And after?
When Elma woke up next morning, it
was broad daylight. She woke with a start, to
find herself lying upon the bed where she had flung
herself. For a minute or two she couldn’t
recollect or recall to herself how it had all come
about. It was too remote from anything in her
previous waking thought, too dream-like, too impossible.
Then an unspeakable horror flashed over her unawares.
Her face flushed hot. Shame and terror overcame
her. She buried her head in her hands in an agony
of awe. Her own self-respect was literally outraged.
It wasn’t exactly remorse; it wasn’t exactly
fear; it was a strange creeping feeling of ineffable
disgust and incredulous astonishment.
There could be but one explanation
of this impossible episode. She must have gone
mad all at once! She must be a frantic lunatic!
A single thought usurped her whole
soul. If she was going mad—if this
was really mania—she could never, never,
never—marry Cyril Waring.
For in a flash of intuition she knew
that now. She knew she was in love. She
knew he loved her.
In that wild moment of awakening all
the rest mattered nothing. The solitary idea
that ran now through her head, as the impulse to dance
had run through it last night, was the idea that she
could never marry Cyril Waring. And if Cyril
Waring could have seen her just then! her cheeks burned
yet a brighter scarlet at that thought than even before.
One virginal blush suffused her face from chin to
forehead. The maidenly sense of shame consumed
and devoured her.
Was she mad? Was she mad?
And was this a lucid interval?
Presently, as she lay still on her
bed all dressed, and with her face in her hands, trembling
for very shame, a little knock sounded tentatively
at the door of her bedroom. It was a timid, small
knock, very low and soft, and, as it were, inquiring.
It seemed to say in an apologetic sort of undertone,
“I don’t know whether you’re awake
or not just yet; and if you’re still asleep,
pray don’t let me for a moment disturb or arouse
you.”
“Who’s there?” Elma
mustered up courage to ask, in a hushed voice of terror,
hiding her head under the bed-clothes.
“It’s me, darling,”
Mrs. Clifford answered, very softly and sweetly.
Elma had never heard her mother speak in so tender
and gentle a tone before, though they loved one another
well, and were far more sympathetic than most mothers
and daughters. And besides, that knock was so
unlike mamma’s. Why so soft and low?
Had mamma discovered her? With
a despairing sense of being caught she looked down
at her tell-tale clothes and the unslept-in bed.
“Oh, what shall I ever do?”
she thought to herself, confusedly. “I
can’t let mamma come in and catch me like this.
She’ll ask why on earth I didn’t undress
last night. And then what could I ever say?
How could I ever explain to her?”
The awful sense of shame-facedness
grew upon her still more deeply than ever. She
jumped up and whispered through the door, in a very
penitent voice, “Oh, mother, I can’t let
you in just yet. Do you mind waiting five minutes?
Come again by-and-by. I—I—I’m
so awfully tired and queer this morning somehow.”
Mrs. Clifford’s voice had an
answering little ring of terror in it, as she replied
at once, in the same soft tone—
“Very well, darling. That’s
all right. Stay as long as you like. Don’t
trouble to get up if you’d rather have your breakfast
in bed. And don’t hurry yourself at all.
I’ll come back by-and-by and see what’s
the matter.”
Elma didn’t know why, but by
the very tone of her mother’s voice she felt
dimly conscious something strange had happened.
Mrs. Clifford spoke with unusual gentleness, yet with
an unwonted tremor.
“Thank you, dear,” Elma
answered through the door, going back to the bedside
and beginning to undress in a tumult of shame.
“Come again by-and-by. In just five minutes.”
It would do her good, she knew, in spite of her shyness,
to talk with her mother. Then she folded her
clothes neatly, one by one, on a ohair; hid the peccant
boa away in its own lower drawer; buttoned her neat
little embroidered nightdress tightly round her throat;
arranged her front hair into a careless disorder;
and tried to cool down her fiery red cheeks with copious
bathing in cold water. When Mrs. Clifford came
back five minutes later, everything looked to the
outer eye of a mere casual observer exactly as if
Elma had laid in bed all night, curled up between
the sheets, in the most orthodox fashion.
But all these elaborate preparations
didn’t for one moment deceive the mother’s
watchful glance, or the keen intuition shared by all
the women of the Clifford family. She looked tenderly
at Elma—Elma with her face half buried
in the pillows, and the tell-tale flush still crimsoning
her cheek in a single round spot; then she turned
for a second to the clothes, too neatly folded on the
chair by the bedside, as she murmured low—
“You’re not well this
morning, my child. You’d better not get
up. I’ll bring you a cup of tea and some
toast myself. You don’t feel hungry, of
course. Ah, no, I thought not. Just a slice
of dry toast—yes, yes. I have been
there. Some eau de Cologne on your forehead,
dear? There, there, don’t cry, Elma.
You’ll be better by-and-by. Stop in bed
till lunch-time. I won’t let Lucy come up
with the tea, of course. You’d rather be
alone. You were tired last night. Don’t
be afraid, my darling. It’ll soon pass off.
There’s nothing on earth, nothing at all to
be alarmed at.”
She laid her hand nervously on Elma’s
arm. Half dead with shame as she was, Elma noticed
it trembled. She noticed, too, that mamma seemed
almost afraid to catch her eye. When their glance
met for an instant the mother’s eyelids fell,
and her cheek, too, burned bright red, almost as red,
Elma felt, as her own that nestled hot so deep in
the pillow. Neither said a word to the other of
what she thought or felt. But their mute sympathy
itself made them more shame-faced than ever.
