TELLING HOW DICKIE CAME TO UNTIE A CERTAIN TAG OF RUSTY, BLACK RIBBON
Yet, as those gray, midwinter weeks
went on to Christmas, and the coming of the New Year,
it became undeniable there was that in the aspect
of affairs at Brockhurst which might very well provoke
curious comment. For the rigour of Richard Calmady’s
self-imposed seclusion, to which Miss St. Quentin
had made allusion in her conversation with Dr. Knott,
was not relaxed. Rather, indeed, did it threaten
to pass from the accident of a first return, after
long absence and illness, into a matter of fixed and
accepted habit. For those years of lonely wandering
and spasmodic rage of living, finding their climax
in deepening disappointment, disillusion, and the
shock of rudely inflicted insult and disgrace, had
produced in Richard a profound sense of alienation
from society and from the amenities of ordinary intercourse.
Since he was apparently doomed to survive, he would
go home but go home very much as some trapped
or wounded beast crawls back to hide in its lair.
He was master in his own house, at least, and safe
from intrusion there. The place offered the silent
sympathy of things familiar, and therefore, in a sense,
uncritical. It is restful to look on that upon
which one has already looked a thousand times.
And so, after his reconciliation with his mother,
followed, in natural sequence, his reconciliation
with Brockhurst. Here he would see only those
who loved him well enough in their several
stations and degrees to respect his humour,
to ask no questions, to leave him to himself.
Richard was gentle in manner at this period, courteous,
humorous even. But a great discouragement was
upon him. It seemed as though some string had
snapped, leaving half his nature broken, unresponsive,
and dumb. He had no ambitions, no desire of activities.
Sport and business, were as little to his mind as
society.
More than this. At first
the excuse of fatigue had served him, but very soon
it came to be a tacitly admitted fact that Richard
did not leave the house. Surely it was large
enough, he said, to afford space for all the exercise
he needed? Refusing to occupy his old suite of
rooms on the ground-floor, he had sent orders, before
his arrival, that the smaller library, adjoining the
Long-Gallery, should be converted into a bedchamber
for him. It had been Richard’s practice,
when on board ship, to steady his uncertain footsteps,
on the slippery or slanting plane of the deck, by
the use of crutches. And this practice he in
great measure retained. It increased his poor
powers of locomotion. It rendered him more independent.
Sometimes, when secure that Lady Calmady would not
receive visitors, he would make his way by the large
library, the state drawing-room, and stair-head, to
the Chapel-Room and sit with her there. But more
often his days were spent exclusively in the Long-Gallery.
He had brought home many curious and beautiful objects
from his wanderings. He would add these to the
existing collection. He would examine the books
too, procure such volumes as were needed to complete
any imperfect series, and, in the departments both
of science, literature, and travel, bring the library
up to date. He would devote his leisure to the
study of various subjects especially natural
science regarding which he was conscious
of a knowledge, deficient, or merely empirical.
“I really am perfectly contented,
mother,” he said to Lady Calmady more than once.
“Look at the length and breadth of the gallery!
It is as a city of magnificent distances, after the
deck of the dear, old yacht and my twelve-foot cabin.
And I’m not a man calculated to occupy so very
much space after all! Let me potter about here
with my books and my bibelots. Don’t
worry about me, I shall keep quite well, I promise
you. Let me hybernate peacefully until spring,
anyhow. I have plenty of occupation. Julius
is going to amend the library catalogue with me, and
there are those chests of deeds, and order-books, and
diaries, which really ought to be looked over.
As it appears pretty certain I shall be the last of
the race, it would be only civil, I think, to bestow
a little of my ample leisure upon my forefathers,
and set down some more or less comprehensive account
of them and their doings. They appear to have
been given to rather dramatic adventures. Don’t
you worry, you dear sweet! As I say, let me hybernate
until the birds of passage come and the young leaves
are green in the spring. Then, when the days grow
long and bright, the sea will begin to call again,
and, when it calls, you and I will pack and go.”
And Katherine yielded, being convinced
that Richard could treat his own case best. If
healing, complete and radical, was to be affected,
it must come from within and not from without.
