<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>IV</h2>
<h3>NO VERDICT</h3>
<p>"What do you think of Mr. Earlforward's health?" Violet demanded
peremptorily, in the bedroom. Her features were alive with urgent
emotion. She almost intimidated the doctor.</p>
<p>"Ha!" he retorted defensively, with an explosive jerk. "I haven't
examined him. I have—not—examined him. He strikes me as
under-nourished."</p>
<p>"And he is. He refuses food."</p>
<p>"But why does he refuse food? There must be some cause."</p>
<p>"It's because he's set on being economical. He's got drawers full of
money, and so have I—at least, I've got a good income of my own. But
there you are. He won't eat, he won't eat. He won't eat enough, do
<i>what</i> I will."</p>
<p>"Is that the only reason?"</p>
<p>"Of course it is. He's never had indigestion in his life."</p>
<p>"Um! Your maid, what's her name, seems to be pretty well nourished, at
all events."</p>
<p>"Have you been seeing her?" Violet inquired sharply, her suspicion
leaping up.</p>
<p>The doctor appreciated his own great careless indiscretion, and answered
with admirable deceitful nonchalance:</p>
<p>"I noticed her one day last week in passing. At least, I took it to be
her."</p>
<p>Violet left the point there.</p>
<p>The electric light blazed down upon them; it had no shade; not a single
light in the house had a shade. It showed harshly, realistically, Violet
half leaning against the foot of the bed, and Dr. Raste, upright as when
in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</SPAN></span> uniform he used to give orders in Palestine, on the rag hearthrug.
Violet's baffled energy raged within her. She had at hand all the
materials for tranquil happiness—affection, money, temperament,
sagacity, an agreeable occupation—and they were stultified by the
mysterious, morbid, absurd, inexcusable and triumphant volition of her
loving husband. Instead of happiness she felt doom—doom closing in on
her, on him, on the sentient house.</p>
<p>"My husband is a miser. I've encouraged him for the sake of peace. And
so now you know, doctor!"</p>
<p>An astounding confession to a stranger, a man to whom she had scarcely
spoken before! But it relieved her. She made it with gusto, with
passion. She had begun candour with Elsie in the morning; she was
growing used to it. The domestic atmosphere itself had changed within
six hours. That which had been tacitly denied for months was now
admitted openly. Truth had burst out. A few minutes earlier—vain
chatter about hospitals, trifling and vain commercial transactions,
make-believes, incredible futilities, ghastly nothings! And now, the
dreadful reality exposed! And at that very moment Henry in his office,
to maintain to himself the frightful pretence, was squandering the
remains of his vitality in the intolerably petty details of business.</p>
<p>"Well," said Dr. Raste primly—the first law of his actions was
self-preservation—"there isn't a great deal to be done until you can
persuade him to have professional advice.... And you? What is it with
you? You don't look much better than your husband."</p>
<p>"Oh, doctor!" Violet cried, suddenly plaintive. "I don't know. You must
examine me. Perhaps I ought to have come to you before."</p>
<p>At this point the light went out and they were in darkness.</p>
<p>"Oh, dear!"—a sort of despair in Violet's voice now "I knew that lamp
would be going soon." The fact was that the lamps in the house generally
had begun to go. All of them had passed their allotted span of a
thousand burning hours. Two in the shop had failed.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</SPAN></span> Henry possessed no
reserve of lamps, and he would not buy, and Violet had not yet wound
herself up to the resolve of buying in defiance of him. Once a fuse had
melted. For two days they had managed mainly with candles. Violet,
irritated, went forth secretly to buy fuse wire. She returned, and with
a half-playful, half-resentful gesture threw the wire almost in his
face; but it had happened that during her absence he had inserted a new
fuse made from a double thickness of soda-water-bottle wire which he had
picked up from somewhere. His reproaches, though unspoken, were hard for
her to bear.</p>
<p>The doctor promptly struck a match, and Violet lit the candle on the
night-table.</p>
<p>"I'm afraid I can't examine you by <i>that</i> light," said the doctor.</p>
<p>"Oh, <i>dear</i>!" She nearly wept, then masterfully took hold of herself. "I
know!" She rushed to the bathroom, stood on the orange-box, and detached
the bathroom lamp, and returned with it to the bedroom. "Here! This will
do."</p>
<p>The doctor climbed on to a chair. As soon as he had fixed the new lamp
Violet economically blew out the candle; and then, quaking, she yielded
up her body, in the glacial chill of the room, for the trial and verdict
which would reassure or agonize her. However, she was neither reassured
or agonized; there was no verdict.</p>
<p>When Dr. Raste redescended the dark stairs the shop lay in darkness and
the bookseller was wheeling in the bookstand. The doctor entered the
still lighted office to get his two parcels, which he arranged on his
left side exactly as before.</p>
<p>"Oh?" said Mr. Earlforward, approaching him. It was an interrogation.</p>
<p>"I should prefer not to say anything at present," the doctor announced
in loud, prim, clearly articulated syllables. "There may be nothing
abnormal, nothing at all. At any rate, it is quite impossible to judge
under existing conditions. I shall call again in a week or ten
days—perhaps earlier. No immediate cause for anxiety."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He had been but little more communicative than this to Violet herself.
