It was now the end of September.
All my fears had proved groundless,
and I had, at last, learned to laugh at them.
For me, a new vista of life had been opened out, for
Sylvia had now been my wife for a whole week seven
long dreamy days of perfect love and bliss.
Scarce could we realize the truth
that we were actually man and wife.
Pennington had, after all, proved
quite kind and affable, his sole thought being of
his daughter’s future happiness. I had invited
them both down to Carrington, and he had expressed
delight at the provision I had made for Sylvia.
Old Browning, in his brand-new suit, was at the head
of a new staff of servants. There were new horses
and carriages and a landaulette motor, while I had
also done all I could to refurnish and renovate some
of the rooms for Sylvia’s use.
The old place had been very dark and
dreary, but it now wore an air of brightness and freshness,
thanks to the London upholsterers and decorators into
whose hands I had given the work.
Pennington appeared highly pleased
with all he saw, while Sylvia, her arms entwined about
my neck, kissed me in silent thanks for my efforts
on her behalf.
Then came the wedding a
very quiet one at St. Mary Abbot’s, Kensington.
Besides Jack Marlowe and a couple of other men who
were intimate friends, not more than a dozen persons
were present. Shuttleworth assisted the vicar,
but Pennington was unfortunately ill in bed at the
Hotel Metropole, suffering from a bad cold.
Still, we held the wedding luncheon at the Savoy,
and afterwards went up to Scarborough, where we were
now living in a pretty suite at the Grand Hotel overlooking
the harbour, the blue bay, and the castle-crowned
cliffs.
It was disappointing to Sylvia that
her father had not been present at the wedding, but
Elsie Durnford and her mother were there, as well as
two or three other of her girl friends. The ceremony
was very plain. At her own request, she had been
married in her travelling-dress, while I, man-like,
had secretly been glad that there was no fuss.
Just a visit to the church, the brief
ceremony, the signature in the register, and a four-line
announcement in the Times and Morning Post,
and Sylvia and I had become man and wife.
I had resolved, on the morning of
my marriage, to put behind me all thought of the mysteries
and gruesomeness of the past. Now that I was
Sylvia’s husband, I felt that she would have
my protection, as well as that of her father.
I had said nothing to her of her strange apprehensions,
for we had mutually allowed them to drop.
We had come to Scarborough in preference
to going abroad, for my well-beloved declared that
she had had already too much of Continental life,
and preferred a quiet time in England. So we had
chosen the East Coast, and now each day we either
drove out over the Yorkshire moors, or wandered by
the rolling seas.
She was now my own my very
own! Ah! the sweet significance of those words
when I uttered them and she clung to me, raising her
full red lips to mine to kiss.
I loved her aye, loved
her with an all-consuming love. I told myself
a thousand times that no man on earth had ever loved
a woman more than I loved Sylvia. She was my
idol, and more, we were wedded, firmly united to one
another, insunderably joined with each other so that
we two were one.
You satirists, cynics, misogamists
and misogynists may sneer at love, and jeer at marriage.
So melancholy is this our age that even by some women
marriage seems to be doubted. Yet we may believe
that there is not a woman in all Christendom who does
not dote upon the name of “wife.”
It carries a spell which even the most rebellious suffragette
must acknowledge. They may speak of the subjection,
the trammel, the “slavery,” and the inferiority
to which marriage reduces them, but, after all, “wife”
is a word against which they cannot harden their hearts.
Ah! how fervently we loved each other.
As Sylvia and I wandered together by the sea on those
calm September evenings, avoiding the holiday crowd,
preferring the less-frequented walks to the fashionable
promenades of the South Cliff or the Spa, we linked
arm in arm, and I often, when not observed, kissed
her upon the brow.
One evening, with the golden sunset
in our faces, we were walking over the cliffs to Cayton
Bay, a favourite walk of ours, when we halted at a
stile, and sat together upon it to rest.
The wide waters deep below, bathed
in the green and gold of the sinking sun, were calm,
almost unruffled, unusual indeed for the North Sea,
while about us the birds were singing their evening
song, and the cattle in the fields were lying down
in peace. There was not a breath of wind.
The calmness was the same as the perfect calmness of
our own hearts.
“How still it is, Owen,”
remarked my love, after sitting in silence for a few
minutes. From where we sat we could see that it
was high tide, and the waves were lazily lapping the
base of the cliffs deep below. Now and then a
gull would circle about us with its shrill, plaintive
cry, while far on the distant horizon lay the trail
of smoke from a passing steamer. “How delightful
it is to be here alone with you!”
My arm stole round her slim waist,
and my lips met hers in a fond, passionate caress.
She looked very dainty in a plain walking costume
of cream serge, with a boa of ostrich feathers about
her throat, and a large straw hat trimmed with autumn
flowers. It was exceptionally warm for the time
of year; yet at night, on the breezy East Coast, there
is a cold nip in the air even in the height of summer.
That afternoon we had, by favour of
its owner, Mr. George Beeforth, one of the pioneers
of Scarborough, wandered through the beautiful private
gardens of the Belvedere, which, with their rose-walks,
lawns and plantations, stretched from the promenade
down to the sea, and had spent some charming hours
in what its genial owner called “the sun-trap.”
In all the north of England there are surely no more
beautiful gardens beside the sea than those, and happily
their good-natured owner is never averse to granting
a stranger permission to visit them.
As we now sat upon that stile our
hearts were too full for words, devoted as we were
to each other.
“Owen,” my wife exclaimed
at last, her soft little hand upon my shoulder as
she looked up into my face, “are you certain
you will never regret marrying me?”
“Why, of course not, dearest,”
I said quickly, looking into her great wide-open eyes.
“But but, somehow ”
“Somehow, what?” I asked slowly.