Her wisdom was to wait in faith. There was much
that had never been told, and never would be told.
Much which had not been explained, and never would
be explained. For, notwithstanding the very gracious
relation existing between herself and Richard, Katherine
realised that there were blank spaces not only in
her knowledge of his past action, but in her knowledge
of the sentiments which now animated him. As
from a far country his mind, she perceived, often
traveled to meet hers. “There was a door
to which she found no key.” But Katherine,
happily, could respect the individuality even of her
best beloved. Unlike the majority of her sex
she was incapable of intrusion, and did not make affection
an excuse for familiarity. Love, in her opinion,
enjoins obligation of service, rather than confers
rights of examination and direction. She had
learned the condition in which his servants had found
Richard, in the opera box of the great theatre at
Naples, lying upon the floor unconscious, his face
disfigured, cut, and bleeding. But what had produced
this condition, whether accident or act of violence,
she had not learned. She had also learned that
her niece, Helen de Vallorbes, had stayed at the villa
just before the commencement of Richard’s illness he
merely passing his days there, and spending his nights
on board the yacht in the harbour, where, no doubt,
that same illness had been contracted. But she
resisted the inclination to attempt further discovery.
She even resisted the inclination to speculate regarding
all this. What Richard might elect to tell her,
that, and that only, would she know, lest, seeking
further, bitter and vindictive thoughts should arise
in her and mar the calm, pathetic sweetness of the
present and her deep, abiding joy in the recovery
of her so-long-lost delight. She refused to go
behind the fact the glad fact that Richard
once more was with her, that her eyes beheld him,
her ears heard his voice, her hands met his.
Every little act of thoughtful care, every pretty word
of half-playful affection, confirmed her thankfulness
and made the present blest. Even this somewhat
morbid tendency of his to shut himself away from the
observation of all acquaintance, conferred on her such
sweetly exclusive rights of intercourse that she could
not greatly quarrel with his secluded way of life.
As to the business of the estate and household, this
had become so much a matter of course to her that it
caused her but small labour. If she could deal
with it when Richard was estranged and far away, very
surely she could deal with it now, when she had but
to open the door of that vast, silvery-tinted, pensively
fragrant, many-windowed room, and entering, among its
many strange and costly treasures, find him a
treasure as strange, and if counted by her past suffering,
as costly, as ever ravished and tortured a woman’s
heart.
And so it came about that, to such
few friends as she received, Katherine could show
a serene countenance. Shortly before Christmas,
Miss St. Quentin came to Brockhurst, and coming stayed,
adapting herself with ready tact to the altered conditions
of life there. Katherine found not only pleasure,
but support, in the younger woman’s presence,
in her devoted yet unexacting affection, in her practical
ability, and in the sight of so graceful a creature
going to and fro. She installed her guest in
the Gun-Room suite. And, by insensible degrees,
permitted Honoria to return to many of her former avocations
in connection with the estate, so that the young lady
took over much of the outdoor business, riding forth
almost daily, by herself or in company with Julius
March, to superintend matters of building or repairing,
of road-mending, hedging, copsing, or forestry, and
not infrequently cheering Chifney a somewhat
sour-minded man just now and prickly-tempered, since
Richard asked no word of him or of his horses by
visits to the racing stables.
“I had better step down and
have a crack with the poor, old dear, Cousin Katherine,”
she would say, “or those unlucky little wretches
of boys will catch it double tides, which really is
rather superfluous.”
And all the while, amid her very varied
interests and occupations, remembrance of that hidden,
twilight life, going forward up-stairs in the well-known
rooms which she now never entered, came to Honoria
as some perpetually recurrent and mournful harmony,
in an otherwise not ungladsome piece of music, might
have come. It exercised a certain dominion over
her mind. So that Richard Calmady, though never
actually seen by her, was never wholly absent from
her thought. All the orderly routine of the great
house, all the day’s work and the sentiment of
it, was subtly influenced by awareness of the actuality
of his invisible presence. And this affected
her strongly, causing her hours of repulsion and annoyance,
and again hours of abounding, if reluctant pity, when
the unnatural situation of this man young
as herself, endowed with a fine intelligence, an aptitude
for affairs, the craving for amusement common to his
age and class and the pathos inherent in
that situation, haunted her imagination. His self-inflicted
imprisonment appeared a reflection upon, in a sense
a reproach to, her own freedom of soul and pleasant
liberty of movement. And this troubled her.
