As he got out of the
train at the little wayside station he remembered the conversation as
if it had been yesterday, instead of fifteen years ago—and his heart
went thumping against his ribs so violently that he almost heard it. The
original thrill came over him again with all its infinite yearning. He
felt it as he had felt it then—not with that tragic
lessening the interval had brought to each repetition of its memory.
Here, in the familiar scenery of its birth, he realised with mingled
pain and wonder that the subsequent years had not destroyed, but only
dimmed it. The forgotten rapture flamed back with all the fierce beauty
of its genesis, desire at white heat. And the shock of the abrupt
discovery shattered time. Fifteen years became a negligible moment; the
crowded experiences that had intervened seemed but a dream. The farewell
scene, the conversation on the steamer’s deck, were clear as of the
day before. He saw the hand holding her big hat that fluttered in the
wind, saw the flowers on the dress where the long coat was blown open a
moment, recalled the face of a hurrying steward who had jostled them; he
even heard the voices—his own and hers:
‘Yes,’ she said simply; ‘I promise you. You
have my word. I’ll wait—’
‘Till I come back,’ he interrupted.
Steadfastly she repeated his actual words, then
added: ‘Here; at home—that is.’
‘I’ll come to the garden gate as usual,’ he
told her, trying to smile. ‘I’ll knock. You’ll open the gate—as
usual—and come out to me.’
These words, too, she attempted to repeat, but her
voice failed, her eyes filled suddenly with tears; she looked into his
face and smiled. It was just then that her little hand went up to hold
the hat on—he saw the very gesture still. He remembered that he was
vehemently tempted to tear his ticket up there and then, to go ashore
with her, to stay in England, to brave all opposition—when the siren
roared its third horrible warning ... and the ship put out to sea.
Fifteen years, thick with various incident, had
passed between them since that moment. His life had risen, fallen,
crashed, then risen again. He had come back at last, fortune won by a
lucky coup—at thirty-five; had come back to find her, come back, above
all, to keep his word. Once every three months they had exchanged the
brief letter agreed upon: ‘I am well; I am waiting; I am happy; I am
unmarried. Yours—’ For his youthful wisdom had insisted that no
‘man’ had the right to keep ‘any woman’ too long waiting; and
she, thinking that letter brave and splendid, had insisted likewise that
he was free—if freedom called him. They had laughed over this last
phrase in their agreement. They put five years as the possible limit
of separation. By then he would have won success, and obstinate parents
would have nothing more to say.
But when five years ended he was ‘on his
uppers’ in a western mining town, and with the end of ten in sight
those uppers, though changed, were little better, apparently, than
patched and mended. It was just then, too, that the change which had
been stealing over him first betrayed itself. He realised it abruptly, a
sense of shame and horror in him. The discovery was made unconsciously:
it disclosed itself. He was reading her letter as a labourer on a
Californian fruit farm: ‘Funny she doesn’t marry—someone else!’
he heard himself say. The words were out before he knew it, and
certainly before he could suppress them. They just slipped out,
startling him into the truth; and he knew instantly that the thought was
fathered in him by a hidden wish.... He was older. He had lived. It was
a memory he loved.
Despising
himself in a contradictory fashion—both vaguely and fiercely—he yet
held true to his boyhood’s promise. He did not write and offer to
release her as he knew they did in stories; he persuaded himself that he
meant to keep his word. There was this fine, stupid, selfish obstinacy
in his character. In any case, she would misunderstand and think he
wanted to set free—himself. ‘Besides—I’m still—awfully fond of
her,’ he asserted. And it was true; only the love, it seemed, had gone
its way. Not that another woman took it; he kept himself clean, held
firm as steel. The love, apparently, just faded of its own accord; her
image dimmed, her letters had ceased to thrill, then ceased to interest
him.
Subsequent
reflection made him realise other details about himself. In the interval
he had suffered hardships, had learned the uncertainty of life that
depends for its continuance on a little food, but that food often hard
to come by, and had seen so many others go under that he held it more
cheaply than of old. The wandering instinct, too, had caught him, slowly
killing the domestic impulse; he lost his desire for a settled place of
abode, the desire for children of his own, lost the desire to marry at
all. Also—he reminded himself with a smile—he had lost other
things: the expression of youth she
was accustomed to and held always in her thoughts of him, two
fingers of one hand, his hair! He wore glasses, too. The
gentlemen-adventurers of life get scarred in those wild places where he
lived. He saw himself a rather battered specimen well on the way to
middle age.
