It was the morning of Commemoration
Day and Vane was dressing for the great ceremony in
the Sheldonian Theatre, the conferring of honours and
degrees, the placing of the Hall-mark of the University
upon those who had passed its tests and proved themselves
to be worthy metal. Over the end of the bed hung
the brand-new bachelor’s gown and silken hood,
which, to-day, for the first time, he would be entitled
to wear. They were the outward material symbols
of the victory which he had won against all competitors.
He was looking far back into his school-boy
days and recalling the dreams he had dreamt of the
time when, if the Fates were very kind to him, he
would have taken his degree and would be able to walk
about in all the glory of cap and gown and hood as
the masters did on Sundays and Saints’ days.
And now it had come to pass.
He had taken as good a degree as the best of them.
In an hour or two he would appear capped and gowned
and hooded on the closing scene of his University
career. On one side of him would be the Chancellor
and all the great dignitaries of the University; on
the other the great audience the undergraduates
in the upper galleries; graduates, tutors and fellows,
proud fathers and mothers, delighted sisters and other
feminine relatives, including cousins and others,
together with desperately envious younger brothers
making the most earnest resolves to henceforth eschew
all youthful dissipations, to foreswear idleness for
ever, and to ‘swat’ day and night until
they too had achieved this glorious consummation vows,
alas! to be broken ere the next school term was many
days old, and yet, with not a few of them, to be renewed
later on and honestly kept.
He knew that, to use a not altogether
inappropriate theatrical simile, he would be playing
a principal part that day. The cheers and the
plaudits which would burst out from the throats of
his fellow-students, and, indeed, from the whole audience,
when he came on to doff his cap and kneel before the
Chancellor to take from his hands the honours he had
won, would be given in recognition of the most brilliant
degree of the year.
And she, too, would be there
with her father and mother, and his father, all sharing
in his triumph, all glorying in his success, in this
splendid fruition of the labours, which, for so many
years, they had watched with such intensely sympathetic
interest.
Under any other circumstances this
would have meant to him even more than the mere formal
triumph; for though he had worked honestly and single-heartedly
for the prizes of his academic career, he had also
worked for them as an athlete might have striven for
his laurels in the Olympian Games, or a knight of
the Age of Chivalry might have fought for his laurels
to lay them at the feet of his lady-love.
Now he had won them and
after all what were they worth? This was not
only to be a day of triumph for him. It was to
be a day of hardest trial and most bitter sacrifice
as well; a trial which, as he knew even now, would
strain his moral fibre very nearly to the breaking
point. It was a struggle for which he had been
bracing himself ever since that last conversation
which he had had with Enid. From that day to this
he had never clasped her hand or looked into her eyes.
That had been the agreement between
them, and also between his father and her parents.
They were not to meet again until he had finished his
university career and taken his degree. That,
as they thought, would give them both time enough
to think to remain faithful, or to think
better of it, as the case might be and,
most important of all for Vane, to determine by the
help of more deliberate thought and added experience,
and by converse with minds older and more deeply versed
in the laws of human nature than his own, whether
or not that resolve, which he had taken when he first
discovered that there was a taint of poison in his
blood, should be kept or not.
But now it was all over although
it ought only to have been just beginning. This
day, which ought to have been the brightest of his
life, was, in reality, to be the darkest. The
golden gates of the Eden of Love lay open before him,
but, instead of entering them, he must pass by with
eyes averted, and enter instead the sombre portals
of his life’s Gethsemane; there to take up his
cross and to bear it until the time came to lay it
down by the side of the grave.
He had thought it all out long and
earnestly in solitary communion with his own soul,
and during many long and closely-reasoned conversations
with Ernshaw, and the one of the night before had decided
him or it might be more correct to say
that it had completed the sum of the convictions which
had been accumulating in his soul for the last two
years.
The path of duty duty to
her, to himself and to Humanity lay straight
and plain before him. He had nothing to do with
the world now. He had come to look upon that
taint in his blood as a taint akin to that of leprosy;
an inherited curse which forbade him to mix with his
kind as other men did. He must stand aloof, crying
“unclean” in his soul if not with his
voice. Henceforth he must be in the world and
not of it and this, as he thought, he had
already proved by his resolve to renounce definitely
and for ever the greatest treasure which the world
could give him, a treasure which had been his so long,
that giving it up was like tearing a part of his own
being away with his own hands.
Still, it was all very hard and very
bitter. Despite his two years’ preparation,
the stress of that last struggle all through the long
hours of the night which should have been filled with
brightest dreams of the morrow, had left him, not
only mentally worn out, but even physically sick.
