The Rosary
Chapter XV
The Consultation
The doctor's room was very quiet. Jane leaned back in his dark green leather
arm-chair, her feet on a footstool, her hands gripping the arms on either side.
The doctor sat at his table, in the round pivot-chair he always used, — a
chair which enabled him to swing round suddenly and face a patient, or to turn
away very quietly and bend over his table.
Just now he was not looking at Jane. He had been giving her a detailed
account of his visit to Castle Gleneesh, which he had left only on the previous
evening. He had spent five hours with Garth. It seemed kindest to tell her all;
but he was looking straight before him as he talked, because he knew that at
last the tears were running unchecked down Jane's cheeks, and he wished her to
think he did not notice them.
"You understand, dear," he was saying, "the actual wounds are going on well.
Strangely enough, though the retina of each eye was pierced, and the sight is
irrecoverably gone, there was very little damage done to surrounding parts, and
the brain is quite uninjured. The present danger arises from the shock to the
nervous system and from the extreme mental anguish caused by the realisation of
his loss. The physical suffering during the first days and nights must have been
terrible. Poor fellow, he looks shattered by it. But his constitution is
excellent, and his life has been so clean, healthy, and normal, that he had
every chance of making a good recovery, were it not that as the pain abated and
his blindness became more a thing to be daily and hourly realised, his mental
torture was so excessive. Sight has meant so infinitely much to him, — beauty
of form, beauty of colour. The artist in him was so all-pervading. They tell me
he said very little. He is a brave man and a strong one. But his temperature
began to vary alarmingly; he showed symptoms of mental trouble, of which I need
not give you technical details; and a nerve specialist seemed more necessary
than an oculist. Therefore he is now in my hands."
The doctor paused, straightened a few books lying on the table, and drew a
small bowl of violets closer to him. He studied these attentively for a few
moments, then put them back where his wife had placed them and went on speaking.
"I am satisfied on the whole. He needed a friendly voice to penetrate the
darkness. He needed a hand to grasp his, in faithful comprehension. He did not
want pity, and those who talked of his loss without understanding it, or being
able to measure its immensity, maddened him. He needed a fellow-man to come to
him and say: 'It is a fight — an awful, desperate fight. But by God's grace you
will win through to victory. It would be far easier to die; but to die would be
to lose; you must live to win. It is utterly beyond all human strength; but by
God's grace you will come through conqueror.' All this I said to him, Jeanette,
and a good deal more; and then a strangely beautiful thing happened. I can tell
you, and of course I could tell Flower, but to no one else on earth would I
repeat it. The difficulty had been to obtain from him any response whatever. He
did not seem able to rouse sufficiently to notice anything going on around him.
But those words, 'by God's grace,' appeared to take hold of him and find
immediate echo in his inner consciousness. I heard him repeat them once or
twice, and then change them to 'with the abundance of Thy grace.' Then he turned
his head slowly on the pillow, and what one could see of his face seemed
transformed. He said: 'Now I remember it, and the music is this'; and his hands
moved on the bedclothes, as if forming chords. Then, in a very low voice, but
quite clearly, he repeated the second verse of the VENI, CREATOR SPIRITUS. I
knew it, because I used to sing it as a chorister in my father's church at home.
You remember?"
"'Enable with perpetual light
The dulness of our blinded sight.
Anoint and cheer our soiled face
With the abundance of Thy grace.
Keep far our foes; give peace at home;
Where Thou art Guide, no ill can come.'"
"It was the most touching thing I ever heard."
The doctor paused, for Jane had buried her face in her hands and was sobbing
convulsively. When her sobs grew less violent, the doctor's quiet voice
continued: "You see, this gave me something to go upon. When a crash such as
this happens, all a man has left to hold on to is his religion. According as his
spiritual side has been developed, will his physical side stand the strain.
Dalmain has more of the real thing than any one would think who only knew him
superficially. Well, after that we talked quite definitely, and I persuaded him
to agree to one or two important arrangements. You know, he has no relations of
his own, to speak of; just a few cousins, who have never been very friendly. He
is quite alone up there; for, though he has hosts of friends, this is a time
when friends would have to be very intimate to be admitted; and though he seemed
so boyish and easy to know, I begin to doubt whether any of us knew the real
Garth — the soul of the man, deep down beneath the surface."
Jane lifted her head. "I did," she said simply.
