<h2>CHAPTER XXXVIII<br/> <span class="f8">THE DUTY OF A WIFE</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">Just</span> as we were about to start Marjory said to me,
half in jest but wholly in earnest:</p>
<p>“I wonder what has become of Gormala these
times. If she knew of the last two nights, she would
simply become desperate; and there is no knowing what
she might prophecy!”</p>
<p>Strangely enough, I had been myself thinking of the
Witch-woman. I suppose it was that the memory of the
finding of the treasure, and of the hovering near us of
death, had recalled her weirds. With the thought of her,
came once more that strange feeling which I had before
experienced, a feeling as if she were present. Motioning
to Marjory to put out the light, I stole to the window.
The heavy curtains, when I had passed through them,
shut out the glimmer of the firelight. Marjory came and
joined me, and we looked out together. There were drifting
clouds, and thus, moments of light and shadow. In
one of the former I saw a dark mass on the edge of the
deep grass that crowns the rock just over the entrance of
Witsennan Point. If it was a woman it was probably
Gormala; and if it was Gormala she was probably watching
me, for of course she could not know that Marjory
was with me. I determined to find out if I could; so I
told Marjory to slip out by the back door whilst I went
to the point. We arranged to join at the upper village
of old Whinnyfold.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Having placed my bicycle ready to start, and shut the
door behind me softly, I stole over to the cliff. Lying just
below the edge, but so that her head was at the top lay
Gormala, asleep. At first I thought it was pretence, for
I knew the wily nature of the old woman; but on examining
closely I found her sleep was real. She looked
worn and tired out, and I concluded that it was the second
night of watching on end which had finished her. It
was well she slept, for had she been awake she must have
seen us. The place she had chosen commanded both
paths away from the house left and right; only by stealing
back over the hill and keeping the house all the time
between us and herself could we have avoided her prying
eyes. Even then, were there light enough, she might
have seen us debouching on the roadway had we gone
inland by Whinnyfold. I could not but be sorry for her;
she looked so old and feeble, and yet with such purpose
in her strong, stern face. I could afford to be pitiful
now; my life was running on happy lines. I had won
Marjory, and we had found the treasure!</p>
<p>I left her undisturbed; I would have put some rug or
covering over her; but I was afraid lest I should awake
her, and so make discovery of our plans. Besides it
would be hard to account for my being awake myself
and about at that hour of the night—or morning, I hardly
knew which it was. Almost as hard as it would have
been for Gormala to explain why she was in similar case.</p>
<p>When I joined Marjory, we took our way as quickly
as possible to Crom; we were both anxious that she should
get into the castle before daylight. It was with a certain
dread, for the experiences of the night were not yet hardened
in memory, that I saw Marjory descend into the
cave when we rolled away the stone. She too was not
free from misgiving; I knew it from the emphasis with
which she impressed on me that I was not to fear for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</SPAN></span>
her. She was to wave a white handkerchief from the
roof when she had got in safely.</p>
<p>Looking over the stone towards the castle whence must
come her signal I waited with an anxiety which I could
not conceal from myself. The grey dawn grew paler and
paler as I looked, and the sky began to quicken. Here
and there around me came every now and again the solitary
pipe of an awakening bird. I could just see the
top of the castle, looking bare and cold through the vista
between the treetops. In a short time, almost shorter
than I could have anticipated, I saw on the roof the flutter
of a white handkerchief. My heart leaped; Marjory was
safe. I waved my own handkerchief; she answered again,
and there was no more sign. I came away satisfied, and
wheeled back to Cruden with what speed I could. It
was still very early morning, when I reached Whinnyfold.
Not a soul was up as I passed on my way, and I
crept in secretly by the back of the house.</p>
<p>When I looked carefully out of a window in front, I
could see in the growing light of morning that Gormala
still lay on the edge of the cliff, motionless and manifestly
asleep.</p>
<p>I lay down for a while and dozed till the morning was
sufficiently advanced. Then after a cold bath and a cup
of hot tea, took my way to Crom, timing myself so as to
arrive for an early breakfast.</p>
<p>Mrs. Jack met me, beaming. She was so hearty, and
so manifestly glad to see me, that I bent over and kissed
her. She was not a bit displeased; she seemed a little
touched by the act, and smiled at me. Then Marjory
came in, looking radiant. She greeted me with a smile,
and went over to and kissed Mrs. Jack affectionately.
