"There is some one else, then, as blind as I am?" said Glynn.
"There was. Yes, yes, the dog," replied Thresk, gazing into the fire.
"You and the dog," he repeated uneasily, "you and the dog. But the dog saw in the end, Glynn, and so will you--even you."
Linda turned quickly, but before she could speak, Glynn made a sign to her. He went over to her side. A glance at Thresk showed him that he was lost in his thoughts.
"If you want me to help you, you must leave us alone," he said.
She hesitated for a moment, and then swiftly crossed the room and went out at the door. Glynn, who had let his cigar go out, lit it again at the flame of one of the candles on the dining-table. Then he planted himself in front of Thresk.
"You are terrifying your wife," he said. "You are frightening her to death."
Thresk did not reply to the accusation directly. He smiled quietly at Glynn.
"She sent for you."
Glynn looked uncomfortable, and Thresk went on:
"You haven"t come from South Uist. You have come from London."
"No," said Glynn.
"From Melton, then. You came because Linda sent for you."
"If it were so," stammered Glynn, "it would only be another proof that you are frightening her."
Thresk shook his head.
"It wasn"t because Linda was afraid that she sent for you," he said stubbornly. "I know Linda. I"ll tell you the truth," and he fixed his burning eyes on Glynn"s face. "She sent for you because she hates being here with me."
"Hates being with you!" cried Glynn, and Thresk nodded his head. Glynn could hardly even so believe that he had heard aright. "Why, you must be mad!" he protested. "Mad or blind. There"s just one person of whom your wife is thinking, for whom she is caring, for whose health she is troubled. It has been evident to me ever since I have been in this house--in spite of her fears. Every time she looks at you her eyes are tender with solicitude. That one person is yourself."
"No," said Thresk. "It"s Channing."
"But he"s dead, man!" cried Glynn in exasperation. "You told me so yourself not half an hour ago. He is dead."
"Yes," answered Thresk. "He"s dead. That"s where he beat me. You don"t understand that?"
"No, I don"t," replied Glynn.
He was speaking aggressively; he stood with his legs apart in an aggressive att.i.tude. Thresk looked him over from head to foot and agreed.
"No," he said, "and I don"t see why you should. You are rather like me, comfortable and commonplace, and of the earth earthy. Before men of our gross stamp could believe and understand what I am going to tell you, they would have to reach--do you mind if I say a refinement?--by pa.s.sing through the same fires which have tempered me."
Glynn made no reply. He shifted his position so that the firelight might fall upon Thresk"s face with its full strength. Thresk leaned forward with his hands upon his knees, and very quietly, though now and then a note of scorn rang in his voice, he told his story.
"You tell me my wife cares for me. I reply that she would have cared, if Channing had not died. When I first met Linda she was engaged to him. You know that. She was devoted to him. You know that too. I knew it and I didn"t mind. I wasn"t afraid of Channing. A poor, feeble creature--heaps of opportunities, not one of them foreseen, not one of them grasped when it came his way. A grumbler, a bag of envy, a beggar for sympathy at any woman"s lap! Why should I have worried my head about Channing? And I didn"t. Linda"s people were all for breaking off their engagement. After all, I was some good. I had made my way. I had roughed it in South America; and I had come home a rich man--not such a very easy thing, as the superior people who haven"t the heart even to try to be rich men are inclined to think. Well, the engagement was broken off, Channing hadn"t a penny to marry on, and n.o.body would give him a job. Look here!" And he suddenly swung round upon Glynn.
"I gave Channing his chance. I knew he couldn"t make any use of it. I wanted to prove he wasn"t any good. So I put a bit of a railway in Chili into his hands, and he brought the thing to the edge of bankruptcy within twelve months. So the engagement was broken off.
Linda clung to the fellow. I knew it, and I didn"t mind. She didn"t want to marry me. I knew it, and I didn"t mind. Her parents broke her down to it. She sobbed through the night before we were married. I knew it, and I didn"t mind. You think me a beast, of course," he added, with a look at Glynn. "But just consider the case from my point of view. Channing was no match for Linda. I was. I wanted time, that was all. Give me only time, and I knew that I could win her."
Boastful as the words sounded, there was nothing aggressive in Thresk"s voice. He was speaking with a quiet simplicity which robbed them quite of offence. He was una.s.sumingly certain.
"Why?" asked Glynn. "Why, given time, were you sure that you could win her?"
"Because I wanted enough. That"s my creed, Glynn. If you want enough, want with every thought, and nerve, and pulse, the thing you want comes along all right. There was the difference between Channing and me. He hadn"t the heart to want enough. I wanted enough to go to school again. I set myself to learn the small attentions which mean so much to women. They weren"t in my line naturally. I pay so little heed to things of that kind myself that it did not easily occur to me that women might think differently. But I learnt my lesson, and I got my reward. Just simple little precautions, like having a cloak ready for her, almost before she was aware that she was cold. And I would see a look of surprise on her face, and the surprise flush into a smile of pleasure. Oh, I was holding her, Glynn, I can tell you. I went about it so very warily," and Thresk laughed with a knowing air. "I didn"t shut my door on Channing either. Not I! I wasn"t going to make a martyr of him. I let him sidle in and out of the house, and I laughed.
For I was holding her. Every day she came a step or two nearer to me."
He broke off suddenly, and his voice, which had taken on a tender and wistful note, incongruous in so big a creature, rose in a gust of anger.
"But he died! He died and caught her back again."
Glynn raised his hands in despair.
"That memory has long since faded," he argued, and Thresk burst out in a bitter laugh.
"Memory," he cried, flinging himself into a chair. "You are one of the imaginative people after all, Glynn." And Glynn stared in round-eyed surprise. Here to him was conclusive proof that there was something seriously wrong with Thresk"s mind. Never had Mr. Glynn been called imaginative before, and his soul revolted against the aspersion.
"Yes," said Thresk, pointing an accusing finger. "Imaginative! I am one of the practical people. I don"t worry about memories. Actual real things interest me--such as Channing"s presence now--in this house."
And he spoke suddenly, leaning forward with so burning a fire in his eyes and voice that Glynn, in spite of himself, looked nervously across his shoulder. He rose hastily from the sofa, and rather in order to speak than with any thought of what he was saying, he asked:
"When did he die?"
"Four months ago. I was ill at the time."
"Ah!"
The exclamation sprang from Glynn"s lips before he could check it.
Here to him was the explanation of Thresk"s illusions. But he was sorry that he had not kept silent. For he saw Thresk staring angrily at him.
"What did you mean by your "Ah"?" Thresk asked roughly.
"Merely that I had seen a line about your illness in a newspaper,"
Glynn explained hastily.
Thresk leaned back satisfied.
"Yes," he resumed. "I broke down. I had had a hard life, you see, and I was paying for it. I am right enough now, however," and his voice rose in a challenge to Glynn to contradict him.
Nothing was further from Glynn"s thoughts.
"Of course," he said quickly.
"I saw Channing"s death in the obituary column whilst I was lying in bed, and, to tell you the truth, I was relieved by it."
"But I thought you said you didn"t mind about Channing?" Glynn interrupted, and Thresk laughed with a little discomfort.
"Well, perhaps I did mind a little more than I care to admit," Thresk confessed. "At all events, I felt relieved at his death. What a fool I was!" And he stopped for a moment as though he wondered now that his mind was so clear, at the delusion which had beset him.
"I thought that it was all over with Channing. Oh, what a fool I was!