THE RETURN OF THE SOLDIER
BY REBECCA WEST
NEW YORK GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
COPYRIGHT, 1918, BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
THE RETURN OF THE SOLDIER -C- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
“AH, don't begin to fuss!" wailed Kitty. "If a woman began to worry in these days because her husband hadn't written to her for a fortnight! Besides, if he'd been anywhere interesting, anywhere where the fighting was really hot, he'd have found some way of telling me instead of just leaving it as 'Somewhere in France.' He'll be all right."
We were sitting in the nursery. I had not meant to enter it again, now that the
child was dead; but I had come suddenly on Kitty as she slipped the key into the
lock, and I had lingered to look in at the high room, so full of whiteness and
clear
"Come here, Jenny. I'm going to dry my hair." And when I looked again I saw that
her golden hair was all about her shoulders and that she wore over her frock a
little silken jacket trimmed with rosebuds. She looked so like a girl on a
magazine cover that one expected to find a large "15 cents" somewhere attached
to her person. She had taken Nanny's big basket-chair from its place by the
high-chair, and was pushing it over to the middle window. "I always come in here
when Emery has washed my hair. It's
I took the brush and turned to the window, leaning my forehead against the glass
and staring unobservantly at the view. You probably know the beauty of that
view; for when Chris rebuilt Baldry Court after his marriage he handed it over
to architects who had not so much the wild eye of the artist as the knowing wink
of the manicurist, and between them they massaged the dear old place into matter
for innumerable photographs in the illustrated papers. The house lies on the
crest of Harrowweald, and from its windows the eye drops to miles of emerald
pasture-land lying wet and brilliant under a westward
That day its beauty was an affront to me, because, like most Englishwomen of my
time, I was wishing for the return of a soldier. Disregarding the national
interest and everything else except the keen prehensile gesture of our hearts
toward him, I wanted to snatch my Cousin Christopher from the wars and seal him
in this green pleasantness his wife and I now looked upon. Of late I had had bad
dreams about him. By nights I saw Chris running across the brown rottenness of
No-Man's-Land, starting back here because
"I wish we could hear from Chris. It is a fortnight since he wrote."
And then it was that Kitty wailed, "Ah, don't begin to fuss!" and bent over her image in a hand-mirror as one might bend for refreshment over scented flowers.
I tried to build about me such a little globe of ease as always ensphered her,
and thought of all that remained good in our lives though Chris was gone. I was
sure that we were preserved from the reproach of luxury, because we had made a
fine place for Chris, one little part of the world that was, so far as surfaces
could make it so, good enough for his amazing goodness. Here we had nourished
that surpassing amiability which was so habitual that one took it as one of his
physical characteristics, and regarded any lapse into bad temper as a calamity
as startling as the breaking of a leg; here we had made happiness inevitable for
him. I could shut my eyes and think of innumerable proofs
First he had sat in the morning-room and talked and stared out on the lawns that
already had the desolation of an empty stage, although he had not yet gone; then
broke off suddenly and went about the house, looking into many rooms. He went to
the stables and looked at the horses and had the dogs brought out; he refrained
from touching them or speaking to them, as though he felt himself already
infected with the squalor of war and did not want to contaminate their bright
physical well-being. Then he went to the edge of the wood and stood staring down
into the clumps of dark-leaved rhododendrons and the yellow tangle of last
year's bracken and the cold winter black of the trees. (From this very window I
had spied on him.) Then he moved
"If he could come back!" I said. "He was so happy here!"
And Kitty answered:
"He could not have been happier."
It was important that he should have been happy, for, you see, he was not like
other city men. When we had played together as children in that wood he had
always shown great faith in the imminence of the improbable. He thought that the
birch-tree would really stir and shrink and quicken into an enchanted princess,
that he really was a red Indian, and that his disguise would suddenly fall from
him at the right sundown, that at any moment a tiger might lift red fangs
through the bracken, and he expected these things with a stronger motion of the
imagination than the ordinary child's make-believe. And from a thousand
intimations, from his occasional clear fixity of gaze on good things as though
they were about to dissolve into better, from the passionate anticipation with
which he went to new countries or met new people, I was aware that this faith
had persisted into his adult life.
We were not, perhaps, specially contemptible women, because nothing could ever really become a part of our life until it had been referred to Chris's attention. I remember thinking, as the parlor-maid came in with a card on the tray, how little it mattered who had called and what flag of prettiness or wit she flew, since there was no chance that Chris would come in and stand over her, his fairness red in the firelight, and show her that detached attention, such as an unmusical man pays to good music, which men of anchored affections give to attractive women.
Kitty read from the card:
"'Mrs. William Grey, Mariposa, Ladysmith Road, Wealdstone,' I don't know anybody
in Wealdstone." That is the name of the red suburban stain which fouls
the fields three miles nearer London than Harrowweald. One cannot now protect
one's environment as one once could. "Do I know her, Ward? Has she been here
before?"
"Oh, no, ma'am." The parlor-maid smiled superciliously. "She said she had news for you." From her tone one could deduce an over-confiding explanation made by a shabby visitor while using the door-mat almost too zealously.
Kitty pondered, then said:
"I'll come down." As the girl went, Kitty took up the amber hair-pins from her
lap and began swathing her hair about her head. "Last year's fashion," she
commented; "but I fancy it'll do for a person with that sort of address." She
stood up, and threw her little silk dressing-
Just beneath us, in one of Kitty's prettiest chintz arm-chairs, sat a middle-aged
woman. She wore a yellowish raincoat and a black hat with plumes. The sticky
straw hat had only lately been renovated by something out of a little bottle
bought at the chemist's. She had rolled her black thread gloves into a ball on
her lap, so that she could turn her gray alpaca skirt well
"Let's get this over," and ran down the stairs. On the last step she paused and said with conscientious sweetness, "Mrs. Grey!"
"Yes," answered the visitor. She lifted to Kitty a sallow and relaxed face the
expression of which gave me a sharp, pitying pang of prepossession in her favor:
it was beautiful that so plain a woman should so ardently rejoice in another's
loveliness. "Are you Mrs. Baldry?" she asked, almost as if she were glad about
it, and stood up. The bones of her bad stays clicked as she moved. Well, she was
not so bad. Her body was long and round and shapely, and with a noble squareness
of the shoulders; her fair hair curled diffidently
She flung at us as we sat down:
"My general maid is sister to your second housemaid."
It left us at a loss.
"You've come about a reference?" asked Kitty.
"Oh, no. I've had Gladys two years now, and I've always found her a very good
girl. I want no reference." With
With the hardness of a woman who sees before her the curse of women's lives, a domestic row, Kitty said that she took no interest in servants' gossip.
"Oh, it isn't—" her eyes brimmed as though we had been unkind—"servants' gossip that I wanted to talk about. I only mentioned Gladys"—she continued to trace the burst seam of her purse—"because that's how I heard you didn't know."
"What don't I know?"
Her head drooped a little.
"About Mr. Baldry. Forgive me, I don't know his rank."
"Captain Baldry," supplied Kitty, wonderingly.
She looked far away from us, to the open door and its view of dark pines and pale March sunshine, and appeared to swallow something.
"Why, that he's hurt," she gently said.
"Wounded, you mean?" asked Kitty.
Her rusty plumes oscillated as she moved her mild face about with an air of perplexity.
"Yes," she said, "he's wounded."
Kitty's bright eyes met mine, and we obeyed that mysterious human impulse to
smile triumphantly at the spectacle of a fellow-creature occupied in baseness.
For this news was not true. It could not possibly be true. The War Office would
have wired to us immediately if Chris had been wounded. This was such a fraud as
one sees recorded in the papers that meticulously record squalor in paragraphs
headed, "Heartless Fraud on Soldier's
Kitty was, I felt, being a little too clever over it.
"How is he wounded?" she asked.
The caller traced a pattern on the carpet with her blunt toe.
"I don't know how to put it; he's not exactly wounded. A shell burst—"
"Concussion?" suggested Kitty.
She answered with an odd glibness and humility, as though tendering us a term she had long brooded over without arriving at comprehension, and hoping that our superior intelligences would make something of it:
"Shell-shock." Our faces did not illumine, so she dragged on lamely, "Anyway, he's not well." Again she played with her purse. Her face was visibly damp.
"Not well? Is he dangerously ill?"
"Oh, no." She was too kind to harrow us. "Not dangerously ill."
Kitty brutally permitted a silence to fall. Our caller could not bear it, and broke it in a voice that nervousness had turned to a funny, diffident croak.
"He's in the Queen Mary Hospital at Boulogne." We did not speak, and she began to flush and wriggle on her seat, and stooped forward to fumble under the legs of her chair for her umbrella. The sight of its green seams and unveracious tortoiseshell handle disgusted Kitty into speech.
"How do you know all this?"
Our visitor met her eyes. This was evidently a moment for which she had steeled
herself, and she rose to it with a catch of her breath. "A man who used to be a
clerk along with my husband is in Mr. Baldry's regiment." Her voice croaked even
more piteously, and her eyes
"And what regiment is that?" pursued Kitty.
The poor sallow face shone with sweat.
"I never thought to ask," she said.
"Well, your friend's name—"
Mrs. Grey moved on her seat so suddenly and violently that the pigskin purse fell from her lap and lay at my feet. I supposed that she cast it from her purposely because its emptiness had brought her to this humiliation, and that the scene would close presently in a few quiet tears.
