<h2><SPAN name="X" id="X">X</SPAN><br/> LIZZIE RAND</h2>
<p>Lizzie Rand was just forty-six years of age
when old Mrs. Roughton McKenzie died leaving
her all her money. Months later she had not thoroughly
realised what had happened to her.</p>
<p>Until that day of Mrs. McKenzie's death she had
never had any money. She had spent her life, her energies,
her pluck and her humour in the service of
one human being after another, and generally in the
service of women. It seemed to her to be really funny
that the one who had during her life begrudged her
most should in the end be the one who had given her
everything; but no one had ever understood old Mrs.
McKenzie, and as likely as not she had left her money
to Lizzie Rand just to spite her numerous relations.
Lizzie had expected nothing. She never did expect
anything, which was as well perhaps, because no one
ever gave her anything. She was not a person to
whom one naturally gave things; she had a pride, a reserve,
an assertion of her own private liberty that
kept people away and forbade intimacy. That had
not always been so. In the long ago days when she
had been Adela Beaminster's secretary she had given
herself. She had loved a man who had not loved her,
and out of the shock of that she had won a friendship<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</SPAN></span>
with another woman, which was still perhaps the most
precious thing that she had. But that same shock
had been enough for her. She guarded, with an almost
bitter ferocity, the purity and liberty of her soul.</p>
<p>All the women whose secretaries she had afterwards
been had felt this in her, and most of them had resented
it. Old Mrs. McKenzie had resented it more than
any of them. She was a selfish, painted, over-decorated
old creature, a widow with no children and only
nephews and nieces to sigh after her wealth. One of
Lizzie's chief duties had been to keep these nephews
and nieces from the door, and this she had done with
a certain grim austerity, finding that none of them
cared for the aunt and all for the money. The outraged
relations decided, of course, at once that she
was a plotting, despicable creature; it is doing her less
than justice to say that the idea that the money would
be left to her never for a single instant entered her
head. Mrs. McKenzie taunted her once for expecting
it.</p>
<p>"Of course you're waiting," she said, "like all of
them, to pick the bones of the corpse."</p>
<p>Lizzie Rand laughed.</p>
<p>"Now is that like me?" she asked. "And, more
important, is it like you?"</p>
<p>Mrs. McKenzie sniggered her tinkling, wheezy
snigger. There was a certain honesty between them.
They had certain things in common.</p>
<p>"I don't like you," she said. "I don't see how anyone
could. You're too self-sufficient—but you certainly
have a sense of humour."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>There had been a time once when many people liked
Lizzie, and she reflected now, with a little shudder,
that perhaps only one person in the world, Rachel
Seddon, the woman friend before-mentioned, liked and
understood her. Why had she shut herself off? Why
presented so stiff, so immaculate, so cold a personality
to the world? She was not stiff, not cold, not immaculate.
It was, perhaps, simply that she felt that
it was in that way only that she could get her work
done, and to do her work thoroughly seemed to her
now to be the job best worth while in life.</p>
<p>During the war she had almost broken from her
secretaryship and gone forth to do Red Cross work or
anything that would help. A kind of timidity that
had grown upon her with the years, a sense of her
age and of her loneliness, held her back. Twenty
years ago she would have gone with the first. Now
she stayed with Mrs. McKenzie.</p>
<p>Mrs. McKenzie died on the day of the Armistice,
November 11, 1918. Her illness had not been severe.
Lizzie had had, at the most, only a week's nursing;
it had been obvious from the first that nothing could
save the old lady. Mrs. McKenzie had not looked
as though she were especially anxious that anything
should save her. She had lain there in scornful
silence, asking for nothing, complaining of nothing,
despising everything. Lizzie admitted that the old
woman died game.</p>
<p>There had followed then that hard, bewildering period
that Lizzie knew by now so well where she must
pull herself, so reluctantly, so heavily towards the busi<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</SPAN></span>ness
of finding a new engagement. She did not, of
course, expect Mrs. McKenzie to leave her a single
penny. She stayed for a week or two with her friend
Rachel Seddon. But Rachel, a widow with an only
son, was so tumultuously glad at the return of her
boy, safe and whole, from the war, that it was difficult
for her just then to take any other human being into
her heart. She loved Lizzie, and would do anything
in the world for her; she was indeed for ever urging
her to give up these sterile companionships and secretaryships
and come and make her home with
her. But Lizzie, this time, felt her isolation as she
had never done before.</p>
<p>"I'm getting old," she thought. "And I'm drifting
off ... soon I shall be utterly alone." The thought
sent little shivering ghosts climbing about her body.
