Part 87 (1/2)
She was not looking at him. Her eyes were on the little white cross above the Mother's grave; there was an anxious fold between the slender dark eyebrows.
”You--you wish to marry a Catholic--you, who tell me that you were once a Christian and are now Agnostic?”
”If I have not what is called Faith,” said Saxham, ”I may at least lay claim to the quality of reverence. And I honour the religion that has made you what you are. Cleave to your Church, child--hold to your pure beliefs, and keep a little love back, Lynette, from your Holy Family and your Saints in Heaven, to give to a poor devil who needs it desperately!”
The sweet colour flushed her, and her face was more than beautiful in its compa.s.sion. She said:
”I pray for you now, and I will always. And one day our Lord will give you back the faith that you have lost.”
”Thank you, dear!” said Saxham humbly. She was opening her lips to speak again when he lifted his hand and stopped her.
”There is one other thing I should like to make clear. I--am not rich. But neither am I absolutely poor. Letters that I have received from a firm of solicitors acting for the trustees and executors of--a near relative deceased, will prove to you that I am possessed of some small property, bringing in an annual income of something like two hundred pounds, and funds sufficient to settle a few thousands upon my wife by way of marriage-jointure. Believe me,” he added, in answer to her look, ”I know you to be incapable of a mercenary thought. But what I should have explained to”--he pointed to the grave that lay so near--”to _her_, I must make clear to you. It could not be otherwise.”
She went over to the grave and knelt beside it, and laid her pure cheek upon it, and spoke to the Dead in a low, murmuring tone. Saxham knew as he watched her, breathing heavily, that the consent of the Mother would never have been given to the marriage he proposed. That other obstacle in the road of his desire, the lover who had deceived, had been swept away, with the stern and tender guardian, in one cataclysm of Fate. He went back in thought to the ending of his long shooting-match _a outrance_ with Father Noah, and remembered how he had promised himself that all should go well with Saxham provided Saxham's bullet got home first.
Were not things going better than he had hoped? She had not even recoiled from him when he had told her of those degraded days of wastrelhood.
Surely things were going well for Saxham, he said, as he waited with his hungering eyes upon his heart's desire. What it cost him not to step over to her, s.n.a.t.c.h her from the ground, and crush her upon his heart with hot and pa.s.sionate kisses and wild words of wors.h.i.+p, he knew quite well. But in that he was able to exercise such a mastery over himself and keep that other Saxham down, Saxham gave praise to that strange G.o.d he had set up, and wors.h.i.+pped, and bowed down before, calling it The Omnipotent Human Will.
She rose by-and-by, and stood with clasped hands, thinking. It was very still, and the air was sweet and balmy, and beyond the lines of the defence-works miles upon miles of sunlit veld rolled away to the hills that were mantled in clear hyacinth-colour and hooded with pale rose.
”If I married you, you would take me away from this country and these people who have killed her?”
She had the thought of another in her heart and the name of another upon her lips. But only her eyes spoke, travelling to that more distant grave where the b.u.t.terflies were hovering above the flowers, as Saxham answered:
”I would take you away, if you wished it.”
”To England?”
”Back to England.”
”I should see London, and the house where Mother lived....” She seemed to have forgotten Saxham, and to be uttering her thoughts aloud. ”I might even see the green mountains of Connemara in Ireland--her own mountains she used to call them. I might one day meet people who are of her blood and name----”
”And of _his_,” thought Saxham, following her eyes' wistful journey to that other grave.
”But,” she went on, ”it would all depend”--she breathed with agitation and knitted her slim white fingers together, and looked round at him with that anxious wrinkle between her fine eyebrows--”upon how much you asked of me!
Suppose I----” His intent and burning eyes confused her, and she dropped her own beneath them. ”If I were to marry you, would you leave me absolutely free?”
”Absolutely,” said Saxham. ”With the most complete freedom a wife could possibly desire.”
”I meant--a different kind of freedom from a wife's.” She knitted and unknitted her hands. ”It is difficult to explain. Would you be willing to ask nothing of me that a friend or a sister might not give? Would you be content----”
Her transparent skin glowed crimson with the rush of blood. Her bosom laboured with the hurry of her breathing. Her white lids veiled her eyes, or the sudden terrible change in Saxham's face might have wrung from her a cry of terror and alarm. But he mastered the raging jealousy that tore him, and said, with a jarring note of savage irony in the voice that had always spoken to her gently until then:
”Would I be content to enter, with you for my partner, into a marriage that should be practically no marriage at all--a formal contract that is not wedlock? That might never change as Time went on, and alter into the close union that physically and mentally makes happiness for men and women who love? Is that what you ask me, Miss Mildare?”
She looked at him full and bent her head. And the man's heart, that had throbbed so wildly, stopped beating with a sudden jerk, and the divine fire that burned and tingled in his blood died out, and the cold sickness of baffled hope weighed on him like a mantle of lead. And the voice that had whispered to him so alluringly, telling him that it was not too late, that he might even yet win this virginal pure, sweetly-budding maiden, and know the bliss of being loved at last, sank into silence. His face was set like granite, and as grey. His eyes burned darkly under his heavy brows. He waited, sombrely and hopelessly, for her to speak again.
”There are such marriages----?”
The question was diffidently and timidly put. He answered: