"Perhaps I did understand it, and preferred not to show my comprehension; there is such a thing as modesty!"
"There is--such a thing as false modesty!"
"Exactly," remarked Lady Betty.
"I will accept your compliment gladly," said Bellairs, looking at Lady Betty.
"Mine?" asked Clarice Leroux.
"Yes," Bellairs replied.
The consciousness that he cared very much more for such a pretty meaning in Lady Betty than in Clarice Leroux led him then, for the first time, to that Garden Gate. He looked at Lady Betty again with a new feeling.
She returned his gaze quietly. Then he turned his eyes to those of Clarice. Hers were fixed upon him with a curious violence. He had a momentary sensation, literally for the first time, that these two women after all, had not one soul, one heart, between them. They did not feel quite simultaneously. Lady Betty was always a step behind Clarice. Yes, that was the difference between them. However quickly the echo follows the voice that summons it, yet it must always follow. Would Lady Betty never cease to follow? Bellairs found himself wondering eagerly, for that afternoon a strange certainty came to him. He knew, in a flash, that Clarice, if she did not already love him, was on the verge of loving him. He knew now that he loved Lady Betty. But she didn"t love him yet, was not even quite close to loving him. Had she been in Egypt alone, divorced from Clarice, Bellairs believed that he would not have attracted her. He attracted her through Clarice, because he attracted Clarice. Could he make her love him in the same way? It would be a curious, subtle experiment to try to win one woman"s heart by winning another"s: Bellairs silently decided to make it. All the rest of that afternoon he talked to Clarice, showing to her the new self that Egypt had given him, the poetry which had ousted the prose inherited from a long line of ancestors, the sentiment of which he was no longer ashamed now he felt it to be a weapon with which he might win two hearts, the heart that contained another heart, as one conjurer"s box contains a hundred others.
"I knew it when I first saw you," Clarice said. "Directly I looked at you that evening on the bank I knew it."
"How strange," Bellairs answered.
"And you--did you know it when you heard me playing?"
"That mazurka! Remember I am a man."
They were sitting in the garden. It was night. Very few people were out, for a great Austrian pianist was playing in the public drawing-room, and the little world of Luxor sat at his feet relentlessly. They two could hear, mingling with a Polonaise of Chopin, the throbbing of tom-toms in the dusty village, the faint and suggestive cry of the pipes, which fill the soul at the same time with desire, and regret for past desire killed by gratification. Bellairs had been making love to Clarice, and she had told him that she loved him. And he had kissed her and his kiss had been returned.
"Will this kiss, too, have its echo?" he thought; and his eyes travelled towards the lighted windows of the drawing-room behind which Lady Betty sat. He turned again to Clarice.
"Do you believe in echoes?" he asked.
"Echoes!"
"That each thing we do in life, each word, each cry, each act, calls into being, perhaps very soon, perhaps very late, a repet.i.tion?"
"From the same person?"
"Or from some other person."
"What a curious idea. You think we cannot ever do anything without finding an imitator! I don"t like to imagine it. I don"t fancy that there can ever, in the history of the world, be an exact repet.i.tion of our feeling, our doing, to-night."
"Yet, there may be. Who knows?"
"I do. Instinct tells me there never can. There has never been, never will be, any woman with a heart just like mine, given to a man just in the same way as mine is given to you. Why should you think such a hateful thing?"
"I don"t know. It was only an idea that occurred to me."
And again he glanced towards the lighted windows.
"The world is very full of echoes," he went on; "our troubles are repeated."
"But not our joys, our deepest joys. No, no, never!"
"There have always been lovers, and they all act in much the same way!"
"Hateful! Ah! why can"t we invent some new mode of expression for ourselves--you and I?"
"Because we are human beings, and one network of tangled limitations."
"You make me cry with anger," she said.
And when he looked, he saw that there were tears shining in her eyes.
At that moment a ghastly sensation of compunction swept over him. What had he done? A deep wrong, the deepest wrong man can do. He had made an experiment, as a scientist may make an experiment. He had vivisected a soul, but the soul was yet ignorant of the fact. When it knew, would it die? But then he told himself he had to do it. For he loved pa.s.sionately, and was certain that he could only gain the heart he had not yet completely won by gaining this heart that he had completely won.
He had made an experiment. If it failed! But it could not fail. All that Clarice said, all that she thought, all that she desired, Betty said, thought, desired. After the necessary interval the echo must follow the voice. And he smiled to himself.
"Why do you smile like that?" Clarice asked.
"Because--because I thought I heard an echo," he replied. And then they kissed again. He, with his eyes shut, forced his imagination to tell him that the lips he pressed were the lips of Betty. She thought only of the lips of love, that burn up all the recollections of the lonely years, all the phantoms which dwell in the deserts through which women pa.s.s to joy--or to despair.
The Austrian pianist was exhausted. Even his long hair could no longer sustain his failing energies. He expired magnificently, the seventh rhapsody of Liszt serving as his bier. Lady Betty came out into the garden.
"How unmusical you two are," she said; "his playing was exquisite."
"We heard finer music here," Clarice answered, as she got up to go back to the dahabeeyah--"did we not?"
She turned to Bellairs. He was looking at Lady Betty and did not hear.
Clarice"s cheek flushed angrily.
"Come, Betty," she exclaimed. "Good-night, Mr Bellairs."
"Good-night, Mr Bellairs," echoed Lady Betty.
The two women moved away, and vanished down the narrow and dusty avenue that leads to the bank of the Nile. Bellairs stood looking after them.
He was wondering why he loved Betty and did not love Clarice. It seemed feeble to love an echo. Yet, the intonation of an echo is sometimes exquisite in its trilling vagueness, its far-off, thrilling beauty. And Bellairs fancied that if he once wakened Betty to pa.s.sion he would free her, in a moment, from her curious bondage, would give to her the soul that Clarice must surely have crushed down and expelled, replacing it with a replica of her own soul. And then he asked himself, being a.n.a.lytically inclined that night, what he adored in Betty. Was it merely her fresh young beauty? It could not be her nature; for that, at present, was merely Clarice"s, and he did not love the nature of Clarice. Yet he felt it was something more than her beauty. When he had made her love him he would know; for, when he had made her love him, he would force her to be herself.
He watched the bats circling among the shadowy palms. How gentle the air was. How sweet the stars looked. Bellairs thought of England that was so far away. It seemed impossible that he could ever be in London again, ever again a.s.sume a Piccadilly nature, and laugh at the folly of having a romance. Yes, it seemed impossible. Nevertheless, in a fortnight he must go. But he would take Betty"s promise with him. He was resolved on that. And then he left the silent garden to the bats, and was soon between the mosquito curtains, dreaming.
Three days afterwards Clarice was prostrated with a nervous headache.
She could not bear to have any one in her cabin, and Lady Betty sat on the deck of the _Queen Hatasoo_ quite inconsolable. Bellairs, arriving to pay his usual afternoon call, found her there. Lord Braydon was out, sailing in a flat-bottomed boat far up the river with Lady Braydon, so Lady Betty was quite desolate. She told Bellairs so mournfully.
"And Clarice won"t let me come near her," she exclaimed. "A step on the floor, the creak of the cabin door as I come in, tortures her. She is all nerves. I hope I shan"t have her headache presently."
"Is it likely?"
"I often do. She seems to pa.s.s it on to me. I never had a headache until I knew her. But, indeed, I never seemed to live, I never seemed to know anything, be anything, until she came into my life."
"I wish I had known you before you knew her," Bellairs said.