THE MOMENT
In the unnatural unbearableness of
her anguish, she lost sight of objects as she passed
them, she lost all memory of what she did. She
did not know how long she had been out, or how far
she had ridden. When the thought of time or distance
vaguely flitted across her mind, it seemed that she
had been riding for hours, and might have crossed one
county and entered another. She had long left
familiar places behind. Riding through and inclosed
by the mist, she, herself, might have been a wandering
ghost, lost in unknown places. Where was he now—where
was he now?
Afterwards she could not tell how
or when it was that she found herself becoming conscious
of the evidences that her horse had been ridden too
long and hard, and that he was worn out with fatigue.
She did not know that she had ridden round and round
over the marshes, and had passed several times through
the same lanes. Childe Harold, the sure of foot,
actually stumbled, out of sheer weariness of limb.
Perhaps it was this which brought her back to earth,
and led her to look around her with eyes which saw
material objects with comprehension. She had reached
the lonely places, indeed and the evening was drawing
on. She was at the edge of the marsh, and the
land about her was strange to her and desolate.
At the side of a steep lane, overgrown with grass,
and seeming a mere cart-path, stood a deserted-looking,
black and white, timbered cottage, which was half
a ruin. Close to it was a dripping spinney, its
trees forming a darkling background to the tumble-down
house, whose thatch was rotting into holes, and its
walls sagging forward perilously. The bit of
garden about it was neglected and untidy, here and
there windows were broken, and stuffed with pieces
of ragged garments. Altogether a sinister and
repellent place enough.
She looked at it with heavy eyes.
(Where was he now—where was he now?—This
repeating itself in the far chambers of her brain.)
Her sight seemed dimmed, not only by the mist, but
by a sinking faintness which possessed her. She
did not remember how little food she had eaten during
more than twenty-four hours. Her habit was heavy
with moisture, and clung to her body; she was conscious
of a hot tremor passing over her, and saw that her
hands shook as they held the bridle on which they had
lost their grip. She had never fainted in her
life, and she was not going to faint now—women
did not faint in these days—but she must
reach the cottage and dismount, to rest under shelter
for a short time. No smoke was rising from the
chimney, but surely someone was living in the place,
and could tell her where she was, and give her at least
water for herself and her horse. Poor beast!
how wickedly she must have been riding him, in her
utter absorption in her thoughts. He was wet,
not alone with rain, but with sweat. He snorted
out hot, smoking breaths.
She spoke to him, and he moved forward
at her command. He was trembling too. Not
more than two hundred yards, and she turned him into
the lane. But it was wet and slippery, and strewn
with stones. His trembling and her uncertain
hold on the bridle combined to produce disaster.
He set his foot upon a stone which slid beneath it,
he stumbled, and she could not help him to recover,
so he fell, and only by Heaven’s mercy not upon
her, with his crushing, big-boned weight, and she was
able to drag herself free of him before he began to
kick, in his humiliated efforts to rise. But
he could not rise, because he was hurt—and
when she, herself, got up, she staggered, and caught
at the broken gate, because in her wrenching leap
for safety she had twisted her ankle, and for a moment
was in cruel pain.
When she recovered from her shock
sufficiently to be able to look at the cottage, she
saw that it was more of a ruin than it had seemed,
even at a short distance. Its door hung open
on broken hinges, no smoke rose from the chimney,
because there was no one within its walls to light
a fire. It was quite empty. Everything about
the place lay in dead and utter silence. In a
normal mood she would have liked the mystery of the
situation, and would have set about planning her way
out of her difficulty. But now her mind made
no effort, because normal interest in things had fallen
away from her. She might be twenty miles from
Stornham, but the possible fact did not, at the moment,
seem to concern her. (Where is he now—where
is he now?) Childe Harold was trying to rise, despite
his hurt, and his evident determination touched her.
He was too proud to lie in the mire. She limped
to him, and tried to steady him by his bridle.
He was not badly injured, though plainly in pain.
“Poor boy, it was my fault,”
she said to him as he at last struggled to his feet.
“I did not know I was doing it. Poor boy!”
He turned a velvet dark eye upon her,
and nosed her forgivingly with a warm velvet muzzle,
but it was plain that, for the time, he was done for.
They both moved haltingly to the broken gate, and Betty
fastened him to a thorn tree near it, where he stood
on three feet, his fine head drooping.
She pushed the gate open, and went
into the house through the door which hung on its
hinges. Once inside, she stood still and looked
about her. If there was silence and desolateness
outside, there was within the deserted place a stillness
like the unresponse of death. It had been long
since anyone had lived in the cottage, but tramps or
gipsies had at times passed through it. Dead,
blackened embers lay on the hearth, a bundle of dried
grass which had been slept on was piled in the corner,
an empty nail keg and a wooden box had been drawn before
the big chimney place for some wanderer to sit on
when the black embers had been hot and red.
Betty gave one glance around her and
sat down upon the box standing on the bare hearth,
her head sinking forward, her hands falling clasped
between her knees, her eyes on the brick floor.
“Where is he now?” broke
from her in a loud whisper, whose sound was mechanical
and hollow. “Where is he now?”
And she sat there without moving,
while the grey mist from the marshes crept close about
the door and through it and stole about her feet.
