When Dartmouth awoke the next day,
the sun was streaming across the bed and Jones’s
anxious face was bending over him.
“Oh, Mr. ’Arold,”
exclaimed Jones, “you’ve got it again.”
Dartmouth laughed aloud. “One
would think I had delirium tremens,” he said.
He put his hand over his eyes, and
struggled with the desire to have the room darkened.
The melancholy had fastened itself upon him, and he
knew that for three or four days he was to be the victim
of one of his unhappiest moods. The laudanum
had lulled his brain and prevented violent reaction
after its prolonged tension; but his spirits were at
zero, and his instinct was to shut out the light and
succumb to his enemy without resistance. If he
had been anywhere but at Rhyd-Alwyn he would not have
thought twice about it; but if he shut himself up
in his room, not only would Weir be frightened and
unhappy, but it was probable that Sir Iltyd would
question the desirability of a son-in-law who was
given to prolonged and uncontrollable attacks of the
blues. He dressed and went down-stairs, but Weir
was nowhere to be found, and after a search through
the various rooms and corners of the castle which
she was in the habit of frequenting, he met her maid
and was informed that Miss Penrhyn was not well and
would not come down-stairs before dinner. The
news was very unwelcome to Dartmouth. Weir at
least would have been a distraction. Now he must
get through a dismal day, and fight his enemy by himself.
To make matters worse, it was raining, and he could
not go out and ride or hunt. He went into Sir
Iltyd’s library and talked to him for the rest
of the morning. Sir Iltyd was not exciting, at
his best, and to-day he had a bad cold; so after lunch
Dartmouth went up to his tower and resigned himself
to his own company. He sat down before the fire,
and taking his head between his hands allowed the
blue devils to triumph. He felt dull as well as
depressed; but for a time he made an attempt to solve
the problem of the phenomenon to which he had been
twice subjected. That it was a phenomenon he
did not see any reason to doubt. If he had spent
his life in a vain attempt to write poetry and an
unceasing wish for the necessary inspiration, there
would be nothing remarkable in his mind yielding suddenly
to the impetus of accumulated pressure, wrenching
itself free of the will’s control, and dashing
off on a wild excursion of its own. But he had
never voluntarily taken a pen in his hand to make
verse, nor had he even felt the desire to possess the
gift, except as a part of general ambition. He
may have acknowledged the regret that he could not
immortalize himself by writing a great poem, but the
regret was the offspring of personal ambition, not
of yearning poetical instinct. But the most extraordinary
phase of the matter was that such a tempest could
take place in a brain as well regulated as his own.
He was eminently a practical man, and a good deal of
a thinker. He had never been given to flights
of imagination, and even in his attacks of melancholy,
although his will might be somewhat enfeebled, his
brain could always work clearly and cleverly.
The lethargy which had occasionally got the best of
him had invariably been due to violent nervous shock
or strain, and was as natural as excessive bodily
languor after violent physical effort. Why, then,
should his brain twice have acted as if he had sown
it with eccentric weeds all his life, instead of planting
it with the choicest seeds he could obtain, and watering
and cultivating them with a patience and an interest
which had been untiring?
But the explanation of his attempt
to put his unborn poem into words gave him less thought
to-day than it had after its first occurrence; there
were other phases of last night’s experience
weirder and more unexplainable still. Paramount,
of course, was the vision or dream—which
would seem to have been induced by some magnetic property
possessed and exerted by Weir. Such things do
not occur without cause, and he was not the sort of
man to yield himself, physically and mentally, his
will and his perceptions, to the unconscious caprice
of a somnambulist. And the scene had cut itself
so deeply into the tablets of his memory that he found
himself forgetting more than once that it was not
an actual episode of his past. He wished he could
see Weir, and hear her account of her mental experiences
of those hours. If her dream should have been
a companion to his, then the explanation would suggest
itself that the scene might have been a vagary of her
brain; that in some way which he did not pretend to
explain, she had hypnotized him, and that his brain
had received a photographic imprint of what had been
in hers. It would then be merely a sort of telepathy.