I hoped that Kitty would let her go without scarring her too much with words and
would not mind if I gave her a little money. There was no doubt in my mind but
that this queer, ugly episode in which this woman butted like a clumsy animal at
a gate she was not intelligent enough to open would dissolve and be replaced by
some more pleasing composition in which
"But Chris is ill!"
It took only a second for the compact insolence of the moment to penetrate, the amazing impertinence of the use of his name, the accusation of callousness she brought against us whose passion for Chris was our point of honor, because we would not shriek at her false news, the impudently bright, indignant gaze she flung at us, the lift of her voice that pretended she could not understand our coolness and irrelevance. I pushed the purse away from me with my toe, and hated her as the rich hate the poor as insect things that will struggle out of the crannies which are their decent home and introduce ugliness to the light of day. And Kitty said in a voice shaken with pitilessness:
"You are impertinent. I know exactly
"Kitty!" I breathed. I was so ashamed that such a scene should spring from
Chris's peril at the front that I wanted to go out into the garden and sit by
the pond until the poor thing had removed her deplorable umbrella, her
unpardonable raincoat, her poor frustrated fraud. But Mrs. Grey, who had begun
childishly and deliberately, "It's you who are being—" and had desisted
simply because she realized that there were no harsh
"Kitty!" and reconciled her in an undertone. "There's some mistake. Got the name wrong, perhaps. Please tell us all about it."
Mrs. Grey began a forward movement like a curtsy. She was groveling after that purse. When she rose, her face was pink from stooping, and her dignity swam uncertainly in a sea of half-shed tears. She said:
"I'm sorry I've upset you. But when you know a thing like that it isn't in flesh
and blood to keep it from his wife. I am a married woman myself, and I
She undid the purse and took out a telegram. I knew suddenly that all she said was true; for that was why her hands had clasped that purse.
"He isn't well! He isn't well!" she said pleadingly. "He's lost his memory, and thinks—thinks he still knows me."
She passed the telegram to Kitty, who read it, and laid it on her knee.
"See," said Mrs. Grey, "it's addressed to Margaret Allington, my maiden name, and
I've been married these ten years. And it was sent to my old home, Monkey
Kitty folded up the telegram and said in a little voice:
"This is a likely story."
Again Mrs. Grey's eyes brimmed. "People are rude to one," she visibly said, but surely not nice people like this. She simply continued to sit.
Kitty cried out, as though arguing:
"There's nothing about shell-shock in this wire."
Our visitor melted into a trembling shyness.
"There was a letter, too."
Kitty held out her hand.
She gasped:
"Oh, no, I couldn't do that!"
"I must have it," said Kitty.
The caller's eyes grew great. She rose and dived clumsily for her umbrella, which had again slipped under the chair.
"I can't," she cried, and scurried to the open door like a pelted dog. She would have run down the steps at once had not some tender thought arrested her. She turned to me trustfully and stammered, "He is at that hospital I said," as if, since I had dealt her no direct blow, I might be able to salve the news she brought from the general wreck of manners. And then Kitty's stiff pallor struck to her heart, and cried comfortingly across the distance, "I tell you, I haven't seen him for fifteen years." She faced about, pushed down her hat on her head, and ran down the steps to the gravel. "They won't understand!" we heard her sob.
For a long time we watched her as she went along the drive, her yellowish
raincoat looking sick and bright in the sharp sunshine, her black plumes nodding
like
When at last I followed her she said:
"Do you believe her?"
I started. I had forgotten that we had ever disbelieved her.
"Yes," I replied.
"What can it mean?" She dropped her arms and stared at me imploringly. "Think, think, of something it can mean which isn't detestable!"
"It's all a mystery," I said; and added madly, because nobody had ever been cross with Kitty, "You didn't help to clear it up."
"Oh, I know you think I was rude," she petulantly moaned; "but you're so
I was appalled by these stiff, dignified gestures that seemed to be plucking Chris's soul from his body, tormented though it was by this unknown calamity.
"But Chris is ill!" I cried.
She stared at me.
"You're saying what she said."
Indeed, there seemed no better words than those Mrs. Grey had used. I repeated:
"But he is ill!"
She laid her face against her arms again.
"What does that matter?" she wailed. "If he could send that telegram, he is no
longer ours."
I WAS sorry the next morning that the post comes too late at Harrowweald to be brought up with the morning tea and waits for one at the breakfast table; for under Kitty's fixed gaze I had to open a letter which bore the Boulogne postmark and was addressed in the writing of Frank Baldry, Chris's cousin, who is in the church. He wrote:
DEAR JENNY:
You will have to break it to Kitty and try to make her take it as quietly as possible. This sentence will sound ominous as a start, but I'm so full of the extraordinary thing that has happened to Chris that I feel as if every living creature was in possession of the facts. I don't know how much you know about it, so I'd better begin at the beginning. Last Thursday I got a wire from Chris, saying that he had had concussion, though not seriously, and was in a hospital
about a mile from Boulogne, where he would be glad to see me. It struck me as odd that it had been sent to Ollenshaws, where I was curate fifteen years ago. Fortunately, I have always kept in touch with Sumpter, whom I regard as a specimen of the very best type of country clergymen, and he forwarded it without unnecessary delay. I started that evening, and looked hard for you and Kitty on the boat; but came to the conclusion I should probably find you at the hospital. After having breakfasted in the town,—how superior French cooking is! I would have looked in vain for such coffee, such an omelet, in my own parish,—I went off to look for the hospital. It is a girls' school, which has been taken over by the Red Cross, with fair-sized grounds and plenty of nice dry paths under the
tilleuls. I could not see Chris for an hour, so I sat down on a bench by a funny, little round pond, with a stone coping, very French. Some wounded soldiers who came out to sit in the sun were rather rude because I was not in khaki, even when I explained that I was a priest of God and that the feeling of the bishops was strongly against the enlistment of the clergy. I do feel that the church has lost its grip on the masses.Then a nurse came out and took me in to see Chris. He is in a nice room, with a southern exposure, with three other officers, who seemed very decent (not the "new army," I am glad to say). He was better than I had expected, but did not look quite himself. For one thing, he was oddly boisterous. He seemed glad to see me, and told me he could remember nothing about his concussion, but that he wanted to get back to Harrowweald. He talked a lot about the wood and the upper pond and wanted to know if the daffies were out yet, and when he would be allowed to travel, because he felt that he would get well at once if only he could get home. And then he was silent for a minute, as though he was holding something back. It will perhaps help you to realize the difficulty of my position when you understand that all this happened before I had been in the room five minutes!
Without flickering an eyelid, quite easily and naturally, he gave me the surprising information that he was in love with a girl called Margaret Allington, who is the daughter of a man who keeps the inn on Monkey Island, at Bray on the Thames. He uttered some appreciations of this woman which I was too upset to note. I gasped, "How long has this been going on?" He laughed
at my surprise, and said, "Ever since I went down to stay with Uncle Ambrose at Dorney after I'd got my B.Sc." Fifteen years ago! I was still staring at him, unable to believe this barefaced admission of a deception carried on for years, when he went on to say that, though he had wired to her and she had wired a message in return, she hadn't said anything about coming over to see him. "Now," he said quite coolly, "I know old Allington's had a bad season,—oh, I'm quite well up in the innkeeping business these days,—and I think it may quite possibly be a lack of funds that is keeping her away. I've lost my check-book somewhere in the scrim, and so I wonder if you'd send her some money. Or, better still, for she's a shy country thing, you might fetch her." I stared. "Chris," I said, "I know the war is making some of us very lax, and I can only ascribe to that the shamelessness with which you admit the existence of a long-standing intrigue; but when it comes to asking me to go over to England and fetch the woman—" He interrupted me with a sneer that we parsons are inveterately eighteenth century and have our minds perpetually inflamed by visions of squires' sons seducing country wenches, and declared
that he meant to marry this Margaret Allington. "Oh, indeed!" I said. "And may I ask what Kitty says to this arrangement?" "Who the devil is Kitty?" he asked blankly. "Kitty is your wife," I said quietly, but firmly. He sat up and shouted: "I haven't got a wife! Has some woman been turning up with a cock-and-bull story of being my wife? Because it's the damnedest lie!" I determined to settle the matter by sharp, common-sense handling. "Chris," I said, "you have evidently lost your memory. You were married to Kitty Ellis at St. George's, Hanover Square, on the third, or it may have been the fourth"—you know my wretched memory for dates—"of February, in 1906." He turned very pale and asked what year this was. "1916," I told him. He fell back in a fainting condition. The nurse came, and said I had done it all right this time, so she at least seemed to have known that he required a rude awakening, although the doctor, a very nice man, Winchester and New, told me he had known nothing of Chris's delusions.
An hour later I was called back into the room. Chris was looking at himself in a hand-mirror, which he threw on the floor as I entered. "You
are right," he said; "I'm not twenty-one, but thirty-six." He said he felt lonely and afraid, and that I must bring Margaret Allington to him at once or he would die. Suddenly he stopped raving and asked, "Is father all right?" I prayed for guidance, and answered, "Your father passed away twelve years ago." He said, "Good God! can't you say he died," and he turned over and lay with his back to me. I have never before seen a strong man weep, and it is indeed a terrible sight. He moaned a lot, and began to call for this Margaret. Then he turned over again and said, "Now tell us all about this Kitty that I've married." I told him she was a beautiful little woman, and mentioned that she had a charming and cultivated soprano voice. He said very fractiously: "I don't like little women, and I hate anybody, male or female, who sings. O God, I don't like this Kitty. Take her away!" And then he began to rave again about this woman. He said that he was consumed with desire for her and that he would never rest until he once more held her in his arms. I had no suspicion that Chris had this side to his nature, and it was almost a relief when he fainted again.I have not seen him since, and it is evening; but I have had a long talk with the doctor, who
says that he has satisfied himself that Chris is suffering from a loss of memory extending over a period of fifteen years. He says that though, of course, it will be an occasion of great trial to us all, he thinks that, in view of Chris's expressed longing for Harrowweald, he ought to be taken home, and advises me to make all arrangements for bringing him back some time next week. I hope I shall be upheld in this difficult enterprise. In the meantime I leave it to you to prepare Kitty for this terrible shock. I could have wished it were a woman of a different type who was to see my poor cousin through these dark days, but convey to her my deepest sympathy. Indeed, I never realized the horror of warfare until I saw my cousin, of whose probity I am as firmly convinced as of my own wantonly repudiating his most sacred obligations.
