It was to a priest rather than to
a man that he made full confession of his grievous
sin. He did not attempt to mitigate it or to throw
upon another a share of the blame. From that
attitude he did not vary a hair’s breadth.
Mea culpa; mea maxima culpa. That was the burthen
of his avowal.
I, knowing the strange mingling in
his nature of brutality and sensitiveness, of animal
and spiritual, and knowing something of the unstable
character of Althea Fenimore, may more justly, I think,
than he, sketch out the miserable prologue of the
drama. That she was madly, recklessly in love
with him there can be no doubt. Nor can there
be doubt that unconsciously she fired the passion
in him. The deliberate, cold-blooded seducer
of his friend’s daughter, such as Boyce, in his
confession, made himself out to be, is a rare phenomenon.
Almost invariably it is the woman who tempts-tempts
innocently and unknowingly, without intent to allure,
still less with thought of wrong-but tempts
all the same by the attraction which she cannot conceal,
by the soft promise which she cannot keep out of her
eyes.
That was the beginning of it.
Betty, whom he loved, and to whom he was engaged,
was away from Wellingsford. In those days she
was very much the young Diana, walking in search of
chaste adventures, quite contented with the love that
lay serenely warm in her heart and thinking little
of a passionate man’s needs-perhaps
starting away from too violent an expression of them-perhaps
prohibiting them altogether. The psychology of
the pre-war young girl absorbed, even though intellectually
and for curiosity’s sake, in the feminist movement,
is yet to be studied. Betty, then, was away.
Althea, beata possidens, made her artless, innocent
appeal for victory. Unconsciously she tempted.
The man yielded. A touch of the lips in a moment
of folly, the man blazed, the woman helpless was consumed.
This happened in January, just before Althea’s
supposed visit to Scotland. Boyce was due at a
Country House party near Carlisle. In the first
flush of their madness they agreed upon the wretched
plan. She took rooms in the town and he visited
her there. Whether he or she conceived it, I do
not know. If I could judge coldly I should say
that it was of feminine inspiration. A man, particularly
one of Boyce’s temperament, who was eager for
the possession of a passionately loved woman, would
have carried her off to a little Eden of their own.
A calm consideration of the facts leads to the suggestion
of a half-hearted acquiescence on the part of an entangled
man in the romantic scheme of an inexperienced girl
to whom he had suddenly become all in all.
Such is my plea in extenuation of
Boyce’s conduct (if plea there can be), seeing
that he raised not a shadow of one of his own.
You may say that my plea is no excuse for his betrayal;
that no man, even if he is tempted, can be pardoned
for non-control of his passions. But I am asking
for no pardon; I am trying to obtain your understanding.
Remember what I have told you about Boyce, his great
bull-neck, his blood-sodden life-preserver, the physical
repulsion I felt when he carried me in his arms.
In such men the animal instinct is stronger at times
than the trained will. Whether you give him a
measure of your sympathy or not, at any rate do not
believe that his short-lived liaison with Althea was
a matter of deliberate and dastardly seduction.
Nor must you think that I am setting down anything
in disparagement of a child whom I once loved.
Long ago I touched lightly on the anomaly of Althea’s
character-her mid-Victorian sentimentality
and softness, combined with her modern spirit of independence.
A fatal anomaly; a perilous balance of qualities.
Once the soft sentimentality was warmed into romantic
passion, the modern spirit led it recklessly to a modern
conclusion.
The liaison was short-lived.
The man was remorseful. He loved another woman.
Very quickly did the poor girl awaken from her dream.
“I was cruel,” said Boyce,
fixing me with those awful black spectacles, “I
know it. I ought to have married her. But
if I had married her, I should have been more cruel.
I should have hated her. It would have been an
impossible life for both of us. One day I had
to tell her so. Not brutally. In a normal
state I think I am as kind-hearted and gentle as most
men. And I couldn’t be brutal, feeling an
unutterable cur and craving her forgiveness.
But I wanted Betty and I swore that only one thing
should keep me from her.”
“One thing?” I asked.
“The thing that didn’t happen,”
said he.
