<h4><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h4>
<h3>BETWEEN TWO WORLDS.</h3>
<p>A solemn calm came down upon the house at Graybridge, and for the first
time Isabel Gilbert felt the presence of death about and around her,
shutting out all the living world by its freezing influence. The great
iceberg had come down upon the poor frail barque. It almost seemed to
Isabel as if she and all in that quiet habitation had been encompassed
by a frozen wall, through which the living could not penetrate.</p>
<p>She suffered very much; the morbid sensibility of her nature made her
especially liable to such suffering. A dull, remorseful pain gnawed at
her heart. Ah, how wicked she had been! how false, how cruel, how
ungrateful! But if she had known that he was to die—if she had only
known—it might all have been different. The foreknowledge of his doom
would have insured her truth and tenderness; she could not have wronged,
even by so much as a thought, a husband whose days were numbered. And
amid all her remorse she was for ever labouring with the one grand
difficulty—the difficulty of realizing what had happened. She had
needed the doctor's solemn assurance that her husband was really dead
before she could bring herself to believe that the white swoon, the
chill heaviness of the passive hand, did indeed mean death. And even
when she had been told that all was over, the words seemed to have very
little influence upon her mind. It could not be! All the last fortnight
of anxiety and trouble was blotted out, and she could only think of
George Gilbert as she had always known him until that time, in the full
vigour of health and strength.</p>
<p>She was very sorrowful; but no passionate grief stirred her frozen
breast. It was the shock, the sense of horror that oppressed her, rather
than any consciousness of a great loss. She would have called her
husband back to life; but chiefly because it was so horrible to her to
know that he was there—near her—what he was. Once the thought came to
her—the weak selfish thought—that it would have been much easier for
her to bear this calamity if her husband had gone away, far away from
her, and only a letter had come to tell her that he was dead. She
fancied herself receiving the letter, and wondering at its black-edged
border. The shock would have been very dreadful; but not so horrible as
the knowledge that George Gilbert was in that house, and yet there was
no George Gilbert. Again and again her mind went over the same beaten
track; again and again the full realization of what had happened slipped
away from her, and she found herself framing little speeches—penitent,
remorseful speeches—expressive of her contrition for all past
shortcomings. And then there suddenly flashed back upon her the too
vivid picture of that deathbed scene, and she heard the dull thick voice
murmuring feebly words of love and praise.</p>
<p>In all this time Roland Lansdell's image was shut out of her mind. In
the dense and terrible shadow that filled all the chambers of her brain,
that bright and splendid figure could have no place. She thought of Mr.
Colborne at Hurstonleigh now and then, and felt a vague yearning for his
presence. He might have been able to comfort her perhaps, somehow; he
might have made it easier for her to bear the knowledge of that dreadful
presence in the room up-stairs. She tried once or twice to read some of
the chapters that had seemed so beautiful on the lips of the popular
curate; but even out of that holy volume dark and ghastly images arose
to terrify her, and she saw Lazarus emerging from the tomb livid in his
grave-clothes: and death and horror seemed to be everywhere and in
everything.</p>
<p>After the first burst of passionate grief, bitterly intermingled with
indignation against the woman whom she believed to have been a wicked
and neglectful wife, Matilda Jeffson was not ungentle to the
terror-stricken girl so newly made a widow. She took a cup of scalding
tea into the darkened parlour where Isabel sat, shivering every now and
then as if with cold, and persuaded the poor frightened creature to take
a little of that comforting beverage. She wiped away her own tears with
her apron while she talked to Isabel of patience and resignation,
submission to the will of Providence, and all those comforting theories
which are very sweet to the faithful mourner, even when the night-time
of affliction is darkest.</p>
<p>But Isabel was not a religious woman. She was a child again, weak and
frivolous, frightened by the awful visitant who had so newly entered
that house. All through the evening of her husband's death she sat in
the little parlour, sometimes trying to read a little, sometimes idly
staring at the tall wick of the tallow-candle, which was only snuffed
once in a way—when Mrs. Jeffson came into the room "to keep the scared
creature company for a bit," she said to her husband, who sat by the
kitchen fire with his elbows on his knees and his face hidden in his
hands, brooding over those bygone days when he had been wont to fetch
his master's son from that commercial academy in the Wareham Road.</p>
<p>There was a good deal of going in and out, a perpetual tramp of hushed
footsteps moving to and fro, as it seemed to Isabel; and Mrs. Jeffson,
even in the midst of her grief, appeared full of some kind of business
that kept her astir all the evening. The Doctor's Wife had imagined that
all voice and motion must come to an end—that life itself must make a
pause—in a house where death was. Others might feel a far keener grief
for the man that was gone; but no one felt so deep an awe of death as
she did. Mrs. Jeffson brought her some supper on a little tray late in
the evening; but she pushed it away from her and burst into tears. There
seemed a kind of sacrilege in this carrying in and out of food and drink
while he lay up-stairs; he whose hat still hung in the passage without,
whose papers and ink-bottles and medical books were all primly arranged
on one of the little vulgar cupboards by the fireplace. Ah, how often
she had hated those medical books for being what they were, instead of
