Part 46 (1/2)
”It must have been a shock,” the man murmured, with his eyes upon the tablecloth.
”It was,” she agreed, hoa.r.s.ely. ”Can't you see it in my face? I do not always look like a woman of forty. Can't you see the gray shadows that are there? You see, I admit it frankly. I was terrified--I am terrified!”
”And why?” he asked.
”Why?” she repeated, looking at him wonderingly. ”Doesn't it seem to you a terrible thing to think of the dead coming back to life?”
He tapped lightly upon the tablecloth for a minute with the fingers of one hand. Then he looked at her again.
”It depends,” he said, ”upon the manner of their death.”
An executioner of the Middle Ages could not have played with his victim more skillfully. The woman was s.h.i.+vering now, preserving some outward appearance of calm only by the most fierce and unnatural effort.
”What do you mean by that, Jerry?” she asked. ”I was not even with--Wenham, when he was lost. You know all about it, I suppose,--how it happened?”
The man nodded thoughtfully.
”I have heard many stories,” he admitted. ”Before we leave the subject for ever, I should like to hear it from you, from your own lips.”
There was a bottle of champagne upon the table, ordered at the commencement of the meal. She touched her gla.s.s; the waiter filled it. She raised it to her lips and set it down empty. Her fingers were clutching the tablecloth.
”You ask me a hard thing, Jerry,” she said. ”It is not easy to talk of anything so painful. From the moment we left New York, Wenham was strange. He drank a good deal upon the steamer. He used to talk sometimes in the most wild way. We came to London. He had an attack of delirium tremens. I nursed him through it and took him into the country, down into Cornwall. We took a small cottage on the outskirts of a fis.h.i.+ng village--St. Catherine's, the place was called. There we lived quietly for a time. Sometimes he was better, sometimes worse. The doctor in the village was very kind and came often to see him. He brought a friend from the neighboring town and they agreed that with complete rest Wenham would soon be better. All the time my life was a miserable one.
He was not fit to be alone and yet he was a terrible companion. I did my best. I was with him half of every day, sometimes longer. I was with him till my own health began to suffer. At last I could stand the solitude no longer. I sent for my father. He came and lived with us.”
”The professor,” her listener murmured.
She nodded.
”It was a little better then for me,” she went on, ”except that poor Wenham seemed to take such a dislike to my father. However, he hated every one in turn, even the doctors, who always did their best for him. One day, I admit, I lost my temper. We quarreled; I could not help it--life was becoming insupportable. He rushed out of the house--it was about three o'clock in the afternoon. I have never seen him since.”
The man was looking at her, looking at her closely although he was blinking all the time.
”What do you think became of him?” he asked. ”What do people think?”
She shook her head.
”The only thing he cared to do was swim,” she said. ”His clothes and hat were found down in the little cove near where we had a tent.”
”You think, then, that he was drowned?” the man asked.
She nodded. Speech seemed to be becoming too painful.
”Drowning,” her companion continued, helping himself to brandy, ”is not a pleasant death. Once I was nearly drowned myself. One struggles for a short time and one thinks--yes, one thinks!” he added.
He raised his gla.s.s to his lips and set it down.
”It is an easy death, though,” he went on, ”quite an easy death. By the way, were those clothes that were found of poor Wenham's identified as the clothes he wore when he left the house?”
She shook her head.
”One could not say for certain,” she answered. ”I never noticed how he was dressed. He wore nearly always the same sort of things, but he had an endless variety.”