<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p class="nind"><span class="smcap">The</span> room was small and dingy: opposite to the door an old-fashioned
tent-bed hung with curtains of a huge-patterned chintz, immense flowers
on a black ground: a candle standing on a small table by the bedside,
another faintly blinking from the mantelpiece beyond, the darkness of
everything around bringing into fuller relief the whiteness of the bed,
the pillows heaped up to support a restless head, a worn and ghastly
face, with large, gleaming eyes, which seemed to have an independent,
restless life of their own. The face had been pretty when Wentworth had
known it first. It was scarcely recognisable now. The cheek bones had
become prominent, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_50" id="page_50">{50}</SPAN></span> lower part of the face worn away almost to
nothing, the eyes enlarged in their hollow caves. She looked as she had
been said to be—dying—except that the light in her eyes spoke of a
secret force which might be fever, or might be because they were the
last citadel of life. But though she seemed at the last extremity of
existence, a few efforts had been made to ornament and adorn the dying
creature, efforts which added unspeakably, horribly, to the ghastly look
of her face. The collar of her night-dress had been folded over a pink
ribbon, leaving bare an emaciated throat, round which was a little gold
chain, suspending a locket: and her hair, still plentiful and pretty,
the one human decoration which does not fade, was carefully dressed,
though somewhat disordered by the continual motion of her restlessness.
It was all horrible to Wentworth, death masquerading in the poor little
vanities which were so unspeakably mean and small in comparison with
that majesty, and all to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_51" id="page_51">{51}</SPAN></span> please <i>him</i>—God help the forlorn creature!
to make her look as when he had praised her prettiness, she from whom
every prettiness, every possibility of pleasing, had gone.</p>
<p>She held out her two hands, which were worn to skin and bone, ‘Oh,
Oliver, my Oliver! oh, I knew he would come. Oh, didn’t I say he would
come?’ she cried. Wentworth could not but take the bony fingers into his
own. He saw that it was expected he should kiss her; but that was
impossible. He sat down in the chair which had been placed for him by
the bedside.</p>
<p>‘I am very sorry to see you so ill, my poor girl,’ he said.</p>
<p>‘Ill’s not the word, Mr. Wentworth; she’s dying. She hasn’t above an
hour or two in this world,’ said the mother, or the woman who took a
mother’s place.</p>
<p>He gave her a look of horrified reproach, with the usual human sense
that it is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_52" id="page_52">{52}</SPAN></span> cruel to announce this fact too clearly. ‘I hope it is not
quite so bad as that.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, Oliver; oh, dear Oliver, yes, yes,’ said the sick woman. ‘This
is—my last night—on earth.’ She spoke with difficulty, pausing and
panting between the words, her thin lips distended with a smile, the
smile (he could not help remarking) that had always been a little
artificial, poor girl! at her best. But even at that awful moment she
was endeavouring to charm him still (he felt with horror) by the means
which she supposed to have charmed him in the past.</p>
<p>‘Tell him, mother, tell him. I haven’t got—the strength.’ She put out
her hands for his hand, which he could not refuse, though her touch made
him shiver, and lay looking at him, smiling, with that awful attempt at
fascination. He covered his eyes with his disengaged hand, half because
of the horror in his soul, half that he might not see her face.</p>
<p>‘Mr. Wentworth,’ said the elder woman,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_53" id="page_53">{53}</SPAN></span> ‘my poor child, sir, she’s got
one wish—’ the bony hands closed upon his with a feeble, yet anxious
pressure as this was said.</p>
<p>‘Yes; what is it? If it is anything I can do for her, tell me. I will do
anything that can procure her a moment’s pleasure,’ he said.</p>
<p>Fatal words to say! but he meant them fully—out of pity first, and also
out of a burning desire, at any cost, to get away. Anything for that! He
would have willingly given the half of what he possessed only to get
away from this place—to return to the life he had left, to hear this
woman’s name no more.</p>
<p>Once more the wasted hands pressed his, and she gave a little cry. ‘I
knowed it—always—mother. I told you.’</p>
<p>‘Hush, hush, dear! Don’t you wear yourself out. You’ll want all your
strength. Mr. Wentworth, I didn’t expect no less from a gentleman like
you. If she hasn’t been all she might have been, poor dear! though<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_54" id="page_54">{54}</SPAN></span> I
don’t want to blame you, sir, you’re not the one as should say a
word—for it was all out of love for you.’</p>
<p>Wentworth had it not in him to be cruel, but he drew his hand almost
roughly from between the girl’s feverish hands. ‘What is the use of
entering into such a question?’ he said. ‘I do not blame her. Let the
past alone. What can I do for her now?’</p>
<p>He had risen up, determined to make his escape at all hazards—but the
little cry she gave had so much pain in it that his heart was touched.