"Ah," said the doctor, "I see. Well, as I said, ordinary friends could not be
admitted. Lady Ingleby went, in her sweet impulsive way, without letting them
know she was coming; travelled all the way up from Shenstone with no maid, and
nothing but a handbag, and arrived at the door in a fly. Robert Mackenzie, the
local medical man, who is an inveterate misogynist, feared at first she was an
unsuspected wife of Dal's. He seemed to think unannounced ladies arriving in
hired vehicles must necessarily turn out to be undesirable wives. I gather they
had a somewhat funny scene. But Lady Ingleby soon got round old Robbie, and came
near to charming him — as whom does she not? But of course they did not dare
let her into Dal's room; so her ministry of consolation appears to have
consisted in letting Dal's old housekeeper weep on her beautiful shoulder. It
was somewhat of a comedy, hearing about it, when one happened to know them all,
better than they knew each other. But to return to practical details. He has had
a fully trained male nurse and his own valet to wait on him. He absolutely
refused one of our London hospital nurses, who might have brought a little
gentle comfort and womanly sympathy to his sick-room. He said he could not stand
being touched by a woman; so there it remained. A competent man was found
instead. But we can now dispense with him, and I have insisted upon sending up a
lady nurse of my own choosing; not so much to wait on him, or do any of a
sick-nurse's ordinary duties — his own man can do these, and he seems a capable
fellow — but to sit with him, read to him, attend to his correspondence, —
there are piles of unopened letters he ought to hear, — in fact help him to
take up life again in his blindness. It will need training; it will require
tact; and this afternoon I engaged exactly the right person. She is a
gentlewoman by birth, has nursed for me before, and is well up in the special
knowledge of mental things which this case requires. Also she is a pretty,
dainty little thing; just the kind of elegant young woman poor Dal would have
liked to have about him when he could see. He was such a fastidious chap about
appearances, and such a connoisseur of good looks. I have written a descriptive
account of her to Dr. Mackenzie, and he will prepare his patient for her
arrival. She is to go up the day after to-morrow. We are lucky to get her, for
she is quite first-rate, and she has only just finished with a long consumptive
case, now on the mend and ordered abroad. So you see, Jeanette, all is shaping
well. — And now, my dear girl, you have a story of your own to tell me, and my
whole attention shall be at your disposal. But first of all I am going to ring
for tea, and you and I will have it quietly down here, if you will excuse me for
a few minutes while I go upstairs and speak to Flower."
* * * * * * *
It seemed so natural to Jane to be pouring out the doctor's tea, and to watch
him putting a liberal allowance of salt on the thin bread- and-butter, and then
folding it over with the careful accuracy which had always characterised his
smallest action. In the essentials he had changed so little since the days when
as a youth of twenty spending his vacations at the rectory he used to give the
lonely girl at the manor so much pleasure by coming up to her school-room tea;
and when it proved possible to dispose of her governess's chaperonage and be by
themselves, what delightful times they used to have, sitting on the hearth-rug,
roasting chestnuts and discussing the many subjects which were of mutual
interest. Jane could still remember the painful pleasure of turning hot
chestnuts on the bars with her fingers, and how she hastened to do them herself,
lest he should be burned. She had always secretly liked and admired his hands,
with the brown thin fingers, so delicate in their touch and yet full of such
gentle strength. She used to love watching them while he sharpened her pencils
or drew wonderful diagrams in her exercise books; thinking how in years to come,
when he performed important operations, human lives would depend upon their
skill and dexterity. In those early years he had seemed so much older than she.
And then came the time when she shot up rapidly into young womanhood and their
eyes were on a level and their ages seemed the same. Then, as the years went on,
Jane began to feel older than he, and took to calling him "Boy" to emphasise
this fact. And then came- -Flower; — and complications. And Jane had to see his
face grow thin and worn, and his hair whiten on the temples. And she yearned
over him, yet dared not offer sympathy. At last things came right for the
doctor, and all the highest good seemed his; in his profession; in his standing
among men; and, above all, in his heart life, which Flower had always held
between her two sweet hands. And Jane rejoiced, but felt still more lonely now
she had no companion in loneliness. And still their friendship held, with Flower
admitted as a third — a wistful, grateful third, anxious to learn from the
woman whose friendship meant so much to her husband, how to succeed where she
had hitherto failed. And Jane's faithful heart was generous and loyal to both,
though in sight of their perfect happiness her loneliness grew.
And now, in her own hour of need, it had to be Deryck only; and the doctor
knew this, and had arranged accordingly; for at last his chance had come, to
repay the faithful devotion of a lifetime. The conversation of that afternoon
would be the supreme test of their friendship. And so, with a specialist's
appreciation of the mental effect of the most trivial external details, the
doctor had ordered muffins, and a kettle on the fire, and had asked Jane to make
the tea.
By the time the kettle boiled, they had remembered the chestnuts, and were
laughing about poor old Fraulein's efforts to keep them in order, and the
strategies by which they used to evade her vigilance. And the years rolled back,
and Jane felt herself very much at home with the chum of her childhood.
Nevertheless, there was a moment of tension when the doctor drew back the
tea-table and they faced each other in easy-chairs on either side of the
fireplace. Each noticed how characteristic was the attitude of the other.
