<h2><SPAN name="chap22"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXII.<br/> A NIGHT OF STORM</h2>
<p>That afternoon the whole Vicarage party walked up to the farm to inspect
another litter of young pigs. It struck Geoffrey, remembering former editions,
that the reproductive powers of Mr. Granger’s old sow were something
little short of marvellous, and he dreamily worked out a calculation of how
long it would take her and her progeny to produce a pig to every square yard of
the area of plucky little Wales. It seemed that the thing could be done in six
years, which was absurd, so he gave up calculating.</p>
<p>He had no words alone with Beatrice that afternoon. Indeed, a certain coldness
seemed to have sprung up between them. With the almost supernatural quickness
of a loving woman’s intuition, she had divined that something was passing
in his mind, inimical to her most vital interests, so she shunned his company,
and received his conventional advances with a politeness which was as cold as
it was crushing. This did not please Geoffrey; it is one thing (in her own
interests, of course) to make up your mind heroically to abandon a lady whom
you do not wish to compromise, and quite another to be snubbed by that lady
before the moment of final separation. Though he never put the idea into words
or even defined it in his mind—for Geoffrey was far too anxious and
unhappy to be flippant, at any rate in thought—he would at heart have
wished her to remain the same, indeed to wax ever tenderer, till the fatal time
of parting arrived, and even to show appreciation of his virtuous conduct.</p>
<p>But to the utter destruction of most such hands as Geoffrey held, loving women
never will play according to the book. Their conduct imperils everything, for
it is obvious that it takes two to bring an affair of this nature to a
dignified conclusion, even when the stakes are highest, and the matter is one
of life and death. Beatrice after all was very much of a woman, and she did not
behave much better than any other woman would have done. She was angry and
suspicious, and she showed it, with the result that Geoffrey grew angry also.
It was cruel of her, he thought, considering all things. He forgot that she
could know nothing of what was in his mind, however much she might guess; also
as yet he did not know the boundless depth and might of her passion for him,
and all that it meant to her. Had he realised this he would have acted very
differently.</p>
<p class="p2">
They came home and took tea, then Mr. Granger and Elizabeth made ready to go to
evening service. To Geoffrey’s dismay Beatrice did the same. He had
looked forward to a quiet walk with her—really this was not to be borne.
Fortunately, or rather unfortunately, she was ready the first, and he got a
word with her.</p>
<p>“I did not know that you were going to church,” he said; “I
thought that we might have had a walk together. Very likely I shall have to go
away early to-morrow morning.”</p>
<p>“Indeed,” answered Beatrice coldly. “But of course you have
your work to attend to. I told Elizabeth that I was coming to church, and I
must go; it is too sultry to walk; there will be a storm soon.”</p>
<p>At this moment Elizabeth came in.</p>
<p>“Well, Beatrice,” she said, “are you coming to church? Father
has gone on.”</p>
<p>Beatrice pretended not to hear, and reflected a moment. He would go away and
she would see him no more. Could she let slip this last hour? Oh, she could not
do it!</p>
<p>In that moment of reflection her fate was sealed.</p>
<p>“No,” she answered slowly, “I don’t think that I am
coming; it is too sultry to go to church. I daresay that Mr. Bingham will
accompany you.”</p>
<p>Geoffrey hastily disclaimed any such intention, and Elizabeth started alone.