He sat down again, and patted softly the poor hand that lay on the
coverlet. ‘My poor girl, I don’t want to hurt you,’ he said.</p>
<p>‘You mustn’t be harsh to her,’ said the mother. ‘How would you like to
think that poor thing had gone miserable out of this world to complain
of you, sir, before the Throne? Not as she’d have the heart to do it,
for she thinks there is no one like you, whatever you may say to her.
Mr. Went<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_55" id="page_55">{55}</SPAN></span>worth, there’s just one thing you can do for her. Make an
honest woman of her, sir, before she dies.’</p>
<p>‘What!’ said Wentworth, springing once more to his feet. He but dimly,
vaguely understood what she meant, yet felt for a moment as if he had
fallen into an ambush, as if he had been trapped into a den of thieves.
He thought he saw a man’s head appearing at the door, and heard
whisperings and footsteps on the stairs. This it was that produced the
momentary fury of his cry; but then he regained control of himself, and
looking round saw no one but the dying girl on the bed and an elderly
woman standing in front of him, looking at him with deprecating yet
earnest eyes.</p>
<p>‘It’s a great deal,’ said the woman, ‘and yet it’s nothing. It’s what
will never harm you one way or another, what nobody will know, nor be
able to cast in your teeth—that won’t cost you anything (except, maybe,
a bit of a fee), and yet it’s everything to her. It would make all the
difference<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_56" id="page_56">{56}</SPAN></span> between going out of this world honest and creditable and
going in her shame, which it was you that brought her to it.’</p>
<p>‘That’s a lie!’ said Oliver. Was it to be supposed he could think of
civility at such a moment? A desperate tremor seized hold upon him. He
got up and turned, half blinded with horror and excitement, towards the
door. ‘I came here,’ he said, ‘because—because—’</p>
<p>Ah! because—why? What could he say? He had meant to be kind—to make up
to her somehow, he could not tell how, for the fact that he was happy
and she dying. He stood arrested with those words upon his lips, which
he could not say, half turned from her, facing the door, as if he would
have broken away.</p>
<p>And then there came a low, despairing cry from the bed—the cry as of a
lost creature. ‘Oh, Oliver, Oliver! you loved me once. Oh, don’t go and
leave me! You loved me, and I loved you.’</p>
<p>He would have cried out that it was false,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_57" id="page_57">{57}</SPAN></span> but the breathless voice,
broken by panting that sounded like the last struggle, the voice of the
woman who was dying, while he was full of life and force, silenced him
in spite of himself. The mother had flown to her to raise her head, to
give her something from a glass on the table, and he, too, turned again,
awe-stricken, thinking the last moment had come.</p>
<p>‘And you can stand and see her like this,’ said the woman by the
bedside, in a low tone. ‘You that are well and strong and have the world
before you; and let her go out of it at five-and-twenty, a girl as you
made an idol of once, a girl as you have helped to bring to this, and
won’t lift a finger to satisfy her before she dies, to give her what she
wants, and what will make her happy for the last hour—before she dies!’</p>
<p>The girl herself was past speaking. She lay back against her mother’s
breast, her own worn and emaciated shoulders heaving with convulsive
struggles for the departing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_58" id="page_58">{58}</SPAN></span> breath. She could not speak, but those
eyes, which were so living while she was dying, turned to him with a
look of such appeal, such entreaty that he could not bear the sight.
They were large with fever and weakness, liquid and clear and dilated,
as the eyes of the dying often are, like two stars glowing out in sudden
light from the pale night of her face. He cried out, ‘What do you want
me to do?’ with despair in his voice, and a sense that whatever they
asked of him he could not now refuse.</p>
<p>‘To do her justice,’ said the mother. ‘Oh, Mr. Wentworth, to make up to
her for all she’s suffered. To make her an honest woman before she
dies.’</p>
<p>The girl’s dying lips moved, but no sound was heard: a pathetic smile
came upon her lips, her eyes held him with that prayer, too intense for
words. Oliver turned away his head not to see them, then turned back
again as if in them there was some spell. A passionate impatience
pricked his heart, for their in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_59" id="page_59">{59}</SPAN></span>ference was not true. They had not been
to each other what was said. Love! love was too great a word to be
mentioned here at all. It had been levity, folly; it had not been love.
She had been too slight for such a word; but she was not too slight for
death. For that solemnity nothing is too slight or too poor; and death
is as great as love is, and compels respect. She drew his eyes to her so
that he could not free himself. He said in an unnatural, stifled voice,
‘Whatever you want from me—this is not the—the time. There is nothing
to be done to-night—and after to-night’—he could not say the words—he
waved his hand towards the bed. She was dying now—now—before their
eyes.</p>
<p>‘I know what you mean,’ said the mother, with dreadful calm. ‘She won’t
last out the night. Very likely she won’t, but that’s what nobody knows
except her Maker. If she don’t, you can’t do nothing, and nobody here
will say a word.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_60" id="page_60">{60}</SPAN></span> But if she do—! Give her your word, Mr. Wentworth, as
you’ll marry her to-morrow if she lives, and she’ll die happy. She’ll
die happy; whether it comes to anything or whether it don’t. Mr.
