<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER THIRTEEN </h2>
<p>The door opened. Lawford rose, and into the further rays of the
candlelight entered a rather slim figure in a light summer gown.</p>
<p>'Just home?' said Herbert.</p>
<p>'We've been for a walk—'</p>
<p>'My sister always forgets everything,' said Herbert, turning to Lawford;
'even tea-time. This is Mr Lawford, Grisel. We've been arguing no end. And
we want you to give a decision. It's just this: Supposing if by some
impossible trick you had come in now, not the charming familiar sister you
are, but shorter, fatter, fair and round-faced, quite different,
physically, you know—what would you do?'</p>
<p>'What nonsense you talk, Herbert!'</p>
<p>'Yes, but supposing: a complete transmogrification—by some
unimaginable ingression or enchantment, by nibbling a bunch of roses, or
whatever you like to call it?'</p>
<p>'Only physically?'</p>
<p>'Well, yes, actually; but potentially, why—that's another matter.'</p>
<p>The dark eyes passed slowly from her brother's face and rested gravely on
their visitor's.</p>
<p>'Is he making fun of me?'</p>
<p>Lawford almost imperceptibly shook his head.</p>
<p>'But what a question! And I've had no tea.' She drew her gloves slowly
through her hand. 'The thing, of course, isn't possible, I know. But
shouldn't I go mad, don't you think?'</p>
<p>Lawford gazed quietly back into the clear, grave, deliberate eyes.
'Suppose, suppose, just for the sake of argument—NOT,' he suggested.</p>
<p>She turned her head and reflected, glancing from one to the other of the
pure, steady candle-flames.</p>
<p>'And what was your answer?' she said, looking over her shoulder at her
brother.</p>
<p>'My dear child, you know what my answers are like!'</p>
<p>'And yours?'</p>
<p>Lawford took a deep breath, gazing mutely, forlornly, into the lovely
untroubled peace of her eyes, and without the least warning tears swept up
into his own. With an immense effort he turned, and choking back every
sound, beating hack every thought, groped his way towards the square black
darkness of the open door.</p>
<p>'I must think, I must think,' he managed to whisper, lifting his hand and
steadying himself. He caught over his shoulder the glimpse of a curiously
distorted vision, a lifted candle, and a still face gazing after him with
infinitely grieved eyes, then found himself groping and stumbling down the
steep, uneven staircase into the darkness of the queer old wooden and
hushed and lonely house. The night air cold on his face calmed his mind.
He turned and held out his hand.</p>
<p>'You'll come again?' Herbert was saying, with a hint of anxiety, even of
apology in his voice.</p>
<p>Lawford nodded, with eyes fixed blankly on the candle, and turning once
more, made his way slowly down the narrow green-bordered path upon which
the stars rained a scattered light so feeble it seemed but as a haze that
blurred the darkness. He pushed open the little white wicket and turned
his face towards the soundless, leaf-crowned hill. He had advanced hardly
a score of steps in the thick dust when almost as if its very silence had
struck upon his ear he remembered the black broken grave with its
sightless heads that lay beyond the leaves. And fear, vast and menacing,
fear such as only children know, broke like a sea of darkness on his
heart. He stopped dead—cold, helpless, trembling. And, in the
silence he heard a faint cry behind him and light footsteps pursuing him.
He turned again. In the thick close gloom beneath the enormous elm-boughs
the grey eyes shone clearly visible in the face upturned to him. 'My
brother,' she began breathlessly—'the little French book. It was I
who—who mislaid it.'</p>
<p>The set, stricken face listened unmoved.</p>
<p>'You are ill. Come back! I am afraid you are very ill.'</p>
<p>'It's not that, not that,' Lawford muttered; 'don't leave me; I am alone.
Don't question me,' he said strangely, looking down into her face,
clutching her hand; 'only understand that I can't, I can't go on.' He
swept a lean arm towards the unseen churchyard. 'I am afraid.'</p>
<p>The cold hand clasped his closer. 'Hush, don't speak! Come back; come
back. I am with you, a friend, you see; come back.'</p>
<p>Lawford clutched her hand as a blind man in sudden peril might clutch the
hand of a child. He saw nothing clearly; spoke almost without
understanding his words.</p>
<p>'Oh, but it's MUST,' he said; 'I MUST go on. You see—why, everything
depends on struggling through: the future! But if you only knew—There!'
Again his arm swept out, and the lean terrified face turned shuddering
from the dark.</p>
<p>'I do know; believe me, believe me! I can guess. See, I am coming with
you; we will go together. As if, as if I did not know what it is to be
afraid. Oh, believe me; no one is near; we go on; and see! it gradually,
gradually lightens. How thankful I am I came.'</p>
<p>She had turned and they were steadily ascending as if pushing their way,
battling on through some obstacle of the mind rather than of the senses
beneath the star-powdered callous vault of night. And it seemed to Lawford
as if, as they pressed on together, some obscure detestable presence as
slowly, as doggedly had drawn worsted aside. He could see again the
peaceful outspread branches of the trees, the lych-gate standing in
clear-cut silhouette against the liquid dusk of the sky. A strange calm
stole over his mind. The very meaning and memory of his fear faded out and
vanished, as the passed-away clouds of a storm that leave a purer, serener
sky.</p>
<p>They stopped and stood together on the brow of the little hill, and
Lawford, still trembling from head to foot, looked back across the hushed
and lightless countryside. 'It's all gone now,' he said wearily, 'and now
there's nothing left. You see, I cannot even ask your forgiveness—and
a stranger!'</p>
<p>'Please don't say that—unless—unless—a "pilgrim" too. I
think, surely, you must own we did have the best of it that time. Yes—and
I don't care WHO may be listening—but we DID win through.'</p>
<p>'What can I say? How shall I explain? How shall I make you understand?'</p>
<p>The clear grey eyes showed not the faintest perturbation. 'But I do; I do
indeed, in part; I do understand, ever so faintly.'</p>
<p>'And now I will come back with you.'</p>
<p>They paused in the darkness face to face, the silence of the sky, arched
in its vastness above the little hill, the only witness of their triumph.</p>
<p>She turned unquestioningly. And laughing softly almost as children do, the
stalking shadows of a twilight wood behind them—they trod in silence
back to the house. They said good-bye at the gate, and Lawford started
once more for home. He walked slowly, conscious of an almost intolerable
weariness, as if his strength had suddenly been wrested away from him. And
at some distance beyond the top of the hill he sat down on the bank beside
a nettled ditch, and with his book pressed down upon the wayside grass
struck a match, and holding it low in the scented, windless air turned
slowly the cockled leaf.</p>
<p>Few of them were alike except for the dinginess of the print and the
sinister smudge of the portraits. All were sewn roughly together into a
mould-stained, marbled cover. He lit a second match, and as he did so
glanced as if inquiringly over his shoulder. And a score or so of pages
before the end he came at last upon the name he was seeking, and turned
the page.</p>
<p>It was a likeness even more striking in its crudeness of ink and line and
paper than the most finished of portraits could have been. It repelled,
and yet it fascinated him. He had not for a moment doubted Herbert's calm
conviction. And yet as he stooped in the grass, closely scrutinising the
blurred obscure features, he felt the faintest surprise not so much at the
significant resemblance but at his own composure, his own steady,
unflinching confrontation with this sinister and intangible adversary. The
match burned down to his fingers. It hissed faintly in the grass.</p>
<p>He stuffed the book into his pocket, and stared into the pale dial of his
watch. It was a few minutes after eleven. Midnight, then, would just see
him in. He rose stiffly and yawned in sheer exhaustion. Then, hesitating,
he turned his head and looked back towards the hollow. But a vague
foreboding held him back. A sour and vacuous incredulity swept over him.