Jane sat forward, her feet firmly planted on the hearth-rug, her arms on her
knees, and her hands clasped in front of her.
The doctor leaned back, one knee crossed over the other, his elbows on the
arms of his chair, the tips of his fingers meeting, in absolute stillness of
body and intense concentration of mind.
The silence between them was like a deep, calm pool.
Jane took the first plunge.
"Deryck, I am going to tell you everything. I am going to speak of my heart,
and mind, and feelings, exactly as if they were bones, and muscles, and lungs. I
want you to combine the offices of doctor and confessor in one."
The doctor had been contemplating his finger-tips. He now glanced swiftly at
Jane, and nodded; then turned his head and looked into the fire.
"Deryck, mine has been a somewhat lonely existence. I have never been
essential to the life of another, and no one has ever touched the real depths of
mine. I have known they were there, but I have known they were unsounded."
The doctor opened his lips, as if to speak; then closed them in a firmer line
than before, and merely nodded his head silently.
"I had never been loved with that love which makes one absolutely first to a
person, nor had I ever so loved. I had — cared very much; but caring is not
loving. — Oh, Boy, I know that now!"
The doctor's profile showed rather white against the dark-green background of
his chair; but he smiled as he answered: "Quite true, dear. There is a
distinction, and a difference."
"I had heaps of friends, and amongst them a good many nice men, mostly rather
younger than myself, who called me 'Miss Champion.' to my face, and 'good old
Jane' behind my back."
The doctor smiled. He had as often heard the expression, and could recall the
whole-hearted affection and admiration in the tones of those who used it.
"Men as a rule," Continued Jane, "get on better with me than do women. Being
large and solid, and usually calling a spade 'a spade;' and not 'a garden
implement,' women consider me strong-minded, and are inclined to be afraid of
me. The boys know they can trust me; they make a confidante of me, looking upon
me as a sort of convenient elder sister who knows less about them than an elder
sister would know, and is probably more ready to be interested in those things
which they choose to tell. Among my men friends, Deryck, was Garth Dalmain."
Jane paused, and the doctor waited silently for her to continue.
"I was always interested in him, partly because he was so original and vivid
in his way of talking, and partly because" — a bright flush suddenly crept up
into the tanned cheeks-"well, though I did not realise it then, I suppose I
found his extraordinary beauty rather fascinating. And then, our circumstances
were so much alike, — both orphans, and well off; responsible to no one for our
actions; with heaps of mutual friends, and constantly staying at the same
houses. We drifted into a pleasant intimacy, and of all my friends, he was the
one who made me feel most like `a man and a brother.' We discussed women by the
dozen, all his special admirations in turn, and the effect of their beauty upon
him, and I watched with interest to see who, at last, would fix his roving
fancy. But on one eventful day all this was changed in half an hour. We were
both staying at Overdene. There was a big house party, and Aunt Georgina had
arranged a concert to which half the neighbourhood was coming. Madame Velma
failed at the last minute. Aunt 'Gina, in a great state of mind, was borrowing
remarks from her macaw. You know how? She always says she is merely quoting `the
dear bird.' Something had to be done. I offered to take Velma's place; and I
sang."
"Ah," said the doctor.
"I sang The Rosary — the song Flower asked for the last time I was here. Do
you remember?"
The doctor nodded. "I remember."
"After that, all was changed between Garth and me. I did not understand it at
first. I knew the music had moved him deeply, beauty of sound having upon him
much the same effect as beauty of colour; but I thought the effect would pass in
the night. But the days went on, and there was always this strange sweet
difference; not anything others would notice; but I suddenly became conscious
that, for the first time in my whole life, I was essential to somebody. I could
not enter a room without realising that he was instantly aware of my presence; I
could not leave a room without knowing that he would at once feel and regret my
absence. The one fact filled and completed all things; the other left a blank
which could not be removed. I knew this, and yet — incredible though it may
appear — I did not realise it meant LOVE. I thought it was an extraordinarily
close bond of sympathy and mutual understanding, brought about principally by
our enjoyment of one another's music. We spent hours in the music-room. I put it
down to that; yet when he looked at me his eyes seemed to touch as well as see
me, and it was a very tender and wonderful touch. And all the while I never
thought of love. I was so plain and almost middle-aged; and he, such a
beautiful, radiant youth. He was like a young sun-god, and I felt warmed and
vivified when he was near; and he was almost always near. Honestly, that was my
side of the days succeeding the concert. But HIS! He told me afterwards, Deryck,
it had been a sudden revelation to him when he heard me sing The Rosary, not of
music only, but of ME. He said he had never thought of me otherwise than as a
good sort of chum; but then it was as if a veil were lifted, and he saw, and
knew, and felt me as a woman. And — no doubt it will seem odd to you. Boy; it
did to me; — but he said, that the woman he found then was his ideal of
womanhood, and that from that hour he wanted me for his own as he had never
wanted anything before."
