<h2><SPAN name="chap30"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXX.<br/> AVE ATQUE VALE</h2>
<p>That frightful journey—no nightmare was ever half so awful! But it came
to an end at last—there was the Bryngelly Station. Geoffrey sprang from
the train, and gave his ticket to the porter, glancing in his face as he did
so. Surely if there had been a tragedy the man would know of it, and show signs
of half-joyous emotion as is the fashion of such people when something awful
and mysterious has happened to somebody else. But he showed no such symptoms,
and a glimmer of hope found its way into Geoffrey’s tormented breast.</p>
<p>He left the station and walked rapidly towards the Vicarage. Those who know
what a pitch of horror suspense can reach may imagine his feelings as he did
so. But it was soon to be put an end to now. As he drew near the Vicarage gate
he met the fat Welsh servant girl Betty running towards him. Then hope left
Geoffrey.</p>
<p>The girl recognised him, and in her confusion did not seem in the least
astonished to see him walking there at a quarter to seven on a summer morning.
Indeed, even she vaguely connected Geoffrey with Beatrice in her mind, for she
at once said in her thick English:</p>
<p>“Oh, sir, do you know where Miss Beatrice is?”</p>
<p>“No,” he answered, catching at a railing for support. “Why do
you ask? I have not seen her for weeks.”</p>
<p>Then the girl plunged into a long story. Mr. Granger and Miss Granger were away
from home, and would not be back for another two hours. Miss Beatrice had gone
out yesterday afternoon, and had not come back to tea. She, Betty, had not
thought much of it, believing that she had stopped to spend the evening
somewhere, and, being very tired, had gone to bed about eight, leaving the door
unlocked. This morning, when she woke, it was to find that Miss Beatrice had
not slept in the house that night, and she came out to see if she could find
her.</p>
<p>“Where was she going when she went out?” Geoffrey asked.</p>
<p>She did not know, but she thought that Miss Beatrice was going out in the
canoe. Leastways she had put on her tennis shoes, which she always wore when
she went out boating.</p>
<p>Geoffrey understood it all now. “Come to the boat-house,” he said.</p>
<p>They went down to the beach, where as yet none were about except a few working
people. Near the boat-house Geoffrey met old Edward walking along with a key in
his hand.</p>
<p>“Lord, sir!” he said. “You here, sir! and in that there queer
hat, too. What is it, sir?”</p>
<p>“Did Miss Beatrice go out in her canoe yesterday evening, Edward?”
Geoffrey asked hoarsely.</p>
<p>“No, sir; not as I know on. My boy locked up the boat-house last night,
and I suppose he looked in it first. What! You don’t mean to
say——Stop; we’ll soon know. Oh, Goad! the canoe’s
gone!”</p>
<p>There was a silence, an awful silence. Old Edward broke it.</p>
<p>“She’s drowned, sir—that’s what she is—drowned at
last; and she the finest woman in Wales. I knewed she would be one day, poor
dear! and she the beauty that she was; and all along of that damned unlucky
little craft. Goad help her! She’s drowned, I say——”</p>
<p>Betty burst out into loud weeping at his words.</p>
<p>“Stop that noise, girl,” said Geoffrey, turning his pale face
towards her. “Go back to the Vicarage, and if Mr. Granger comes home
before I get back, tell him what we fear. Edward, send some men to search the
shore towards Coed, and some more in a sailing boat. I will walk towards the
Bell Rock—you can follow me.”</p>
<p>He started and swiftly tramped along the sands, searching the sea with his eye.