What was the use of all this struggling and vexation. What gain in living
on? Once dead his sluggish spirit at least would find its rest. Dust to
dust it would indeed be for him. What else, in sober earnest, had he been
all his daily stolid life but half dead, scarce conscious, without a
living thought, or desire, in head or heart?</p>
<p>And while he was still gloomily debating within himself he had turned
towards home, and soon was walking in a kind of reverie, even his extreme
tiredness in part forgotten, and only a far-away dogged recollection in
his mind that in spite of shame, in spite of all his miserable weakness,
the words had been uttered once for all, and in all sincerity, 'We DID win
through.'</p>
<p>Yet a desolate and odd air of strangeness seemed to drape his unlighted
house as he stood looking up in a kind of furtive communion with its
windows. It affected him with that discomforting air of extreme and
meaningless novelty that things very familiar sometimes take upon
themselves. In this leaden tiredness no impression could be trustworthy.
His lids shut of themselves as he softly mounted the steps. It seemed a
needlessly wide door that soundlessly admitted him. But however hard he
pressed the key his bedroom door remained stubbornly shut until he found
that it was already unlocked and he had only to turn the handle. A
night-light burned in a little basin on the washstand. The room was hung,
as it were, with the stillness of night. And half lying on the bed in her
dressing-gown, her head leaning on the rail at the foot, was Alice, just
as sleep had overtaken her.</p>
<p>Lawford returned to the door and listened. It seemed he heard a voice
talking downstairs, and yet not talking, for it ran on and on in an
incessant slightly argumentative monotony that had neither break nor
interruption. He closed the door, and stooping laid his hand softly on
Alice's narrow, still childish hand that lay half-folded on her knee. Her
eyes opened instantly and gazed widely into his face. A slow vacant smile
of sleep came and went and her fingers tightened gently over his as again
her lids drooped down over the drowsy blue eyes.</p>
<p>'At last, at last, dear,' she said; 'I have been waiting such a time. But
we mustn't talk much. Mother is waiting up, reading.'</p>
<p>Faintly through the close-shut door came the sound of that distant
expressionless voice monotonously rising and falling.</p>
<p>'Why didn't you tell me, dear?' Alice still sleepily whispered. 'Would I
have asked a single question? How could I? Oh, if you had only trusted
me!'</p>
<p>'But the change—the change, Alice! You must have seen that. You
spoke to me, you did think I was only a stranger; and even when you knew,
it was only fear on your face, dearest, and aversion; and you turned to
your mother first. Don't think, Alice, that I am...God only knows—I'm
not complaining. But truth is best whatever it is. I do feel that. You
mustn't be afraid of hurting me, my dear.'</p>
<p>Her very hands seemed to quicken in his as now, with sleep quite gone, the
fret of memory returned, and she must reassure both herself and him. 'But
you see, dear, mother had told me that you—besides, I did know you
at once, really; quite inside, you know, deep down. I know I was
perplexed; I didn't understand; but that was all. Why, even when you came
up in the dark, and we talked—if you only knew how miserable I had
been—though I knew even then there was something different, still I
was not a bit afraid. Was I? And shouldn't I have been afraid, horribly
afraid, if YOU had not been YOU?' She repressed a little shudder, and
clasped his hand more closely. 'Don't let us say anything more about it,
she implored him; 'we are just together again, you and I; that is all that
matters.' But her words were like brave soldiers who have fought their way
through an ambuscade but have left all confidence behind them.</p>
<p>Lawford listened; and that was enough just now—that she still, in
spite of doubt, believed in him, and thought and cared for him. He was too
tired to have refused the least kindness. He made no answer, but leant his
head on the cool, slender fingers in gratitude and peace. And, just as he
was, he almost instantly fell asleep. He woke in the darkness to find
himself alone. He groped his way heavily to the door and turned the
handle. But now it was really locked. Energy failed him. 'I suppose—Sheila...'
he muttered.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />