<h2><SPAN name="chap29"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIX.<br/> A WOMAN’S LAST WORD</h2>
<p>Geoffrey came down to breakfast about eleven o’clock on the morning of
that day the first hours of which he had spent at Euston Station. Not seeing
Effie, he asked Lady Honoria where she was, and was informed that Anne, the
French <i>bonne</i>, said the child was not well and that she had kept her in
bed to breakfast.</p>
<p>“Do you mean to say that you have not been up to see what is the matter
with her?” asked Geoffrey.</p>
<p>“No, not yet,” answered his wife. “I have had the dressmaker
here with my new dress for the duchess’s ball to-morrow; it’s
lovely, but I think that there is a little too much of that creamy lace about
it.”</p>
<p>With an exclamation of impatience, Geoffrey rose and went upstairs. He found
Effie tossing about in bed, her face flushed, her eyes wide open, and her
little hands quite hot.</p>
<p>“Send for the doctor at once,” he said.</p>
<p>The doctor came and examined the child, asking her if she had wet her feet
lately.</p>
<p>“Yes, I did, two days ago. I wet my feet in a puddle in the
street,” she answered. “But Anne did say that they would soon get
dry, if I held them to the fire, because my other boots was not clean. Oh, my
head does ache, daddie.”</p>
<p>“Ah,” said the doctor, and then covering the child up, took
Geoffrey aside and told him that his daughter had a mild attack of inflammation
of the lungs. There was no cause for anxiety, only she must be looked after and
guarded from chills.</p>
<p>Geoffrey asked if he should send for a trained nurse.</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” said the doctor. “I do not think it is necessary,
at any rate at present. I will tell the nurse what to do, and doubtless your
wife will keep an eye on her.”</p>
<p>So Anne was called up, and vowed that she would guard the cherished child like
the apple of her eye. Indeed, no, the boots were not wet—there was a
little, a very little mud on them, that was all.</p>
<p>“Well, don’t talk so much, but see that you attend to her
properly,” said Geoffrey, feeling rather doubtful, for he did not trust
Anne. However, he thought he would see himself that there was no neglect. When
she heard what was the matter, Lady Honoria was much put out.</p>
<p>“Really,” she said, “children are the most vexatious
creatures in the world. The idea of her getting inflammation of the lungs in
this unprovoked fashion. The end of it will be that I shall not be able to go
to the duchess’s ball to-morrow night, and she was so kind about it, she
made quite a point of my coming. Besides I have bought that lovely new dress on
purpose. I should never have dreamed of going to so much expense for anything
else.”</p>
<p>“Don’t trouble yourself,” said Geoffrey. “The House
does not sit to-morrow; I will look after her. Unless Effie dies in the
interval, you will certainly be able to go to the ball.”</p>
<p>“Dies—what nonsense! The doctor says that it is a very slight
attack. Why should she die?”</p>
<p>“I am sure I hope that there is no fear of anything of the sort, Honoria.
Only she must be properly looked after. I do not trust this woman Anne. I have
half a mind to get in a trained nurse after all.”</p>
<p>“Well, if you do, she will have to sleep out of the house, that’s
all. Amelia (Lady Garsington) is coming up to-night, and I must have somewhere
to put her maid, and there is no room for another bed in Effie’s
room.”</p>
<p>“Oh, very well, very well,” said Geoffrey, “I daresay that it
will be all right, but if Effie gets any worse, you will please understand that
room must be made.”</p>
<p>But Effie did not get worse. She remained much about the same. Geoffrey sat at
home all day and employed himself in reading briefs; fortunately he had not to
go to court. About six o’clock he went down to the House, and having
dined very simply and quietly, took his seat and listened to some dreary talk,
which was being carried on for the benefit of the reporters, about the adoption
of the Welsh language in the law courts of Wales.</p>
<p>Suddenly he became aware of a most extraordinary sense of oppression. An
indefinite dread took hold of him, his very soul was filled with terrible
apprehensions and alarm. Something dreadful seemed to knock at the portals of
his sense, a horror which he could not grasp. His mind was confused, but little
by little it grew clearer, and he began to understand that a danger threatened
Beatrice, that she was in great peril. He was sure of it. Her agonised dying
cries reached him where he was, though in no form which he could understand;
once more her thought beat on his thought—once more and for the last time
her spirit spoke to his.</p>
<p>Then suddenly a cold wind seemed to breathe upon his face and lift his hair,
and everything was gone. His mind was as it had been; again he heard the dreary
orator and saw the members slipping away to dinner. The conditions that
disturbed him had passed, things were as they had been. Nor was this strange!
For the link was broken. Beatrice was <i>dead</i>. She had passed into the
domains of impenetrable silence.</p>
<p class="p2">
Geoffrey sat up with a gasp, and as he did so a letter was placed in his hand.
