.
“Listen to me,” she said.
“You intimate that you have been laying melodramatic
plots against me which will injure my good name.
That is rubbish. Let us leave it at that.
You threaten that you will break Rosy’s heart
and take her child from her, you say also that you
will wound and hurt my mother to her death and do
your worst to ruin an honest man——”
“And, by God, I will!”
he raged. “And you cannot stop me, if——”
“I do not know whether I can
stop you or not, though you may be sure I will try,”
she interrupted him, “but that is not what I
was going to say.” She drew a step nearer,
and there was something in the intensity of her look
which fascinated and held him for a moment. She
was curiously grave. “Nigel, I believe
in certain things you do not believe in. I believe
black thoughts breed black ills to those who think
them. It is not a new idea. There is an
old Oriental proverb which says, ‘Curses, like
chickens, come home to roost.’ I believe
also that the worst—the very worst cannot
be done to those who think steadily—steadily—only
of the best. To you that is merely superstition
to be laughed at. That is a matter of opinion.
But—don’t go on with this thing—don’t
go on with it. Stop and think
it over.”
He stared at her furiously—tried
to laugh outright, and failed because the look in
her eyes was so odd in its strength and stillness.
“You think you can lay some
weird spell upon me,” he jeered sardonically.
“No, I don’t,” she
answered. “I could not if I would.
It is no affair of mine. It is your affair only—and
there is nothing weird about it. Don’t
go on, I tell you. Think better of it.”
She turned about without further speech,
and walked away from him with light swiftness over
the marsh. Oddly enough, he did not even attempt
to follow her. He felt a little weak—perhaps
because a certain thing she had said had brought back
to him a familiar touch of the horrors. She had
the eyes of a falcon under the odd, soft shade of the
extraordinary lashes. She had seen what he thought
no one but himself had realised. Having watched
her retreating figure for a few seconds, he sat down—as
suddenly as before—on the mound near the
tree.
“Oh, damn her!” he said,
his damp forehead on his hands. “Damn the
whole universe!”
. . . . .
When Betty and Roland reached Stornham,
the wicker-work pony chaise from the vicarage stood
before the stone entrance steps. The drawing-room
door was open, and Mrs. Brent was standing near it
saying some last words to Lady Anstruthers before
leaving the house, after a visit evidently made with
an object. This Betty gathered from the solemnity
of her manner.
“Betty,” said Lady Anstruthers,
catching sight of her, “do come in for a moment.”
When Betty entered, both her sister
and Mrs. Brent looked at her questioningly.
“You look a little pale and
tired, Miss Vanderpoel,” Mrs. Brent said, rather
as if in haste to be the first to speak. “I
hope you are not at all unwell. We need all our
strength just now. I have brought the most painful
news. Malignant typhoid fever has broken out among
the hop pickers on the Mount Dunstan estate.
Some poor creature was evidently sickening for it
when he came from London. Three people died last
night.”