THE ATONEMENT OF LEAM DUNDAS.
BY MRS. E. LYNN LINTON, AUTHOR OF "PATRICIA
KEMBALL."
CHAPTER XXXVII.
UNWORTHY.
The storm had passed with the night, and the day was bright
and joyful—almost hard in its brightness and cruel in its
joy; for while the sun was shining overhead and the air was
musical with the hum of insects and the song of birds, the
flowers were broken, the tender plants destroyed, the uncut
corn was laid as if a troop of horse had trampled down the
crops, and the woods, like the gardens and the fields, were
wrecked and spoiled. But of all the mourners sighing between
earth and sky, Nature is the one that never repents, and the
sun shines out over the saddest ruin as it shines out over the
richest growth, as careless of the one as of the other.
Edgar came down from the Hill in the sunshine, handsome,
strong, jocund as the day. As he rode through the famous double
avenue of chestnuts he thought, What a glorious day! how clear
and full of life after the storm! but he noted the wreckage
too, and was concerned to see how the trees and fields had
suffered. Still, the one would put forth new branches and fresh
leaves next year; and if the other had been roughly handled,
there was yet a salvage to be garnered. The ruin was not
irreparable, and he was in the mood to make the best of things.
Do not the first days of a happy love ever give the happiest
kind of philosophy for man and woman to go on?
And he was happy in his love. Who more so? He was on his way
now to Ford House as a man going to his own, serene and
confident of his possession. He had left his treasure
overnight, and he went to take it up again, sure to find it
where he had laid it down. He had no thought of the thief who
might have stolen it in the dark hours, of the rust that might
have cankered it in the chill of the gray morning. He only
pictured to himself its beauty, its sweetness and undimmed
radiance—only remembered that this treasure was his, his
own and his only, unshared by any, and known in its excellence
by none before him.
He rode up to the door glad, dominant, assured. Life was
very pleasant to the strong man and ardent lover—the
English gentleman with his happiness in his own keeping, and
his future marked out in a clear broad pathway before him.
There was no cloud in his sky, no shadow on his sea: it was all
sunshine and serenity—man the master of his own fate and
the ruler of circumstance—man the supreme over all
things, a woman's past included.
Not seeing Leam in the garden, Edgar rang the bells and was
shown into the drawing-room, where she was sitting alone. The
down-drawn blinds had darkened the room to a pleasant gloom for
eyes somewhat overpowered by the blazing sunshine and the
dazzling white clouds flung like heaps of snow against the hard
bright blue of the sky; yet something struck more chill than
restful on the lover as he came through the doorway, little
fanciful or sentimental as he was.
Leam, who had not been in bed through the night, was sitting
on the sofa in the remotest and darkest part of the room. She
rose as he entered—rose only, not coming forward to meet
him, but standing in her place silent, pale, yet calm and
collected. She did not look at him, but neither did she blush
nor tremble. There was something statuesque, almost dead, about
her—something that was not the same Leam whom he had
known from the first.
He went up to her, both hands held out. She shrank back and
folded hers in each other, still not looking at him.
"Why, Leam, what is it?" he cried in amazement, pained,
shocked at her action. Was she in her right mind? Had she heard of his former
attentions to Adelaide, divined their ultimate meaning, and
been seized with a mad idea of sacrifice and generosity? It
must be with Adelaide, he thought, rapidly reviewing his past.
He was absolutely safe about Violet Cray, who had never known
his name; and those later Indian affairs were dead and as good
as buried. What, then, did it mean?
"No, not till you have heard me," said Leam in a low voice.
"And never after."
"My darling! what is it?" he repeated.
"You must not call me dear names: I am unworthy," said Leam.
"No," checking him as he would have spoken, smiling with a
sense of relief that her craze—if it was a
craze—went to the visionary side of her own unworthiness,
and was not due to any knowledge of his misdemeanors, as she
might think them. "Do not speak. I have to tell you. I had
forgotten it," she went on to say in the same tense, compressed
manner—the manner of one who has a task to get through,
and has gathered all her strength for the effort, leaving none
to be squandered in emotion—"I was so happy in these last
days I had forgotten it. Now I have remembered, and we must
part."
