IS THERE NO HELP FOR THESE THINGS?
Slowly, heavily, like one drugged,
Rudyard Byng made his way through the streets, oblivious
of all around him. His brain was like some engine
pounding at high pressure, while all his body was cold
and lethargic. His anger at those he left behind
was almost madness, his humiliation was unlike anything
he had ever known. In one sense he was not a
man of the world. All his thoughts and moods and
habits had been essentially primitive, even in the
high social and civilized surroundings of his youth;
and when he went to South Africa, it was to come into
his own the large, simple, rough, adventurous
life. His powerful and determined mind was confined
in its scope to the big essential things. It
had a rare political adroitness, but it had little
intellectual subtlety. It had had no preparation
for the situation now upon him, and its accustomed
capacity was suddenly paralyzed. Like some huge
ship staggered by the sea, it took its punishment with
heavy, sullen endurance. Socially he had never,
as it were, seen through a ladder; and Jasmine’s
almost uncanny brilliance of repartee and skill in
the delicate contest of the mind had ever been a wonder
to him, though less so of late than earlier in their
married life. Perhaps this was because his senses
were more used to it, more blunted; or was it because
something had gone from her that freshness
of mind and body, that resilience of temper and spirit,
without which all talk is travail and weariness?
He had never thought it out, though he was dimly conscious
of some great loss of the light gone from
the evening sky.
Yes, it was always in the evening
that he had most longed to see “his girl”;
when the day’s work was done; when the political
and financial stress had subsided; or when he had
abstracted himself from it all and turned his face
towards home. For the big place in Park Lane had
really been home to him, chiefly because, or alone
because, Jasmine had made it what it was; because
in every room, in every corner, was the product of
her taste and design. It had been home because
it was associated with her. But of late ever
since his five months’ visit to South Africa
without her the year before there had come
a change, at first almost imperceptible, then broadening
and deepening.
At first it had vexed and surprised
him; but at length it had become a feeling natural
to, and in keeping with, a scheme of life in which
they saw little of each other, because they saw so
much of other people. His primitive soul had
rebelled against it at first, not bitterly, but confusedly;
because he knew that he did not know why it was; and
he thought that if he had patience he would come to
understand it in time. But the understanding
did not come, and on that ominous, prophetic day before
they went to Glencader, the day when Ian Stafford had
dined with Jasmine alone after their meeting in Regent
Street, there had been a wild, aching protest against
it all. Not against Jasmine he did
not blame her; he only realized that she was different
from what he had thought she was; that they were both
different from what they had been; and that the
light had gone from the evening sky.
But from first to last he had always
trusted her. It had never crossed his mind, when
she “made up” to men in her brilliant,
provoking, intoxicating way, that there was any lack
of loyalty to him. It simply never crossed his
mind. She was his wife, his girl, his flower which
he had plucked; and there it was, for the universe
to see, for the universe to heed as a matter of course.
For himself, since he had married her, he had never
thought of another woman for an instant, except either
to admire or to criticize her; and his criticism was,
as Jasmine had said, “infantile.”
The sum of it was, he was married to the woman of
his choice, she was married to the man of her choice;
and there it was, there it was, a great, eternal,
settled fact. It was not a thing for speculation
or doubt or reconsideration.
Always, when he had been troubled
of late years, his mind had involuntarily flown to
South Africa, as a bird flies to its nest in the distant
trees for safety, from the spoiler or from the storm.
And now, as he paced the streets with heavy, almost
blundering tread, so did the weight of
slander drag him down his thoughts suddenly
saw a picture which had gone deep down into his soul
in far-off days. It was after a struggle with
Lobengula, when blood had been shed and lives lost,
and the backbone of barbarism had been broken south
of the Zambesi for ever and ever and ever. He
had buried two companions in arms whom he had loved
in that way which only those know who face danger
on the plain, by the river, in the mountain, or on
the open road together. After they had been laid
to rest in the valley where the great baboons came
down to watch the simple cortege pass, where a stray
lion stole across the path leading to the grave, he
had gone on alone to a spot in the Matoppos, since
made famous and sacred.
