Summerhay did not wear his heart on his sleeve, and when, on the
closing-day of term, he left his chambers to walk to that last
meeting, his face was much as usual under his grey top hat. But,
in truth, he had come to a pretty pass. He had his own code of
what was befitting to a gentleman. It was perhaps a trifle "old
Georgian," but it included doing nothing to distress a woman. All
these weeks he had kept himself in hand; but to do so had cost him
more than he liked to reflect on. The only witness of his
struggles was his old Scotch terrier, whose dreams he had disturbed
night after night, tramping up and down the long back-to-front
sitting-room of his little house. She knew--must know--what he was
feeling. If she wanted his love, she had but to raise her finger;
and she had not raised it. When he touched her, when her dress
disengaged its perfume or his eyes traced the slow, soft movement
of her breathing, his head would go round, and to keep calm and
friendly had been torture.
While he could see her almost every day, this control had been just
possible; but now that he was about to lose her--for weeks--his
heart felt sick within him. He had been hard put to it before the
world. A man passionately in love craves solitude, in which to
alternate between fierce exercise and that trance-like stillness
when a lover simply aches or is busy conjuring her face up out of
darkness or the sunlight. He had managed to do his work, had been
grateful for having it to do; but to his friends he had not given
attention enough to prevent them saying: "What's up with old
Bryan?" Always rather elusive in his movements, he was now too
elusive altogether for those who had been accustomed to lunch,
dine, dance, and sport with him. And yet he shunned his own
company--going wherever strange faces, life, anything distracted
him a little, without demanding real attention. It must be
confessed that he had come unwillingly to discovery of the depth of
his passion, aware that it meant giving up too much. But there are
women who inspire feeling so direct and simple that reason does not
come into play; and he had never asked himself whether Gyp was
worth loving, whether she had this or that quality, such or such
virtue. He wanted her exactly as she was; and did not weigh her in
any sort of balance. It is possible for men to love passionately,
yet know that their passion is but desire, possible for men to love
for sheer spiritual worth, feeling that the loved one lacks this or
that charm.
Summerhay's love had no such divided consciousness. About her
past, too, he dismissed speculation. He remembered having heard in
the hunting-field that she was Winton's natural daughter; even then
it had made him long to punch the head of that covertside scandal-
monger. The more there might be against the desirability of loving
her, the more he would love her; even her wretched marriage only
affected him in so far as it affected her happiness. It did not
matter--nothing mattered except to see her and be with her as much
as she would let him. And now she was going to the sea for a
month, and he himself--curse it!--was due in Perthshire to shoot
grouse. A month!
He walked slowly along the river. Dared he speak? At times, her
face was like a child's when it expects some harsh or frightening
word. One could not hurt her--impossible! But, at times, he had
almost thought she would like him to speak. Once or twice he had
caught a slow soft glance--gone the moment he had sight of it.
He was before his time, and, leaning on the river parapet, watched
the tide run down. The sun shone on the water, brightening its
yellowish swirl, and little black eddies--the same water that had
flowed along under the willows past Eynsham, past Oxford, under the
church at Clifton, past Moulsford, past Sonning. And he thought:
'My God! To have her to myself one day on the river--one whole
long day!' Why had he been so pusillanimous all this time? He
passed his hand over his face. Broad faces do not easily grow
thin, but his felt thin to him, and this gave him a kind of morbid
satisfaction. If she knew how he was longing, how he suffered! He
turned away, toward Whitehall. Two men he knew stopped to bandy a
jest. One of them was just married. They, too, were off to
Scotland for the twelfth. Pah! How stale and flat seemed that
which till then had been the acme of the whole year to him! Ah,
but if he had been going to Scotland with her! He drew his breath
in with a sigh that nearly removed the Home Office.
Oblivious of the gorgeous sentries at the Horse Guards, oblivious
of all beauty, he passed irresolute along the water, making for
their usual seat; already, in fancy, he was sitting there, prodding
at the gravel, a nervous twittering in his heart, and that eternal
question: Dare I speak? asking itself within him. And suddenly he
saw that she was before him, sitting there already. His heart gave
a jump. No more craning--he would speak!
She was wearing a maize-coloured muslin to which the sunlight gave
a sort of transparency, and sat, leaning back, her knees crossed,
one hand resting on the knob of her furled sunshade, her face half
hidden by her shady hat. Summerhay clenched his teeth, and went
straight up to her.
"Gyp! No, I won't call you anything else. This can't go on! You
know it can't. You know I worship you! If you can't love me, I've
got to break away. All day, all night, I think and dream of
nothing but you. Gyp, do you want me to go?"
Suppose she said: "Yes, go!" She made a little movement, as if in
protest, and without looking at him, answered very low:
"A month. Is that long? Please! It's not easy for me." She
smiled faintly, lifted her eyes to him just for a second. "Please
not any more now."
That evening at his club, through the bluish smoke of cigarette
after cigarette, he saw her face as she had lifted it for that one
second; and now he was in heaven, now in hell.