CONCERNING A SPIRIT IN PRISON
Upon those moments of rapture followed
days of trembling, during which the sands of Richard
Calmady’s life ran very low, and his brain wandered
in delirium, and he spoke unwittingly of many matters
of which it was unprofitable to hear. Periods
of unconsciousness, when he lay as one dead; periods
of incessant utterance now violent in unavailing
repudiation, now harsh with unavailing remorse alternated.
And, at this juncture, much of Lady Calmady’s
former very valiant pride asserted itself. In
tender jealousy for the honour of her beloved one
she shut the door of that sick-room, of sinister aspect,
against brother and friend, and even against the faithful
Clara. None should see or hear Richard in his
present alienation and abjection, save herself and
those who had hitherto ministered to him. He should
regain a measure, at least, of his old distinction
and beauty before any, beyond these, looked on his
face. And so his own men-servants Captain
Vanstone, capable, humorous, and alert and
Price, the red-headed, Welsh first-mate, of varied
and voluminous gift of invective continued
to nurse him. These men loved him. They would
be loyal in silence, since, whatever his lapses, Dickie
was and always had been as Katherine reflected among
the number of those happily-endowed persons who triumphantly
give the lie to the cynical saying that “no man
is a hero to his valet de chambre.”
To herself Katherine reserved the
right to enter that sinister sick-room whenever she
pleased, and to sit by the bedside, waiting for the
moment should it ever come when
Richard would again recognise her, and give himself
to her again. And those vigils proved a searching
enough experience, notwithstanding her long apprenticeship
to service of sorrow which was also the
service of her son. For, in the mental and moral
nudity of delirium, he made strange revelation, not
only of acts committed, but of inherent tendencies
of character and of thought. He spoke, with bewildering
inconsequence and intimacy, of incidents and of persons
with whom she was unacquainted, causing her to follow
him a rather brutal pilgrimage into
regions where the feet of women, bred and nurtured
like herself, but seldom tread. He spoke of persons
with whom she was well acquainted also, and whose
names arrested her attention with pathetic significance,
offering, for the moment, secure standing ground amid
the shifting quicksand of his but half-comprehended
words. He spoke of Morabita, the famous prima
donna, and of gentle Mrs. Chifney down at the
Brockhurst racing-stables. He grew heated in
discussion with Lord Fallowfeild. He petted little
Lady Constance Quayle. He called Camp, coaxed
and chaffed the dog merrily whereat Lady
Calmady rose from her place by the bedside and stood
at one of the dim, shuttered windows for a while.
He spoke of places, too, and of happenings in them,
from Westchurch to Constantinople, from a nautch at
Singapore to a country fair at Farley Row. But,
recurrent through all his wanderings, were allusions,
unsparing in revolt and in self-abasement, to a woman
whom he had loved and who had dealt very vilely with
him, putting some unpardonable shame upon him, and
to a man whom he himself had very basely wronged.
The name, neither of man nor woman, did Katherine
learn. Madame de Vallorbes’ name,
for which she could not but listen, he never mentioned,
nor did he mention her own. And recurrent,
also, running as a black thread through all his speech,
was lament, not unmanly but very terrible to hear the
lament of a creature, captive, maimed, imprisoned,
perpetually striving, perpetually frustrated in the
effort, to escape. And, noting all this, Katherine
not only divined very dark and evil pages in the history
of her beloved one, but a struggle so continuous and
a sorrow so abiding that, in her estimation at all
events, they cancelled and expiated the darkness and
evil of those same pages. While the mystery, both
of wrong done and sorrow suffered, so wrought upon
her that, having, in the first ecstasy of recovered
human love, deserted and depreciated the godward love
a little, she now ran back imploring assurance and
renewal of that last, in all penitence and humility,
lest, deprived of the counsel and sure support of
it, she should fail to read the present and deal with
the future aright if, indeed, any future
still remained for that beloved one other than the
yawning void of death and inscrutable silence of the
grave!
The better part of a week passed thus,
and then, one fair morning, Winter, bringing her breakfast
to the anteroom of that same sea-blue, sea-green bedchamber sometime
tenanted by Helen de Vallorbes disclosed
a beaming countenance.
“Mr. Powell wishes me to inform
your ladyship that Sir Richard has passed a very good
night. He has come to himself, my lady, and has
asked for you.”
The butler’s hands shook as he set down the
tray.
“I hope your ladyship will take
something to eat before you go down-stairs,”
he added. “Mr. Powell told Sir Richard that
it was still early, and he desired that on no consideration
should you be hurried.”