Yours ever, FRANK.
Over my shoulder Kitty muttered:
"And he always pretended he liked my singing." Then she gripped my arm and
shrieked in a possessive fury: "Bring him home! Bring him home!"
So, a week later, they brought Chris home.
From breakfast-time that day the house was pervaded with a day-before-the-funeral
feeling. Although all duties arising from the occasion had been performed, one
could settle to nothing else. Chris was expected at one, but then there came a
telegram to say he was delayed till the late afternoon. So Kitty, whose beauty
was as changed in grief from its ordinary seeming as a rose in moonlight is
different from a rose by day, took me down after lunch to the greenhouses and
had a snappishly competent conversation about the year's vegetables with Pipe,
the gardener. Then Kitty went into the drawing-room and filled the house with
the desolate merriment of an inattentively played pianola, while I sat in the
hall and wrote letters and noticed how sad dance-music has sounded ever since
the war began. After
We stood up. Through the thudding of the engines came the sound of Chris's great
male voice which always had in it a note like the baying of a big dog. "Thanks,
I can manage by myself." I heard, amazed, his step ring strong upon the stone,
for I had felt his absence as a kind of death from which he would emerge
ghostlike, impalpable. And then he stood in the doorway, the gloom blurring his
outlines like fur, the faint, clear candle-light catching the fair down on his
face. He
I cried out, because I had seen that his hair was of three colors now, brown and gold and silver.
With a quick turn of the head, he found me out in the shadows.
"Hullo, Jenny!" he said, and gripped my hands.
"O Chris, I am so glad!" I stuttered, and then could say no more for shame that I
was thirty-five instead of twenty. For his eyes had hardened in the midst of his
welcome, as though he had trusted that I at least would have been no party to
this conspiracy to deny that he was young, and he said:
"I've dropped Frank in town. My temper's of the convalescent type." He might as well have said, "I've dropped Frank, who had grown old, like you."
"Chris," I went on, "it's so wonderful to have you safe."
"Safe," he repeated. He sighed very deeply and continued to hold my hands. There was a rustle in the shadows, and he dropped my hands.
The face that looked out of the dimness to him was very white, and her upper lip
was lifted over her teeth in a distressed grimace. It was immediately as plain
as though he had shouted it that this sad mask meant nothing to him. He knew not
because memory had given him any insight into her heart, but because there is an
instinctive kindliness in him which makes him wise about all suffering, that it
would hurt her if he asked if this was his wife; but his body involuntarily
began a gesture of inquiry before he realized that
"I am your wife." There was a weak, wailing anger behind the words.
"Kitty," he said softly and kindly. He looked around for some graciousness to make the scene less wounding, and stooped to kiss her; but he could not. The thought of another woman made him unable to breathe, sent the blood running under his skin.
With a toss, like a child saying, "Well, if you don't want to, I'm sure I
wouldn't for the world!" Kitty withdrew from the suspended caress. He watched
her retreat into the shadows as though she were a symbol of this new life by
which he was baffled and oppressed, until the darkness outside became filled
with the sound like the surf which we always hear at Harrowweald on angry
evenings, and
She cried out from the other end of the room, as though she were speaking with some one behind a shut door:
"I've ordered dinner at seven. I thought you'd probably have missed a meal or two, or would want to go to bed early." She said it very smartly, with her head on one side like a bird, as if she was pleading that he would find her very clever about ordering dinner and thinking of his comfort.
"Good," he said. "I'd better dress now, hadn't I?" He looked up the stair-case,
and would have gone up had I not held him back; for the little room in the south
wing, with the fishing-rods and the old books, went in the rebuilding, absorbed
by the black-and-white magnificence that is Kitty's bedroom.
"Oh, I'll take you up," Kitty rang out efficiently. She pulled at his coat-sleeve, so they started level on the lowest step. But as they went up, the sense of his separateness beat her back; she lifted her arms as though she struggled through a fog, and fell behind. When he reached the top she was standing half-way down the stairs, her hands clasped under her chin. But he did not see her. He was looking along the corridor and saying, "This house is different." If the soul has to stay in its coffin till the lead is struck asunder, in its captivity it speaks with such a voice.
She braced herself with a gallant laugh.
"How you've forgotten!" she cried, and ran up to him, rattling her keys and
looking grave with housewifery, and I was left alone with the dusk and the
familiar things. The dusk flowed in wet and cool from the garden, as if to put
out the fire
I began to say what was in my mind to Kitty when she came in, but she moved
There came suddenly a thud at the door. We heard Chris swear and stumble to his feet, while one of the servants spoke helpfully. Kitty knitted her brows, for she hates gracelessness, and a failure of physical adjustment is the worst indignity she can conceive.
"He's fallen down those three steps from the hall," I whispered. "They're new." She did not listen, because she was controlling her face into harmony with the appearance of serene virginity upon which his eyes would fall when he entered the room.
His fall had ruffled him and made him look very large and red, and he breathed
"It seems so strange that you should not remember me," she said. "You gave me all these."
He answered kindly:
"I am glad I did that. You look very beautiful in them." But as he spoke his gaze shifted to the shadows in the corners of the room, and the blood ran hot under his skin. He was thinking of another woman, of another beauty.
Kitty put up her hands as if to defend her jewels.
In that silence dinner was announced, and we went into the dining-room. It is the
fashion at Baldry Court to use no electric light save when there is work to be
done or a great company to be entertained, and to eat and talk by the mild
clarity of many candles. That night it was a kindly fashion, for we sat about
the table with our faces veiled in shadow, and seemed to listen in quiet
contentment to the talk of our man who had come back to us. Yet all through the
meal I was near to weeping, because whenever he thought himself unobserved he
looked at the things that were familiar to him. Dipping his head, he would
glance sidewise at the old oak paneling, and nearer things he fingered as though
sight were not intimate enough a contact. His hand caressed the arm of his
chair, because he remembered the black gleam of it, stole out and touched the
recollected salt-cellar. It was his furtiveness that was heartrending; it was
as
Kitty shook her head.
"I don't know."
"Griffiths will know," Chris said cheerily, and swung round on his seat to ask the butler, and found him osseous, where Griffiths was rotund; dark, where Griffiths had been merrily mottled; strange, where Griffiths had been a part of home, a condition of life. He sat back in his chair as though his heart had stopped.
When the butler who is not Griffiths had left the room he spoke gruffly.
"Stupid of me, I know; but where is Griffiths?"
"Dead seven years ago," said Kitty, her eyes on her plate.
He sighed deeply in a shuddering horror.
"I'm sorry. He was a good man."
I cleared my throat.
"There are new people here, Chris, but they love you as the old ones did."
He forced himself to smile at us both, to a gay response.
"As if I didn't know that to-night!"
But he did not know it. Even to me he would give no trust, because it was Jenny the girl who had been his friend and not Jenny the woman. All the inhabitants at this new tract of time were his enemies, all its circumstances his prison-bars. There was suspicion in the gesture with which, when we were back in the drawing-room he picked up the flannel from the work-table.
"Whose is this?" he said curiously. His mother had been a hard-riding woman, not apt with her needle.
"Clothes for one of the cottages," answered Kitty, breathlessly. "We—we've a lot
of responsibilities, you and I. With
He moved his shoulders uneasily, as if under a yoke, and, after he had drunk his coffee, pulled up one of the blinds and went out to pace the flagged walk under the windows. Kitty huddled carelessly by the fire, her hands over her face, unheeding by its red glow she looked not so virginal and bride-like; so I think she was too distracted even to plan. I went to the piano. Through this evening of sentences cut short because their completed meaning was always sorrow, of normal life dissolved to tears, the chords of Beethoven sounded serenely.
"So you like Jenny," said Kitty, suddenly, "to play Beethoven when it's the war that's caused all this. I could have told that you would have chosen to play German music this night of all nights."
So I began a saraband by Purcell, a jolly thing that makes one see a plump,
sound
"Kitty."
"Yes, Chris." She was sweet and obedient and alert.
"I know my conduct must seem to you perversely insulting,"—behind him the
search-light wheeled while he gripped the sides of the window,—"but if I do
She raised her hands to her jewels, and pressed the cool globes of her pearls into her flesh. "She lives near here," she said easily. "I will send the car down for her to-morrow. You shall see as much of her as you like."
His arms fell to his sides.
"Thank you," he muttered; "you're all being so kind—" He disengaged himself into the darkness.
I was amazed at Kitty's beautiful act and more amazed to find that it had made her face ugly. Her eyes snapped as they met mine.
"That dowd!" she said, keeping her voice low, so that he might not hear it as he passed to and fro before the window. "That dowd!"
This sudden abandonment of beauty and amiability meant so much in our Kitty,
whose law of life is grace, that I went over and kissed her.
