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The Rosary by Barclay, Florence L. (Florence Louisa) - CHAPTER XXXIV

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The Rosary

CHAPTER XXXIV

“LOVE NEV­ER FAILETH”

Garth was stand­ing at the open win­dow, when Nurse Rose­mary re- en­tered the li­brary; and he did not turn, im­me­di­ate­ly.

She looked anx­ious­ly for the let­ter, and saw it laid ready on her side of the ta­ble. It bore signs of hav­ing been much crum­pled; look­ing al­most as a let­ter might ap­pear which had been crushed in­to a ball, flung in­to the waste-​pa­per bas­ket, and af­ter­wards re­trieved. It had, how­ev­er, been care­ful­ly smoothed out; and lay ready to her hand.

When Garth turned from the win­dow and passed to his chair, his face bore the signs of a great strug­gle. He looked as one who, sight­less, has yet been mak­ing fran­tic ef­forts to see. The ivory pal­lor was gone. His face was flushed; and his thick hair, which grew in beau­ti­ful curves low up­on his fore­head and tem­ples, and was usu­al­ly care­ful­ly brushed back in short-​cropped neat­ness, was now ruf­fled and dis­or­dered. But his voice was com­plete­ly un­der con­trol, as he turned to­wards his sec­re­tary.

“My dear Miss Gray,” he said, “we have a dif­fi­cult task be­fore us. I have re­ceived a let­ter, which it is es­sen­tial I should hear. I am obliged to ask you to read it to me, be­cause there is ab­so­lute­ly no one else to whom I can pre­fer such a re­quest. I can­not but know that it will be a dif­fi­cult and painful task for you, feel­ing your­self an in­ter­me­di­ary be­tween two wound­ed and sun­dered hearts. May I make it eas­ier, my dear lit­tle girl, by as­sur­ing you that I know of no one in this world from whose lips I could lis­ten to the con­tents of that let­ter with less pain; and, fail­ing my own, there are no eyes be­neath which I could less grudg­ing­ly let it pass, there is no mind I could so un­ques­tion­ing­ly trust, to judge kind­ly, both of my­self and of the writ­er; and to for­get faith­ful­ly, all which was not in­tend­ed to come with­in the knowl­edge of a third per­son.”

“Thank you, Mr. Dal­main,” said Nurse Rose­mary.

Garth leaned back in his chair, shield­ing his face with his hand.

“Now, if you please,” he said. And, very clear­ly and qui­et­ly, Nurse Rose­mary be­gan to read.

“DEAR GARTH, As you will not let me come to you, so that I could say, be­tween you and me alone, that which must be said, I am com­pelled to write it. It is your own fault, Dal; and we both pay the penal­ty. For how can I write to you freely when I know, that as you lis­ten, it will seem to you of ev­ery word I am writ­ing, that I am drag­ging a third per­son in­to that which ought to be, most sa­cred­ly, be­tween you and me alone. And yet, I must write freely; and I must make you ful­ly un­der­stand; be­cause the whole of your fu­ture life and mine will de­pend up­on your re­ply to this let­ter. I must write as if you were able to hold the let­ter in your own hands, and read it to your­self. There­fore, if you can­not com­plete­ly trust your sec­re­tary, with the pri­vate his­to­ry of your heart and mine, bid her give it you back with­out turn­ing this first page; and let me come my­self, Garth, and tell you all the rest.”

“That is the bot­tom of the page,” said Nurse Rose­mary; and wait­ed.

Garth did not re­move his hand. “I do com­plete­ly trust; and she must not come,” he said.

Nurse Rose­mary turned the page, and went on read­ing.

“I want you to re­mem­ber, Garth, that ev­ery word I write, is the sim­ple un­var­nished truth. If you look back over your re­mem­brance of me, you will ad­mit that I am not nat­ural­ly an un­truth­ful per­son, nor did I ev­er take eas­ily to pre­var­ica­tion. But, Garth, I told you one lie; and that fa­tal ex­cep­tion proves the rule of per­fect truth­ful­ness, which has al­ways oth­er­wise held, be­tween you and me; and, please God, al­ways will hold. The con­fes­sion here­in con­tained, con­cerns that one lie; and I need not ask you to re­alise how hum­bling it is to my pride to have to force the hear­ing of a con­fes­sion up­on the man who has al­ready re­fused to ad­mit me to a vis­it of friend­ship. You will re­mem­ber that I am not nat­ural­ly hum­ble; and have a con­sid­er­able amount of prop­er pride; and, per­haps, by the great­ness of the ef­fort I have had to make, you will be able to gauge the great­ness of my love. God help you to do so–my dar­ling; my beloved; my poor des­olate boy!”