Which little word of thoughtfulness
on Dickie’s part brought a roundness to Katherine’s
cheek and a soft shining into her sweet eyes, so that
Honoria St. Quentin, sauntering into the room just
then with her habitual lazy grace, stood still a moment
in pleased surprise, noting the change in her friend’s
appearance.
“Why, dear Cousin Katherine,”
she asked, “what’s happened? All’s
right with the world!”
“Yes,” Katherine answered.
“God’s very much in His heaven, to-day,
and all’s right with all the world, because
things are a little more right with one man in it. That
is the woman’s creed always has been,
I suppose, and I rather hope always will be.
It is frankly personal and individualistic, I know.
Possibly it is contemptibly narrow-minded. Still
I doubt if she will readily find another one which
makes for greater happiness or fulness of life.
You don’t agree, dearest, I know nevertheless
pour out my tea for me, will you? I want to dispose
of this necessary evil of breakfast with all possible
despatch. Richard has sent for me. He has
slept and is awake.”
And as Miss St. Quentin served her
dear friend, she pondered this speech curiously, saying
to herself: “Yes, I did right, though
I never liked Ludovic Quayle better than now, and
never liked any other man as well as I like Ludovic
Quayle. But that’s not enough. I’m
getting hold of the appearance of the thing, but I
haven’t got hold of the thing itself. And
so the woman in me must continue to be kept in the
back attic. She shall be denied all further development.
She shall have nothing unless she can have the whole
of it, and repeat Cousin Katherine’s creed from
her heart.”
Richard did not speak when Lady Calmady
crossed the room and sat down at the bedside.
He barely raised his eyelids. But he felt out
for her hand across the surface of the sheet.
And she took the proffered hand in both hers and fell
to stroking the palm of it with her finger-tips.
And this silent greeting, and confiding contact of
hand with hand, was to her exquisitely healing.
It gave an assurance of nearness and acknowledged
ownership, more satisfying and convincing than many
eloquent phrases of welcome. And so she, too,
remained silent, only indeed permitting herself, for
a little while, to look at him, lest so doing she
should make further demand upon his poor quantity of
strength. A folding screen in stamped leather,
of which age had tempered the ruby and gold to a sober
harmony of tone, had been placed round the head of
the bed, throwing this last into clear, quiet shadow.
The bed linen was fresh and smooth. Richard had
made a little toilet. His silk shirt, open at
the throat, was also fresh and smooth. He was
clean shaven, his hair cropped into that closely-fitting,
bright-brown cap of curls. Katherine perceived
that his beauty had begun to return to him, though
his face was distressingly worn and emaciated, and
the long, purplish line of that unexplained scar still
disfigured his cheek. His hands were little more
than skin and bone. Indeed, he was fragile, she
feared, as any person could be who yet had life in
him, and she wondered, rather fearfully, if it was
yet possible to build up that life again into any
joy of energy and of activity. But she put such
fears from her as unworthy. For were they not
together, he and she, actually and consciously reunited?
That was sufficient. The rest could wait.
And to-day, as though lending encouragement
to gracious hopes, the usually gloomy and cavernous
room had taken to itself a quite generous plenishing
of air and light. The heavy curtains were drawn
aside. The casements of one of the square, squat
windows were thrown widely open. The slatted
shutters without were partially opened likewise.
A shaft of strong sunshine slanted in and lay, like
a bright highway, across the rich colours of the Persian
carpet. The air was hot but nimble, and of a
vivacious and stimulating quality. It fluttered
some loose papers on the writing-table near the open
window. It fluttered the delicate laces and fine
muslin frills of Lady Calmady’s morning-gown.
There was a sprightly mirthfulness in the touch of
it, not unpleasing to her. For it seemed to speak
of the ever-obtaining youth, the incalculable power
of recuperation, the immense reconstructive energy
resident in nature and the physical domain. And
there was comfort in that thought. She turned
her eyes from the bed and its somewhat sorrowful burden the
handsome head, the broad, though angular, shoulders,
the face, immobile and mask-like, with closed eyelids
and unsmiling lips, reposing upon the whiteness of
the pillows and fixed them upon that radiant
space of outer world visible between the dark-framing
of the half-open shutters. Beyond the dazzling,
black-and-white chequer of the terrace and balustrade,
they rested on the cool green of the formal garden,
the glistering dome and slender columns of the pavilion
set in the angle of the terminal wall. And
this last reminded her quaintly of that other pavilion,
embroidered, with industry of innumerable stitches,
upon the curtains of the state bed at home that
pavilion, set for rest and refreshment in the midst
of the tangled ways of the Forest of This Life, where
the Hart may breathe in security, fearless of Care,
the pursuing Leopard, which follows all too close
behind. Owing to her position and the sharp
drop of the hillside, Naples itself, the great painted
city, its fine buildings and crowded shipping, was
unseen. But, far away, the lofty promontory of
Sorrento sketched itself in palest lilac upon the
azure of the sea and sky.
