Stories by English Authors: Orient
V >> Various >> Stories by English Authors: Orient
She smiled a little.
"You must learn to possess your soul in patience," she said, and glanced
inconsequently from Broomhurst to her husband, and then dropped her eyes
and was silent a moment.
John was obviously, and a little audibly, enjoying his dinner. He sat
with his chair pushed close to the table, and his elbows awkwardly
raised, swallowing his soup in gulps. He grasped his spoon tightly in
his bony hand, so that its swollen joints stood out larger and uglier
than ever, his wife thought.
Her eyes wandered to Broomhurst's hands. They were well shaped, and,
though not small, there was a look of refinement about them; he had a
way of touching things delicately, a little lingeringly, she noticed.
There was an air of distinction about his clear-cut, clean-shaven face,
possibly intensified by contrast with Drayton's blurred features; and it
was, perhaps, also by contrast with the gray cuffs that showed beneath
John's ill-cut drab suit that the linen Broomhurst wore seemed to her
particularly spotless.
Broomhurst's thoughts, for his part, were a good deal occupied with his
hostess.
She was pretty, he thought, or perhaps it was that, with the wide,
dry lonely plain as a setting, her fragile delicacy of appearance was
invested with a certain flower-like charm.
"The silence here seems rather strange, rather appalling at first, when
one is fresh from a town," he pursued, after a moment's pause; "but I
suppose you're used to it, eh, Drayton? How do _you_ find life here,
Mrs. Drayton?" he asked, a little curiously, turning to her as he spoke.
She hesitated a second. "Oh, much the same as I should find it anywhere
else, I expect," she replied; "after all, one carries the possibilities
of a happy life about with one; don't you think so? The Garden of Eden
wouldn't necessarily make my life any happier, or less happy, than a
howling wilderness like this. It depends on one's self entirely."
"Given the right Adam and Eve, the desert blossoms like the rose, in
fact," Broomhurst answered, lightly, with a smiling glance inclusive of
husband and wife; "you two don't feel as though you'd been driven out of
Paradise, evidently."
Drayton raised his eyes from his plate with a smile of total
incomprehension.
"Great heavens! what an Adam to select!" thought Broomhurst,
involuntarily, as Mrs. Drayton rose rather suddenly from the table.
"I'll come and help with that packing-case," John said, rising, in his
turn, lumberingly from his place; "then we can have a smoke--eh! Kathie
don't mind, if we sit near the entrance."
The two men went out together, Broomhurst holding the lantern, for the
moon had not yet risen. Mrs. Drayton followed them to the doorway, and,
pushing the looped-up hanging farther aside, stepped out into the cool
darkness.
Her heart was beating quickly, and there was a great lump in her throat
that frightened her as though she were choking.
"And I am his _wife_--I _belong_ to him!" she cried, almost aloud.
She pressed both her hands tightly against her breast, and set her
teeth, fighting to keep down the rising flood that threatened to sweep
away her composure. "Oh, what a fool I am! What an hysterical fool of a
woman I am!" she whispered below her breath. She began to walk slowly up
and down outside the tent, in the space illumined by the lamplight, as
though striving to make her outwardly quiet movements react upon the
inward tumult. In a little while she had conquered; she quietly entered
the tent, drew a low chair to the entrance, and took up a book, just as
footsteps became audible. A moment afterward Broomhurst emerged from the
darkness into the circle of light outside, and Mrs. Drayton raised her
eyes from the pages she was turning to greet him with a smile.
"Are your things all right?"
"Oh, yes, more or less, thank you. I was a little concerned about a case
of books, but it isn't much damaged fortunately. Perhaps I've some you
would care to look at?"
"The books will be a godsend," she returned, with a sudden brightening
of the eyes; "I was getting _desperate_--for books."
"What are you reading now?" he asked, glancing at the volume that lay in
her lap.
"It's a Browning. I carry it about a good deal. I think I like to have
it with me, but I don't seem to read it much."
"Are you waiting for a suitable optimistic moment?" Broomhurst inquired,
smiling.
"Yes, now that you mention it, I think that must be why I am waiting,"
she replied, slowly.
"And it doesn't come--even in the Garden of Eden? Surely the serpent,
pessimism, hasn't been insolent enough to draw you into conversation
with him?" he said, lightly.
"There has been no one to converse with at all--when John is away,
I mean. I think I should have liked a little chat with the serpent
immensely by way of a change," she replied, in the same tone.
"Ah, yes," Broomhurst said, with sudden seriousness; "it must be
unbearably dull for you alone here, with Drayton away all day."
Mrs. Drayton's hand shook a little as she fluttered a page of her open
book.
