She had heard the sound of him going down her stairs, and the click of the latch at the bottom, and the slamming of the front door; and then, under her windows, his feet on the pavement of the Square. She went to the window, and stared at the weeping ash-trees in the garden and thought of how Brodrick had said that it was no wonder that they wept.
And at the memory of his voice she felt a little p.r.i.c.king, wounding pain under her eyelids, the birth-pang of unwilling tears.
There were feet, hurrying feet on the pavement again, and again the bell cried out with its nervous electric scream. Her staircase door was opened quickly and shut again, but Jane heard nothing until Brodrick stood still in the room and spoke her name.
She turned, and he came forward, and she met him, holding her head high to keep back her tears. She came slowly, with shy feet and with fear in her eyes, and the desire of her heart on her lips, lifting them like wings.
He took her two hands, surrendered to his, and raised and kissed them.
For a moment they stood so, held together, without any movement or any speech.
"Jinny," he said thickly, and she looked down and saw her own tears, dreadful drops, rolling off Brodrick"s hands.
"I"m sorry," she said. "I didn"t mean to do that."
Her hands struggled in his, and for pity he let them go.
"You can"t be more surprised at me than I am myself," said she.
"But I"m not surprised," said Brodrick. "I never am."
And still she doubted.
"What did you come back for?"
"This, of course."
He had drawn her to the long seat by the fireplace.
"Why did you go away," she said, "and make me cry?"
"Because, for the first time in my life, I was uncertain."
"Of yourself?" Doubt, dying hard, stabbed her.
"I am never uncertain of myself," said Brodrick.
"Of what, then?"
"Of you."
"But you never told me."
"I"ve been trying to tell you the whole time."
Yet even in his arms her doubt stirred.
"What are you going to do now?" she whispered.
"_You"re_ going to marry me," he said.
He had been certain of it the whole time.
"I thought," she said an hour later, "that you were going to marry Gertrude."
"Oh, so that was it, was it? You were afraid----"
"I wasn"t afraid. I knew it was the best thing you could do."
"The best thing I could do? To marry Gertrude?"
"My dear--it would be far, far better than marrying me."
"But I don"t want," said he, "to marry Gertrude."
"Of course, _she_ doesn"t want to marry you."
"I never supposed for a moment that she did."
"All the same, I thought it was going to happen."
"If it was going to happen," he said, "it would have happened long ago."
She insisted. "It would have been nicer for you, dear, if it had."
"And when I"d met you afterwards--you think _that_ would have been nicer--for all three of us?"
His voice was low, shaken, surcharged and crushed with pa.s.sion. But he could see things plainly. It was with the certainty, the terrible lucidity of pa.s.sion that he saw himself. The vision was disastrous to all ideas of integrity, of propriety and honour; it destroyed the long tradition of the Brodricks. But he saw true.
Jane"s eyes were searching his while her mouth smiled at him.
"And is it really," she said, "as bad as that?"
"It always is as bad as that, when you"re determined to get the thing you want. Luckily for me I"ve only really wanted one thing."
"One thing?"
"You--or a woman like you. Only there never was a woman like you."
"I see. _That"s_ why you care for me?"
"Does it matter why?"
"Not a bit. I only wondered."
He looked at her almost as if he also wondered. Then they were silent.
Jane was content to let her wonder die, but Brodrick"s mind was still groping in obscurity. At last he seemed to have got hold of something, and he spoke.
"Of course, there"s your genius, Jinny. If I don"t say much about it, you mustn"t think I don"t care."