And so it seemed that Althea accepted
the inevitable. The placid, fatalistic side of
her nature asserted itself. Pride, too, helped
her instinctive feminine secretiveness. She lived
for months in her father’s house without giving
those that were dear to her any occasion for suspicion.
In order to preserve the secrecy Boyce was bound to
continue his visits to Wellings Park. Now and
then, when they met alone, she upbraided him bitterly.
On the whole, however, he concluded that they had
agreed to bury an ugly chapter in their lives.
Yes, it was an ugly chapter.
From such you cannot get away, bury it, as you will,
never so deep.
“And all the time remember,”
he said, “that I was mad for Betty. The
more shy she was, the madder I grew. I could not
rest in Wellingsford without her. When she came
here, I came. When she went to town, I went to
town. She was as elusive as a dream. Finally
I pinned her down to a date for our marriage in August.
It was the last time I saw her. She went away
to stay with friends. That was the beginning of
June. She was to be away two months. I knew,
if I had clamoured, she would have made it three.
It was the shyness of the exquisite bird in her that
fascinated me. I could never touch Betty in those
days without dreading lest I might soil her feathers.
You may laugh at a hulking brute like me saying such
things, but that’s the way I saw Betty, that’s
the way I felt towards her. I could no more have
taken her into my bear’s hug and kissed her
roughly than I could have smashed a child down with
my fist. And yet-My God, man! how
I ached for her!”
Long as I had loved Betty in a fatherly
way, deeply as I loved her now, the man’s unexpected
picture of her was a revelation. You see it was
only after her marriage, when she had softened and
grown a woman and come so near me that I felt the
great comfort of her presence when she was by, the
need of it when she was away. How could I have
known anything of the elusiveness in her maidenhood
before which he knelt so reverently?
That he so knelt is the keynote of
the man’s soul untainted by the flesh.
It made clear to me the tenderness
that lay beneath that which was brutal; the reason
of that personal charm which had captivated me against
my will; his defencelessness against the Furies.
So far the narrative has reached the
latter part of June. He had spent the month with
his mother. As Betty had ordained that July should
be blank, a month during which the moon should know
no changes but only the crescent of Diana should shine
supreme in the heavens, he had made his mundane arrangements
for his fishing excursion to Norway. On the afternoon
of the 23rd he paid a farewell call at Wellings Park.
Althea, in the final settlement of their relations,
had laid it down as a definite condition that he should
maintain his usual social intercourse with the family.
A few young people were playing tennis. Tea was
served on the lawn near by the court. Althea
gave no sign of agitation. She played her game,
laughed with her young men, and took casual leave of
Boyce, wishing him good sport. He drew her a pace
aside and murmured: “God bless you for
forgiving me.”
She laughed a reply out loud: “Oh, that’s
all right.”
When he told me that, I recalled vividly
the picture of her, in my garden, on the last afternoon
of her life, eating the strawberries which she had
brought me for tea. I remembered the little slangy
tone in her voice when she had asked me whether I
didn’t think life was rather rotten. That
was the tone in which she had said to him, “Oh,
that’s all right.”
During the early afternoon on the
25th, she rang him up on the telephone. Chance
willed that he should receive the call at first hand.
She must see him before he left Wellingsford.
She had something of the utmost importance to tell
him. A matter of life and death. With one
awful thought in his mind, he placed his time at her
disposal. For what romantic, desperate or tragic
reason she appointed the night meeting at the end
of the chestnut avenue where the towing-path turns
into regions of desolate quietude, he could not tell.
He agreed without argument, dreading the possible
lack of privacy in their talk over the wires.
On that afternoon she came to me,
as I have told you, with her strawberries and her
declaration of the rottenness of life.
They met and walked along the towing-path.
It was bright moonlight, but she could not have chosen
a lonelier spot, more free from curious eyes or ears.
And then took place a scene which it is beyond my power
to describe. I can only picture it to myself
from Boyce’s broken, self-accusing talk.
He was going away. She would never see him again
until he returned to marry another woman. She
was making her last frantic bid for happiness.
She wept and sobbed and cajoled and upbraided-You
know what women at the end of their tether can do.
