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"Not really. Perhaps no one could really help you. No one helps or hinders. You work out your fate from the inside, like all the powerful ones. You do what is in you to do, and never question. But I longed for the woman's satisfaction of being something to you,--of holding the sponge, as the boys say. But a mere woman, poor, weak creature, is tied with a short rope--do you know what that means? So the next best thing, if one can't live one's self, is to live in another--some strong one.
When you are a woman and have reached my age, you know that you can't live for yourself. That chance has gone."
"I don't believe it," I protested. "You are just ready to live."
She gave me a smile for my compliment, and shook her head.
"No, I don't deceive myself. Most women do. I know when I have reached the end of my chapter.... So I have followed you, step by step--oh, you don't know how closely! And I have sucked in all the joy of your success, of your power, of you--a man! I have lived a man's life."
"But you went away?" I said accusingly.
"Yes, I went away--because that would help! It was the only thing I could do--I could go away."
For the first time her voice shook with pa.s.sion. I was answered.
"Now I have come back to find that my hands are tied more than ever. I can help you no more. Believe me, that is the hardest thing yet. I can help you no more! My husband--you understand? No, you need not understand. A woman is bound back and across by a thousand threads, which do not always show to the eye.... I may yet keep my husband from throwing you over, but that is no matter--the truth is I count no longer to you. If the world had been other than it is, my friend, I should have been by your side, fighting it out daily for you, with you. As it is--"
She threw up her arms in a gesture of disgust and remained silent, brooding. It was not necessary to complete the words. Nor could I speak.
Something very wonderful and precious was pa.s.sing before my eyes for the last time, something that had been near was floating off, would never come back. And life was so made that it was vain, useless, to try to hold it, to cry out, to do anything except to be still and feel the loss. My hands fell beside hers upon the polished surface of the desk, and we sat looking into one another's eyes, without fear. She was feeling what I was feeling, but she was looking deeper into fate than I could look. For she was wiser as a woman than I was as a man. We were the two in the world most near, and between us there was a gulf that could not be crossed. The years that are to come, my heart said to me then, will be longer than those that have pa.s.sed.
"Listen," she whispered, as though she were reading my thoughts. "We shall never need more than this. Remember! Nothing more than this. For I should be a hindrance, then, not a help. And that would be the end of me, indeed. You have your will to work, which is more than any woman could give you. And I have the thought of you. Now I must go away again--we have to live that way. It makes no difference: you and I think the same thoughts in the same way. What separation does a little distance put between you and me? I shall follow after you step by step, and when you have mounted to the broad level that comes after accomplishment, you will be glad that it has been as I say, not different. It is I that must long. For you need no woman to comfort and love you!"
It was finished, and we sat in the deepening twilight beyond words. The truth of what she had spoken filled my mind. There was nothing else for us two but what we had had: we had come to the top of ourselves to know this, to look it in the face, and to put it aside....
The twilight silence was broken sharp in two by a cry that rang across the room. We started from our dream together and looked around. Sarah was standing midway in the long room, steadying herself by a hand reached out to a chair. I ran to hold her from falling. She grasped my arm and walked on unsteadily toward Jane.
"I knew it! I knew it always!" she cried harshly.
"You tortuous woman--you are taking him from me! You did it from the first day! How I hate you!"
[Ill.u.s.tration: "_No, child, you are wrong! There is no truth in your cruel words._"]
She dropped into a chair and sobbed. Jane knelt down by her side and, grasping her hands, spoke to her in low, pleading words:--
"No, child, you are wrong! You wrong _him_. He is not such a man. There is no truth in your cruel words."
"Yes, you have made him do dishonorable things. He has acted so his own family have left him. I know it is _you_!" she sobbed. "He has done what you would have him do."
"Child, child!" Jane exclaimed impatiently, shaking gently the hands she held. "What do you mean by saying such a thing?"
"Hasn't he done all those bad things? He never denied it, not when he was accused in church before every one. And May said it was true."
She looked resentfully at Jane through her tears. The older woman still smiled at her and stroked her hands.
"But even if it were true, _you_ mustn't take the part of his accusers!
That isn't for a woman who loves him to do. You must trust him to the end."
Sarah looked at her and then at me. She pushed Jane from her quickly.
"Don't you defend him to me! You have stolen him! He loves you. I saw it once before, and I see it on your face now. I know it!"
"Come!" I said, taking Sarah by the arm and leading her away. "You don't know what you say."
"Yes, I do! You treat me like a child, Van! Why did you have to take him?" she turned and flamed out to Jane. "You have always had everything."
"Have I had everything?" the other woman questioned slowly, quietly, as if musing to herself. "Everything? Do you know all, child? Let me tell you one thing. Once I had a child--a son. One child! And he was born blind. He lived four months. Those were the only months I think I have ever lived. Do you think that I have had _all_ the joy?"
She was stirred, at last, pa.s.sionate, ironic, and Sarah looked at her with wondering surprise, with awe.
"You grudge me the three or four hours your husband has given me out of the ten years you have lived with him! You hate me because he has talked to me as he would talk to himself--as he would talk to you each day, if you could read the first letter of his mind. And if I love him? If he loves me? Would you deny yourself the little I have taken from you, his wife, if it were yours to take and _mine_ to lose? But be content! Not one word of what you call love has pa.s.sed between us, or ever will. Is that enough?"
They looked at each other with hate plainly written on their faces.
"You are a bad woman!" Sarah exclaimed brokenly.
"Am I? Think of this, then. I could take your husband--I could from this hour! But for his sake, for _his_ sake, I will not. _I will not!_"
Sarah groaned, covering her eyes, while Jane walked rapidly out of the room. In a moment the carriage door clicked outside, and we were alone.
"You love that woman, Van!" Sarah's voice broke the silence between us with an accusing moan.
"Why say that--" I began, and stopped; for, after this hour, I knew what it was for one person to be close to another. However, it seemed a foolish thing to be talking about. There would be no gain in going deeper into our hearts.
"There has never been a word between us that you should not hear," I replied; "and now let us say no more."
But Sarah shook her head, unconvinced.
"It is two years or more since I have seen Jane," I added.
"That makes no difference. Jane was right! You love her!" she repeated helplessly. "What shall we do?"
"Nothing!" I took her cold hands and sat down opposite her, drawing her nearer me. "Don't fear, my wife. They are going away again, I understand. She will go out of our life for always."
"I have my children," Sarah mused after a pause.
"We have _our_ children," I corrected. "And it's best to think of them before ourselves."
"Oh, if we could take them and go away to some little place, to live like my people down in Kentucky--you and me and the children!"
I smiled to myself at the thought. To run away was not just to pack a trunk, as Sarah thought!
"It would be impossible. Everything would go to pieces. I should lose pretty much all that we have--not only that, but a great many other people who have trusted me with their money would lose. I must work at least until there is no chance of loss for them."
"But aren't you a very rich man, Van?"
"Not so rich as I shall be some day! But I might make out to live in Kentucky, all the same."
"You think I must have a great deal of money?"