And, as Katherine reasoned, if this
fair prospect, after so many ages of tumultuous history
and the shock of calamitous events, after battle,
famine, terror of earthquake and fire, devastation
by foul disease, could still recover and present such
an effect of triumphant youthfulness, such, at once
august and mirthful, charm, might not her beloved
one, lying here broken in health and in spirit, likewise
regain the glory of his manhood and the delight of
it, notwithstanding present weakness and mournful
eclipse? Yes, it would come right come
right Katherine told herself, thereby making
one of those magnificent acts of faith which go so
far to produce just that which they prophesy.
God could not have created so complex and beautiful
a creature, and permitted it so to suffer, save to
the fulfilment of some clear purpose which would very
surely be made manifest at last. God Almighty
should be justified of His strange handiwork; and
she of her love before the whole of the story was
told. And, stirred by these thoughts, and
by the fervour of her own pious confidence, Katherine’s
finger-tips traveled more rapidly over the palm of
that outstretched and passive hand. Then, on
a sudden, she became aware that Richard was looking
fixedly at her. She turned her head proudly, the
exaltation of a living faith very present in her smile.
“You are the same,” he
said slowly. His voice was low, toneless, and
singularly devoid of emotion. “Deliciously
the same. You are just as lovely. You still
have your pretty colour. You are hardly a day
older ”
He paused, still regarding her fixedly.
“I’m glad you have got
on one of those white, frilly things you used to wear.
I always liked them.”
Katherine could not speak just then.
This sudden and complete intimacy unnerved her.
It was so long since any one had spoken to her thus.
It was very dear to her, yet the toneless voice gave
a strange unreality to the tender words.
“It’s a matter for congratulation
that you are the same,” Richard went on, “since
everything else, it appears, is destined to continue
the same. One should have one thing it is agreeable
to contemplate in that connection, considering the
vast number of things altogether the reverse of agreeable
which one fondly hoped one was rid of forever, and
which intrude themselves.”
He shifted himself feebly on the pillows,
and the flicker of a smile crossed his face.
“Poor, dear mother,” he
said, “you see again, without delay, the old
bad habit of grumbling!”
“Grumble on, grumble on, my
best beloved,” Katherine murmured, while her
finger-tips traveled softly over his palm.
“Verily and indeed, you are
the same!” Richard rejoined. Once more he
lay looking full at her, until she became almost abashed
by that unswerving scrutiny. It came over her
that the plane of their relation had changed.
Richard was, as never heretofore, her equal, a man
grown.
Suddenly he spoke.
“Can you forgive me?”
And so far had Katherine’s thought
journeyed from the past, so absorbed was it in the
present, that she answered, surprised:
“My dearest, forgive what?”
“Injustice, ingratitude, desertion,”
Richard said, “neglect, systematic cruelty.
There is plenty to swell the list. All I boasted
I would do I have done and more.” His
voice, until now so even and emotionless, faltered
a little. “I have sinned against heaven
and before thee, and am no more worthy to be called
thy son.”
Katherine’s hand closed down on his firmly.
“All that, as far as I am concerned,
is as though it was not and never had been,”
she answered. “So much for judgment
on earth, dearest. While in heaven, thank
God, we know there is more joy over the one sinner
who repents than over the ninety-and-nine just persons
who need no repentance.”
“And you really believe that?”
Richard said, speaking half indulgently, half ironically,
as if to a child.
“Assuredly, I believe it.”
“But supposing the sinner is
not repentant, but merely cowed?” Richard
straightened his head on the pillows and closed his
eyes. “You gave me leave to grumble well,
then, I am so horribly disappointed. Here have
life and death been sitting on either side of me for
the past month, and throwing with dice for me.
I saw them as plainly as I can see you. The queer
thing was they were exactly alike, yet I knew them
apart from the first. Day and night I heard the
rattle of the dice it became hideously
monotonous and felt the mouth of the dice-box
on my chest when they threw. I backed death heavily.
It seemed to me there were ways of loading the dice.
I loaded them. But it wasn’t to be, mother.
Life always threw the highest numbers and
life had the last throw.”
“I praise God for that,” Katherine said,
very softly.
“I don’t, unfortunately,”
he answered. “I hoped for a neat little
execution a little pain, perhaps, a little
shedding of blood, without which there is no remission
of sins but I suppose that would have been
letting me off too easy.”