Where John Cecil Rhodes sleeps on
that high plateau of convex hollow stone, with the
great natural pillars standing round like sentinels,
and all the rugged unfinished hills tumbling away to
an unpeopled silence, he came that time to rest his
sorrowing soul. The woods, the wild animal life,
had been left behind, and only a peaceful middle world
between God and man greeted his stern eyes.
Now, here in London, at that corner
where the lonely white statue stands by Londonderry
House, as he moved in a dream of pain, with vast weights
like giant manacles hampering every footstep, inwardly
raging that into his sweet garden of home the vile
elements of slander had been thrown, yet with a terrible
and vague fear that something had gone terribly wrong
with him, that far-off day spent at the Matoppos flashed
upon his sight.
Through streets upon streets he had
walked, far, far out of his way, subconsciously giving
himself time to recover before he reached his home;
until the green quiet of Hyde Park, the soft depths
of its empty spaces, the companionable and commendable
trees, greeted his senses. Then, here, suddenly
there swam before his eyes the bright sky over those
scarred and jagged hills beyond the Matoppos, purple
and grey, and red and amethyst and gold, and his soul’s
sight went out over the interminable distance of loneliness
and desolation which only ended where the world began
again, the world of fighting men. He saw once
more that tumbled waste of primeval creation, like
a crazed sea agitated by some Horror underneath, and
suddenly transfixed in its plunging turmoil a
frozen concrete sorrow, with all active pain gone.
He heard the loud echo of his feet upon that hollow
plateau of rock, with convex skin of stone laid upon
convex skin, and then suddenly the solid rock which
gave no echo under his tread, where Rhodes lies buried.
He saw all at once, in the shining horizon at different
points, black, angry, marauding storms arise and roar
and burst: while all the time above his head
there was nothing but sweet sunshine, into which the
mists of the distant storms drifted, and rainbows formed
above him. Upon those hollow rocks the bellow
of the storms was like the rumbling of the wheels
of a million gun-carriages; and yet high overhead there
were only the bright sun and faint drops of rain falling
like mystic pearls.
And then followed he could
hear it again, so plainly, as his eyes now sought
the friendly shades of the beeches and the elms yonder
in Hyde Park! upon the air made denser
by the storm, the call of a lonely bird from one side
of the valley. The note was deep and strong and
clear, like the bell-bird of the Australian salt-bush
plains beyond the Darling River, and it rang out across
the valley, as though a soul desired its mate; and
then was still. A moment, and there came across
the valley from the other side, stealing deep sweetness
from the hollow rocks, the answer of the bird which
had heard her master’s call. Answering,
she called too, the viens ici of kindred
things; and they came nearer and nearer and nearer,
until at last their two voices were one.
In that wild space there had been
worked out one of the great wonders of creation, and
under the dim lamps of Park Lane, in his black, shocked
mood, Rudyard recalled it all by no will of his own.
Upon his eye and brain the picture had been registered,
and in its appointed time, with an automatic suggestion
of which he was ignorant and innocent, it came to
play its part and to transform him.
The thought of it all was like a cool
hand laid upon his burning brow. It gave him
a glimpse of the morning of life.
The light was gone from the evening
sky: but was it gone forever?
As he entered his house now he saw
upon a Spanish table in the big hall a solitary bunch
of white roses a touch of simplicity in
an area of fine artifice. Regarding it a moment,
black thoughts receded, and choosing a flower from
the vase he went slowly up the stairs to Jasmine’s
room.
He would give her this rose as the
symbol of his faith and belief in her, and then tell
her frankly what he had heard at De Lancy Scovel’s
house.
For the moment it did not occur to
him that she might not be at home. It gave him
a shock when he opened the door and found her room
empty. On her bed, like a mesh of white clouds,
lay the soft linen and lace and the delicate clothes
of the night; and by the bed were her tiny blue slippers
to match the blue dressing-gown. Some gracious
things for morning wear hung over a chair; an open
book with a little cluster of violets and a tiny mirror
lay upon a table beside a sofa; a footstool was placed
at a considered angle for her well-known seat on the
sofa where the soft-blue lamp-shade threw the light
upon her book; and a little desk with dresden-china
inkstand and penholder had little pockets of ribbon-tied
letters and bills even business had an air
of taste where Jasmine was. And there on a table
beside her bed was a large silver-framed photograph
of himself turned at an angle toward the pillow where
she would lay her head.