Jane paused, and looked into the glowing heart of the fire.
The doctor turned slowly and looked at Jane. He himself had experienced the
intense attraction of her womanliness, — all the more overpowering when it was
realised, because it did not appear upon the surface. He had sensed the strong
mother-tenderness lying dormant within her; had known that her arms would prove
a haven of refuge, her bosom a soothing pillow, her love a consolation
unspeakable. In his own days of loneliness and disappointment, the doctor had
had to flee from this in Jane, — a precious gift, so easy to have taken because
of her very ignorance of it; but a gift to which he had no right. Thus the
doctor could well understand the hold it would gain upon a man who had
discovered it, and who was free to win it for his own.
But he only said, "I do not think it odd, dear."
Jane had forgotten the doctor. She came back promptly from the glowing heart
of the fire.
"I am glad you don't," she said. "I did. — well, we both left Overdene on
the same day. I came to you; he went to Shenstone. It was a Tuesday. On the
Friday I went down to Shenstone, and we met again. Having been apart for a
little while seemed to make this curious feeling of `togetherness,' deeper and
sweeter than ever. In the Shenstone house party was that lovely American girl,
Pauline Lister. Garth was enthusiastic about her beauty, and set on painting
her. Everybody made sure he was going to propose to her. Deryck, I thought so,
too; in fact I had advised him to do it. I felt so pleased and interested over
it, though all the while his eyes touched me when he looked at me, and I knew
the day did not begin for him until we had met, and was over when we had said
good-night. And this experience of being first and most to him made everything
so golden, and life so rich, and still I thought of it only as an unusually
delightful friendship. But the evening of my arrival at Shenstone he asked me to
come out on to the terrace after dinner, as he wanted specially to talk to me.
Deryck, I thought it was the usual proceeding of making a confidante of me, and
that I was to hear details of his intentions regarding Miss Lister. Thinking
that, I walked calmly out beside him; sat down on the parapet, in the brilliant
moonlight, and quietly waited for him to begin. Then — oh, Deryck! It
happened."
Jane put her elbows on her knees, and buried her face in her clasped hands.
"I cannot tell you — details. His love — it just poured over me like molten
gold. It melted the shell of my reserve; it burst through the ice of my
convictions; it swept me off my feet upon a torrent of wondrous fire. I knew
nothing in heaven or earth but that this love was mine, and was for me. And then
— oh, Deryck! I can't explain — I don't know myself how it happened — but
this whirlwind of emotion came to rest upon my heart. He knelt with his arms
around me, and we held each other in a sudden great stillness; and in that
moment I was all his, and he knew it. He might have stayed there hours if he had
not moved or spoken; but presently he lifted up his face and looked at me. Then
he said two words. I can't repeat them, Boy; but they brought me suddenly to my
senses, and made me realise what it all meant. Garth Dalmain wanted me to marry
him."
Jane paused, awaiting the doctor's expression of surprise.
"What else could it have meant?" said Deryck Brand, very quietly. He passed
his hand over his lips, knowing they trembled a little. Jane's confessions were
giving him a stiffer time than he had expected. "Well, dear, so you — ?"
"I stood up," said Jane; "for while he knelt there he was master of me, mind
and body; and some instinct told me that if I were to be won to wifehood, my
reason must say `yes' before the rest of me. It is `spirit, soul, and body' in
the Word, not `body, soul, and spirit,' as is so often misquoted; and I believe
the inspired sequence to be the right one."
The doctor made a quick movement of interest. "Good heavens, Jane!" he said.
"You have got hold of a truth there, and you have expressed it exactly as I have
often wanted to express it without being able to find the right words. You have
found them, Jeanette."
She looked into his eager eyes and smiled sadly. "Have I, Boy?" she said.
"Well, they have cost me dear. — I put my lover from me and told him I must
have twelve hours for calm reflection. He was so sure — so sure of me, so sure
of himself — that he agreed without a protest. At my request he left me at
once. The manner of his going I cannot tell, even to you, Dicky. I promised to
meet him at the village church next day and give him my answer. He was to try
the new organ at eleven. We knew we should be alone. I came. He sent away the
blower. He called me to him at the chancel step. The setting was so perfect. The
artist in him sang for joy, and thrilled with expectation. The glory of absolute
certainty was in his eyes; though he had himself well in hand. He kept from
touching me while he asked for my answer. Then — I refused him, point blank,
giving a reason he could not question. He turned from me and left the church,
and I have not spoken to him from that day to this."
A long silence in the doctor's consulting-room. One manly heart was entering
into the pain of another, and yet striving not to be indignant until he knew the
whole truth.
