That evening Pete was sitting with
one foot on the cradle rocker, one arm on the table,
and the other hand trifling tenderly with the ring
and the earrings which he had found in the drawer of
the dressing-table, when there was a hurried knock
on the door. It had the hollow reverberation
of a knock on the lid of a coffin.
“Come in,” called Pete.
It was Philip, but it was almost as
if Death had entered, so thin and bony were his cheeks,
so wild his eyes, so cold his hands.
Pete was prepared for anything.
“You’ve found me out, too, I see you have,”
he said defiantly. “You needn’t tell
me it’s chasing caught fish.”
“Be brave, Pete,” said
Philip. “It will be a great shock to you.”
Pete looked up and his manner changed.
“Speak it out, sir. It’s a poor man
that can’t stand ”
“I’ve come on the saddest
errand,” said Philip, taking a seat as far away
as possible.
“You’ve found her you’ve
seen her, sir. Where is she?”
“She is ” began Philip,
and then he stopped.
“Go on, mate; I’ve known trouble before
to-day,” said Pete.
“Can you bear it?” said Philip. “She
is ” and he stopped again.
“She is where?” said Pete.
“She is dead,” said Philip at last.
Pete rose to his feet. Philip
rose also, and now poured out his message with the
headlong rush of a cataract.
“In fact, it all happened some
time ago, Pete, but I couldn’t bring myself
to tell you before. I tried, but I couldn’t.
It was in Douglas of a fever in
a lodging alone unattended ”
“Hould hard, sir! Give
me time,” said Pete. “I’d a
gunshot wound at Kimberley, and since then I’ve
a stitch in my side at whiles and sometimes a bit
of a catch in my breathing.”
He staggered to the porch door and
threw it open, then came back panting “Dead!
dead! Kate is dead!”
Nancy came from the kitchen at the
moment, and hearing what he was saying, she lifted
both hands and uttered a piercing shriek. He took
her by the shoulders and turned her back, shut the
door behind her, and said, holding his right hand
hard at his side, “Women are brave, sir, but
when the storm breaks on a man ”
He broke off and muttered again, “Dead!
Kirry is dead!”
The child, awakened by Nancy’s
cry, was now whimpering fretfully. Pete went
to the cradle and rocked it with one foot, crooning
in a quavering treble, “Hush-a-bye! hush-a-bye!”
Philip’s breathing was oppressed.
He felt like a man at the edge of a precipice, with
an impulse to throw himself over. “God forgive
me,” he said. “I could kill myself.
I’ve broken your heart; ”
“No fear of me, sir,”
said Pete. “I’m an ould hulk that’s
seen weather. I’ll not go to pieces from
inside at all. Give me time, mate, give me time.”
And then he went on muttering as before, “Dead!
Kirry dead! Hush-a-bye! My Kirry dead!”
The little one slept, and Pete drew
back in his chair, nodded into the fire, and said
in a weak, childish voice, “I’ve known
her all my life, d’ye know? She’s
been my lil sweetheart since she was a slip of a girl,
and slapped the schoolmaster for bating me wrongously.
Swate lil thing in them days, mate, with her brown
feet and tossing hair. And now she’s a
woman and she’s dead! The Lord have mercy
upon me!”
He got up and began to walk heavily
across the floor, dipping and plunging as if going
upstairs. “The bright and happy she was
when I started for Kimberley, too; with her pretty
face by the aising stones in the morning, all laughter
and mischief. Five years I was seeing it in my
drames like that, and now it’s gone.
Kirry is gone! My Kirry! God help me!
O God, have mercy upon me!”
He stopped in his unsteady walk, and
sat and stared into the fire. His eyes were red;
blotches of heart’s blood seemed to be rising
to them; but there was not the sign of a tear.
Philip did not attempt to console him. He felt
as if the first syllable would choke in his throat.
“I see how it’s been,
sir,” said Pete. “While I was away
her heart was changing her, and when I came back she
thought she must keep her word. My poor lamb!
She was only a child anyway. But I was a man I
ought to have seen how it was. I’m like
a drowning man, too things are coming back
on me. I’m seeing them plain enough now.
But it’s too late! My poor Kirry!
And I thought I was making her so happy!” Then,
with a helpless look, “You wouldn’t believe
it, sir, but I was never once thinking nothing else.
No, I wasn’t; it’s a fact. I was same
as a sailor working all the voyage home, making a
cage, and painting it goold, for the love-bird he’s
catcht in the sunny lands somewhere; but when he’s
putting it in, it’s only wanting away, poor thing.”
