SIX MONTHS AFTER
Up the moss-grown path, where the
rose bushes run wild, almost met, came Anna in a spotless
white gown, with the flush of her early morning walk
in her cheeks, and something of the brightness of it
in her eyes. In one hand she carried a long-stalked
red rose, dripping with dew, in the other the post-bag.
She reached a tiny yellow-fronted
cottage covered with flowering creepers, and entered
the front room by the wide-open window. Breakfast
was laid for one, a dish of fruit and a shining coffee
equipage. By the side of her plate was a small
key. With trembling fingers she opened the post-bag.
There was one letter. One only.
She opened and read it at once.
It was dated from the House of Commons on the previous
day.
“MY DEAR MISS
PELLISSIER,
“To-morrow the six months will
be up. For days I have been undecided as
to whether I would come to you or no. I would
like you to believe that the decision I have
arrived at to stay away is
wholly and entirely to save you pain. It should
be the happiest day of your life, and I would
not detract from its happiness by letting you
remember for a moment that there are others to
whom your inevitable decision must bring some pain.
“For I know that you love Ennison.
You tried bravely enough to hide your preference,
to look at us all with the same eyes, to speak
to us in the same tone. It was not your fault
you failed. If by any chance I have made
a mistake a word will bring me to you. But
I know very well that that word will never be spoken.
“Your great success has been
my joy, our joy as well as yours. You have
made for yourself a unique place upon the stage.
We have so many actresses who aspire to great
things in the drama, not one who can interpret
as you have interpreted it, the delicate finesse,
the finer lights and shades of true comedy. Ennison
will make a thousand enemies if he takes you
from the stage. Yet I think that he will
do it.
“For my own part I have come
fully now into my inheritance. I am bound
to admit that I greatly enjoy my altered life.
Every minute I spend here is an education to
me. Before very long I hope to have definite
work. Some of my schemes are already in hand.
People shrug their shoulders and call me a crazy
socialist. Yet I fancy that we who have
been poor ourselves must be the best judges of
the needs of the people.
“You will write
to me, I am sure and from the date of your
letter I trust most
earnestly that I may come back to my old
place as
“Your
devoted friend,
“WALTER
BRENDON.”
She set the letter down, and drew
from her pocket another with a foreign post mark which
had come the day before. This one too she read.
“HASSELL’S
CAMP,
“NEAR
COLORADO.
“On or about the day you receive
this letter, Anna, the six months will be up.
Do you expect me, I wonder. I think not.
At any rate, here I am, and here I shall be,
twenty thousand feet above all your poison-reeking
cities, up where God’s wind comes fresh
from heaven, very near indeed to the untrodden snows.
Sometimes I tremble, Anna, to think how near I
came to passing through life without a single
glimpse, a moment’s revelation of this
greatest and most awful of mysteries, the mystery of
primaeval nature. It is a true saying that
in the mountains there is peace. One’s
sense of proportion, battered out of all shape in
the daily life of cities, reasserts itself.
I love you still, Anna, but life holds other
things than the love of man for woman. Some
day I shall come back, and I will show you on canvas
the things which have come to me up here amongst
the eternal silence.
“Many nights I have thought of
you, Anna. Your face has flitted out of
my watch-fire, and then I have been a haunted man.
But with the morning, the glorious unstained
morning the passion of living would stir even
the blood of a clod. It comes over the mountains,
Anna, pink darkening into orange red, everywhere a
wonderful cloud sea, scintillating with colour.
It is enough to make a man throw away canvas
and brushes into the bottomless precipices, enough
to make one weep with despair at his utter and absolute
impotence. Nature is God, Anna, and the greatest
artist of us all a pigmy. When I think of
those ateliers of ours, the art jargon,
the decadents with their flamboyant talk I long for
a two-edged sword and a minute of Divinity.
To perdition with them all.
“I shall come back, if at all,
a new man. I have a new cult to teach, a
new enthusiasm. I feel years younger, a man again.
My first visit will be to you. I must tell
you all about God’s land, this marvellous
virgin country, with its silent forests and dazzling
peaks. I make no apology for not being with you
now. You love Ennison. Believe me,
the bitterness of it has almost departed, crushed
out of me together with much of the weariness and
sorrow I brought with me here by the nameless glory
of these lonely months. Yet I shall think
of you to-day. I pray, Anna, that you may
find your happiness.