It touched her pride somehow. It produced in her
a false conscience, as though she were guilty of an
unkindness, a lack of considerateness and perfect
delicacy.
“Whether he behaves well or
ill, whether he is good or bad, Richard Calmady invariably
takes up altogether too much room,” she would
tell herself half angrily to find herself
within half an hour, under plea of usefulness to his
mother, warmly interested in some practical matter
from which Richard Calmady would derive, at least indirectly,
distinct advantage and benefit!
This, then, was the state of affairs
one Saturday afternoon at the beginning of February.
With poor Dickie himself the day had been marked by
abundant discouragement. He was well in body.
The restfulness of one quiet, uneventful week following
another had steadied his nerves, repaired the waste
of fever, and restored his physical strength.
But, along with this return of health had come a growing
necessity to lay hold of some idea, to discover some
basis of thought, some incentive to action, which
should make life less purposeless and unprofitable.
Richard, in short, was beginning to generate more energy
than he could place. The old order had passed
away, and no new order had, as yet, effectively disclosed
itself. He had not formulated all this, or even
consciously recognised the modification of his own
attitude. Nevertheless he felt the gnawing ache
of inward emptiness. It effectually broke up
the torpor which had held him. It made him very
restless. It reawoke in him an inclination to
speculation and experiment.
Snow had fallen during the earlier
hours of the day, and, the surface of the ground being
frost-bound, it, though by no means deep, remained
unmelted. The whiteness of it, given back by the
ceiling and pale paneling of walls of the Long-Gallery,
notwithstanding the generous fires burning in the
two ornate, high-ranging chimney-places, produced,
as the day waned, an effect of rather stark cheerlessness
in the great room. This was at once in unison
with Richard’s somewhat bleak humour, and calculated
to increase the famine of it.
All day long he had tried to stifle
the cry of that same famine, that same hunger of unplaced
energy, by industrious work. He had examined,
noted, here and there transcribed, passages from deeds,
letters, order-books, and diaries offering first-hand
information regarding former generations of Calmadys.
It happened that studies he had recently made in contemporary
science, specially in obtaining theories of biology,
had brought home to him what tremendous factors in
the development and fate of the individual are both
evolution and heredity. At first idly, and as
a mere pastime, then with increasing eagerness in
the vague hope his researches might throw light on
matters of moment to himself and of personal application he
had tried to trace out tastes and strains of tendency
common to his ancestors. But under this head
he had failed to make any very notable discoveries.
For these courtiers, soldiers, and sportsmen were united
merely by the obvious characteristics of a high-spirited,
free-living race. They were raised above the
average of the country gentry, perhaps, by a greater
appreciation, than is altogether common, of literature
and art. But as Richard soon perceived it was
less any persistent peculiarity of mental and physical
constitution, than a similarity of outward event united
them. The perpetually repeated chronicle of violence
and accident which he read, in connection with his
people, intrigued his reason, and called for explanation.
Was it possible, he began to ask himself, that a certain
heredity in incident, in external happening, may not
cling to a race? That these may not by some strange
process be transmissible, as are traits of character,
temperament, stature, colouring, feature, and face?
And if this as matter of speculation merely was
the case, must there not exist some antecedent cause
to which could be referred such persistent effect?
Might not an hereditary fate in external events take
its rise in some supreme moral or spiritual catastrophe,
some violation of law? The Greek dramatists held
it was so. The writers of the Old Testament held
it was so, too.
Sitting at the low writing-table,
near the blazing fire, that stark whiteness reflected
from off the snow-covered land all around him, Richard
debated this point with himself. He admitted the
theory was not scientific, according to the reasoning
of modern physical science. It approached an
outlook theological rather than rationalistic, yet
he could not deny the conception, admission.
