"No, no! You"re mad! You mustn"t see him. I"ll see him. You go into the other room." There was a communicating door which led to a bedroom.
"I"ll not let him come near you. I"ll stand between you and him."
"I must see him. I"m not afraid, Walter. Unlock the door."
"Oh, but I shan"t let him come in. I shall----"
"If it"s Grantley, he"ll come in. Unlock the door. At any rate we can"t have the door broken in."
She smiled a little as she said this, and then sat down in the chair by the table where Blake had been sitting when she kissed his hand and gave him her surrender.
A knock came on the door. Young Blake unlocked it, and stood opposite to it. His face was pale now.
"He shan"t come near you," he whispered to Sibylla over his shoulder.
She made no sign. She sat resting her clasped hands on the table and gazing intently towards the door. There was no sign of confusion or of guilt about her. Her face was composed and calm. Young Blake"s fists were clenched. He seemed to keep himself still with an effort.
The door opened, and Grantley appeared on the threshold. He was very wet; the rain dripped from his hat as he took it off his head; salt spray hung on the hair over his ears. He shook himself as he shut the door behind him. Then he looked from Sibylla to Blake, and back to Sibylla, at last fixing his eyes on her.
"You can"t come in here," said Blake. "I"ll come outside with you, if you like, but you can"t come in here."
Grantley took no notice. His eyes were on Sibylla.
"Am I too late, Sibylla?" he asked.
"Yes," she answered tranquilly, "too late."
A sudden flush swept over Grantley"s face, but in an instant his usual pallor had returned.
"In the sense in which I spoke, is that true, Sibylla?"
She shrugged her shoulders a little. She seemed composed and almost careless as she answered, with a touch of contempt:
"No; but it is true, for all that."
CHAPTER XVI
THE UPPER AND THE NETHER STONE
"Then you must come back with me," said Grantley. Young Blake sprang forward a step, crying--"By G.o.d, no!"
Neither of them heeded him; their eyes were on one another. Already the fight was between the two, and the two only.
"Do you really think that?" she asked. "I don"t know how you come to be here--I suppose Christine warned you somehow; but it"s by mere accident that you are here, and that I haven"t gone before now. It makes no difference. You"re not in time, as you call it. The thing is settled already; it was settled when I planned to come, not when I came. What you meant doesn"t count. Do you really think I shall come back now?"
"Yes, you must come back now."
"Back to that life? Never! Of course you don"t know what it was to me, and I don"t suppose I could tell you. You wouldn"t understand."
Blake threw himself into a chair by the window. He was helplessly impatient of the situation. Grantley came a little nearer the table and stood there, to all seeming impa.s.sive. The appearance was not very deceptive. He was not now dominated by emotion; he was possessed by a resolve. His love for his wife was far buried in his heart; his set purpose was all he knew.
"I don"t see what you had to complain of," he said coldly. "The way we lived was your choice, not mine. But I"m not going to discuss that. I"m here to take you home to your husband"s house and to your child."
"I"ve faced all that a thousand times, and answered it a thousand times.
It can"t move me now. You"d better go away, Grantley."
Again Blake rose; he did not lack physical courage.
"I"ll go with you. I"m at your service," he said. "But outside; you shan"t stay here."
He waited a moment for an answer, but, getting none, nor so much as a look, sank awkwardly into his seat again.
Grantley spoke to his wife.
"I know what happened. Before you did this, you fogged your mind with all sorts of fantastic ideas. You"re not the woman to do this kind of thing easily."
"Fantastic ideas! Yes, they seem so to you. The fantastic idea of having something to live for, some life, something else than a prison, than repression, than coldness. I had lots of those fantastic ideas, Grantley."
"You had your child."
"I tell you I"ve faced it." She pressed her fingers hard into her cheek and frowned. "The child made it worse," she jerked out fiercely. "Seeing you with the child was----" She shook her head with a shiver.
Grantley raised his eyebrows.
"As bad as that?" he asked mockingly. He paused, and went on: "But this is all beside the point. Supposing it was as bad as you say, what then?
You had made your bargain; you chose to take me; you relied on your own opinion. Say it was a mistaken opinion--what difference does that make?"
"It does make a difference. I"m not called upon to throw away every chance of happiness because of one mistake."
"That"s just what you are called upon to do--in civilised society."
"You don"t actually propose an abstract argument," she asked, "now--under these circ.u.mstances?" She smiled derisively.
"Oh, no! But your point of view compelled a protest. I"m not here to argue; I"m here to take you back--or, if you won"t come, to tell you the consequences."
"I"m prepared for the consequences."
That gave young Blake another chance. He rose and came forward.
"Yes, she is--and so am I," he said; "and that ought to end the matter between us. We"re prepared for the trouble and the scandal and all that; and I"m prepared for anything else you may think proper to ask. We"ve weighed all that, and made up our minds to it. That"s the answer we have to give."
He spoke in a low voice, but very quickly and with pa.s.sion; evidently he had hard work to keep control of himself. When he finished speaking, there was a moment"s silence. He looked from Grantley to Sibylla, then went back to his chair; but he drew it nearer and listened intently.
"It is so," said Sibylla. "We"ve made up our minds to all that."