Edgar was grieved to see her in such deadly trouble, for it
was easy to see her pain beneath her still exterior, but he was
confident, and if grieved not afraid. Leam's little life, so
innocent and uneventful as it must have been, could hold no
such tremendous evil, could have been smirched with no such
damning stain, as that at which she seemed to hint. Grant even
that there had been something more between her and Alick
Corfield than he would quite like to hear—which was his
first thought—still, that more must needs be very little,
could but be very simple. His wife must be spotless—that
he knew, and he would marry none whose past was not as
unsullied as new-fallen snow, as unsullied as must be her
future—absolute purity—the unruffled emotions of a
maidenhood undisturbed until now even by dreams, even by
visions. He owed it to himself and his position that his wife,
man of many loves as he was, should be this; but at the worst
the childish affection of brother and sister, which was all
that could possibly have been between Leam and that awkward
young gangrel Alick Corfield, could have nothing in it that he
ought to take to heart or that should influence him. Yes, he
might smile and not be afraid. And indeed her delicate
conscience was another grace in his eyes. He loved her more
than ever for the honesty that must confess all its little
sins. Sweet Leam! Leam having to confess! Leam! she who was
almost too modest for an ordinary lover's comfort, needing to
be tamed out of her savage bashfulness, not to be reproved for
transgressing the proper reticence of an English maid. It was a
pretty play, but it was only a play.
"Come and sit by me and make full confession, my darling,"
he said lovingly.
"I will stand where I am. You sit," said Leam, without
looking at him.
He seated himself on the sofa. "And now what has my little
culprit to say for herself?" he asked pleasantly, putting on a
playful magisterial air.
"It is over," said Leam, her hands pressed in each other
with so tight a clasp that the strained knuckles were white and
started. "You must not love me: I cannot be your wife."
"Why?" He showed his square white teeth beneath the golden
sweep of his moustache, his moist red lips parted, always
smiling.
"I have done a great crime," said Leam in a low, monotonous
voice.
"A crime! That is a large word for a small
peccadillo—larger than any sin of yours merits, my
sweetheart."
"You do not know," said Leam with a despairing gesture. "How
can you know when you have not heard?"
"Well, what may be its name?" he asked, willing to humor
her.
She paused for a moment: then with a visible effort, drawing
in her breath, she said, in a voice that was unnaturally calm
and low, "I killed madame."
"Leam!" cried Edgar, "how can you talk such nonsense? The
thing is growing beyond a joke. Unsay your words; they are a
wrong done to me."
He had started to his
feet while he spoke, and now stood before her with a strangely
scared and startled face. Naturally, as such a man would, he
was resolute not to accept such a terrible confession, and one
so unlikely, so impossible; but something in the girl's voice
and manner, something in its sad, still reality, seemed to
overpower his determination to find this simply a bad joke
which she was playing off on his credulity. And then the thing
fitted only too well. He had heard half a dozen times of Madame
de Montfort's sudden death, and how very strange it was that
the draught which she had taken so often with impunity before
should have been found so laden with prussic acid on the first
night of her homecoming as to kill her in an instant—how
strange, too, that not the strictest search or inquiry could
come upon a trace of such poison bought or possessed by any
member of the family, for what police-officer would look to
find a sixty-minim bottle of prussic acid concealed among the
coils of a young girl's hair? And when Leam said in that quiet
if desperate manner that it was she who had killed madame, her
words made the whole mystery clear and solved the as yet
unsolved problem.
Nevertheless, he would not believe her, but said again,
passionately, "Unsay your words, Leam: they offend me."
"I cannot," said Leam.
He laughed scornfully. "Kill Madame de Montfort. Absurd! You
could not. It was impossible for a girl like you to kill any
one," he cried in broken sentences. "How could you do such a
thing, Leam, and not be found out? Silly child! you are
raving."
