Part 8 (1/2)
There was a new vigour in her splendid old face and body.
”There is a reason now why I am the Dowager d.u.c.h.ess of Darte,” she went on, ”and why I have money and houses and lands. There is a reason why I have lived when it sometimes seemed as if my usefulness was over. There are uses for my money--for my places--for myself. Lately I have found myself saying, as Mordecai said to Esther, 'Who knowest whether thou art not come to the kingdom for such a time as this.' A change is taking place in me too. I can do more because there is so much more to do. I can even use my hands better. Look at them.”
She held them out that he might see them--her beautiful old-ivory fingers, so long stiffened by rheumatism. She slowly opened and shut them.
”I can move them more--I have been exercising them and having them rubbed. I want to be able to knit and sew and wait on myself and perhaps on other people. Because I have been a rich, luxurious old woman it has not occurred to me that there were rheumatic old women who were forced to do things because they were poor--the things I never tried to do. I have begun to try.”
She let her hands fall on her lap and sat gazing up at him with a rather strange expression.
”Do you know what I have been doing?” she said. ”I have been praying to G.o.d--for a sort of miracle. In their terror people are beginning to ask their Deity for things as they have never done it before. We are most of us like children waking in horror of the black night and shrieking for some one to come--some one--any one! Each creature cries out to his own Deity--the G.o.d his own need has made. Most of us are doing it in secret--half ashamed to let it be known. We are abject things. Mothers and fathers are doing it--young lovers and husbands and wives.”
”What miracle are you asking for?”
”For power to do things I have not done for years. I want to walk--to stand--to work. If under the stress of necessity I begin to do all three, my doctors will say that mental exaltation and will power have caused the change. It may be true, but mental exaltation and will power are things of the soul not of the body. Anguish is actually forcing me into a sort of practical belief. I am trying to 'have faith even as a grain of mustard seed' so that I may say unto my mountain, 'Remove hence to yonder place and it shall be removed.'”
”'The things which I do, ye shall do also and even greater things than these shall ye do.'” Coombe repeated the words deliberately. ”I heard an earnest middle-aged dissenter preach a sermon on that text a few days ago.”
”What?”--his old friend leaned forward. ”Are _you_ going to hear sermons?”
”I am one of the children, I suppose. Though I do not shriek aloud, probably something shrieks within me. I was pa.s.sing a small chapel and heard a singular voice. I don't know exactly why I went into the place, but when I sat down inside I felt the tension of the atmosphere at once.
Every one looked anxious or terrified. There were pale faces and stony or wild eyes. It did not seem to be an ordinary service and voices kept breaking out with spasmodic appeals, 'Almighty G.o.d, look down on us!'
'Oh, Christ, have mercy!' 'Oh, G.o.d, save us!' One woman in black was rocking backwards and forwards and sobbing over and over again, 'Oh, Jesus! Jesus! Oh, Lord Jesus!'”
”Part of her body and soul was lying done to death in some field--or by some roadside,” said the d.u.c.h.ess. ”She could not pray--she could only cry out. I can hear her, 'Oh, Lord Jesus!'”
Later came the morning when the changed George came to say good-bye. He was wonderfully good-looking in his khaki and seemed taller and more square of jaw. He made a few of the usual young jokes which were intended to make things cheerful and to treat affectionate fears lightly, but his good-natured blue eye held a certain deadly quiet in its depths.
His mother and Kathryn were with him, and it was while they were absorbed in anxious talk with the d.u.c.h.ess that he walked over to where Robin sat and stood before her.
”Will you come into the library and let me say something to you? I don't want to go away without saying it,” he put it to her.
The library was the adjoining room and Robin rose and went with him without any comment or question. Already the time had come when formalities had dropped away and people did not ask for trivial explanations. The pace of events had become too rapid.
”There are a lot of chances when a man goes out--that he won't come back,” he said, still standing after she had taken a place in the window-seat he guided her to. ”There are not as many as one's friends can't help thinking--but there are enough to make him feel he'd like to leave things straight when he goes. What I want you to let me say is, that the minute I had made a fool of myself the night of the dance, I knew what an a.s.s I had been and I was ready to grovel.”
Robin's lifted face was quite gentle. Suddenly she was thinking self-reproachingly, ”Oh, poor boy--poor boy!”
”I flew into a temper and would not let you,” she answered him. ”It _was_ temper--but there were things you didn't know. It was not your fault that you didn't.” The square, good-natured face flushed with relief, and George's voice became even slightly unsteady.
”That's kind of you,” he said, ”it's _kind_ and I'm jolly grateful.
Things mean a lot just now--with all one's people in such a state and trying so pluckily to hide it. I just wanted to make sure that you knew that _I_ knew that the thing only happened because I was a silly idiot and for no other reason. You will believe me, won't you, and won't remember it if you ever remember me?”
”I shall remember you--and it is as if--that had never happened at all.”
She put out, as she got up, such a kind hand that he grasped it almost joyously.