Gyp stayed in her room doing little things--as a woman will when
she is particularly wretched--sewing pale ribbons into her
garments, polishing her rings. And the devil that had entered into
her when she woke that morning, having had his fling, slunk away,
leaving the old bewildered misery. She had stabbed her lover with
words and looks, felt pleasure in stabbing, and now was bitterly
sad. What use--what satisfaction? How by vengeful prickings cure
the deep wound, disperse the canker in her life? How heal herself
by hurting him whom she loved so? If he came up again now and made
but a sign, she would throw herself into his arms. But hours
passed, and he did not come, and she did not go down--too truly
miserable. It grew dark, but she did not draw the curtains; the
sight of the windy moonlit garden and the leaves driving across
brought a melancholy distraction. Little Gyp came in and prattled.
There was a tree blown down, and she had climbed on it; they had
picked up two baskets of acorns, and the pigs had been so greedy;
and she had been blown away, so that Betty had had to run after
her. And Baryn was walking in the study; he was so busy he had
only given her one kiss.
When she was gone, Gyp opened the window and let the wind full into
her face. If only it would blow out of her heart this sickening
sense that all was over, no matter how he might pretend to love her
out of pity! In a nature like hers, so doubting and self-
distrustful, confidence, once shaken to the roots, could never be
restored. A proud nature that went all lengths in love could never
be content with a half-love. She had been born too doubting,
proud, and jealous, yet made to love too utterly. She--who had
been afraid of love, and when it came had fought till it swept her
away; who, since then, had lived for love and nothing else, who
gave all, and wanted all--knew for certain and for ever that she
could not have all.
It was "nothing" he had said! Nothing! That for months he had
been thinking at least a little of another woman besides herself.
She believed what he had told her, that there had been no more than
a kiss--but was it nothing that they had reached that kiss? This
girl--this cousin--who held all the cards, had everything on her
side--the world, family influence, security of life; yes, and more,
so terribly much more--a man's longing for the young and
unawakened. This girl he could marry! It was this thought which
haunted her. A mere momentary outbreak of man's natural wildness
she could forgive and forget--oh, yes! It was the feeling that it
was a girl, his own cousin, besieging him, dragging him away, that
was so dreadful. Ah, how horrible it was--how horrible! How, in
decent pride, keep him from her, fetter him?
She heard him come up to his dressing-room, and while he was still
there, stole out and down. Life must go on, the servants be
hoodwinked, and so forth. She went to the piano and played,
turning the dagger in her heart, or hoping forlornly that music
might work some miracle. He came in presently and stood by the
fire, silent.
Dinner, with the talk needful to blinding the household--for what
is more revolting than giving away the sufferings of the heart?--
was almost unendurable and directly it was over, they went, he to
his study, she back to the piano. There she sat, ready to strike
the notes if anyone came in; and tears fell on the hands that
rested in her lap. With all her soul she longed to go and clasp
him in her arms and cry: "I don't care--I don't care! Do what you
like--go to her--if only you'll love me a little!" And yet to
love--a little! Was it possible? Not to her!
In sheer misery she went upstairs and to bed. She heard him come
up and go into his dressing-room--and, at last, in the firelight
saw him kneeling by her.
She raised herself and threw her arms round him. Such an embrace a
drowning woman might have given. Pride and all were abandoned in
an effort to feel him close once more, to recover the irrecoverable
past. For a long time she listened to his pleading, explanations,
justifications, his protestations of undying love--strange to her
and painful, yet so boyish and pathetic. She soothed him, clasping
his head to her breast, gazing out at the flickering fire. In that
hour, she rose to a height above herself. What happened to her own
heart did not matter so long as he was happy, and had all that he
wanted with her and away from her--if need be, always away from her.
But, when he had gone to sleep, a terrible time began; for in the
small hours, when things are at their worst, she could not keep
back her weeping, though she smothered it into the pillow. It woke
him, and all began again; the burden of her cry: "It's gone!" the
burden of his: "It's not--can't you see it isn't?" Till, at last,
that awful feeling that he must knock his head against the wall
made him leap up and tramp up and down like a beast in a cage--the
cage of the impossible. For, as in all human tragedies, both were
right according to their natures. She gave him all herself, wanted
all in return, and could not have it. He wanted her, the rest
besides, and no complaining, and could not have it. He did not
admit impossibility; she did.