Nurse Rose­mary stopped abrupt­ly; for, at this sud­den men­tion of love, and at these words of un­ex­pect­ed ten­der­ness from Jane, Garth had risen to his feet, and tak­en two steps to­wards the win­dow; as if to es­cape from some­thing too im­mense to be faced. But, in a mo­ment he re­cov­ered him­self, and sat down again, com­plete­ly hid­ing his face with his hand.

Nurse Rose­mary re­sumed the read­ing of the let­ter.

“Ah, what a wrong I have done, both to you, and to my­self! Dear, you re­mem­ber the evening on the ter­race at Shen­stone, when you asked me to be–when you called me–when I WAS–YOUR WIFE? Garth, I leave this last sen­tence as it stands, with its two at­tempts to reach the truth. I will not cross them out, but leave them to be read to you; for, you see Garth, I fi­nal­ly ar­rived! I WAS your wife. I did not un­der­stand it then. I was in­tense­ly sur­prised; un­be­liev­ably in­ex­pe­ri­enced in mat­ters of feel­ing; and be­wil­dered by the flood of sen­sa­tion which swept me off my feet and al­most en­gulfed me. But even then I knew that my soul arose and pro­claimed you mate and mas­ter. And when you held me, and your dear head lay up­on my heart, I knew, for the first time the mean­ing of the word ec­sta­sy; and I could have asked no kinder gift of heav­en, than to pro­long those mo­ments in­to hours.”

Nurse Rose­mary’s qui­et voice broke, sud­den­ly; and the read­ing ceased.

Garth was lean­ing for­ward, his head buried in his hands. A dry sob rose in his throat, just at the very mo­ment when Nurse Rose­mary’s voice gave way.

Garth re­cov­ered first. With­out lift­ing his head, with a ges­ture of pro­tec­tive af­fec­tion and sym­pa­thy, he stretched his hand across the ta­ble.

“Poor lit­tle girl,” he said, “I am so sor­ry. It is rough on you. If on­ly it had come when Brand was here! I am afraid you MUST go on; but try to read with­out re­al­is­ing. Leave the re­al­is­ing to me.”

And Nurse Rose­mary read on.

“When you lift­ed your head in the moon­light and gazed long and earnest­ly at me–Ah, those dear eyes!–your look sud­den­ly made me self-​con­scious. There swept over me a sense of my own ex­ceed­ing plain­ness, and of how lit­tle there was in what those dear eyes saw, to pro­vide rea­son, for that ador­ing look. Over­whelmed with a shy shame I pressed your head back to the place where the eyes would be hid­den; and I re­alise now what a dif­fer­ent con­struc­tion you must have put up­on that ac­tion. Garth, I as­sure you, that when you lift­ed your head the sec­ond time, and said, ‘My wife,’ it was the first sug­ges­tion to my mind that this won­der­ful thing which was hap­pen­ing meant–mar­riage. I know it must seem al­most in­cred­ible, and more like a child of eigh­teen, than a wom­an of thir­ty. But you must re­mem­ber, all my deal­ings with men up to that hour had been hand­shakes, hearti­est com­rade­ship, and an oc­ca­sion­al clap on the shoul­der giv­en and re­ceived. And don’t for­get, dear King of my heart, that, un­til one short week be­fore, you had been amongst the boys who called me ‘good old Jane,’ and ad­dressed me in in­ti­mate con­ver­sa­tion as ‘my dear fel­low’! Don’t for­get that I had al­ways looked up­on you as YEARS younger than my­self; and though a strange­ly sweet tie had grown up be­tween us, since the evening of the con­cert at Over­dene, I had nev­er re­alised it as love. Well–you will re­mem­ber how I asked for twelve hours to con­sid­er my an­swer; and you yield­ed, im­me­di­ate­ly; (you were so per­fect, all the time, Garth) and left me, when I asked to be alone; left me, with a ges­ture I have nev­er for­got­ten. It was a rev­ela­tion of the way in which the love of a man such as you ex­alts the wom­an up­on whom it is out­poured. The hem of that gown has been a sa­cred thing to me, ev­er since. It is al­ways with me, though I nev­er wear it.–A de­tailed ac­count of the hours which fol­lowed, I shall hope to give you some day, my dear­est. I can­not write it. Let me hurl on to pa­per, in all its crude ug­li­ness, the mis­er­able fact which part­ed us; turn­ing our dawn­ing joy to dis­il­lu­sion and sad­ness. Garth–it was this. I did not be­lieve your love would stand the test of my plain­ness. I knew what a wor­ship­per of beau­ty you were; how you must have it, in one form or an­oth­er, al­ways around you. I got out my di­ary in which I had record­ed ver­ba­tim our con­ver­sa­tion about the ug­ly preach­er, whose face be­came il­lu­mined in­to beau­ty, by the in­spired glo­ry with­in. And you added that you nev­er thought him ug­ly again; but he would al­ways be plain. And you said it was not the sort of face one would want to have al­ways be­fore one at meals; but that you were not called up­on to un­der­go that dis­ci­pline, which would be sheer mar­tyr­dom to you.”

