STRUGGLE and VICTORY.
Elma hurried home full of intense
misgivings. She dreaded having to meet her mother’s
eye. How on earth could she hide from that searching
glance the whole truth as to what had happened in the
wood that morning? When she reached home, however,
she learned to her relief, from the maid who opened
the door to her, that their neighbour, Mr. Gilbert
Gildersleeve, the distinguished Q.C., had dropped
in for lunch, and this chance diversion supplied Elma
with a little fresh courage to face the inevitable.
She went straight up to her own room the moment she
entered the house, without seeing her mother, and
there she waited, bathing her face copiously till
some minutes after the lunch bell had rung. For
she felt sure she would blush crimson when she met
her mother; but as she blushed habitually when strangers
came in, the cause of it might thus, perhaps, she
vainly flattered herself, escape even those lynx-like
eyes of Mrs. Clifford’s.
The great Q.C., a big, overbearing
man, with a pair of huge burly hands that somehow
seemed to form his chief feature, was a little bit
blustering in his talk, as usual; the more so because
he had just learned incidentally that something had
gone wrong between his daughter Gwendoline and Granville
Kelmscott. For though that little episode of
private wooing had run its course nominally without
the knowledge or consent of either family, Mr. Gilbert
Gildersleeve, at least, had none the less been aware
for many weeks past of the frequent meetings between
Gwendoline and Granville in the dell just beyond the
disputed boundary line. And as Mr. Gildersleeve
disliked Colonel Kelmscott of Tilgate Park, for a
pig-headed esquire, almost as cordially as Colonel
Kelmscott disliked Mr. Gildersleeve in return for
a rascally lawyer, it had given the great Q.C. no
little secret satisfaction in his own soul to learn
that his daughter Gwendoline was likely to marry the
Colonel’s son and heir, directly against the
wishes and consent of his father.
Only that very morning, however, poor
Mrs. Gildersleeve, that tired, crushed wife, had imparted
to her lord and master, in fear and trembling, the
unpleasant intelligence that, so far as she could
make out, there was something wrong between Granville
and Gwendoline. And this something wrong she
ventured to suggest was no mere lover’s tiff
of the ordinary kiss-and-make-it-up description,
but a really serious difficulty in the way of their
marriage. So Mr. Gildersleeve, thus suddenly
deprived of his expected triumph, took it out another
way by more than even his wonted boisterousness of
manner in talking about the fortunes of the Kelmscott
family.
“I fancy, myself, you know,
Mrs. Clifford,” he was saying, very loud, as
Elma entered, “there’s a screw loose just
now in the Kelmscott affairs—something
rotten somewhere in the state of Denmark. That
young fellow, Granville, who’s by no means such
a bad lot as his father all round—too good
for the family, in fact; too good for the family—Granville’s
been accustomed of late to come over into my grounds,
beyond the boundary wall, and being anxious above all
things to cultivate friendly relations with all my
neighbours in the county, I’ve allowed him to
come—I’ve allowed him, and I may
even say to a certain extent I’ve encouraged
him. There at times he’s met by accident
my daughter Gwendoline. Oh, dear no”—with
uplifted hand, and deprecating lips—“I
assure you, nothing of that sort, my dear Mrs.
Clifford. Gwendoline’s far too young, and
I couldn’t dream of allowing her to marry into
Colonel Kelmscott’s family. But, however,
be that as it may, he’s been in the habit of
coming there, till very recently, when all of a sudden,
only a week or ten days back, to my immense surprise
he ceased at once, and ever since has dropped into
the defensive, exactly as he used to do. And
I interpret it to mean—”
Elma heard no more of that pompous
speech. Her knees shook under her. For she
was aware only of Mrs. Clifford’s eyes, fixed
mildly and calmly upon her face, not in anger, as
she feared, or reproach, but rather in infinite pity.
