"Why?"
"I don"t know--perhaps to see if you were really so very different from what you are now."
"I was--utterly."
"What were you like?"
"I can"t remember--but I was utterly different."
As she ceased speaking, Bellairs glanced over the rail to the river bank. Two blue-robed donkey boys stood there trying to attract his attention, and pointing significantly to their gaily-bedizened donkeys.
"Shall we go for a ride?" he said to Lady Betty. "Just along the river bank? Then we shall see Lord Braydon as he sails back. Mdlle. Leroux won"t miss you. Shall we go?"
Betty hesitated. But she could do the invalid no good by staying. So she a.s.sented. Bellairs helped her to the bank and placed her in the smart red saddle. He motioned the boys to keep well in the rear, and they started at a quick, tripping walk. As they went, a white face appeared at a cabin window, staring after them, the face of Clarice, who had with difficulty lifted her throbbing head from the pillow. She watched the donkeys diminishing till they were black shadows moving along against the sky, then she began to cry weakly, but only because she was too ill to be with them. Her gift of prophecy failed her at this critical juncture of her life, and she had no sense of a coming disaster, as she lay back on her berth, and gave herself up once more to pain.
That evening Lord Braydon asked Bellairs to dine on the dahabeeyah, and he accepted the invitation. Clarice was still in durance, having entirely failed to pa.s.s her headache on to Lady Betty. After dinner Lord Braydon went into the saloon to write a letter to England, and Lady Betty and Bellairs had the deck to themselves. He was resolved to put his fate to the touch; for, during the donkey ride, he had discovered the change in Betty which he had so eagerly desired, the change from warm friendship to a different feeling. The girl had not acknowledged it. Bellairs had not asked her to do so; but he meant to. Only the thought of his treachery to the woman lying in the cabin below held him back, just for a moment, and prompted him to talk lightly of indifferent things. But that treachery had been a necessary manoeuvre in his campaign of happiness. He strove to dismiss it from his mind as he leant forward in his chair, and led Lady Betty to the subject that lay so near to his heart.
"You love me?" she said presently.
"Yes--deeply. You are angry?"
"How can I be? No, no--and yet--"
"Yes?"
"And yet, when you told me, I felt sad."
Bellairs looked keenly vexed, and she hastened to add:--
"Not because I am--indifferent. No, no. I can"t explain why the feeling came. It was gone in a moment. And now--"
"Now you are happy?"
He caught her hand and she left it in his.
"Yes, very happy."
Bellairs bent over her and kissed her--as he lifted himself up a white hand appeared on the rail of the companion that led from the lower to the upper deck of the _Hatasoo_. Clarice wearily dragged herself up.
She was wrapped in a shawl and looked very ill. Betty ran to help her.
"I thought I must get a little air," she said feebly. "How d"you do, Mr Bellairs?"
She sank down in a chair.
Bellairs felt like a man between two fires.
Two days later Lord Braydon gave his consent to his daughter"s engagement with Bellairs, and Lady Betty ran to tell Clarice. She had not previously said a word to her friend of what had pa.s.sed between her and Bellairs. He had begged her to keep silence until he had spoken to Lord Braydon, and she had promised and had kept her promise. But now she rushed into the saloon where Clarice was playing Chopin, and, throwing her arms round her friend, told her the great news. The body of Clarice became rigid in her arms.
"And the king has consented," Betty cried.
The king was her father.
"Clarice, Clarice, isn"t it wonderful?"
"Wonderful! I thought so when you told me. But already I begin to doubt if it is."
"To doubt, Clarice?"
"To doubt whether anything a man does is wonderful."
That was all Clarice said. Then she kissed Betty, and went on playing Chopin feverishly, while Betty told, to the accompaniment of the music, all that was in her heart.
"And," she said at last, "I love him, Clarice; I love him intensely. I shall always love him."
Clarice played a final chord and got up.
Bellairs lunched on the dahabeeyah that day and Clarice met him as usual. Her manner gave no sign of any mental disturbance. Perhaps it was curiously calm. He wondered a little, but was too happy to wonder much.
Joy made him cruel, for nothing is so cruel as joy. Only he was glad that Clarice had so much pride, for he thought now that in her pride lay his safety. He no longer feared that she would condescend to a scene, and he even thought that perhaps she did not feel so deeply as he had supposed.
"After all," he said to himself exultantly, "there"s no harm done. I need not have been so conscience-stricken. What is a pretty speech and a kiss to a woman who has lived, travelled over the world, read widely, thought many things? Now, if I had treated Betty in such a way I should be a blackguard. She could not have understood. She could only have suffered. I will never hurt her--Betty!"
His nature was so full of her that it could no longer hold any thought of Clarice. And for a little while, as Bellairs dived into Betty"s heart, he was astonished at the pa.s.sion he found there, and congratulated himself on having released her from bondage. Now, at least, he was teaching her to be herself. He was killing the echo and creating a voice, a beautiful, clear, radiant voice that would sing to him, to him alone.
"Betty has a great deal in her," he said to Clarice once.
"Yes--a great deal. Who put it there, do you think?"
"Who? Why, n.o.body. Surely you would not say that all you yourself have of--of strength, originality, courage, was put into you by some other man or woman."
"No. I would not say that. But then--I am not Betty."
Bellairs felt irritated.
"Please don"t run Betty down," he exclaimed hastily.
"I! I run down Betty! I don"t think you understand what I feel about Betty. She is the one perfect being I know. I worship her."
"I am sure you do," he said, mollified. "And you have done much for her, perhaps too much."
"I cannot tell that--yet," Clarice answered. "Some day I may know whether I have done very much, or very little."
"Some day--when?"
"Perhaps very soon."
Bellairs wondered what she meant, and wondered, too, why he had a sudden sense of uneasiness.