So she sat long—long—in a heavy,
far-off dream.
Along the road a man was riding with
a lowering, fretted face. He had come across
country on horseback, because to travel by train meant
wearisome stops and changes and endlessly slow journeying,
annoying beyond endurance to those who have not patience
to spare. His ride would have been pleasant enough
but for the slow mist-like rain. Also he had
taken a wrong turning, because he did not know the
roads he travelled. The last signpost he had
passed, however, had given him his cue again, and
he began to feel something of security. Confound
the rain! The best road was slippery with it,
and the haze of it made a man’s mind feel befogged
and lowered his spirits horribly—discouraged
him—would worry him into an ill humour
even if he had reason to be in a good one. As
for him, he had no reason for cheerfulness—he
never had for the matter of that, and just now——!
What was the matter with his horse? He was lifting
his head and sniffing the damp air restlessly, as if
he scented or saw something. Beasts often seemed
to have a sort of second sight—horses particularly.
What ailed him that he should prick
up his ears and snort after his sniffing the mist!
Did he hear anything? Yes, he did, it seemed.
He gave forth suddenly a loud shrill whinny, turning
his head towards a rough lane they were approaching,
and immediately from the vicinity of a deserted-looking
cottage behind a hedge came a sharp but mournful-sounding
neigh in answer.
“What horse is that?”
said Nigel Anstruthers, drawing in at the entrance
to the lane and looking down it. “There
is a fine brute with a side-saddle on,” he added
sharply. “He is waiting for someone.
What is a woman doing there at this time? Is
it a rendezvous? A good place——”
He broke off short and rode forward.
“I’m hanged if it is not Childe Harold,”
he broke out, and he had no sooner assured himself
of the fact than he threw himself from his saddle,
tethered his horse and strode up the path to the broken-hinged
door.
He stood on the threshold and stared.
What a hole it was—what a hole! And
there she sat—alone—eighteen
or twenty miles from home—on a turned-up
box near the black embers, her hands clasped loosely
between her knees, her face rather awful, her eyes
staring at the floor, as if she did not see it.
“Where is he now?” he
heard her whisper to herself with soft weirdness.
“Where is he now?”
Sir Nigel stepped into the place and
stood before her. He had smiled with a wry unpleasantness
when he had heard her evidently unconscious words.
“My good girl,” he said,
“I am sure I do not know where he is—but
it is very evident that he ought to be here, since
you have amiably put yourself to such trouble.
It is fortunate for you perhaps that I am here before
him. What does this mean?” the question
breaking from him with savage authority.
He had dragged her back to earth.
She sat upright and recognised him with a hideous
sense of shock, but he did not give her time to speak.
His instinct of male fury leaped within him.
“You!” he cried out.
“It takes a woman like you to come and hide herself
in a place of this sort, like a trolloping gipsy wench!
It takes a New York millionairess or a Roman empress
or one of Charles the Second’s duchesses to
plunge as deep as this. You, with your golden
pedestal—you, with your ostentatious airs
and graces—you, with your condescending
to give a man a chance to repent his sins and turn
over a new leaf! Damn it,” rising to a
sort of frenzy, “what are you doing waiting
in a hole like this—in this weather—at
this hour—you—you!”
The fool’s flame leaped high
enough to make him start forward, as if to seize her
by the shoulder and shake her.
But she rose and stepped back to lean
against the side of the chimney—to brace
herself against it, so that she could stand in her
lame foot’s despite. Every drop of blood
had been swept from her face, and her eyes looked
immense. His coming was a good thing for her,
though she did not know it. It brought her back
from unearthly places. All her child hatred woke
and blazed in her. Never had she hated a thing
so, and it set her slow, cold blood running like something
molten.
“Hold your tongue!” she
said in a clear, awful young voice of warning.
“And take care not to touch me. If you do—I
have my whip here—I shall lash you across
your mouth!”
He broke into ribald laughter.
A certain sudden thought which had cut into him like
a knife thrust into flesh drove him on.
“Do!” he cried. “I
should like to carry your mark back to Stornham—and
tell people why it was given. I know who you are
here for. Only such fellows ask such things of
women. But he was determined to be safe, if you
hid in a ditch. You are here for Mount Dunstan—and
he has failed you!”
But she only stood and stared at him,
holding her whip behind her, knowing that at any moment
he might snatch it from her hand. And she knew
how poor a weapon it was. To strike out with it
would only infuriate him and make him a wild beast.
And it was becoming an agony to stand upon her foot.
And even if it had not been so—if she had
been strong enough to make a leap and dash past him,
her horse stood outside disabled.
Nigel Anstruthers’ eyes ran
over her from head to foot, down the side of her mud-stained
habit, while a curious light dawned in them.
“You have had a fall from your
horse,” he exclaimed. “You are lame!”
Then quickly, “That was why Childe Harold was
trembling and standing on three feet! By Jove!”
Then he sat down on the nail keg and
began to laugh. He laughed for a full minute,
but she saw he did not take his eyes from her.
