Thyrza was not to be a boarder with the Emersons, nor did Mrs.
Ormonde request them to make a friend of her. Nothing more was
proposed than that she should rent from them their spare room, which
was tolerably spacious and could be used both as bed-chamber and
parlour. Her meals were to be supplied to her by the landlady of the
house. The only stipulation with the Emersons was that she should
receive her singing-lessons in their sitting-room, where there was a
piano.
Thyrza herself specially desired of Mrs. Ormonde that she might live
as much alone as possible. She declared that it would be no hardship
whatever to her to be without companionship. Her day's occupation
would be chiefly sewing, for Mrs. Ormonde had made arrangements that
she should have regular employment for her needle from a certain
charitable 'Home' at Hampstead. For this work she received payment,
which--Mrs. Ormonde made it appear--would suffice to discharge
her obligations to the Emersons and her landlady. Moreover, two days
of the week she was to spend at the said Home, where certain, not
too exacting, duties were assigned to her.
All this was very neatly contrived, and Mrs. Ormonde felt rather
proud of her success in so far meeting the requirements of a very
difficult case. A competent judge had reported so favourably of
Thyrza's voice, that there was a strong probability of its some day
enabling her to earn a living--should that be necessary--in one
of the many paths which our musical time opens to those thus happily
endowed; no stress was laid on that, however, for it was far from
desirable that Thyrza should be nursed into expectation of a golden
future. Mrs. Ormonde had determined that, if her exertion would
accomplish it, Thyrza should yet have as large a share of happiness
as a sober hope may claim for a girl of passionate instincts, of
rare beauty, and, it might be, of latent genius. To be sure, such
claim cannot be extravagant. The happy people of the world are the
dull, unimaginative beings from whom the gods, in their kindness,
have veiled all vision of the rising and the setting day, of
sea-limits, and of the stars of the night, whose ears are thickened
against the voice of music, whose thought finds nowhere mystery.
Thyrza Trent was not of those. What joys were to be hers she must
pluck out of the fire, and there are but few of her kind whom in the
end the fire does not consume.
But for the present things seemed to be set going on a smooth track.
And to be sure, though she had thought it better to ask no such
kindness, Mrs. Ormonde knew that her friend Clara Emerson would very
shortly make a companion of Thyrza. It was Clara's nature to make a
friend of any 'nice' person who gave a sign of readiness for
friendly intercourse; the fact of Thyrza's being untaught, and a
needle-plier, would make no difference to her when she had
discovered the girl's sweetness of disposition.
Thyrza wondered much at the way in which her singing-master
proceeded with her instruction. She had looked forward to learning
new songs, and she was allowed to sing nothing but mere
uninteresting scales of notes. A timid question at length elicited
one or two abrupt remarks which humbled, but at the same time
informed, her. The teacher, like most of his kind, was a poor
creature of routine, unburdened by imagination; he had only a larynx
to deal with, and was at no pains to realise that the fountain of
its notes was a soul. To be sure, that was a thought which he was
not accustomed to have forced upon him.
Humbled and informed, Thyrza took her lessons with faultless
patience, and with the hopeful zeal which makes light of every
difficulty. She felt her voice improving, and when she sang to
herself the old songs she was no longer satisfied with the old
degree of accuracy. A world of which she had had no suspicion was
opening to her; music began to mean something quite different from
the bird-warble which was all that she had known. Moreover, she
began to have an inkling of the value of her voice. Mrs. Ormonde had
scarcely with a word commended her singing, and had spoken of the
lessons as something that might be useful, with no more emphasis.
The master, of course, had only praise or blame for the individual
exercise. But there was someone in the house who felt bound by no
considerations of prudence; Clara, hearing Thyrza's notes, was
entranced by them, and of course took the first opportunity of
saying so.
'You really think I have a good voice?' Thyrza asked once, when they
had grown accustomed to each other.
'You have a splendid voice, Miss Trent!' replied Clara, who
delighted in bestowing praise.