How tender and delicate and innocent
it all was! He looked round the room with new
eyes, as though seeing everything for the first time.
There was another photograph of himself on her dressing-table.
It had no companion there; but on another table near
were many photographs; four of women, the rest of
men: celebrities, old friends like Ian Stafford and
M. Mennaval.
His face hardened. De Lancy Scovel’s
black slander swept through his veins like fire again,
his heart came up in his throat, his fingers clinched.
Presently, as he stood with clouded
face and mist in his eyes, Jasmine’s maid entered,
and, surprised at seeing him, retreated again, but
her eyes fastened for a moment strangely on the white
rose he held in his hand. Her glance drew his
own attention to it again. Going over to the
gracious and luxurious bed, with its blue silk canopy,
he laid the white rose on her pillow. Somehow
it was more like an offering to the dead than a lover’s
tribute to the living. His eyes were fogged,
his lips were set. But all he was then in mind
and body and soul he laid with the rose on her pillow.
As he left the rose there, his eyes
wandered slowly over this retreat of rest and sleep:
white robe-de-nuit, blue silk canopy,
blue slippers, blue dressing-gown all blue,
the colour in which he had first seen her.
Slowly he turned away at last and
went to his own room. But the picture followed
him. It kept shining in his eyes. Krool’s
face suddenly darkened it.
“You not ring, Baas,” Krool said.
Without a word Rudyard waved him away,
a sudden and unaccountable fury in his mind.
Why did the sight of Krool vex him so?
“Come back,” he said,
angrily, before the door of the bedroom closed.
Krool returned.
“Weren’t there any cables?
Why didn’t you come to Mr. Scovel’s at
midnight, as I told you?”
“Baas, I was there at midnight,
but they all say you come home, Baas. There the
cable two.” He pointed to the
dressing-table.
Byng snatched them, tore them open, read them.
One had the single word, “Tomorrow.”
The other said, “Prepare.” The code
had been abandoned. Tragedy needs few words.
They meant that to-morrow Kruger’s
ultimatum would be delivered and that the worst must
be faced.
He glanced at the cables in silence,
while Krool watched him narrowly, covertly, with a
depth of purpose which made his face uncanny.
“That will do, Krool; wake me
at seven,” he said, quietly, but with suppressed
malice in his tone.
Why was it that at that moment he
could, with joy, have taken Krool by the neck and
throttled him? All the bitterness, anger and rage
that he had felt an hour ago concentrated themselves
upon Krool without reason, without cause.
Or was it that his deeper Other Self had whispered
something to his mind about Krool something
terrible and malign?
In this new mood he made up his mind
that he would not see Jasmine till the morning.
How late she was! It was one o’clock, and
yet this was not the season. She had not gone
to a ball, nor were these the months of late parties.
As he tossed in his bed and his head
turned restlessly on his pillow, Krool’s face
kept coming before him, and it was the last thing he
saw, ominous and strange, before he fell into a heavy
but troubled sleep.
Perhaps the most troubled moment of
the night came an hour after he went to bed.
Then it was that a face bent over
him for a minute, a fair face, with little lines contracting
the ripe lips, which were redder than usual, with
eyes full of a fevered brightness. But how harmonious
and sweetly ordered was the golden hair above!
Nothing was gone from its lustre, nothing robbed it
of its splendour. It lay upon her forehead like
a crown. In its richness it seemed a little too
heavy for the tired face beneath, almost too imperial
for so slight and delicate a figure.
Rudyard stirred in his sleep, murmuring
as she leaned over him; and his head fell away from
her hand as she stretched out her fingers with a sudden
air of pity of hopelessness, as it might
seem from her look. His face restlessly turned
to the wall a vexed, stormy, anxious face
and head, scarred by the whip of that overlord more
cruel and tyrannous than Time, the Miserable Mind.
She drew back with a little shudder.
“Poor Ruddy!” she said, as she had said
that evening when Ian Stafford came to her after the
estranging and scornful years, and she had watched
Rudyard leave her to her fate and to her
folly.
“Poor Ruddy!”