“You are in as unpleasant a
situation as a young woman can well be,” he
said, when he stopped. “You came to a dirty
hole to be alone with a man who felt it safest not
to keep his appointment. Your horse stumbled and
disabled himself and you. You are twenty miles
from home in a deserted cottage in a lane no one passes
down even in good weather. You are frightened
to death and you have given me even a better story
to play with than your sister gave me. By Jove!”
His face was an unholy thing to look
upon. The situation and her powerlessness were
exciting him.
“No,” she answered, keeping
her eyes on his, as she might have kept them on some
wild animal’s, “I am not frightened to
death.”
His ugly dark flush rose.
“Well, if you are not,”
he said, “don’t tell me so. That kind
of defiance is not your best line just now. You
have been disdaining me from magnificent New York
heights for some time. Do you think that I am
not enjoying this?”
“I cannot imagine anyone else
who would enjoy it so much.” And she knew
the answer was daring, but would have made it if he
had held a knife’s point at her throat.
He got up, and walking to the door
drew it back on its crazy hinges and managed to shut
it close. There was a big wooden bolt inside and
he forced it into its socket.
“Presently I shall go and put
the horses into the cowshed,” he said.
“If I leave them standing outside they will attract
attention. I do not intend to be disturbed by
any gipsy tramp who wants shelter. I have never
had you quite to myself before.”
He sat down again and nursed his knee gracefully.
“And I have never seen you look
as attractive,” biting his under lip in cynical
enjoyment. “To-day’s adventure has
roused your emotions and actually beautified you—which
was not necessary. I daresay you have been furious
and have cried. Your eyes do not look like mere
eyes, but like splendid blue pools of tears.
Perhaps I shall make you cry sometime, my dear
Betty.”
“No, you will not.”
“Don’t tempt me.
Women always cry when men annoy them. They rage,
but they cry as well.”
“I shall not.”
“It’s true that most women
would have begun to cry before this. That is
what stimulates me. You will swagger to the end.
You put the devil into me. Half an hour ago I
was jogging along the road, languid and bored to extinction.
And now——” He laughed outright
in actual exultation. “By Jove!”
he cried out. “Things like this don’t
happen to a man in these dull days! There’s
no such luck going about. We’ve gone back
five hundred years, and we’ve taken New York
with us.” His laugh shut off in the middle,
and he got up to thrust his heavy, congested face close
to hers. “Here you are, as safe as if you
were in a feudal castle, and here is your ancient
enemy given his chance—given his chance.
Do you think, by the Lord, he is going to give it
up? No. To quote your own words, ‘you
may place entire confidence in that.’”
Exaggerated as it all was, somehow
the melodrama dropped away from it and left bare,
simple, hideous fact for her to confront. The
evil in him had risen rampant and made him lose his
head. He might see his senseless folly to-morrow
and know he must pay for it, but he would not see
it to-day. The place was not a feudal castle,
but what he said was insurmountable truth. A
ruined cottage on the edge of miles of marsh land,
a seldom-trodden road, and night upon them! A
wind was rising on the marshes now, and making low,
steady moan. Horrible things had happened to
women before, one heard of them with shudders when
they were recorded in the newspapers. Only two
days ago she had remembered that sometimes there seemed
blunderings in the great Scheme of things. Was
all this real, or was she dreaming that she stood here
at bay, her back against the chimney-wall, and this
degenerate exulting over her, while Rosy was waiting
for her at Stornham—and at this very hour
her father was planning his journey across the Atlantic?
“Why did you not behave yourself?”
demanded Nigel Anstruthers, shaking her by the shoulder.
“Why did you not realise that I should get even
with you one day, as sure as you were woman and I was
man?”
She did not shrink back, though the
pupils of her eyes dilated. Was it the wildest
thing in the world which happened to her—or
was it not? Without warning—the sudden
rush of a thought, immense and strange, swept over
her body and soul and possessed her—so possessed
her that it changed her pallor to white flame.
It was actually Anstruthers who shrank back a shade
because, for the moment, she looked so near unearthly.
“I am not afraid of you,”
she said, in a clear, unshaken voice. “I
am not afraid. Something is near me which will
stand between us—something which died
to-day.”
He almost gasped before the strangeness
of it, but caught back his breath and recovered himself.
“Died to-day! That’s
recent enough,” he jeered. “Let us
hear about it. Who was it?”
“It was Mount Dunstan,”
she flung at him. “The church-bells were
tolling for him when I rode away. I could not
stay to hear them. It killed me—I
loved him. You were right when you said it.
I loved him, though he never knew. I shall always
love him—though he never knew. He knows
now. Those who died cannot go away when that
is holding them. They must stay. Because
I loved him, he may be in this place. I call on
him——” raising her clear voice.
“I call on him to stand between us.”
He backed away from her, staring an
evil, enraptured stare.
“What! There is that much
temperament in you?” he said. “That
was what I half-suspected when I saw you first.
But you have hidden it well. Now it bursts forth
in spite of you. Good Lord! What luck—what
luck!”
He moved to the door and opened it.
“I am a very modern man, and
I enjoy this to the utmost,” he said. “What
I like best is the melodrama of it—in connection
with Fifth Avenue. I am perfectly aware that
you will not discuss this incident in the future.
You are a clever enough young woman to know that it
will be more to your interest than to mine that it
shall be kept exceedingly quiet.”
