<h2><SPAN name="chap26"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVI.<br/> WHAT BEATRICE SWORE</h2>
<p>Beatrice went to her room, but the atmosphere of the place seemed to stifle
her. Her brain was reeling, she must go out into the air—away from her
tormentors. She had not yet answered Geoffrey’s letter, and it must be
answered by this post, for there was none on Sunday. It was half-past
four—the post went out at five; if she was going to write, she should do
so at once, but she could not do so here. Besides, she must find time for
thought. Ah, she had it; she would take her canoe and paddle across the bay to
the little town of Coed and write her letter there. The post did not leave Coed
till half-past six. She put on her hat and jacket, and taking a stamp, a sheet
of paper, and an envelope with her, slipped quietly from the house down to old
Edward’s boat-house where the canoe was kept. Old Edward was not there
himself, but his son was, a boy of fourteen, and by his help Beatrice was soon
safely launched. The sea glittered like glass, and turning southwards,
presently she was paddling round the shore of the island on which the Castle
stood towards the open bay.</p>
<p>As she paddled her mind cleared, and she was able to consider the position. It
was bad enough. She saw no light, darkness hemmed her in. But at least she had
a week before her, and meanwhile what should she write to Geoffrey?</p>
<p>Then, as she thought, a great temptation assailed Beatrice, and for the first
time her resolution wavered. Why should she not accept Geoffrey’s offer
and go away with him—far away from all this misery? Gladly would she give
her life to spend one short year at his dear side. She had but to say the word,
and he would take her to him, and in a month from now they would be together in
some foreign land, counting the world well lost, as he had said. Doubtless in
time Lady Honoria would get a divorce, and they might be married. A day might
even come when all this would seem like a forgotten night of storm and fear;
when, surrounded by the children of their love, they would wend peaceably,
happily, through the evening of their days towards a bourne robbed of half its
terrors by the fact that they would cross it hand-in-hand.</p>
<p>Oh, that would be well for her; but would it be well for him? When the first
months of passion had passed by, would he not begin to think of all that he had
thrown away for the sake of a woman’s love? Would not the burst of shame
and obloquy which would follow him to the remotest corners of the earth wear
away his affection, till at last, as Lady Honoria said, he learned to curse and
hate her. And if it did not—if he still loved her through it
all—as, being what he was, he well might do—could she be the one to
bring this ruin on him? Oh, it would have been more kind to let him drown on
that night of the storm, when fate first brought them together to their
undoing.</p>
<p>No, no; once and for all, once and for ever, she would <i>not</i> do it. Cruel
as was her strait, heavy as was her burden, not one feather’s weight of
it should he carry, if by any means in her poor power she could hold it from
his back. She would not even tell him of what had happened—at any rate,
not now. It would distress him; he might take some desperate step; it was
almost certain that he would do so. Her answer must be very short.</p>
<p>She was quite close to Coed now, and the water lay calm as a pond. So calm was
it that she drew the sheet of paper and the envelope from her pocket, and
leaning forward, rested them on the arched covering of the canoe, and pencilled
those words which we have already read.</p>
<p>“No, dear Geoffrey. Things must take their course.—B.”</p>
<p>Thus she wrote. Then she paddled to the shore. A fisherman standing on the
beach caught her canoe and pulled it up. Leaving it in his charge, she went
into the quaint little town, directed and posted her letter, and bought some
wool. It was an excuse for having been there should any one ask questions.
After that she returned to her canoe. The fisherman was standing by it. She
offered him sixpence for his trouble, but he would not take it.</p>
<p>“No, miss,” he said, “thanking you kindly—but we
don’t often get a peep at such sweet looks. It’s worth sixpence to
see you, it is. But, miss, if I may make so bold as to say so, it isn’t
safe for you to cruise about in that craft, any ways not alone.”</p>
<p>Beatrice thanked him and blushed a little. Vaguely it occurred to her that she
must have more than a common share of beauty, when a rough man could be so
impressed with it. That was what men loved women for, their beauty, as Owen
Davies loved and desired her for this same cause and this only.</p>
<p>Perhaps it was the same with Geoffrey—no, she did not believe it. He
loved her for other things besides her looks. Only if she had not been
beautiful, perhaps he would not have begun to love her, so she was thankful for
her eyes and hair, and form.</p>
<p>Could folly and infatuation go further? This woman in the darkest hour of her
bottomless and unhorizoned despair, with conscience gnawing at her heart, with
present misery pressing on her breast, and shame to come hanging over her like
a thunder cloud, could yet feel thankful that she had won this barren love, the
spring of all her woe. Or was her folly deep wisdom in disguise?—is there
something divine in a passion that can so override and defy the worst agonies
of life?</p>
<p>She was at sea again now, and evening was falling on the waters softly as a
dream. Well, the letter was posted. Would it be the last, she wondered? It
seemed as though she must write no more letters. And what was to be done? She
would <i>not</i> marry Owen Davies—never would she do it. She could not
so shamelessly violate her feelings, for Beatrice was a woman to whom death
would be preferable to dishonour, however legal. No, for her own sake she would
not be soiled with that disgrace. Did she do this, she would hold herself the
vilest of the vile. And still less would she do it for Geoffrey’s sake.