"Dear, you're taking things all the wrong way," I said. "Chris is ill—"
"He's well enough to remember her all right," she replied unanswerably. Her silver shoe tapped the floor; she pinched her lips for some moments. "After all, I suppose I can sit down to it. Other women do. Teddy Rex keeps a Gaiety girl, and Mrs. Rex has to grin and bear it." She shrugged in answer to my silence. "What else is it, do you think? It means that Chris is a man like other men. But I did think that bad women were pretty. I suppose he's had so much to do with pretty ones that a plain one's a change."
"Kitty! Kitty! how can you!"
But her little pink mouth went on manufacturing malice.
"This is all a blind," she said at the end of an unpardonable sentence. "He's pretending."
I, who had felt his agony all the evening
Chris spoke from the darkness.
"Jenny!" I let her go. He came in and stood over us, running his hand through his hair unhappily. "Let's all be decent to each other," he said heavily. "It's all such a muddle, and it's so rotten for all of us—"
Kitty shook herself neat and stood up.
"Why don't you say, 'Jenny, you mustn't be rude to visitors'? It's how you feel, I know." She gathered up her needlework. "I'm going to bed. It's been a horrid night."
She spoke so pathetically, like a child who hasn't enjoyed a party as much as it
had thought it would, that both of us
"You can't remember her at all?"
"Oh, yes," he said, without raising his eyelids, "in a sense. I know how she bows
when you meet her in the street, how she dresses when she goes to church. I know
her as one knows a woman staying
"It's a pity you can't remember Kitty. All that a wife should be she's been to you."
He sat forward, warming his palms at the blaze and hunching his shoulders as though there were a draft. His silence compelled me to look at him, and I found his eyes, cold and incredulous and frightened, on me.
"Jenny, is this true?"
"That Kitty's been a good wife?"
"That Kitty is my wife, that I am old, that"—he waved a hand at the altered room—"all this."
"It is all true. She is your wife, and this place is changed, and it's better and
jollier in all sorts of ways, believe me, and fifteen years have passed. Why,
Chris, can't you see that I have grown old?" My vanity could hardly endure his
slow stare, but I kept my fingers clasped on my lap. "You see?"
He turned away with an assenting mutter; but I saw that deep down in him, not to be moved by any material proof, his spirit was incredulous.
"Tell me what seems real to you," I begged. "Chris, be a pal. I'll never tell."
"M-m-m," he said. His elbows were on his knees, and his hands stroked his thick
tarnished hair. I could not see his face, but I knew that his skin was red and
that his gray eyes were wet and bright. Then suddenly he lifted his chin and
laughed, like a happy swimmer breaking through a wave that has swept him far
inshore. He glowed with a radiance that illuminated the moment till my blood
tingled and I began to rub my hands together and laugh, too. "Why, Monkey
Island's real. But you don't know old Monkey. Let me tell you."
CHRIS told the story lingeringly, in loving detail. From Uncle Ambrose's gates,
it seems, one took the path across the meadow where Whiston's cows are put to
graze, passed through the second stile—the one between the two big alders—into a
long straight road that ran across the flat lands to Bray. After a mile or so
there branched from it a private road that followed a line of noble poplars down
to the ferry. Between two of them—he described it meticulously, as though it
were of immense significance—there stood a white hawthorn. In front were the
dark-green, glassy waters of an unvisited back-water, and beyond them a bright
lawn set with many walnut-trees and a few great chestnuts, well lighted with
their candles,
Well, one sounded the bell that hung on a post, and presently Margaret in a white
dress would come out of the porch and would walk to the stone steps down to the
river. Invariably, as she passed the walnut-tree that overhung the path, she
would pick a leaf, crush it, and sniff the sweet scent; and as she came near the
steps she would shade her eyes and peer across the water. "She is a little
near-sighted; you can't imagine how sweet it makes her
And then one took the pole from her and brought her back to the island, though
probably one did not mount the steps to the lawn for a long time. It was so good
to sit in the punt by the landing-stage while Margaret dabbled her hands in the
black waters and forgot her shyness as one talked. "She's such good company.
So usually one sat down there in the boat, talking with a sense of leisure, as
though one had all the rest of one's life in which to carry on this
conversation, and noting how the reflected ripple of the water made a bright,
vibrant, mark upon her throat, and other effects of the scene upon her beauty,
until the afternoon grew drowsy, and she said, "Father will be wanting his tea."
And they would go up and find old Allington, in white ducks, standing in the
fringe of long grasses and
Then they all had tea under the walnut-tree where the canary's cage was hanging,
and the ducks' eggs would be brought out, and Mr. Allington would talk much
Thames-side gossip: how the lock-keeper at Teddington had had his back broken by
a swan, mad as swans are in May; how they would lose their license at the
Dovetail Arms if they were not careful; and how the man who kept the inn by
Surly Hall was like to die, because after he had been cursing his daughter for
two days for having run away with a soldier from Windsor Barracks, he had
suddenly seen her white face in a clump of rushes in the river just under the
hole in the garden
So they would sit on that bright lawn until the day was dyed with evening blue, and Mr. Allington was more and more often obliged to leap into the punt to chase his ducks, which had started on a trip to Bray Lock, or to crawl into the undergrowth after rabbits similarly demoralized by the dusk.
Then Chris would say he had to go, and they would stand in a communing silence
while the hearty voice of Mr. Allington shouted from midstream or under the
alder-boughs a disregarded invitation to stay and have a bite of supper. In the
liquefaction of colors which happens on a summer evening, when the green grass
seemed like a precious fluid poured out on the earth and dripping over to the
river, and the chestnut candles were no longer proud flowers, but just wet,
white lights
Chris explained this part of his story stumblingly; but I, too, have watched
people I loved in the dusk, and I know what he meant. As she sat in the punt
while he ferried himself across it was no longer visible that her fair hair
curled differently and that its rather wandering parting was a little on one
side; that her straight brows, which were a little darker than her hair, were
nearly always contracted in a frown of conscientious speculation; that her mouth
and chin were noble, yet as delicate as flowers; that her shoulders were
slightly hunched because her young body, like a lily-stem, found it difficult to
manage its own tallness. She was then just a girl in white who lifted a white
face or drooped a dull-gold head. Then she was nearer to him than at any
other
He stood beside the crazy post where the bell hung and watched the white figure take the punt over the black waters, mount the gray steps, and assume some of their grayness, become a green shade in the green darkness of the foliage-darkened lawn, and he exulted in that guarantee.
How long this went on he had forgotten; but it continued for some time before
there came the end of his life, the last day he could remember. I was barred out
of that day. His lips told me of its physical appearances, while from his wet,
bright eyes and his flushed skin, his beautiful signs of a noble excitement, I
tried to derive the real story. It seemed that the day when he bicycled over to
Monkey
She brought the punt across and said very primly, "Dad will be disappointed; he's
gone up to town on business," and answered gravely, "That is very kind of you,"
when he took the punt-pole from
Chris said he would take her down to Dorney Lock in the skiff, and she got in
very silently and obediently; but as soon as they were out in midstream she
developed a sense of duty, and said she could not leave the inn with just that
boy to look after it. And then she went into the kitchen and, sucking in her
lower lip for shyness, very conscientiously cut piles of bread and butter in
case some visitors came to tea. Just when Chris was convincing her of the
impossibility of any visitors arriving they came, a fat woman in a luscious pink
blouse and an old chap who had been rowing in a tweed waistcoat. Chris went out,
though Margaret laughed and trembled and begged him not to, and waited on them.
It should have been a great lark, but suddenly he hated them, and when they
offered him a tip for pushing
Still Margaret would not leave the island. "Supposing," she said, "that Mr.
Learoyd comes for his ale." But she consented to walk with him to the wild part
of the island, where poplars and alders and willows grew round a clearing in
which white willow-herb and purple figwort and here and there a potato-flower,
last ailing consequence of one of Mr. Allington's least successful enterprises,
fought down to the fringe of iris on the river's lip. In this gentle jungle was
a rustic seat, relic of a reckless aspiration on the part of Mr. Allington to
make this a pleasure-garden, and on it they sat until a pale moon appeared above
the green corn-field on the other side of the river. "Not six yet," he said,
taking out his watch. "Not six yet," she repeated. Words seemed to bear more
significance
Afterward she pulled at his hand. She wanted to go back across the lawn and walk
round the inn, which looked mournful, as unlit houses do by dusk. They passed
beside the green-and-white stucco barrier of the veranda and stood on the
three-cornered lawn that shelved high over the stream at the island's end,
regarding the river, which was now something more wonderful than water, because
it had taken to its bosom the rose and amber glories of the sunset smoldering
behind the elms and Bray church-tower. Birds sat on the telegraph wires that
spanned the river as the black notes sit on a staff of music.
When there had descended on them a night as brilliant as the day he drew her out
into the darkness, which was sweet with the scent of walnut-leaves, and they
And as he spoke, her warm body melted to nothingness in his arms. The columns that had stood so hard and black against the quivering tide of moonlight and starlight seemed to totter and dissolve. He was lying in a hateful world where barbed-wire entanglements showed impish knots against a livid sky full of blooming noise and splashes of fire and wails for water, and his back was hurting intolerably.
Chris fell to blowing out the candles, and I, perhaps because the egotistical part of me was looking for something to say that would make him feel me devoted and intimate, could not speak.
Suddenly he desisted, stared at a candle-flame, and said:
"If you had seen the way she rested her cheek against the glass and looked into
the
"Of course you can't," I murmured sympathetically.
