While Pete and Philip were driving
over the road from Douglas, Kate was sitting with
the child on her lap before the fire in Elm Cottage.
Her eyes were restless, her manner agitated.
She looked out at the window from time to time.
The setting sun behind the house still held the day
with horizontal shafts of light in the spring green
of the transparent leaves.
“Wouldn’t you like to
see the procession to-night, Nancy?” she said.
“Aw, mortal,” said Nancy.
“But I won’t get lave, though. ’Take
care of my two girls,’ says he ”
“You may go, Nancy; I’ll see to baby,”
said Kate.
“But the man himself, woman;
he’ll be coming home as hungry as a hunter.”
“I’ll see to his supper,
too,” said Kate. “Carry the key with
you that you may let yourself in, and be back at half-past
seven.”
Then Nancy began to fly about the
kitchen like sputter-ings out of the frying-pan filling
the kettle, lighting the lamp, and getting together
the baby’s night-clothes. Kate watched her
and glanced at the clock.
“Was the town quiet when you
were out for the bacon, Nancy?” she said.
“Quiet enough,” said Nancy.
“Everybody flying off Le-zayre way already except
what were making for the quay.”
“Is the steamer sailing to-night, then?’’
“Yes, the Peveril; but
not water enough to float her till half-past seven,
they were saying. Here’s the lil one’s
nightdress, and here’s her binder, bless her just
big enough for a bandage for a person’s wrist
if she sprained it churning.”
“Lay them on the fender to air,
Nancy I’ll not undress baby yet awhile.
And see it’s nearly seven.”
“I’ll be pinning my shawl
on and away like the wind,” said Nancy.
“The bogh!” she said, with the pin between
her teeth. “She’s off again.
Do you really think, now, the angels in heaven are
as sweet and innocent, Kirry? I don’t.
They can’t if they’re grown up. And
having to climb Jacob’s ladder, poor things,
they must be. Then, if they’re men but
that’s ridiculous, anyway.”
“The clock is striking, Nancy.
No use going when everything’s over,”
said Kate, and the foot with which she rocked the child
went faster now that the little one was asleep.
“Sakes alive! Let me tie
the strings of my bonnet, woman. Pity you can’t
come yourself, Kitty. But if they’re worth
their salt they’ll be whipping round this way
and giving you a lil tune, anyway.”
“Have you got the key, Nancy?”
“Yes, and I’ll be back
in an hour. And mind you put baby to bed soon,
and mind you and mind you ”
With as many warnings as if she had
been mistress and Kate the servant, Nancy backed herself
out of the house. It was now dark outside.
Kate rose immediately, put the child
in the cradle, and began to lay the table for Pete’s
supper the cruet, the plates, the teapot
on the hob to warm, and then by force of
habit two cups and saucers. But sight
of the cups awakened her to painful consciousness.
She put one of them back in the cupboard, broke the
coal on the fire, settled the kettle up to the blaze,
fixed the Dutch oven with three rashers of bacon before
the bars, then lit a candle, and, with a nervous look
around, turned to go upstairs.
In the bedroom she drew on her cloak,
pinned her hat and veil with trembling fingers, then
took her purse from her pocket and emptied its contents
onto the dressing-table.
“Not mine,” she thought.
And standing before the mirror at that moment, she
caught sight of her earrings. “I must take
nothing of his,” she told herself, and she raised
her hands to her ears. Then her heart smote her.
“As if Pete would ever think of such things,”
she thought. “No, not if I took everything
he has in the world. And must I be thinking
of them?... Yet I cannot I will not
take them with me.”
She opened a drawer and hurried everything
into it the money, the earrings, the keeper
off her finger, and then she paused at the touch of
the wedding-ring. A superstitious instinct restrained
her. Yet the ring was the badge of her broken
covenant. “With this ring I thee wed ”
She tore off the wedding-ring also, and cast it with
the rest.
“He will find them,” she
thought. “There will be nothing else to
tell him what has happened. He will come, and
I shall be gone. He will call, and there will
be no answer. He will look for me, and I shall
be lost to him for ever. Not a word left behind.