"I put poison into the bottle, and she died," said Leam in a
half whisper.
"Leam! you a murderess!"
She quivered at the word, at the tone of loathing, of
abhorrence, of almost terror, in which he said it, but she held
her terrible ground. She had begun her martyrdom, her agony of
atonement for the sake of truth and love, and she must go
through now to the end. "Yes," she said, "I am a murderess. Now
you know all, and why you must not love me."
"I cannot believe you," he pleaded helplessly. "It is too
horrible. My darling, say that you have told me this to try
me—that it is not true, and that you are still my own, my
very own, my pure and sinless Leam."
He knelt at her feet, clasping her waist. He was not of
those who, like Alick, could bear the sin of the beloved as the
sacrifice of pride, of self, of soul to that love. He himself
might be stained from head to heel with the soil of sin, but
his wife must be, as has been said, without flaw or blemish,
immaculate and free from fault. Any lapse, involving the loss
of repute should it ever be made public, would have been the
death-knell of his hopes, the requiem of his love; but such an
infamy as this! If true it was only too final.
"Oh, no! no! do not do that," cried Leam, trying to unclasp
his hands. "Do not kneel to me. I ought to kneel to you," she
added with a little cry that struck with more than pity to
Edgar's heart, and that nearly broke her down for so much
relaxing of the strain, so much yielding to her grief, as it
included.
"Leam, tell me you are joking—tell me that you did not
do this awful thing," he cried again, his handsome face,
blanched and drawn, upturned to her in agony.
She put her hands over her eyes. "I cannot lie to you," she
said. "And I must not degrade you. Do not touch me: I am not
good enough to be touched by you."
He loosened his arms, and she shrank from him almost as if
she faded away.
"Why did you deceive me?" he groaned. "You should not have
let me love you, knowing the truth."
"I did not know that you loved me, or that I loved you, till
that night," she pleaded piteously. "If I had known I would
have prevented it. I have told you as soon as I
remembered."
"You have broken my heart," he cried, flinging himself on
the sofa, his face buried in the cushions. And then, strong man
as he was, a brave soldier and an English country gentleman, he
burst into a passion of tears that shook him as the storm had
shaken the earth last night—tears that were the culmination
of his agony, not its relief.
Leam stood by him as pale as the shattered lilies in the
garden. What could she do? How could she comfort him? Tainted
and dishonored, she dared not even lay her hand on
his—her infamous and murderous hand, and he so pure and
noble! Neither could she pray for him, nor yet for herself.
Pray? to whom? To God? God had turned His face away from her,
even as her lover had now turned away his: He was angry with
her, and still unappeased. She dared not pray to Him, and He
would not hear her if she did. The saints were no longer the
familiar and parental deities, grave and helpful, to whom she
could refer all her sorrows and perplexities, as in earlier
times, sure of speedy succor. The teaching of the later days
had destroyed the simple fetichism of childhood; and
now—afraid of God, by whom she was unforgiven; the saints
swept out of her spiritual life like those mist-wreaths of
morning which were once taken for solid towers and impregnable
fortresses; the Holy Mother vanished with the rest; all
spiritual help a myth, all spiritual consolation gone—how
could she pray? Lonely as her life had been since mamma died,
it had never been so lonely as now, when she felt that God had
abandoned her, and that she had sacrificed her lover to her
sense of truth and honor and what was due to his nobility.
She stood by him and watched his passionate outburst with
anguish infinitely more intense than his own. To have caused
him this sorrow was worse than to have endured it for herself.
There was no sacrifice of self that she could not have made for
his good. Spaniard as she was, she would have been above
jealousy if another woman would have made him happier than she;
and if her death would have given him gain or joy, she would
have died for him as another would have lived. Yet it was she,
and she only, who was causing him this pain, who was destroying
his happiness and breaking his heart.
She dared not speak nor move. It took all the strength she
drew from silence to keep her from breaking into a more
terrible storm of grief than even that into which he had
fallen. She dared not make a sign, but simply stood there,
doing her best to bear her heavy burden to the end. The only
feeling that she had for herself was that it was cruel not to
let her die, and why did not mute anguish kill her?