He strove to pacify her by the old arguments which
hitherto she had accepted. Suddenly she cried:
“If you don’t marry me I am disgraced for
ever.” And this brought them to a dead halt.
When he came to this point I remembered
the diabolical accuracy of Gedge’s story.
Boyce said: “There is one
usual reason why a man should marry a woman to save
her from disgrace. Is that the reason?”
She said “Yes.”
The light went out of the man’s life.
“In that case,” said he,
“there can be no question about it. I will
marry you. But why didn’t you tell me before?”
She said she did not know. She
made the faltering excuses of the driven girl.
They walked on together and sat on the great bar of
the lock gates.
“Till then,” said he,
“I had never known what it was to have death
in my heart. But I swear to God, Meredyth, I
played my part like a man. I had done a dastardly
thing. There was nothing left for me but to make
reparation. In a few moments I tore my life asunder.
The girl I had wronged was to be the mother of my
child. I accepted the situation. I was as
kind to her as I could be. She laid her head on
my shoulder and cried, and I put my arm around her.
I felt my heart going out to her in remorse and pity
and tenderness. A man must be a devil who could
feel otherwise.... Our lives were bound up together....
I kissed her and she clung to me. Then we talked
for a while-ways and means.... It was
time to go back. We rose. And then-Meredyth-this
is what she said:
“‘You swear to marry me?’
“‘I swear it,’ said I.
“‘In spite of anything?’
“I gave my promise. She put her arms round
my neck.
“’What I’ve told
you is not wholly true. But the moral disgrace
is there all the time.’
“I took her wrists and disengaged myself and
held her and looked at her.
“‘What do you mean-not wholly
true?’ I asked.
“My God! I shall never
forget it.” He stuck both his elbows on
the bed and clutched his hair and turned his black
glasses wide of me. “The child crumpled
up. She seemed to shrivel like a leaf in the fire.
She said:
“’I’ve tried to
lie to you, but I can’t. I can’t.
Pity me and forgive me.’
“I started back from her in
a sudden fury. I could not forgive her.
Think of the awful revulsion of feeling. Foolishly
tricked! I was mad with anger. I walked
away and left her. I must have walked ten or
fifteen yards. Then I heard a splash in the water.
I turned. She was no longer on the bank.
I ran up. I heard a cry. I just saw her sinking.
And I couldn’t move. As God
hears me, it is true. I knew I must dive in and
rescue her-I had run up with every impulse
to do so; but I could not move.
I stood shivering with the paralysis of fear.
Fear of the deep black water, the steep brick sides
of the canal that seemed to stretch away for ever-fear
of death, I suppose that was it. I don’t
know. Fear irresistible, unconquerable, gripped
me as it had gripped me before, as it has gripped
me since. And she drowned before my eyes while
I stood like a stone.”
There was an awful pause. He
had told me the end of the tragedy so swiftly and
in a voice so keyed to the terror of the scene, that
I lay horror-stricken, unable to speak. He buried
his face in his hands, and between the fleshy part
of the palms I saw the muscles of his lips twitch
horribly. I remembered, with a shiver, how I had
first seen them twitch, in his mother’s house,
when he had made his strange, almost passionate apology
for fear. And he had all but described this very
incident: the reckless, hare-brained devil standing
on the bank of a river and letting a wounded comrade
drown. I remember how he had defined it:
“the sudden thing that hits a man’s heart
and makes him stand stock-still like a living corpse-unable
to move a muscle-all his will-power out
of gear-just as a motor is out of gear....
It is as much of a fit as epilepsy.”
The span of stillness was unbearable.
The watch on the little table by my bedside ticked
maddeningly. Marigold put his head in at the door,
apparently to warn me that it was getting late.
I waved him imperiously away. Boyce did not notice
his entrance. Presently he raised his head.
“I don’t know how long
I stood there. But I know that when I moved she
was long since past help. Suddenly there was a
sharp crashing noise on the road below. I looked
round and saw no one. But it gave me a shock-and
I ran. I ran like a madman. And I thought
as I ran that, if I were discovered, I should be hanged
for murder. For who would believe my story?
Who would believe it now?”
“I believe it, Boyce,” I said.
“Yes. You. You know
something of the hell my life has been. But who
else? He had every motive for the crime, the lawyers
would say. They could prove it. But, my
God! what motive had I for sending all my gallant
fellows to their deaths at Vilboek’s Farm? ...
The two things are on all fours-and many
other things with them.... My one sane thought
through the horror of it all was to get home and into
the house unobserved. Then I came upon the man
Gedge, who had spied on me.”
“I know about that,” said
I, wishing to spare him from saying more than was
necessary. “He told Fenimore and me about
it.”
“What was his version?”
he asked in a low tone. “I had better hear
it.”
When I had told him, he shook his
head. “He lied. He was saving his
skin. I was not such a fool, mad as I was, as
to leave him like that. He had seen us together.
He had seen me alone. To-morrow there would be
discovery. I offered him a thousand pounds to
say nothing. He haggled. Oh! the ghastly
business! Eventually I suggested that he should
come up to London with me by the first train in the
morning and discuss the money. I was dreading
lest someone should come along the avenue and see
me. He agreed. I think I drank a bottle of
whisky that night. It kept me alive. We
met in my chambers in London. I had sent my man
up the day before to do some odds and ends for me.
I made a clear breast of it to Gedge. He believed
the worst. I don’t blame him. I bought
his silence for a thousand a year. I made arrangements
for payment through my bankers. I went to Norway.
But I went alone. I didn’t fish. I
put off the two men I was to join. I spent over
a month all by myself. I don’t think I
could tell you a thing about the place. I walked
and walked all day until I was exhausted, and got
sleep that way. I’m sure I was going mad.
I should have gone mad if it hadn’t been for
the war. I suppose I’m the only Englishman
living or dead who whooped and danced with exultation
when he heard of it. I think my brain must have
been a bit touched, for I laughed and cried and jumped
about in a pine-wood with a week old newspaper in
my hands. I came home. You know the rest.”
Yes, I knew the rest. The woman
he had left to drown had been ever before his eyes;
the avenging Furies in pursuit. This was the torture
in his soul that had led him to many a mad challenge
of Death, who always scorned his defiance. Yes,
I knew all that he could tell me.
But we went on talking. There
were a few points I wanted cleared up. Why should
he have kept up a correspondence with Gedge?
“I only wrote one foolish angry letter,”
he replied.
And I told him how Sir Anthony had
thrown it unread into the fire. Gedge’s
nocturnal waylaying of him in my front garden was another
unsuccessful attempt to tighten the screw. Like
Randall and myself, he had no fear of Gedge.
Of Sir Anthony he could not speak.
He seemed to be crushed by the heroic achievement.
It was the only phase of our interview during which,
by voice and manner and attitude, he appeared to me
like a beaten man. His own bravery at the reception
had gone for naught. He was overwhelmed by the
hideous insolence of it.
“I shall never get that man’s
voice out of my ears as long as I live,” he
said hoarsely.
After a while he added: “I
wonder whether there is any rest or purification for
me this side of the grave.”
I said tentatively, for we had never
discussed matters of religion: “If you
believe in Christ, you must believe in the promise
regarding the sins that be as scarlet.”
But he turned it aside. “In
the olden days, men like me turned monk and found
salvation in fasting and penance. The times in
which we live have changed and we with them, my friend.
Nos mulamur in illis, as the tag goes.”
We went on talking-or rather
he talked and I listened. Now and again he would
help himself to a drink or a cigarette, and I marvelled
at the clear assurance with which he performed the
various little operations. I, lying in bed, lost
all sense of pain, almost of personality. My
little ailments, my little selfish love of Betty, my
little humdrum life itself dwindled insignificant
before the tragic intensity of this strange, curse-ridden
being.
And all the tune we had not spoken
of Betty-except the Betty of long ago.
It was I, finally, who gave him the lead.
“And Betty?” said I.
He held out his hand in a gesture that was almost
piteous.
“I could tear her from my life.
I had no alternative. In the tearing I hurt her
cruelly. To know it was not the least of the burning
hell I lit for myself. But I couldn’t tear
her from my heart. When a brute beast like me
does love a woman purely and ideally, it’s a
desperate business. It means God’s Heaven
to him, while it means only an earthly paradise to
the ordinary man. It clutches hold of the one
bit of immortal soul he has left, and nothing in this
world can make it let go. That’s why I
say it’s a desperate business.”