“Your
friend,
“DAVID
COURTLAW.”
“P.S. I
do not congratulate you on your success. I was
certain
of it. I am glad
or sorry according as it has brought you
happiness.”
Anna’s eyes were a little dim
as she poured out her coffee, and the laugh she attempted
was not altogether a success.
“This is all very well,”
she said, “but two out of the three are rank
deserters and if the papers tell the truth
the third is as bad. I believe I am doomed to
be an old maid.”
She finished her breakfast and strolled
out across the garden with the letters still in her
hand. Beyond was a field sloping steeply upwards,
and at the top a small pine plantation. She climbed
slowly towards it, keeping close to the hedge side,
fragrant with wild roses, and holding her skirts high
above the dew-laden grass. Arrived in the plantation
she sat down with her back against a tree trunk.
Already the warm sun was drawing from
the pines their delicious odour. Below her stretched
a valley of rich meadowland, of yellow cornfields,
and beyond moorland hillside glorious with purple heather
and golden gorse. She tried to compose her thoughts,
to think of the last six months, to steep herself
in the calm beauty of the surroundings. And she
found herself able to do nothing of the sort.
A new restlessness seemed to have stolen in upon her.
She started at the falling of a leaf, at the lumbering
of a cow through the hedge. Her heart was beating
with quite unaccustomed vigour, her hands were hot,
she was conscious of a warmth in her blood which the
summer sunshine was scarcely responsible for.
She struggled against it quite uselessly. She
knew very well that a new thing was stirring in her.
The period of repression was over. It is foolish,
she murmured to herself, foolish. He will not
come. He cannot.
And then all her restlessness was
turned to joy. She sprang to her feet and stood
listening with parted lips and eager eyes. So
he found her when he came round the corner of the
spinney.
“Anna,” he cried eagerly.
She held out her arms to him and smiled.
“And where,” he asked, “are my rivals?”
“Deserters,” she answered,
laughing. “It is you alone, Nigel, who have
saved me from being an old maid. Here are their
letters.”
He took them from her and read them.
When he came to a certain sentence in Brendon’s
letter he stopped short and looked up at her.
“So Brendon and I,” he
said, “have been troubled with the same fears.
I too, Anna, have watched and read of your success
with I must confess it some
misgiving.”
“Please tell me why?” she asked.
“Do you need me to tell you?
You have tasted the luxury of power. You have
made your public, you are already a personage.
And I want you for myself for my wife.”
She took his hand and smiled upon him.
“Don’t you understand,
Nigel,” she said softly, “that it was precisely
for this I have worked so hard. It is just the
aim I have had in view all the time. I wanted
to have something to give up. I did not care no
woman really cares to play the beggar maid
to your King Cophetua.”
“Then you will really give it all up!”
he exclaimed.
She laughed.
“When we go indoors I will show
you the offers I have refused,” she answered.
“They have all been trying to turn my head.
I think that nearly every manager in London has made
me an offer. My reply to all of them has been
the same. My engagement at the ‘Garrick’
terminates Saturday week, and then I am free.”
“You will make me horribly conceited,”
he answered. “I think that I shall be the
most unpopular man in London. You are not playing
to-night, are you?”
“Not to-night,” she answered.
“I am giving my understudy a chance. I
am going up to dine with my sister.”
“Annabel is a prophetess,”
he declared. “I too am asked.”
“It is a conspiracy,”
she exclaimed. “Come, we must go home and
have some luncheon. My little maidservant will
think that I am lost.”
They clambered down the hill together.
The air was sweet with the perfume of flowers, and
the melody of murmuring insects, the blue sky was
cloudless, the heat of the sun was tempered by the
heather-scented west wind. Ennison paused by
the little gate.
“I think,” he said, “that
you have found the real home of the lotus-eaters.
Here one might live the life of golden days.”
She shook her head gently.
“Neither you nor I, Nigel, are
made of such stuff,” she answered. “These
are the playgrounds of life. The great heart of
the world beats only where men and women are gathered
together. You have your work before you, and
I-”
He kissed her on the lips.
“I believe,” he said, “that you
mean me to be Prime Minister.”