"I should think it quite natural you would be irritated beyond endurance
to hear that all's right with the world, for instance, when you were
sighing for the long day to pass," he continued.
"I don't mind the day so much; it's the evenings." She abruptly checked
the swift words, and flushed painfully. "I mean--I've grown stupidly
nervous, I think--even when John is here. Oh, you have no idea of the
awful _silence_ of this place at night," she added, rising hurriedly
from her low seat, and moving closer to the doorway. "It is so close,
isn't it?" she said, almost apologetically. There was silence for quite
a minute.
Broomhurst's quick eyes noted the silent momentary clinching of the
hands that hung at her side, as she stood leaning against the support at
the entrance.
"But how stupid of me to give you such a bad impression of the camp--the
first evening, too!" Mrs. Drayton exclaimed, presently; and her
companion mentally commended the admirable composure of her voice.
"Probably you will never notice that it _is_ lonely at all," she
continued; "John likes it here. He is immensely interested in his work,
you know. I hope _you_ are too. If you are interested it is all quite
right. I think the climate tries me a little. I never used to be
stupid--and nervous. Ah, here's John; he's been round to the kitchen
tent, I suppose."
"Been looking after that fellow cleanin' my gun, my dear," John
explained, shambling toward the deck-chair.
Later Broomhurst stood at his own tent door. He looked up at the
star-sown sky, and the heavy silence seemed to press upon him like an
actual, physical burden.
He took his cigar from between his lips presently, and looked at the
glowing end reflectively before throwing it away.
"Considering that she has been alone with him here for six months, she
has herself very well in hand--_very_ well in hand," he repeated.
It was Sunday morning. John Drayton sat just inside the tent, presumably
enjoying his pipe before the heat of the day. His eyes furtively
followed his wife as she moved about near him, sometimes passing close
to his chair in search of something she had mislaid. There was colour
in her cheeks; her eyes, though preoccupied, were bright; there was a
lightness and buoyancy in her step which she set to a little dancing air
she was humming under her breath.
After a moment or two the song ceased; she began to move slowly,
sedately; and, as if chilled by a raw breath of air, the light faded
from her eyes, which she presently turned toward her husband.
"Why do you look at me?" she asked, suddenly.
"I don't know, my dear," he began slowly and laboriously, as was his
wont. "I was thinkin' how nice you looked--jest now--much better, you
know; but somehow,"--he was taking long whiffs at his pipe, as usual,
between each word, while she stood patiently waiting for him to
finish,--"somehow, you alter so, my dear--you're quite pale again, all
of a minute."
She stood listening to him, noticing against her will the more than
suspicion of cockney accent and the thick drawl with which the words
were uttered.
His eyes sought her face piteously. She noticed that too, and stood
before him torn by conflicting emotions, pity and disgust struggling in
a hand-to-hand fight within her.
"Mr. Broomhurst and I are going down by the well to sit; it's cooler
there. Won't you come?" she said at last, gently.
He did not reply for a moment; then he turned his head aside, sharply
for him.
"No, my dear, thank you; I'm comfortable enough here," he returned,
huskily.
She stood over him, hesitating a second; then moved abruptly to the
table, from which she took a book.
He had risen from his seat by the time she turned to go out, and he
intercepted her timorously.
"Kathie, give me a kiss before you go," he whispered, hoarsely. "I--I
don't often bother you."
She drew her breath in deeply as he put his arms clumsily about her;
but she stood still, and he kissed her on the forehead, and touched the
little wavy curls that strayed across it gently with his big, trembling
fingers.
When he released her, she moved at once impetuously to the open doorway.
On the threshold she hesitated, paused a moment irresolutely, and then
turned back.
"Shall I--does your pipe want filling, John?" she asked, softly.
"No, thank you, my dear."
"Would you like me to stay, read to you, or anything?"
He looked up at her wistfully. "N-no, thank you; I'm not much of a
reader, you know, my dear--somehow."
She hated herself for knowing that there would be a "my dear," probably
a "somehow," in his reply, and despised herself for the sense of
irritated impatience she felt by anticipation, even before the words
were uttered.
There was a moment's hesitating silence, broken by the sound of quick,
firm footsteps without. Broomhurst paused at the entrance, and looked
into the tent.
"Aren't you coming, Drayton?" he asked, looking first at Drayton's wife
and then swiftly putting in his name with a scarcely perceptible pause.
"Too lazy? But you, Mrs. Drayton?"
"Yes, I'm coming," she said.
They left the tent together, and walked some few steps in silence.
Broomhurst shot a quick glance at his companion's face.
"Anything wrong?" he asked, presently.
