Horace's letter Nancy sent by post to her husband, requesting him to
let her know his thoughts about it in writing before they again met.
Of her own feeling she gave no sign. 'I want you to speak of it just
as if it concerned a stranger, plainly and simply. All I need say
is, that I never even suspected the truth.'
Tarrant did not keep her long in suspense, and his answer complied
in reasonable measure with the desire she had expressed.
'The disclosure has, of course, pained you. Equally, of course, you
wish it were not necessary to let me know of it; you are in doubt as
to how it will affect me; you perhaps fear that I shall--never
mind about phrasing. First, then, a word on that point. Be assured
once for all that nothing external to yourself can ever touch the
feeling which I now have for you. "One word is too often profaned";
I will say simply that I hold you in higher regard that any other
human being.
'Try not to grieve, my dearest. It is an old story, in both senses.
You wish to know how I view the matter. Well, if a wife cannot love
her husband, it is better she should not pretend to do so; if she
love some one else, her marriage is at an end, and she must go.
Simple enough--provided there be no children. Whether it is ever
permissible for a mother to desert her children, I don't know. I
will only say that, in you yourself, I can find nothing more
admirable than the perfect love which you devote to your child.
Forsake it, you could not.
'In short, act as feeling dictates. Your mother lives; that fact
cannot be ignored. In your attitude towards her, do not consult me
at all; whatever your heart approves, I shall find good and right.
Only, don't imagine that your feeling of to-day is final--I would
say, make no resolve; they are worth little, in any concern of life.
'Write to me again, and say when you wish to see me.
After reading this, Nancy moved about with the radiance of a great
joy on her countenance. She made no haste to reply; she let a day
elapse; then, in the silence of a late hour, took pen and paper.
'When do I wish to see you? Always; in every moment of my day. And
yet I have so far conquered "the unreasonable female"--do you
remember saying that?--that I would rather never see you again
than bring you to my side except when it was your pleasure to be
with me. Come as soon as you can--as soon as you will.
'My mother--how shall I word it? She is nothing to me. I don't
feel that Nature bids me love her. I could pardon her for leaving my
father; like you, I see nothing terrible in that; but, like you, I
know that she did wrong in abandoning her little children, and her
kindness to Horace at the end cannot atone for it. I don't think she
has any love for me. We shall not see each other; at all events,
that is how I feel about it at present. But I am very glad that
Horace made provision for her--that of course was right; if he had
not done it, it would have been my duty.
'I had better tell you that Mary has known my mother's story for a
long time--but not that she still lived. My father told her just
before his death, and exacted her promise that, if it seemed well,
she would repeat everything to me. You shall know more about it,
though it is bad all through. My dear father had reason bitterly to
regret his marriage long before she openly broke it.
'But come and see me, and tell me what is to be done now that we are
free to look round. There is no shame in taking what poor Horace has
given us. You see that there will be at least three thousand pounds
for our share, apart from the income we shall have from the
business.'
He was sure to come on the evening of the morrow. Nancy went out
before breakfast to post her letter; light-hearted in the assurance
that her husband's days of struggle were over, that her child's
future no longer depended upon the bare hope that its father would
live and thrive by a profession so precarious as that of literature,
she gave little thought to the details of the new phase of life
before her. Whatever Tarrant proposed would be good in her sight.
Probably he would wish to live in the country; he might discover the
picturesque old house of which he had so often spoken. In any case,
they would now live together. He had submitted her to a probation,
and his last letter declared that he was satisfied with the result.
Midway in the morning, whilst she was playing with her little boy,
--rain kept them in the house,--a knock at the front door
announced some unfamiliar visit. Mary came to the parlour, with a
face of surprise.
Mary handed an envelope, addressed to 'Mrs. Tarrant.' It contained a
sheet of paper, on which was written in pencil: 'I beg you to see
me, if only for a minute.'
'Yes, I will see her,' said Nancy, when she had frowned in brief
reflection.
Mary led away the little boy, and, a moment after, introduced
Jessica Morgan. At the appearance of her former friend, Nancy with
difficulty checked an exclamation; Miss. Morgan wore the garb of the
Salvation Army. Harmonious therewith were the features shadowed by
the hideous bonnet: a face hardly to be recognised, bloodless, all
but fleshless, the eyes set in a stare of weak-minded fanaticism.
She came hurriedly forward, and spoke in a quick whisper.
Coldly, Nancy invited her to sit down, but the visitor shook her
head.
'I mustn't take a seat in your house. I am unwelcome; we can't
pretend to be on terms of friendliness. I have come, first of all,'
--her eyes wandered as she spoke, inspecting the room,--'to
humble myself before you--to confess that I was a dishonourable
friend,--to make known with my lips that I betrayed your secret--'
Nancy interrupted the low, hurrying, panting voice, which distressed
her ear as much as the facial expression that accompanied it did her
eyes.