It was addressed in Beatrice’s handwriting and bore the Chester postmark.
A chill fear seized him. What did it contain? He hurried with it into a private
room and opened it. It was dated from Bryngelly on the previous Sunday and had
several inclosures.</p>
<p>“My dearest Geoffrey,” it began, “I have never before
addressed you thus on paper, nor should I do so now, knowing to what risks such
written words might put you, were it not that occasions may arise (as in this
case) which seem to justify the risk. For when all things are ended between a
man and a woman who are to each other what we have been, then it is well that
the one who goes should speak plainly before speech becomes impossible, if only
that the one who is left should not misunderstand that which has been done.</p>
<p>“Geoffrey, it is probable—it is almost certain—that before
your eyes read these words I shall be where in the body they can never see me
more. I write to you from the brink of the grave; when you read it, it will
have closed over me.</p>
<p>“Geoffrey, I shall be dead.</p>
<p>“I received your dear letter (it is destroyed now) in which you expressed
a wish that I should come away with you to some other country, and I answered
it in eight brief words. I dared not trust myself to write more, nor had I any
time. How could you think that I should ever accept such an offer for my own
sake, when to do so would have been to ruin you? But first I will tell you all
that has happened here.” (Here followed a long and exact description of
those events with which we are already acquainted, including the denunciation
of Beatrice by her sister, the threats of Owen Davies as regards Geoffrey
himself, and the measures which she had adopted to gain time.)</p>
<p>“Further,” the letter continued, “I inclose you your
wife’s letter to me. And here I wish to state that I have not one word to
say against Lady Honoria or her letter. I think that she was perfectly
justified in writing as she did, for after all, dear Geoffrey, you are her
husband, and in loving each other we have offended against her. She tells me
truly that it is my duty to make all further communications between us
impossible. There is only one way to do this, and I take it.</p>
<p>“And now I have spoken enough about myself, nor do I wish to enter into
details that could only give you pain. There will be no scandal, dear, and if
any word should be raised against you after I am gone, I have provided an
answer in the second letter which I have inclosed. You can print it if
necessary; it will be a sufficient reply to any talk. Nobody after reading it
can believe that you were in any way connected with the accident which will
happen. Dear, one word more—still about myself, you see! Do not blame
yourself in this matter, for you are not to blame; of my own free will I do it,
because in the extremity of the circumstances I think it best that one should
go and the other be saved, rather than that both should be involved in a common
ruin.</p>
<p>“Dear, do you remember how in that strange vision of mine, I dreamed that
you came and touched me on the breast and showed me light? So it has come to
pass, for you have given me love—that is light; and now in death I shall
seek for wisdom. And this being fulfilled, shall not the rest be fulfilled in
its season? Shall I not sit in those cloudy halls till I see you come to seek
me, the word of wisdom on your lips? And since I cannot have you to myself, and
be all in all to you, why I am glad to go. For here on the world is neither
rest nor happiness; as in my dream, too often does ‘Hope seem to rend her
starry robes.’</p>
<p>“I am glad to go from such a world, in which but one happy thing has
found me—the blessing of your love. I am worn out with the weariness and
struggle, and now that I have lost you I long for rest. I do not know if I sin
in what I do; if so, may I be forgiven. If forgiveness is impossible, so be it!
You will forgive me, Geoffrey, and you will always love me, however wicked I
may be; even if, at the last, you go where I am not, you will remember and love
the erring woman to whom, being so little, you still were all in all. We are
not married, Geoffrey, according to the customs of the world, but two short
days hence I shall celebrate a service that is greater and more solemn than any
of the earth. For Death will be the Priest and that oath which I shall take
will be to all eternity. Who can prophesy of that whereof man has no sure
knowledge? Yet I do believe that in a time to come we shall look again into
each other’s eyes, and kiss each other’s lips, and be one for
evermore. If this is so, it is worth while to have lived and died; if not,
then, Geoffrey, farewell!</p>
<p>“If I may I will always be near you. Listen to the night wind and you
shall hear my voice; look on the stars, you will see my eyes; and my love shall
be as the air you breathe. And when at last the end comes, remember me, for if
I live at all I shall be about you then. What have I more to say? So much, my
dear, that words cannot convey it. Let it be untold; but whenever you hear or
read that which is beautiful or tender, think ‘this is what Beatrice
would have said to me and could not!’</p>
<p>“You will be a great man, dear, the foremost or one of the foremost of
your age. You have already promised me to persevere to this end: I will not ask
you to promise afresh. Do not be content to accept the world as women must.
