Half an hour later, as Ferrol was
passing from Louis Lavilette’s stables into
the road leading to the Seigneury he met Sophie Farcinelle,
face to face. In a vague sort of way he was conscious
that a look of despair and misery had suddenly wasted
the bloom upon her cheek, and given to the large,
cow-like eyes an expression of child-like hopelessness.
An apathy had settled upon his nerves. He saw
things as in a dream. His brain worked swiftly,
but everything that passed before his eyes was, as
it were, in a kaleidoscope, vivid and glowing, but
yet intangible. His brain told him that here
before him was a woman into whose life he had brought
its first ordeal and humiliation. But his heart
only felt a reflective sort of pity: it was not
a personal or immediate realisation, that is, not
at first.
He was scarcely conscious that he
stood and looked at her for quite two minutes, without
motion or speech on the part of either; but the dumb,
desolate look in her eyes a look of appeal,
astonishment, horror and shame combined, presently
clarified his senses, and he slowly grew to look at
her as at his punishment, the punishment of his life.
Before always before Sophie had
been vague and indistinct: seen to-day, forgotten
tomorrow; and previous to meeting her scores had affected
his senses, affected them not at all deeply.
She was like a date in history to
a boy who remembers that it meant something, but what,
is not quite sure. But the meaning and definiteness
were his own. Out of the irresponsibility of his
nature, out of the moral ineptitude to which he had
been born, moral knowledge came to him at last.
Love had not done it; neither the love of Christine,
as strong as death, nor the love of his sister, the
deepest thing he ever knew but the look
of a woman wronged. He had inflicted on her the
deepest wrong that may be done a woman. A woman
can forgive passion and ruin, and worse, if the man
loves her, and she can forgive herself, remembering
that to her who loved much, much was forgiven.
But out of wilful idleness, the mere flattery of the
senses, a vampire feeding upon the spirits and souls
of others, for nothing save emotion for emotion’s
sake that was shameless, it was the last
humiliation of a woman. As it were, to lose joy,
and glow, and fervour of young, sincere and healthy
life, to whip up the dying vitality and morbid brain
of a consumptive!
All in a flash he saw it, realised
it, and hated himself for it. He knew that as
long as he lived, an hour or ten years, he never could
redeem himself; never could forgive himself, and never
buy back the life that he had injured. Many a
time in his life he had kissed and ridden away, and
had been unannoyed by conscience. But in proportion
as conscience had neglected him before, it ground
him now between the stones, and he saw himself as
he was. Come of a gentleman’s family, he
knew he was no gentleman. Having learned the
forms and courtesies of life, having infused his whole
career with a spirit of gay bonhomie, he knew that
in truth he was a swaggerer; that bad taste, infamous
bad taste, had marked almost everything that he had
done in his life. He had passed as one of the
nobility, but he knew that all true men, all he had
ever met, must have read him through and through.
He had understood this before to a certain point,
had read himself to a certain mark of gauge, but he
had never been honestly and truly a man until this
moment. His soul was naked before his eyes.
It had been naked before, but he had laughed.
Born without real remorse, he felt it at last.
The true thing started within him. God, the avenger,
the revealer and the healer, had held up this woman
as a glass to him that he might see himself.
He saw her as she had been, a docile,
soft-eyed girl, untouched by anything that defames
or shames, and all in a moment the man that had never
been in him until now, from the time he laughed first
into his mother’s eyes as a babe, spoke out
as simply as a child would have spoken, and told the
truth. There were no ameliorating phrases to soften
it to her ears; there was no tact, there was no blarney,
there was no suave suggestion now, no cheap gaiety,
no cynicism of the social vampire only
the direct statement of a self-reproachful, dying man.
“I didn’t fully know what
I was doing,” he said to her. “If
I had understood then as I do now, I would never have
come near you. It was the worst wickedness I
ever did.”
The new note in his voice, the new
fashion of his words, the new look of his eyes, startled
her, confused her. She could scarcely believe
he was the same man. The dumb desolation lifted
a little, and a look of under standing seemed to pierce
her tragic apathy. As if a current of thought
had been suddenly sent through her, she drew herself
up with a little shiver, and looked at him as if she
were about to speak; but instead of doing so, a strange,
unhappy smile passed across her lips.
He saw that all the goodness of her
nature was trying to arouse itself and assure him
of forgiveness. It did not deceive him in the
least.