Though the words were ordinary enough, the voice in which they were
spoken was in some subtle fashion a different voice from that in
which he had talked to her nearly two months ago, though it would have
required a keen sense of nice shades in sound to have detected the
change.
Mrs. Drayton's sense of niceties in sound was particularly keen, but she
answered quietly, "Nothing, thank you."
They did not speak again till the trees round the stone well were
reached.
Broomhurst arranged their seats comfortably beside it.
"Are we going to read or talk?" he asked, looking up at her from his
lower place.
"Well, we generally talk most when we arrange to read; so shall we agree
to talk to-day for a change, by way of getting some reading done?" she
rejoined, smiling. "_You_ begin."
Broomhurst seemed in no hurry to avail himself of the permission; he
was apparently engrossed in watching the flecks of sunshine on Mrs.
Drayton's white dress. The whirring of insects, and the creaking of a
Persian wheel somewhere in the neighbourhood, filtered through the hot
silence.
Mrs. Drayton laughed after a few minutes; there was a touch of
embarrassment in the sound.
"The new plan doesn't answer. Suppose you read, as usual, and let me
interrupt, also as usual, after the first two lines."
He opened the book obediently, but turned the pages at random.
She watched him for a moment, and then bent a little forward toward him.
"It is my turn now," she said, suddenly; "is anything wrong?"
He raised his head, and their eyes met. There was a pause. "I will be
more honest than you," he returned; "yes, there is."
"What?"
"I've had orders to move on."
She drew back, and her lips whitened, though she kept them steady.
"When do you go?"
"On Wednesday."
There was silence again; the man still kept his eyes on her face.
The whirring of the insects and the creaking of the wheel had suddenly
grown so strangely loud and insistent that it was in a half-dazed
fashion she at length heard her name--"_Kathleen!_"
"Kathleen!" he whispered again, hoarsely.
She looked him full in the face, and once more their eyes met in a long,
grave gaze.
The man's face flushed, and he half rose from his seat with an impetuous
movement; but Kathleen stopped him with a glance.
"Will you go and fetch my work? I left it in the tent," she said,
speaking very clearly and distinctly; "and then will you go on reading?
I will find the place while you are gone."
She took the book from his hand, and he rose and stood before her.
There was a mute appeal in his silence, and she raised her head slowly.
Her face was white to the lips, but she looked at him unflinchingly; and
without a word he turned and left her.
Mrs. Drayton was resting in the tent on Tuesday afternoon. With the help
of cushions and some low chairs, she had improvised a couch, on which
she lay quietly with her eyes closed. There was a tenseness, however, in
her attitude which indicated that sleep was far from her.
Her features seemed to have sharpened during the last few days, and
there were hollows in her cheeks. She had been very ill for a long time,
but all at once, with a sudden movement, she turned her head and buried
her face in the cushions with a groan. Slipping from her place, she fell
on her knees beside the couch, and put both hands before her mouth to
force back the cry that she felt struggling to her lips.
For some moments the wild effort she was making for outward calm, which
even when she was alone was her first instinct, strained every nerve and
blotted out sight and hearing, and it was not till the sound was very
near that she was conscious of the ring of horse's hoofs on the plain.
She raised her head sharply, with a thrill of fear, still kneeling, and
listened.
There was no mistake. The horseman was riding in hot haste, for the thud
of the hoofs followed one another swiftly.
As Mrs. Drayton listened her white face grew whiter, and she began to
tremble. Putting out shaking hands, she raised herself by the arms of
the folding-chair and stood upright.
Nearer and nearer came the thunder of the approaching sound, mingled
with startled exclamations and the noise of trampling feet from the
direction of the kitchen tent.
Slowly, mechanically almost, she dragged herself to the entrance, and
stood clinging to the canvas there. By the time she had reached it
Broomhurst had flung himself from the saddle, and had thrown the reins
to one of the men.
Mrs. Drayton stared at him with wide, bright eyes as he hastened toward
her.
"I thought you--you are not--" she began, and then her teeth began to
chatter. "I am so cold!" she said, in a little, weak voice.
Broomhurst took her hand and led her over the threshold back into the
tent.
"Don't be so frightened," he implored; "I came to tell you first. I
thought it wouldn't frighten you so much as--Your--Drayton is--very ill.
They are bringing him. I--"
He paused. She gazed at him a moment with parted lips; then she broke
into a horrible, discordant laugh, and stood clinging to the back of a
chair.
Broomhurst started back.
"Do you understand what I mean?" he whispered. "Kathleen, for God's
sake--_don't_--he is _dead_."