Great men do not accept the world; they reform it—and you are of their
number. And when you are great, Geoffrey, you will use your power, not for
self-interest, but to large and worthy ends; you will always strive to help the
poor, to break down oppression from those who have to bear it, and to advance
the honour of your country. You will do all this from your own heart and not
because I ask it of you, but remember that your fame will be my best
monument—though none shall ever know the grave it covers.</p>
<p>“Farewell, farewell, farewell! Oh, Geoffrey, my darling, to whom I have
never been a wife, to whom I am more than any wife—do not forget me in
the long years which are to come. Remember me when others forsake you. Do not
forget me when others flatter you and try to win your love, for none can be to
you what I have been—none can ever love you more than that lost Beatrice
who writes these heavy words to-night, and who will pass away blessing you with
her last breath, to await you, if she may, in the land to which your feet also
draw daily on.”</p>
<p>Then came a tear-stained postscript in pencil dated from Paddington Station on
that very morning.</p>
<p>“I journeyed to London to see you, Geoffrey. I could not die without
looking on your face once more. I was in the gallery of the House and heard
your great speech. Your friend found me a place. Afterwards I touched your coat
as you passed by the pillar of the gateway. Then I ran away because I saw your
friend turn and look at me. I shall kiss this letter—just here before I
close it—kiss it there too—it is our last cold embrace. Before the
end I shall put on the ring you gave me—on my hand, I mean. I have always
worn it upon my breast. When I touched you as you passed through the gateway I
thought that I should have broken down and called to you—but I found
strength not to do so. My heart is breaking and my eyes are blind with tears; I
can write no more; I have no more to say. Now once again good-bye. <i>Ave atque
vale</i>—oh, my love!—B.”</p>
<p>The second letter was a dummy. That is to say it purported to be such an
epistle as any young lady might have written to a gentleman friend. It began,
“Dear Mr. Bingham,” and ended, “Yours sincerely, Beatrice
Granger,” was filled with chit-chat, and expressed hopes that he would be
able to come down to Bryngelly again later in the summer, when they would go
canoeing.</p>
<p>It was obvious, thought Beatrice, that if Geoffrey was accused by Owen Davies
or anybody else of being concerned with her mysterious end, the production of
such a frank epistle written two days previously would demonstrate the
absurdity of the idea. Poor Beatrice, she was full of precautions!</p>
<p class="p2">
Let him who may imagine the effect produced upon Geoffrey by this heartrending
and astounding epistle! Could Beatrice have seen his face when he had finished
reading it she would never have committed suicide. In a minute it became like
that of an old man. As the whole truth sank into his mind, such an agony of
horror, of remorse, of unavailing woe and hopelessness swept across his soul,
that for a moment he thought his vital forces must give way beneath it, and
that he should die, as indeed in this dark hour he would have rejoiced to do.
Oh, how pitiful it was—how pitiful and how awful! To think of this love,
so passionately pure, wasted on his own unworthiness. To think of this divine
woman going down to lonely death for him—a strong man; to picture her
crouching behind that gateway pillar and touching him as he passed, while he,
the thrice accursed fool, knew nothing till too late; to know that he had gone
to Euston and not to Paddington; to remember the matchless strength and beauty
of the love which he had lost, and that face which he should never see again!
Surely his heart would break. No man could bear it!</p>
<p>And of those cowards who hounded her to death, if indeed she was already dead!
Oh, he would kill Owen Davies—yes, and Elizabeth too, were it not that
she was a woman; and as for Honoria he had done with her. Scandal, what did he
care for scandal? If he had his will there should be a scandal indeed, for he
would beat this Owen Davies, this reptile, who did not hesitate to use a
woman’s terrors to prosper the fulfilling of his lust—yes, and then
drag him to the Continent and kill him there. Only vengeance was left to him!</p>
<p>Stop, he must not give way—perhaps she was not dead—perhaps that
horrible presage of evil which had struck him like a storm was but a dream.
Could he telegraph? No, it was too late; the office at Bryngelly would be
closed—it was past eight now. But he could go. There was a train leaving
a little after nine—he should be there by half-past six to-morrow. And
Effie was ill—well, surely they could look after her for twenty-four
hours; she was in no danger, and he must go—he could not bear this
torturing suspense. Great God! how had she done the deed!</p>
<p>Geoffrey snatched a sheet of paper and tried to write. He could not, his hand
shook so. With a groan he rose, and going to the refreshment room swallowed two
glasses of brandy one after another. The spirit took effect on him; he could
write now. Rapidly he scribbled on a sheet of paper:</p>
<p class="letter">
“I have been called away upon important business and shall probably not
be back till Thursday morning. See that Effie is properly attended to. If I am
not back you must not go to the duchess’s ball.—G<small>EOFFREY</small>
B<small>INGHAM</small>.”</p>
<p>Then he addressed the letter to Lady Honoria and dispatched a commissionaire
with it. This done, he called a cab and bade the cabman drive to Euston as fast
as his horse could go.</p>
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