“Ah!” she said to herself, “I thought that you would not
come, my dear.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Geoffrey, when she had well gone, “shall we go
out?”</p>
<p>“I think it is pleasanter here,” answered Beatrice.</p>
<p>“Oh, Beatrice, don’t be so unkind,” he said feebly.</p>
<p>“As you like,” she replied. “There is a fine sunset—but
I think that we shall have a storm.”</p>
<p>They went out, and turned up the lonely beach. The place was utterly deserted,
and they walked a little way apart, almost without speaking. The sunset was
magnificent; great flakes of golden cloud were driven continually from a home
of splendour in the west towards the cold lined horizon of the land. The sea
was still quiet, but it moaned like a thing in pain. The storm was gathering
fast.</p>
<p>“What a lovely sunset,” said Geoffrey at length.</p>
<p>“It is a fatal sort of loveliness,” she answered; “it will be
a bad night, and a wet morrow. The wind is rising; shall we turn?”</p>
<p>“No, Beatrice, never mind the wind. I want to speak to you, if you will
allow me to do so.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Beatrice, “what about, Mr. Bingham.”</p>
<p>To make good resolutions in a matter of this sort is comparatively easy, but
the carrying of them out presents some difficulties. Geoffrey,
conscience-stricken into priggishness, wished to tell her that she would do
well to marry Owen Davies, and found the matter hard. Meanwhile Beatrice
preserved silence.</p>
<p>“The fact is,” he said at length, “I most sincerely hope you
will forgive me, but I have been thinking a great deal about you and your
future welfare.”</p>
<p>“That is very kind of you,” said Beatrice, with an ominous
humility.</p>
<p>This was disconcerting, but Geoffrey was determined, and he went on in a
somewhat flippant tone born of the most intense nervousness and hatred of his
task. Never had he loved her so well as now in this moment when he was about to
counsel her to marry another man. And yet he persevered in his folly. For, as
so often happens, the shrewd insight and knowledge of the world which
distinguished Geoffrey as a lawyer, when dealing with the affairs of others,
quite deserted him in this crisis of his own life and that of the woman who
worshipped him.</p>
<p>“Since I have been here,” he said, “I have had made to me no
less than three appeals on your behalf and by separate people—by your
father, who fancies that you are pining for Owen Davies; by Owen Davies, who is
certainly pining for you; and by old Edward, intervening as a kind of domestic
<i>amicus curiæ</i>.”</p>
<p>“Indeed,” said Beatrice, in a voice of ice.</p>
<p>“All these three urged the same thing—the desirability of your
marrying Owen Davies.”</p>
<p>Beatrice’s face grew quite pale, her lips twitched and her grey eyes
flashed angrily.</p>
<p>“Really,” she said, “and have <i>you</i> any advice to give
on the subject, Mr. Bingham?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Beatrice, I have. I have thought it over, and I think
that—forgive me again—that if you can bring yourself to it, perhaps
you had better marry him. He is not such a bad sort of man, and he is well
off.”</p>
<p>They had been walking rapidly, and now they were reaching the spot known as the
“Amphitheatre,” that same spot where Owen Davies had proposed to
Beatrice some seven months before.</p>
<p>Beatrice passed round the projecting edge of rock, and walked some way towards
the flat slab of stone in the centre before she answered. While she did so a
great and bitter anger filled her heart. She saw, or thought she saw, it all.
Geoffrey wished to be rid of her. He had discerned an element of danger in
their intimacy, and was anxious to make that intimacy impossible by pushing her
into a hateful marriage. Suddenly she turned and faced him—turned like a
thing at bay. The last red rays of the sunset struck upon her lovely face made
more lovely still by its stamp of haughty anger: they lay upon her heaving
breast. Full in the eyes she looked him with those wide angry eyes of
hers—never before had he seen her wear so imperial a mien. Her dignity
and the power of her presence literally awed him, for at times Beatrice’s
beauty was of that royal stamp which when it hides a heart, is a compelling
force, conquering and born to conquer.</p>
<p>“Does it not strike you, Mr. Bingham,” she said quietly,
“that you are taking a very great liberty? Does it not strike you that no
man who is not a relation has any right to speak to a woman as you have spoken
to me?—that, in short, you have been guilty of what in most people would