He looked over his shoulder as he spoke, her shrill laughter ringing in
his ears. The white glare and dazzle of the plain stretched before him,
framed by the entrance to the tent; far off, against the horizon, there
were moving black specks, which he knew to be the returning servants
with their still burden.
They were bringing John Drayton home.
One afternoon, some months later, Broomhurst climbed the steep lane
leading to the cliffs of a little English village by the sea. He had
already been to the inn, and had been shown by the proprietress the
house where Mrs. Drayton lodged.
"The lady was out, but the gentleman would likely find her if he went
to the cliffs--down by the bay, or thereabouts," her landlady explained;
and, obeying her directions, Broomhurst presently emerged from the shady
woodland path on to the hillside overhanging the sea.
He glanced eagerly round him, and then, with a sudden quickening of the
heart, walked on over the springy heather to where she sat. She turned
when the rustling his footsteps made through the bracken was near enough
to arrest her attention, and looked up at him as he came. Then she rose
slowly and stood waiting for him. He came up to her without a word, and
seized both her hands, devouring her face with his eyes. Something he
saw there repelled him. Slowly he let her hands fall, still looking
at her silently. "You are not glad to see me, and I have counted the
hours," he said, at last, in a dull, toneless voice.
Her lips quivered. "Don't be angry with me--I can't help it--I'm not
glad or sorry for anything now," she answered; and her voice matched his
for grayness.
They sat down together on a long flat stone half embedded in a wiry
clump of whortleberries. Behind them the lonely hillsides rose,
brilliant with yellow bracken and the purple of heather. Before them
stretched the wide sea. It was a soft, gray day. Streaks of pale
sunlight trembled at moments far out on the water. The tide was rising
in the little bay above which they sat, and Broomhurst watched the lazy
foam-edged waves slipping over the uncovered rocks toward the shore,
then sliding back as though for very weariness they despaired of
reaching it. The muffled, pulsing sound of the sea filled the silence.
Broomhurst thought suddenly of hot Eastern sunshine, of the whir of
insect wings on the still air, and the creaking of a wheel in the
distance. He turned and looked at his companion.
"I have come thousands of miles to see you," he said; "aren't you going
to speak to me now I am here?"
"Why did you come? I told you not to come," she answered, falteringly.
"I--" she paused.
"And I replied that I should follow you--if you remember," he answered,
still quietly. "I came because I would not listen to what you said then,
at that awful time. You didn't know _yourself_ what you said. No wonder!
I have given you some months, and now I have come."
There was silence between them. Broomhurst saw that she was crying; her
tears fell fast on to her hands, that were clasped in her lap. Her face,
he noticed, was thin and drawn.
Very gently he put his arm round her shoulder and drew her nearer to
him. She made no resistance; it seemed that she did not notice the
movement; and his arm dropped at his side.
"You asked me why I had come. You think it possible that three months
can change one very thoroughly, then?" he said, in a cold voice.
"I not only think it possible; I have proved it," she replied, wearily.
He turned round and faced her.
"You _did_ love me, Kathleen!" he asserted. "You never said so in words,
but I know it," he added, fiercely.
"Yes, I did."
"And--you mean that you don't now?"
Her voice was very tired. "Yes; I can't help it," she answered; "it has
gone--utterly."
The gray sea slowly lapped the rocks. Overhead the sharp scream of a
gull cut through the stillness. It was broken again, a moment afterward,
by a short hard laugh from the man.
"Don't!" she whispered, and laid a hand swiftly on his arm. "Do you
think it isn't worse for me? I wish to God I _did_ love you!" she cried,
passionately. "Perhaps it would make me forget that, to all intents and
purposes, I am a murderess."
Broomhurst met her wide, despairing eyes with an amazement which yielded
to sudden pitying comprehension.
"So that is it, my darling? You are worrying about _that_? You who were
as loyal as--"
She stopped him with a frantic gesture.
"Don't! _don't!_" she wailed. "If you only knew! Let me try to tell
you--will you?" she urged, pitifully. "It may be better if I tell some
one--if I don't keep it all to myself, and think, and _think_."
She clasped her hands tight, with the old gesture he remembered when she
was struggling for self-control, and waited a moment.