For the rest, she knew that she had done the thing that was
right, however hard. It was not fitting that she should be his
wife; and it was better that he should suffer for the moment
than be degraded for all time by association with one so
shameful, so dishonored, as herself.
Presently, Edgar cleared his eyes and lifted up his face. He
was angry with himself for this unmanly burst of feeling, and
because angry with himself disposed for the moment to be hard
on her. She was standing there in exactly the same spot and
just the same attitude as before, her head a little bent, her
hands twined in each other, her eyes with the pleading,
frightened look of confession turned timidly to him; but as he
raised himself from the sofa, pushing back his hair and
striding to the window as if to hide the fact of his having
shed tears, she turned her eyes to the floor. She was beginning
to feel now that she must not even look at him. The gulf that
separated them, dug by her own ineffaceable crime, was so deep,
the distance so wide!
A painful silence fell between them: then Edgar, not looking
at her, said in a constrained voice, "I will keep your dreadful
secret, Leam, sacredly for ever. You feel sure of that, I hope.
But, as you say, we must part. I do not pretend to be better
than other men, but I could not take as my wife one who had
been guilty of such an awful crime as this."
"No," said Leam, her parched lips scarcely able to form a
word at all.
"Your secret will be safe with me," he repeated.
She did not reply. In giving up himself she had given up all
that made life lovely, and the refuse might as well go as
not.
"But we must
part."
"Yes," said Leam.
He turned back to the window, desperately troubled. He did
really love her, passionately, sincerely. He longed at this
very moment to take her in his arms and tell her that he would
accept her crime if only he might have herself. Had he not been
the master of the Hill and a Harrowby he would have done so,
but the master of the Hill and the head of the house of
Harrowby had a character to maintain and a social ideal to keep
pure. He could not bring into such a home as his, present to
his mother as her daughter, to his sisters as their sister, a
girl who by her own confession was a murderess—a girl
who, if the law had its due, would be hanged by the neck in the
precincts of the county jail till she was dead. He might have
been sinful enough in his own life, in the ordinary way of
men—and truly there were passages in his past that would
scarcely bear the light—but what were the worst of his
misdemeanors compared with this awful crime? No: he must
resolutely crush the last lingering impulse of tenderness, and
leave her to work through her own tribulation, as he also must
work through his.
"But we must part," he said for a third time.
Her lips quivered. She did not answer, only bent her head in
sign of acquiescence.
"It is hard to say it, harder still to do; and I who loved
you so dearly!" cried Edgar with the angry despair of a man
forced against himself to give up his desire.
She put up her hands. "Don't!" she said with a sharp cry. "I
cannot bear to hear about your love."
He gave a sudden sob. Her love for him was very precious to
him—his for her very strong.
"Why did you tell me?" he then said. "And yet you did the
right thing to tell me: I was wrong to say that. It was good of
you, Leam—noble, like yourself."
"I love you. That is not being noble," she answered slowly
and with infinite pathos. "I could not have deceived you after
I remembered."
"You are too noble to deceive," he said, holding out his
hand.
Leam turned away. "I am not fit to touch your hand," she
said, the very pride of contrition in her voice—pride for
him, if humiliation for herself.
"For this once," he pleaded.
"I am unworthy," she answered.
At this moment little Fina came jumping into the room. She
had in her hand a rose-colored scarf that had once been poor
madame's, and which the nurse, turning out an old box of hers,
had found and given to the child.
After she had kissed Edgar, played with his
bréloques, looked at the works of his watch,
plaited his beard into three strings, and done all that she
generally did in the way of welcome, she shook out the gauze
scarf over her dress.
"This was mamma's—my own mamma's," she said. "Leam
will never tell me about mamma: you tell me, Major Harrowby,"
coaxingly.
"I cannot: I did not know her," said Edgar in an altered
voice, while Leam looked as if her judgment had come, but bore
it as she had borne all the rest, resolutely.