Jane's spirit was strung up to the same pitch as in that fateful hour, and
once more she thought herself right.
At last the doctor spoke. He looked at her searchingly now, and held her
eyes.
"And why did you refuse him, Jane?" The kind voice was rather stern.
Jane put out her hands to him appealingly. "Ah, Boy, I must make you
understand! How could I do otherwise, though, indeed, it was putting away the
highest good life will ever hold for me? Deryck, you know Garth well enough to
realise how dependent he is on beauty; he must be surrounded by it, perpetually.
Before this unaccountable need of each other came to us he had talked to me
quite freely on this point, saying of a plain person whose character and gifts
he greatly admired, and whose face he grew to like in consequence: 'But of
course it was not the sort of face one would have wanted to live with, or to
have day after day opposite to one at table; but then one was not called to that
sort of discipline, which would be martyrdom to me.' Oh, Deryck! Could I have
tied Garth to my plain face? Could I have let myself become a daily, hourly
discipline to that radiant, beauty-loving nature? I know they say, 'Love is
blind.' But that is before Love has entered into his kingdom. Love desirous,
sees only that, in the one beloved, which has awakened the desire. But Love
content, regains full vision, and, as time goes on, those powers of vision
increase and become, by means of daily, hourly, use, — microscopic and
telescopic. Wedded love is not blind. Bah! An outsider staying with married
people is apt to hear what love sees, on both sides, and the delusion of love's
blindness is dispelled forever. I know Garth was blind, during all those golden
days, to my utter lack of beauty, because he wanted ME so much. But when he had
had me, and had steeped himself in all I have to give of soul and spirit beauty;
when the daily routine of life began, which after all has to be lived in
complexions, and with features to the fore; when he sat down to breakfast and I
saw him glance at me and then look away, when I was conscious that I was sitting
behind the coffee-pot, looking my very plainest, and that in consequence my
boy's discipline had begun; could I have borne it? Should I not, in the
miserable sense of failing him day by day, through no fault of my own, have
grown plainer and plainer; until bitterness and disappointment, and perhaps
jealousy, all combined to make me positively ugly? I ask you, Deryck, could I
have borne it?"
The doctor was looking at Jane with an expression of keen professional
interest.
"How awfully well I diagnosed the case when I sent you abroad," he remarked
meditatively. "Really, with so little data to go upon — "
"Oh, Boy," cried Jane, with a movement of impatience, "don't speak to me as
if I were a patient. Treat me as a human being, at least, and tell me — as man
to man — could I have tied Garth Dalmain to my plain face? For you know it is
plain."
The doctor laughed. He was glad to make Jane a little angry. "My dear girl,"
he said, "were we speaking as man to man, I should have a few very strong things
to say to you. As we are speaking as man to woman, — and as a man who has for a
very long time respected, honoured, and admired a very dear and noble woman, —
I will answer your question frankly. You are not beautiful, in the ordinary
acceptation of the word, and no one who really loves you would answer otherwise;
because no one who knows and loves you would dream of telling you a lie. We will
even allow, if you like, that you are plain, although I know half a dozen young
men who, were they here, would want to kick me into the street for saying so,
and I should have to pretend in self-defence that their ears had played them
false and I had said, 'You are JANE,' which is all they would consider mattered.
So long as you are yourself, your friends will be well content. At the same
time, I may add, while this dear face is under discussion, that I can look back
to times when I have felt that I would gladly walk twenty miles for a sight of
it; and in its absence I have always wished it present, and in its presence I
have never wished it away."
"Ah, but, Deryck, you did not have to have it always opposite you at meals,"
insisted Jane gravely.
"Unfortunately not. But I enjoyed the meals more on the happy occasions when
it was there."
"And, Deryck — YOU DID NOT HAVE TO KISS IT."
The doctor threw back his head and shouted with laughter, so that Flower,
passing up the stairs, wondered what turn the conversation could be taking.
But Jane was quite serious; and saw in it no laughing matter.
"No, dear," said the doctor when he had recovered; "to my infinite credit be
it recorded, that in all the years I have known it I have never once kissed it."
"Dicky, don't tease! Oh, Boy, it is the most vital question of my whole life;
and if you do not now give me wise and thoughtful advice, all this difficult
confession will have been for nothing."
The doctor became grave immediately. He leaned forward and took those clasped
hands between his.
"Dear," he said, "forgive me if I seemed to take it lightly. My most earnest
thought is wholly at your disposal. And now let me ask you a few questions. How
did you ever succeed in convincing Dalmain that such a thing as this was an
insuperable obstacle to your marriage?"
"I did not give it as a reason."
"What then did you give as your reason for refusing him?"
"I asked him how old he was."
"Jane! Standing there beside him in the chancel, where he had come awaiting
your answer?"