'Do you think I shall really be able to sing some day--I mean, to
people?'
'Why not? I fancy people will be only too anxious to get you to
sing.'
'In--in places like St. James's Hall?' Thyrza asked, her ears
tingling at her audacity.
Thyrza sewed, as a rule, for six hours a day, save of course on the
days when she went to the Home. For her leisure she had found so
much occupation that she seldom went to bed before midnight. In her
walk to the omnibus which took her to Hampstead, she had to pass a
second-hand book-shop, and it became her habit to put aside sixpence
a week--more she could not--for the purchasing of books. With no
one to guide her choice, and restricted as she was in the matter of
price, she sometimes made strange acquisitions. She avoided story
books, and bought only such as seemed to her to contain solid matter
--history by preference, having learned from Gilbert that history
was the best thing to study. Over these accumulating volumes she
spent many a laborious hour. At first it was very hard to keep awake
much after ten o'clock; eyelids would grow so heavy, and the coil
of golden hair (she no longer wore the long plait with the blue
ribbon) seemed such a burden on the brain. But she strove with her
drowsiness, and, like other students, soon made the grand discovery
that, the fit once over, one is wider awake than ever. What hard,
hard things she read! 'Tytler's Universal History,' in one fat
little small-typed volume, very much spoilt by rain, she made a
vade-mecum; the 'Annals of the Orient, of Greece, of Rome'--with
difficulty not easily estimated she worked her way through them. An
English Dictionary became a necessity; she had to wait three weeks
before she had money enough to purchase the cheapest she could find.
At the very beginning of Tytler were such terrible words:
chronological, and epitome, and disquisitions, and
exemplification.
'If I had someone to ask, what time it would save me! Wouldn't he
help me? Wouldn't he be glad to tell me what long words mean?'
Never mind, she would do it by herself. She had brains. Poor Gilbert
had so often said that she could learn anything in time. So the lamp
burned on till midnight. Compendious old Tytler! In his grave it
should have given him both joy and sorrow that so sweet a face grew
paler over his long hard words.
Had she not her reward before her? Two years; in one way it would be
all too short a time. Not an hour must be lost. And when the two
years had come full circle, and some morning she was told that
someone wished to see her, and she went down into the sitting-room,
and he, he stood before her, then she would say, 'This and this I
have done, thus hard have I striven, for your sake, because I love
you better than my own soul!'
That secret: no one must suspect it; no, not even Lyddy. After a
hard night's work she would wake up feeling yet weary, her brain
dull, and a strange pain at her heart--the pain that came so
often; but, whilst her thoughts were struggling to consciousness,
she felt that there was some joy beyond the present pain. And,
behold! with sense of the new day came ever renewed hope. She rose,
and a bright angel circled her with protecting, comforting arms.
Dark or sunny, for her the morning had its golden rays.
How near he sometimes might be to her! She knew nothing of
Egremont's having left England; Lydia did not, and would scarcely
have mentioned the name even if she had known. Thyrza thought of
himself as always very near. There was a possibility that she might
by chance see him. It would have been very dear to her to see him at
a distance, but she dreaded lest he should see her. That would spoil
all. No, it was a sacred compact. Two years--two whole years--
had to be lived through, and then no one could say a word against
their meeting.
She would be able to sing to him then. If her voice proved good
enough for her to sing in a concert, like the concert at St.
James's Hall, would he not be proud of her? Artist's soul that she
had, she never gave it a thought that, if she became his wife, he
might prefer that she should not sing in public. She imagined
herself before a great hall of people, singing, yet singing in truth
to one only. But all the others must hear and praise, that he might
have joy of her power.
Yet there would be the hour, also, for singing to him alone--they
two alone together. Would not her song be then the most glorious?
Not with her own voice, but with the voice of very love, would she
utter her hymn of gladness and worship. And he would praise her in
few words--more with looks than with words. And again she would
say: 'So I can sing, and no one can sing like me; but only because I
sing for you, and with my soul I love you!'