be an impertinence? What right have you to dictate to me as to whom I should or
should not marry? Surely of all things in the world that is my own
affair.”</p>
<p>Geoffrey coloured to the eyes. As would have been the case with most men of his
class, he felt her accusation of having taken a liberty, of having presumed
upon an intimacy, more keenly than any which she could have brought against
him.</p>
<p>“Forgive me,” he said humbly. “I can only assure you that I
had no such intention. I only spoke—ill-judgedly, I
fear—because—because I felt driven to it.”</p>
<p>Beatrice took no notice of his words, but went on in the same cold voice.</p>
<p>“What right have you to speak of my affairs with Mr. Davies, with an old
boatman, or even with my father? Had I wished you to do so I should have asked
you. By what authority do you constitute yourself an intermediary for the
purpose of bringing about a marriage which you are so good as to consider would
be to my pecuniary interest? Do you not know that such a matter is one which
the woman concerned, the woman whose happiness and self-respect are at stake,
alone can judge of? I have nothing more to say except this. I said just now
that you had been guilty of what would in most people be an impertinence. Well,
I will add something. In this case, Mr. Bingham, there are circumstances which
make it—a cruel insult!”</p>
<p>She stopped speaking, then suddenly, without the slightest warning, burst into
passionate weeping. As she did so, the first rush of the storm passed over
them, winnowing the air as with a thousand eagles’ wings, and was lost on
the moaning depths beyond.</p>
<p>The light went out of the sky. Now Geoffrey could only see the faint outlines
of her weeping face. One moment he hesitated and one only; then Nature
prevailed against him, for the next she was in his arms.</p>
<p>Beatrice scarcely resisted him. Her energies seemed to fail her, or perhaps she
had spent them in her bitter words. Her head fell upon his shoulder, and there
she sobbed her fill. Presently she lifted it and their lips met in a first long
kiss. It was finished; this was the end of it—and thus did Geoffrey
prosper Owen Davies’s suit.</p>
<p>“Oh, you are cruel, cruel!” he whispered in her ear. “You
must have known I loved you, Beatrice, that I spoke against myself because I
thought it to be my duty. You must have known that, to my sin and sorrow, I
have always loved you, that you have never been an hour from my mind, that I
have longed to see your face like a sick man for the light. Tell me, did you
not know it, Beatrice?”</p>
<p>“How should I know?” she answered very softly; “I could only
guess, and if indeed you love me how could you wish me to marry another man? I
thought that you had learned my weakness and took this way to reproach me. Oh,
Geoffrey, what have we done? What is there between you and me—except our
love?”</p>
<p>“It would have been better if we had been drowned together at the
first,” he said heavily.</p>
<p>“No, no,” she answered, “for then we never should have loved
one another. Better first to love, and then to die!”</p>
<p>“Do not speak so,” he said; “let us sit here and be happy for
a little while to-night, and leave trouble till to-morrow.”</p>
<p>And, where on a bygone day Beatrice had tarried with another wooer, side by
side they sat upon the great stone and talked such talk as lovers use.</p>
<p>Above them moaned the rising gale, though sheltered as they were by cliffs its
breath scarcely stirred their hair. In front of them the long waves boomed upon
the beach, while far out to sea the crescent moon, draped in angry light,
seemed to ride the waters like a boat.</p>
<p>And were they alone with their great bliss, or did they only dream? Nay, they
were alone with love and lovers’ joys, and all the truth was told, and
all their doubts were done. Now there was an end of hopes and fears; now reason
fell and Love usurped his throne, and at that royal coming Heaven threw wide
her gates. Oh, Sweetest and most dear! Oh, Dearest and most sweet! Oh, to have
lived to find this happy hour—oh, in this hour to die!</p>
<p>See heaviness is behind us, see now we are one. Blow, you winds, blow out your
stormy heart; we know the secret of your strength, you rush to your desire.
Fall, deep waters of the sea, fall in thunder at the feet of earth; we hear the
music of your pleading.</p>
<p>Earth, and Seas, and Winds, sing your great chant of love! Heaven and Space and
Time, echo back the melody! For Life has called to us the answer of his riddle!