"Yes. It did seem awful when I came to think it over afterwards. But it
worked."
"I have no doubt it worked. What then?"
"He said he was twenty-seven. I said I was thirty, and looked thirty-five,
and felt forty. I also said he might be twenty-seven, but he looked nineteen,
and I was sure he often felt nine."
"Well?"
"Then I said that I could not marry a mere boy."
"And he acquiesced?"
"He seemed stunned at first. Then he said of course I could not marry him if
I considered him that. He said it was the first time he had given a thought to
himself in the matter. Then he said he bowed to my decision, and he walked down
the church and went out, and we have not met since."
"Jane," said the doctor, "I wonder he did not see through it. You are so
unused to lying, that you cannot have lied, on the chancel step, to the man you
loved, with much conviction."
A dull red crept up beneath Jane's tan.
"Oh, Deryck, it was not entirely a lie. It was one of those dreadful lies
which are 'part a truth,' of which Tennyson says that they are 'a harder matter
to fight.'"
"'A lie which is all a lie
May be met and fought with outright;
But a lie which is part a truth
Is a harder matter to fight,'"
quoted the doctor.
"Yes," said Jane. "And he could not fight this, just because it was partly
true. He is younger than I by three years, and still more by temperament. It was
partly for his delightful youthfulness that I feared my maturity and staidness.
It was part a truth, but oh, Deryck, it was more a lie; and it was altogether a
lie to call him — the man whom I had felt complete master of me the evening
before — 'a mere boy.' Also he could not fight it because it took him so
utterly by surprise. He had been all the time as completely without self-
consciousness, as I had been morbidly full of it. His whole thought had been of
me. Mine had been of him and — of myself."
"Jane," said the doctor, "of all that you have suffered since that hour, you
deserved every pang."
Jane bent her head. "I know," she said.
"You were false to yourself, and not true to your lover. You robbed and
defrauded both. Cannot you now see your mistake? To take it on the lowest
ground, Dalmain, worshipper of beauty as he was, had had a surfeit of pretty
faces. He was like the confectioner's boy who when first engaged is allowed to
eat all the cakes and sweets he likes, and who eats so many in the first week,
that ever after he wants only plain bread-and-butter. YOU were Dal's
bread-and-butter. I am sorry if you do not like the simile."
Jane smiled. "I do like the simile," she said.
"Ah, but you were far more than this, my dear girl. You were his ideal of
womanhood. He believed in your strength and tenderness, your graciousness and
truth. You shattered this ideal; you failed this faith in you. His fanciful,
artistic, eclectic nature with all its unused possibilities of faithful and
passionate devotion, had found its haven in your love; and in twelve hours you
turned it adrift. Jane — it was a crime. The magnificent strength of the fellow
is shown by the way he took it. His progress in his art was not arrested. All
his best work has been done since. He has made no bad mad marriage, in mockery
of his own pain; and no grand loveless one, to spite you. He might have done
both — I mean either. And when I realise that the poor fellow I was with
yesterday — making such a brave fight in the dark, and turning his head on the
pillow to say with a gleam of hope on his drawn face: `Where Thou art Guide, no
ill can come' — had already been put through all this by you — Jane, if you
were a man, I'd horsewhip you!" said the doctor.
Jane squared her shoulders and lifted her head with more of her old spirit
than she had yet shown.
"You have lashed me well, Boy," she said, "as only words spoken in faithful
indignation can lash. And I feel the better for the pain. — And now I think I
ought to tell you that while I was on the top of the Great Pyramid I suddenly
saw the matter from a different standpoint. You remember that view, with its
sharp line of demarcation? On one side the river, and verdure, vegetation,
fruitfulness, a veritable 'garden enclosed'; on the other, vast space as far as
the eye could reach; golden liberty, away to the horizon, but no sign of
vegetation, no hope of cultivation, just barren, arid, loneliness. I felt this
was an exact picture of my life as I live it now. Garth's love, flowing through
it, as the river, could have made it a veritable 'garden of the Lord.' It would
have meant less liberty, but it would also have meant no loneliness. And, after
all, the liberty to live for self alone becomes in time a weary bondage. Then I
realised that I had condemned him also to this hard desert life. I came down and
took counsel of the old Sphinx. Those calm, wise eyes, looking on into futurity,
seemed to say: 'They only live who love.' That evening I resolved to give up the
Nile trip, return home immediately, send for Garth, admit all to him, asking him
to let us both begin again just where we were three years ago in the moonlight
on the terrace at Shenstone. Ten minutes after I had formed this decision, I
heard of his accident."
The doctor shaded his face with his hand. "The wheels of time," he said in a
low voice, "move forward — always; backward, never."
"Oh, Deryck," cried Jane, "sometimes they do. You and Flower know that
sometimes they do."
