When Mark Lennan, travelling through from Beaulieu, reached his
rooms in Chelsea, he went at once to the little pile of his
letters, twice hunted through them, then stood very still, with a
stunned, sick feeling. Why had she not sent him that promised
note? And now he realized--though not yet to the full--what it
meant to be in love with a married woman. He must wait in this
suspense for eighteen hours at least, till he could call, and find
out what had happened to prevent her, till he could hear from her
lips that she still loved him. The chilliest of legal lovers had
access to his love, but he must possess a soul that was on fire, in
this deadly patience, for fear of doing something that might
jeopardize her. Telegraph? He dared not. Write? She would get
it by the first post; but what could he say that was not dangerous,
if Cramier chanced to see? Call? Still more impossible till three
o'clock, at very earliest, to-morrow. His gaze wandered round the
studio. Were these household gods, and all these works of his,
indeed the same he had left twenty days ago? They seemed to exist
now only in so far as she might come to see them--come and sit in
such a chair, and drink out of such a cup, and let him put this
cushion for her back, and that footstool for her feet. And so
vividly could he see her lying back in that chair looking across at
him, that he could hardly believe she had never yet sat there. It
was odd how--without any resolution taken, without admission that
their love could not remain platonic, without any change in their
relations, save one humble kiss and a few whispered words--
everything was changed. A month or so ago, if he had wanted, he
would have gone at once calmly to her house. It would have seemed
harmless, and quite natural. Now it was impossible to do openly
the least thing that strict convention did not find desirable.
Sooner or later they would find him stepping over convention, and
take him for what he was not--a real lover! A real lover! He
knelt down before the empty chair and stretched out his arms. No
substance--no warmth--no fragrance--nothing! Longing that passed
through air, as the wind through grass.
He went to the little round window, which overlooked the river.
The last evening of May; gloaming above the water, dusk resting in
the trees, and the air warm! Better to be out, and moving in the
night, out in the ebb and flow of things, among others whose hearts
were beating, than stay in this place that without her was so cold
and meaningless.
Lamps--the passion-fruit of towns--were turning from pallor to full
orange, and the stars were coming out. Half-past nine! At ten
o'clock, and not before, he would walk past her house. To have
this something to look forward to, however furtive and barren,
helped. But on a Saturday night there would be no sitting at the
House. Cramier would be at home; or they would both be out; or
perhaps have gone down to their river cottage. Cramier! What
cruel demon had presided over that marring of her life! Why had he
never met her till after she had bound herself to this man! From a
negative contempt for one who was either not sensitive enough to
recognize that his marriage was a failure, or not chivalrous enough
to make that failure bear as little hardly as possible on his wife,
he had come already to jealous hatred as of a monster. To be face
to face with Cramier in a mortal conflict could alone have
satisfied his feeling. . . . Yet he was a young man by nature
gentle!
His heart beat desperately as he approached that street--one of
those little old streets, so beautiful, that belonged to a vanished
London. It was very narrow, there was no shelter; and he thought
confusedly of what he could say, if met in this remote backwater
that led nowhere. He would tell some lie, no doubt. Lies would
now be his daily business. Lies and hatred, those violent things
of life, would come to seem quite natural, in the violence of his
love.
He stood a moment, hesitating, by the rails of the old church.
Black, white-veined, with shadowy summits, in that half darkness,
it was like some gigantic vision. Mystery itself seemed modelled
there. He turned and walked quickly down the street close to the
houses on the further side. The windows of her house were lighted!
So, she was not away! Dim light in the dining-room, lights in the
room above--her bedroom, doubtless. Was there no way to bring her
to the window, no way his spirit could climb up there and beckon
hers out to him? Perhaps she was not there, perhaps it was but a
servant taking up hot water. He was at the end of the street by
now, but to leave without once more passing was impossible. And
this time he went slowly, his head down, feigning abstraction,
grudging every inch of pavement, and all the time furtively
searching that window with the light behind the curtains. Nothing!
Once more he was close to the railings of the church, and once more
could not bring himself to go away. In the little, close, deserted
street, not a soul was moving, not even a cat or dog; nothing alive
but many discreet, lighted windows. Like veiled faces, showing no
emotion, they seemed to watch his indecision. And he thought: "Ah,
well! I dare say there are lots like me. Lots as near, and yet as
far away! Lots who have to suffer!" But what would he not have
given for the throwing open of those curtains. Then, suddenly
scared by an approaching figure, he turned and walked away.