'There's no need to tell me. I knew it at the time, and you did me
no harm. Indeed, it was a kindness.'
'I supposed you knew. But it is laid upon me to make a confession
before you. I have to ask your pardon, most humbly and truly.'
'Do you mean that some one has told you to do this?'
'Oh no!' A gleam of infinite conceit shot over the humility of
Jessica's countenance. 'I am answerable only to my own soul. In the
pursuit of an ideal which I fear you cannot understand, I subdue my
pride, and confess how basely I behaved to you. Will you grant me
your forgiveness?'
She clasped her gloveless hands before her breast, and the fingers
writhed together.
'If it is any satisfaction to you,' replied Nancy, overcome with
wonder and pity, 'I will say those words. But don't think that I
take upon myself--'
'Only say them. I ask your pardon--say you grant it.'
Nancy uttered the formula, and with bowed head Jessica stood for a
minute in silence; her lips moved.
'And now,' she said at length, 'I must fulfil the second part of the
duty which has brought me here.' Her attitude changed to one of
authority, and her eyes fixed themselves on Nancy's, regarding her
with the mild but severe rebuke of a spiritual superior. 'Having
acknowledged my wrong-doing, I must remind you of your own. Let me
ask you first of all--have you any religious life?'
Nancy's eyes had turned away, but at these words they flashed
sternly upon the speaker.
'I expected it,' Jessica sighed patiently. 'You are still in the
darkness, out of which I have been saved.'
'If you have nothing more to say than this, I must refuse to talk
any longer.'
'There is a word I must speak,' pursued Jessica. 'If you will not
heed it now, it will remain in your memory, and bear fruit at the
appointed time. I alone know of the sin which poisons your soul, and
the experiences through which I have passed justify me in calling
you to repentance.'
'Stop! That is quite enough. Perhaps you are behaving
conscientiously; I will try to believe it. But not another word, or
I shall speak as I don't wish to.'
'It is enough. You know very well what I refer to. Don't imagine
that because you are now a married woman--'
'Leave the house,' she said, in an unsteady tone. 'You said you were
unwelcome, and it was true. Take yourself out of my sight!'
Jessica put her head back, murmured some inaudible words, and with a
smile of rancorous compassion went forth into the rain.
On recovering from the excitement of this scene, Nancy regretted her
severity; the poor girl in the hideous bonnet had fallen very low,
and her state of mind called for forbearance. The treachery for
which Jessica sought pardon was easy to forgive; not so, however,
the impertinent rebuke, which struck at a weak place in Nancy's
conscience. Just when the course of time and favour of circumstances
seemed to have completely healed that old wound, Jessica, with her
crazy malice grotesquely disguised, came to revive the
half-forgotten pangs, the shame and the doubt that had seemed to be
things gone by. It would have become her, Nancy felt, to treat her
hapless friend of years ago in a spirit of gentle tolerance; that
she could not do so proved her--and she recognised the fact--
still immature, still a backward pupil in the school of life.--
'And in the Jubilee year I thought myself a decidedly accomplished
person!'
Never mind. Her husband would come this evening. Of him she could
learn without humiliation.
His arrival was later than of wont. Only at eleven o'clock, when
with disappointment she had laid aside her book to go to bed, did
Tarrant's rap sound on the window.
'Something much better,' Tarrant muttered, as he threw off his
overcoat.
He began to talk of ordinary affairs, and nearly half-an-hour
elapsed before any mention was made of the event that had bettered
their prospects. Nancy looked over a piece of his writing in an
evening paper which he had brought; but she could not read it with
attention. The paper fell to her lap, and she sat silent. Clearly,
Tarrant would not be the first to speak of what was in both their
minds. The clock ticked; the rain pattered without; the journalist
smoked his pipe and looked thoughtfully at the ceiling.
'Are you sorry,' Nancy asked, 'that I am no longer penniless?'
'Ah--to be sure. We must speak of that. No, I'm not sorry. If I
get run over, you and the boy--'
'Can make ourselves comfortable, and forget you; to be sure. But for
the present, and until you do get run over?'
'In one or two respects, perhaps. But leave me out of the question.
You have an income of your own to dispose of; nothing oppressively
splendid, I suppose. What do you think of doing?'
'Of my society, you have quite as much as is good for you,' he
answered amiably. 'That you should wish for acquaintances, is
reasonable enough. Take a house somewhere in the western suburbs.
One or two men I know have decent wives, and you shall meet them.'
'Will it be known to everybody that we don't live together?'
'Well,' answered Tarrant, with a laugh, 'by way of example, I should
rather like it to be known; but as I know you wouldn't like it,
let the appearances be as ordinary as you please.'
Again Nancy reflected. She had a struggle with herself.
'Just one question,' she said at length. 'Look me in the face. Are
you--ever so little--ashamed of me?'