The doctor smiled sadly and very tenderly. "I know," he said, "that there is
always one exception which proves every rule." Then he added quickly: "But,
unquestionably, it helps to mend matters, so far as your own mental attitude is
concerned, that before you knew of Dalmain's blindness you should have admitted
yourself wrong, and made up your mind to trust him."
"I don't know that I was altogether clear about having been wrong," said
Jane, "but I was quite convinced that I couldn't live any longer without him,
and was therefore prepared to risk it. And of course now, all doubt or need to
question is swept away by my poor boy's accident, which simplifies matters,
where that particular point is concerned."
The doctor looked at Jane with a sudden raising of his level brows.
"Simplifies matters?" he said.
Then, as Jane, apparently satisfied with the expression, did not attempt to
qualify it, he rose and stirred the fire; standing over it for a few moments in
silent thought. When he sat down again, his voice was very quiet, but there was
an alertness about his expression which roused Jane. She felt that the crisis of
their conversation had been reached.
"And now, my dear Jeanette," said the doctor, "suppose you tell me what you
intend doing."
"Doing?" said Jane. "Why, of course, I shall go straight to Garth. I only
want you to advise me how best to let him know I am coming, and whether it is
safe for him to have the emotion of my arrival. Also I don't want to risk being
kept from him by doctors or nurses. My place is by his side. I ask no better
thing of life than to be always beside him. But sick-room attendants are apt to
be pig- headed; and a fuss under these circumstances would be unbearable. A wire
from you will make all clear."
"I see," said the doctor slowly. "Yes, a wire from me will undoubtedly open a
way for you to Garth Dalmain's bedside. And, arrived there, what then?"
A smile of ineffable tenderness parted Jane's lips. The doctor saw it, but
turned away immediately. It was not for him, or for any man, to see that look.
The eyes which should have seen it were sightless evermore.
"What then, Deryck? Love will know best what then. All barriers will be swept
away, and Garth and I will be together."
The doctor's finger-tips met very exactly before he spoke again; and when he
did speak, his tone was very level and very kind.
"Ah, Jane," he said, "that is the woman's point of view. It is certainly the
simplest, and perhaps the best. But at Garth's bedside you will be confronted
with the man's point of view; and I should be failing the trust you have placed
in me did I not put that before you now. — From the man's point of view, your
own mistaken action three years ago has placed you now in an almost impossible
position. If you go to Garth with the simple offer of your love — the treasure
he asked three years ago and failed to win — he will naturally conclude the
love now given is mainly pity; and Garth Dalmain is not the man to be content
with pity, where he has thought to win love, and failed. Nor would he allow any
woman — least of all his crown of womanhood — to tie herself to his blindness
unless he were sure such binding was her deepest joy. And how could you expect
him to believe this in face of the fact that, when he was all a woman's heart
could desire, you refused him and sent him from you? — If, on the other hand,
you explain, as no doubt you intend to do, the reason of that refusal, he can
but say one thing: 'You could not trust me to be faithful when I had my sight.
Blind, you come to me, when it is no longer in my power to prove my fidelity.
There is no virtue in necessity. I can never feel I possess your trust, because
you come to me only when accident has put it out of my power either to do the
thing you feared, or to prove myself better than your doubts.' My dear girl,
that is how matters stand from the man's point of view; from his, I make no
doubt, even more than from mine; for I recognise in Garth Dalmain a stronger man
than myself. Had it been I that day in the church, wanting you as he did, I
should have grovelled at your feet and promised to grow up. Garth Dalmain had
the iron strength to turn and go, without a protest, when the woman who had
owned him mate the evening before, refused him on the score of inadequacy the
next morning. I fear there is no question of the view he would take of the
situation as it now stands."
Jane's pale, startled face went to the doctor's heart.
"But Deryck — he — loves — "
"Just because he loves, my poor old girl, where you are concerned he could
never be content with less than the best."
"Oh, Boy, help me! Find a way! Tell me what to do!" Despair was in Jane's
eyes.
The doctor considered long, in silence. At last he said: "I see only one way
out. If Dal could somehow be brought to realise your point of view at that time
as a possible one, without knowing it had actually been the cause of your
refusal of him, and could have the chance to express himself clearly on the
subject — to me, for instance — in a way which might reach you without being
meant to reach you, it might put you in a better position toward him. But it
would be difficult to manage. If you could be in close contact with his mind,
constantly near him unseen — ah, poor chap, that is easy now — I mean unknown
to him; if, for instance, you could be in the shoes of this nurse-companion
person I am sending him, and get at his mind on the matter; so that he could
feel when you eventually made your confession, he had already justified himself
to you, and thus gone behind his blindness, as it were."