For a second their glances met in mute intercourse
of soul, then each dropped their eyelashes as suddenly
as before. Through the rest of that lunch Elma
sat as in a maze, hearing and seeing nothing.
What she ate, or drank, or talked about, she knew
not. Mr. Gildersleeve’s pungent and embellished
anecdotes of the Kelmscott family and their unneighbourly
pride went in at one ear and out at the other.
All she was conscious of was her mother’s sympathetic
yet unerring eye; she felt sure that at one glance
that wonderful thought-reader had divined everything,
and seen through and through their interview that morning.
After lunch, the two men strolled
upon the lawn to enjoy their cigars, and Elma and
her mother were left alone in the drawing-room.
For some minutes neither could make
up her mind to break the ice and speak. They
sat shame-faced beside one another on the sofa, like
a pair of shy and frightened maidens. At last
Mrs. Clifford braced herself up to interrupt the
awkward silence. “You’ve been in
Chetwood Forest, Elma,” she murmured low, looking
down and averting her eyes carefully from her trembling
daughter.
“Yes, mother,” Elma answered,
all aglow with conscious blushes. “In Chetwood
Forest.”
“And you met him, dear?”
The mother spoke tenderly and sympathetically.
Elma’s heart stood still. “Yes, mother,
I met him.”
“And he had the snake there?”
Elma started in surprise. Why
dwell upon that seemingly unimportant detail?
“Oh yes,” she answered, still redder and
hotter than ever. “He had it there.
He was painting it.”
Mrs. Clifford paused a minute.
Then she went on, with pain. “And he asked
you, Elma?”
Elma bowed her head. “Yes,
he asked me—and I refused him,” she
answered, with a terrible wrench.
“Oh, darling; I know it,”
Mrs. Clifford cried, seizing both cold hands in hers.
“And I know why, too. But, Elma, believe
me, you needn’t have done it. My daughter,
my daughter, you might just as well have taken him.”
“No, never,” Elma cried,
rising from her seat and moving towards the door in
an agony of shame. “I couldn’t.
I daren’t. It would be wrong. It would
be cruel. But, mother, don’t speak to me
of it. Don’t mention it again. Even
before you it makes me more wretched and ashamed than
I can say to allude to it.”
She rushed from the room, with cheeks
burning like fire. Come what might, she never
could talk to any living soul again about that awful
episode.
But Mrs. Clifford sat on, on the sofa
where Elma left her, and cried to herself silently,
silently, silently. What a mother should do
in these hateful circumstances she could hardly even
guess. She only knew she could never speak it
out, and even if she did, Elma would never have the
courage or the heart to listen to her.
That same evening, when Elma went
up to bed, a strange longing came across her to sit
up late, and think over to herself again all the painful
details of the morning’s interview. She
seated herself by her bedside in her evening dress,
and began to think it all out again, exactly as it
happened. As she did so, the picture of Sardanapalus,
on his bed of fern, came up clear in her mind, just
as he lay coiled round in Cyril Waring’s landscape.
Beautiful Sardanapalus, so sleek and smooth and glossy,
if only she had him here now—she paused
and hesitated. In a moment, the wild impulse
rushed upon her once more. It clutched her by
the throat; it held her fast as in a vice. She
must get up and dance; she must obey the mandate;
she must whirl till she fell in that mystical ecstasy.
She rose, and seemed for a moment
as though she must yield to the temptation. The
boa—the boa was in the lower drawer.
Reluctantly, remorsefully, she opened the drawer and
took it out in her hands. Fluff and feathers,
fluff and feathers—nothing more than that!
But oh, how soft, how smooth, how yielding, how serpentine!
With a violent effort she steadied herself, and looked
round for her scissors. They lay on the dressing-table.
She took them up with a fixed and determined air.
“If thy right hand offend thee, cut it off,”
she thought to herself. Then she began ruthlessly
hacking the boa into short little lengths of a few
inches each, which she gathered up in her hands as
soon as she had finished, and replaced with care in
the drawer where she had originally found them.