We gripped hands, and he brought down on our conversation the finality of
darkness.
NEXT morning it appeared that the chauffeur had taken the car up to town to get a part replaced, and Margaret could not be brought from Wealdstone till the afternoon. It fell to me to fetch her. "At least," Kitty had said, "I might be spared that humiliation." Before I started I went to the pond on the hill's edge. It is a place where autumn lives for half the year, for even when the spring lights tongues of green fire in the undergrowth, and the valley shows sunlit between the tree-trunks, here the pond is fringed with yellow bracken and tinted bramble, and the water flows amber over last winter's leaves.
Through this brown gloom, darkened now by a surly sky, Chris was taking the
"I'm just going down to fetch Margaret," I said.
He thanked me for it.
"But, Chris, I must tell you. I've seen Margaret. She came up here, so kind and
sweet, to tell us you were wounded. She's the greatest dear in the world, but
she's
"Didn't I tell you last night," he said, "that that doesn't matter?" He dipped his oar to a stroke that sent him away from me. "Bring her soon. I shall wait for her down here."
Wealdstone is not, in its way, a bad place; it lies in the lap of open country,
and at the end of every street rise the green hills of Harrow and the spires of
Harrow School. But all the streets are long and red and freely articulated with
railway arches, and factories spoil the skyline with red, angular chimneys, and
in front of the shops stood little women with backs ridged by cheap stays, who
tapped their upper lips with their forefingers and made other feeble, doubtful
gestures, as
And here Margaret lived in a long road of red-brick boxes, flecked here and there
with the pink blur of almond-blossom, which debouched in a flat field where
green grass rose up rank through clay mold blackened by coal-dust from the
railway. Mariposa, which was the last house in the road, did not even have an
almond-tree. In the front garden, which seemed to be imperfectly reclaimed from
the greasy field, yellow crocus and some sodden squills just winked, and the
back, where a man was handling a spade without mastery, presented the austere
appearance of an allotment. And not only did Margaret live in this place; she
also belonged to it. When she opened the door
"He's home?"
I nodded.
She pulled me inside and slammed the door.
"Is he well?" she asked.
"Quite," I answered.
Her tense stare relaxed. She rubbed her hands on her overall and said:
"You'll excuse me. It's the girl's day out. If you'll step into the parlor—"
So in her parlor I sat and told her how it was with Chris and how greatly he
desired to see her. And as I spoke of his longing I turned my eyes away from
her, because she was sitting on a sofa, upholstered in velveteen of a sickish
green,
I had finished the statement of our sad case, and I saw that though she had not moved, clasping her knees in a set, hideous attitude, the tears were rolling down her cheeks.
"Oh, don't! Oh, don't!" I exclaimed, standing up. Her tear-stained immobility touched the heart. "He's not so bad; he'll get quite well."
"I know, I know," she said miserably. "I don't believe that anything bad could be
allowed to happen to Chris for long. And I'm sure," she said kindly, "you're
looking after him beautifully. But when a thing you had thought had ended
fifteen years ago starts all over again, and you're very tired—" She drew a
hand
"You'll do him good." I found myself raising my voice to the pitch she had suddenly attained as though to keep her at it. "Come now!"
She dipped suddenly to compassion.
"But the young lady?" she asked timidly. "She was upset the last time. I've often wondered if I did right in going. Even if Chris has forgotten, he'll want to do what's right. He couldn't bear to hurt her."
"That's true," I said. "You do know our Chris. He watches her out of the corner of his eye, even when he's feeling at his worst, to see she isn't wincing. But she sent me here to-day."
"Oh!" cried Margaret, glowing, "she must have a lovely nature!"
I lost suddenly the thread of the conversation. I could not talk about Kitty. She
appeared to me at that moment a faceless figure with flounces, just as most of
the servants at Baldry Court appear to me as faceless figures with caps and
aprons. There were only two real people in the world, Chris and this woman whose
personality was sounding through her squalor like a beautiful voice singing
"I think that's Mr. Grey come in from his gardening. You'll excuse me."
Through the open door I heard a voice saying in a way which suggested that its production involved much agitation of a prominent Adam's apple:
"Well, dear, seeing you had a friend, I thought I'd better slip up and change my gardening trousers." I do not know what she said to him, but her voice was soft and comforting and occasionally girlish and interrupted by laughter, and I perceived from its sound that with characteristic gravity she had accepted it as her mission to keep loveliness and excitement alive in his life.
"An old friend of mine has been wounded," was the only phrase I heard; but when
she drew him out into the garden
"Very well, dear. Don't worry about me. I'll trot along after tea and have a game of draughts with Brown."
She answered:
When she came back into the parlor again she was wearing that yellowish raincoat,
that hat with hearse plumes nodding over its sticky straw, that gray alpaca
skirt. I first defensively clenched my hands. It would have been such agony to
the finger-tips to touch any part of her apparel. And then I thought of Chris,
to whom a second before I had hoped to bring a serene comforter. I perceived
clearly that that ecstatic woman lifting her eyes and her hands to the
benediction of love was Margaret as she existed in eternity; but this was
Margaret as she existed in time, as the fifteen years between Monkey Island and
this damp day in Ladysmith Road had irreparably made her. Well, I had promised
to bring her to him.
She said:
"I'm ready," and against that simple view of her condition I had no argument. But when she paused by the painted drainpipe in the hall and peered under contracted brows for that unveracious tortoiseshell handle, I said hastily:
"Oh, don't trouble about an umbrella."
"I'll maybe need it walking home," she pondered.
"But the car will bring you back."
"Oh, that will be lovely," she said, and laughed nervously, looking very plain. "Do you know, I know the way we're coming together is terrible, but I can't think of a meeting with Chris as anything but a kind of treat. I've got a sort of party feeling now."
As she held the gate open for me she looked back at the house.
"It's a horrid little house, isn't it?" she asked. She evidently desired sanction
for a long-suppressed discontent.
"It isn't very nice," I agreed.
"They put cows sometimes into the field at the back," she went on, as if conscientiously counting her blessings. "I like that; but otherwise it isn't much."
"But it's got a very pretty name," I said, laying my hand on the raised metal letters that spelled "Mariposa" across the gate.
"Ah, isn't it!" she exclaimed, with the smile of the inveterate romanticist. "It's Spanish, you know, for butterfly."
Once we were in the automobile, she became a little sullen with shyness, because
she felt herself so big and clumsy, her clothes so coarse, against the fine
upholstery, the silver vase of Christmas roses, and all the deliberate delicacy
of Kitty's car. She was afraid of the chauffeur, as the poor are always afraid
of men-servants, and ducked her head when he got out to start the car. To recall
her to ease and beauty I told her that though Chris had
In a deep, embarrassed voice she began to tell me about Monkey Island. It was
strange how both Chris and she spoke of it as though it were not a place, but a
magic state which largely explained the actions performed in it. Strange, too,
that both of them should describe meticulously the one white hawthorn that stood
among the poplars by the ferry-side. I suppose a thing that one has looked at
with some one one loves acquires forever after a special significance. She said
that her father had gone there when she was fourteen. After Mrs. Arlington had
been taken away by a swift and painful death the cheer of his Windsor hostelry
had become intolerable to the man; he regarded the whole world as her grave, and
the tipsy sergeants in scarlet, the carter crying for a pint of four-half, and
even the
Then one April afternoon Chris landed at the island, and by the first clean,
quick movement of tying up his boat made her his slave. I could imagine that it
would
"I know all about that," I said quickly. I was more afraid that I should feel envy or any base passion in the presence of this woman than I have ever been of anything else in my life. "I want to hear how you came to part."
"Oh," she cried, "it was the silliest quarrel! We had known how we felt for just
a week. Such a week! Lovely weather we had, and father hadn't noticed anything.
I didn't want him to,
"Well, then, one Thursday afternoon I'd gone on the back-water with Bert
Batchard, nephew to Mr. Batchard who keeps the inn at Surly Hall. I was laughing
out loud because he did row so funny! He's a town chap, and he was handling
those oars for all the world as though they were teaspoons. The old dinghy just
sat on the water like a hen on its chicks and didn't move, and he so sure of
himself! I just sat and laughed and laughed. Then all of a sudden, clang!
clang! the bell at the ferry. And there was Chris, standing up there
among the poplars, his brows
I had got the key at last. There had been a spring at Baldry Court fifteen years
ago that was desolate for all that there was beautiful weather. Chris had
lingered with Uncle Ambrose in his Thames-side rectory as he had never lingered
before, and old Mr. Baldry was filling the house with a sense of hot, apoplectic
misery. All day he was up in town at the office, and without explanation he had
discontinued his noontide habit of ringing up his wife. All night he used to sit
in the library looking over his papers and ledgers; often in the mornings the
housemaids would find him asleep across his desk, very red, yet looking dead.
The men he brought home to dinner treated him with a kindness and consideration
which were not the tributes
It was that evening, as I went down to see the new baby at the lodge, that I met
Chris coming up the drive. Through the blue twilight his white face had had a
drowned look. I remembered it well, because my surprise that he passed me
without seeing me had made me perceive for the first time that he had never
seen
Something of this I told Margaret, to which she answered, "Oh, I know all that,"
and went on with her story. On Sunday, three days after their quarrel, Mr.