editions of "Zanoni" and "Ernest Maltravers!" and it seemed wicked even
to have thought unkindly of them, now that he to whom they belonged was
dead.</p>
<p>It was quite in vain that Mrs. Jeffson urged her to go up-stairs to the
room opposite that in which the surgeon lay; it was quite as vainly that
the good woman entreated her to go and look at him, now that he was
lying so peacefully in the newly-arranged chamber, to lay her hand on
his marble forehead, so that no shadow of him should trouble her in her
sleep. The girl only shook her head forlornly.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid," she said, piteously—"I'm afraid of that room. I never
thought that he would die. I know that I wasn't good. It was wicked to
think of other people always, and not of him; but I never thought that
he would die. I knew that he was good to me; and I tried to obey him:
but I think I should have been different if I had known that he would
die."</p>
<p>She pulled out the little table-drawer where the worsted socks were
rolled up in fluffy balls, with needles sticking out of them here and
there. Even these were a kind of evidence of her neglect. She had
cobbled them a little during the later period of her married
life,—during the time of her endeavour to be good,—but she had not
finished this work or any other. Ah, what a poor creature she was, after
all!—a creature of feeble resolutions, formed only to be broken; a weak
vacillating creature, full of misty yearnings and aspirings—resolving
nobly in one moment, to yield sinfully in the next.</p>
<p>She begged to be allowed to spend the night down-stairs on the rickety
little sofa; and Mrs. Jeffson, seeing that she was really oppressed by
some childish terror of that upper story, brought her some blankets and
pillows, and a feeble little light that was to burn until daybreak.</p>
<p>So in that familiar room, whose every scrap of shabby furniture had been
a part of the monotony of her life, Isabel Gilbert spent the first night
of her widowhood, lying on the little sofa, nervously conscious of every
sound in the house; feverishly wakeful until long after the morning sun
was shining through the yellow-white blind, when she fell into an uneasy
doze, in which she dreamt that her husband was alive and well. She did
not arouse herself out of this, and yet she was never thoroughly asleep
throughout the time, until after ten o'clock; and then she found Mrs.
Jeffson sitting near the little table, on which the inevitable cup of
tea was smoking beside a plate of the clumsy kind of bread-and-butter
inseparably identified with George Gilbert in Isabel's mind.</p>
<p>"There's somebody wants to see you, if you're well enough to be spoken
to, my dear," Matilda said, very gently; for she had been considerably
moved by Mrs. Gilbert's penitent little confession of her shortcomings
as a wife; and was inclined to think that perhaps, after all, Graybridge
had judged this helpless schoolgirl creature rather harshly. "Take the
tea, my dear; I made it strong on purpose for you; and try and cheer up
a bit, poor lassie; you're young to wear widow's weeds; but he was fit
to go. If all of us had worked as hard for the good of other folks, we
could afford to die as peaceful as he did."</p>
<p>Isabel pushed the heavy tangled hair away from her pallid face, and
pursed-up her pale lips to kiss the Yorkshire-woman.</p>
<p>"You're very kind to me," she said; "you used to think that I was
wicked, I know; and then you seemed very unkind. But I always wished to
be good. I should like to have been good, and to die young, like
George's mother."</p>
<p>It is to be observed that, with Isabel's ideal of goodness there was
always the association of early death. She had a vague idea that very
religious and self-denying people got through their quota of piety with
tolerable speed, and received their appointed reward. As yet her notions
of self-sacrifice were very limited; and she could scarcely have
conceived a long career of perfection. She thought of nuns as creatures
who bade farewell to the world, and had all their back-hair cut off, and
retired into a convent, and died soon afterwards, while they were still
young and interesting. She could not have imagined an elderly nun, with
all a long monotonous life of self-abnegation behind her, getting up at
four o'clock every morning, and being as bright and vivacious and
cheerful as any happy wife or mother outside the convent-walls. Yet
there are such people.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Mrs. Gilbert took a little of the hot tea, and then sat quite still,
with her head lying on Matilda Jeffson's shoulder, and her hand clasped
in Matilda's rough fingers. That living clasp seemed to impart a kind of
comfort, so terribly had death entered into Isabel's narrow world.</p>
<p>"Do you think you shall be well enough to see him presently, poor
lassie?" Mrs. Jeffson said, after a long silence. "I shouldn't ask you,
only he seems anxious-like, as if there was something particular on his
mind; and I know he's been very kind to you."</p>
<p>Isabel stared at her in bewilderment.</p>
<p>"I don't know who you are talking of," she said.</p>
<p>"It's Mr. Raymond, from Coventford! It's early for him to be so far as
Graybridge; but he looks as pale and worn-like as if he'd been up and
about all night. He was all struck of a heap-like when I told him about
our poor master."</p>
<p>Here Mrs. Jeffson had recourse to the cotton apron which had been so
frequently applied to her eyes during the last week. Isabel huddled a
shabby little shawl about her shoulders; she had made no change in her
dress when she had lain down the night before; and she was very pale and
wan, and tumbled and woebegone, in the bright summer light.</p>
<p>"Mr. Raymond! Mr. Raymond!" She repeated his name to herself once or
twice, and made a faint effort to understand why he should have come to
her. He had always been very kind to her, and associated with his image
there was a sense of sound wisdom and vigorous cheerfulness of spirit.