The vision of a doomed family arose before him starting
in each successive generation with brilliant prospects
and high hope, only to find speedy extinction in some
more or less brutal form of death a race
dwindling, moreover, in numbers as the years passed,
until it found representation in a single individual,
and that individual maimed, and incomplete! Heredity
of accident, heredity of disaster, finding final expression
in himself this confronted Richard. He
had reckoned himself, heretofore, a solitary example
of ill-fortune. But, mastering the contents of
these records, he found himself far from solitary.
He merely participated, though under a novel form,
in the unlucky fate of all the men of his race.
And then arose the question to him, under
existing circumstances, of vital importance what
stood behind all that blind chance, cynical
indifference, wanton and arbitrary cruelty, or some
august, far-reaching necessity of, as yet, unsatisfied
justice?
Richard pushed the crackling, stiffly-folded
parchments, the letters frayed and yellow with age,
the broken-backed, discoloured diaries and order-books,
away from him, and sat, his elbows on the table, his
chin in his hands, thinking. And the travail
of his spirit was great, as it needs must be, at times,
with every human being who dares live at first, not
merely at second hand who dares attempt
a real, and not merely a nominal assent who
dares deal with earthly existence, the amazing problems
and complexities of it, immediately, refusing to accept with
indolent timidity tradition, custom, hearsay,
convenience, as his guides. Oh! for some
sure answering, some unimpeachable assurance, some
revelation not relative and symbolic, but absolute,
some declaration above all suspicion of cunningly-devised
opportunism, concerning the dealings of the unknown
force man calls God, with the animal man calls man! And
then Richard turned upon himself contemptuously.
For it was childish to cry out thus. The heavens
were dumb above him as the snow-bound earth was dumb
beneath. There was no sign! Never
had been. Never would be, save in the fond imaginations
of religious enthusiasts, crazed by superstition, by
austerities, and hysteria, duped by ignorance, by hypocrites
and quacks.
With long-armed adroitness he reached
down and picked up those light-made, stunted crutches,
slipped from his chair and adjusted them. For
a long while he had used them as a matter of course
without criticism or thought. But now they produced
in him a swift disgust. His hands, grasping the
lowest crossbar of them, were in such disproportionate
proximity to the floor! For the moment he was
disposed to fling them aside. Then again he turned
upon himself with scathing contempt. For this
too was childish. What did the use of them matter,
since, used or not, the fact of his crippled condition
remained? And so, with a renewal of bitterness
and active rebellion, lately unknown to him, he moved
away down the great room past bronze athlete
and marble goddess, past oriental jars, tall as himself,
uplifted on the squat, carven, ebony stands, past
strangely-painted, half-fearful, lacquer cabinets,
past porcelain bowls filled with faint sweetness of
dried rose-leaves, bay, lavender, and spice, past trophies
of savage warfare and, hardly less savage, civilised
sport, towards the wide mullion-window of the eastern
bay. But just before reaching it, he came opposite
to a picture by Velasquez, set on an easel across the
corner of the room. It represented a hideous
and misshapen dwarf, holding a couple of graceful
greyhounds in a leash an unhappy creature
who had made sport for the household of some Castilian
grandee, and whose gorgeous garments, of scarlet and
gold, were ingeniously designed so as to emphasise
the physical degradation of its contorted person.
Richard had come, of late, to take a sombre pleasure
in the contemplation of this picture. The desolate
eyes, looking out of the marred and brutal face, met
his own with a certain claim of kinship. There
existed a tragic freemasonry between himself and this
outcasted being, begotten of a common knowledge, a
common experience. As a boy Richard hated this
picture, studiously avoided the sight of it. It
had suggested comparisons which wounded his self-respect
too shrewdly and endangered his self-security.
He hated it no longer, finding grim solace, indeed,
in its sad society.