He was inhuman again—for his patients. Within him, however, glowed the
longing to see his child's eyes kindle when he presented her with the
Globe Shakspere for her very own.</p>
<p>That night, contrary to custom, Henry went to bed earlier than Violet.
He stated that he felt decidedly better, but that he had finished all
his book-keeping and oddments of work, and that it would be a pity to
keep the office fire alive for nothing. Violet, in her mantle, had to
darn a curtain in the front-room. When she went into the bedroom and
switched on the light she saw him, with the counterpane well up to his
chin, lying flat on his back, eyes shut, but not asleep. He had the
pallor of a corpse, and the corpse-like effect was enhanced by the
indications of his straight, thin body under the clothes. She stood bent
by the side of the bed and looked at him, as it were passionately, but
vainly trying by the intensity of her gaze to wrench out and drag up
from hidden depths the inaccessible secrets of his mind.</p>
<p>Though saying little to her about her trouble he had behaved to her
through the evening with the most considerate kindliness. He had
caressed her with his voice. And about her trouble she had not expected
him to say much. He had a very inadequate conception of the physical
risks which women by nature are condemned to run. And she had never
talked much in such directions, for not only was he a strangely modest
man, but she deliberately practised the reserve which he himself
practised. She argued, somewhat vindictively: "He tells me nothing. I
will tell him nothing." Moreover, the doctor's calm non-committal
attitude had given Henry an exceptional occasion to exercise his great
genius for postponement. Never would Henry go half-way to meet an ordeal
of any sort. Lastly, his reactions were generally slow. Fear, anxiety,
seemed to come late to him.</p>
<p>He opened his eyes. She gave him one of the long kisses which he loved.
Could he guess (she wondered) that her kiss was absent-minded that
night, perfunctory,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</SPAN></span> a kiss that emerged inattentive to him from the
dark, virginal fastnesses of her being, which neither he nor any other
would or could invade. With intention she pressed her lips on his.</p>
<p>"Come to bed," he murmured gently, "and get that light out."</p>
<p>Half undressed she looked carefully at herself in the mirror of the
perfectly made, solid, everlasting Victorian wardrobe. Yes, her face
showed evidence of illness; it frightened her. No, she was merely
indisposed; she was frightening herself. She had no pain, or extremely
little. She thought, as she regarded herself in the glass, how
inscrutable, how enigmatic, how feminine she was, and how impossible it
was for him to comprehend her. She felt superior to him, as a complex
mind to a simple one. She thought that she, far better than he, could
appreciate the significance of the terrible day. She was overwhelmed by
it. Situations were evolving one out of another. Nothing had happened,
and yet all was changed. The night was twenty years away from the
morning.</p>
<p>"Do you know about that girl?" he asked with soft weariness when she had
slipped into bed and the light was out.</p>
<p>"No. Elsie? What?"</p>
<p>"She's eaten two-thirds of the cheese in the cage—at least two-thirds.
Must have eaten it before she went out."</p>
<p>The "cage" was the wire-netted larder hung outside the kitchen window.
Henry had taken to buying cheese, because it was as nourishing as meat,
and cheaper. He had "discovered" cheese as a food—especially a food for
servants. Violet said no word, but she sighed. She was staggered, deeply
discouraged, by this revelation of Elsie's incredible greed and guile;
it was a blow that somehow finished her off.</p>
<p>"Yes," Henry went on, and his mild voice passed through the darkness
into Violet's ear with an uncanny effect. "I happened to go up into the
kitchen just before<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</SPAN></span> I came to bed." (And he had not rushed back to tell
her of the calamity. He had characteristically kept it to ripen in his
brain. And how characteristic of him to wander ferreting into the
kitchen! Naught could escape his vigilance.) "Did you see her when she
came home?"</p>
<p>"Yes. She went straight to bed."</p>
<p>A silence.</p>
<p>"Something will have to be done about that girl," he said at length.</p>
<p>"What does he mean?" thought Violet, alarmed anew. "Does he mean we must
get rid of her? No, that would be too much." But she was not afraid of
the extra work for herself which getting rid of Elsie would entail. She
was afraid of being left to live all alone with Henry. She trembled at
such a prospect.</p>
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