Jane bounded in her chair. "Deryck, I have it! Oh, send ME as his
nurse-companion! He would never dream it was I. It is three years since he heard
my voice, and he thinks me in Egypt. The society column in all the papers, a few
weeks ago, mentioned me as wintering in Egypt and Syria and remaining abroad
until May. Not a soul knows I have come home. You are the best judge as to
whether I have had training and experience; and all through the war our work was
fully as much mental and spiritual, as surgical. It was not up to much
otherwise. Oh, Dicky, you could safely recommend me; and I still have my
uniforms stowed away in case of need. I could be ready in twenty-four hours, and
I would go as Sister — anything, and eat in the kitchen if necessary."
"But, my dear girl," said the doctor quietly, "you could not go as Sister
Anything, unfortunately. You could only go as Nurse Rosemary Gray; for I engaged
her this morning, and posted a full and explicit account of her to Dr.
Mackenzie, which he will read, to our patient. I never take a case from one
nurse and give it to another, excepting for incompetency. And Nurse Rosemary
Gray could more easily fly, than prove incompetent. She will not be required to
eat in the kitchen. She is a gentlewoman, and will be treated as such. I wish
indeed you could be in her shoes, though I doubt whether you could have carried
it through — And now I have something to tell you. Just before I left him,
Dalmain asked after you. He sandwiched you most carefully in between the duchess
and Flower; but he could not keep the blood out of his thin cheeks, and he
gripped the bedclothes in his effort to keep his voice steady. He asked where
you were. I said, I believed, in Egypt. When you were coming home. I told him I
had heard you intended returning to Jerusalem for Easter, and I supposed we
might expect you home at the end of April or early in May. He inquired how you
were. I replied that you were not a good correspondent, but I gathered from
occasional cables and post-cards that you were very fit and having a good time.
I then volunteered the statement that it was I who had sent you abroad because
you were going all to pieces. He made a quick movement with his hand as if he
would have struck me for using the expression. Then he said: 'Going to pieces?
SHE!' in a tone of most utter contempt for me and my opinions. Then he hastily
made minute inquiries for Flower. He had already asked about the duchess all the
questions he intended asking about you. When he had ascertained that Flower was
at home and well, and had sent him her affectionate sympathy, he begged me to
glance through a pile of letters which were waiting until he felt able to have
them read to him, and to tell him any of the handwritings known to me. All the
world seemed to have sent him letters of sympathy, poor chap. I told him a dozen
or so of the names I knew, — a royal handwriting among them. He asked whether
there were any from abroad. There were two or three. I knew them all, and named
them. He could not bear to hear any of them read; even the royal letter remained
unopened, though he asked to have it in his hand, and fingered the tiny crimson
crown. Then he asked. 'Is there one from the duchess?' There was. He wished to
hear that one, so I opened and read it. It was very characteristic of her Grace;
full of kindly sympathy, heartily yet tactfully expressed. Half-way through she
said: 'Jane will be upset. I shall write and tell her next time she sends me an
address. At present I have no idea in which quarter of the globe my dear niece
is to be found. Last time I heard of her she seemed in a fair way towards
marrying a little Jap and settling in Japan. Not a bad idea, my dear Dal, is it?
Though, if Japan is at all like the paper screens, I don't know where in that
Liliputian country they will find a house, or a husband, or a
what-do-you-call-'em thing they ride in, solid enough for our good Jane!' With
intuitive tact of a very high order, I omitted this entire passage about
marrying the Jap. When your aunt's letter was finished, he asked point blank
whether there was one from you. I said No, but that it was unlikely the news had
reached you, and I felt sure you would write when it did. So I hope you will,
dear; and Nurse Rosemary Gray will have instructions to read all his letters to
him."
"Oh, Deryck," said Jane brokenly, "I can't bear it! I must go to him!"
The telephone bell on the doctor's table whirred sharply. He went over and
took up the receiver.
"Hullo! . . . Yes, it is Dr. Brand. . . . Who is speaking? . . . Oh, is it
you, Matron?" — Jane felt quite sorry the matron could not see the doctor's
charming smile into the telephone. — "Yes? What name did you say? . . .
Undoubtedly. This morning; quite definitely. A most important case. She is to
call and see me to-night . . . What? . . . Mistake on register? Ah, I see . . .
Gone where? . . . Where? . . . Spell it, please . . . Australia! Oh, quite out
of reach! . . . Yes, I heard he was ordered there . . . Never mind, Matron. You
are in no way to blame . . . Thanks, I think not. I have some one in view . . .
Yes. . . . Yes. . . . No doubt she might do . . . I will let you know if I
should require her . . . Good-bye, Matron, and thank you."
The doctor hung up the receiver. Then he turned to Jane; a slow,
half-doubtful smile gathering on his lips.
"Jeanette," he said, "I do not believe in chance. But I do believe in a
Higher Control, which makes and unmakes our plans. You shall go."