And it was thus, in silent parley
with this rather dreadful companion, as the blear
February twilight descended upon the bare, black trees
and snow-clad land without, and upon the very miscellaneous
furnishings of the many-windowed gallery within, that
Julius March now discovered Richard Calmady.
He had returned, across the park, from one of the
quaint brick-and-timber cottages just without the last
park gate, at the end of Sandyfield Church-lane.
A labourer’s wife was dying, painfully enough,
of cancer, and he had administered the Blessed Sacrament
to her, there, in her humble bedchamber. The august
promises and adorable consolations of that mysterious
rite remained very sensibly present to him on his
homeward way. His spirit was uplifted by the
confirmation of the divine compassion therein perpetually
renewed, perpetually made evident. And, it followed,
that coming now upon Richard Calmady alone, here,
in the stark, unnatural pallor of the winter dusk,
holding silent communion with that long-ago victim
of merciless practices and depraved tastes, not only
caused him a painful shock, but also moved him with
fervid desire to offer comfort and render help. Yet,
what to say, how to approach Richard without risk of
seeming officiousness and consequent offense, he could
not tell. The young man’s experiences and
his own were so conspicuously far apart. For
a moment he stood uncertain and silent, then he said:
“That picture always fills me with self-reproach.”
Richard looked round with a certain
lofty courtesy by no means encouraging. And,
as he did so, Julius March was conscious of receiving
a further, and not less painful impression. For
Richard’s face was very still, not with the
stillness of repose, but with that of fierce emotion
held resolutely in check, while in his eyes was a desolation
rivalling that of the eyes portrayed by the great Spanish
artist upon the canvas close at hand.
“When I first came to Brockhurst,
that picture used to hang in the study,” he
continued, by way of explanation.
“Ah! I see, and you turned
it out!” Richard observed, not without an inflection
of irony.
“Yes. In those days I am
afraid I did not discriminate very justly between
refinement of taste and self-indulgent fastidiousness.
While pluming myself upon an exalted standard of sensibility
and sentiment, I rather basely spared myself acquaintance
with that, both in nature and in art, which might
cause me distress or disturbance of thought. I
was a mental valetudinarian, in short. I am ashamed
of my defect of moral courage and charity in relation
to that picture.”
Richard shifted his position slightly,
looked fixedly at the canvas and then down at his
own hands in such disproportionate proximity to the
floor.
“Oh! you were not to blame,”
he said. “It is obviously a thing to laugh
at, or run from, unless you happen to have received
a peculiar mental and physical training. Anyhow
the poor devil has found his way home now and come
into port safely enough at last?”
He glanced back at the picture, over
his shoulder, as he moved across the room.
“Perhaps he’s even found
a trifle of genuine sympathy so don’t
vex your righteous soul over your repudiation of him,
my dear Julius. The lapses of the virtuous may
make, indirectly, for good. And your instinct,
after all, was both the healthy and the artistic one.
Velasquez ought to have been incapable of putting his
talent to such vile uses, and the first comer with
a spark of true philanthropy in him ought to have
knocked that poor little monstrosity on the head.”
Richard came to the writing-table,
glanced at the papers which encumbered it, made for
an armchair drawn up beside the fire.
“Sit down, Julius,” he
said. “There is something quite else about
which I want to speak to you. I have been working
through all these documents, and they give rise to
speculations neither strictly scientific nor strictly
orthodox, yet interesting all the same. You are
a dealer in ethical problems. I wonder if you
can offer any solution of this one, of which the basis
conceivably is ethical. As to these various owners
of Brockhurst Sir Denzil, the builder of
the house, is a delightful person, and appears to
have prospered mightily in his undertakings, as so
liberal-minded and ingenious a gentleman had every
right to prosper. But after him from
the time, at least, of his grandson, Thomas everything
seems to have gone to rather howling grief here.
We have nothing but battle, murder, and sudden death.
These become positively monotonous in the pertinacity
of their repetition. Of course one may argue
that adventurous persons expose themselves to an uncommon
number of dangers, and consequently pay an uncommon
number of forfeits. I dare say that is the reasonable
explanation. Only the persistence of the thing
gets hold of one rather. The manner of their
dying is very varied, yet there are two constant quantities
in each successive narrative, namely, violence and
comparative youth.”