Not a line to say, ’Thank you and good-bye and
God bless you, dear Pete, for all your love and goodness
to rae."’
It was cruel very cruel yet
what could she write? What could she say that
had not better be left unsaid? The least syllable no,
the uncertainty would be kinder. Perhaps Pete
would think she was dead perhaps that she
had destroyed herself. Even that would not be
so bitter as the truth. He would get over it he
would become reconciled. “No,” she
thought, “I can write nothing I can
leave no message.”
She shut the drawer quickly, and picked
up the candle. As she did so, the shadow of herself
moved about her. It mounted from the floor to
the wall, from the wall to the ceiling. When
she walked it seemed to be on top of her, hanging
over her, pressing down on her, crushing her.
She grew cold and sick, and hastened to the door.
The room was full of other shadows the
memories of sleepless nights and of painful awakenings.
These stared at her from every familiar thing the
watch ticking in its stand on the mantelpiece, the
handle of the wardrobe, the pink curtains of the bed,
the white pillow beneath them. She felt like a
frightened child. With a terrified glance over
her shoulder she crept out of the room.
Being downstairs again, she breathed
more freely. There was light all about her, and
the hall-parlour was bright and warm. The kettle
was now singing in the cheerful blaze, the cat was
purring on the rug, and there was a smell of bacon
slowly frying. She looked at the clock it
was a quarter after seven. “Time to waken
baby,” she thought.
She took from a chest the child’s
outdoor clothes a robe, a pelisse, and
a white hood. Her fingers had touched a scarlet
hood in a cardboard box, but “not that”
she thought, and left it. She spread the clothes
about her chair, and then lifted the little one from
the cradle to her pillowing arm. The child awoke
as she raised it, and made a fretful cry, which she
smothered in a gurgling kiss.
“I can love the darling without
shame now,” she thought. “It’s
sweet face will reproach me no more.”
With soft cooings at the baby’s
cheek, she was stooping to take the robe that lay
at her feet, when her eyes fell on the round place
in the cradle where the child had been. That
made her think again of Pete. He would come home
and find the little nest cold and empty. It would
kill him; it would be a second bereavement. Was
it not enough that she should go away herself?
Must she rob him of the child as well? He loved
it; he doted on it. It was the light of his eyes,
the joy of his life. To lose it would be a blow
like the blow of death.
Yet could a mother leave her child
behind her? Impossible! The full tide of
motherhood came over her, and its tender selfishness
swept down everything. “I cannot,”
she thought; “come what may, I cannot and I will
not leave her.” And then she reached her
hand for the child’s pelisse.
“It would be a kind of atonement,
though,” she thought. To leave the little
one to Pete would be making amends in some sort for
the wrong that she was doing him. To deny herself
the sight of the child’s sweet face day by day
and hour by hour that would be a punishment
also, and she deserved to be punished. “Can
I leave her?” she thought. “Can I?
Oh, what mother could bear it? No, no never,
never! And yet I ought I must Oh,
this is terrible!”
In the midst of this agony of uncertainty,
thinking of Pete and of the wrong she had done him,
yet pressing the child to her breast with trembling
arms, as if some one were tearing it away, the babe
itself settled everything. Making some inarticulate
whimper of communication, it nuzzled up to her, its
eyes closed, but its head working against her bosom
with the instinct of suckling, though it had never
sucked.
“I’m only half a mother, after all,”
she thought.
The highest joys, the deepest rights
of motherhood had been denied to her the
child taking from the mother, the mother giving to
the child, the child and the mother one :
this had not been hers.
“My little baby can live without
me,” she thought. “If I leave her,
she will never miss me.”
She nearly broke down at that thought,
and almost let her purpose slip. It was like
God’s punishment in advance, God’s hand
directing her thus to withdraw the child
from dependence on herself.
“Yes, I must leave her with Pete,” she
thought.
She put the child back into the cradle,
half dressed as it was, and rocked it until it slept
again. Then she hung over the tiny bed as a mother
hangs over the little coffin that is soon to be shut
up from her eyes for ever. Her tears rained down
on the small counterpane. “My sweet baby
I my little Katherine! I may never kiss you again never
see you any more’ you may grow up
to be a woman and know nothing of your mother!”