The white fire had not died out of
her and she stood straight.
“What I have called on will
be near me, and will stand between us,” she
said.
Old though it was, the door was massive
and heavy to lift. To open it cost him some muscular
effort.
“I am going to the horses now,”
he explained before he dragged it back into its frame
and shut her in. “It is safe enough to leave
you here. You will stay where you are.”
He felt himself secure in leaving
her because he believed she could not move, and because
his arrogance made it impossible for him to count
on strength and endurance greater than his own.
Of endurance he knew nothing and in his keen and cynical
exultance his devil made a fool of him.
As she heard him walk down the path
to the gate, Betty stood amazed at his lack of comprehension
of her.
“He thinks I will stay here.
He absolutely thinks I will wait until he comes back,”
she whispered to the emptiness of the bare room.
Before he had arrived she had loosened
her boot, and now she stooped and touched her foot.
“If I were safe at home I should
think I could not walk, but I can walk now—I
can—I can—because I will bear
the pain.”
In such cottages there is always a
door opening outside from the little bricked kitchen,
where the copper stands. She would reach that,
and, passing through, would close it behind her.
After that something would tell her what to do—something
would lead her.
She put her lame foot upon the floor,
and rested some of her weight upon it—not
all. A jagged pain shot up from it through her
whole side it seemed, and, for an instant, she swayed
and ground her teeth.
“That is because it is the first
step,” she said. “But if I am to be
killed, I will die in the open—I will die
in the open.”
The second and third steps brought
cold sweat out upon her, but she told herself that
the fourth was not quite so unbearable, and she stiffened
her whole body, and muttered some words while she took
a fifth and sixth which carried her into the tiny
back kitchen.
“Father,” she said.
“Father, think of me now—think of
me! Rosy, love me—love me and pray
that I may come home. You—you who have
died, stand very near!”
If her father ever held her safe in
his arms again—if she ever awoke from this
nightmare, it would be a thing never to let one’s
mind hark back to again—to shut out of
memory with iron doors.
The pain had shot up and down, and
her forehead was wet by the time she had reached the
small back door. Was it locked or bolted—was
it? She put her hand gently upon the latch and
lifted it without making any sound. Thank God
Almighty, it was neither bolted nor locked, the latch
lifted, the door opened, and she slid through it into
the shadow of the grey which was already almost the
darkness of night. Thank God for that, too.
She flattened herself against the
outside wall and listened. He was having difficulty
in managing Childe Harold, who snorted and pulled
back, offended and made rebellious by his savagely
impatient hand. Good Childe Harold, good boy!
She could see the massed outline of the trees of the
spinney. If she could bear this long enough to
get there—even if she crawled part of the
way. Then it darted through her mind that he
would guess that she would be sure to make for its
cover, and that he would go there first to search.
“Father, think for me—you
were so quick to think!” her brain cried out
for her, as if she was speaking to one who could physically
hear.
She almost feared she had spoken aloud,
and the thought which flashed upon her like lightning
seemed to be an answer given. He would be convinced
that she would at once try to get away from the house.
If she kept near it—somewhere—somewhere
quite close, and let him search the spinney, she might
get away to its cover after he gave up the search and
came back. The jagged pain had settled in a sort
of impossible anguish, and once or twice she felt
sick. But she would die in the open—and
she knew Rosalie was frightened by her absence, and
was praying for her. Prayers counted and, yet,
they had all prayed yesterday.
“If I were not very strong,
I should faint,” she thought. “But
I have been strong all my life. That great French
doctor—I have forgotten his name—said
that I had the physique to endure anything.”
She said these things that she might
gain steadiness and convince herself that she was
not merely living through a nightmare. Twice she
moved her foot suddenly because she found herself in
a momentary respite from pain, beginning to believe
that the thing was a nightmare—that nothing
mattered—because she would wake up presently—so
she need not try to hide.
“But in a nightmare one has
no pain. It is real and I must go somewhere,”
she said, after the foot was moved. Where could
she go? She had not looked at the place as she
rode up. She had only half-consciously seen the
spinney. Nigel was swearing at the horses.
Having got Childe Harold into the shed, there seemed
to be nothing to fasten his bridle to. And he
had yet to bring his own horse in and secure him.
She must get away somewhere before the delay was over.
How dark it was growing! Thank
God for that again! What was the rather high,
dark object she could trace in the dimness near the
hedge? It was sharply pointed, is if it were
a narrow tent. Her heart began to beat like a
drum as she recalled something. It was the shape
of the sort of wigwam structure made of hop poles,
after they were taken from the fields. If there
was space between it and the hedge—even
a narrow space—and she could crouch there?
Nigel was furious because Childe Harold was backing,
plunging, and snorting dangerously. She halted
forward, shutting her teeth in her terrible pain.
She could scarcely see, and did not recognise that
near the wigwam was a pile of hop poles laid on top
of each other horizontally. It was not quite as
high as the hedge whose dark background prevented
its being seen. Only a few steps more. No,
she was awake—in a nightmare one felt only
terror, not pain.
“You, who died to-day,”
she murmured.
She saw the horizontal poles too late.