Richard’s speech had become
rapid and imperative. Now he paused.
“Think of my father’s death, for instance ”
he said.
His narrow, black figure crouched
together, Julius March knelt on one knee before the
fire. He held his thin hands outspread, so as
to keep the glow of the burning logs from his face.
He was deeply moved, debating a certain matter with
himself.
“To all questions supremely
worth having answered, there is no answer I
take that for granted,” the young man continued.
“And yet one is so made that it is impossible
not to go on asking. I can’t help wanting
to get at the root of this queer recurrence of accident,
and all the rest of it, which clings to my people.
I can’t help wanting to make out whether there
was any psychological moment which determined the
future, and started them definitely on the down-grade.
What happened that’s what I want
to arrive at what happened at that moment?
Had it any reasonable and legitimate connection with
all which has followed?”
As he held them outspread, between
his face and the glowing fire, Julius March’s
hands trembled. He found himself confronted by
a situation which he had long foreseen, long and earnestly
prayed to avoid. The responsibility was so great
of either giving or withholding the answer, as he
knew it, to that question of Dickie’s. A
way of rendering possible help opened before him.
But it was a way beset with difficulties, a way at
once fantastic and coarsely realistic, a way along
which the sublime and the ridiculous jostled each other
with somewhat undignified closeness of association,
a way demanding childlike faith, not to say childish
credulity, coupled with a great fearlessness and self-abnegation
before ever a man’s steps could be profitably
set in it. If presented to Richard, would he not
turn angrily from it as an insult offered to his intellect
and his breeding alike? Indeed, the hope of effecting
good showed very thin. The danger of provoking
evil bulked very big. What was his duty?
He suffered an agony of indecision. And again
with a slight inflection of mockery in his tone, Richard
spoke.
“All blind chance, Julius?
I declare I get a little weary of this Deity of yours.
He neglects his business so flagrantly. He really
is rather scandalously much of an absentee. And
He would be so welcome if He would condescend to deal
a trifle more openly with one, and satisfy one’s
intelligence and moral sense. If, for instance,
He would afford me some information regarding this
same psychological moment which I need so badly just
now as a peg to hang a theory of casualty upon.
I am ambitious as much in the interests
of His reputation as in those of my own curiosity to
get at the logic of the affair, to get at the why and
wherefore of it, and lay my finger on the spot where
differentiation sets in.”
Julius March stood upright. Richard’s
scorn hurt him. It also terminated his indecision.
For a little space he looked out into the stark whiteness
of the snowy dusk, and then down at the young man,
leaning back in the low chair, there close before him.
To Julius’ short-sighted eyes, in the uncertain
light, Dickie’s face bore compelling resemblance
to Lady Calmady’s. This touched him with
the memory of much, and he went back on the thought
of the divine compassion, perpetually renewed, perpetually
made evident in the Eucharistic Sacrifice. Man
may rail, yet God is strong and faithful to bless.
Perhaps that way was neither too fantastic, nor too
humble, after all, for Richard to walk in.
“Has no knowledge of the received
legend about this subject ever reached you?”
“No never not a word.”
“I became acquainted with it
accidentally, long ago, before your birth. It
is inadmissible, according to modern canons of thought,
as such legends usually are. And events, subsequent
to my acquaintance with it, conferred on it so singular
and painful a significance that I kept my knowledge
to myself. Perhaps when you grew up I ought to
have put you in possession of the facts. They
touch you very nearly.”
Richard raised his eyebrows.
“Indeed,” he said coldly.
“But a fitting opportunity at
least, so I judged, being, I own, backward and reluctant
in the matter never presented itself.
In this, as in much else, I fear I have betrayed my
trust and proved an unprofitable servant if
so may God forgive me.”
“It would have gone hard with
Brockhurst without you, Julius,” Richard said,
a sudden softening in his tone.
“I will bring you the documents
the last thing to-night, when when your
mother has left you. They are best read, perhaps,
in silence and alone.”