Heart to heart we sit, and lips to lips, and we are more wise than Solomon, and
richer than barbarian kings, for Happiness is ours.</p>
<p>To this end were we born, Dearest and most sweet, and from all time
predestinate! To this end, Sweetest and most dear, do we live and die, in death
to find completer unity. For here is that secret of the world which wise men
search and cannot find, and here too is the gate of Heaven.</p>
<p>Look into my eyes, and let me gaze on yours, and listen how these things shall
be. The world is but a mockery, and a shadow is our flesh, for where once they
were there shall be naught. Only Love is real; Love shall endure till all the
suns are dead, and yet be young.</p>
<p>Kiss me, thou Conqueror, for Destiny is overcome, Sorrow is gone by; and the
flame that we have hallowed upon this earthly altar shall still burn brightly,
and yet more bright, when yonder stars have lost their fire.</p>
<p>But alas! words cannot give a fitting form to such a song as this. Let music
try! But music also folds her wings. For in so supreme an hour</p>
<p class="poem">
“A bolt is shot back somewhere in our breast,”</p>
<p>and through that opened door come sights and sounds such as cannot be written.</p>
<p class="p2">
They tell us it is madness, that this unearthly glory is but the frenzy of a
passion gross in its very essence. Let those think it who will, but to dreamers
let them leave their dreams. Why then, at such a time, do visions come to
children of the world like Beatrice and Geoffrey? Why do their doubts vanish,
and what is that breath from heaven which they seem to feel upon their brow?
The intoxication of earthly love born of the meeting of youth and beauty. So be
it! Slave, bring more such wine and let us drink—to Immortality and to
those dear eyes that mirror forth a spirit’s face!</p>
<p>Such loves indeed are few. For they must be real and deep, and natures thus
shaped are rare, nor do they often cross each other’s line of life. Yes,
there are few who can be borne so high, and none can breathe that ether long.
Soon the wings which Love lent them in his hour of revelation will shrink and
vanish, and the borrowers will fall back to the level of this world, happy if
they escape uncrushed. Perchance even in their life-days, they may find these
spirit wings again, overshadowing the altar of their vows in the hour of
earthly marriage, if by some happy fate, marriage should be within their reach,
or like the holy pinions of the goddess Nout, folded about a coffin, in the
time of earthly death. But scant are the occasions, and few there are who know
them.</p>
<p class="p2">
Thus soared Beatrice and Geoffrey while the wild night beat around them, making
a fit accompaniment to their stormy loves. And thus they too fell from heaven
to earth.</p>
<p>“We must be going, Geoffrey; it grows late,” said Beatrice.
“Oh, Geoffrey, Geoffrey, what have we done? What can be the end of all
this? It will bring trouble on you, I know that it must. The old saying will
come true. I saved your life, and I shall bring ruin on you!”</p>
<p>It is characteristic of Beatrice that already she was thinking of the
consequences to Geoffrey, not of those to herself.</p>
<p>“Beatrice,” said Geoffrey, “we are in a desperate position.
Do you wish to face it and come away with me, far away to the other side of the
world?”</p>
<p>“No, no,” she answered vehemently, “it would be your ruin to
abandon the career that is before you. What part of the world could you go to
where you would not be known? Besides there is your wife to think of. Ah, God,
your wife—what would she say of me? You belong to her, you have no right
to desert her. And there is Effie too. No, Geoffrey, no, I have been wicked
enough to learn to love you—oh, as you were never loved before, if it is
wicked to do what one cannot help—but I am not bad enough for this. Walk
quicker, Geoffrey; we shall be late, and they will suspect something.”</p>
<p>Poor Beatrice, the pangs of conscience were finding her out!</p>
<p>“We are in a dreadful position,” he said again. “Oh, dearest,
I have been to blame. I should never have come back here. It is my fault; and
though I never thought of this, I did my best to please you.”</p>
<p>“And I thank you for it,” she answered. “Do not deceive
yourself, Geoffrey. Whatever happens, promise me never for one moment to
believe that I reproached or blamed you. Why should I blame you because you won
my heart? Let me sooner blame the sea on which we floated, the beach where we
walked, the house in which we lived, and the Destiny that brought us together.
