Double Harness

Chapter 38

"It"s with you to bring it about or to prevent it."

"No!" she cried, rising to her feet in the agonised strain of her heart--"no, no! That"s a lie--a lie! On your head be it! Ah, but perhaps it would be best for him! G.o.d knows, perhaps it would be best!"

"So I think," said Grantley quietly. "And you accept that?"

"No, I acknowledge no responsibility--not a jot."

"Well, leave the question of responsibility. But it"s your will that this shall happen sooner than that you should leave this man?"



"Sooner than that I should come back to you, that life of ours begin again, and Frank grow up to a knowledge of it!"

"And it"s my will, sooner than that he should grow up to a knowledge of how his mother ended it. That"s settled then?"

"It"s no bargain!" she protested fiercely. "You have settled it."

"But it is settled?" he persisted.

"If you do it, may G.o.d never pardon you!"

"Perhaps. But you know that it is settled?"

She made no answer.

"You can"t deny that you know. So be it."

He faced her for a moment longer; her figure swayed a little, but she stood her ground. She was not beaten down. And she knew the thing was settled, unless by chance, at the last, pity should enter Grantley"s heart. But she did not believe pity could enter that heart; he had never shown her that there was a way.

The smile rested still on Grantley"s face as he regarded his wife. She looked very beautiful in her fierce defiance, her loathing of him, her pa.s.sionate protest, her refusal to be beaten down, her facing of the thing. She had a fine spirit; it did not know defeat or cravenness. She was mad with her ideas. Perhaps he was mad with his. And the ideas clashed--with ruin to her life, and his, and the child"s. But she did not bow her head any more than he would bend his haughty neck.

"At least you have courage," he said to her. "It is settled. And now I"ll say good-bye and go. I"ll interrupt you no more."

It was his first taunt of that kind. It seemed to pa.s.s unheeded by Sibylla; but young Blake"s face turned red, and he clenched his hands; but not in anger. A wave of horror pa.s.sed over him. He would not interrupt longer what his coming had interrupted--that was what Grantley Imason meant. He would leave them to themselves while he went back alone to his home, and there found the sleeping child. But the idea of that--the picture of the one house and the other--was too fearful. How could the two bear to think of that? How could they stand there and decide on that? It was unnatural, revolting, alien from humanity. Yet they meant it. Blake doubted that no more, and the conviction of it unmanned him. He had been prepared for scandal, he had been ready to risk his life. Those things were ordinary; but this thing was not.

Scandal is one thing, tragedy another. This grim unyielding pair of enemies threw tragedy in his appalled face. It was too much. A groan burst from his lips.

"My G.o.d!" he moaned.

They both turned and looked at him--Sibylla gravely, Grantley with his rigid smile.

"My G.o.d, I can"t bear it!" He was writhing in his chair, as though in keen bodily pain. "It"s too awful! We--we should think of it all our lives. I should never get rid of it. I should see the poor little beggar"s face. I can"t stand that. I never thought of anything like that. I never meant anything like that. Poor little Frank! My G.o.d, you can"t mean it, Imason?"

"You know I mean it. It"s nothing to you. The responsibility is ours.

What do you count for? It was you or another--that"s all. Neither my life nor my son"s is anything to you."

"But it would--it would always be there. I could never sleep at nights.

I should feel like--like a murderer. For pity"s sake----"

He came towards Grantley, stretching out his hands for mercy. Grantley made no sign. Blake turned to Sibylla. She too was stiff and still, but her eyes rested on him in compa.s.sion. He turned away and threw himself into the chair again. A convulsive movement ran through his body, and he gave a loud sob.

Sibylla walked slowly away to the hearthrug, and stood looking at the agonised young man. Grantley waited in immovable patience. The thing was not finished yet.

"The horror of it!" Blake moaned almost inarticulately. He turned to weak rage for an instant and hissed across to Grantley: "If I had a revolver, I"d shoot you where you stand."

"That would be better for me, but not better for the boy," said Grantley.

"I can"t understand you," Blake gasped, almost sobbing again.

"Why should you? My account is not to be rendered to you. If I"ve ruined my wife"s life--and you"ve heard her say I have--if I take my own and my son"s, what is it to you?"

In Grantley"s slow measured words there breathed a great contempt. What, he seemed to say, were any great things, any stern issues, to this unmanned hysterical creature, who dressed up his desires in fine clothes, and let them beguile him whither he knew not, only to start back in feeble horror at the ruin that he had invited? What was it all to him, or he to it? It was he or another. The real battle was still between himself and Sibylla. With what eyes was she looking on this young man? He turned from the collapsed figure and faced his wife again.

But her eyes were now on Walter Blake, with a pleading, puzzled, pitying look. The next moment she walked quickly across the room and knelt down by his side, taking one of his hands in both of hers. She began to whisper consolation to him, praying him not to distress himself, to be calm and brave, tenderly reproaching his lack of self-control. She was with him as Grantley had seen her with the child. He wondered to see that, and his wonder kept his temper under command. There did not seem enough to make a man"s pa.s.sion rage or his jealousy run wild, even though she whispered close in Blake"s ear, and soothingly caressed his hand.

"Don"t be so distressed," he heard her murmur. "It"s not your fault, dear. Don"t be frightened about it."

He tried to shake her off with a childish petulance, but she persevered.

Yet she could not calm him. He broke from her and sprang to his feet, leaving her kneeling.

"I can"t face it! By G.o.d, I can"t!" he cried.

"It will happen," said Grantley Imason. "If not to-night--if anything prevents me to-night--still very soon. You"ll hear of it very soon."

The young man shuddered.

"The poor little chap--the poor innocent little chap!" he muttered hoa.r.s.ely. He turned to Grantley. "For Heaven"s sake, think again!"

"It"s you who have to think. I have thought. I"ve little time for more thought. You"ve all your life to think about it--all your life with that woman, who is the mother of the child."

"Why do you torment him?" broke out Sibylla angrily.

But she rose slowly and drew away from Blake as she spoke.

Grantley shrugged his shoulders scornfully.

"The fellow has no business in an affair like this," he said. "He"d better get back to his flirtations."

"I never thought of anything like this."

The repet.i.tion came from Blake like some dull forlorn refrain.

He put his hand to his throat and gulped with a hard dry swallow. He looked round the room, made for a table where some whisky stood, and took a drink of it. Then he half staggered back to his chair, and sat down all in a heap. His limit was reached. He was crushed between the upper and the nether stone--between Grantley"s flinty pride and the ruthless fanaticism of Sibylla"s ideas. Between them they would make him, who had wanted to be good, who had had such fine aspirations, such high-coloured dreams, such facile emotions, so impulsive a love--between them they would make him a murderer--a murderer in his own eyes.

Whatever hands did the deed, to the end of his days conscience would cry out that his were red.

Sibylla sighed. Her eyes were very mournful. She spoke, as it seemed, more to herself than to either of them.

"I wanted to make him happy, and I"ve made him very unhappy. I can do it, but he can"t do it. I mustn"t ask it of him. He would never be happy, I could never make him happy. Even if I could be happy, he couldn"t; it"s too hard for him. I don"t know what to do now."

Grantley neither spoke nor moved.

"I"ve no right to ask it of any man. n.o.body could agree to it, n.o.body could endure it. There"s misery both ways now."

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