With a sudden frenzied motion of her
hands she caught her breath, as though some pain had
seized her. Her eyes almost closed with the shame
that reached out from her heart, as though to draw
the veil of her eyelids over the murdered thing before
her murdered hope, slaughtered peace:
the peace of that home they had watched burn slowly
before their eyes in the years which the locust had
eaten.
Which the locust had eaten yes,
it was that. More than once she had heard Rudyard
tell of a day on the veld when the farmer surveyed
his abundant fields with joy, with the gay sun flaunting
it above; and suddenly there came a white cloud out
of the west, which made a weird humming, a sinister
sound. It came with shining scales glistening
in the light and settled on the land acre upon acre,
morgen upon morgen; and when it rose again the fields,
ready for the harvest, were like a desert the
fields which the locust had eaten. So had the
years been, in which Fortune had poured gold and opportunity
and unlimited choice into her lap. She had used
them all; but she had forgotten to look for the Single
Secret, which, like a key, unlocks all doors in the
House of Happiness.
“Poor Ruddy!” she said,
but even as she said it for the second time a kind
of anger seemed to seize her.
“Oh, you fool you
fool!” she whispered, fiercely. “What
did you know of women! Why didn’t you make
me be good? Why didn’t you master me the
steel on the wrist the steel on the wrist!”
With a little burst of misery and
futile rage she went from the room, her footsteps
uneven, her head bent. One of the open letters
she carried dropped from her hand onto the floor of
the hall outside. She did not notice it.
But as she passed inside her door a shadowy figure
at the end of the hall watched her, saw the letter
drop, and moved stealthily forward towards it.
It was Krool.
How heavy her head was! Her worshipping
maid, near dead with fatigue, watched her furtively,
but avoided the eyes in the mirror which had a half-angry
look, a look at once disturbed and elated, reckless
and pitiful. Lablanche was no reader of souls,
but there was something here beyond the usual, and
she moved and worked with unusual circumspection and
lightness of touch. Presently she began to unloose
the coils of golden hair; but Jasmine stopped her
with a gesture of weariness.
“No, don’t,” she
said. “I can’t stand your touch tonight,
Lablanche. I’ll do the rest myself.
My head aches so. Good-night.”
“I will be so light with it,
madame,” Lablanche said, protestingly.
“No, no. Please go. But the morning,
quite early.”
“The hour, madame?”
“When the letters come, as soon
as the letters come, Lablanche the first
post. Wake me then.”
She watched the door close, then turned
to the mirror in front of her and looked at herself
with eyes in which brooded a hundred thoughts and
feelings: thoughts contradictory, feelings opposed,
imaginings conflicting, reflections that changed with
each moment; and all under the spell of a passion
which had become in the last few hours the most powerful
influence her life had ever known. Right or wrong,
and it was wrong, horribly wrong; wise or unwise,
and how could the wrong be wise! she knew she was
under a spell more tyrannous than death, demanding
more sacrifices than the gods of Hellas.
Self-indulgent she had been, reckless
and wilful and terribly modern, taking sweets where
she found them. She had tried to squeeze the orange
dry, in the vain belief that Wealth and Beauty can
take what they want, when they want it, and that happiness
will come by purchase; only to find one day that the
thing you have bought, like a slave that revolts,
stabs you in your sleep, and you wake with wide-eyed
agony only to die, or to live with the
light gone from the evening sky.
Suddenly, with the letters in her
hand with which she had entered the room, she saw
the white rose on her pillow. Slowly she got up
from the dressing-table and went over to the bed in
a hushed kind of way. With a strange, inquiring,
half-shrinking look she regarded the flower. One
white rose. It was not there when she left.
It had been brought from the hall below, from the
great bunch on the Spanish table. Those white
roses, this white rose, had come from one who, selfish
as he was, knew how to flatter a woman’s vanity.
From that delicate tribute of flattery and knowledge
Rudyard had taken this flowering stem and brought it
to her pillow.
It was all too malevolently cynical.
Her face contracted in pain and shame. She had
a soul to which she had never given its chance.
It had never bloomed. Her abnormal wilfulness,
her insane love of pleasure, her hereditary impulses,
had been exercised at the expense of the great thing
in her, the soul so capable of memorable and beautiful
deeds.