I am proud and glad to love you, dear, but I am not so selfish as to wish to
ruin you: Geoffrey—I had rather die.”</p>
<p>“Don’t talk so,” he said, “I cannot bear it. What are
we to do? Am I to go away and see you no more? How can we live so,
Beatrice?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Geoffrey,” she answered heavily, taking him by the hand and
gazing up into his face, “you are to go away and see me no more, not for
years and years. This is what we have brought upon ourselves, it is the price
that we must pay for this hour which has gone. You are to go away to-morrow,
that we may be put out of temptation, and you must come back no more. Sometimes
I shall write to you, and sometimes perhaps you will write to me, till the
thing becomes a burden, then you can stop. And whether you forget me or
not—and, Geoffrey, I do not think you will—you will know that I
shall never forget you, whom I saved from the sea—to love me.”</p>
<p>There was something so sweet and infinitely tender about her words, instinct as
they were with natural womanly passion, that Geoffrey bent at heart beneath
their weight as a fir bends beneath the gentle, gathering snow. What was he to
do, how could he leave her? And yet she was right. He must go, and go quickly,
lest his strength might fail him, and hand in hand they should pass a bourne
from which there is no return.</p>
<p>“Heaven help us, Beatrice,” he said. “I will go to-morrow
morning and, if I can, I will keep away.”</p>
<p>“You <i>must</i> keep away. I will not see you any more. I will not bring
trouble on you, Geoffrey.”</p>
<p>“You talk of bringing trouble on me,” he said; “you say
nothing of yourself, and yet a man, even a man with eyes on him like myself, is
better fitted to weather such a storm. If it ruined me, how much more would it
ruin you?”</p>
<p>They were at the gate of the Vicarage now, and the wind rushed so strongly
through the firs that she needed to put her lips quite close to his ear to make
her words heard.</p>
<p>“Stop, one minute,” she said, “perhaps you do not quite
understand. When a woman does what I have done, it is because she loves with
all her life and heart and soul, because all these are a part of her love. For
myself, I no longer care anything—I have <i>no</i> self away from you; I
have ceased to be of myself or in my own keeping. I am of you and in yours. For
myself and my own fate or name I think no more; with my eyes open and of my own
free will I have given everything to you, and am glad and happy to give it. But
for you I still do care, and if I took any step, or allowed you to take any
that could bring sorrow on you, I should never forgive myself. That is why we
must part, Geoffrey. And now let us go in; there is nothing more to say, except
this: if you wish to bid me good-bye, a last good-bye, dear Geoffrey, I will
meet you to-morrow morning on the beach.”</p>
<p>“I shall leave at half-past eight,” he said hoarsely.</p>
<p>“Then we will meet at seven,” Beatrice said, and led the way into
the house.</p>
<p>Elizabeth and Mr. Granger were already seated at supper. They supped at nine on
Sunday nights; it was just half-past.</p>
<p>“Dear me,” said the old gentleman, “we began to think that
you two must have been out canoeing and got yourselves drowned in good earnest
this time. What have you been doing?”</p>
<p>“We have had a long walk,” answered Geoffrey; “I did not know
that it was so late.”</p>
<p>“One wants to be pleased with one’s company to walk far on such a
night as this,” put in Elizabeth maliciously.</p>
<p>“And so we were—at least I was,” Geoffrey answered with
perfect truth, “and the night is not so bad as you might think, at least
under the lee of the cliffs. It will be worse by and by!”</p>
<p>Then they sat down and made a desperate show of eating supper. Elizabeth, the
keen-eyed, noticed that Geoffrey’s hand was shaking. Now what, she
wondered, would make the hand of a strong man shake like a leaf? Deep emotion
might do it, and Elizabeth thought that she detected other signs of emotion in
them both, besides that of Geoffrey’s shaking hand. The plot was working
well, but could it be brought to a climax? Oh, if he would only throw prudence
to the winds and run away with Beatrice, so that she might be rid of her, and
free to fight for her own hand.</p>
<p>Shortly after supper both Elizabeth and Beatrice went to bed, leaving their
father with Geoffrey.</p>
<p>“Well,” said Mr. Granger, “did you get a word with Beatrice?