One of them had rolled from its place and lay on the
ground, and she trod on it, was thrown forward against
the heap, and, in her blind effort to recover herself,
slipped and fell into a narrow, grassed hollow behind
it, clutching at the hedge. The great French
doctor had not been quite right. For the first
time in her life she felt herself sinking into bottomless
darkness—which was what happened to people
when they fainted.
When she opened her eyes she could
see nothing, because on one side of her rose the low
mass of the hop poles, and on the other was the long-untrimmed
hedge, which had thrown out a thick, sheltering growth
and curved above her like a penthouse. Was she
awakening, after all? No, because the pain was
awakening with her, and she could hear, what seemed
at first to be quite loud sounds. She could not
have been unconscious long, for she almost immediately
recognised that they were the echo of a man’s
hurried footsteps upon the bare wooden stairway, leading
to the bedrooms in the empty house. Having secured
the horses, Nigel had returned to the cottage, and,
finding her gone had rushed to the upper floor in
search of her. He was calling her name angrily,
his voice resounding in the emptiness of the rooms.
“Betty; don’t play the fool with me!”
She cautiously drew herself further
under cover, making sure that no end of her habit
remained in sight. The overgrowth of the hedge
was her salvation. If she had seen the spot by
daylight, she would not have thought it a possible
place of concealment.
Once she had read an account of a
woman’s frantic flight from a murderer who was
hunting her to her death, while she slipped from one
poor hiding place to another, sometimes crouching
behind walls or bushes, sometimes lying flat in long
grass, once wading waist-deep through a stream, and
at last finding a miserable little fastness, where
she hid shivering for hours, until her enemy gave
up his search. One never felt the reality of
such histories, but there was actually a sort of parallel
in this. Mad and crude things were let loose,
and the world of ordinary life seemed thousands of
miles away.
She held her breath, for he was leaving
the house by the front door. She heard his footsteps
on the bricked path, and then in the lane. He
went to the road, and the sound of his feet died away
for a few moments. Then she heard them returning—he
was back in the lane—on the brick path,
and stood listening or, perhaps, reflecting. He
muttered something exclamatory, and she heard a match
struck, and shortly afterwards he moved across the
garden patch towards the little spinney. He had
thought of it, as she had believed he would.
He would not think of this place, and in the end he
might get tired or awakened to a sense of his lurid
folly, and realise that it would be safer for him to
go back to Stornham with some clever lie, trusting
to his belief that there existed no girl but would
shrink from telling such a story in connection with
a man who would brazenly deny it with contemptuous
dramatic detail. If he would but decide on this,
she would be safe—and it would be so like
him that she dared to hope. But, if he did not,
she would lie close, even if she must wait until morning,
when some labourer’s cart would surely pass,
and she would hear it jolting, and drag herself out,
and call aloud in such a way that no man could be
deaf. There was more room under her hedge than
she had thought, and she found that she could sit up,
by clasping her knees and bending her head, while
she listened to every sound, even to the rustle of
the grass in the wind sweeping across the marsh.
She moved very gradually and slowly,
and had just settled into utter motionlessness when
she realised that he was coming back through the garden—the
straggling currant and gooseberry bushes were being
trampled through.
“Betty, go home,” Rosalie
had pleaded. “Go home—go home.”
And she had refused, because she could not desert
her.
She held her breath and pressed her
hand against her side, because her heart beat, as
it seemed to her, with an actual sound. He moved
with unsteady steps from one point to another, more
than once he stumbled, and his angry oath reached
her; at last he was so near her hiding place that
his short hard breathing was a distinct sound.
A moment later he spoke, raising his voice, which
fact brought to her a rush of relief, through its
signifying that he had not even guessed her nearness.
“My dear Betty,” he said,
“you have the pluck of the devil, but circumstances
are too much for you. You are not on the road,
and I have been through the spinney. Mere logic
convinces me that you cannot be far away. You
may as well give the thing up. It will be better
for you.”
“You who died to-day—do
not leave me,” was Betty’s inward cry,
and she dropped her face on her knees.
“I am not a pleasant-tempered
fellow, as you know, and I am losing my hold on myself.
The wind is blowing the mist away, and there will be
a moon. I shall find you, my good girl, in half
an hour’s time—and then we shall
be jolly well even.”
She had not dropped her whip, and
she held it tight. If, when the moonlight revealed
the pile of hop poles to him, he suspected and sprang
at them to tear them away, she would be given strength
to make one spring, even in her agony, and she would
strike at his eyes—awfully, without one
touch of compunction—she would strike—strike.
There was a brief silence, and then
a match was struck again, and almost immediately she
inhaled the fragrance of an excellent cigar.
“I am going to have a comfortable
smoke and stroll about—always within sight
and hearing. I daresay you are watching me, and
wondering what will happen when I discover you, I
can tell you what will happen. You are not a
hysterical girl, but you will go into hysterics—and
no one will hear you.”
(All the power of her—body
and soul—in one leap on him and then a lash
that would cut to the bone. And it was not a nightmare—and
Rosy was at Stornham, and her father looking over
steamer lists and choosing his staterooms.)
He walked about slowly, the scent
of his cigar floating behind him. She noticed,
as she had done more than once before, that he seemed
to slightly drag one foot, and she wondered why.