On he walked sullenly, desperately striving to hope against hope. On, past the
Dog Rocks, round the long curve of beach till he came to the Amphitheatre. The
tide was high again; he could barely pass the projecting point. He was round
it, and his heart stood still. For there, bottom upwards, and gently swaying to
and fro as the spent waves rocked it, was Beatrice’s canoe.</p>
<p>Sadly, hopelessly, heavily, Geoffrey waded knee deep into the water, and
catching the bow of the canoe, dragged it ashore. There was, or appeared to be,
nothing in it; of course he could not expect anything else. Its occupant had
sunk and been carried out to sea by the ebb, whereas the canoe had drifted back
to shore with the morning tide.</p>
<p>He reared it upon its end to let the water drain out of it, and from the hollow
of the bow arch something came rolling down, something bright and heavy,
followed by a brown object. Hastily he lowered the canoe again, and picked up
the bright trinket. It was his own ring come back to him—the Roman ring
he had given Beatrice, and which she told him in the letter she would wear in
her hour of death. He touched it with his lips and placed it back upon his
hand, this token from the beloved dead, vowing that it should never leave his
hand in life, and that after death it should be buried on him. And so it will
be, perhaps to be dug up again thousands of years hence, and once more to play
a part in the romance of unborn ages.</p>
<p><i>Ave atque vale</i>—that was the inscription rudely cut within its
round. Greeting and farewell—her own last words to him. Oh, Beatrice,
Beatrice! to you also <i>ave atque vale</i>. You could not have sent a fitter
message. Greeting and farewell! Did it not sum it all? Within the circle of
this little ring was writ the epitome of human life: here were the beginning
and the end of Love and Hate, of Hope and Fear, of Joy and Sorrow.</p>
<p>Beatrice, hail! Beatrice, farewell! till perchance a Spirit rushing earthward
shall cry “<i>Greeting</i>,” in another tongue, and Death,
descending to his own place, shaking from his wings the dew of tears, shall
answer “<i>Farewell to me and Night, ye Children of Eternal
Day!</i>”</p>
<p>And what was this other relic? He lifted it—it was Beatrice’s
tennis shoe, washed from her foot—Geoffrey knew it, for once he had tied
it.</p>
<p>Then Geoffrey broke down—it was too much. He threw himself upon the great
rock and sobbed—that rock where he had sat with her and Heaven had opened
to their sight. But men are not given to such exhibitions of emotion, and
fortunately for him the paroxysm did not last. He could not have borne it for
long.</p>
<p>He rose and went again to the edge of the sea. At this moment old Edward and
his son arrived. Geoffrey pointed to the boat, then held up the little shoe.</p>
<p>“Ah,” said the old man, “as I thought. Goad help her!
She’s gone; she’ll never come ashore no more, she won’t.
She’s twenty miles away by now, she is, breast up, with the gulls
a-screaming over her. It’s that there damned canoe, that’s what it
is. I wish to Goad I had broke it up long ago. I’d rather have built her
a boat for nothing, I would. Damn the unlucky craft!” screamed the old
man at the top of his voice, and turning his head to hide the tears that were
streaming down his rugged face. “And her that I nursed and pulled out of
the waters once all but dead. Damn it, I say! There, take that, you Sea Witch,
you!” and he picked up a great boulder and crashed it through the bottom
of the canoe with all his strength. “You shan’t never drown no
more. But it has brought you good luck, it has, sir; you’ll be a fortunit
man all your life now. It has brought you the <i>Drowned One’s
shoe</i>.”</p>
<p>“Don’t break it any more,” said Geoffrey. “She used to
value it. You had better bring it along between you—it may be wanted. I
am going to the Vicarage.”</p>
<p>He walked back. Mr. Granger and Elizabeth had not yet arrived, but they were
expected every minute. He went into the sitting-room. It was full of memories
and tokens of Beatrice. There lay a novel which he had given her, and there was
yesterday’s paper that she had brought from town, the <i>Standard</i>,
with his speech in it.</p>
<p>Geoffrey covered his eyes with his hand, and thought. None knew that she had
committed suicide except himself. If he revealed it things might be said of
her; he did not care what was said of him, but he was jealous of her dead name.
It might be said, for instance, that the whole tale was true, and that Beatrice
died because she could no longer face life without being put to an open shame.