With a sense of grovelling meanness,
Philip sat and listened. Then, with eyes wandering
across the floor, he said, “You have nothing
to reproach yourself with. You did everything
a man could do everything. And she
was innocent also. It was the fault of another.
He came between you. Perhaps he thought he couldn’t
help it perhaps he persuaded himself God
knows what lie he told himself but she’s
innocent, Pete; believe me, she’s ”
Pete brought his fist down heavily
on the table, and the rings that lay on it jumped
and tingled. “What’s that to me?”
he cried hoarsely. “What do I care if she’s
innocent or guilty? She’s dead, isn’t
she? and that’s enough. Curse the man!
I don’t want to hear of him. She’s
mine now. What for should he come here between
me and my own?”
The torn heart and racked brain could
bear no more. Pete dropped his head on the table.
Presently his anger ebbed. Without lifting his
head, he stretched his hand across the rings to feel
for Philip’s hand. Philip’s hand
trembled in his grasp. He took that for sympathy,
and became the more ashamed.
“Give me time, mate,”
he said. “I’ll be my own man soon.
My head’s moithered dreadful I’m
not knowing if I heard you right. In Douglas,
you say? By herself, too? Not by herself,
surely? Not quite alone neither? She found
you out, didn’t she? You’d be there,
Phil? You’d be with her yourself?
She’d be wanting for nothing?”
Philip answered huskily, his eyes
still wandering. “If it will be any comfort
to you... yes, I was with her she
wanted for nothing.”
“My poor girl!” said Pete.
“Did she send had she any maybe
she said a word or two at the last, eh?”
Philip clutched at the question.
There was something at last that he could say without
falsehood. “She sent a prayer for your forgiveness,”
he said. “She told me to tell you to think
of her as little as might be; not to grieve for her
too much, and to try to forget her, so that her sin
also might be forgotten.”
“And the lil one anything
about the lil one?” asked Pete.
“That was the bitterest grief
of all,” said Philip. “It was so hard
that you must think her an unnatural mother. ’My
Katherine! My little Katherine! My sweet
angel!’ It was her cry the whole day long.”
“I see, I see,” said Pete,
nodding at the fire; “she left the lil one for
my sake, wanting it with her all the while. Poor
thing! You’d comfort her, Philip?
You’d let her go aisy?”
“‘The child is well and
happy,’ I told her. ’He’s thinking
nothing of yourself but what is good and kind,’
I said.”
“God’s peace rest on her!
My darling! My wife!” said Pete solemnly.
Then suddenly in another tone, “Do you know
where she’s buried?”
Philip hesitated. He had not
foreseen this question. Where had been his head
that he had never thought of it? But there was
no going back now. He was compelled to go on.
He must tell lie on lie. “Yes,” he
faltered.
“Could you take me to the grave?”
Philip gasped; the sweat broke out on his forehead.
“Don’t be freckened, sir,”
said Pete; “I’m my own man again.
Could you take me to my wife’s grave?”
“Yes,” said Philip.
He was in the rapids. He was on the edge of precipitation.
He was compelled to go over. He made a blindfold
plunge. Lie on lie; lie on lie!
“Then we’ll start by the coach to-morrow,”
said Pete.
Philip rose with rigid limbs.
He had meant to tell one lie only, and already he
had told many. Truly “a lie is a cripple;”
it cannot stand alone. “Good night, Pete;
I’ll go home. I’m not well to-night.”
“We’ll stop the coach
at your aunt’s gate in the morning,” said
Pete.
They stepped to the door together,
and stood for a moment in the dank and lifeless darkness.
“The world’s getting wonderful
lonely, man, and you’re all that’s left
to me now, Phil you and the child.
I’m not for wailing, though. When I got
my gun-shot wound out yonder, I was away over the big
veldt, hundreds of miles from anywhere, behind the
last bush and the last blade of grass, with the stones
and the ashes and the dust about as far,
you’d say, as the world was finished, and never
looking to see herself and the ould island and the
ould faces no more. I’m not so lonesome
as that at all. Good-night, ould fellow, and
God bless you!”
The gate opened and closed, Philip
went stumbling up the road. He was hating Pete.
To hate this open-hearted man who had dragged him into
an entanglement of lies was the only resource of his
stifled conscience.
Pete went back to the house, muttering,
“Kirry is dead! Kirry is dead!” He
put the catch on the door, said, “Close the shutters,
Nancy,” and then returned to his chair by the
cradle.