Her instinct told her what he would feel at such a thing, though he might never
say a word. Surely he would loathe and despise her. No, that idea was done
with—utterly done with.</p>
<p>Then what remained to her? She would not fly with Geoffrey, since to do so
would be to ruin him. She would not marry Owen, and not to do so would still be
to ruin Geoffrey. She was no fool, she was innocent in act, but she knew that
her innocence would indeed be hard to prove—even her own father did not
believe in it, and her sister would openly accuse her to the world. What then
should she do? Should she hide herself in some remote half-civilised place, or
in London? It was impossible; she had no money, and no means of getting any.
Besides, they would hunt her out, both Owen Davies and Geoffrey would track her
to the furthest limits of the earth. And would not the former think that
Geoffrey had spirited her away, and at once put his threats into execution?
Obviously he would. There was no hope in that direction. Some other plan must
be found or her lover would still be ruined.</p>
<p>So argued Beatrice, still thinking not of herself, but of Geoffrey, of that
beloved one who was more to her than all the world, more, a thousand times,
than her own safety or well-being. Perhaps she overrated the matter. Owen
Davies, Lady Honoria, and even Elizabeth might have done all they threatened;
the first of them, perhaps the first two of them, certainly would have done so.
But still Geoffrey might have escaped destruction. Public opinion, or the
sounder part of it, is sensibly enough hard to move in such a matter,
especially when the person said to have been wronged is heart and soul on the
side of him who is said to have wronged her.</p>
<p>Moreover there might have been ways out of it, of which she knew nothing. But
surrounded as she was by threatening powers—by Lady Honoria threatening
actions in the Courts on one side, by Owen Davies threatening exposure on
another, by Elizabeth ready and willing to give the most damning evidence on
the third, to Beatrice the worst consequences seemed an absolutely necessary
sequence. Then there was her own conscience arrayed against her. This
particular charge was a lie, but it was not a lie that she loved Geoffrey, and
to her the two things seemed very much the same thing. Hers was not a mind to
draw fine distinctions in such matters. <i>Se posuit ut culpabilem</i>: she
“placed herself as guilty,” as the old Court rolls put it in
miserable Latin, and this sense of guilt disarmed her. She did not realise the
enormous difference recognised by the whole civilised world between thought and
act, between disposing mind and inculpating deed. Beatrice looked at the
question more from the scriptural point of view, remembering that in the Bible
such fine divisions are expressly stated to be distinctions without a
difference.</p>
<p>Had she gone to Geoffrey and told him her whole story it is probable that he
would have defied the conspiracy, faced it out, and possibly come off
victorious. But, with that deadly reticence of which women alone are capable,
this she did not and would not do. Sweet loving woman that she was, she would
not burden him with her sorrows, she would bear them alone—little
reckoning that thereby she was laying up a far, far heavier load for him to
carry through all his days.</p>
<p>So Beatrice accepted the statements of the plaintiff’s attorney for
gospel truth, and from that false standpoint she drew her auguries.</p>
<p class="p2">
Oh, she was weary! How lovely was the falling night, see how it brooded on the
seas! and how clear were the waters—there a fish passed by her
paddle—and there the first start sprang into the sky! If only Geoffrey
were here to see it with her. Geoffrey! she had lost him; she was alone in the
world now—alone with the sea and the stars. Well, they were better than
men—better than all men except one. Theirs was a divine companionship,
and it soothed her. Ah, how hateful had been Elizabeth’s face, more
hateful even than the half-crazed cunning of Owen Davies, when she stretched
her hand towards her and called her “a scarlet woman.” It was so
like Elizabeth, this mixing up of Bible terms with her accusation. And after
all perhaps it was true.—What was it, “Though thy sins be as
scarlet, yet shall they be white as snow.” But that was only if one
repented. She did not repent, not in the least. Conscience, it is true,
reproached her with a breach of temporal and human law, but her heart cried
that such love as she had given was immortal and divine, and therefore set
beyond the little bounds of time and man. At any rate, she loved Geoffrey and
