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She went into her own room, and threw herself on her bed and writhed there, torn by many pangs. The pang of the heart and the pang of the half-born spirit, struggling with the body that held it back from birth; and through it all the pang of the motherhood she had thwarted and disowned. Out of the very soil of corruption it pierced, sharp and pure, infinitely painful. It was almost indiscernible from the fierce exultation of her heart that had found fulfilment, and from the pa.s.sion of her body that yet waited for its own.
She undressed herself, and crept into her bed and lay there, tortured, visited by many memories. She gazed with terrified, pitiful eyes into a darkness that was peopled for her with all the faces she had known in the short seasons of her sinning; men, and the women who had been her friends and her companions; and the strangers who had pa.s.sed her by, or who had lingered and looked on. The faces of Robert and his children hung somewhere on the outskirts of her vision, but she could not fix them or hold them; they were trampled out, obliterated by that phantasmal procession of her shames. Some faces, more terrible than all, detached themselves and crowded round her, the faces of those who had pursued her, and of those whom her own light feet pursued; from the first who had found her and left her, to the last whom she herself had held captive and let go. They stood about her bed; they stretched out their hands and touched her; their faces peered into hers; faces that she had forgotten. She thrust them from her into the darkness and they came again. Each bore the same likeness to his fellow; each had the same looks, the same gestures that defied her to forget. She fell asleep; and the dreams, the treacherous, perpetually remembering, delivered her into their hands.
She waked at dawn, with memory quickened by her dreams. She heard voices now, all the voices that had accused her. Her mother's voice spoke first, and it was very sad. It said, "I am sending you away, Kitty, because of the children." Then her father's voice, very stern, "No, I will not have you back. You must stay where you are for your little sisters' sake." And her mother's voice again--afterward--sad and stern, too, this time, "As you made your bed, Kitty, you must lie. We can't take you back."
And there was a third voice. It said very softly, "You can't have it both ways." It cried out aloud in a fury, "I've always known it. You can't hide it. You're full of it." And yet another voice, deep and hard, "You can't _not_ tell him. It's a shame Kitty; it's an awful shame."
She could not sleep again for listening to them.
CHAPTER XVIII
It was morning. She dragged herself up and tried to dress. But her hands shook and her head ached violently. She stretched herself half-dressed upon her bed and lay there helpless, surrendered to the bodily pain that delivered her mercifully from the anguish of her mind.
She saw no one, not even Jane Lucy.
Outside, in the pa.s.sage, and in the inner room she heard the footsteps of the children and their little shrill voices; each sound accentuated the stabbing pulse of pain. It was impossible to darken the room, and the insufferable sunlight poured in unchecked through the thin yellow blinds and plagued her brain, till the nerves of vision throbbed, beat for beat, with the nerves of torment. At noon she had only one sensation of brilliant surging pain.
She dozed and her headache lifted. When she woke her body was weak as if it had had a fever, but her mind closed on reality with the impact of a force delayed.
There was a thing not yet quite real to her, a thing that seemed to belong to the region of bodily pain, to be born there as a bad dream might be born; a thing that had been there last night among other things, that, as she stared at it, became more prominent, more poignant than they. And yet, though its air was so beckoning and so familiar, it was not among the number of things accomplished and irrevocable. It was simply the thing she had to do.
It possessed her now; and under its dominion she was uplifted, carried along. Her mind moved toward it with a reckless rocking speed, the perilous certainty of the insane.
At five o'clock she rang the bell and asked the servant to bring her some tea. She swallowed a little with a jerk of her throat, and put the cup down, shuddering. It brought her a sickening memory of yesterday.
At five o'clock she got up and dressed herself and sent a message to Robert Lucy to see her downstairs in her sitting-room, alone. As she stood at her gla.s.s she said to herself, "How shocking I look. But he won't mind."
At six he was with her.
She drew her hand away from his as if his touch had hurt her. Her smile was the still, bloodless smile that comes with pain. She drew her chair back out of the sunlight, in the recess by the fireplace. He stood beside her then, looking at her with eyes that loved her the more for the sad hurt to her beauty. His manner recalled the shy, adolescent uncertainty of his first approaches.
"Don't you think," he said, "you ought to have stayed in bed?"
She shook her head and struggled to find her voice. It came convulsively.
"No. I'm better. I'm all right now."
"It was being out in that beastly hot sun yesterday--with those youngsters. You're not used to it."
She laughed. "No. I'm not used to it. Robert--you haven't told them, have you?"
"What?"
"About you--and me?"
"No. Not yet." He smiled. "I say, I shall have to tell them very soon, shan't I?"
"You needn't."
He made some inarticulate sound that questioned her.
"I've changed my mind. I can't marry you."
He had to bend his head to catch her low, indistinct murmur; but he caught it.
He drew back from her, and leaned against the chimneypiece and looked at her more intently than before.
"Do you mean," he said quietly, "because of _them_?"
"Yes."
He looked down.
"Poor Kitty," he said. "You think I'm asking too much of you?"
She did not answer.
"You're afraid?"
"I told you I was afraid."
"Yes. But I thought it was all right. I thought you liked them."
She was silent. Tears rose to her eyes and hung on their unsteady lashes.
"They like you."
She bowed her head and the tears fell.
"Is that what has upset you?"
"Yes."
"I see. You've been thinking it over and you find you can't stand it. I don't wonder. You've let those little monkeys tire you out. You've nearly got a sunstroke and you feel as if you'd rather die than go through another day like yesterday? Well, you shan't. There'll never be another day like yesterday."
"No. Never," she said; and her sobs choked her.
"Why should there be? They'll have a governess. You don't suppose I meant you to have them on your hands all the time?"
She went on crying softly. He sat on the arm of her chair and put his arm round her and dried her eyes.
"Don't be unhappy about it, Kitty. I understand. You're not marrying them, dear; you're marrying me."
She broke loose from him.