Then she kissed me too, and there was a glad look in her
eyes which made my heart thrill.</p>
<p>After breakfast she sat in the window with Mrs. Jack,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</SPAN></span>
and I went to the fireplace to light a cigarette. I stood
with my back to the fire and looked over at Marjory; it
was always a joy to me when she was in my sight. Presently
she said to Mrs. Jack:</p>
<p>“Weren’t you frightened when I didn’t come back the
night before last?” The elderly lady smiled complacently
as she answered:</p>
<p>“Not a bit, my dear!” Marjory was astonished into
an exclamation:</p>
<p>“Why not?” The affectionate old woman looked at
her gravely and tenderly:</p>
<p>“Because I knew you were with your husband; the
safest place where a young woman can be. And oh! my
dear, I was rejoiced that it was so; for I was beginning
to be anxious, and almost unhappy about you. It didn’t
seem right or natural for two young people like you and
your husband to be living, one in one place and one in
another.” As she spoke she took Marjory’s hand in hers
and stroked it lovingly. Marjory turned her head away
from her, and, after one swift glance at me from under her
eyelashes, from me also. Mrs. Jack went on in a grave,
sweet way, lecturing the girl she loved and that she had
mothered; not as a woman lectures a child but as an old
woman advises her junior:</p>
<p>“For oh! Marjory, my dear one, when a woman takes
a husband she gives up herself. It is right that she
should; and it is better too, for us women. How can
we look after our mankind, if we’re thinking of ourselves
all the time! And they want a lot of looking after too,
let me tell you. They’re only men after all—the dears!
Your bringing-up, my child, has not made you need them.
But you would well understand it, if when you was a
child, you was out on the plains and among the mountains,
like I was; if you didn’t know when you saw your
daddy, or your brother, or your husband go out in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</SPAN></span>
morning whether you’d ever see him come back at night,
or would see him brought back. And then, when the
work was over, or the fight or whatever it might be, to
see them come home all dirty and ragged and hungry,
and may be sick or wounded—for the Indians made a lot
of harm in my time with their good old bows and their
bad new guns—where would we women and girls have
been. Or what sort of women at all at all, if we didn’t
have things ready for them! My dear, as I suppose you
know now, a man is a mighty good sort of a thing after
all. He may be cross, or masterful, or ugly to deal with
when he has got his shirt out; but after all he’s a man,
and that’s what we love them for. I was beginning to
wonder if you was a girl at all, when I see you let your
husband go away from you day after day and you not
either holdin’ him back, or goin’ off with him, way the
girls did in my time. I tell you it would have been a
queer kind of girl in Arizony that’d have let her man go
like that, when once they had said the word together.
Why, my dear, I lay awake half the night sayin’ my
prayers for the both of you, and blessin’ God that He had
sent you such a happiness as true love; when there might
have been them that would have ben runnin’ after your
fortun’ and gettin’ on your weak side enough to throw
dust in your eyes. And when in the grey of the dawn
I looked into your room and found you hadn’t come, why
I just tip-toed back to my bed and went to sleep happy.
And I was happy all day, knowin’ you were happy too.
And last night I just went to sleep at once and didn’t
bother my head about listenin’ for your comin’; for well
I knew you wouldn’t be home then. Ah! my dear, you’ve
done the right thing. At the least, your husband’s wishes
is as much as your own, seein’ as how there’s two of you.
But a woman only learns her true happiness when she
gives up all her own wishes, and thinks only for her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</SPAN></span>
husband. And, mind you, child, it isn’t givin’ up much
after all—at least we didn’t think so in my time—when
she pleases her husband that she loves, by goin’ off to
share his home.”</p>
<p>I listened full of deep emotion as the old lady spoke.
I felt that every word she said was crystallised truth;
and there was no questioning the deep, earnest, loving-kindness
of her intent. I was half afraid to look at Marjory
lest I should disconcert her; so I turned round
quietly till I faced the fireplace, and leaning on the plinth
of it stole a glance in the old oval mirror above. Marjory
sat there with her hand in Mrs. Jack’s. Her head
was bent, and there was a flush on her neck and arms
which told its own story. I felt that she was silently crying,
or very near it; and a lump rose in my own throat.
This was one of the crises in her life. It was so borne in
upon me; and I knew its truth. We have all, as the
Scotch say, to “dree our own weird,” this was a battle
with her own soul which Marjory must fight alone. The
old woman’s wise words sounded a trumpet note of duty.
She was face to face with it, and must judge for herself.
Even with all my love, I could not help her. I stood
silent, scarcely daring to breathe lest I should disturb or
distract her. I tried to efface myself, and for a few
minutes did not even look in the mirror. The old woman
too, knew the value of silence, for she sat still; there was
not even the rustle of her dress. At last I could hear
Marjory’s in-drawn breath, and looked in the mirror.
Her attitude had not changed, except that she had raised
her head; I could tell by its proud poise that she was her
own woman again. She still kept her face away; and
there was the veil of recent tears over her sweet voice as
she spoke tenderly:</p>
<p>“Thank you, dear. I am so glad you have spoken to
me so freely and so lovingly.” I could see from the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</SPAN></span>
motion of the two hands and her own whitening knuckles
that she was squeezing her companion’s fingers. Then,
after a few moments she rose quietly, and, still keeping
her head averted, sailed quietly out of the room in her own
graceful manner. I did not stir; I felt that I could please
her best by keeping quiet.</p>
<p>But oh! how my heart went with her in her course.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</SPAN></span></p>
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