Allington was found dead in his bed. "I wanted Chris so badly; but he never
came, he never wrote," and she fell into a lethargic disposition to sit all day
and watch the Thames flow by, from which she was hardly roused by finding that
her father had left her nothing save an income of twenty pounds a year from
unrealizable
So, five years after she left Monkey Island, she married Mr. William Grey. Soon
after their marriage he lost his job and was for some time out of work; later he
developed a weak chest that needed constant attention. "But it all helped to
pass the time," she said cheerfully and without irony. So it happened that it
was not till two years after that she had the chance of revisiting Monkey
Island. At first there was no money, and later there was the necessity of
seeking the healthful breezes of Brighton or Bognor or Southend, which were the
places in which Mr. Grey's chest oddly elected to thrive. And when these
obstacles were removed, she was lethargic; also she had heard that the
"Well, when we got to the ferry, Mr. Grey says, 'But mercy, Margaret, there's
water all round it!' and I said, 'William, that's just it.'" They found that the
island was clean and decorous again, for it had only recently changed hands.
"Father and daughter the new people are, just like me and dad, and Mr. Taylor's
something of dad's cut, too, but he comes from the North. But Miss Taylor's much
handsomer than I ever was; a really big woman she is, and such lovely golden
hair. They were very kind when I told
"He was a kind man. He put me into a chair and called Miss Taylor in and told her
to keep William out in the garden as long as possible. At last I said, 'But Mrs.
Hitchcock did say she'd send my letters on.' And he said, 'Mrs. Hitchcock hadn't
been here three weeks before she bolted with a bookie from Bray, and after that
Hitchcock mixed his drinks and
"And what was in them?"
"For a long time I did not read them; I thought it was against my duty as a wife. But when I got that telegram saying he was wounded, I went up-stairs and read those letters. Oh, those letters!"
She bowed her head and wept.
As the car swung through the gates of Baldry Court she sat up and dried her eyes.
She looked out at the strip of turf, so bright that one would think it wet, and
lighted here and there with snowdrops and scillas and crocuses, that runs
between the drive and the tangle of silver birch and bramble and fern. There is
no esthetic reason for that border; the common outside looks lovelier where it
fringes the road with dark gorse and rough amber grasses. Its use is purely
philosophic; it proclaims that here we esteem only controlled beauty, that the
wild will not have
But that she was wise, that the angels would of a certainty be on her side, did
not make her any the less physically offensive to our atmosphere. All my
doubts
"And now," she said brightly as I put
I took her into the drawing-room and opened one of the French windows.
"Go past the cedars to the pond," I told her. "He is rowing there."
"That is nice," she said. "He always looks so lovely in a boat."
I called after her, trying to hint the possibility of a panic breakdown to their meeting:
"You'll find he's altered—"
She cried gleefully:
"Oh, I shall know him."
As I went up-stairs I became aware that I was near to a bodily collapse; I
suppose the truth is that I was physically so jealous of Margaret that it was
making me ill. But suddenly, like a tired person dropping a weight that they
know to be precious, but cannot carry for another minute, my mind refused to
consider the situation any longer and turned to the
"O Kitty, that poor battered thing outside!"
She stared so grimly out into the garden that my eyes followed her stare.
It was one of those draggled days, common at the end of March when a garden looks
at its worst. The wind that was rolling up to check a show of sunshine had taken
away the cedar's dignity of solid blue shade, had set the black firs beating
their arms together, and had filled the sky with glaring gray clouds that dimmed
the brilliance of the crocuses. It was to give gardens a point on days such as
these, when the planned climax of this flower-bed and that stately tree goes for
nothing, that the old gardeners raised statues in their lawns and walks,
large
How her near presence had been known by Chris I do not understand, but there he
was, running across the lawn as night after night I had seen him in my dreams
running across No-Man's-Land. I knew that so he would close his eyes as he ran;
I knew that so he would pitch on his knees when he reached safety. I assumed
naturally that at Margaret's feet lay safety even before I saw her arms brace
him under the armpits with a gesture that was not passionate, but rather the
movement of one carrying a wounded man from under fire. But even when she had
raised his head to the level of her lips, the central issue was not decided. I
covered my eyes and said aloud, "In a minute
AFTER the automobile had taken Margaret away Chris came to us as we sat in the drawing-room, and, after standing for a while in the glow of the fire, hesitantly said:
"I want to tell you that I know it is all right. Margaret has explained to me."
Kitty crumpled her sewing into a white ball.
"You mean, I suppose, that you know I'm your wife. I'm pleased that you describe that as knowing 'it's all right,' and grateful that you have accepted it at last—on Margaret's authority. This is an occasion that would make any wife proud."
Her irony was as faintly acrid as a
So Kitty lay about like a broken doll, face downward on a sofa, with one limp arm
dangling to the floor, or protruding stiff feet in fantastic slippers from the
end of her curtained bed; and I tried to make my permanent wear that mood
A week after my journey to Wealdstone I went to Kitty to ask her to come for a walk with me and found her stretched on her pillows, holding a review of her underclothing. She refused bitterly and added:
"Be back early. Remember Dr. Gilbert Anderson is coming at half-past four. He's
our last hope. And tell that woman she must see him. He says he wants to see
everybody concerned." She continued to look wanly at the frail, luminous silks
her maid brought her as a speculator who had cornered an article for which there
had been no demand might look at his damnably numerous, damnably unprofitable
freights. So I went out alone into a soft day, with the dispelled winter lurking
above in high dark clouds, under which there ran quick, fresh currents of air
and broken shafts of insistent sunshine
That pleased me, too, and I wished I had some one with me to enjoy this artless
little show of the new year. I had not
Then suddenly I was stunned with jealousy. It was not their love for each other
that caused me such agony at that moment; it was the thought of the things their
eyes had rested upon together. I imagined that white hawthorn among the poplars
by the ferry on which they had looked fifteen years ago at Monkey Island, and it
was more than I could bear. I
I was now utterly cut off from Chris. Before, when I looked at him, I knew an
instant ease in the sight of the short golden down on his cheeks, the ridge of
bronze flesh above his thick, fair eyebrows. But
Nothing could mitigate the harshness of our dejection. You may think we were
attaching an altogether fictitious importance to what was merely the delusion of
a madman. But every minute of the day, particularly at those trying times when
he strolled about the house and grounds with the doctors, smiling courteously,
but without joy, and answering their questions with the crisp politeness of a
man shaking off an inquisitive commercial traveler in a hotel smoking-room, it
became plain that if madness means a liability to wild error about the world
Chris was not mad. It was our peculiar shame that he had rejected us when he had
attained to something saner than sanity. His very loss of memory was a triumph
over the limitations of language which prevent the mass of men from making
explicit statements about
I could not think clearly about it. I suppose that the subject of our tragedy,
written in spiritual terms, was that in Kitty he had turned from the type of
woman that makes the body conqueror of the soul and in me the type that mediates
between the soul and the body and makes them run even and unhasty like a
well-matched pair of carriage horses, and had given himself to a woman whose
bleak habit it was to champion the soul against the body. But I saw it just as a
fantastic act of cruelty that I could think of only as a conjunction of
calamitous images. I think of it happening somewhere behind
I stirred on the dead leaves as though I had really heard the breaking of the
globe and cried out, "Gilbert Anderson, Gilbert Anderson must cure him." Heaven
knows that I had no reason for faith in any doctor, for during the last week so
many of them, as sleek as seals with their neatly brushed hair and their
frock-coats, had stood round Chris and looked at him with the consequenceless
deliberation of a
There had been a hardening of the light while I slept that made the dear,
familiar woods rich and sinister, and to the eye, tropical. The jewel-bright
buds on the soot-black boughs, the blue valley distances, smudged here and there
with the pink enamel of villa-roofs, and seen between the black-and-white
intricacies of the birch-trunks and the luminous gray pillars of the beeches,
hurt my wet eyes as might beauty blazing under an equatorial sun. There was a
tropical sense of danger, too, for I walked as apprehensively as though a snake
coiled under every leaf, because I feared to come on them when he was speaking
to her without looking at
It was not utter dullness not to have anticipated the beauty that I saw. No one
could have told. They had taken the mackintosh rug out of the dinghy and spread
it on this little space of clear grass, I think so that they could look at a
scattering of early primroses in a pool of white anemones at an oak-tree's foot.
She had run her hands over the rug so that it lay quite smooth and comfortable
under him
I have often seen people grouped like that on the common outside our gates on
Bank holidays. Most often the man has a handkerchief over his face to shade him
from the sun, and the woman squats beside him and peers through the undergrowth
to see that the children come to no harm as they play. It has sometimes seemed
to me that there was a significance about it. You know when one goes into
It was not fair that by the exercise of a generosity which seemed as fortuitous a
possession as a beautiful voice a woman should be able to do such wonderful
things for a man. For sleep was the least of her gifts to him. What she had done
in leading
"Jenny, it can't be true that they did that to Belgium? Those funny, quiet, stingy people!" And his soldierly knowledge was as deeply buried as this memory of that awful August. While her spell endured they could not send him back into the hell of war. This wonderful, kind woman held his body as safely as she held his soul.
I was so grateful that I was forced to go and sit down on the rug beside her. It
was an intrusion, but I wanted to be near her. She did not look surprised when
she turned to me her puckered brows, but smiled through the ugly fringe of
vagrant
Presently she leaned over to me across his body and whispered:
"He's not cold. I put the overcoat on him as soon as he was fairly off. I've just felt his hands, and they're as warm as toast." If I had whispered like that I would have wakened him.
Soon he stirred, groped for her hand, and lay with his cheek against the rough palm. He was awake, but liked to lie so.
In a little she shook her hand away and said:
"Get up and run along to the house and have some hot tea. You'll catch your death lying out here."