She saw in the gay, happy, careless, kindly eyes of
young Tom Seddon how old she was to the new
generation.</p>
<p>He called her "Aunt Liz," took her to the theatre,
and was an angel ... nevertheless an angel happily,
almost boastfully, secure in another, warmer planet
than hers.</p>
<p>Then came the shock. Mrs. McKenzie had left her
everything—the equivalent of about eight thousand
pounds a year.</p>
<p>At first her sense was one of an urgent need of rest.
She sank back amongst the cushions and pillows of
Rachel's house and refused to think ... refused to
think at all.... She considered for a moment the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</SPAN></span>
infuriated faces of the McKenzie relations. Then
they, too, passed from her consciousness.</p>
<p>When she faced the world again, she faced it with
the old common sense that had always been her most
prominent characteristic. She had eight thousand a
year. Well, she would do the very best with it that
she could. Rachel, who had appeared to be more deeply
excited than she over the event, had various suggestions
to offer, but Lizzie had her own ideas. She could not
remember the time when she had not planned what she
would do when somebody left her money.</p>
<p>She took one of the most charming flats in Hortons,
bought beautiful things for it, etchings by D. T. Cameron,
one Nevinson, and a John drawing, some Japanese
prints; she had books and soft carpets and flowers
and a piano; and had the prettiest spare room for a
friend. Then she stopped and looked about her. There
were certain charities in which she had been always
deeply interested, especially one for Poor Gentlewomen.
There was a home, too, for illegitimate babies. She
remembered, with a happy irony, the occasion when she
had tried to persuade Mrs. McKenzie to give something
to these charities and had failed.... Well, Mrs.
McKenzie was giving now all right. Lizzie hoped that
she knew it.</p>
<p>There accumulated around her all the business that
clusters about an independent woman with means. She
was on committees; many people who would not have
looked twice at her before liked her now and asked
her to their houses.</p>
<p>Again she stopped and looked about her.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Still there was something that she needed. What
was it? Companionship? More than that. Affection,
a centre to her life; someone who needed her, someone
to whom she was of more importance than anyone else
in the world. Even a dog....</p>
<p>She was forty-six. Without being plain she was too
slight, too hard-drawn, too masculine, above all too old
to be attractive to men. An old maid of forty-six.
She faced the truth. She gave little dinner-parties,
and felt more lonely than ever. Even it seemed there
was nobody who wanted to make her a confidante. People
wanted her money, but herself not at all. She was
not good conversationally. She said sharp sarcastic
things that frightened people. People did not want the
truth; they wanted things to be wrapped up first, as
her mother and sister had wanted them years ago.</p>
<p>She was a failure socially, in spite of her money.
She could not be genial, and yet her heart ached for love.</p>
<p>At this moment Mr. Edmund Lapsley appeared.
Lizzie met him at a party given by Mrs. Philip Mark
in Bryanston Square. Mrs. Mark was an old friend of
Rachel's, a kindly and clever woman with an ambitious
husband who would never get very far.</p>
<p>Her parties were always formed by a strange mixture
dictated first by her kind heart and second her desire
to have people in her house who might possibly help her
husband. Edmund Lapsley originated in the former of
these impulses. He was not much to look at—long,
lanky, with a high bony head, a prominent Roman
nose and large, cracking fingers. He was shabbily
dressed, awkward in his manner, and apprehensive.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</SPAN></span>
It was his eyes that first attracted Lizzie's attention.
They were beautiful large brown eyes, with the expression
of a lost and lonely dog seated deep in their pupils.
He sat with Lizzie in a corner of the crowded drawing-room
to arrange his long legs so that they should not be
in the way, cracked his long fingers together and endeavoured
to be interested in the people whom Lizzie pointed
out to him.</p>
<p>"That's Henry Trenchard," Lizzie said, "that wild-looking
boy with the untidy hair.... He's very clever.
Going to be our great novelist.... That's his sister,
Millie. Mrs. Mark's sister, too. Isn't she pretty?