He felt as though the scene which would mark the culminating
triumph of his academic career, the end of his youth
and the beginning of his manhood, was really an ordeal
too great, too agonising, to be faced.
His scout had brought up an ample
breakfast, with, of course, many congratulations on
the coming honours of the day; but he had only drunk
some of the coffee and left the food untouched.
As he stood in front of the glass, putting on his
collar, his face looked to him more like that of a
man going to execution, than to take the public reward
of many a silent hour of hard study. His hands
trembled so that he could hardly get his necktie into
decent shape.
His coffee on the dressing-table.
Would a teaspoonful of brandy in it do him any harm?
For two years he had not tasted alcohol in any shape,
though he had kept it in his rooms for his friends.
He and Ernshaw, who was also a rigid teetotaler, had
sat with them and seen them drink. He had smelt
the fumes of it in the atmosphere of the room, first
with temptation which he had fought against and overcome
in the strength of the memory of that terrible night
in Warwick Gardens. Then the subtle aroma had
become merely a matter of interest to him, a thing
to be studied as a physician might study the symptoms
of a disease for which he has found the cure.
He had seen his friends leave his
rooms somewhat the worse for liquor, and he had reasoned
with them afterwards, not priggishly or sanctimoniously,
but just as a man who had had the same weakness and
had overcome it because he thought it necessary to
do so, and they had taken it all very good-humoredly
and gone away and done the same thing again a few
nights afterwards, seeming none the worst for it.
But surely now he had conquered the
deadly craving. Surely two years of hard mental
study and healthy physical exercise two
years, during which not a drop of alcohol had passed
his lips must have worked the poison out
of his blood. Henceforth he was entitled to look
upon alcohol as a servant, as a minister to his wants,
and not as a master of his weaknesses.
His mental struggle had so exhausted
him that his physical nature craved for a stimulant,
cried out for some support, some new life, new energy,
if even for an hour or so, so imperiously, that his
enfeebled mental stamina had not strength enough left
to say “no.”
He had got his collar on and his tie
tied, and his hands and fingers were trembling as
though he were just recovering from an attack of malarial
fever.
“It can’t possibly do
me any harm now,” he said, as he moved away from
the glass towards the door of his sitting-room.
“I’ve conquered all that. I haven’t
the slightest desire for it as drink I haven’t
had for over a year now I only want it
as medicine, as a patient has it from a doctor.
I can’t go on without it, I must have something
or I shall faint in the Theatre or do something ridiculous
of that sort, and as for meeting Enid good
heavens, how am I to do that at all! Yes, I think
a couple of teaspoonsful in that coffee will do me
far more good than harm.”
He went towards the sideboard on which
stood his spirit-case. He unlocked it and took
out the brandy decanter. As he did so the memory
of that other night came back to him, and he smiled.
He had conquered now, and he could afford to smile
at those old fears. He took the stopper out of
the decanter and deliberately raised it to his nostrils.
No, it was powerless. The aroma had no more effect
upon him than the scent of, say, eau de Cologne
would have had. That night in Warwick Gardens,
it had been like the touch of some evil magician’s
wand. Then, in an instant, it had transformed
his whole nature; but now his brain remained cool and
calm, and his senses absolutely unmoved. Yes,
he had conquered. He needed a stimulant, merely
as an invalid might need a tonic, and he could take
it with just as much safety.
He took the decanter into his bedroom
and poured a couple of teaspoonsful into his coffee,
stirred it, lifted the cup, and, after one single
priceless moment’s hesitation, put it to his
lips and drank it off.
“Ah, that’s better!”
he said, as he put the cup down and felt the subtle
glow run like lightning through his veins. “Hallo,
who’s that? Confound it, I hope it isn’t
Ernshaw. I don’t want to begin the day with
a lecture on backsliding.”
He put the stopper back, went into
the sitting-room, and replaced the decanter in the
stand before he said in answer to a knock at his door:
“Come in! Is that you Ernshaw?”
The door opened, and Reginald Garthorne came in.
“No, it’s me. That’s
not quite grammatical, I believe, but it’s usual.
Good-morning, Maxwell,” he went on, holding out
his hand. “I’ve come round early
for two reasons. In the first place I want to
be the first to congratulate you, and in the second
place I want you to give me a brandy and soda.
I got here rather late last night with one or two other
Cambridge men, and one of them took us to a man’s
rooms in Brazenose, and we had a rather wet night
of it. Not the proper thing, of course, but excusable
just now.”