He caught her hand again. It was evident that for some reason the moment was charged with ecstasy for them both.
It seemed as though there was a softer
"There is a doctor coming at half-past four who wants to see you both."
It cast no shadow on their serenity. He smiled upward, still lying on his back, and hailed me, "Hallo, Jenny." But she made him get up and help her to fold the rug.
"It's not right to keep a doctor waiting in these times," she declared, "so
overworked they are, poor men, since the war." As I led the way up through the
woods to the house I heard her prove her point by an illustrative anecdote about
something that had happened down her road. I heard, too, their footsteps come to
a halt for a space. I think her gray eyes had looked at him so sweetly that he
had been constrained to take her in his arms.
I FELT, I remember with the little perk of self-approbation with which one
remembers any sort of accurate premonition even if its fulfilment means
disaster, a cold hand close round my heart as we turned the corner of the house
and came on Dr. Gilbert Anderson. I was startled, to begin with, by his
unmedical appearance. He was a little man with winking blue eyes, a flushed and
crumpled forehead, a little gray mustache that gave him the profile of an
amiable cat, and a lively taste in spotted ties, and he lacked that appetiteless
look which is affected by distinguished practitioners. He was at once more
comical and more suggestive of power than any other doctor I had ever seen, and
this difference was emphasized by his unexpected
"Nobody about in there; we professional men get so little fresh air," he said
bluffly, and blew his nose in a very large handkerchief, from the folds of which
he emerged with perfect self-possession. "You," he said to Chris, with a naïve
adoption of the detective tone, "are the patient." He rolled his blue eye on me,
took a good look, and, as he realized I did not matter, shook off the
unnecessary impression like a dog coming out of water. He faced Margaret as
though she were the nurse in charge of the case and gave her a brisk little nod.
"You're Mrs.
She obeyed; that sort of woman always does what the doctor orders. But I delayed for a moment to stare after this singular specialist, to sidetrack my foreboding by pronouncing him a bounder, to wish, as my foreboding persisted, that like a servant I could give notice because there was "always something happening in the house."
Then, as the obedient figure at the top of the stairs was plainly shivering under
its shoddy clothes in the rising wind that was polishing the end of the
afternoon to brightness, I hastened to lead her into the hall. We stood about
uneasily in its gloaming. Margaret looked round her and said in a voice
flattened by the despondency she evidently shared with me:
There was a noise above us like the fluttering of doves. Kitty was coming
downstairs in a white serge dress against which her hands were rosy; a woman
with such lovely little hands never needed to wear flowers. By her kind of
physical discipline she had reduced her grief to no more than a slight darkening
under the eyes, and for this moment she was glowing. I knew it was because she
was going to meet a new man and anticipated the kindling of admiration in his
eyes, and I smiled, contrasting her probable prefiguring of Dr. Anderson with
the amiable rotundity we had just encountered. Not
"The doctor's talking to Chris outside," I said.
"Ah," breathed Kitty. I found, though the occasion was a little grim, some
entertainment in the two women's faces, so mutually intent, so differently fair,
the one a polished surface that reflected light, like a mirror hung opposite a
window, the other a lamp grimed by the smoke of careless use, but still giving
out radiance from
"How do you do, Mrs. Grey?" she said, suddenly shaking out her cordiality as one shakes out a fan. "It's very kind of you. Won't you go up-stairs and take off your things?"
"No, thank you," answered Margaret, shyly, "I shall have to go away so soon."
"Ah, do!" begged Kitty, prettily.
It was, of course, that she did not want Margaret to meet the specialist in those
awful clothes; but I did not darken the situation by explaining that this
disaster had already happened. Instead, I turned to Margaret an expression which
conveyed that this was an act of hospitality the refusal of which we would find
wounding, and to that she yielded, as I knew she would. She followed me
up-stairs and
"And the lovely things you have on your dressing-table," she commented. "You must
have very good taste." The charity that changed my riches to a merit! As I
"You've lovely hair," I said.
"I used to have nice hair," she mourned, "but these last few years I've let myself go." She made half-hearted attempts to smooth the straggling tendrils on her temples, but presently laid down her brush and clicked her tongue against her teeth. "I hope that man's not worrying Chris," she said.
There was no reassurance ready, so I went to the other side of the room to put
her hat down on a chair, and stayed for a moment to pat its plumes and wonder if
nothing could be done with it. But it was, as surgeons say, an inoperable case.
So I just gloomed at it and wished I had not let this doctor interpose his
plumpness between Chris and Margaret, who since that afternoon seemed to me as
not only a woman whom it was good to love, but, as a patron saint must appear to
a Catholic, as an intercessory being whose kindliness could be daunted only by
some
She was standing up, and in her hand she held the photograph of Oliver that I keep on my dressing-table. It is his last photograph, the one taken just a week before he died.
"Who is this?" she asked.
"The only child Chris ever had. He died five years ago."
"Five years ago?"
Why did it matter so?
"Yes," I said.
"He died five years ago, my Dick."
"Just two."
"My Dick was two." We both were breathing hard. "Why did he die?"
"We never knew. He was the loveliest boy, but delicate from his birth. At the end he just faded away, with the merest cold."
"So did my Dick—a chill. We thought he would be up and about the next day, and he just—"
Her awful gesture of regret was suddenly paralyzed. She seemed to be fighting her way to a discovery.
"It's—it's as if," she stammered, "they each had half a life."
I felt the usual instinct to treat her as though she were ill, because it was
evident that she was sustained by a mystic interpretation of life. But she had
already taught me something, so I stood aside while she fell on her knees, and
wondered why she did not look at the
The parlor-maid knocked at the door.
"Mrs. Baldry and Dr. Anderson are waiting in the drawing-room, ma'am."
Margaret reassumed her majesty, and put her white face close to the glass as she pinned up her braids.
"I knew there was a something," she moaned, and set the hair-pins all awry. More she could not say, though I clung to her and begged her; but the slow gesture with which, as we were about to leave the room, she laid her hand across the child's photograph somehow convinced me that we were not to be victorious.
When we went into the drawing-room we found Dr. Anderson, plump and expository,
balancing himself on the balls of his feet on the hearth-rug and enjoying the
caress of the fire on his calves, while Kitty, showing against the dark frame of
her oak
"A complete case of amnesia," he was saying as Margaret, white-lipped, yet less shy than I had ever seen her, went to a seat by the window, and I sank down on the sofa. "His unconscious self is refusing to let him resume his relations with his normal life, and so we get this loss of memory."
"I've always said," declared Kitty, with an air of good sense, "that if he would make an effort—"
"Effort!" He jerked his round head about. "The mental life that can be controlled
by effort isn't the mental life that matters. You've been stuffed up when you
were young with talk about a thing called self-control, a sort of barmaid of the
soul that says, 'Time's up, gentlemen,' and 'Here, you've had enough.'
"He wished for nothing," said Kitty. "He was fond of us, and he had a lot of money."
"Ah, but he did!" countered the doctor, gleefully. He seemed to be enjoying it all. "Quite obviously he has forgotten his life here because he is discontented with it. What clearer proof could you need than the fact you were just telling me when these ladies came in—that the reason the War Office didn't wire to you when he was wounded was that he had forgotten to register his address? Don't you see what that means?"
"Forgetfulness," shrugged Kitty. "He isn't businesslike." She had always
nourished a doubt as to whether Chris was really, as she put it, practical, and
his income and his international reputation weighed nothing as against his
evident inability to pick up pieces at sales.
"One forgets only those things that one wants to forget. It's our business to find out why he wanted to forget this life."
"He can remember quite well when he is hypnotized," she said obstructively. She had quite ceased to glow.
"Oh, hypnotism's a silly trick. It releases the memory of a dissociated personality which can't be related—not possibly in such an obstinate case as this—to the waking personality. I'll do it by talking to him. Getting him to tell his dreams." He beamed at the prospect. "But you—it would be such a help if you would give me any clue to this discontent."
"I tell you," said Kitty, "he was not discontented till he went mad."
He caught the glint of her rising temper.
"Ah," he said, "madness is an indictment not of the people one lives with, only
of the high gods. If there was anything, it's evident that it was not your
fault." A smile sugared it, and knowing that where
"Nothing and everything was wrong," I said at last. "I've always felt it." A sharp movement of Kitty's body confirmed my deep, old suspicion that she hated me.
He went back further than I expected.
"His relations with his father and mother, now?"
"His father was old when he was born, and always was a little jealous of him. His mother was not his sort. She wanted a stupid son who would have been satisfied with shooting."
He laid down a remark very softly, like a hunter setting a snare.
"He turned, then, to sex with a peculiar need."
It was Margaret who spoke, shuffling her feet awkwardly under her chair.
"Yes, he was always dependent."
We gaped at her who said this of our splendid Chris, and I saw that she was not as she had been. There was a directness of speech, a straight stare, that was for her a frenzy. "Doctor," she said, her mild voice roughened, "what's the use of talking? You can't cure him,"—she caught her lower lip with her teeth and fought back from the brink of tears,—"make him happy, I mean. All you can do is to make him ordinary."
"I grant you that's all I do," he said. It queerly seemed as though he was experiencing the relief one feels on meeting an intellectual equal. "It's my profession to bring people from various outlying districts of the mind to the normal. There seems to be a general feeling it's the place where they ought to be. Sometimes I don't see the urgency myself."
She continued without joy:
"I know how you could bring him back
The little man had lost in a moment his glib assurance, his knowingness about the pathways of the soul.
"Well, I'm willing to learn."
"Remind him of the boy," said Margaret.