But why should she have dreamed a dream in which they
both were so unhappily metamorphosed? and why should
it have produced so powerful an impression upon his
waking sense? And why, strangest of all, had
he, without thought or self-surprise, gone to her,
and with his soul stirred to its depths, called her
“Sionèd”? True, she had almost disguised
herself, and had been the living counterfeit of Sionèd
Penrhyn; but that was no reason why he should have
called a woman who had belonged to his grandmother’s
time by her first name. Could Weir, thoroughly
imbued with the character she was unconsciously representing,
have exercised her hypnotic power from the moment she
entered the gallery, and left him without power to
think or feel except through her own altered perceptions?
He thrust out his foot against the fender, almost
overturning it, and, throwing back his head, clasped
his hands behind it and scowled at the black ceiling
above him. He was a man who liked things explained,
and he felt both sullen and angry that he should have
had an experience which baffled his powers of analysis
and reason. His partial solution gave him no
satisfaction, and he had the uncomfortable sense of
actual mystery, and a premonition of something more
to come. This, however, he was willing to attribute
to the depressed condition of his spirits, which threw
its gloom over every object, abstract and concrete,
and which induced the tendency to exaggerate any strange
or unpleasant experience of which he had been the
victim. It was useless to try to think of anything
else; his brain felt as if it had resolved itself
into a kaleidoscope, through which those three scenes
shifted eternally. Finally, he fell asleep, and
did not awaken until it was time to dress for dinner.
Before he left his room, Weir’s maid knocked
at his door and handed him a note, in which the lady
of Rhyd-Alwyn apologized for leaving him to himself
for an entire day, and announced that she would not
appear at dinner, but would meet him in the drawing-room
immediately thereafter. Dartmouth read the note
through with a puzzled expression: it was formal
and stilted, even for Weir. She was gone when
he came to his senses in the gallery the night before.
Had she awakened and become conscious of the situation?
It was not a pleasant reminiscense for a girl to have,
and he felt honestly sorry for her. Then he groaned
in spirit at the prospect of an hour’s tête-à-tête
with Sir Iltyd. He liked Sir Iltyd very much,
and thought him possessed of several qualifications
valuable in a father-in-law, among them his devotion
to his library; but in his present frame of mind he
felt that history and politics were topics he would
like to relegate out of existence.
He put the best face on the situation
he could muster, however, and managed to conceal from
Sir Iltyd the fact that his spirits were in other
than their normal condition. The old baronet’s
eyes were not very sharp, particularly when he had
a cold, and he was not disposed to notice Harold’s
pallor and occasional fits of abstraction, so long
as one of his favorite topics was under discussion.
When Dartmouth found that he had got safely through
the dinner, he felt that he had accomplished a feat
which would have rejoiced the heart of his grandmother,
and he thought that his reward could not come a moment
too soon. Accordingly, for the first time since
he had been at Rhyd-Alwyn, he declined to sit with
Sir Iltyd over the wine, and went at once in search
of Weir.
As he opened the door of the drawing-room
he found the room in semi-darkness, lighted only by
the last rays of the setting sun, which strayed through
the window. He went in, but did not see Weir.
She was not in her accustomed seat by the fire, and
he was about to call her name, when he came to a sudden
halt, and for the moment every faculty but one seemed
suspended. A woman was standing by the open window
looking out over the water. She had not heard
him, and had not turned her head. Dartmouth felt
a certain languor, as of one who is dreaming, and
is half-conscious that he is dreaming, and therefore
yields unresistingly to the pranks of his sleeping
brain. Was it Weir, or was it the woman who had
been a part of his vision last night? She wore
a long, shining yellow dress, and her arms and neck
were bare. Surely it was the other woman!
She turned her head a little, and he saw her face
in profile; there was the same stamp of suffering,
the same pallor. Weir had never looked like that;
before he had known her she had had, sometimes, a
little expression of sadness and abstraction which
had made her look very picturesque, but which had
borne no relationship to suffering or experience.
And the scene! the room filled with dying light, the
glimpse of water beyond, the very attitude of the woman
at the casement—all were strangely and
deeply familiar to him, although not the details of
the vision of last night. The only things that
were wanting were the Eastern hangings to cover the
dark wainscotted old walls, and the skins on the black,
time-stained floor.