“I was so in­ter­est­ed, at the time; and so amused at the un­con­scious way in which you stood and ex­plained this, to quite the plainest wom­an of your ac­quain­tance, that I record­ed it very ful­ly in my jour­nal.–Alas! On that im­por­tant night, I read the words, over and over, un­til they took mor­bid hold up­on my brain. Then–such is the self-​con­scious­ness awak­ened in a wom­an by the fact that she is loved and sought–I turned on all the lights around my mir­ror, and crit­ical­ly and care­ful­ly ex­am­ined the face you would have to see ev­ery day be­hind your cof­fee-​pot at break­fast, for years and years, if I said ‘Yes,’ on the mor­row. Dar­ling, I did not see my­self through your eyes, as, thank God, I have done since. And I DID NOT TRUST YOUR LOVE TO STAND THE TEST. It seemed to me, I was sav­ing both of us from fu­ture dis­ap­point­ment and mis­ery, by brave­ly putting away present joy, in or­der to avoid cer­tain dis­en­chant­ment. My beloved, it will seem to you so cool­ly cal­cu­lat­ing, and so mean; so un­wor­thy of the great love you were even then lav­ish­ing up­on me. But re­mem­ber, for years, your re­mark­able per­son­al grace and beau­ty had been a source of plea­sure to me; and I had pic­tured you wed­ded to Pauline Lis­ter, for in­stance, in her daz­zling white­ness, and soft ra­di­ant youth. So my mor­bid self-​con­scious­ness said: ‘What! This young Apol­lo, tied to my pon­der­ous plain­ness; grow­ing hand­somer ev­ery year, while I grow old­er and plain­er?’ Ah, dar­ling! It sounds so un­wor­thy, now we know what our love is. But it sound­ed sen­si­ble and right that night; and at last, with a bo­som that ached, and arms that hung heavy at the thought of be­ing emp­tied of all that joy, I made up my mind to say ‘no.’ Ah, be­lieve me, I had no idea what it al­ready meant to you. I thought you would pass on at once to an­oth­er fan­cy; and trans­fer your love to one more able to meet your needs, at ev­ery point. Hon­est­ly, Garth, I thought I should be the on­ly one left des­olate.–Then came the ques­tion: how to refuse you. I knew if I gave the true rea­son, you would ar­gue it away, and prove me wrong, with glow­ing words, be­fore which I should per­force yield. So–as I re­al­ly meant not to let you run the risk, and not to run it my­self– I lied to you, my beloved. To you, whom my whole be­ing ac­claimed King of my heart, Mas­ter of my will; supreme to me, in love and life,–to YOU I said: ‘I can­not mar­ry a mere boy.’ Ah, dar­ling! I do not ex­cuse it. I do not de­fend it. I mere­ly con­fess it; trust­ing to your gen­eros­ity to ad­mit, that no oth­er an­swer would have sent you away. Ah, your poor Jane, left des­olate! If you could have seen her in the lit­tle church, call­ing you back; re­tract­ing and promis­ing; lis­ten­ing for your re­turn­ing foot­steps, in an agony of long­ing. But my Garth is not made of the stuff which stands wait­ing on the door- mat of a wom­an’s in­de­ci­sion.”

“The lone­ly year which fol­lowed so broke my nerve, that Deryck Brand told me I was go­ing all to pieces, and or­dered me abroad. I went, as you know; and in oth­er, and more vig­or­ous, sur­round­ings, there came to me a san­er view of life. In Egypt last March, on the sum­mit of the Great Pyra­mid, I made up my mind that I could live with­out you no longer. I did not see my­self wrong; but I yearned so for your love, and to pour mine up­on you, my beloved, that I con­clud­ed it was worth the risk. I made up my mind to take the next boat home, and send for you. Then–oh, my own boy–I heard. I wrote to you; and you would not let me come.”