"I want to hear about mamma, and who killed her," pouted
Fina.
"Hush, Fina," said Leam in an agony: "you must not
talk."
"You always say that, Leam, when I want to hear about
mamma," was the child's petulant reply.
"Go away now, dear little Fina," said Edgar, who felt all
that Leam must feel at these inopportune words, and who,
moreover, weak as he was in this direction, was longing for one
last caress.
"I will go and send her nurse," said Leam, half staggering
to the door.
Had anything been wanting to show her the impossibility of
their marriage, this incident of Fina's random but incisive
words would have been enough.
"Leam! not one word more?" he asked as he stood against the
door, holding the handle in his hand.
"No," she said hopelessly. "What words can we have
together?"
"And we are parting
like this, and for ever?"
"For ever. Yes, it has to be for ever," she answered almost
mechanically.
"Leam, why did you love me?" he cried, taking her hands in
his and keeping them.
"How could I help it? Who would not love you?" she
answered.
Again he gave a sudden heavy sob, and again the poor pale,
tortured face reflected the pain it witnessed.
"Good-bye!" she then said, drawing her hands from his.
"Remember only, when you blame me, that I told you, not to let
you be degraded. And forgive me before I die, for I loved
you—ah, better than my own life!"
With a sudden impulse she stooped forward, took back his
right hand in both of hers, pressed it to her bosom, kissed it
passionately again and again, then turned with one faint,
half-suppressed moan, and left him. And as he heard her light
feet cross the hall, wearily, heavily, as the feet of a mourner
dragging by the grave of the beloved, he knew that his dream of
love was over. But, with the strange satire of the senses in
moments of sorrow, noting ever the most trivial things, Edgar
noted specially the powerful perfume of a spray of lemon-plant
which she bruised as she pressed his hand against her
breast.
That evening Edgar Harrowby went down to the rectory. He was
strong enough in physique and in some phases of will, but he
was not strong all through, and he had never been able to face
unassisted the first desolation of a love-disappointment.
Adelaide, in a picturesque dress and her most becoming mood,
welcomed him with careful cordiality as a prodigal whose husks,
clinging about his coat, were to be handled tenderly as if they
were pearls. She saw that something was gravely wrong, and she
grasped the line of connection if she did not understand the
issue; but, mindful of the doctrine of letting well
alone—also of that of catching a heart at the
rebound—she made no allusion in the beginning, but let
her curiosity gnaw her like the Spartan boy's fox without
making a sign. At last, however, her curiosity became
impatience, and her impatience conquered her reserve. She was
clever in her generation and fairly self-controlled, but she
was only a woman, after all.
"And when did you see that eccentric little lady, Miss
Leam?" she asked with a smile—not a bitter smile, merely
one of careless amusement, as if Leam was acknowledged to be a
comical subject of conversation and one naturally provoking a
smile.
"Dear Adelaide," said Edgar, not looking at her, but
speaking with unusual earnestness, "do not speak ill of Leam
Dundas—neither to me nor to any one else. I ask it as a
favor."
Adelaide turned pale. "Tell me only one thing, Edgar: are
you going to marry her?" she asked, her manner as earnest as
his own, but with a different meaning.
"No. Marry her? Good God, no!" was his vehement reply. Then
more tenderly: "But for all that do not speak ill of her. Will
you promise, dear, good friend?"
"Yes, I will promise," she answered with what was for her
fervor and a sudden look of intense relief. "I never will
again, Edgar; and I am sorry if I have hurt you at any time by
what I may have said. I did not mean to do so."
"No, I know you did not. I can appreciate your motives, and
they were good," Edgar answered with emotion; and then their
two pairs of fine blue eyes met, and both pairs were moist.
This was just at the moment when Leam, pale, rigid as a
statue, thickly veiled, and holding a box in her hand, met Mr.
Gryce in Steel's Wood, he having gone to catch such rare
specimens of sleeping lepidoptera as the place afforded and his
eyes could discern. |