was proud and glad to love him. The circumstances were unfortunate, but she did
not make the world or its social arrangements any more than she had made
herself, and she could not help that. The fact remained, right or
wrong—she loved him, loved him!</p>
<p>How clear were the waters! What was that wild dream which she had dreamt about
herself sitting at the bottom of the sea, and waiting for him—till at
last he came. Sitting at the bottom of the sea—why did it strike her so
strangely—what unfamiliar thought did it waken in her mind? Well, and why
not? It would be pleasant there, better at any rate than on the earth. But
things cannot be ended so; one is burdened with the flesh, and one must wear it
till it fails. Why must she wear it? Was not the sea large enough to hide her
bones? Look now, she had but to slip over the edge of the canoe, slip without a
struggle into those mighty arms, and in a few short minutes it would all be
done and gone!</p>
<p>She gasped as the thought struck home. <i>Here</i> was the answer to her
questionings, the same answer that is given to every human troubling, to all
earthly hopes and fears and strivings. One stroke of that black knife and
everything would be lost or found. Would it be so great a thing to give her
life for Geoffrey?—why she had well nigh done as much when she had known
him but an hour, and now that he was all in all, oh, would it be so great a
thing? If she died—died secretly, swiftly, surely—Geoffrey would be
saved; they would not trouble him then, there would be no one to trouble about:
Owen Davies could not marry her then, Geoffrey could not ruin himself over her,
Elizabeth could pursue her no further. It would be well to do this thing for
Geoffrey, and he would always love her, and beyond that black curtain there
might be something better.</p>
<p>They said that it was sin. Yes, it might be sin to act thus for oneself alone.
But to do it for another—how of that! Was not the Saviour whom they
preached a Man of Sacrifice? Would it be a sin in her to die for Geoffrey, to
sacrifice herself that Geoffrey might go free?</p>
<p>Oh, it would be no great merit. Her life was not so easy that she should fear
this pure embrace. It would be better, far better, than to marry Owen Davies,
than to desecrate their love and teach Geoffrey to despise her. And how else
could she ward this trouble from him except by her death, or by a marriage that
in her eyes was more dreadful than any death?</p>
<p class="p2">
She could not do it yet. She could not die until she had once more seen his
face, even though he did not see hers. No, not to-night would she seek this
swift solution. She had words to say—or words to write—before the
end. Already they rushed in upon her mind!</p>
<p>But if no better plan presented itself she would do it, she was sure that she
would. It was a sin—well, let it be a sin; what did she care if she
sinned for Geoffrey? He would not think the worse of her for it. And she had
hope, yes, Geoffrey had taught her to hope. If there was a Hell, why it was
here. And yet not all a Hell, for in it she had found her love!</p>
<p class="p2">
It grew dark; she could hear the whisper of the waves upon Bryngelly beach. It
grew dark; the night was closing round. She paddled to within a few fathoms of
the shore, and called in her clear voice.</p>
<p>“Ay, ay, miss,” answered old Edward from the beach. “Come in
on the next wave.”</p>
<p>She came in accordingly and her canoe was caught and dragged high and dry.</p>
<p>“What, Miss Beatrice,” said the old man shaking his head and
grumbling, “at it again! Out all alone in that thing,” and he gave
the canoe a contemptuous kick, “and in the dark, too. You want a husband
to look after you, you do. You’ll never rest till you’re
drowned.”</p>
<p>“No, Edward,” she answered with a little laugh. “I
don’t suppose that I shall. There is no peace for the wicked above seas,
you know. Now do not scold. The canoe is as safe as church in this weather and
in the bay.”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, it’s safe enough in the calm and the bay,” he
answered, “but supposing it should come on to blow and supposing you
should drift beyond the shelter of Rumball Point there, and get the rollers
down on you—why you would be drowned in five minutes. It’s wicked,
miss, that’s what it is.”</p>
<p>Beatrice laughed again and went.</p>
<p>“She’s a funny one she is,” said the old man scratching his
head as he looked after her, “of all the woman folk as ever I knowed she
is the rummest. I sometimes thinks she wants to get drowned. Dash me if I
haven’t half a mind to stave a hole in the bottom of that there damned
