It was a beautiful May morning, and
standing by the Paddington Station with the dog at
his feet, he felt her approach instinctively as she
came toward him with her free step in her white cambric
dress under the light parasol fringed with lace.
Her face was glowing with the fresh air, and she looked
happy and bright. As they walked into the station
she poured out a stream of questions about the dog,
took possession of him straightway, and concluded
to call him Don.
They agreed to spend the day at Burnham
Beeches, and while he went for the tickets she stepped
on to the platform. It was Saturday, the bookstall
was ablaze with the picture papers, and one of them
was prominently displayed at a page containing her
own portrait. She wanted John to see this, so
she invented an excuse for bringing him face to face
with it, and then she laughed and he bought the paper.
The clerk recognised herthey
could see that by the smile he kept in reserveand
a group of officers in the Guards, in flannels and
straw hats, going down to their club at Maidenhead,
looked at her and nudged each other as if they knew
who she was. Her eyes danced, her lips smiled,
and she was proud that John should see the first fruits
of her fame. She was proud of him, too, with
his bold walk and strong carriage, as they passed
the officers in their negligent dress, with their red
and blue neckties. But John’s heart was
aching, and he was wondering how he was to begin on
the duty he had to do.
From the moment they started she gave
herself up to the delights of their holiday, and even
the groaning and cranking and joggling of the train
amused her. When the Guards had got into their
first-class carriage they had glanced at the open
window where her brilliant eyes and rosy lips were
gleaming behind a veil. John gazed at her with
his slow and tender looks, and felt guilty and ashamed.
They left the train at Slough, and
a wave of freshness, with an odour of verdure and
sap, blew into their faces. The dog leaped and
barked, and Glory skipped along with it, breaking
every moment into enthusiastic exclamations.
There was hardly any wind, and the clouds, which were
very high overhead, were scarcely moving. It
was a glorious day, and Glory’s face wore an
expression of perfect happiness.
They lunched at the old hotel in the
town, with the window open, and the swallows darting
in the air outside, and Glory, who took milk “for
remembrance,” rose and said, “I looks toward
Mr. Storm,” and then drank his health and swept
him the prettiest courtesy. All through lunch
she kept feeding the dog from her own fingers, and
at the end rebuked him for spreading his bones in
a half circle across the carpet, a thing which was
never done, she said, in the best society, this side
the Cannibal Islands.
“By-and-bye,” he thought,
“time enough by-and-bye,” for the charm
of her joy was infectious.
The sun was high when they started
on their walk, and her face looked flushed and warm.
But through the park-like district to the wood she
raced with Don, and made him leap over her sunshade
and roll over and over on the bright green grass.
The larks were trilling overhead, everything was humming
and singing.
“Let her have one happy day,”
he thought, and they began to call and shout to each
other.
Then they came to the beeches, and,
being sheltered from the fiery rays of the sun, she
put down her sunshade and John took off his hat.
The silence and gloom, the great gnarled trees, with
their thews and sinews, their arms and thighs and
loins, the gentle rustle of the breeze in the branches
overhead, the deep accumulation of dead leaves underfoot,
the fluttering of wings, the low cooing of pigeons,
and all the mystery and wonder of the wood, brought
a sense of awe, as on entering a mighty minster in
the dusk. But this wore away presently, and Glory
began to sing. Her pure voice echoed in the fragrant
air, and the happiness so long pent up and starved
seemed to bubble in every word and note.
“Isn’t this better than
singing in music halls?” he thought, and then
he began to sing too, just like any happy boy, without
thinking of yesterday or to-morrow, of before or after.
She smiled at him. He smiled back. It was
like a dream. After his long seclusion it was
difficult to believe it could be true. The open
air, the perfume of the leaves they were wading through,
the silver bark of the birches and the blue peeps of
the sky between, and then Glory walking with her graceful
motion, and laughing and singing by his side!
“I shall wake up in a minute,” he thought,
“I’m sure I shall!”
They sang one song together.
It was Lasses and Lads, and to make themselves think
it was the old time back again they took each other’s
hands and swung them to the tune. He felt her
clasp like milk coursing through his body, and a great
wave of tenderness swept up his hard resolve as sea-wrack
is thrown up after a storm. “She is here;
we are together; why trouble about anything more?”
and the time flew by.
But their voices went wrong immediately,
and they were soon in difficulties. Then she
laughed, and they began again; but they could not
keep together, and as often as they tried they failed.
“Ah, it’s not like the old days!”
he thought, and a mood of sadness came over him.
He had begun to observe in Glory the trace of the
life she had passed throughwords, phrases,
ideas, snatches of slang, touches of moods which had
the note of a slight vulgarity. When the dog took
a bone uninvited she cried: “It’s
a click; you’ve sneaked it”; when John
broke down in the singing she told him to “chuck
it off the chest”; and when he stopped altogether
she called him glum, and said she would “do it
on her own.”