His presence would bring some comfort to her, she thought. Next to Mr.
Colborne, he was the person whom she would most have desired to see.</p>
<p>"I will go to him, Mrs. Jeffson," she said, rising slowly from the sofa.
"He was always very good to me. But, oh, how the sight of him will bring
back the time at Conventford, when George used to come and see me on
Sunday afternoons, and we used to walk together in the cold bare
meadows!"</p>
<p>That time did come back to her as she spoke: a grey colourless pause in
her life, in which she had been—not happy, perhaps, but contented. And
since that time what, tropical splendors, what a gorgeous oasis of light
and colour had spread itself suddenly about her path! a forest of
miraculous flowers and enchanted foliage that had shut out all the
every-day world in which other people dragged out their tiresome
existences—a wonderful Asiatic wilderness, in which there were hidden
dangers lurking, terrible as the cobras that drop down upon the
traveller from some flowering palm-tree, or the brindled tigers that
prowl in the shadowy jungle. She looked back across that glimpse of an
earthly paradise to the old dull days at Conventford; and a hot blast
from the tropical oasis seemed to rush in upon her, beyond which the
past spread far away like a cool grey sea. Perhaps that quiet
neutral-tinted life was the best, after all. She saw herself again as
she had been; "engaged" to the man who lay dead up-stairs; and weaving a
poor little web of romance for herself even out of that prosaic
situation.</p>
<p>Mr. Raymond was waiting in the best parlour,—that sacred chamber, which
had been so rarely used during the parish surgeon's brief wedded
life,—that primly-arranged little sitting-room, which always had a
faint odour of old-fashioned <i>pot pourri</i>; the room which Isabel had
once yearned to beautify into a bower of chintz and muslin. The blind
was down, and the shutters half-closed; and in the dim light Charles
Raymond looked very pale.</p>
<p>"My dear Mrs. Gilbert," he said, taking her hand, and leading her to a
seat; "my poor child,—so little more than a child,—so little wiser or
stronger than a child,—it seems cruel to come to you at such a time;
but life is very hard sometimes——"</p>
<p>"It was very kind of you to come," Isabel exclaimed, interrupting him.
"I wanted to see you, or some one like you; for everything seems so
dreadful to me. I never thought that he would die."</p>
<p>She began to cry, in a weary helpless way, not like a person moved by
some bitter grief; rather like a child that finds itself in a strange
place and is frightened.</p>
<p>"My poor child, my poor child!"</p>
<p>Charles Raymond still held Isabel's passive hand, and she felt tears
dropping on it; the tears of a man, of all others the last to give way
to any sentimental weakness. But even then she did not divine that he
must have some grief of his own—some sorrow that touched him more
nearly than George Gilbert's death could possibly touch him. Her state
of feeling just now was a peculiarly selfish state, perhaps; for she
could neither understand nor imagine anything outside that darkened
house, where death was supreme. The shock had been too terrible and too
recent. It was as if an earthquake had taken place, and all the
atmosphere round her was thick with clouds of blinding dust produced by
the concussion. She felt Mr. Raymond's tears dropping slowly on her
hand; and if she thought about them at all, she thought them only the
evidence of his sympathy with her childish fears and sorrows.</p>
<p>"I loved him like my own son," murmured Charles Raymond, in a low tender
voice. "If he had not been what he was,—if he had been the veriest cub
that ever disgraced a good old stock,—I think even then I should have
loved him as dearly and as truly, for her sake. Her only son! I've seen
him look at me as she looked when I kissed her in the church on her
wedding-day. So long as he lived, I should have never felt that she was
really lost to me."</p>
<p>Isabel heard nothing of these broken sentences. Mr. Raymond uttered them
in low musing tones, that were not intended to reach any mortal ears.