“Now I know per­fect­ly well, that you might say: ‘She did not trust me when I had my sight. Now that I can­not see, she is no longer afraid.’ Garth, you might, say that; but it would not be true. I have had am­ple proof late­ly that I was wrong, and ought to have trust­ed you all through. What it is, I will tell you lat­er. All I can say now is: that, if your dear shin­ing eyes could see, they would see, NOW, a wom­an who is, trust­ful­ly and un­ques­tion­ing­ly, all your own. If she is doubt­ful of her face and fig­ure, she says quite sim­ply: ‘They pleased HIM; and they are just HIS. I have no fur­ther right to crit­icise them. If he wants them, they are not mine, but his.’ Dar­ling, I can­not tell you now, how I have ar­rived at this as­sur­ance. But I have had proofs be­yond words of your faith­ful­ness and love.”

“The ques­tion, there­fore, sim­ply re­solves it­self in­to this: Can you for­give me? If you can for­give me, I can come to you at once. If this thing is past for­give­ness, I must make up my mind to stay away. But, oh, my own Dear,–the bo­som on which once you laid your head waits for you with the long­ing ache of lone­ly years. If you need it, do not thrust it from you.”

“Write me one word by your own hand: ‘For­giv­en.’ It is all I ask. When it reach­es me, I will come to you at once. Do not dic­tate a let­ter to your sec­re­tary. I could not bear it. Just write–if you can tru­ly write it–’FOR­GIV­EN’; and send it to ‘Your Wife.’”

The room was very still, as Nurse Rose­mary fin­ished read­ing; and, lay­ing down the let­ter, silent­ly wait­ed. She won­dered for a mo­ment whether she could get her­self a glass of wa­ter, with­out dis­turb­ing him; but de­cid­ed to do with­out it.

At last Garth lift­ed his head.

“She has asked me to do a thing im­pos­si­ble,” he said; and a slow smile il­lu­mined his drawn face.

Jane clasped her hands up­on her breast.

“CAN you not write ‘for­giv­en’?” asked Nurse Rose­mary, bro­ken­ly.

“No,” said Garth. “I can­not. Lit­tle girl, give me a sheet of pa­per, and a pen­cil.”

Nurse Rose­mary placed them close to his hand.

Garth took up the pen­cil. He groped for the pa­per; felt the edges with his left hand; found the cen­tre with his fin­gers; and, in large firm let­ters, wrote one word.

“Is that leg­ible?” he asked, pass­ing it across to Nurse Rose­mary.

“Quite leg­ible,” she said; for she an­swered be­fore it was blot­ted by her tears.

In­stead of “for­giv­en,” Garth had writ­ten: “LOVED.”

“Can you post it at once?” Garth asked, in a low, ea­ger voice. “And she will come–oh, my God, she will come! If we catch to-​night’s mail, she may be here the day af­ter to-​mor­row!”

Nurse Rose­mary took up the let­ter; and, by an al­most su­per­hu­man ef­fort, spoke steadi­ly.

“Mr. Dal­main,” she said; “there is a postscript to this let­ter. It says: ‘Write to The Palace Ho­tel, Ab­erdeen.’”

Garth sprang up, his whole face and fig­ure alive with ex­cite­ment.

“In Ab­erdeen?” he cried. “Jane, in Ab­erdeen! Oh, my God! If she gets this pa­per to-​mor­row morn­ing, she may be here any time in the day. Jane! Jane! Dear lit­tle Rose­mary, do you hear? Jane will come to- mor­row! Didn’t I tell you some­thing was go­ing to hap­pen? You and Simp­son were too British to un­der­stand; but Margery knew; and the woods told us it was Joy com­ing through Pain. Could that be post­ed at once, Miss Gray?”

The May-​Day mood was up­on him again. His face shone. His fig­ure was elec­tric with ex­pec­ta­tion. Nurse Rose­mary sat at the ta­ble watch­ing him; her chin in her hands. A ten­der smile dawned on her lips, out of keep­ing with her sup­posed face and fig­ure; so full was it of the glo­ri­ous ex­pec­ta­tion of a ma­ture and per­fect love.

“I will go to the post-​of­fice my­self, Mr. Dal­main,” she said. “I shall be glad of the walk; and I can be back by tea-​time.”

At the post-​of­fice she did not post the word in Garth’s hand­writ­ing. That lay hid­den in her bo­som. But she sent off two tele­grams. The first to

The Duchess of Meldyum,

Palace Ho­tel, Ab­erdeen.

“Come here by 5.50 train with­out fail this evening.”

The sec­ond to

Sir Deryck Brand,

Wim­pole Sheet, Lon­don.

“All is right.”