She saw him as dead, and the thought of death, always with her, renewed her pity and her adoration; he knew that his own background lent a charm enthralling and poignant to his every word, look and gesture. But for him this charm and this renewal were lacking. He could not feel such pity, either for her or for himself. She was to live, poor little Kitty, and, by degrees, the tragedy would fade and the beauty of their last weeks together would remain with her. There was no cavern yawning behind Kitty"s figure; life, inexorably, showed him her smiling future.
And, for himself; well, if it was tragic to have to die, it was a tragedy one got used to. He might have felt it more if only Kitty hadn"t been there to feel it so superabundantly for him. No: he could keep up; he could see to it that the pendulum didn"t falter; but he couldn"t hide from himself that its swing was growing mechanical.
By the end of the third week the serpent was awake and walking in Paradise. Holland was tired; profoundly tired.
He found his wife"s eyes on him one day as they sat with books under the trees on the lawn. He tried to read the books now, though in a casual manner that would offer no offence to Kitty"s unoccupied hands and eyes.
He wanted very much to read and to forget himself--to forget Kitty--for a little while. It was difficult to do this when such a desultory air must be a.s.sumed, when he must be ready to answer anything she said at a moment"s notice, and must remember to look up and smile at her or to read some pa.s.sage aloud to her at every few pages. But he had been trying thus to combine oblivion and alertness when a longer interval than usual of the first held him beguiled, and alertness, when it returned, returned too late. Kitty"s eyes made him think of the eyes she had gazed with on the day of revelation in the library. They were candid, they were frightened; the eyes of the real child. Now, as then, they were drinking in some new knowledge; a new fear and an old fear, come close at last, were pressing on her. He felt so tired that he would have liked to look away and to have pretended not to see; but he was not so tired as to be cruel, and he tried to smile at her, as, tilting his hat over his eyes so that they were shadowed, he asked her what she was thinking of.
She rose and came to him, kneeling down beside his chair and putting her hands on his shoulders.
"What is the matter, Kitty?" he asked her, as he had asked on that morning three weeks before.
"Nicholas--Nicholas--are you feeling worse?" she returned.
Holland was surprised and almost relieved. It was no new demand, it was merely a sharper fear. And perhaps she was right, perhaps he was feeling worse and the end was approaching. If so, any languor would be taken as symptomatic of dissolution and not of indifference, and he might relax his hold. Actually a deep wave of satisfaction seemed to go lapping through him.
"I don"t feel badly, dear," he said, smoothing back her hair. "You know, I shall suffer hardly any pain; but I do feel very tired."
"In what way tired?" Another alarm was in her voice.
"Bodily fatigue, dear. Of course, one doesn"t die without fading."
He felt, when he had said it, that the words, in spite of his care, were cruel; that she would feel them as cruel; he had gone too fast; had tried to grasp at his immunity too hastily.
"Nicholas!" she gasped. "You speak as if I were accusing you!"
"Accusing me, darling! How could you be! Of what?"
"Oh, Nick," she sobbed, hiding her face on his breast,--"Am _I_ tiring you? Do you sometimes want me to go away and to leave you more alone?"
His heart stood still. Over her bowed head he looked at the sunlit trees and flowers, the hazy glory of the summer day, a phantasmagoric setting to this knot of human pain and fear, and he said to himself that unless he were very careful he might hurt her irremediably; he might rob her of the memory that was to beautify everything when he was gone.
He had found in a moment, he felt sure, just the right quiet tone, expressing a comprehension too deep for the fear of any misunderstanding between them. "There would be no me left, Kitty, if you went away. I am you--all that there is of me. You are life itself; don"t talk of robbing me of any of it; I have so little left."
She was silent for a moment, not lifting her face, no longer weeping.
Then in a voice curiously hushed and controlled she said: "How quiet you are; how peaceful you are--how terribly peaceful."
"You want me to be at peace, don"t you, dear?"
"You don"t mind leaving life. You don"t mind leaving me," she said.
"Kitty--Kitty----"
She interrupted his protest: "I"ve nothing to give you but love; I"ve never had anything to give you but love. And you are tired of that. You are going, you are going for ever. I shall never see you again. And you don"t mind! You don"t mind!" She broke into dreadful sobs.
Helpless and tormented he held her, trying to soothe, to rea.s.sure, to convince, recovering, even, in the vehemence of his pity, the very tones of pa.s.sionate love, the personal note that her quick ear had felt fading. She sobbed, and sobbed, but answered him at last, in the pathetic little child language of their first honeymoon that they had revived and enriched with new, sweet follies. But he felt that she was not really comforted, that she tried to delude herself.
"You _do_ feel tired--in your body--only in your body?--not in your soul?" she repeated. "It isn"t _I_, it"s only _you_."
"It"s only I who am dying," he almost felt that, with grim irony, he would have liked to answer for her complete rea.s.surance. The funny, ugly, pathetic truth peeped out at him; she would rather have him die than have him cease to love her.