As she looked at the flower, a sense
of the path by which she had come, of what she had
left behind, of what was yet to chance, shuddered into
her heart.
That a flower given by Adrian Fellowes
should be laid upon her pillow by her husband, by
Rudyard Byng, was too ghastly or too devilishly humorous
for words; and both aspects of the thing came to her.
Her face became white, and almost mechanically she
put the letters she held on a writing-table near;
then coming to the bed again she looked at the rose
with a kind of horror. Suddenly, however, she
caught it up, and bursting into a laugh which was
shrill and bitter she threw it across the room.
Still laughing hysterically, with her golden hair streaming
about her head, folding her round like a veil which
reached almost to her ankles, she came back to the
chair at the dressing-table and sat down.
Slowly drawing the wonderful soft
web of hair over her shoulders, she began to weave
it into one wide strand, which grew and grew in length
till it was like a great rope of spun gold. Inch
by inch, foot by foot it grew, until at last it lay
coiled in her lap like a golden serpent, with a kind
of tension which gave it life, such as Medusa’s
hair must have known as the serpent-life entered into
it. There is or was in
Florence a statue of Medusa, seated, in her fingers
a strand of her hair, which is beginning to coil and
bend and twist before her horror-stricken eyes; and
this statue flashed before Jasmine’s eyes as
she looked at the loose ends of gold falling beyond
the blue ribbon with which she had tied the shining
rope.
With the mad laughter of a few moments
before still upon her lips, she held the flying threads
in her hand, and so strained was her mind that it
would not have caused her surprise if they had wound
round her fingers or given forth forked tongues.
She laughed again a low and discordant
laugh it was now.
“Such imaginings I think I must be
mad,” she murmured.
Then she leaned her elbows on the
dressing-table and looked at herself in the glass.
“Am I not mad?” she asked
herself again. Then there stole across her face
a strange, far-away look, bringing a fresh touch of
beauty to it, and flooding it for a moment with that
imaginative look which had been her charm as a girl,
a look of far-seeing and wonder and strange light.
“I wonder if I had
had a mother!” she said, wistfully, her chin
in her hand. “If my mother had lived, what
would I have been?”
She reached out to a small table near,
and took from it a miniature at which she looked with
painful longing. “My dear, my very dear,
you were so sweet, so good,” she said.
“Am I your daughter, your own daughter me?
Ah, sweetheart mother, come back to me! For God’s
sake come now. Speak to me if you
can. Are you so very far away? Whisper only
whisper, and I shall hear.
“Oh, she would, she would, if
she could!” her voice wailed, softly. “She
would if she could, I know. I was her youngest
child, her only little girl. But there is no
coming back. And maybe there is no going forth;
only a blackness at the last, when all stops all
stops, for ever and ever and ever, amen! ...Amen so
be it. Ah, I even can’t believe in that!
I can’t even believe in God and Heaven and the
hereafter. I am a pagan, with a pagan’s
heart and a pagan’s ways.”
She shuddered again and closed her
eyes for a moment. “Ruddy had a glimpse,
one glimpse, that day, the day that Ian came back.
Ruddy said to me that day, ’If you had lived
a thousand years ago you would have had a thousand
lovers.’ ... And it is true by
all the gods of all the worlds, it is true. Pleasure,
beauty, is all I ever cared for pleasure,
beauty, and the Jasmine-flower. And Ian and
Ian, yes, Ian! I think I had soul enough for
one true thing, even if I was not true.”
She buried her face in her hands for
a moment, as though to hide a great burning.
“But, oh, I wonder if I did
ever love Ian, even! I wonder.... Not then,
not then when I deserted him and married Rudyard, but
now now? Do do I love him
even now, as we were to-day with his arms round me,
or is it only beauty and pleasure and me?
... Are they really happy who believe in God
and live like like her?” She gazed
at her mother’s portrait again. “Yes,
she was happy, but only for a moment, and then she
was gone so soon. And I shall never
see her, I who never saw her with eyes that recall....