In some dim, indefinite, instinctive fashion, Elma
knew her mother was vaguely aware what she had done
last night. Her gaze fell half unconsciously on
the bottom drawer. With quick insight, Mrs. Clifford’s
eye followed her daughter’s. Then it fell
as before. Elma looked up at her terrified, and
burst into a sudden flood of tears. Her mother
stooped down and caught her wildly in her arms.
“Cry, cry, my darling,” ahe murmured, clasping
her hard to her breast. “Cry, cry; it’ll
do you good; there’s safety in crying.
Nobody but I shall come near you to-day. Nobody
else shall know! Don’t be afraid of me!
Have not I been there, too? It’s nothing,
nothing.”
With a burst of despair, Elma laid
her face in her mother’s bosom. Some minutes
later, Mrs. Clifford went down to meet her husband
in the breakfast-room.
“Well?” the father asked,
shortly, looking hard at his wife’s face, which
told its own tale at once, for it was white and pallid.
“Well!” Mrs. Clifford
answered, with a pre-occupied air. “Elma’s
not herself this morning at all. Had a nervous
turn after she went to her room last night. I
know what it is. I suffered from them myself
when I was about her age.” Her eyes fell
quickly and she shrank from her husband’s searching
glance. She was a plump-faced and well-favoured
British matron now, but once, many years before, as
a slim young girl, she had been in love with somebody—somebody
whom by superior parental wisdom she was never allowed
to marry, being put off instead with a well-connected
match, young Mr. Clifford of the Colonial Office.
That was all. No more romance than that.
The common romance of every woman’s heart.
A forgotten love. Yet she tingled to remember
it.
“And you think?” Mr. Clifford
asked, laying down his newspaper and looking very
grave.
“I don’t think. I
know,” his wife answered hastily. “I
was wrong the other day, and Elma’s in love
with that young man, Cyril Waring. I know more
than that, Reginald; I know you may crush her; I know
you may kill her; but if you don’t want to do
that, I know she must marry him. Whether we wish
it, or whether we don’t, there’s nothing
else to be done. As things stand now, it’s
inevitable, unavoidable. She’ll never be
happy with anybody else—she must have him—and
I, for one, won’t try to prevent her.”
Mr. Reginald Clifford, C.M.G., sometime
Administrator of the island of St. Kitts, gazed at
his wife in blank astonishment. She spoke decidedly;
he had never heard her speak with such firmness in
his life before. It fairly took his breath away.
He gazed at his wife blankly as he repeated to himself
in very slow and solemn tones, each word distinct,
“You, for one, won’t try to prevent her!”
“No, I won’t,” Mrs.
Clifford retorted defiantly, assured in her own mind
she was acting right. “Elma’s really
in love with him; and I won’t let Elma’s
life be wrecked—as some lives have been
wrecked, and as some mothers would wreck it.”
Mr. Clifford leaned back in his chair,
one mass of astonishment, and let the Japanese paper-knife
he was holding in his right hand drop clattering from
his fingers. “If I hadn’t heard you
say it yourself, Louisa,” he answered, with
a gasp, “I could never have believed it.
I could—never—have—believed
it. I don’t believe it even now.
It’s impossible, incredible.”
“But it’s true,”
Mrs. Clifford repeated. “Elma must marry
the man she’s in love with.”
Meanwhile poor Elma lay alone in her
bedroom upstairs, that awful sense of remorse and
shame still making her cheeks tingle with unspeakable
horror. Mrs. Clifford brought up her cup of tea
herself. Elma took it with gratitude, but still
never dared to look her mother in the face. Mrs.
Clifford, too, kept her own eyes averted. It
made Elma’s self-abasement even profounder than
before to feel that her mother instinctively knew
everything.
The poor child lay there long, with
a burning face and tingling ears, too ashamed to get
up and dress herself and face the outer world, too
ashamed to go down before her father’s eyes,
till long after lunchtime. Then there came a
noise at the door once more; the rustling of a dress;
a retreating footstep. Somebody pushed an envelope
stealthily under the door. Elma picked it up
and examined it curiously. It bore a penny stamp,
and the local postmark. It must have come then
by the two o’clock delivery, without a doubt;
but the address, why, the address was written in some
unknown hand, and in printing capitals. Elma
tore it open with a beating heart, and read the one
line of manuscript it contained, which was also written
in the same print-like letters.
“Don’t be afraid,”
the letter said, “It will do you no harm.
Resist it when it comes. If you do, you will
get the better of it.”
Elma looked at the letter over and
over again in a fever of dismay. She was certain
it was her mother had written that note. But she
read it with tears, only half-reassured—and
then burnt it to ashes, and proceeded to dress herself.
When she went down to the drawing-room,
Mrs. Clifford rose from her seat, and took her hand
in her own, and kissed her on one cheek as if nothing
out of the common had happened in any way. The
talk between them was obtrusively commonplace.
But all that day long, Elma noticed her mother was
far tenderer to her than usual; and when she went
up to bed Mrs. Clifford held her fingers for a moment
with a gentle pressure, and kissed her twice upon her
eyes, and stifled a sigh, and then broke from the
room as if afraid to speak to her.