When Gyp recovered a consciousness, whose flight had been
mercifully renewed with morphia, she was in her bed, and her first
drowsy movement was toward her mate. With eyes still closed, she
turned, as she was wont, and put out her hand to touch him before
she dozed off again. There was no warmth, no substance; through
her mind, still away in the mists of morphia, the thoughts passed
vague and lonely: 'Ah, yes, in London!' And she turned on her
back. London! Something--something up there! She opened her
eyes. So the fire had kept in all night! Someone was in a chair
there, or--was she dreaming! And suddenly, without knowing why,
she began breathing hurriedly in little half-sobbing gasps. The
figure moved, turned her face in the firelight. Betty! Gyp closed
her eyes. An icy sweat had broken out all over her. A dream! In
a whisper, she said:
No answer; then a half-choked, "Don't 'ee think--don't 'ee think!
Your Daddy'll be here directly, my sweetie!"
Gyp's eyes, wide open, passed from the firelight and that rocking
figure to the little chink of light that was hardly light as yet,
coming in at one corner of the curtain. She was remembering. Her
tongue stole out and passed over her lips; beneath the bedclothes
she folded both her hands tight across her heart. Then she was not
dead with him--not dead! Not gone back with him into the ground--
not-- And suddenly there flickered in her a flame of maniacal
hatred. They were keeping her alive! A writhing smile forced its
way up on to her parched lips.
"Betty, I'm so thirsty--so thirsty. Get me a cup of tea."
The stout form heaved itself from the chair and came toward the
bed.
"Yes, my lovey, at once. It'll do you good. That's a brave girl."
The moment the door clicked to, Gyp sprang up. Her veins throbbed;
her whole soul was alive with cunning. She ran to the wardrobe,
seized her long fur coat, slipped her bare feet into her slippers,
wound a piece of lace round her head, and opened the door. All
dark and quiet! Holding her breath, stifling the sound of her
feet, she glided down the stairs, slipped back the chain of the
front door, opened it, and fled. Like a shadow she passed across
the grass, out of the garden gate, down the road under the black
dripping trees. The beginning of light was mixing its grey hue
into the darkness; she could just see her feet among the puddles on
the road. She heard the grinding and whirring of a motor-car on
its top gear approaching up the hill, and cowered away against the
hedge. Its light came searching along, picking out with a
mysterious momentary brightness the bushes and tree-trunks, making
the wet road gleam. Gyp saw the chauffeur turn his head back at
her, then the car's body passed up into darkness, and its tail-
light was all that was left to see. Perhaps that car was going to
the Red House with her father, the doctor, somebody, helping to
keep her alive! The maniacal hate flared up in her again; she flew
on. The light grew; a man with a dog came out of a gate she had
passed, and called "Hallo!" She did not turn her head. She had
lost her slippers, and ran with bare feet, unconscious of stones,
or the torn-off branches strewing the road, making for the lane
that ran right down to the river, a little to the left of the inn,
the lane of yesterday, where the bank was free.
She turned into the lane; dimly, a hundred or more yards away, she
could see the willows, the width of lighter grey that was the
river. The river--"Away, my rolling river!"--the river--and the
happiest hours of all her life! If he were anywhere, she would
find him there, where he had sung, and lain with his head on her
breast, and swum and splashed about her; where she had dreamed, and
seen beauty, and loved him so! She reached the bank. Cold and
grey and silent, swifter than yesterday, the stream was flowing by,
its dim far shore brightening slowly in the first break of dawn.
And Gyp stood motionless, drawing her breath in gasps after her
long run; her knees trembled; gave way. She sat down on the wet
grass, clasping her arms round her drawn-up legs, rocking herself
to and fro, and her loosened hair fell over her face. The blood
beat in her ears; her heart felt suffocated; all her body seemed on
fire, yet numb. She sat, moving her head up and down--as the head
of one moves that is gasping her last--waiting for breath--breath
and strength to let go life, to slip down into the grey water. And
that queer apartness from self, which is the property of fever,
came on her, so that she seemed to see herself sitting there,
waiting, and thought: 'I shall see myself dead, floating among the
reeds. I shall see the birds wondering above me!' And, suddenly,
she broke into a storm of dry sobbing, and all things vanished from
her, save just the rocking of her body, the gasping of her breath,
and the sound of it in her ears. Her boy--her boy--and his poor
hair! "Away, my rolling river!" Swaying over, she lay face down,
clasping at the wet grass and the earth.
The sun rose, laid a pale bright streak along the water, and hid
himself again. A robin twittered in the willows; a leaf fell on
her bare ankle.
Winton, who had been hunting on Saturday, had returned to town on
Sunday by the evening tram, and gone straight to his club for some
supper. There falling asleep over his cigar, he had to be awakened
when they desired to close the club for the night. It was past two
when he reached Bury Street and found a telegram.
"Something dreadful happened to Mr. Summerhay. Come quick.--
BETTY."
Never had he so cursed the loss of his hand as during the time that
followed, when Markey had to dress, help his master, pack bags, and
fetch a taxi equipped for so long a journey. At half-past three
they started. The whole way down, Winton, wrapped in his fur coat,
sat a little forward on his seat, ready to put his head through the
window and direct the driver. It was a wild night, and he would
not let Markey, whose chest was not strong, go outside to act as
guide. Twice that silent one, impelled by feelings too strong even
for his respectful taciturnity, had spoken.
Dead! Could Fate be cruel enough to deal one so soft and loving
such a blow? And he kept saying to himself: "Courage. Be ready
for the worst. Be ready."