The doctor ceased suddenly to balance on the balls of his feet.
"What boy?"
"They had a boy."
He looked at Kitty.
"You told me nothing of this!"
"I didn't think it mattered," she answered, and shivered and looked cold, as she always did at the memory of her unique contact with death. "He died five years ago."
He dropped his head back, stared at the cornice, and said with the soft malignity
of a clever person dealing with the slow-witted.
"These subtle discontents are often the most difficult to deal with." Sharply he turned to Margaret. "How would you remind him?"
"Take him something the boy wore, some toy he played with."
Their eyes met wisely.
"It would have to be you that did it."
Her face assented.
Kitty said:
"I don't understand. How does it matter so much?" She repeated it twice before she broke the silence that Margaret's wisdom had brought down on us. Then Dr. Anderson, rattling the keys in his trousers-pockets and swelling red and perturbed, answered:
"I don't know, but it does."
Kitty's voice soared in satisfaction.
"Oh, then it's very simple. Mrs. Grey can do it now. Jenny, take Mrs. Grey up to
the nursery. There are lots of things up there."
Margaret made no movement, but continued to sit with her heavy boots resting on
the edge of their soles. Dr. Anderson searched Kitty's face, exclaimed, "Oh,
well!" and flung himself into an arm-chair so suddenly that the springs spoke.
Margaret smiled at that and turned to me, "Yes, take me to the nursery, please."
Yet as I walked beside her up the stairs I knew this compliance was not the
indication of any melting of this new steely sternness. The very breathing that
I heard as I knelt beside her at the nursery door and eased the disused lock
seemed to come from a different and a harsher body than had been hers before. I
did not wonder that she was feeling bleak, since in a few moments she was to go
out and say the words that would end all her happiness, that would destroy all
the gifts her generosity had so difficultly amassed. Well, that is the kind of
thing one has to do in this life.
But hardly had the door opened and disclosed the empty, sunny spaces swimming
with motes before her old sweetness flowered again. She moved forward slowly,
tremulous and responsive and pleased, as though the room's loveliness was a gift
to her. She stretched out her hands to the clear sapphire walls and the bright
fresco of birds and animals with a young delight. So, I thought, might a bride
go about the house her husband secretly prepared for her. Yet when she reached
the hearth and stood with her hands behind her on the fireguard, looking about
her at all the exquisite devices of our nursery to rivet health and amusement on
our reluctant little visitor, it was so apparent that she was a mother that I
could not imagine how it was that I had not always known it. It has sometimes
happened that painters who have kept close enough to earth to see a heavenly
vision have made pictures of the assumption of the Blessed Virgin which do
"Oh, the fine room!" she cried. "But where's his little cot?"
"It isn't here. This is the day nursery. The night nursery we didn't keep. It is just bedroom now."
Her eyes shone at the thought of the cockered childhood this had been.
"I couldn't afford to have two nurseries. It makes all the difference to the wee
things." She hung above me for a little as I opened the ottoman and rummaged
among Oliver's clothes. "Ah, the lovely little frocks! Did she make them? Ah,
"Oh, no," I said. I couldn't find the clothes I wanted. "The only thing that taxed his little brain was the prayers his Scotch nurse taught him, and he didn't bother much over them. He would say, 'Jesus, tender leopard,' instead of 'Jesus, tender shepherd,' as if he liked it better."
"Did you ever! The things they say! He'd a Scotch nurse. They say they're very
good. I've read in the papers the Queen of Spain has one." She had gone back to
the hearth again, and was playing with the toys on the mantelpiece. It was odd
that she showed no interest in my search for the most memorable garment. A
vivacity which played above her tear-wet strength, like a ball of St. Elmo's
fire on the mast of a stout ship, made me realize she still was strange. "The
toys
I had laid my hand on them at last. I wished, in the strangest way, that I had not. Yet of course it had to be.
"That's just what he did do," I said.
As she felt the fine kid-skin of the clockwork dog, her face began to twitch.
"I thought perhaps my baby had left me because I had so little to give him. But
if a baby could leave all this!" She cried flatly, as though constant repetition
in the night had made it as instinctive a reaction to suffering as a moan, "I
want a child! I want a child!" Her arms invoked the wasted life that had been
squandered in this room. "It's all gone so wrong," she fretted, and her voice
dropped to a solemn whisper. "They each had only half a life."
I had to steady her. She could not go to Chris and shock him not only by her news, but also by her agony. I rose and took her the things I had found in the ottoman and the toy cupboard.
"I think these are the best things to take. This is one of the blue jerseys he used to wear. This is the red ball he and his father used to play with on the lawn."
Her hard hunger for the child that was not melted into a tenderness for the child that had been. She looked broodingly at what I carried, then laid a kind hand on my arm.
"You've chosen the very things he will remember. Oh, you poor girl!"
I found that from her I could accept even pity.
She nursed the jersey and the ball, changed them from arm to arm, and held them to her face.
"I think I know the kind of boy he was—a man from the first." She kissed
I stared.
"To get Chris's boy," she moaned. "You thought I meant to take them out to Chris?" She wrung her hands; her weak voice quavered at the sternness of her resolution. "How can I?"
I grasped her hands.
"Why should you bring him back?" I said. I might have known there was deliverance in her yet.
Her slow mind gathered speed.
"Either I never should have come," she pleaded, "or you should let him be." She
was arguing not with me, but with the whole hostile, reasonable world. "Mind
you, I wasn't sure if I ought to come the second time, seeing we both were
married and that. I prayed and read the Bible,
"Put it like this." She made such explanatory gestures as I have seen cabmen make
over their saucers of tea round a shelter. "If my boy had been a cripple,—he
wasn't; he had the loveliest limbs,—
"I seemed to have to tell them that I knew a way. I suppose it would have been sly to sit there and not tell them. I told them, anyhow. But, oh, I can't do it! Go out and put an end to the poor love's happiness. After the time he's had, the war and all. And then he'll have to go back there! I can't! I can't!"
I felt an ecstatic sense of ease. Everything was going to be right. Chris was to
live in the interminable enjoyment of his youth and love. There was to be a
finality about his happiness which usually belongs only to loss and calamity; he
was to be as happy as a ring cast into the sea is lost, as a man whose coffin
has lain for centuries beneath the sod is dead. Yet Margaret continued to say,
and irritated
"I oughtn't to do it, ought I?"
"Of course not! Of course not!" I cried heartily, but the attention died in her eyes. She stared over my shoulder at the open door, where Kitty stood.
The poise of her head had lost its pride, the shadows under her eyes were black
like the marks of blows, and all her loveliness was diverted to the expression
of grief. She held in her arms her Chinese sleeve dog, a once-prized pet that
had fallen from favor and was now only to be met whining upward for a little
love at every passer in the corridors, and it sprawled leaf-brown across her
white frock, wriggling for joy at the unaccustomed embrace. That she should at
last have stooped to lift the lonely little dog was a sign of her deep
unhappiness. Why she had come up I do not know, nor why her face puckered with
tears as she looked
Now, why did Kitty, who was the falsest thing on earth, who was in tune with
every kind of falsity, by merely suffering somehow remind us of reality? Why did
her tears reveal to me what I had learned long ago, but had forgotten in my
frenzied love, that there is a draft that we must drink or not be fully human? I
knew that one must know the truth. I knew quite well that when one is adult one
must raise to one's lips the wine of the truth, heedless that it is not sweet
like milk, but draws the mouth with its strength, and celebrate communion
with
I did not know how I could pierce Margaret's simplicity with this last cruel subtlety, and turned to her, stammering. But she said:
"Give me the jersey and the ball."
The rebellion had gone from her eyes, and they were again the seat of all gentle wisdom.
"The truth's the truth," she said, "and he must know it."
I looked up at her, gasping, yet not truly amazed; for I had always known she could not leave her throne of righteousness for long, and she repeated, "The truth's the truth," smiling sadly at the strange order of this earth.
We kissed not as women, but as lovers do; I think we each embraced that part of Chris the other had absorbed by her love. She took the jersey and the ball, and clasped them as though they were a child. When she got to the door she stopped and leaned against the lintel. Her head fell back; her eyes closed; her mouth was contorted as though she swallowed bitter drink.
I lay face downward on the ottoman and presently heard her poor boots go creaking
down the corridors. Through the feeling of doom that filled the room as tangibly
as a scent I stretched out to the thought of Chris. In the deep daze of devotion
which followed recollection of
She said:
"I wish she would hurry up. She's got to do it sooner or later."
My spirit was asleep in horror. Out there Margaret was breaking his heart
"Aren't they coming back?" asked Kitty. "I wish you'd look."
There was nothing in the garden; only a column of birds swinging across the lake of green light that lay before the sunset.
A long time after Kitty spoke once more:
"Jenny, do look again."
There had fallen a twilight which was a wistfulness of the earth. Under the
cedar-boughs I dimly saw a figure mothering something in her arms. Almost had
she dissolved into the shadows; in another moment the night would have her. With
his back turned on this fading unhappiness Chris walked across the lawn. He was
looking up under his brows at the over-arching house as though it were a hated
place to which, against all his hopes, business had forced him to return. He
"Jenny, aren't they there?" Kitty asked again.
"They're both there."
"Is he coming back?"
"He's coming back."
"Jenny! Jenny! How does he look?"
"Oh,"—how could I say it?—"every inch a soldier."
She crept behind me to the window, peered over my shoulder and saw.
I heard her suck in her breath with satisfaction.
"He's cured!" she whispered slowly. "He's cured!"