She's the loveliest of the family. That stout clergyman
is a Trenchard cousin. They all hang together
in the most wonderful way, you know. His wife ran
away and never came back again. I don't think I wonder;
he looks heavy...." And so on.</p>
<p>Lizzie wondered to herself why she bothered. It was
not her habit to gossip, and Mr. Lapsley was obviously
not at all interested.</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon," she said; "you don't want to
know who these people are."</p>
<p>"No," he said in a strange, sudden, desperate whisper.
"I don't. I lost my wife only three months ago.
I'm trying to go out into the world again. I can't. It
doesn't do any good." He gripped his knee with one of
his large bony hands.</p>
<p>"I'm so sorry," Lizzie said. "I didn't know. How
tiresome of me to have gone on chattering like that!
You should have stopped me."</p>
<p>He seemed himself to be surprised at the confession<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</SPAN></span>
that he had made. He stared at her in a bewildered
fashion like an owl suddenly flashed into light. He
stared, saying nothing. Suddenly in the same hurried,
husky whisper he went on: "Do you mind my talking
to you? I want to talk to somebody. I'd like to tell
you about her."</p>
<p>"Please," said Lizzie, looking into his eyes, they were
tender and beautiful, so unlike his ugly body, and full
of unhappiness.</p>
<p>He talked; the words tumbled out in an urgent,
tremulous confusion.</p>
<p>They had been married, it appeared, ten years, ten
wonderful happy years. "How she can have cared for
me, that's what I never understood, Miss—Miss——"</p>
<p>"Rand," said Lizzie.</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon. Difficult to catch ... when
you are introduced.... Never understood. I was
years older than she. I'm fifty now—forty when I married
her, and she was only twenty. Thirty when she—when
she died. In childbirth it was. The child, a
boy, was born dead. Everyone prophesied disaster.
They all told her not to marry me, she was so pretty,
and so young, and so brilliant. She sang, Miss Rand,
just like a lark. She did, indeed. She was trained in
Paris. I oughtn't to have proposed to her, I suppose.
That's what I tell myself now, but I was carried off my
feet, completely off my feet. I couldn't help myself
at all. I loved her from the first moment that I saw
her. You know how those things are, Miss Rand.
And, in any case, I don't know. Ten perfect years,
that's a good deal for anyone to have, isn't it? And she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</SPAN></span>
was as happy as I was. It may seem strange to you,
looking at me, but it was really so. She thought I was
so much cleverer than I was—and better too. It used to
make me very nervous sometimes lest she should find me
out, you know, and leave me. I always expected that to
happen. But she was so charitable to everyone. Never
could see the bad side of people, and they were always
better with her than with anyone else. We'd always
hoped for a child, and then, as the years went on, we
gave it up. Edmund, she said to me, we must make it
up to one another. And then she told me it was going
to be all right. You wouldn't have believed two ordinary
people could be so happy as we were when
we knew about it. We made many plans, of course. I
was a little apprehensive that I'd be rather old to bring
up a child, but she was so young that made it all right—so
wonderfully young.... Then she died. It was
incredible, of course. I didn't believe it ... I don't
believe it now. She's not dead. That's absurd. You'd
feel the same if you'd seen her, Miss Rand. So full
of life, and then suddenly ... nothing at all. It's
impossible. Nature isn't like that. Things gradually
die, don't they, and change into something else. Not
suddenly...."</p>
<p>He broke off. He was clutching his knees and
staring in front of him. "I don't know why I talk to
you like this, Miss Rand ... I hope you'll forgive
me. I shouldn't have bothered you."</p>
<p>"I'm pleased that you have, Mr. Lapsley." She got
up. She felt that he would be glad now to escape.