And if I could see her, would I? I am a pagan would
I try to be like her, if I could? I never really
prayed, because I never truly felt there was a God
that was not all space, and that was all soul and
understanding. And what is to come of it, or what
will become of me? ... I can’t go back,
and going on is madness. Yes, yes, it is madness,
I know madness and badness and
dust at the end of it all. Beauty gone, pleasure
gone.... I do not even love pleasure now as I
did. It has lost its flavour; and I do not even
love beauty as I did. How well I know it!
I used to climb hills to see a sunset; I used to walk
miles to find the wood anémones and the wild violets;
I used to worship a pretty child ... a pretty child!”
She shrank back in her chair and pondered
darkly. “A pretty child.... Other
people’s pretty children, and music and art and
trees and the sea, and the colours of the hills, and
the eyes of wild animals ... and a pretty child.
I wonder, I wonder if ”
But she got no farther with that thought.
“I shall hate everything on earth if it goes
from me, the beauty of things; and I feel that it is
going. The freshness of sense has gone, somehow.
I am not stirred as I used to be, not by the same
things. If I lose that sense I shall kill myself.
Perhaps that would be the easiest way now. Just
the overdose of ”
She took a little phial from the drawer
of the dressing-table. “Just the tiny overdose
and ‘good-bye, my lover, good-bye.’”
Again that hard little laugh of bitterness broke from
her. “Or that needle Mr. Mappin had at
Glencader. A thrust of the point, and in an instant
gone, and no one to know, no one to discover, no one
to add blame to blame, to pile shame upon shame.
Just blackness blackness all at once, and
no light or anything any more. The fruit all
gone from the trees, the garden all withered, the
bower all ruined, the children all dead the
pretty children all dead forever, the pretty children
that never were born, that never lived in Jasmine’s
garden.”
As there had come to Rudyard premonition
of evil, so to-night, in the hour of triumph, when,
beyond peradventure, she had got for Ian Stafford
what would make his career great, what through him
gave England security in her hour of truth, there
came now to her something of the real significance
of it all.
She had got what she wanted.
Her pride had been appeased, her vanity satisfied,
her intellect flattered, her skill approved, and Ian
was hers. But the cost?
Words from Swinburne’s threnody
on Baudelaire came to her mind. How often she
had quoted them for their sheer pagan beauty!
It was the kind of beauty which most appealed to her,
which responded to the element of fatalism in her,
the sense of doom always with her since she was a
child, in spite of her gaiety, her wit, and her native
eloquence. She had never been happy, she had
never had a real illusion, never aught save the passion
of living, the desire to conquer unrest:
“And now, no sacred staff shall
break in blossom,
No choral salutation lure to light
The spirit sick with perfume and sweet
night,
And Love’s tired eyes and hands
and barren bosom.
There is no help for these things, none
to mend and none to mar
Not all our songs, oh, friend, can make
Death clear or make Life durable
But still with rose and ivy and wild vine,
And with wild song about this dust of
thine,
At least I fill a place where white dreams
dwell,
And wreathe an unseen shrine.”
“’And Love’s tired
eyes and hands and barren bosom.... There is no
help for these things, none to mend and none to mar....’”
A sob rose in her throat. “Oh, the beauty
of it, the beauty and the misery and the despair of
it!” she murmured.
Slowly she wound and wound the coil
of golden hair about her neck, drawing it tighter,
fold on fold, tighter and tighter.
“This would be the easiest way this,”
she whispered. “By my own hair! Beauty
would have its victim then. No one would kiss
it any more, because it killed a woman.... No
one would kiss it any more.”
She felt the touch of Ian Stafford’s
lips upon it, she felt his face buried in it.
Her own face suffused, then Adrian Fellowes’
white rose, which Rudyard had laid upon her pillow,
caught her eye where it lay on the floor. With
a cry as of a hurt animal she ran to her bed, crawled
into it, and huddled down in the darkness, shivering
and afraid.
Something had discovered her to herself
for the first time. Was it her own soul?
Had her Other Self, waking from sleep in the eternal
spaces, bethought itself and come to whisper and warn
and help? Or was it Penalty, or Nemesis, or that
Destiny which will have its toll for all it gives
of beauty, or pleasure, or pride, or place, or pageantry?
“Love’s tired eyes and hands and barren
bosom”
The words kept ringing in her ears.
They soothed her at last into a sleep which brought
no peace, no rest or repose.