She could not often be sorrowful, and never for long together, even
in thinking of the past. Yes, one day there was of unbroken grief,
the day on which she received, through Mrs. Ormonde as always, the
letter wherein Lydia told her of Mr. Boddy's death. On that day she
shed bitter tears. Lydia spared her all that was most painful. She
said that the old man had fallen insensible by the Pooles' house,
had been taken in by them, and had died. She said that just before
the end he uttered Thyrza's name. And Thyrza had thought too seldom
of Mr. Boddy, to whom she and her sister owed so much. Had she
hastened his death--she now asked herself--by bringing upon him
a great grief? The common remorse, the common vain longings,
assailed her. Even in the old days she had somewhat slighted him;
she had never shown him such love and care as Lydia always did. And
the poor old man was buried, with so much of her past.
Only one little shadow there was that fell upon her at times when
she thought of Egremont. What was that question of Mrs. Ormonde's--
a question asked in the overheard conversation? 'Have you altogether
forgotten Annabel?' And Walter's reply had shown that he did once
love someone named Annabel. He had asked her to marry him, and she
--strange beyond thought!--had refused him. Thyrza believed--
she could not be quite sure, but she believed--that she had heard
Mrs. Ormonde address Miss Newthorpe by that name. She remembered
Miss Newthorpe very distinctly, her refined beauty, her delightful
playing; strangely, too, she had associated Egremont with that lady
in the thoughts she had after her return from Eastbourne. If that
were Annabel, did there remain no fear? If he had once loved her,
might not the love revive? He and she would meet--doubtless, would
meet. Her beauty, her accomplishments, would be present, and was
there no danger to the newer love if that memory were frequently
brought back?
If he had not loved Annabel, be she who she might! If this love for
herself had been his first love, how thankful she would have been!
The love she gave him was her first; never had she loved Gilbert
Grail, though she had thought her friendship for him deserved the
dearer name. Her first love, truly, and would it not he her last?
Very often, when she had sat down to her hook, thoughts of this kind
would come and distract her. What to her were the kings of old
Eastern lands, the conquests of Rome, the long chronicles dense with
forgotten battle and woe? So easily she could have yielded to her
former habits, and have passed hour after hour in reverie. What--
she wondered now--had she dreamed of in those far-off days? Was it
not foresight of the mystery one day to rule her life? Had she not
visioned these sorrows and these priceless joys, when as yet unable
to understand them? Indeed, sometimes there seemed no break between
then and now. She longed unconsciously for what was now come, that
was all. Everything had befallen so naturally, so inevitably, step
by step, a rising from vision to vision.
But Lydia was not forgotten. To her she wrote long letters, telling
all that she might tell. The one thing of which she would most
gladly have spoken to her sister must never be touched upon. For in
one respect Lydia was against her--fixedly against her; she had
come to know that too well. Lydia bitterly resented Egremont's
coming between her sister and Gilbert; she hoped his name would
never again be spoken, and that all remembrance of him would pass
away. This made no difference to Thyrza's love. When she met Lydia
it was always with the same passionate joy. Their meetings took
place in a private room at the hotel Mrs. Ormonde always used. Lydia
never made any inquiry; whatever she might tell about herself,
Thyrza had to tell unasked. It would have made a great difference
had there been no secret to keep beyond that comparatively
unimportant one of where Thyrza was living. But Thyrza resolved to
breathe no word till the two years were gone by. Would it, then,
make a coldness between her and her sister? It should not; her
happiness should not have that great flaw.
When the spring came, Thyrza knew a falling off in her health. The
pain at her heart gave her more trouble, and she had days of such
physical weakness that she could do little work. With the reviving
year her passion became a yearning of such intensity that it seemed
to exhaust her frame. For all her endeavours it was seldom during
these weeks that she could give attention to her books; even her
voice failed for a time, and when she resumed the suspended lessons,
she terrified her teacher by fainting just as he was taking leave of
her. Mrs. Ormonde came, and there was a very grave conversation
between her and Dr. Lambe, who was again attending Thyrza. It was
declared that the latter had been over-exerting herself; work of all
kind was prohibited for a season. And when a week or two brought
about little, if any, improvement, Thyrza was taken to Eastbourne,
to her old quarters in Mrs. Guest's house.