It was very kind of you to go that long tramp on purpose. Gracious, how it
blows! we shall have the house down presently. Lightning, too, I
declare.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered Geoffrey, “I did.”</p>
<p>“Ah, I hope you told her that there was no need for her to give up hope
of him yet, of Mr. Davies, I mean?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I told her that—that is if the greater includes the
less,” he added to himself.</p>
<p>“And how did she take it?”</p>
<p>“Very badly,” said Geoffrey; “she seemed to think that I had
no right to interfere.”</p>
<p>“Indeed, that is strange. But it doesn’t mean anything. She’s
grateful enough to you at heart, depend upon it she is, only she did not like
to say so. Dear me, how it blows; we shall have a night of it, a regular gale,
I declare. So you are going away to-morrow morning. Well, the best of friends
must part. I hope that you will often come and see us. Good-bye.”</p>
<p>Once more a sense of the irony of the position overcame Geoffrey, and he smiled
grimly as he lit his candle and went to bed. At the back of the house was a
long passage, which terminated at one end in the room where he slept, and at
the other in that occupied by Elizabeth and Beatrice. This passage was lit by
two windows, and built out of it were two more rooms—that of Mr. Granger,
and another which had been Effie’s. The windows of the passage, like most
of the others in the Vicarage, were innocent of shutters, and Geoffrey stood
for a moment at one of them, watching the lightning illumine the broad breast
of the mountain behind. Then looking towards the door of Beatrice’s room,
he gazed at it with the peculiar reverence that sometimes afflicts people who
are very much in love, and, with a sigh, turned and sought his own.</p>
<p>He could not sleep, it was impossible. For nearly two hours he lay turning from
side to side, and thinking till his brain seemed like to burst. To-morrow he
must leave her, leave her for ever, and go back to his coarse unprofitable
struggle with the world, where there would be no Beatrice to make him happy
through it all. And she, what of her?</p>
<p>The storm had lulled a little, now it came back in strength, heralded by the
lightning. He rose, threw on a dressing-gown, and sat by a window watching it.
Its tumult and fury seemed to ease his heart of some little of its pain; in
that dark hour a quiet night would have maddened him.</p>
<p>In eight hours—eight short hours—this matter would be ended so far
as concerned their actual intercourse. It would be a secret locked for ever in
their two breasts, a secret eating at their hearts, cruel as the worm that
dieth not. Geoffrey looked up and threw out his heart’s thought towards
his sleeping love. Then once more, as in a bygone night, there broke upon his
brain and being that mysterious spiritual sense. Stronger and more strong it
grew, beating on him in heavy unnatural waves, till his reason seemed to reel
and sink, and he remembered naught but Beatrice, knew naught save that her very
life was with him now.</p>
<p>He stretched out his arms towards the place where she should be.</p>
<p>“Beatrice,” he whispered to the empty air, “Beatrice! Oh, my
love! my sweet! my soul! Hear me, Beatrice!”</p>
<p>There came a pause, and ever the unearthly sympathy grew and gathered in his
heart, till it seemed to him as though separation had lost its power and across
dividing space they were mingled in one being.</p>
<p>A great gust shook the house and passed away along the roaring depths.</p>
<p>Oh! what was this? Silently the door opened, and a white draped form passed its
threshold. He rose, gasping; a terrible fear, a terrible joy, took possession
of him. The lightning flared out wildly in the eastern sky. There in the fierce
light she stood before him—she, Beatrice, a sight of beauty and of dread.
She stood with white arms outstretched, with white uncovered feet, her bosom
heaving softly beneath her night-dress, her streaming hair unbound, her lips
apart, her face upturned, and a stamp of terrifying calm.</p>
<p class="poem">
“In the wide, blind eyes uplift<br/>
Thro’ the darkness and the drift.”</p>
<p>Great Heaven, she was asleep!</p>
<p>Hush! she spoke.</p>
<p>“You called me, Geoffrey,” she said, in a still, unnatural voice.
“You called me, my beloved, and I—have—come.”</p>
<p>He rose aghast, trembling like an aspen with doubt and fear, trembling at the
sight of the conquering glory of the woman whom he worshipped.</p>
<p>See! She drew on towards him, and she was <i>asleep</i>. Oh, what could he do?</p>
<p>Suddenly the draught of the great gale rushing through the house caught the
opened door and crashed it to.</p>
<p>She awoke with a wild stare of terror.</p>
<p>“Oh, God, where am I?” she cried.</p>
<p>“Hush, for your life’s sake!” he answered, his faculties
returning. “Hush! or you are lost.”</p>
<p>But there was no need to caution her to silence, for Beatrice’s senses
failed her at the shock, and she sank swooning in his arms.</p>
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