After that her mind felt somewhat
more at ease and a trifle less turbulent. She
loved Cyril Waring—oh yes, she loved him
with all her heart; it was hard to give him up; hard
not to yield to that pressing impulse in such a moment
of doubt and despondency. The boa had said to
her, as it were, “Come, dance, go mad, and forget
your trouble!” But she had resisted the temptation.
And now—
Why, now, she would undress, and creep
into bed, like any other good English girl under similar
circumstances, and cry herself asleep with thoughts
of Cyril.
And so she did in truth. She
let her emotion take its natural outlet. She
lay awake for an hour or two, till her eyes were red
and sore and swollen. Then at last she dropped
off, for very weariness, and slept soundly an unbroken
sleep till morning.
At eight o’clock, Mrs. Clifford
knocked her tentative little knock at the door.
“Come in, mother,” Elma cried, starting
up in her surprise; and her mother, much wondering,
turned the handle and entered.
When she reached the bed, she gave
a little cry of amazement. “Why, Elma,”
she exclaimed, staring her hard and long in the face;
“my darling, what’s this? Your eyes
are red! How strange! You’ve been
crying!”
“Yes, mother,” Elma answered,
turning her face to the wall, but a thousand times
less ashamed than she had been the day before when
her mother spoke to her. “I couldn’t
help it, dearest.” She took that soft white
hand in hers and pressed it hard in silence. “It’s
no wonder, you know,” she said at last, after
a long deep pause. “He’s going away
from Chetwood to-day—and it was so very,
very hard to say good-bye to him for ever.”
“Oh yes, I know, darling,”
Mrs. Clifford answered, eyeing her harder than ever
now with a half-incredulous look. “I know
all that. But—you’ve had a good
night in spite of everything, Elma.”
Elma guessed what she meant.
They two could converse together quite plainly without
words. “Well, yes, a better night,”
she answered, hesitating, and shutting her eyes under
the bed-clothes for very shame. “A little
disturbed—don’t you know—just
at first; but I had a good cry very soon, and then
that mended everything.”
Her mother still looked at her, half
doubting and half delighted. “A good cry’s
the right thing,” she said slowly, in a very
low voice. “The exact right thing, perfectly
proper and normal. A good cry never did any girl
on this earth one atom of harm. It’s the
best safety-valve. You’re lucky, Elma, my
child, in being able to get one.”
“Yes, dear,” Elma answered,
with her head still buried. “Very lucky
indeed. So I think, too, mother.”
Mrs. Clifford’s eye fell aimlessly
upon certain tiny bits of feathery fluff that flecked
the floor here and there like floating fragments of
thistledown. In a second, her keen instinct divined
what they meant. Without one word she rose silently
and noiselessly, and opened the lower drawer, where
the boa usually reposed among the furs and feathers.
One glimpse of those mangled morsels showed her the
truth at a glance. She shut the drawer again noiselessly
and silently as she had opened it. But Elma, lying
still with her eyes closed tight, yet knew perfectly
well how her mother had been occupied.
Mrs. Clifford came back, and, stooping
over her daughter’s bed, kissed her forehead
tenderly. “Elma, darling,” she said,
while a hot tear or two fell silently upon the girl’s
burning cheek, “you’re very, very brave.
I’m so pleased with you, so proud of you!
I couldn’t have done it myself. You’re
stronger-minded than I am. My child, he kissed
you for good-bye yesterday. You needn’t
say yes, you needn’t say no. I read it
in your face. No need for you to tell me of it.
Well, darling, it wasn’t good-bye after all,
I’m certain of that. Believe me, my child,
he’ll come back some day, and you’ll know
you can marry him.”
“Never!” Elma cried, hiding
her face still more passionately and wildly than before
beneath great folds of the bed-clothes. “Don’t
speak to me of him any more, mother! Never!
Never! Never!”