With a sudden effort of will he threw
off the sense of mystery which had again taken possession
of him, and walked forward quickly. As Weir heard
him, she turned her head and met his eyes, and although
a closer look at her face startled him afresh, his
brain was his own again, and he was determined that
it should remain so. He might yield to supernatural
impressions when unprepared, but not when both brain
and will were defiantly on the alert. That she
was not only unaccountably altered, but that she shrank
from him, was evident; and he was determined to hear
her version of last night’s adventure without
delay. He believed that she would unconsciously
say something which would throw a flood of light on
the whole matter.
“Where did you get that dress?” he said,
abruptly.
She started sharply, and the color
flew to the roots of her hair, then, receding, left
her paler than before. “Why do you ask me
that?” she demanded, with unconcealed, almost
terrified suspicion in her tones.
“Because,” he said, looking
straight into her eyes, “I had a peculiar dream
last night, in which you wore a dress exactly like
this. It is rather a remarkable coincidence that
you should put it on to-night.”
“Harold!” she cried, springing
forward and catching his arm convulsively in both
her hands, “what has happened? What is it?
And how can you talk so calmly when to me it seems—”
He put his arm around her. “Seems
what?” he said, soothingly. “Did
you have a dream, too?”
“Yes,” she said, her face
turning a shade paler, “I had a dream.”
“And in it you wore this dress?”
“Yes.”
“Tell me your dream.”
“No!” she exclaimed, “I cannot.”
Dartmouth put his hand under her chin
and pushed her head back against his shoulder, upturning
her face. “You must tell me,” he said,
quietly; “every word of it! I am not asking
you out of curiosity, but because the dream I had
was too remarkable to be without meaning. I cannot
reach that meaning unassisted; but with your help I
believe I can. So tell me at once.”
“Oh, Harold!” she cried,
throwing her arms suddenly about him and clinging
to him, “I have no one else to speak to but you:
I cannot tell my father; he would not understand.
No girl ever felt so horribly alone as I have felt
to-day. If it had not been for you I believe I
should have killed myself; but you are everything to
me, only—how can I tell you?”
He tightened his arms about her and kissed her.
“Don’t kiss me,” she exclaimed sharply,
trying to free herself.
“Why not?” he demanded, in surprise.
“Why should I not kiss you?”
She let her head drop again to his
shoulder. “True,” she said; “why
should you not? It is only that I forget that
I am not the woman I dreamed I was; and for her—it
was wrong to kiss you.”
“Weir, tell me your dream at
once. It is for your good as well as mine that
I insist. You will be miserable and terrified
until you take someone into your confidence.
I believe I can explain your dream, as well as give
you the comfort of talking it over with you.”
She slipped suddenly out of his arms
and walked quickly to the end of the room and back,
pausing within a few feet of him. The room was
growing dark, and he could distinguish little of her
beyond the tall outline of her form and the unnatural
brilliancy of her eyes, but he respected her wish
and remained where he was.
“Very well,” she said,
rapidly. “I will tell you. I went to
sleep without much terror, for I had told my maid to
sleep in my dressing-room. But I suppose the
storm and the story I had told you had unsettled my
nerves, for I soon began to dream a horrid dream.
I thought I was dead once more. I could feel the
horrible chill and pain, the close-packed ice about
me. I was dead, but yet there was a spirit within
me. I could feel it whispering to itself, although
it had not as yet spread its fire through me and awakened
me into life. It whispered that it was tired,
and disheartened, and disappointed, and wanted rest;
that it had been on a long, fruitless journey, and
was so weary that it would not take up the burden of
life again just yet. But its rest could not be
long; there was someone it must find, and before he
had gone again to that boundless land, whose haunting
spirits were impalpable as flecks of mist. And
then it moaned and wept, and seemed to live over its
past, and I went back with it, or I was one with it—I
cannot define. It recalled many scenes, but only
one made an impression on my memory; I can recall no
other.” She paused abruptly, but Dartmouth
made no comment; he stood motionless in breathless
expectancy. She put her hand to her head, and
after a moment continued haltingly:
“I—oh—I
hardly know how to tell it. I seemed to be standing
with you in a room more familiar to me than any room
in this castle; a room full of tapestries and skins
and cushions and couches; a room which if I had seen
it in a picture I should have recognized as Oriental,
although I have never seen an Oriental room. I
have always had an indescribable longing to see Constantinople,
and it seemed to me in that dream as if I had but
to walk to the window and look down upon it—as
if I had looked down upon it many times and loved its
beauty. But although I was with you, and your
arms were about me, we were not as we are now—as
we were before the dream: we had suffered all
that a man and a woman can suffer who love and are
held apart. And you looked as you do now, yet
utterly different. You looked years older, and
you were dressed so strangely. I do not know
how I looked, but I know how I felt. I felt that
I had made up my mind to commit a deadly sin, and
that I gloried in it. I had suffered because to
love you was a sin; but I only loved you the more
for that reason. Then you slowly drew me further
into the room and pressed me more closely in your arms
and kissed me again, and then—I—oh—I
do not know—it is all so vague I don’t
know what it meant—but it seemed as if the
very foundations of my life were being swept away.