Yes, he had better hold his tongue as to how and why she died. She was
dead—nothing could bring her back. But how then should he account for his
presence there? Easily enough. He would say frankly that he came because
Beatrice had written to him of the charges made against her and the threats
against himself—came to find her dead. And on that point he would still
have a word with Owen Davies and Elizabeth.</p>
<p>Scarcely had he made up his mind when Elizabeth and her father entered. Clearly
from their faces they had as yet heard nothing.</p>
<p>Geoffrey rose, and Elizabeth caught sight of him standing with glowing eyes and
a face like that of Death himself. She recoiled in alarm.</p>
<p>“What brings you here, Mr. Bingham?” she said, in her hard voice.</p>
<p>“Cannot you guess, Miss Granger?” he said sternly. “A few
days back you made certain charges against your sister and myself in the
presence of your father and Mr. Owen Davies. These charges have been
communicated to me, and I have come to answer them and to demand satisfaction
for them.”</p>
<p>Mr. Granger fidgeted nervously and looked as though he would like to escape,
but Elizabeth, with characteristic courage, shut the door and faced the storm.</p>
<p>“Yes, I did make those charges, Mr. Bingham,” she said, “and
they are true charges. But stop, we had better send for Beatrice first.”</p>
<p>“You may send, but you will not find her.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?—what do you mean?” asked her father
apprehensively.</p>
<p>“It means that he has hidden her away, I suppose,” said Elizabeth
with a sneer.</p>
<p>“I mean, Mr. Granger, that your daughter Beatrice is <i>dead</i>.”</p>
<p>For once startled out of her self-command, Elizabeth gave a little cry, while
her father staggered back against the wall.</p>
<p>“Dead! dead! What do you mean? How did she die?” he asked.</p>
<p>“That is known to God and her alone,” answered Geoffrey. “She
went out last evening in her canoe. When I arrived here this morning she was
missed for the first time. I walked along the beach and found the canoe and
this inside of it,” and he placed the sodden shoe upon the table.</p>
<p>There was a silence. In the midst of it, Owen Davies burst into the room with
wild eyes and dishevelled hair.</p>
<p>“Is it true?” he cried, “tell me—it cannot be true that
Beatrice is drowned. She cannot have been taken from me just when I was going
to marry her. Say that it is not true!”</p>
<p>A great fury filled Geoffrey’s heart. He walked down the room and shut
the door, a red light swimming before his eyes. Then he turned and gripped Owen
Davies’s shoulder like a vice.</p>
<p>“You accursed blackguard—you unmanly cur!” he said;
“you and that wicked woman,” and he shook his hand at Elizabeth,
“conspired together to bring a slur upon Beatrice. You did more: you
threatened to attack me, to try and ruin me if she would not give herself up to
you. You loathsome hypocrite, you tortured her and frightened her; now I am
here to frighten <i>you</i>. You said that you would make the country ring with
your tales. I tell you this—are you listening to me? If you dare to
mention her name in such a sense, or if that woman dares, I will break every
bone in your wretched body—by Heaven I will kill you!” and he cast
Davies from him, and as he did so, struck him heavily across the face with the
back of his hand.</p>
<p>The man took no notice either of his words or of the deadly insult of the blow.</p>
<p>“Is it true?” he screamed, “is it true that she is
dead?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Geoffrey, following him, and bending his tall square
frame over him, for Davies had fallen against the wall, “yes, it is
true—she is dead—and beyond your reach for ever. Pray to God that
you may not one day be called her murderers, all of you—you shameless
cowards.”</p>
<p>Owen Davies gave one shrill cry and sank in a huddled heap upon the ground.</p>
<p>“There is no God,” he moaned; “God promised her to me, to be
my own—you have killed her; you—you seduced her first and then you
killed her. I believe you killed her. Oh, I shall go mad!”</p>
<p>“Mad or sane,” said Geoffrey, “say those words once more and
I will stamp the life out of you where you are. You say that God promised her
to you—promised that woman to a hound like you. Ah, be careful!”</p>
<p>Owen Davies made no answer. Crouched there upon the ground he rocked himself to
and fro, and moaned in the madness of his baulked desire.</p>
<p>“This man,” said Geoffrey, turning towards and pointing to
Elizabeth, who was glaring at him like a wild cat from the corner of the room,
“said that there is no God. I say that there is a God, and that one day,
soon or late, vengeance will find you out—you murderess, you writer of
anonymous letters; you who, to advance your own wicked ends whatever they may
be, were not ashamed to try to drag your innocent sister’s name into the
dirt. I never believed in a hell till now, but there must be a hell for such as
you, Elizabeth Granger. Go your ways; live out your time; but live every hour
of it in terror of the vengeance that shall come so surely as you shall die.</p>
<p>“Now for you, sir,” he went on, addressing the trembling father.