For some little time he sat silently by the girl's side, with her hand
still lying in his; then he rose and walked up and down the room with a
soft slow step, and with his head drooping.</p>
<p>"You have been very much shocked by your husband's death?" he said at
last.</p>
<p>Isabel began to cry again at this question,—weak hysterical tears, that
meant very little, perhaps.</p>
<p>"Oh, very, very much," she answered. "I know I was not so good as I
ought to have been; and I can never ask him to forgive me now."</p>
<p>"You were very fond of him, I suppose?"</p>
<p>A faint blush flickered and faded upon Isabel's pallid face; and then
she answered, hesitating a little,——</p>
<p>"He was very good to me, and I—I tried always to be grateful—almost
always," she added, with a remorseful recollection of rebellious moments
in which she had hated her husband because he ate spring-onions, and
wore Graybridge-made boots.</p>
<p>Just the slightest indication of a smile glimmered upon Mr. Raymond's
countenance as he watched Isabel's embarrassment. We are such weak and
unstable creatures at the very best, that it is just possible this man,
who loved Roland Lansdell very dearly, was not entirely grieved by the
discovery of Isabel's indifference for her dead husband. He went back to
the chair near hers, and seated himself once more by her side. He began
to speak to her in a very low earnest voice; but he kept his eyes bent
upon the ground; and in that dusky light she was quite unable to see the
expression of his face.</p>
<p>"Isabel," he began, very gravely, "I said just now that life seems very
hard to us sometimes,—not to be explained by any doctrine of averages,
by any of the codes of philosophy which man frames for his own comfort;
only to be understood very dimly by one sublime theory, which some of us
are not strong mough to grasp and hold by. Ah, what poor tempest-tossed
vessels we are without that compass! I have had a great and bitter grief
to bear within the last four-and-twenty hours, Isabel; a sorrow that has
come upon me more suddenly than even the shock of your husband's death
can have fallen on you."</p>
<p>"I am very sorry for you," Isabel answered, dreamily; "the world must be
full of trouble, I think. It doesn't seem as if any one was ever really
happy."</p>
<p>She was thinking of her own life, so long to look back upon, though she
was little more than twenty years of age; she was thinking of the petty
sordid miseries of her girlhood,—the sheriff's officers and
tax-gatherers, and infuriated tradespeople,—the great shock of her
father's disgrace; the dull monotony of her married life; and Roland
Lansdell's sudden departure; and his stubborn anger against her when she
refused to run away with him; and then her husband's death. It seemed
all one dreary record of grief and trouble.</p>
<p>"I am growing old. Isabel," resumed Mr. Raymond; "but I have never lost
my sympathy with youth and all its brightness. I think, perhaps, that
sympathy has grown wider and stronger with increase of years. There is
one young man who has been always very dear to me—more dear to me than
I can ever make you comprehend, unless I were to tell you the subtle
link that has bound him to me. I suppose there are some fathers who have
as deep a love for their sons as I have for the man of whom I speak; but
I have always fancied fatherly love a very lukewarm feeling compared
with my affection for Roland Lansdell."</p>
<p>Roland Lansdell! It was the first time she had heard his name spoken
since that Sunday on which her husband's illness had begun. The name
shot through her heart with a thrill that was nearly akin to pain. A
little glimpse of lurid sunshine burst suddenly in upon the darkness of
her life. She clasped her hands before her face almost as if it had been
actual light that she wanted to shut out.</p>
<p>"Oh, don't speak of him!" she said, piteously. "I was so wicked; I
thought of him so much; but I did not know that my husband would die.
