"Certainly, why not? I think it possible that you may require its soothing influence before we have gone very far."
There was something in her voice which seemed as if it had been meant to sting him; it only made him smile.
"I also think that possible."
She watched him as, having refilled and relighted his pipe, he puffed at it, as if he found in the flavour of the tobacco that consolation at which she had hinted. Perceiving that he continued to smoke in silence she spoke again, as if she resented being constrained to speak.
"I presume that you have some idea of what it is I wish to say to you?"
He shook his head.
"I haven"t."
"Really?"
"Absolutely. If you will forgive my saying so, and I fear that you are in an unforgiving mood, I have ceased attempting to forecast what, under any stated set of circ.u.mstances, you may either say or do. You are to me what mathematicians call an unknown quant.i.ty; you may stand for something or for nothing. One never knows."
"I have not the honour to understand you, Mr Morice."
"Don"t imagine that I am even hinting at a contradiction; but I hope, for both our sakes, that you understand me better than I do you."
"I think that"s very possible."
"I think so also; alas! that it should be so."
"You may well say, alas!"
"You are right; I may."
She was silent, her lips twitching, as if with impatience or scorn.
"My acquaintance with the world is but a slight one, Mr Morice; and, unfortunately, in one respect it has been of an almost uniform kind. I have learned to a.s.sociate with the idea of a man something not agreeable. I hoped, at one time, that you would prove to be a variation; but you haven"t. That is why, in admitting that I did understand you a little, I think that you were justified in saying, alas!"
"That, however, is not why I said it, as I should have imagined you would have surmised; although I admire the ingenuity with which you present your point of view. But, may I ask if you have ordered me to present myself at Wyche Cross with the intention of favouring me with neatly turned remarks on the subject of men in general and of myself in particular?"
"You know I haven"t."
"I am waiting to know it."
"I had not thought that anyone fashioned in G.o.d"s image could play so consummately the hypocrite."
"Of all the astounding observations! Is it possible that you can have overlooked your own record?"
As he spoke the blood dyed her face; she swerved so suddenly that one felt that if it had not been for the support of the stile she might have fallen. On the instant he was penitent.
"I beg your pardon; but you use me in such a fashion; you say such things, that you force me to use my tongue."
"Thank you, you need not apologise. The taunt was deserved. I have played the hypocrite; I know it--none know it better. But let me a.s.sure you that, latterly, I have continued to play the hypocrite for your sake."
"For my sake?"
"For your sake and for yours only, and you know it."
"I know it? This transcends everything! The courage of such a suggestion, even coming from you, startles me almost into speechlessness. May I ask you to explain?"
"I will explain, if an explanation is necessary, which we both know it is not!"
He waved his pipe with an odd little gesture in the air.
"Good heavens!" he exclaimed.
CHAPTER XIX
THE b.u.t.tONS OFF THE FOILS
Outwardly she was the calmer of the two. She stood upright and motionless; he was restless and fidgety, as if uneasy both in mind and body. She kept her eyes fixed steadily upon his face; he showed a disposition to elude her searching glance. When she spoke her tone was cool and even.
"You have accused me of playing the hypocrite. It is true, I have. I have allowed the world to regard me as a spinster, when I was a married woman; as free when I was bound. I have told you that I should have ceased before this to play the hypocrite, if it had not been for you.
You have--pretended--to doubt it. Well, you are that kind of man. And it is because you are that kind of man that I am constrained to ask if you wish me now to cease to play the hypocrite and save Jim Baker"s life?"
"Is not that a question for your consideration rather than for mine?"
"You propose to place the responsibility upon my shoulders!"
"Would you rather it were on mine?"
"That is where it properly belongs."
"In dealing with you I am at a serious disadvantage, since you are a woman and I am a man. The accident of our being of different s.e.xes prevents my expressing myself with adequate precision."
"You appear to be anxious to take refuge even when there is nothing behind which you can hide. The difference in our s.e.xes has never prevented you from saying to me exactly what you pleased, how you pleased--you know it. Nor do I intend to allow your manhood to shelter you. Mr Morice, the time for fencing"s past. When life and death are hanging in the balance, words are weightless. I ask you again, do you intend to save Jim Baker"s life?"
"I have yet to learn that it is in imminent peril."
"Then acquire that knowledge now from me. I am informed that if someone is not discovered, on whom the onus of guilt can be indubitably fixed, the probabilities are that Jim Baker will be hanged for murder."
"And you suggest that I should discover that--unhappy person?"
"I ask you if you do not think the discovery ought to be made, to save that wretched creature?"
"What I am anxious to get at, before I commit myself to an answer is this--presuming that I think the discovery should be made, do you suggest that it should be made by you or by me?"
"Mr Morice, I will make my meaning plainer, if the thing be possible.
When--that night--in the wood it happened, I thought that it was done for me. I still think that might have been the motive; partly, I confess, because I cannot conceive of any other, though the misapprehension was as complete as it was curious. I did not require that kind of service--G.o.d forbid! And, therefore, thinking this--that I was, though remotely, the actual cause--it appears to me that I was, and am, unable to speak, lest it would seem that I was betraying one whose intention was to render me a service."