The clock ticked loud in the quiet
room it was twenty-five minutes past seven.
“One kiss more, my little darling.
If they ever tell you... they’ll say because
your mother left you... Oh, will she think I did
not love her? Hush!”
Through the walls of the house there
came the sound of a band playing at a distance.
She looked at the clock again it was nearly
half-past seven. Almost at the same moment there
was the rumble of carriage-wheels on the road.
They stopped in the lane that ran between the chapel
and the end of the garden.
Kate rose from her knees and opened
the door softly. The house had been as a dungeon
to her, and she was flying from it like a prisoner
escaping. A shrill whistle pierced the air.
The Peveril was leaving the quay. Through
the streets there was a sound as of water running over
stones. It was the scuttling of the feet of the
townspeople as they ran to meet the procession.
She stepped out. The garden was
dark and quiet as a prison yard; Hardly a leaf stirred,
but the moon was breaking through the old fir-tree
as she lifted her troubled face to the untroubled sky.
She stood and listened. The band was coming nearer.
She could hear the thud of the big drum.
Boom! Boom! Boom!
Pete was there. He was helping
at Philip’s triumph. That was the beat of
his great heart made audible.
At this her own heart stopped for
a moment. She grew chill at the thought of the
brave man who asked no better lot than to love and
cherish her, and at the memory of the other upon whose
mercy she had cast herself. The band stopped.
There was a noise like the breaking of a mighty rocket
in the sky. The people were cheering and clapping
hands. Then a clearer sound struck her ear.
It was the clock inside the house chiming the half-hour.
Nancy would be back soon.
Kate listened intently, inclining
her head inwards. If the child had awakened at
that instant, if it had stirred and cried, she must
have gone back for good. She returned for one
moment and flung herself over the cradle again.
One spasm more of lingering tenderness. “Good-bye,
my little one! I am leaving you with him, darling,
because he loves you dearly. You will grow up
and be a good, good girl to him always. Good-bye,
my pet! My precious, my precious! You will
reward him for all he has done for me. You are
half of myself, dearest the innocent half.
Yes, you will wipe out your mother’s sin.
You will be all he thinks I am, but never have been.
Farewell, my sweet Katherine, my little, darling baby good-bye farewell good-bye!”
She leapt up and fled out of the house
at last, on tiptoe, like a thief, pulling the door
after her.
When she heard the click of the lock
she felt both wretchedness and exultation immense
agony and immense relief. If little Katherine
were to cry now, she could not return to her.
The door was closed, the house was shut, the prison
was left behind. And behind her, too, were the
treachery, the duplicity, and deceit of ten stifling
months.
She hurried through the garden to
a side-door in the wall leading to the lane.
The path was like a wave of the sea to her stumbling
feet. Her breathing was short, her sight was
weak, her temples were beating audibly. Half
across the garden something touched her dress, and
she made a faint scream. It was Pete’s
dog, Dempster. He was looking up at her out of
the darkness of the bushes. By the light through
the blind of the house she could see his bat’s
ears and watchful eyes.
Boom! Boom! Boom!
The band had begun again. It
was coming nearer. Philip! Philip! He
was her only refuge now. All else was a blank.
The side-door had been little used.
Its hinges and bolt were rusty and stiff. She
broke her nails in opening it. From the other
side came the light jingle of a curb chain, and over
the wall hovered a white sheet of smoking light.
The carriage was in the lane, and
the driver Philip’s servant, Jem-y-Lord stood
with the door open. Kate stumbled on the step
and fell into the seat. The door was closed.
Then a new thought smote her.
It was about the child, about Philip, about Pete.
In leaving the little one behind her, though she had
meant it so unselfishly, she had done the one thing
that must be big with consequences. It would
bring its penalty, its punishment, its retribution.
Stop! She would go back even yet. Her face
was against the glass; she was struggling with the
strap. But the carriage was moving. She
heard the rumble of the wheels; it was like a deafening
reverberation from the day of doom. Then her senses
dwaled away and the carriage drove on.