The wind was blowing the mist away, and there was
a faint growing of light. The moon was not full,
but young, and yet it would make a difference.
But the upper part of the hedge grew thick and close
to the heap of wood, and, but for her fall, she would
never have dreamed of the refuge.
She could only guess at his movements,
but his footsteps gave some clue. He was examining
the ground in as far as the darkness would allow.
He went into the shed and round about it, he opened
the door of the tiny coal lodge, and looked again
into the small back kitchen. He came near—nearer—so
near once that, bending sidewise, she could have put
out a hand and touched him. He stood quite still,
then made a step or so away, stood still again, and
burst into a laugh once more.
“Oh, you are here, are you?”
he said. “You are a fine big girl to be
able to crowd yourself into a place like that!”
Hot and cold dew stood out on her
forehead and made her hair damp as she held her whip
hard.
“Come out, my dear!” alluringly.
“It is not too soon. Or do you prefer that
I should assist you?”
Her heart stood quite still—quite.
He was standing by the wigwam of hop poles and thought
she had hidden herself inside it. Her place under
the hedge he had not even glanced at.
She knew he bent down and thrust his
arm into the wigwam, for his fury at the result expressed
itself plainly enough. That he had made a fool
of himself was worse to him than all else. He
actually wheeled about and strode away to the house.
Because minutes seemed hours, she
thought he was gone long, but he was not away for
twenty minutes. He had, in fact, gone into the
bare front room again, and sitting upon the box near
the hearth, let his head drop in his hands and remained
in this position thinking. In the end he got
up and went out to the shed where he had left the horses.
Betty was feeling that before long
she might find herself making that strange swoop into
the darkness of space again, and that it did not matter
much, as one apparently lay quite still when one was
unconscious—when she heard that one horse
was being led out into the lane. What did that
mean? Had he got tired of the chase—as
the other man did—and was he going away
because discomfort and fatigue had cooled and disgusted
him—perhaps even made him feel that he was
playing the part of a sensational idiot who was laying
himself open to derision? That would be like
him, too.
Presently she heard his footsteps
once more, but he did not come as near her as before—in
fact, he stood at some yards’ distance when he
stopped and spoke—in quite a new manner.
“Betty,” his tone was
even cynically cool, “I shall stalk you no more.
The chase is at an end. I think I have taken all
out of you I intended to. Perhaps it was a bad
joke and was carried too far. I wanted to prove
to you that there were circumstances which might be
too much even for a young woman from New York.
I have done it. Do you suppose I am such a fool
as to bring myself within reach of the law? I
am going away and will send assistance to you from
the next house I pass. I have left some matches
and a few broken sticks on the hearth in the cottage.
Be a sensible girl. Limp in there and build yourself
a fire as soon as you hear me gallop away. You
must be chilled through. Now I am going.”
He tramped across the bit of garden,
down the brick path, mounted his horse and put it
to a gallop at once. Clack, clack, clack—clacking
fainter and fainter into the distance—and
he was gone.
When she realised that the thing was
true, the effect upon her of her sense of relief was
that the growing likelihood of a second swoop into
darkness died away, but one curious sob lifted her
chest as she leaned back against the rough growth
behind her. As she changed her position for a
better one she felt the jagged pain again and knew
that in the tenseness of her terror she had actually
for some time felt next to nothing of her hurt.
She had not even been cold, for the hedge behind and
over her and the barricade before had protected her
from both wind and rain. The grass beneath her
was not damp for the same reason. The weary thought
rose in her mind that she might even lie down and sleep.
But she pulled herself together and told herself that
this was like the temptation of believing in the nightmare.
He was gone, and she had a respite—but
was it to be anything more? She did not make any
attempt to leave her place of concealment, remembering
the strange things she had learned in watching him,
and the strange terror in which Rosalie lived.
“One never knows what he will
do next; I will not stir,” she said through
her teeth. “No, I will not stir from here.”
And she did not, but sat still, while
the pain came back to her body and the anguish to
her heart—and sometimes such heaviness that
her head dropped forward upon her knees again, and
she fell into a stupefied half-doze.
From one such doze she awakened with
a start, hearing a slight click of the gate.
After it, there were several seconds of dead silence.
It was the slightness of the click which was startling—if
it had not been caused by the wind, it had been caused
by someone’s having cautiously moved it—and
this someone wishing to make a soundless approach had
immediately stood still and was waiting. There
was only one person who would do that. By this
time, the mist being blown away, the light of the
moon began to make a growing clearness. She lifted
her hand and delicately held aside a few twigs that
she might look out.
She had been quite right in deciding
not to move. Nigel Anstruthers had come back,
and after his pause turned, and avoiding the brick
path, stole over the grass to the cottage door.
His going had merely been an inspiration to trap her,
and the wood and matches had been intended to make
a beacon light for him. That was like him, as
well. His horse he had left down the road.
But the relief of his absence had
been good for her, and she was able to check the shuddering
fit which threatened her for a moment. The next,
her ears awoke to a new sound. Something was stumbling
heavily about the patch of garden—some
animal. A cropping of grass, a snorting breath,
and more stumbling hoofs, and she knew that Childe
Harold had managed to loosen his bridle and limp out
of the shed. The mere sense of his nearness seemed
a sort of protection.
