Gyp's recovery proceeded at first with a sure rapidity which
delighted Winton. As the economic agent pointed out, she was
beautifully made, and that had a lot to do with it!
Before Christmas Day, she was already out, and on Christmas morning
the old doctor, by way of present, pronounced her fit and ready to
go home when she liked. That afternoon, she was not so well, and
next day back again upstairs. Nothing seemed definitely wrong,
only a sort of desperate lassitude; as if the knowledge that to go
back was within her power, only needing her decision, had been too
much for her. And since no one knew her inward feelings, all were
puzzled except Winton. The nursing of her child was promptly
stopped.
It was not till the middle of January that she said to him.
"The house is quite ready. I think I had better go to-morrow.
He's still at Rosek's. I won't let him know. Two or three days
there by myself first would be better for settling baby in."
He made no effort to ascertain her feelings toward Fiorsen. He
knew too well.
They travelled next day, reaching London at half-past two. Betty
had gone up in the early morning to prepare the way. The dogs had
been with Aunt Rosamund all this time. Gyp missed their greeting;
but the installation of Betty and the baby in the spare room that
was now to be the nursery, absorbed all her first energies. Light
was just beginning to fail when, still in her fur, she took a key
of the music-room and crossed the garden, to see how all had fared
during her ten weeks' absence. What a wintry garden! How
different from that languorous, warm, moonlit night when Daphne
Wing had come dancing out of the shadow of the dark trees. How
bare and sharp the boughs against the grey, darkening sky--and not
a song of any bird, not a flower! She glanced back at the house.
Cold and white it looked, but there were lights in her room and in
the nursery, and someone just drawing the curtains. Now that the
leaves were off, one could see the other houses of the road, each
different in shape and colour, as is the habit of London houses.
It was cold, frosty; Gyp hurried down the path. Four little
icicles had formed beneath the window of the music-room. They
caught her eye, and, passing round to the side, she broke one off.
There must be a fire in there, for she could see the flicker
through the curtains not quite drawn. Thoughtful Ellen had been
airing it! But, suddenly, she stood still. There was more than a
fire in there! Through the chink in the drawn curtains she had
seen two figures seated on the divan. Something seemed to spin
round in her head. She turned to rush away. Then a kind of
superhuman coolness came to her, and she deliberately looked in.
He and Daphne Wing! His arm was round her neck. The girl's face
riveted her eyes. It was turned a little back and up, gazing at
him, the lips parted, the eyes hypnotized, adoring; and her arm
round him seemed to shiver--with cold, with ecstasy?
Again that something went spinning through Gyp's head. She raised
her hand. For a second it hovered close to the glass. Then, with
a sick feeling, she dropped it and turned away.
Never! Never would she show him or that girl that they could hurt
her! Never! They were safe from any scene she would make--safe in
their nest! And blindly, across the frosty grass, through the
unlighted drawing-room, she went upstairs to her room, locked the
door, and sat down before the fire. Pride raged within her. She
stuffed her handkerchief between her teeth and lips; she did it
unconsciously. Her eyes felt scorched from the fire-flames, but
she did not trouble to hold her hand before them.
Suddenly she thought: 'Suppose I had loved him?' and laughed. The
handkerchief dropped to her lap, and she looked at it with wonder--
it was blood-stained. She drew back in the chair, away from the
scorching of the fire, and sat quite still, a smile on her lips.
That girl's eyes, like a little adoring dog's--that girl, who had
fawned on her so! She had got her "distinguished man"! She sprang
up and looked at herself in the glass; shuddered, turned her back
on herself, and sat down again. In her own house! Why not here--
in this room? Why not before her eyes? Not yet a year married!
It was almost funny--almost funny! And she had her first calm
thought: 'I am free.'
But it did not seem to mean anything, had no value to a spirit so
bitterly stricken in its pride. She moved her chair closer to the
fire again. Why had she not tapped on the window? To have seen
that girl's face ashy with fright! To have seen him--caught--
caught in the room she had made beautiful for him, the room where
she had played for him so many hours, the room that was part of the
house that she paid for! How long had they used it for their
meetings--sneaking in by that door from the back lane? Perhaps
even before she went away--to bear his child! And there began in
her a struggle between mother instinct and her sense of outrage--a
spiritual tug-of-war so deep that it was dumb, unconscious--to
decide whether her baby would be all hers, or would have slipped
away from her heart, and be a thing almost abhorrent.
She huddled nearer the fire, feeling cold and physically sick. And
suddenly the thought came to her: 'If I don't let the servants know
I'm here, they might go out and see what I saw!' Had she shut the
drawing-room window when she returned so blindly? Perhaps already--!
In a fever, she rang the bell, and unlocked the door. The maid
came up.
"Please shut the drawing-room, window, Ellen; and tell Betty I'm
afraid I got a little chill travelling. I'm going to bed. Ask her
if she can manage with baby." And she looked straight into the
girl's face. It wore an expression of concern, even of
commiseration, but not that fluttered look which must have been
there if she had known.
"Yes, m'm; I'll get you a hot-water bottle, m'm. Would you like a
hot bath and a cup of hot tea at once?"
Gyp nodded. Anything--anything! And when the maid was gone, she
thought mechanically: 'A cup of hot tea! How quaint! What should
it be but hot?'
The maid came back with the tea; she was an affectionate girl, full
of that admiring love servants and dogs always felt for Gyp,
imbued, too, with the instinctive partisanship which stores itself
one way or the other in the hearts of those who live in houses
where the atmosphere lacks unity. To her mind, the mistress was
much too good for him--a foreigner--and such 'abits! Manners--he
hadn't any! And no good would come of it. Not if you took her
opinion!
"And I've turned the water in, m'm. Will you have a little mustard
in it?"
Again Gyp nodded. And the girl, going downstairs for the mustard,
told cook there was "that about the mistress that makes you quite
pathetic." The cook, who was fingering her concertina, for which
she had a passion, answered:
"She 'ides up her feelin's, same as they all does. Thank 'eaven
she haven't got that drawl, though, that 'er old aunt 'as--always
makes me feel to want to say, 'Buck up, old dear, you ain't 'alf so
precious as all that!'"
And when the maid Ellen had taken the mustard and gone, she drew
out her concertina to its full length and, with cautionary
softness, began to practise "Home, Sweet Home!"
To Gyp, lying in her hot bath, those muffled strains just mounted,
not quite as a tune, rather as some far-away humming of large
flies. The heat of the water, the pungent smell of the mustard,
and that droning hum slowly soothed and drowsed away the vehemence
of feeling. She looked at her body, silver-white in the yellowish
water, with a dreamy sensation. Some day she, too, would love!
Strange feeling she had never had before! Strange, indeed, that it
should come at such a moment, breaking through the old instinctive
shrinking. Yes; some day love would come to her. There floated
before her brain the adoring look on Daphne Wing's face, the shiver
that had passed along her arm, and pitifulness crept into her
heart--a half-bitter, half-admiring pitifulness. Why should she
grudge--she who did not love? The sounds, like the humming of
large flies, grew deeper, more vibrating. It was the cook, in her
passion swelling out her music on the phrase,
"Be it ne-e-ver so humble,
There's no-o place like home!"