Please don't speak of him; it pains me so to hear his name."</p>
<p>She broke down into a torrent of hysterical weeping as she uttered this
last entreaty. She remembered Roland's angry face in the church; his
studied courtesy during that midnight interview at the Priory, the calm
reserve of manner which she had mistaken for indifference. He was
nothing to her; he was not even her friend; and she had sinned so deeply
against the dead man for his sake.</p>
<p>"I should be the last to mention Roland Lansdell's name in your
hearing," Mr. Raymond answered presently, when she had grown a little
quieter, "if the events of the last day or two had not broken down all
barriers. The time is very near at hand, Isabel, when no name ever
spoken upon this earth will be an emptier sound than the name of Roland
Lansdell."</p>
<p>She lifted her tear-stained face suddenly and looked at him. All the
clouds floated away, and a dreadful light broke in upon her; she looked
at him, trembling from head to foot, with her hands clasped convulsively
about his arm.</p>
<p>"You came here to tell me something!" she gasped; "something has
happened—to him! Ah, if it has, life is <i>all</i> sorrow!"</p>
<p>"He is dying, Isabel."</p>
<p>"Dying!"</p>
<p>Her lips shaped the words, and her fixed eyes stared at Charles
Raymond's face with an awful look.</p>
<p>"He is dying. It would be foolish to deceive you with any false hope,
when in four-and-twenty hours' time all will be finished. He went
out—riding—the other night, and fell from his horse, as it is
supposed. He was found by some haymakers early the next morning, lying
helpless, some miles from the Priory, and was carried home. The medical
men give no hope of his recovery; but he has been sensible at intervals
ever since. I have been a great deal with him—constantly with him; and
his cousin Gwendoline is there. He wants to see you, Isabel; of course
he knows nothing of your husband's death; I did not know of it myself
till I came here this morning. He wants to see you, my poor child. Do
you think you can come?"</p>
<p>She rose and bent her head slowly as if in assent, but the fixed look of
horror never left her face. She moved towards the door, and seemed as if
she wanted to go at once—dressed as she was, with the old faded shawl
wrapped about her.</p>
<p>"You'd better get your housekeeper to make you comfortable and tidy,
while I go and engage a fly," said Mr. Raymond; and then looking her
full in the face, he added, "Can you promise me to be very calm and
quiet when you see him? You had better not come unless you can promise
me as much as that. His hours are numbered, as it is; but any violent
emotion would be immediately fatal. A man's last hours are very precious
to him, remember; the hours of a man who knows his end is near make a
sacred mystical period in which the world drops far away from him, and
he is in a kind of middle region between this life and the next. I want
you to recollect this, Isabel. The man you are going to see is not the
man you have known in the past. There would be very little hope for us
after death, if we found no hallowing influence in its approach."</p>
<p>"I will recollect," Isabel answered. She had shed no tears since she had
been told of Roland's danger. Perhaps this new and most terrible shock
had nerved her with an unnatural strength. And amid all the anguish
comprehended in the thought of his death, it scarcely seemed strange to
her that Roland Lansdell should be dying. It seemed rather as if the end
of the world had suddenly come about; and it mattered very little who
should be the first to perish. Her own turn would come very soon, no
doubt.</p>
<p>Mr. Raymond met Mrs. Jeffson in the passage, and said a few words to her
before he went out of the house. The good woman was shocked at the
tidings of Mr. Lansdell's accident. She had thought very badly of the
elegant young master of Mordred Priory; but death and sorrow take the
bitterness out of a true-hearted woman's feelings, and Matilda was
womanly enough to forgive Roland for the wish that summoned the Doctor's
Wife to his deathbed. She went up-stairs, and came down with Isabel's
bonnet and cloak and simple toilet paraphernalia; and presently Mrs.
Gilbert had a consciousness of cold water splashed upon her face, and a
brush passed over her tangled hair. She felt only half conscious of
these things, as she might have felt had they been the events of a
dream. So presently, when Mr. Raymond came back, accompanied by the
muffled rolling of wheels in the straw-bestrewn lane, and she was half
lifted into the old-fashioned, mouldy-smelling Graybridge fly,—so all
along the familiar high-road, past the old inn with the sloping roof,
where the pigeons were cooing to each other, as if there had been no
such thing as death or sorrow in the world,—so under the grand gothic
gates of monastic Mordred, it was all like a dream—a terrible
oppressive dream—hideous by reason of some vague sense of horror rather
than by the actual vision presented to the eyes of the sleeper. In a
troubled dream it is always thus,—it is always a hidden, intangible
something that oppresses the dreamer.</p>
<p>The leaves were fluttering in the warm midsummer wind, and the bees were
humming about the great flower-beds. Far away the noise of the waterfall
blended with all other summer sounds in a sweet confusion. And he was
dying! Oh, what wonderful patches of shadow and sunlight on the wide
lawns! what marvellous glimpses down long glades, where the young fern
heaved to and fro in the fitful breezes like the emerald wavelets of a
summer sea! And he was dying! It is such an old, old feeling, this
unwillingness to comprehend that there can be death anywhere upon an
earth that is so beautiful. Eve may have felt very much as Isabel felt
to-day, when she saw a tropical sky, serenely splendid, above the corpse
of murdered Abel. Hero may have found the purple distances of the
classic mountains, the yellow glory of the sunlit sands, almost more
difficult to bear than the loss of her drowned lover.</p>
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