“Why does he look so sorrowful?”
she thought, and telling herself that this came to
people who were much alone, she rattled on more recklessly
than before.
She talked of the life of the music
hall, the life at “the back,” glorifying
it by a tone of apology. It was all hurry-scurry,
slap, dash, and drive; no time to consider effects;
a succession of last acts and first nights; so it
was really harder to be a music-hall woman than a
regular actress. And the music-hall woman was
no worse than other womenconsidering.
Had he seen their ballet? It was fetching.
Such pages! Simply darlings! They were
the proud young birds of paradise whom toffs like
those Guards came to see, and it was fun to see them
pluming and preening themselves at the back, each for
the eyes of her own particular lord in the stalls.
Thus she flung out unfamiliar notes, hardly knowing
their purport, but to John they were as slimy creatures
out of the social mire she had struggled through.
O London! London! Its shadow was over them
even there, and go where they would, they could never
escape from it.
His former thought began to hang about
him again, and he asked her to tell him what had happened
to her during his absence.
“Shall I?” she said.
“Well, I brought three golden sovereigns out
of the hospital to distribute among the people of
London, but, bless you, they went nowhere.”
“And what then?”
“Thenthen Hope was
a good breakfast but a bad supper, you know. But
shall I tell you all? Yes, yes, I will.”
She told him of Mrs. Jupe, and of
the deception she had practised upon her people, and
he turned his head that he might not see her tears.
She told him of the “Three Graces,” and
of the stage managershe called him the
“stage damager”and then she
turned her head that she might hide her shame.
She told him of Josephs, the bogus agent, and his face
grew hard and his brown eyes looked black.
“And where did you say his place
was?” he asked in a voice that vibrated and
broke.
“I didn’t say,” she answered with
a laugh and a tear.
She told him of Aggie, and of the
foreign clubs, and of Koenig, and of the dinner party
at the Home Secretary’s, and then she skipped
a step and cried:
“Ding, dong, dended,
My tale’s ended.”
“And was it there you met Mr. Drake again?”
She replied with a nod.
“Never having seen him in the meantime?”
She pursed her lips and shook her
head. “That’s all over now, and what
matter? I likes to be jolly and I allwis is!”
“But is it all over?”
he said, and he looked at her again with the deep
look that had cut into her heart.
“He’s going to say something,”
she thought, and she began to laugh, but with a faint
tremor, and giving the dog her parasol to carry in
his mouth, she took off her hat, swung it in her hand
by the brim, and set off to run.
There was the light shimmer of a pool
at a level below, where the water had drained to a
bottom and was inclosed by beeches. The trees
seemed to hang over it with outstretched wings, like
birds about to alight, and round its banks there were
plots of violets which filled the air with their fragrance.
It was a God-blest bit of ground, and when he came
up with her she was standing at the edge of the marshy
mere panting and on the point of tears, and saying,
in a whisper, “Oh, how beautiful!”
“But however am I to get across?”
she cried, looking with mock terror on the two inches
of water that barely covered the grass, and at the
pretty red shoes that peeped from under her dress.
Then something extraordinary occurred.
She hardly knew what was happening until it was over.
Without a word, without a smile, he lifted her up in
his arms and carried her to the other side. She
felt helpless like a child, as if suddenly she belonged
to herself no longer. Her head had fallen on
his shoulder and her heart was beating against his
breast. Or was it his heart that was beating?
When he put her down she was afraid she was going
to cry, so she began to laugh and to say they mustn’t
lose that 7.30 to London or the “rag”
would be rolling up without her and the “stage
damager” would be using “cuss words.”
They had to pass the old church of
Stoke Pogis on the way back to the town, and after
looking at its timber belfry and steeple John suggested
that they should see the inside. The sexton was
found working in the garden at the side of the house,
and he went indoors for the keys. “Here
they be, sir, and you being a pa’son I’ll
bide in the orchet. You and your young missus
can look at the church without me. ’A b’lieve
’a hev seed it afore,” he said with a
twinkle.
The church was dark and cool.
There was a window representing an angel ascending
to heaven against a deep blue sky, and a squire’s
pew furnished like a box at the theatre, with a carpet
and even a stove. The chairs in the front bore
family crests, and behind them were inferior chairs,
without crests, for the servants. John had opened
the little modern organ and begun to play. After
a while he began to sing. He sang Nazareth, and
his voice filled the empty church and went up into
the gloom of the roof, and echoed and returned, and
it was almost as if another voice were singing there.
Glory stood by his side and listened;
a wonderful peace had come down on her. Then
the emotion that vibrated in his deep voice made something
surge up to her throat. “Life for evermore!
Life for evermore!” All at once she began to
weep, to sob, and to laugh in a breath, and he stopped.
“How ridiculous I am to-day!
You’ll think me a maniac,” she said.
But he only took her hand as if she had been a child
and led her out of the church.
Insensibly the day had passed into
evening, and the horizontal rays of the sun were dazzling
their eyes as they returned to the hotel for tea.
In giving orders for this meal they had left the illustrated
weekly behind, and it was now clear from the easy
smiles that greeted them that the paper had been looked
at and Glory identified. The room was ready,
with the table laid, the window closed, and a fire
of wood in the dog grate, for the chill of the evening
was beginning to be felt. And to make him forget
what had happened at the church she put on a look of
forced gaiety and talked rapidly, frivolously, and
at random. The fresh air had given her such a
colour that they would ‘fairly eat her to-night.’
How tired she was, though! But a cup of tea would
exhilarate her “like a Johnnie’s first
whisky and soda in bed.”
He looked at her with his grave face;
every word was cutting him like a knife. “So
you didn’t tell the old folks at Glenfaba about
the hospital until later?”
“No. Have a cup of the
‘girl’? They call champagne ‘the
boy’ at ’the back,’ so I call tea
‘the girl,’ you know.”
“And when did you tell them about the music
hall?”
“Yesterday. ‘Muffins?’”
and as she held out the plate she waggled the wrist
of her other hand, and mimicked the cry of the muffin
man.
“Not until yesterday?”
She began to excuse herself.
What was the use of taking people by surprise?
And then good people were sometimes so easily shocked!
Education and upbringing, and prejudices and even blood
“Glory,” he said, “if
you are ashamed of this life, believe me it is not
a right one.”
“Ashamed? Why should I
be ashamed? Everybody is saying how proud I should
be.”
She spoke feverishly, and by a sudden
impulse she plucked up the paper, but as suddenly
let it drop again, for, looking at his grave face,
her little fame seemed to shrivel up. “But
give a dog a bad name you know You
were there on Monday night. Did you see anything,
nowanything in the performance ”
“I saw the audience, Glory;
that was enough for me. It is impossible for
a girl to live long in an atmosphere like that and
be a good woman. Yes, my child, impossible’
God forbid that I should sit in judgment on any man,
still less on any woman!but the women of
the music hall, do they remain good women? Poor
souls, they are placed in a position so false that
it would require extraordinary virtue not to become
false along with it! And the whiter the soul
that is dragged through thatthat mire,
the more the defilement. The audiences at such
places don’t want the white soul, they don’t
want the good woman, they want the woman who has tasted
of the tree of good and evil. You can see it in
their faces, and hear it in their laughter, and measure
it in their applause. Oh, I’m only a priest,
but I’ve seen these places all the world over,
and I know what I’m saying, and I know it’s
true and you know it’s true, Glory ”
Glory leaped up from the table and
her eyes seemed to emit fire. “I know it’s
hard and cruel and pitiless, and, since you were there
on Monday and saw how kind the audience was to me,
it’s personal and untrue as well.”
But her voice broke and she sat down
again and said in another tone: “But, John,
it’s nearly a year, you know, since we saw each
other last, and isn’t it a pity? Tell me,
where are you living now? Have you made your
plans for the future? Oh, who do you think was
with me just before you called yesterday? PollyPolly
Love, you remember! She’s grown stout and
plainer, poor thing, and I was so sorry Her
brother was in your Brotherhood, wasn’t he?
Is he as strangely fond of her as ever? Is he?
Eh? Don’t you understand? Polly’s
brother, I mean?”
“He’s dead, Glory.
Yes, dead. He died a month ago. Poor boy,
he died broken-hearted! He had come to hear of
his sister’s trouble at the hospital. I
was to blame for that. He never looked up again.”
There was silence; both were gazing
into the fire, and Glory’s mouth was quivering.
All at once she said: “JohnJohn
Storm, why can’t you understand that it’s
not the same with me as with other women? There
seem to be two women in me always. After I left
the hospital I went through a good deal. Nobody
will ever know how much I went through. But even
at the worst, somehow I seemed to enjoy and rejoice
in everything. Things happened that made me cry,
but there was another me that was laughing. And
that’s how it is with the life I am living now.
It is not I myself that go through thisthis
mire, as you call it, it’s only my other self,
my lower self, if you like, but I am not touched by
it at all. Don’t you see that? Don’t
you, now?”
“There are professions which
are a source of temptation, and talents that are a
snare, Glory ”
“I see, I see what you mean.
There are not many ways a woman can succeed inthat’s
the cruelty of things. But there are a few, and
I’ve chosen the one I’m fit for.
And now, now that I’ve escaped from all that
misery, that meanness, and have brought the eyes of
London upon me, and the world is full of smiles for
me, and sunshine, and I am happy, you come at last,
you that I couldn’t find when I wanted you so
muchoh, so much!because you
had forgotten me; you come to me out of a darkness
like the grave and tell me to give it all up.
Yes, yes, yes, that’s what you meangive
it all up! Oh, it’s cruel!”
She covered her face with her hands
and sobbed. He bent over her with a sorrowful
face and said, “My child, if I have come out
of a darkness as of the grave it is because I had
not forgotten you there, but was thinking of
you every day and hour.”
Her sobbing ceased, but the tears
still flowed through her fingers.
“Before that poor lad abandoned
hope he came out into the world too-stole out-thinking
to find his lost one. I told him to look for you
first, and he went to the hospital.”
“I saw him.”
“You!”
“It was on New Year’s Eve. He passed
me in the street.”
“Ah!Well, he came
back anyway, and said you were gone, and all trace
of you was lost. Did I forget you after that,
Glory?”
His husky voice broke off suddenly,
and he rose with a look of wretchedness. “You
are right, there are two selves in you, and the higher
self is so pure, so strong, so unselfish, so nobleOh,
I am sure of it, Glory! Only there’s no
one to speak to it, no one. I try, but I can not.”
She was still crying behind her hands.
“And meanwhile the lower selfthere
are only too many to speak to that ”
Her hands came down from her disordered
face and she said, “I know whom you mean.”
“I mean the world.”
“No, indeed, you mean Mr. Drake.
But you are mistaken. Mr. Drake has been a good
friend to me, but he isn’t anything else, and
doesn’t want to be. Can’t you see
that when you think of me and talk of me as you would
of some other women you hurt me and degrade me, and
I can not bear it? You see I am crying againgoodness
knows why. But I sha’n’t give up my
profession. The idea of such a thing! It’s
ridiculous! Think of Glory in a convent!
One of the poor Clares perhaps!”
“Hush!”
“Or back in the island serving
out sewing at a mothers’ meeting! Give it
up! Indeed I won’t!”
“You shall and you must!”
“Who’ll make me?”
“I will!”
Then she laughed out wildly, but stopped
on the instant and looked up at him with glistening
eyes. An intense blush came over her face, and
her looks grew bright as his grew fierce. A moment
afterward the waiting maid, with an inquisitive expression,
was clearing the table and keeping a smile in reserve
for “the lovers’ quarrel!”
Some of the Guardsmen were in the
train going back, and at the next station they changed
to the carriage in which Glory and John were sitting.
Apparently they had dined before leaving their club
at Maidenhead, and they talked at Glory with covert
smiles. “Going to the Colosseum tonight?”
said one. “If there’s time,”
said another. “Oh, time enough. The
attraction doesn’t begin till ten, don’t
you know, and nobody goes before.” “Tell
me she’s rippin’.” “Gooddeuced
good.”
Glory was sitting with her back to
the engine drumming lightly on the window and looking
out at the setting sun. At first she felt a certain
shame at the obvious references, but, piqued at John’s
silence, she began to take pride in them, and shot
glances at him from under half-closed eyelids.
John was sitting opposite with his arms folded.
At the talk of the men he felt his hands contract
and his lips grow cold with the feeling that Glory
belonged to everybody now and was common property.
Once or twice he looked at them and became conscious
of an impression, which had floated about him since
he left the Brotherhood, that nearly every face he
saw bore the hideous stamp of self-indulgence and
sensuality.
But the noises of the train helped
him not to hear, and he looked out for London.
It lay before them under a canopy of smoke, and now
and then a shaft from the setting sun lit up a glass
roof and it glittered like a sinister eye. Then
there came from afar, over the creaking and groaning
of the wheels and the whistle of the engine, the deep,
multitudinous murmur of that distant sea. The
mighty tide was rising and coming up to meet them.
Presently they were dashing into the midst of it, and
everything was drowned in the splash and roar.
The Guardsmen, being on the platform
side, alighted first, and on going off they bowed
to Glory with rather more than easy manners. A
dash of the devil prompted her to respond demonstratively,
but John had risen and was taking off his hat to the
men, and they were going away discomfited. Glory
was proud of himhe was a man and a gentleman.
He put her into a hansom under the
lamps outside the station, and her face was lit up,
but she patted the dog and said: “You have
vexed me and you needn’t come to see me again.
I shall not sing properly this evening or sleep tonight
at all, if that is any satisfaction to you, so you
needn’t trouble to inquire.”
When he reached home Mrs. Callender
told him of a shocking occurrence at the fashionable
wedding at All Saints’ that morning. A young
woman had committed suicide during the ceremony, and
it turned out to be the poor girl who had been dismissed
from the hospital.
John Storm remembered Brother Paul.
“I must bury her,” he thought.