But the figures of Betty and a maid at the open garden gate, in the
breaking darkness, standing there wringing their hands, were too
much for his stoicism. Leaping out, he cried:
"As we came up the hill, sir, I see a lady or something in a long
dark coat with white on her head, against the hedge."
"Right! Drive down again sharp, and use your eyes."
At such moments, thought is impossible, and a feverish use of every
sense takes its place. But of thought there was no need, for the
gardens of villas and the inn blocked the river at all but one
spot. Winton stopped the car where the narrow lane branched down
to the bank, and jumping out, ran. By instinct he ran silently on
the grass edge, and Markey, imitating, ran behind. When he came in
sight of a black shape lying on the bank, he suffered a moment of
intense agony, for he thought it was just a dark garment thrown
away. Then he saw it move, and, holding up his hand for Markey to
stand still, walked on alone, tiptoeing in the grass, his heart
swelling with a sort of rapture. Stealthily moving round between
that prostrate figure and the water, he knelt down and said, as
best he could, for the husk in his throat:
Gyp raised her head and stared at him. Her white face, with eyes
unnaturally dark and large, and hair falling all over it, was
strange to him--the face of grief itself, stripped of the wrappings
of form. And he knew not what to do, how to help or comfort, how
to save. He could see so clearly in her eyes the look of a wild
animal at the moment of its capture, and instinct made him say:
He saw the words reach her brain, and that wild look waver.
Stretching out his arm, he drew her close to him till her cheek was
against his, her shaking body against him, and kept murmuring:
When, with Markey's aid, he had got her to the cab, they took her,
not back to the house, but to the inn. She was in high fever, and
soon delirious. By noon, Aunt Rosamund and Mrs. Markey, summoned
by telegram, had arrived; and the whole inn was taken lest there
should be any noise to disturb her.
At five o'clock, Winton was summoned downstairs to the little so-
called reading-room. A tall woman was standing at the window,
shading her eyes with the back of a gloved hand. Though they had
lived so long within ten miles of each other he only knew Lady
Summerhay by sight, and he waited for the poor woman to speak
first. She said in a low voice:
"There is nothing to say; only, I thought I must see you. How is
she?"
They stood in silence a full minute, before she whispered:
"My poor boy! Did you see him--his forehead?" Her lips quivered.
"I will take him back home." And tears rolled, one after the
other, slowly down her flushed face under her veil. Poor woman!
Poor woman! She had turned to the window, passing her handkerchief
up under the veil, staring out at the little strip of darkening
lawn, and Winton, too, stared out into that mournful daylight. At
last, he said:
"I will send you all his things, except--except anything that might
help my poor girl."
Without a quiver, he met those tear-darkened, dilated eyes
straining at his; with a heavy sigh, she once more turned away,
and, brushing her handkerchief across her face, drew down her veil.
It was not true--he knew from the mutterings of Gyp's fever--but no
one, not even Summerhay's mother, should hear a whisper if he could
help it. At the door, he murmured:
"I don't know whether my girl will get through, or what she will do
after. When Fate hits, she hits too hard. And you! Good-bye."
In the days that followed, when Gyp, robbed of memory, hung between
life and death, Winton hardly left her room, that low room with
creepered windows whence the river could be seen, gliding down
under the pale November sunshine or black beneath the stars. He
would watch it, fascinated, as one sometimes watches the relentless
sea. He had snatched her as by a miracle from that snaky river.
He had refused to have a nurse. Aunt Rosamund and Mrs. Markey were
skilled in sickness, and he could not bear that a strange person
should listen to those delirious mutterings. His own part of the
nursing was just to sit there and keep her secrets from the others--
if he could. And he grudged every minute away from his post. He
would stay for hours, with eyes fixed on her face. No one could
supply so well as he just that coherent thread of the familiar, by
which the fevered, without knowing it, perhaps find their way a
little in the dark mazes where they wander. And he would think of
her as she used to be--well and happy--adopting unconsciously the
methods of those mental and other scientists whom he looked upon as
quacks.
He was astonished by the number of inquiries, even people whom he
had considered enemies left cards or sent their servants, forcing
him to the conclusion that people of position are obliged to
reserve their human kindness for those as good as dead. But the
small folk touched him daily by their genuine concern for her whose
grace and softness had won their hearts. One morning he received a
letter forwarded from Bury Street.
"I have read a paragraph in the paper about poor Mr. Summerhay's
death. And, oh, I feel so sorry for her! She was so good to me; I
do feel it most dreadfully. If you think she would like to know
how we all feel for her, you would tell her, wouldn't you? I do
think it's cruel.
So they knew Summerhay's name--he had not somehow expected that.
He did not answer, not knowing what to say.
During those days of fever, the hardest thing to bear was the sound
of her rapid whisperings and mutterings--incoherent phrases that
said so little and told so much. Sometimes he would cover his
ears, to avoid hearing of that long stress of mind at which he had
now and then glimpsed. Of the actual tragedy, her wandering spirit
did not seem conscious; her lips were always telling the depth of
her love, always repeating the dread of losing his; except when
they would give a whispering laugh, uncanny and enchanting, as at
some gleam of perfect happiness. Those little laughs were worst of
all to hear; they never failed to bring tears into his eyes. But
he drew a certain gruesome comfort from the conclusion slowly
forced on him, that Summerhay's tragic death had cut short a
situation which might have had an even more tragic issue. One
night in the big chair at the side of her bed, he woke from a doze
to see her eyes fixed on him. They were different; they saw, were
her own eyes again. Her lips moved.
It was rather a sigh than a word and, raising his head, Winton saw
her eyes closed again. Now that the fever had gone, the white
transparency of her cheeks and forehead against the dark lashes and
hair was too startling. Was it a living face, or was its beauty
that of death?