Presently she began to speak in a low, hurried tone: "It began
before you came. I know now what the feeling was that I was afraid to
acknowledge to myself. I used to try and smother it; I used to repeat
things to myself all day--poems, stupid rhymes--_anything_ to keep my
thoughts quite underneath--but I--_hated_ John before you came! We had
been married nearly a year then. I never loved him. Of course you are
going to say, 'Why did you marry him?'" She looked drearily over the
placid sea. "Why _did_ I marry him? I don't know; for the reason that
hundreds of ignorant, inexperienced girls marry, I suppose. My home
wasn't a happy one. I was miserable, and oh--_restless_. I wonder if
men know what it feels like to be restless? Sometimes I think they
can't even guess. John wanted me very badly; nobody wanted me at home
particularly. There didn't seem to be any point in my life. Do you
understand? . . . Of course, being alone with him in that little camp
in that silent plain"--she shuddered--"made things worse. My nerves went
all to pieces. Everything he said, his voice, his accent, his walk,
the way he ate, irritated me so that I longed to rush out sometimes and
shriek--and go _mad_. Does it sound ridiculous to you to be driven mad
by such trifles? I only know I used to get up from the table sometimes
and walk up and down outside, with both hands over my mouth to keep
myself quiet. And all the time I _hated_ myself--how I hated myself! I
never had a word from him that wasn't gentle and tender. I believe he
loved the ground I walked on. Oh, it is _awful_ to be loved like that
when you--" She drew in her breath with a sob. "I--I--it made me sick
for him to come near me--to touch me." She stopped a moment.
Broomhurst gently laid his hand on her quivering one. "Poor little
girl!" he murmured.
"Then _you_ came," she said, "and before long I had another feeling
to fight against. At first I thought it couldn't be true that I loved
you--it would die down. I think I was _frightened_ at the feeling; I
didn't know it hurt so to love any one."
Broomhurst stirred a little. "Go on," he said, tersely.
"But it didn't die," she continued, in a trembling whisper, "and the
other _awful_ feeling grew stronger and stronger--hatred; no, that is
not the word--_loathing_ for--for--John. I fought against it. Yes," she
cried, feverishly, clasping and unclasping her hands; "Heaven knows I
fought it with all my strength, and reasoned with myself, and--oh, I did
_everything_, but--" Her quick-falling tears made speech difficult.
"Kathleen!" Broomhurst urged, desperately, "you couldn't help it, you
poor child. You say yourself you struggled against your feelings. You
were always gentle; perhaps he didn't know."
"But he did--he _did_," she wailed; "it is just that. I hurt him
a hundred times a day; he never said so, but I knew it; and yet I
_couldn't_ be kind to him,--except in words,--and he understood.
And after you came it was worse in one way, for he knew--I _felt_ he
knew--that I loved you. His eyes used to follow me like a dog's, and
I was stabbed with remorse, and I tried to be good to him, but I
couldn't."
"But--he didn't suspect--he trusted you," began Broomhurst. "He had
every reason. No woman was ever so loyal, so--"
"Hush!" she almost screamed. "Loyal! it was the least I could do--to
stop you, I mean--when you--After all, I knew it without your telling
me. I had deliberately married him without loving him. It was my own
fault. I felt it. Even if I couldn't prevent his knowing that I hated
him, I could prevent _that_. It was my punishment. I deserved it for
_daring_ to marry without love. But I didn't spare John one pang after
all," she added, bitterly. "He knew what I felt toward him; I don't
think he cared about anything else. You say I mustn't reproach myself?
When I went back to the tent that morning--when you--when I stopped
you from saying you loved me, he was sitting at the table with his head
buried in his hands; he was crying--bitterly. I saw him,--it is terrible
to see a man cry,--and I stole away gently, but he saw me. I was torn
to pieces, but I _couldn't_ go to him. I knew he would kiss me, and I
shuddered to think of it. It seemed more than ever not to be borne that
he should do that--when I knew _you_ loved me."
"Kathleen," cried her lover, again, "don't dwell on it all so
terribly--don't--"
"How can I forget?" she answered, despairingly. "And then,"--she lowered
her voice,--"oh, I can't tell you--all the time, at the back of my mind
somewhere, there was a burning wish that he might _die_. I used to lie
awake at night, and, do what I would to stifle it, that thought used to
_scorch_ me, I wished it so intensely. Do you believe that by willing
one can bring such things to pass?" she asked, looking at Broomhurst
with feverishly bright eyes. "No? Well, I don't know. I tried to smother
it,--I _really_ tried,--but it was there, whatever other thoughts I
heaped on the top. Then, when I heard the horse galloping across
the plain that morning, I had a sick fear that it was _you_. I knew
something had happened, and my first thought when I saw you alive and
well, and knew it was _John_, was _that it was too good to be true_. I
believe I laughed like a maniac, didn't I? . . . Not to blame? Why, if
it hadn't been for me he wouldn't have died. The men say they saw him
sitting with his head uncovered in the burning sun, his face buried in
his hands--just as I had seen him the day before. He didn't trouble to
be careful; he was too wretched."