There
was confusion in his mind, however, and
in his heart: a struggling complex of emotions that made it
difficult to know exactly what he did feel. The dominant clue concealed
itself. Feelings shifted. A single, clear determinant did not offer. He
was an honest fellow. ‘I can’t quite make it out,’ he said.
‘What is it I really feel? And why?’ His motive seemed obscured. To
keep the flame alight for the long buffeting years was no small
achievement; better men had succumbed in half the time. Yet something in
him still held fast to the girl as with a band of steel that would
not let her go entirely. Occasionally there came strong reversions,
when he ached with longing, yearning, hope; when he loved her again; remembered
passionately each detail of the far-off courtship days in the forbidden
rectory garden beyond the small, white garden gate. Or was it merely the
image and the memory he loved ‘again’? He hardly knew himself. He
could not tell. That ‘again’ puzzled him. It was the wrong word
surely.... He still wrote the promised letter, however; it was so easy;
those short sentences could not betray the dead or dying fires. One day,
besides, he would return and claim her. He meant to keep his word.
And
he had kept it. Here he was, this calm September afternoon, within three
miles of the village where he first had kissed her, where the marvel of
first love had come to both; three short miles between him and the
little white garden gate of which at this very moment she was intently
thinking, and behind which some fifty minutes later she would be standing,
waiting for....
He
had purposely left the train at an earlier station; he would walk the
three miles in the dusk, climb the familiar steps, knock at the white
gate in the wall as of old, utter the promised words, ‘I have come
back to find you,’ enter, and—keep his word. He had written from
Mexico a week before he sailed; he had made careful, even accurate
calculations: ‘In the dusk, on the sixteenth of September, I shall
come and knock,’ he added to the usual sentences. The knowledge of his
coming, therefore, had been in her possession seven days. Just before
sailing, moreover, he had heard from her—though not in answer,
naturally. She was well; she was happy; she was unmarried; she was
waiting.
And
now, as by some magical process of restoration—possible to deep hearts
only, perhaps, though even to them quite inexplicable—the state of
first love had blazed up again in him. In all its radiant beauty it lit
his heart, burned unextinguished in his soul, set body and mind on
fire. The years had merely veiled it. It burst upon him, captured,
overwhelmed him with the suddenness of a dream. He stepped from the
train. He met it in the face. It took him prisoner. The familiar trees
and hedges, the unchanged countryside, the ‘fields-smells known in
infancy,’ all these, with something subtly added to them, rolled back
the passion of his youth upon him in a flood. No longer was he bound
upon what he deemed, perhaps, an act of honourable duty; it was love
that drove him, as it drove him fifteen years before. And it drove him
with the accumulated passion of desire long forcibly repressed; almost
as if, out of some fancied notion of fairness to the girl, he had
deliberately, yet still unconsciously, said ‘No’ to it; that she
had not faded, but that he had decided, ‘I
must forget her.’ That sentence: ‘Why dosen’t she
marry—someone else?’ had not betrayed change in himself. It
surprised another motive: ‘It’s not fair to—her!’
His
mind worked with a curious rapidity, but worked within one circle only.
The stress of sudden emotion was extraordinary. He remembered a
thousand things; yet, chief among them, those occasional reversions when
he had felt he ‘loved her again.’ Had he not, after all, deceived
himself? Had she ever really ‘faded’ at all? Had he not felt he
ought to let her fade— release her that way? And the change in
himself?—that sentence on the Californian fruit-farm—what did they
mean? Which had been true, the fading or the love?
The
confusion in his mind was hopeless, but, as a matter of fact, he did not
think at all: he only felt. The momentum, besides, was irresistible, and
before the shattering onset of the sweet revival he did not stop to
analyse the strange result. He knew certain things, and cared to know no
others: that his heart was leaping, his blood running with the heat of
twenty, that joy recaptured him, that he must see, hear, touch her, hold
her in his arms—and marry her. For the fifteen years had crumbled to a
little thing, and at thirty-five he felt himself but twenty,
rapturously, deliciously in love.
He
went quickly, eagerly, down the little street to the inn, still feeling
only, not thinking anything. The vehement uprush of the old emotion made
reflection of any kind impossible. He gave no further thought to those
long years ‘out there,’ when her name, her letters, the very image
of her in his mind had found him, if not cold, at least without keen
response. All that was forgotten as though it had not been. The
steadfast thing in him, this strong holding to a promise which had never
wilted, ousted the recollection of fading and decay that, whatever
caused them, certainly had existed. And this steadfast thing now took
command. This enduring quality in his character led him. It was only
towards the end of the hurried tea he first received the singular
impression—vague, indeed, but undeniably persistent—that he was being
led.