“As for the congratulations,
old man,” said Maxwell, “thanks for yours
and accept mine for what you’ve done in the Tripos,
and as for the brandy and soda, well, here you are.
Open that cupboard, and you’ll find some soda
and glasses.”
As he said this, he unlocked the spirit
case again, and put the brandy decanter on the table.
“I’ve just been having
a spoonful myself in my coffee,” he went on,
with just a little flash of wonder why he should have
said this. “The fact is, I suppose, I’ve
been overdoing it a bit lately, and that, and the
anxiety of the thing, has rather knocked me up.
I felt as nervous as a freshman going in for his first
viva voce, when I got up this morning.”
“I don’t wonder at it,”
said Garthorne, helping himself. “You must
have been grinding infernally hard. So have I,
for the matter of that, although, I didn’t aspire
to a double first. You really do look quite knocked
up. By the way,” he continued, looking at
Vane with a smile whose significance he might have
seen had it not been for those two spoonsful of brandy,
“I suppose you’ve quite got over that well,
if you’ll excuse me saying so that
foolishness about inherited alcoholism and that sort
of stuff, and therefore you’ll lay all your laurels
at the feet of the fair Enid without a scruple?
Of course, you remember that juvenile hiding you gave
me on the “Orient”? Quite romantic,
wasn’t it? Well, I must admit that you
proved yourself the better boy then, and as you’ve
taken a double first and I have only got a single,
you’ve proved yourself the better man as well.
Here’s to you, Maxwell, won’t you join
me? You know you have quite an ordeal to go through
to-day, and just one won’t hurt you do
you good, in fact. You look as if you wanted a
bracer.”
Vane listened to the tempting words,
so kindly and frankly spoken, as he might have listened
to words heard in a dream. All the high resolves
which had shaped themselves with such infinite labour
during the past two years, seemed already to have
been made by someone else a someone else
who was yet himself. He had made them and he was
proud of them, and, of course, he meant to hold to
them; but he had conquered that deadly fear which
had held him in chains so long. He was a free
man now, and could do as he liked with his destiny.
His long probation was over, and he
had come through it triumphant. He was to see
Enid again that day for the first time for two years.
He would hear her voice offering him the sweetest
of all congratulations, and when it was all over,
there would be a little family gathering in his rooms,
just their fathers and themselves, and he would tell
them everything frankly, and they should help him
to choose for after all, it was only their
right, and she, surely, had the best right of all to
be consulted. Meanwhile, now that he had fought
and conquered that old craving for alcohol, there
would be no harm, especially on such a morning as
this, in joining Garthorne in just one brandy and soda.
It never struck him how strangely
inverted these thoughts were; what an utter negation
of his waking thoughts, as they flashed through his
mind while Garthorne was speaking. They seemed
perfectly reasonable to him, and so subtle
was the miracle wrought by those two spoonsful of
brandy perfectly honest.
“Well, really, I don’t
see why I shouldn’t,” he said, taking up
the decanter and pulling one of the two glasses which
Garthorne had put on the table towards him. “I
think I have got over that little weakness now.
At any rate, for the last two years I haven’t
touched a drop of anything stronger than coffee, and
I’ve sat here and in other men’s rooms
with fellows drinking in an atmosphere, as one might
say, full of drink and tobacco smoke; and except for
the smoking of course I haven’t dropped
that I’ve never felt the slightest
inclination to join them, at least, after the first
month or so so I think I’m pretty
safe now.”
“Oh, of course you are!”
said Garthorne. “As a matter of fact, you
know, I never thought that there was anything serious
in that idea of yours that you’d inherited the
taint from some ancestor of yours. You got screwed
one night for the first time in your life, and it gave
you a fright. But the fact that you’ve
been able to swear off absolutely for two years, is
perfectly clear proof that the craving really existed
only in your own imagination. If it had been
real, you couldn’t possibly have done it.
Well, here’s to us, old man, and to someone else
who shall be nameless just now!”
Vane, in the recklessness of his new
confidence, had mixed himself a pretty stiff dose.
As he raised his glass with Garthorne’s, something
seemed to drag upon his arm, and something in his soul
rose in revolt; but the old lurking poison was already
aflame in his blood. He nodded to Garthorne and
said:
“Thanks, old man. Here’s to us and
her!”
A few minutes before the words would
have seemed blasphemy to him, now they sounded like
an ordinary commonplace. He put the glass to his
lips and emptied it in quick, hungry gulps.