He had limped and stumbled to the
front part of the garden before Nigel heard him.
When he did hear, he came out of the house in the humour
of a man the inflaming of whose mood has been cumulative;
Childe Harold’s temper also was not to be trifled
with. He threw up his head, swinging the bridle
out of reach; he snorted, and even reared with an ugly
lashing of his forefeet.
“Good boy!” whispered
Betty. “Do not let him take you—do
not!”
If he remained where he was he would
attract attention if anyone passed by. “Fight,
Childe Harold, be as vicious as you choose—do
not allow yourself to be dragged back.”
And fight he did, with an ugliness
of temper he had never shown before—with
snortings and tossed head and lashed—out
heels, as if he knew he was fighting to gain time
and with a purpose.
But in the midst of the struggle Nigel
Anstruthers stopped suddenly. He had stumbled
again, and risen raging and stained with damp earth.
Now he stood still, panting for breath—as
still as he had stood after the click of the gate.
Was he—listening? What was he listening
to? Had she moved in her excitement, and was
it possible he had caught the sound? No, he was
listening to something else. Far up the road it
echoed, but coming nearer every moment, and very fast.
Another horse—a big one—galloping
hard. Whosoever it was would pass this place;
it could only be a man—God grant that he
would not go by so quickly that his attention would
not be arrested by a shriek! Cry out she must—and
if he did not hear and went galloping on his way she
would have betrayed herself and be lost.
She bit off a groan by biting her lip.
“You who died to-day—now—now!”
Nearer and nearer. No human creature
could pass by a thing like this—it would
not be possible. And Childe Harold, backing and
fighting, scented the other horse and neighed fiercely
and high. The rider was slackening his pace;
he was near the lane. He had turned into it and
stopped. Now for her one frantic cry—but
before she could gather power to give it forth, the
man who had stopped had flung himself from his saddle
and was inside the garden speaking. A big voice
and a clear one, with a ringing tone of authority.
“What are you doing here?
And what is the matter with Miss Vanderpoel’s
horse?” it called out.
Now there was danger of the swoop
into the darkness—great danger—though
she clutched at the hedge that she might feel its thorns
and hold herself to the earth.
“You!” Nigel Anstruthers
cried out. “You!” and flung forth
a shout of laughter.
“Where is she?” fiercely.
“Lady Anstruthers is terrified. We have
been searching for hours. Only just now I heard
on the marsh that she had been seen to ride this way.
Where is she, I say?”
A strong, angry, earthly voice—not
part of the melodrama—not part of a dream,
but a voice she knew, and whose sound caused her heart
to leap to her throat, while she trembled from head
to foot, and a light, cold dampness broke forth on
her skin. Something had been a dream—her
wild, desolate ride—the slew tolling; for
the voice which commanded with such human fierceness
was that of the man for whom the heavy bell had struck
forth from the church tower.
Sir Nigel recovered himself brilliantly.
Not that he did not recognise that he had been a fool
again and was in a nasty place; but it was not for
the first time in his life, and he had learned how
to brazen himself out of nasty places.
“My dear Mount Dunstan,”
he answered with tolerant irritation, “I have
been having a devil of a time with female hysterics.
She heard the bell toll and ran away with the idea
that it was for you, and paid you the compliment of
losing her head. I came on her here when she had
ridden her horse half to death and they had both come
a cropper. Confound women’s hysterics!
I could do nothing with her. When I left her for
a moment she ran away and hid herself. She is
concealed somewhere on the place or has limped off
on to the marsh. I wish some New York millionairess
would work herself into hysteria on my humble account.”
“Those are lies,” Mount
Dunstan answered—“every damned one
of them!”
He wheeled around to look about him,
attracted by a sound, and in the clearing moonlight
saw a figure approaching which might have risen from
the earth, so far as he could guess where it had come
from. He strode over to it, and it was Betty
Vanderpoel, holding her whip in a clenched hand and
showing to his eagerness such hunted face and eyes
as were barely human. He caught her unsteadiness
to support it, and felt her fingers clutch at the
tweed of his coatsleeve and move there as if the mere
feeling of its rough texture brought heavenly comfort
to her and gave her strength.
“Yes, they are lies, Lord Mount
Dunstan,” she panted. “He said that
he meant to get what he called ‘even’
with me. He told me I could not get away from
him and that no one would hear me if I cried out for
help. I have hidden like some hunted animal.”
Her shaking voice broke, and she held the cloth of
his sleeve tightly. “You are alive—alive!”
with a sudden sweet wildness. “But it is
true the bell tolled! While I was crouching in
the dark I called to you—who died to-day—to
stand between us!”
The man absolutely shuddered from head to foot.
“I was alive, and you see I heard you and came,”
he answered hoarsely.
He lifted her in his arms and carried
her into the cottage. Her cheek felt the enrapturing
roughness of his tweed shoulder as he did it.
He laid her down on the couch of hay and turned away.
“Don’t move,” he said. “I
will come back. You are safe.”
If there had been more light she would
have seen that his jaw was set like a bulldog’s,
and there was a red spark in his eyes—a
fearsome one. But though she did not clearly
see, she knew, and the nearness of the last hours
swept away all relenting.