Yet,
though aware of this, he did not pause to argue or reflect. The
emotional displacement in him, of course, had been more than
considerable: there had been upheaval, a change whose abruptness was
even dislocating, fundamental in a sense he could not estimate—shock.
Yet he took no count of anything but the one mastering desire to get
to her as soon as possible, knock at the small, white garden gate, hear
her answering voice, see the low wooden door swing open—take her.
There was joy and glory in his heart, and a yearning sweet delight. At
this very moment she was expecting him. And he—had come.
Behind
these positive emotions, however, there lay concealed all the time
others that were of a negative character. Consciously, he was not aware
of them, but they were there; they revealed their presence in various
little ways that puzzled him. He recognised them absent-mindedly, as it
were; did not analyse or investigate them. For, through the confusion
upon his faculties, rose also a certain hint of insecurity that betrayed
itself by a slight hesitancy or miscalculation in one or two unimportant
actions. There was a touch of melancholy, too, a sense of something
lost. It lay, perhaps, in that tinge of sadness which accompanies the
twilight of an autumn day, when a gentler, mournful beauty veils a
greater beauty that is past. Some trick of memory connected it with a
scene of early boyhood, when, meaning to see the sunrise, he overslept,
and, by a brief half-hour, was just—too late. He noted it merely, then
passed on; he did not understand it; he hurried all the more, this hurry
the only sign that it was noted.
‘I must be quick,’ flashed up across his strongly positive emotions.
And, due to this hurry, possibly, were the slight
miscalculations that he made. They were very trivial. He rang for
sugar, though the bowl stood just before his eyes, yet when the girl
came in he forgot completely what he rang for—and inquired instead
about the late trains back to London. And, when the time-table was laid
before him, he examined it without intelligence, then looked up
suddenly into the maid’s face with a question about flowers. Were
there flowers to be had in the village anywhere? What kind of flowers?
‘Oh, a bouquet or a’—he hesitated, searching for a word that tried
to present itself, yet was not the word he
wanted to make use of—‘or a wreath—of some sort?’ he
finished. He took the very word he did not want to take. In several
things he did and said, this hesitancy and miscalculation betrayed
themselves—such trivial things, yet significant in and elusive way
that he disliked. There was sadness, insecurity somewhere in them. And
he resented them, though aware of their existence only because they
qualified his joy. There was a whispered ‘No’ floating somewhere in
the dusk. Almost—he felt disquiet. He hurried, more and more eager
to be off upon his journey—the final part of it.
Moreover, there were other signs of an odd
miscalculation— dislocation, perhaps, properly speaking—in him.
Though the inn was familiar from his boyhood days, kept by the same old
couple, too, he volunteered no information about himself, nor asked a
single question about the village he was bound for. He did not even
inquire if the rector—her father—still were living. And when he left
he entirely neglected the gilt-framed mirror above the mantelpiece of
plush, dusty pampas-grass in waterless vases on either side. It did not
matter, apparently, whether he looked well or ill, tidy or untidy. He
forgot that when his cap was off the absence of thick, accustomed hair
must alter him considerably, forgot also that two fingers were missing
from one hand, the right hand, the hand that she would presently clasp.
Nor did it occur to him that he wore glasses, which must change his
expression and add to the appearance of the years he bore. None of these
obvious and natural things seemed to come into his thoughts at all. He
was in a hurry to be off. He did not think. But though his mind may not
have noted these slight betrayals with actual sentences, his attitude,
nevertheless, expressed them. This was, it seemed, the feeling in him:
‘What could such details matter to her now?
Why, indeed, should he give to them a single thought? It was himself
she loved and waited for, not separate items of his external, physical
image.’ As well think of the fact that she, too, must have
altered—outwardly. It never once occurred to him. Such details were
of To-day.... He was only impatient to come to her quickly, very
quickly, instantly, if possible. He hurried.
There was a flood of boyhood’s joy in him. He
paid for his tea, giving a tip that was twice the price of the meal, and
set out gaily and impetuously along the winding lane. Charged to the
brim with a sweet picture of a small, white garden gate, the loved face
close behind it, he went forward at a headlong pace, singing ‘Nancy
Lee’ as he used to sing it fifteen years before.