At last came another of those pitying lulls till he went to sleep
in her arms. Long she lay awake, staring at the darkness,
admitting despair, trying to find how to bear it, not succeeding.
Impossible to cut his other life away from him--impossible that,
while he lived it, this girl should not be tugging him away from
her. Impossible to watch and question him. Impossible to live
dumb and blind, accepting the crumbs left over, showing nothing.
Would it have been better if they had been married? But then it
might have been the same--reversed; perhaps worse! The roots were
so much deeper than that. He was not single-hearted and she was.
In spite of all that he said, she knew he didn't really want to
give up that girl. How could he? Even if the girl would let him
go! And slowly there formed within her a gruesome little plan to
test him. Then, ever so gently withdrawing her arms, she turned
over and slept, exhausted.
Next morning, remorselessly carrying out that plan, she forced
herself to smile and talk as if nothing had happened, watching the
relief in his face, his obvious delight at the change, with a
fearful aching in her heart. She waited till he was ready to go
down, and then, still smiling, said:
"Forget all about yesterday, darling. Promise me you won't let it
make any difference. You must keep up your friendship; you mustn't
lose anything. I shan't mind; I shall be quite happy." He knelt
down and leaned his forehead against her waist. And, stroking his
hair, she repeated: "I shall only be happy if you take everything
that comes your way. I shan't mind a bit." And she watched his
face that had lost its trouble.
But she went on laughing; then, with a sob, turned away and buried
her face in her hands. To all his prayers and kisses she answered
nothing, and breaking away from him, she rushed toward the door. A
wild thought possessed her. Why go on? If she were dead, it would
be all right for him, quiet--peaceful, quiet--for them all! But he
had thrown himself in the way.
"Gyp, for heaven's sake! I'll give her up--of course I'll give her
up. Do--do--be reasonable! I don't care a finger-snap for her
compared with you!"
And presently there came another of those lulls that both were
beginning to know were mere pauses of exhaustion. They were
priceless all the same, for the heart cannot go on feeling at that
rate.
It was Sunday morning, the church-bells ringing, no wind, a lull in
the sou'westerly gale--one of those calms that fall in the night
and last, as a rule, twelve or fifteen hours, and the garden all
strewn with leaves of every hue, from green spotted with yellow to
deep copper.
Summerhay was afraid; he kept with her all the morning, making all
sorts of little things to do in her company. But he gradually lost
his fear, she seemed so calm now, and his was a nature that bore
trouble badly, ever impatient to shake it off. And then, after
lunch, the spirit-storm beat up again, with a swiftness that showed
once more how deceptive were those lulls, how fearfully deep and
lasting the wound. He had simply asked her whether he should try
to match something for her when he went up, to-morrow. She was
silent a moment, then answered:
"Oh, no, thanks; you'll have other things to do; people to see!"
The tone of her voice, the expression on her face showed him, with
a fresh force of revelation, what paralysis had fallen on his life.
If he could not reconvince her of his love, he would be in
perpetual fear--that he might come back and find her gone, fear
that she might even do something terrible to herself. He looked at
her with a sort of horror, and, without a word, went out of the
room. The feeling that he must hit his head against something was
on him once more, and once more he sought to get rid of it by
tramping up and down. Great God! Such a little thing, such
fearful consequences! All her balance, her sanity almost,
destroyed. Was what he had done so very dreadful? He could not
help Diana loving him!
In the night, Gyp had said: "You are cruel. Do you think there is
any man in the world that I wouldn't hate the sight of if I knew
that to see him gave you a moment's pain?" It was true--he felt it
was true. But one couldn't hate a girl simply because she loved
you; at least he couldn't--not even to save Gyp pain. That was not
reasonable, not possible. But did that difference between a man
and a woman necessarily mean that Gyp loved him so much more than
he loved her? Could she not see things in proportion? See that a
man might want, did want, other friendships, even passing moments
of passion, and yet could love her just the same? She thought him
cruel, called him cruel--what for? Because he had kissed a girl
who had kissed him; because he liked talking to her, and--yes,
might even lose his head with her. But cruel! He was not! Gyp
would always be first with him. He must make her see--but how?