Nigel Anstruthers having discreetly
waited until the two had passed into the house, and
feeling that a man would be an idiot who did not remove
himself from an atmosphere so highly charged, was making
his way toward the lane and was, indeed, halfway through
the gate when heavy feet were behind him and a grip
of ugly strength wrenched him backward.
“Your horse is cropping the
grass where you left him, but you are not going to
him,” said a singularly meaning voice. “You
are coming with me.”
Anstruthers endeavoured to convince
himself that he did not at that moment turn deadly
sick and that the brute would not make an ass of himself.
“Don’t be a bally fool!”
he cried out, trying to tear himself free.
The muscular hand on his shoulder
being reinforced by another, which clutched his collar,
dragged him back, stumbling ignominiously through
the gooseberry bushes towards the cart-shed. Betty
lying upon her bed of hay heard the scuffling, mingled
with raging and gasping curses. Childe Harold,
lifting his head from his cropping of the grass, looked
after the violently jerking figures and snorted slightly,
snuffing with dilated red nostrils. As a war
horse scenting blood and battle, he was excited.
When Mount Dunstan got his captive
into the shed the blood which had surged in Red Godwyn’s
veins was up and leaping. Anstruthers, his collar
held by a hand with fingers of iron, writhed about
and turned a livid, ghastly face upon his captor.
“You have twice my strength
and half my age, you beast and devil!” he foamed
in a half shriek, and poured forth frightful blasphemies.
“That counts between man and
man, but not between vermin and executioner,”
gave back Mount Dunstan.
The heavy whip, flung upward, whistled
down through the air, cutting through cloth and linen
as though it would cut through flesh to bone.
“By God!” shrieked the
writhing thing he held, leaping like a man who has
been shot. “Don’t do that again!
Damn you!” as the unswerving lash cut down
again—again.
What followed would not be good to
describe. Betty through the open door heard wild
and awful things—and more than once a sound
as if a dog were howling.
When the thing was over, one of the
two—his clothes cut to ribbons, his torn
white linen exposed, lay, a writhing, huddled worm,
hiccoughing frenzied sobs upon the earth in a corner
of the cart-shed. The other man stood over him,
breathless and white, but singularly exalted.
“You won’t want your horse
to-night, because you can’t use him,” he
said. “I shall put Miss Vanderpoel’s
saddle upon him and ride with her back to Stornham.
You think you are cut to pieces, but you are not, and
you’ll get over it. I’ll ask you to
mark, however, that if you open your foul mouth to
insinuate lies concerning either Lady Anstruthers or
her sister I will do this thing again in public some
day—on the steps of your club—and
do it more thoroughly.”
He walked into the cottage soon afterwards
looking, to Betty Vanderpoel’s eyes, pale and
exceptionally big, and also more a man than it is
often given even to the most virile male creature to
look—and he walked to the side of her resting
place and stood there looking down.
“I thought I heard a dog howl,” she said.
“You did hear a dog howl,”
he answered. He said no other word, and she asked
no further question. She knew what he had done,
and he was well aware that she knew it.
There was a long, strangely tense
silence. The light of the moon was growing.
She made at first no effort to rise, but lay still
and looked up at him from under splendid lifted lashes,
while his own gaze fell into the depth of hers like
a plummet into a deep pool. This continued for
almost a full minute, when he turned quickly away and
walked to the hearth, indrawing a heavy breath.
He could not endure that which beset
him; it was unbearable, because her eyes had maddeningly
seemed to ask him some wistful question. Why did
she let her loveliness so call to him. She was
not a trifler who could play with meanings. Perhaps
she did not know what her power was. Sometimes
he could believe that beautiful women did not.
In a few moments, almost before he
could reach her, she was rising, and when she got
up she supported herself against the open door, standing
in the moonlight. If he was pale, she was pale
also, and her large eyes would not move from his face,
so drawing him that he could not keep away from her.
“Listen,” he broke out
suddenly. “Penzance told me—warned
me—that some time a moment would come which
would be stronger than all else in a man—than
all else in the world. It has come now. Let
me take you home.”
“Than what else?” she
said slowly, and became even paler than before.
He strove to release himself from
the possession of the moment, and in his struggle
answered with a sort of savagery.
“Than scruple—than
power—even than a man’s determination
and decent pride.”
“Are you proud?” she half
whispered quite brokenly. “I am not—since
I waited for the ringing of the church bell—since
I heard it toll. After that the world was empty—and
it was as empty of decent pride as of everything else.
There was nothing left. I was the humblest broken
thing on earth.”
“You!” he gasped.
“Do you know I think I shall go mad directly
perhaps it is happening now. You were humble
and broken—your world was empty! Because——?”
“Look at me, Lord Mount Dunstan,”
and the sweetest voice in the world was a tender,
wild little cry to him. “Oh look at
me!”
He caught her out-thrown hands and
looked down into the beautiful passionate soul of
her. The moment had come, and the tidal wave rising
to its height swept all the common earth away when,
with a savage sob, he caught and held her close and
hard against that which thudded racing in his breast.
And they stood and swayed together,
folded in each other’s arms, while the wind
from the marshes lifted its voice like an exulting
human thing as it swept about them.