Soulless sylvan creatures, dryads, nymphs, seemed to gaze from green shadows among branches; the mocking faces of pucks and elves to tilt and smile in the breeze-shaken flowers;--that subtle gaze, that sinister smile, of what did it remind him? All Nature was laughing at him, cruelly laughing; yet all Nature was consoling him.
His love and Kitty"s was a flower rooted in death and contradiction. Not affinity, not the growing needs of normal life had brought them together; only the magic of doom and the craving to be loved.
Poor Kitty; she did not know. It was his love she loved, his love she clung to and watched for and caressed. She did not know it, but she would rather have him dead than have him loveless. That was the truth that smiled the sinister smile. One might summon one"s courage to smile back at it, but one was rather glad to be leaving it--and Kitty.
And, in the days that followed, when from the pretence of pa.s.sion he could find refuge only in the pretence of dying, disgust crept into the weariness, he began to wonder when the pretence would become reality. He began to want to die.
This weariness, this irritation, this disgust belonged to life rather than to death; it was a sharp longing to escape from consciousness of Kitty--Kitty, alert and agonised in her suspicion. It was a nostalgic longing for the old, tame, dusty life, his work, his selfless interests.
The month was almost up, and yet he was no worse; was he really going to last for another month?
He said to Kitty one morning that he must go up to town. Her face grew ashen. "The doctor! You are going to the doctor, Nicholas?"
"No, no; it"s only that Collier is pa.s.sing through. I heard from him this morning. He wants to see me."
"Why should you bother and think about work now, darling?"
"Why, dearest, I must be of any use I can until the end."
He tried to keep lightness in his voice and patience out of it.
"Let him come down here. I"ll write myself and ask him." She, too, was a.s.suming something. She, too, was afraid of him, as he of her.
"He hasn"t time. He is on his way to the Continent."
"It will be bad for you to travel now. And London in August!" Her voice was grave, reproachfully tender.
"No, dear, I promise you I will run no risk."
"Promise as much as you will"--now, gaily, sweetly, falsely, but how pathetically, she clasped her hands about his arm;--"but I couldn"t think of letting you go alone: you didn"t really believe I"d let you go alone, darling: I"ll come too, of course. Won"t that be fun!--Oh, Nick, you _want_ me to come! You don"t want to get away!"--The falsity broke down and the full anguish of her suspicion was in her voice and eyes. It was this sincerity that pierced him and made him helpless--sick and helpless. He was able now to blindfold its dreadful clear-sightedness by swift resource: he acted his delight, his grat.i.tude: he hadn"t liked to ask his dearest--all the bother for only a day and night; he had thought it would bore her, for he must be most of the time with Collier; but, yes, they would go together, since she petted him so; they would do a play; he would help her choose a new hat; it would be great fun.
Yet, while he knotted the handkerchief around her eyes, turned her about and confused her sense of direction, as if in a merry game, he knew that fear and suspicion lurked for them both in their playing.
He had, indeed, meant to go to the doctor, but now that must be postponed. The meeting with Collier, his chief at the Home Office, was his only gulp of freedom. At the hotel Kitty waited, and his heart smote him when he found her sitting just as he had left her, mute, white, smiling and enduring. She hadn"t even been to her dressmaker"s or done any shopping as she had promised him to do. "I know I am absurd;--I know you think me, silly;--but I can"t--I can"t do anything--think anything--but you!" she said, her lips trembling.
"Absurd, darling, indeed!" he answered, "as if you couldn"t think of me and order a new dress at the same time! You know I told you I wanted to see you in a pale blue lawn--isn"t lawn the pretty stuff?--And what of the hat? You do want one?--Come, let us go out and I"ll help you to choose it."
But she did not want to go out; she only wanted to sit near him, lean her head against him, have him make up to her for the hours of loneliness. He knew that night at the play that she hardly heard a word, and that when once or twice, he was lured from his absorption and made to laugh, really forgetting, really amused, his laughter hurt her. She gazed at the stage with wide, vacant eyes. He felt the strain of being in town with this desperate devotion beside him worse than the strain of being shut up with it in the country; for there Kitty need hide and repress nothing, and his danger of hurting her by forgetfulness was not so great. He was like a prisoner led about by his gaoler, manacles on his wrists and ankles and a yoke on his neck; there was a certain relief in going back to prison where, at all events, one wasn"t so tormented by the sights and sounds of freedom, nor so conscious of chains and the watchful eye upon one.
"This is the end," he thought, as, in the train, they sat side by side, holding hands and very silent, but that, from time to time, when their eyes met, she would smile her doting, hungry smile and murmur: "Darling."
After this, the prison again; the high walls and stifling sweetness of Paradise, and then, thank goodness, release.
How strange a contrast to the journey a month ago, when, stunned, shot through, he had only felt the bliss of home-coming, the longing for the nest. It was all nest now; there was no s.p.a.ce for the fear of death. He was shut in, smothered by this panting breast of love.