canoe, and finish it.”</p>
<p>Beatrice reached home a little before supper time. Her first act was to call
Betty the servant and with her assistance to shift her bed and things into the
spare room. With Elizabeth she would have nothing more to do. They had slept
together since they were children, now she had done with her. Then she went in
to supper, and sat through it like a statue, speaking no word. Her father and
Elizabeth kept up a strained conversation, but they did not speak to her, nor
she to them. Elizabeth did not even ask where she had been, nor take any notice
of her change of room.</p>
<p>One thing, however, Beatrice learnt. Her father was going on the Monday to
Hereford by an early train to attend a meeting of clergymen collected to
discuss the tithe question. He was to return by the last train on the Tuesday
night, that is, about midnight. Beatrice now discovered that Elizabeth proposed
to accompany him. Evidently she wished to see as little as possible of her
sister during this week of truce—possibly she was a little afraid of her.
Even Elizabeth might have a conscience.</p>
<p>So she should be left alone from Monday morning till Tuesday night. One can do
a good deal in forty hours.</p>
<p>After supper Beatrice rose and left the room, without a word, and they were
glad when she went. She frightened them with her set face and great calm eyes.
But neither spoke to the other on the subject. They had entered into a
conspiracy of silence.</p>
<p>Beatrice locked her door and then sat at the window lost in thought. When once
the idea of suicide has entered the mind it is apt to grow with startling
rapidity. She reviewed the whole position; she went over all the arguments and
searched the moral horizon for some feasible avenue of escape. But she could
find none that would save Geoffrey, except this. Yes, she would do it, as many
another wretched woman had done before her, not from cowardice indeed, for had
she alone been concerned she would have faced the thing out, fighting to the
bitter end—but for this reason only, it would cut off the dangers which
threatened Geoffrey at their very root and source. Of course there must be no
scandal; it must never be known that she had killed herself, or she might
defeat her own object, for the story would be raked up. But she well knew how
to avoid such a possibility; in her extremity Beatrice grew cunning as a fox.
Yes, and there might be an inquest at which awkward questions would be asked.
But, as she well knew also, before an inquest can be held there must be
something to hold it on, and that something would not be there.</p>
<p class="p2">
And so in the utter silence of the night and in the loneliness of her chamber
did Beatrice dedicate herself to sacrifice upon the altar of her immeasurable
love. She would face the last agonies of death when the bloom of her youthful
strength and beauty was but opening as a rose in June. She would do more, she
would brave the threatened vengeance of the most High, coming before Him a self
murderess, and with but one plea for pity—that she loved so well: <i>quia
multum amavit</i>. Yes, she would do all this, would leave the warm world in
the dawning summer of her days, and alone go out into the dark—alone
would face those visions which might come—those Shapes of terror, and
those Things of fear, that perchance may wait for sinful human kind. Alone she
would go—oh, hand in hand with him it had been easy, but this must not
be. The door of utter darkness would swing to behind her, and who could say if
in time to come it should open to Geoffrey’s following feet, or if he
might ever find the path that she had trod. It must be done, it should be done!
Beatrice rose from her seat with bright eyes and quick-coming breath, and swore
before God, if God there were, that she would do it, trusting to Him for pardon
and for pity, or failing these—for sleep.</p>
<p>Yes, but first she must once more look upon Geoffrey’s dear
face—and then farewell!</p>
<p>Pity her! poor mistaken woman, making of her will a Providence, rushing to
doom. Pity her, but do not blame her overmuch, or if you do, then blame Judith
and Jephtha’s daughter and Charlotte Corday, and all the glorious women
who from time to time have risen on this sordid world of self, and given
themselves as an offering upon the altars of their love, their religion, their
honour or their country!</p>
<p class="p2">
It was finished. Now let her rest while she could, seeing what was to come.
With a sigh for all that was, and all that might have been, Beatrice lay down
and soon slept sweetly as a child.</p>
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