With action, then, the negative sensations hid
themselves, obliterated by the positive ones that took command. The
former, however, merely lay concealed; they waited. Thus, perhaps, does
vital emotion, overlong restrained, denied, indeed, of its blossoming
altogether, take revenge. Repressed element in his psychic life asserted
themselves, selecting, as though naturally a dramatic form.
The dusk fell rapidly, mist rose in floating strips
along the meadows by the stream; the old, familiar details beckoned him
forwards, then drove him from behind as he went swiftly past them. He
recognised others rising through the thickening air beyond; they nodded,
peered, and whispered, sometimes they almost sang. And each added to his
inner happiness; each brought its sweet and precious contribution, and
built it into the reconstructed picture of the earlier, long-forgotten
rapture. It was an enticing and enchanted journy that he made, something
impossibly blissful in it, something, too, that seemed curiously
irresistible.
For the scenery had not altered all these years,
the details of the country were unchanged, everything he saw was rich
with dear and precious association, increasing the momentum of the tide
that carried him along. Yonder was the stile over whose broken step he
had helped her yesterday, and there the slippery plank across the stream
where she looked above her shoulder to ask for his support; he saw the
very bramble bushes where she scratched her hand, a-blackberrying, the
day before ... and, finally, the weather-stained signpost, ‘To the
Rectory.’ It pointed to the path through the dangerous field where
Farmer Sparrow’s bull provided such a sweet excuse for holding,
leading—protecting her. From the entire landscape rose a stream of
recent memory, each incident alive, each little detail brimmed with its
cargo of fond association.
He read the rough black lettering on the crooked
arm—it was rather faded, but he knew it too well to miss a single
letter—and hurried forward along the muddy track; he looked about him
for a sign of Farmer Sparrow’s bull; he even felt in the misty air for
the little hand, that he might take and lead her into safety. The
thought of her drew him on with such irresistible anticipation that it
seemed as if the cumulative drive of vanished and unsated years evoked
the tangible phantom almost. He actually felt it, soft and warm and
clinging in his own, that was no longer incomplete and mutilated.
Yet it was not he who led and guided now, but, more
and more, he who was being led. The hint had first betrayed its presence
at the inn; it now openly declared itself. It had crossed the frontier
into a positive sensation. Its growth, swiftly increasing all this time,
had accomplished itself; he had ignored, somehow, both its genesis and
quick development; the result he plainly recognised. She was expecting
him, indeed, but it was more than expectation; there was calling in
it—she summoned him. Her thought and longing reached him along that
old, invisible track love builds so easily between true, faithful
hearts. All the forces of her being, her very voice, came towards him
through the deepening autumn twilight. He had not noticed the curious
physical restoration in his hand, but he was vividly aware of this more
magical alteration—that she led
and guided him, drawing him ever more swiftly towards the little, white
garden gate where she stood at this very moment, waiting. Her sweet
strength compelled him; there was this new touch of something
irresistible about the familiar journey, where formerly had been
delicious yielding only, shy, tentative advance.
His footsteps hurried, faster and ever faster; so
deep was the allurement in his blood, he almost ran. He reached the
narrow, winding lane, and raced along it. He knew each bend, each angle
of the holly hedge, each separate incident of ditch and stone. He could
have plunged blindfold down it at top speed. The familiar perfumes
rushed at him—dead leaves and mossy earth and ferns and dock leaves,
bringing the bewildering currents of strong emotion in him all
together as in a rising wave. He saw, then, the crumbling wall, the
cedars topping it with spreading branches, the chimneys of the rectory.
On his right bulked the outline of the old, grey church; the twisted,
ancient yews, the company of gravestones, upright and leaning, dotting
the ground like listening figures. But he looked at none of these. For,
a little beyond, he already saw the five rough steps of stone that led
from the lane towards a small, white garden gate. That gate at last
shone before him, rising through the misty air. He reached it.
He stopped dead a moment. His heart, it seemed,
stopped too, then took to violent hammering in his brain. There was a
roaring in his mind, and yet a marvellous silence—just behind it. Then
the roar of emotion died away. There was utter stillness. This
stillness, silence, was all about him. The world seemed preternaturally
quiet.
But the pause was too brief to measure. For the
tide of emotion had receded only to come on again with redoubled power.