“I do not blame you so much, because I believe that this viper poisoned
your mind. You might have thought that the tale was true. It is not true; it
was a lie. Beatrice, who now is dead, came into my room in her sleep, and was
carried from it as she came. And you, her father, allowed this villain and your
daughter to use her distress against her; you allowed him to make a lever of
it, with which to force her into a marriage that she loathed. Yes, cover up
your face—you may well do so. Do your worst, one and all of you, but
remember that this time you have to deal with a man who can and will strike
back, not a poor friendless girl.”</p>
<p>“Before Heaven, it was not my fault, Mr. Bingham,” gasped the old
man. “I am innocent of it. That Judas-woman Elizabeth betrayed her sister
because she wanted to marry him herself,” and he pointed to the Heap upon
the floor. “She thought that it would prejudice him against Beatrice, and
he—he believed that she was attached to you, and tried to work upon her
attachment.”</p>
<p>“So,” said Geoffrey, “now we have it all. And you, sir, stood
by and saw this done. You stood by thinking that you would make a profit of her
agony. Now I will tell you what I meant to hide from you. I did love her. I do
love her—as she loved me. I believe that between you, you drove her to
her grave. Her blood be on your heads for ever and for ever!”</p>
<p>“Oh, take me home,” groaned the Heap upon the
floor—“take me home, Elizabeth! I daren’t go alone. Beatrice
will haunt me. My brain goes round and round. Take me away, Elizabeth, and stop
with me. You are not afraid of her, you are afraid of nothing.”</p>
<p>Elizabeth sidled up to him, keeping her fierce eyes on Geoffrey all the time.
She was utterly cowed and terrified, but she could still look fierce. She took
the Heap by the hand and drew him thence still moaning and quite crazed. She
led him away to his castle and his wealth. Six months afterwards she came forth
with him to marry him, half-witted as he was. A year and eight months
afterwards she came out again to bury him, and found herself the richest widow
in Wales.</p>
<p class="p2">
They went forth, leaving Geoffrey and Mr. Granger alone. The old man rested his
head upon the table and wept bitterly.</p>
<p>“Be merciful,” he said, “do not say such words to me. I loved
her, indeed I did, but Elizabeth was too much for me, and I am so poor. Oh, if
you loved her also, be merciful! I do not reproach you because you loved her,
although you had no right to love her. If you had not loved her, and made her
love you, all this would never have happened. Why do you say such dreadful
things to me, Mr. Bingham?”</p>
<p>“I loved her, sir,” answered Geoffrey, humbly enough now that his
fury had passed, “because being what she was all who looked on her must
love her. There is no woman left like her in the world. But who am I that I
should blame you? God forgive us all! I only live henceforth in the hope that I
may one day rejoin her where she has gone.”</p>
<p>There was a pause.</p>
<p>“Mr. Granger,” said Geoffrey presently, “never trouble
yourself about money. You were her father; anything you want and what I have is
yours. Let us shake hands and say good-bye, and let us never meet again. As I
said, God forgive us all!”</p>
<p>“Thank you—thank you,” said the old man, looking up through
the white hair that fell about his eyes. “It is a strange world and we
are all miserable sinners. I hope there is a better somewhere. I’m
well-nigh tired of this, especially now that Beatrice has gone. Poor girl, she
was a good daughter and a fine woman. Good-bye. Good-bye!”</p>
<p>Then Geoffrey went.</p>
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