“Yes, I can understand,” said I.
“I schooled myself to the loss
of her. It was part of my punishment. But
now she has come back into my life. Fate has willed
it so. Does it mean that I am forgiven?”
“By whom?” I asked. “By God?”
“By whom else?”
“How dare man,” said I, “speak for
the Almighty?”
“How is man to know?”
“That’s a hard question,”
said I. “I can only think of answering it
by saying that a man knows of God’s forgiveness
by the measure of the Peace of God in his soul.”
“There’s none of it in
mine, my dear chap, and never will be,” said
Boyce.
I strove to help him. For what other purpose
had he come to me?
“You think then that the sending
of Betty is a sign and a promise? Yes. Perhaps
it is. What then?”
“I must accept it as such,”
said he. “If there is a God, He would not
give me back the woman I love, only to take her away
again. What shall I do?”
“In what way?” I asked.
“She offered to marry me.
I am to give her my answer to-morrow. If I were
the callous, murdering brute that everyone would have
the right to believe I am, I shouldn’t have
hesitated. If I hadn’t been a tortured,
damned soul,” he cried, bringing his great fist
down on the bed, “I shouldn’t have come
here to ask you what my answer can be. My whole
being is infected with horror.” He rose
and stood over the bed and, with clenched hands, gesticulated
to the wall in front of him. “I’m
incapable of judging. I only know that I crave
her with everything in me. I’ve got it
in my brain that she’s my soul’s salvation.
Is my brain right? I don’t know. I
come to you-a clean, sweet man who knows
everything-I don’t think there’s
a crime on my conscience or a foulness in my nature
which I haven’t confessed to you. You can
judge straight as I can’t. What answer
shall I give to-morrow?”
Did ever man, in a case of conscience,
have a greater responsibility? God forgive me
if I solved it wrongly. At any rate, He knows
that I was uninfluenced by mean personal considerations.
All my life I have tried to have an honourable gentleman
and a Christian man. According to my lights I
saw only one clear course.
“Sit down, old man,” said
I. “You’re a bit too big for me like
that.” He felt for his chair, sat down
and leaned back. “You’ve done almost
everything,” I continued, “that a man can
do in expiation of offences. But there is one
thing more that you must do in order to find peace.
You couldn’t find peace if you married Betty
and left her in ignorance. You must tell Betty
everything-everything that you have told
me. Otherwise you would still be hag-ridden.
If she learned the horror of the thing afterwards,
what would be your position? Acquit your conscience
now before God and a splendid woman, and I stake my
faith in each that neither will fail you.”
After a few minutes, during which
the man’s face was like a mask, he said:
“That’s what I wanted
to know. That’s what I wanted to be sure
of. Do you mind ringing your bell for Marigold
to take me away? I’ve kept you up abominably.”
He rose and held out his hand and I had to direct him
how it could reach mine. When it did, he gripped
it firmly.
“It’s impossible,”
said he, “for you to realise what you’ve
done for me to-night. You’ve made my way
absolutely clear to me-for the first time
for two years. You’re the truest comrade
I’ve ever had, Meredyth. God bless you.”
Marigold appeared, answering my summons,
and led Boyce away. Presently he returned.
“Do you know what time it is, sir?” he
asked serenely.
“No,” said I.
“It’s half-past one.”
He busied himself with my arrangements
for the night, and administered what I learned afterwards
was a double dose of a sleeping draught which Cliffe
had prescribed for special occasions. I just remember
surprise at feeling so drowsy after the intense excitement
of the evening, and then I fell asleep.
When I awoke in the morning I gathered
my wits together and recalled what had taken place.
Marigold entered on tiptoe and found me already aroused.
“I’m sorry to tell you,
sir,” said he, “that an accident happened
to Colonel Boyce after he left last night.”
“An accident?”
“I suppose so, sir,” said
Marigold. “That’s what his chauffeur
says. He got out of the car in order to sit by
the side of the canal-by the lock gates.
He fell in, sir. He’s drowned.”