The elder sister could not give herself to full enjoyment of these
days. Much as she delighted to be with Thyrza, there was always one
and the same drawback to her pleasure in the meetings. Thyrza was so
unfeignedly cheerful that Lydia could by no effort get rid of her
suspicion that she was being deceived. She shrank from reopening the
subject, because it was so disagreeable to her to pronounce
Egremont's name; because, too, she could not betray doubt without
offending Thyrza. It was hard to distrust Thyrza, yet how account
for the girl's most strange apparent happiness? Even now, though
under troubled health, her sister's spirits were good. Far more
easily Lydia could have suspected Mrs. Ormonde of some duplicity,
yet here she was checked by instincts of gratitude, and by a sense
of shame. Mrs. Ormonde did not certainly impress her as likely to be
deceitful. Still, though she would not specify accusation, Lydia
felt, was convinced indeed, that something very material was being
kept from her. It was a cruel interference with the completeness of
her sympathy in all the conversation between Thyrza and herself.
'So you are friends again with Mary Bower,' Thyrza said, soon after
they had met. 'Do you go and have tea with her on Sundays
sometimes?'
'We won't talk about it now, dearest. Some day we will, though--a
good long talk. When we are again together. If we ever shall be
together again, Thyrza.'
'I think so, Lyddy. I hope so. At all events, we shall see each
other very often.'
'But you don't think we shall. You don't hope we shall.' Thyrza
did not speak.
'No,' Lydia went on, very sadly, 'that's all over and gone. There's
something between us, and now there always will be, always. It's
very hard for me to lose you like this.'
'Don't speak about it now, Lyddy,' her sister murmured. 'It isn't
true that there'll always be something between us. You'll see. But
don't speak about it now, dear.'
Lydia brightened, and found other subjects, Then Thyrza said:
'You never told me, Lyddy, what it was that first made you break off
with Mary. You know you never would tell me. Is it still a secret?'
'It was because Mary spoke against Mr. Ackroyd. I still don't think
that she ought to have spoken as she did, and Mary owns she was
unkind; but I understand better now what she meant.'
'But there's something else, I'm sure there is. You said, 'And I
don't either,' in such a queer way. How do you know they don't suit
each other?'
'Since grandad's death, you know, I've often been to Mrs. Poole's.
She tells me things sometimes. You mustn't think I ever ask, Thyrza.
You know that isn't my way. But Mrs. Poole often speaks about her
brother. Only two days ago, she told me he wasn't going to marry
Totty.'
'Really? And I don't think you'd have said a word about it if I
hadn't made you. It's broken off for good?'
'Butwhy has he broken off with Totty? What does Totty say about
it?'
'I believe she was the first to ask him to break off. I met her a
week ago, and she looked very jolly, as if something good had
happened to her. I suppose she's glad to be free again.'
'How queer it all is, Lyddy! Now you might mention things like this
in your letters. If there's anything else of the same kind happens,
remember you tell me.'
'I don't see how there can be. Unless they begin over again.'
'Well, mind you tell me if they do--and if they don't.'
On the second day of Lydia's visit, they heard from The Chestnuts
that Bessie Bunce was dead. She had died suddenly, and just when she
seemed to be in better health than for years.
Thyrza, speaking of the event with Lydia, said gravely:
'I can't feel sorry. It's a good thing to die like that, with no
pain and no looking forward.'
'Oh, do you think so, Thyrza? There's something dreadful in the
suddenness to me.'
'To me it's just the opposite. I'm afraid of death. I don't think I
could sit by anybody that was dying. I hope, I hope I may die in
that way!'