Wentworth, sir, do, for the love of God!’</p>
<p>The girl recovered a little gasping breath. ‘I’ll die happy. I’ll die
happy, whether it comes to anything or not.’ Even this little rally
showed more and more the nearness of the end.</p>
<p>He had shrank at the word ‘marry’ as if it had been a blow aimed at him,
but he could not escape from the tragic persistence of those eyes. And
overwhelmed as he was, a little hope rose in him. He said to himself,
‘She can never live till to-morrow.’ Why should he resist if a promise
would make her happy? for she was surely dying, and she never could take
him at his word. ‘If that is all, I will promise,’ he said.</p>
<p>The light in her eyes seemed to give<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_61" id="page_61">{61}</SPAN></span> a leap of joy and triumph, then
closed under the flickering eyelids, he thought for ever, and he cried
out involuntarily, and made a step nearer to the bed. When her eyes were
closed, she looked like one who had been dead a day, nothing but a
faint, convulsive heave of the shoulders showing that there was life in
her still.</p>
<p>The mother busied herself about the half-unconscious creature, putting
the cordial to her lips, supporting the pillow against her own breast.
‘You will have an easy bargain,’ she said, as she went on with these
cares; ‘but anyhow, we’ll bless you for what you say. Matilda, give me
the drops the doctor left for her when she felt faint. She’s very low,
now, poor dear! Mr. Wentworth’s behaving like a gentleman, as you always
said he would. He has promised to marry her to-morrow morning, if she
lives. She’ll not live, but she’s satisfied, poor dear!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_62" id="page_62">{62}</SPAN></span>’</p>
<p>Matilda had come so softly into the room that she startled him as if she
had been a ghost. ‘I knew as he would do it when he saw how bad she was;
but, Lord, what do it matter to the poor thing now?’</p>
<p>This was his own opinion. In a few minutes more there was a bustle
downstairs, which Matilda pronounced to be the doctor coming, and
Wentworth went down to wait until he had paid his visit. The little
parlour below had one candle burning in it, for the benefit of those who
went and came. The young man was left there for a few minutes alone. To
describe the condition in which he was is impossible. His heart was
beating with a dull noise against his breast. All that had been so
bright to him a little while before had become as black as night. He
could not think; only contemplate what was before him dumbly, with
horror and disgust and fear. He had given a pledge,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_63" id="page_63">{63}</SPAN></span> but it was a pledge
that never would call for fulfilment—no, no, it never could be
fulfilled—it would be as a nightmare, a dreadful dream, from which he
would awake by-and-by and find the sun shining and all well. After a
while he heard the doctor’s heavy foot come clamping down the wooden
staircase. He was angry with the man for having so little delicacy, for
making so much noise when his patient was dying. Presently he came in to
give his bulletin to the gentleman, whom he perceived at once to be
somehow very deeply concerned.</p>
<p>‘Last the night? No, I don’t think she’ll last the night: but you never
can tell exactly with such nervous subjects. She might put on a spurt
and come round again for a little while.’</p>
<p>‘Then,’ said Wentworth, with a sense that he was acquiring information
clandestinely, ‘there is no hope of any permanent recovery?’</p>
<p>The doctor laughed him to scorn. If<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_64" id="page_64">{64}</SPAN></span> he had not been a parish doctor,
accustomed to very poor patients and their ways, he would not have
allowed himself to laugh in such circumstances.</p>
<p>‘When she has not above half a lung, and her heart is—but you don’t
understand these matters, perhaps. She may make a rally for a few hours,
but I doubt if she will see out this night.’</p>
<p>After this, Wentworth went home to the closed-up chambers, where nobody
expected him, and to which he got admittance with difficulty. He had to
walk miles, he thought, through those dreadful streets, all like each
other, all gleaming with wet, before he could even find a cab. There was
no strength left in him. He went on and on mechanically, and might, he
thought, have been wandering all night, but that the sight of a slowly
passing cab, which he knew he wanted, brought him back to a dull sense
of the necessity of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_65" id="page_65">{65}</SPAN></span> shelter. The cold rooms, so vacant and unprepared,
which were just shelter and no more, were scarcely an improvement upon
the mechanical march and movement, which deadened his mind and made him
less sensible of his terrible position. It had been arranged that if she
was still alive in the morning, a messenger was to be sent to him, and
that then he was to take the necessary steps to redeem his pledge. But
he said to himself that it was impossible—that she could not live till
morning. It was a horrible moment for a man to go through—a man whose
life had blossomed into such gladness and prosperity. But still, if he
could but be sure that nothing worse was to come of it—and what could
come of it when the doctor himself was all but sure that she could not
see out the night?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_66" id="page_66">{66}</SPAN></span></p>
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