He drew away his hand and covered his eyes.
“When I had seen you I seemed
to have made my final peace. I understood why
I had been kept waiting till then. Having seen
you, I flattered myself I might decently get free
at last. But I am branded afresh, that’s
all, and sent back to the galleys.”
Lady Calmady’s eyes sought the
radiant prospect the green of the garden,
the slender columns of the airy pavilion, the lilac
land set in the azure of sea and sky. No words
of hers could give comfort as yet, so she would remain
silent. Her trust was in the amiable ministry
of time, which may bring solace to the tormented,
human soul, even as it reclothes the mountainside
swept by the lava stream, or cleanses and renders
gladly habitable the plague devastated city.
But there was a movement upon the
bed. Richard had turned on his side. He
had recovered his self-control, and once more looked
fixedly at her.
“Mother,” he said calmly,
“is your love great enough to take me back,
and give yourself to me again, though I am not fit
so much as to kiss the hem of your garment?”
“There is neither giving nor
taking, my beloved,” she answered, smiling upon
him. “In the truth of things, you have never
left me, neither have I ever let you go.”
“Ah! but consider these last
four years and their record!” he rejoined.
“I am not the same man that I was. There’s
no getting away from fact, from deeds actually done,
or words actually said, for that matter. I have
kept my singularly repulsive infirmity of body, and
to it I have added a mind festering with foul memories.
I have been a brute to you, a traitor to a friend
who trusted me. I have been a sensualist, an
adulterer. And I am hopelessly broken in pride
and self-respect. The conceit, the pluck even,
has been licked right out of me.” Richard
paused, steadying his voice which faltered again. “I
only want, since it seems I’ve got to go on
living, to slink away somewhere out of sight, and
hide myself and my wretchedness and shame from every
one I know. Can you bear with me, soured
and invalided as I am, mother? Can you put up
with my temper, and my silence, and my grumbling, useless
log as I must continue to be?”
“Yes everlastingly yes,” Katherine
answered.
Richard threw himself flat on his back again.
“Ah! how I hate myself my God, how
I hate myself!” he exclaimed.
“And how beyond all worlds I love you,”
Katherine put in quietly.
He felt out for her hand across the
sheet, found and held it. There were footsteps
upon the terrace to the right, the scent of a cigar,
Ludovic Quayle’s voice in question, Honoria St.
Quentin’s in answer, both with enforced discretion
and lowness of tone. General Ormiston joined
them. Miss St. Quentin laughed gently. The
sound was musical and sweet. Footsteps and voices
died away. A clang of bells and the hooting of
an outward-bound liner came up from the city and the
port.
Richard’s calm had returned. His expression
had softened.
“Will those two marry?” he asked presently.
Lady Calmady paused before speaking.
“I hope so for Ludovic’s
sake,” she said. “He has served, if
not quite Jacob’s seven years, yet a full five
for his love.”
“If for Ludovic’s sake, why not for hers?”
Dickie asked.
“Because two halves don’t
always make a whole in marriage,” Katherine
said.
“You are as great an idealist
as ever!” He paused, then raised
himself, sitting upright, speaking with a certain passion.
“Mother, will you take me away,
away from every one, at once, just as soon as possible?
I never want to see this room, or this house, or Naples
again. The climax was reached here of disillusion,
and of iniquity, and of degradation. Don’t
ask what it was. I couldn’t tell you.
And, mercifully, only one person, whose lips are sealed
in self-defense, knows exactly what took place besides
myself. But I want to get away, away alone with
you, who are perfectly unsullied and compassionate,
and who have forgiven me, and who still can love.
Will you come? Will you take me? The yacht
is all ready for sea.”
“Yes,” Katherine said.
“I asked this morning who was
here with you, and Powell told me. I can’t
see them, mother, simply I can’t! I haven’t
the nerve. I haven’t the face. Can
you send them away?”
“Yes,” Katherine said.
Richard’s eyes had grown dangerously
bright. A spot of colour burned on either cheek.
Katherine leaned over him.
“My dearest,” she declared, “you
have talked enough.”
“Yes, they’re beginning
to play again, I can hear the rattle of the dice. Mother
take me away, take me out to sea, away from this dreadful
place. Ah! you poor darling, how horribly
selfish I am! But let me get out to sea,
and then later, take me home to Brockhurst.
The house is big. Nobody need see me.”
“No, no,” Katherine said,
laying him back with tender force upon the pillows. “No
one has seen you, no one shall see you. We will
be alone, you and I, just as long as you wish.
With me, my beloved, you are very safe.”