“I won’t be so mean now
as to say I was weak,” he added. “I
was not weak; I was bad. I always felt I was
born a liar and a thief. I’ve lied to myself
all my life; and I’ve lied to other people because
I never was a true man.”
“A thief!” she said at
last, scarcely above a whisper, and looking at him
with a flash of horror in her eyes. “A thief!”
It was no use; he could not allow
her to think he meant a thief in the vulgar, common
sense, though that was what he was: just a common
criminal.
“I have stolen the kind thoughts
and love of people to whom I gave nothing in return,”
he said steadily. “There is nothing good
in me. I used to think I was good-natured; but
I was not, or I wouldn’t have brought misery
to a girl like you.”
His truth broke down the barriers
of her anger and despair. Something welled up
in her heart: it may have been love, it may have
been inherent womanliness.
“Why did you marry Christine?” she asked.
All at once he saw that she never
could quite understand. Her stand-point would
still, in the end, be the stand-point of a woman.
He saw that she would have forgiven him, even had
he not loved her, if he had not married Christine.
For the first time he knew something, the real something,
of a woman’s heart. He had never known it
before, because he had been so false himself.
He might have been evil and had a conscience too;
then he would have been wise. But he had been
evil, and had had no conscience or moral mentor from
the beginning; so he had never known anything real
in his life. He thought he had known Christine,
but now he saw her in a new light, through the eyes
of her sister from whose heart he had gathered a harvest
of passion and affection, and had burnt the stubble
and seared the soil forever. Sophie could never
justify herself in the eyes of her husband, or in her
own eyes, because this man did not love her.
Even as he stood before her there, declaring himself
to her as wilfully wicked in all that he had said
and done, she still longed passionately for the thing
that was denied her: not her lost truth back,
but the love that would have compensated for her suffering,
and in some poor sense have justified her in years
to come. She did not put it into words, but the
thought was bluntly in her mind. She looked at
him, and her eyes filled with tears, which dropped
down her cheek to the ground.
He was about to answer her question,
when, all at once, her honest eyes looked into his
mournfully, and she said with an incredible pathos
and simplicity:
“I don’t know how I am
going to live on with Magon. I suppose I’ll
have to keep pretending till I die!”
The bell in the church was ringing
for vespers. It sounded peaceful and quiet, as
though no war, or rebellion, or misery and shame, were
anywhere within the radius of its travel.
Just where they stood there was a
tall calvary. Behind it was some shrubbery.
Ferrol was going to answer her, when he saw, coming
along the road, the Cure in his robes, bearing the
host. In front of him trotted an acolyte, swinging
the censer.
Ferrol quickly drew Sophie aside behind
the bushes, where they should not be seen; for he
was no longer reckless. He wished to be careful
for the woman’s sake.
The Curb did not turn his head to
the right or left, but came along chanting something
slowly. The smell of the incense floated past
them. When the priest and the lad reached the
calvary they turned towards it, bowed, crossed themselves,
and the lad rang a little silver bell. Then the
two passed on, the lad still ringing. When they
were out of sight the sound of the bell came softly,
softly up the road, while the bell in the church tower
still called to prayer.
The words the priest chanted seemed
to ring through the air after he had gone.
“God
have mercy upon the passing soul!
God
have mercy upon the passing soul!
Hear
the prayer of the sinner, O Lord;
Listen
to the voice of those that mourn;
Have
mercy upon the sinner, O Lord!”
When Ferrol turned to Sophie again,
both her hands were clasping the calvary, and she
had dropped her head upon them.
“I must go,” he said. She did not
move.
Again he spoke to her; but she did
not lift her head. Presently, however, as he
stood watching her, she moved away from the calvary,
and, with her back still turned to him, stepped out
into the road and hurried on towards her home, never
once turning her head.
He stood looking after her for a moment,
then turned and, sitting on a log behind the shrubbery,
he tore a few pieces of paper out of a note-book and
began writing. He wrote swiftly for about twenty
minutes or more, then, arising, he moved on towards
the village, where crowds had gathered excited,
fearful, tumultuous; for the British soldiers had
just entered the place.
Ferrol seemed almost oblivious of
the threatening crowd, which once or twice jostled
him more than was accidental. He came into the
post-office, got an envelope, put his letter inside
it, stamped it, addressed it to Christine, and dropped
it into the letter-box.