Give up everything? Give up--Diana? (Truth is so funny--it will
out even in a man's thoughts!) Well, and he could! His feeling
was not deep--that was God's truth! But it would be difficult,
awkward, brutal to give her up completely! It could be done,
though, sooner than that Gyp should think him cruel to her. It
could be--should be done!
Only, would it be any use? Would she believe? Would she not
always now be suspecting him when he was away from her, whatever he
did? Must he then sit down here in inactivity? And a gust of
anger with her swept him. Why should she treat him as if he were
utterly unreliable? Or--was he? He stood still. When Diana had
put her arms round his neck, he could no more have resisted
answering her kiss than he could now fly through the window and
over those poplar trees. But he was not a blackguard, not cruel,
not a liar! How could he have helped it all? The only way would
have been never to have answered the girl's first letter, nearly a
year ago. How could he foresee? And, since then, all so gradual,
and nothing, really, or almost nothing. Again the surge of anger
swelled his heart. She must have read the letter which had been
under that cursed bust of old Voltaire all those months ago. The
poison had been working ever since! And in sudden fury at that
miserable mischance, he drove his fist into the bronze face. The
bust fell over, and Summerhay looked stupidly at his bruised hand.
A silly thing to do! But it had quenched his anger. He only saw
Gyp's face now--so pitifully unhappy. Poor darling! What could he
do? If only she would believe! And again he had the sickening
conviction that whatever he did would be of no avail. He could
never get back, was only at the beginning, of a trouble that had no
end. And, like a rat in a cage, his mind tried to rush out of this
entanglement now at one end, now at the other. Ah, well! Why
bruise your head against walls? If it was hopeless--let it go!
And, shrugging his shoulders, he went out to the stables, and told
old Pettance to saddle Hotspur. While he stood there waiting, he
thought: 'Shall I ask her to come?' But he could not stand another
bout of misery--must have rest! And mounting, he rode up towards
the downs.
Hotspur, the sixteen-hand brown horse, with not a speck of white,
that Gyp had ridden hunting the day she first saw Summerhay, was
nine years old now. His master's two faults as a horseman--a habit
of thrusting, and not too light hands--had encouraged his rather
hard mouth, and something had happened in the stables to-day to put
him into a queer temper; or perhaps he felt--as horses will--the
disturbance raging within his rider. At any rate, he gave an
exhibition of his worst qualities, and Summerhay derived perverse
pleasure from that waywardness. He rode a good hour up there;
then, hot, with aching arms--for the brute was pulling like the
devil!--he made his way back toward home and entered what little
Gyp called "the wild," those two rough sedgy fields with the linhay
in the corner where they joined. There was a gap in the hedge-
growth of the bank between them, and at this he put Hotspur at
speed. The horse went over like a bird; and for the first time
since Diana's kiss Summerhay felt a moment's joy. He turned him
round and sent him at it again, and again Hotspur cleared it
beautifully. But the animal's blood was up now. Summerhay could
hardly hold him. Muttering: "Oh, you brute, don't pull!" he jagged
the horse's mouth. There darted into his mind Gyp's word: "Cruel!"
And, viciously, in one of those queer nerve-crises that beset us
all, he struck the pulling horse.
They were cantering toward the corner where the fields joined, and
suddenly he was aware that he could no more hold the beast than if
a steam-engine had been under him. Straight at the linhay Hotspur
dashed, and Summerhay thought: "My God! He'll kill himself!"
Straight at the old stone linhay, covered by the great ivy bush.
Right at it--into it! Summerhay ducked his head. Not low enough--
the ivy concealed a beam! A sickening crash! Torn backward out of
the saddle, he fell on his back in a pool of leaves and mud. And
the horse, slithering round the linhay walls, checked in his own
length, unhurt, snorting, frightened, came out, turning his wild
eyes on his master, who never stirred, then trotted back into the
field, throwing up his head.