He turned, leaped forward, clambered impetuously up the rough stone
steps, and flung himself, breathless and exhausted, against the trivial
barrier’ that stood between his eyes and—hers. In his wild, half
violent impatience, however, he stumbled. That roaring, too, confused
him. He fell forward, it seemed, for twilight had merged in darkness,
and he misjudged the steps, the distances he yet knew so well. For a
moment, certainly, he lay at full length upon the uneven ground against
the wall; the steps had tripped him. And then he raised himself and
knocked. His right hand struck upon the small, white garden gate. Upon
the two lost fingers he felt the impact. ‘I am here,’ he cried, with
a deep sound in his throat as though utterance was choked and difficult.
‘I have come back.’
For a fraction of a second he waited, while the
world stood still and waited with him. But there was no delay. Her
answer came at once: ‘I am well.... I am happy.... I am waiting.’
And the voice was dear and marvellous as of old.
Though the words were strange, reminding him of something dreamed,
forgotten, lost, it seemed, he did not take special note of them. He
only wondered that she did not open instantly that he might see her.
Speech could follow, but sight came surely first! There was this
lightning-flash of disappointment in him. Ah, she was lengthening out
the marvellous moment, as often and often she had done before. It was to
tease him that she made him wait. He knocked again; he pushed against
the unyielding surface. For he noticed that it was unyielding; and there
was a depth in the tender voice that he could not understand.
‘Open!’ he cried again, but louder than before.
‘I have come back!’ And, as he said it, the mist struck cold against
his face.
But her answer froze his blood.
‘I cannot open.’
And a sudden anguish of despair rose over him; the
sound of her voice was strange; in it was faintness, distance as well as
depth. It seemed to echo. Something frantic seized him then—the panic
sense.
‘Open, open! Come out to me!’ he tried to
shout. His voice failed oddly; there was no power in it. Something
appalling struck him between the eyes. ‘For God’s sake, open. I’m
waiting here! Open, and come out to me!’
The reply was muffled by distance that already
seemed increasing; he was conscious of freezing cold about him—in his
heart:
‘I cannot. You must come in to me.’
He knew not exactly then what happened, for the
cold grew dreadful and the icy mist was in his throat. No words would
come. He rose to his knees, and from his knees to his feet. He stooped.
With all his force he knocked again; in a blind frenzy of despair he
hammered and beat against the unyielding barrier of the small, white
garden gate. He battered it till the skin of his knuckles was torn and
bleeding—the first two fingers of a hand already mutilated. He
remembered the torn and broken skin, for he noticed in the gloom that
stains upon the gate bore witness to his violence; it was not till afterwards
that he remembered the other fact—that the hand had already suffered
mutilation, long, long years ago. The power of sound was feebly in him;
he called aloud; there was no answer. He tried to scream, but the scream
was muffled in his throat before it issued properly; it was a nightmare
scream. As a last resort he flung himself bodily upon the unyielding
gate, with such precipitate violence, moreover, that his face struck
against its surface.
From the friction, then, along the whole length of
his cheek he knew that the surface was not smooth. Cold and rough that
surface was; but also—it was not of wood. Moreover, there was writing
on it he had not seen before. How he deciphered it in the gloom, he
never knew. The lettering was deeply cut. Perhaps he traced it with his
fingers; his right hand certainly lay stretched upon it. He made out a
name, a date, a broken verse from the Bible, and strange words: ‘Je
suis la première au rendez-vous. Je vous attends.’ The lettering
way sharply cut with edges that were new. For the date was of a week
ago; the broken verse ran, ‘When the shadows flee away ...’ and the
small, white garden gate was unyielding because it was of— stone.
At the inn he found himself staring at a table from
which the tea things had not been deared away. There was a railway
time-table in his hands, and his head was bent forwards over it, trying
to decipher the lettering in the growing twilight. Beside him, still
fingering a form, stood the serving-girl; her other hand held a brown
tray with a running dog painted upon its dented surface. It swung to and
fro a little as she spoke, evidently continuing a conversation her
customer had begun. For she was giving information—in the colourless,
disinterested voice such persons use:
‘We all went to the funeral, sir, all the country
people went. The grave was her father’s—the family grave....’
Then, seeing that her customer was too absorbed in the time-table to
listen further, she said no more but began to pile the tea things on to
the tray with noisy clatter.
Ten
minutes later, in the road, he stood hesitating. The signal at the
station just opposite was already down. The autumn mist was rising. He
looked along the winding road that melted away into the distance, then
slowly turned and reached the platform just as the London train came in.
He felt very old—too old to walk three miles....