And yet—oh, I cannot explain! I do
not know, myself.” And she would have thrown
herself headlong on the sofa had not Dartmouth sprang
forward and caught her.
“There, never mind,” he
said, quickly. “Let that go. It is
of no consequence. A dream like that must necessarily
end in a climax of incoherence and excitement.”
He drew her down on the sofa, and
for a moment said nothing further. He had to
acknowledge that she had deepened the mystery, and
given no key. A silence fell, and neither moved.
Suddenly she raised her head. “What was
your dream?” she demanded.
“The same. I don’t
pretend to explain it. And I shall not insult
your understanding by inventing weak excuses.
If it means anything we will give the problem no rest
until we have solved it. If we cannot solve it,
then we are justified in coming to the conclusion that
there is nothing in it. But I believe we shall
get to the bottom of it yet.”
“Perhaps,” she said, wearily;
“I do not know. I only feel that I shall
never be myself again, but must go through life with
that woman’s burden of sin and suffering weighing
me down.” She paused a moment, and then
continued: “In that dream I wore a dress
like this, and that is the reason I put it on to-night.
I was getting some things in Paris before I left,
and I bought it thinking you would like it; I had heard
you say that yellow was your favorite color. When
my maid opened the door of my wardrobe to-night to
take out a dress, and I saw this hanging there, it
gave me such a shock that I caught at a chair to keep
from falling. And then I felt irresistibly impelled
to put it on. I felt as if it were a shroud,
vivid in color as it is; but it had an uncanny fascination
for me, and I experienced a morbid delight in feeling
both spirit and flesh revolt, and yet compelling them
to do my will. I never knew that it was in me
to feel so, but I suppose I am utterly demoralized
by so realistically living over again that awful experience
of my childhood. If it happened again I should
either be carried back to the vault for good and all,
or end my days in the topmost tower of the castle,
with a keeper, and the storms and sea-gulls for sole
companions.”
She sat up in a moment, and putting
her hand on his shoulder, looked him full in the face
for the first time. “It seems to me that
I know you now,” she said, “and that I
never knew you before. When I first saw you to-night
I shrank from you: why, I hardly know, except
that the personality of that woman had woven itself
so strongly into mine that for the moment I felt I
had no right to love you. But I have never loved
you as I do to-night, because that dream, however little
else I may have to thank it for, did for me this at
least: it seemed to give me a glimpse into every
nook and corner of your character; I feel now that
my understanding of your strange nature is absolute.
I had seen only one side of it before, and had made
but instinctive guesses at the rest; but as I stood
with you in that dream, I had, graven on my memory,
the knowledge of every side and phase of your character
as you had revealed it to me many times; and that memory
abides with me. I remember no details, but that
makes no difference; if I were one with you I could
not know you better.” She slipped her arms
about his neck and pressed her face close to his.
“You have one of your attacks of melancholy
to-night,” she murmured. “You tried
to conceal it, and the effort made you appear cold.
It was the first thing I thought of when I turned
and saw you, in spite of all I felt myself. And
although you had described those attacks before, the
description had conveyed little to me; that your moods
were different from other people’s blues had
hardly occurred to me, we had been so happy.
But now I understand. I pay for the knowledge
with a high price; but that is life, I suppose.”