“Well,” she sighed, gazing
away towards the far-off horizon, her wonderful eyes
bluer than the sea itself, “I have a strange,
indescribable feeling of impending evil a
presage of disaster.”
“My darling,” I exclaimed,
“why trouble yourself over what are merely melancholy
fancies? We are happy in each other’s love;
therefore why should we anticipate evil? If it
comes, then we will unite to resist it.”
“Ah, yes, Owen,” she replied
quickly, “but this strange feeling came over
me yesterday when we were together at Whitby.
I cannot describe it only it is a weird,
uncanny feeling, a fixed idea that something must
happen to mar this perfect happiness of ours.”
“What can mar our happiness
when we both trust each other when we both
love each other, and our two hearts beat as one?”
“Has not the French poet written
a very serious truth in those lines: ’Plaisir
d’amour ne dure qu’un moment; chagrin d’amour
dure toute la vie’?”
“Yes, but we shall experience
no chagrin, sweetheart,” I assured her.
“After another week here we will travel where
you will. If you wish, we will go to Carrington.
There we shall be perfectly happy together, away in
beautiful Devonshire.”
“I know you want to go there
for the shooting, Owen,” she said quietly, yet
regarding me somewhat strangely, I thought. “You
have asked Mr. Marlowe?”
“With your permission, dearest.”
But her face changed, and she sighed slightly.
In an instant I recollected the admission
that they had either met before, or at least they
knew something concerning each other.
“Perhaps you do not desire to
entertain company yet?” I said quickly.
“Very well; I’ll ask your father; he and
I can have some sport together.”
“Owen,” she said at last,
turning her fair face again to mine, “would
you think it very, very strange of me, after all that
you have done at beautiful old Carrington, if I told
you that I well, that I do not exactly
like the place?”
This rather surprised me, for she
had hitherto been full of admiration of the fine,
well-preserved relic of the Elizabethan age.
“Dearest, if you do not care
for Carrington we will not go there. We can either
live at Wilton Street, or travel.”
“I’m tired of travelling,
dear,” she declared. “Ah, so tired!
So, if you are content, let us live in Wilton Street.
Carrington is so huge. When we were there I always
felt lost in those big old rooms and long, echoing
corridors.”
“But your own rooms that I’ve
had redecorated and furnished are smaller,”
I said. “I admit that the old part of the
house is very dark and weird full of ghosts
of other times. There are a dozen or more legends
concerning it, as you know.”
“Yes, I read them in the guide-book
to Devon. Some are distinctly quaint, are they
not?”
“Some are tragic also especially
the story of little Lady Holbrook, who was so brutally
killed by the Roundheads because she refused to reveal
the whereabouts of her husband,” I said.
“Poor little lady!” sighed
Sylvia. “But that is not mere legend:
it is historical fact.”
“Well,” I said, “if
you do not care for Carrington if it is
too dull for you we’ll live in London.
Personally, I, too, should soon grow tired of a country
life; and yet how could I grow tired of life with
you, my own darling, at my side?”
“And how could I either, Owen?”
she asked, kissing me fondly. “With you,
no place can ever be dull. It is not the dulness
I dread, but other things.”
“What things?”
“Catastrophe of what
kind, I know not. But I have been seized with
a kind of instinctive dread.”
For a few moments I was silent, my
arm still about her neat waist. This sudden depression
of hers was not reassuring.
“Try and rid yourself of the
idea, dearest,” I urged presently. “You
have nothing to fear. We may both have enemies,
but they will not now dare to attack us. Remember,
I am now your husband.”
“And I your wife, Owen,”
she said, with a sweet love-look. Then, with
a heavy sigh, she gazed thoughtfully away with her
eyes fixed upon the darkening sea, and added:
“I only fear, dearest for your sake.”
I was silent again.
“Sylvia,” I said slowly
at last, “have you learnt anything anything
fresh which has awakened these strange apprehensions
of yours?”
“No,” she faltered, “nothing
exactly fresh. It is only a strange and unaccountable
dread which has seized me a dread of impending
disaster.”
“Forget it,” I urged,
endeavouring to laugh. “All your fears are
now without foundation, dearest. Now we are wedded,
we will fearlessly face the world together.”
“I have no fear when I am at
your side, Owen,” she replied, looking at me
pale and troubled. “But when we are parted
I I always fear. The day before yesterday
I was full of apprehension all the time you had gone
to York. I felt that something was to happen to
you.”
“Really, dear,” I said,
smiling, “you make me feel quite creepy.
Don’t allow your mind to run on the subject.
Try and think of something else.”
“But I can’t,” she
declared. “That’s just it. I
only wish I could rid myself of this horrible feeling
of insecurity.”
“We are perfectly secure,”
I assured her. “My enemies are now aware
that I’m quite wide awake.” And in
a few brief sentences I explained my curious meeting
with the Frenchman Delanne.
The instant I described him his
stout body, his grey pointed beard, his gold pince-nez,
his amethyst ring she sat staring at me,
white to the lips.
“Why,” she gasped, “I
know! The description is exact. And and
you say he saw my father in Manchester! He actually
rode away in the same cab as Reckitt! Impossible!
You must have dreamt it all, Owen.”
“No, dearest,” I said
quite calmly. “It all occurred just as I
have repeated it to you.”
“And he really entered the taxi
with Reckitt? He said, too, that he knew my father eh?”
“He did.”
She held her breath. Her eyes
were staring straight before her, her breath came
and went quickly, and she gripped the wooden post to
steady herself, for she swayed forward suddenly, and
I stretched out my hand, fearing lest she should fall.
What I had told her seemed to stagger
her. It revealed something of intense importance
to her something which, to me, remained
hidden.
It was still a complete enigma.