"Won't you come and see me? I have a flat in Hortons<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</SPAN></span>
Chambers in Duke Street, No. 42.... Do come. Just
telephone."</p>
<p>He looked up at her, not rising from his seat. Then
he got up.</p>
<p>"I will," he said. "Thank you."</p>
<p>He was still staring at her, and she knew that he had
something further to say. She could see it struggling
in his eyes. But she did not want him to confess any
more. He would be the kind of man to regret afterwards
what he had done. She would not burden his
conscience. And yet she had the knowledge that it was
something very serious that he wanted to tell her, something
that had been, in reality, at the back of all his
earlier confession.</p>
<p>She refused the appeal in his eyes, said good-night,
took his hand for a moment and turned away.</p>
<p>Afterwards she was talking to Katherine Mark.</p>
<p>"I see you were kind to poor Mr. Lapsley," Katherine
said.</p>
<p>"How sad about his wife!" Lizzie answered.</p>
<p>"Yes. And she really was young and beautiful. No
one understood why she married him, but I've never seen
anything more successful.... I didn't think he'd
come to-night, but I'm fond of him. Philip doesn't
care for him much, but he reminds me of a cousin of
ours, John Trenchard, who was killed in Russia in the
second year of the war. But John was unhappier than
Mr. Lapsley. He never had his perfect years."</p>
<p>"Yes, that's something," Lizzie acknowledged.</p>
<p>It was strange to her afterwards that Edmund Lapsley
should persist so vividly in her mind. She saw<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</SPAN></span>
him with absolute clarity almost as though he were with
her in her flat. She thought of him a good deal. He
needed someone to comfort him, and she needed someone
to comfort. She hoped he would come and see her.</p>
<p>He did come, one afternoon, quite unexpectedly and
without telephoning first. Fortunately she was there,
alone, and wanting someone to talk to. At first he was
shy and self-conscious. They talked stiffly about London,
and the weather, and the approaching Peace, and
whether there would ever be a League of Nations, and
how high prices were, and how impossible it was to get
servants and when they got them they went.... Lizzie
broke ruthlessly in upon this. "It isn't the least little
good, Mr. Lapsley," she said, "our talking like this.
It's mere waste of time. We both know plenty of people
to whom we can chatter this nonsense. Either we
are friends, or we are not. If we are friends, we must
go a little further. Are we friends?"</p>
<p>He seemed to be at a loss. He blinked at her.</p>
<p>"Yes," he said.</p>
<p>"Well, then," she looked at him and smiled. "I don't
want to force your confidence, but there was something
that you were anxious to tell me about the other night,
some way in which I could help you. I stopped you
then, but I don't want to stop you now. I'll be honoured
indeed if there's anything I can do."</p>
<p>He gulped, stammered, then out it came. At the first
hint of his trouble it was all that Lizzie could do to
repress an impatient gesture. His trouble was—spiritualism.</p>
<p>Of all the tiresome things, of all the things about<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</SPAN></span>
which she had no patience at all, of all the idiotic,
money-wasting imbecilities! He poured it all out. He
had read books, at last a friend had taken him ... a
Dr. Orloff, a very wonderful medium, a very trustworthy
man, a man about whom there could be no
question.</p>
<p>On the first occasion the results had been poor—on
the second occasion his Margaret had spoken to him,
actually spoken to him. Oh! but there could be no
doubt! Her very voice.... His own voice shook as
he spoke of it.</p>
<p>Since then he had been, he was forced to admit, a
number of times—almost every day ... every day ... every
afternoon. He talked to Margaret every
day now for half an hour or more.</p>
<p>He was sure it was right, he was doing nobody any
harm ... they two together ... it could not be
wrong, but.... He stopped. Lizzie gave him no help.
She sat there looking in front of her. She despised
him; she was conscious of a deep and bitter disappointment.
She did not know how he could betray his
weakness, his softness, his gullibility. She had thought
him.... She looked up suddenly, knowing that his
voice had stopped. He was gazing at her in despair,
his eyes wide with an unhappiness that struck deep to
his heart.</p>
<p>"You despise me!" he said.</p>
<p>"Yes," she answered. "I do." But she was aware
at the same time that she could have gone across to him
and put her hand on his head and comforted him.
"That's all false! You know it is. You're only deluding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</SPAN></span>
yourself because you want to persuade yourself—it's
weak of you. Your wife can't come to you that way."</p>
<p>"Don't take it from me!" His voice was an agonised
cry. "It's all I have. It's true. It's true. It
must be true!"</p>
<p>They were suddenly in contact ... she felt a warm
sense of protection and pity, a longing to comfort and
help so strong that she instinctively put her hand to her
heart as though she would restrain it.</p>
<p>"Oh, I didn't mean," she cried, "that I'd take anything
away from you. No, no—never that. If you
thought that I meant that, you're wrong. Keep anything
you've got. Perhaps I'm mistaken. The mediums
I've known have been charlatans. That's prejudiced
me. Then I don't think I want my friends to
come back to me in quite that way.... If it's true,
it seems to be forcing them, against their will, as it
were. Oh! I know a great many people now are finding
it all true and good. I don't know anything about
it. I shouldn't have said what I did. And then you
see I've never lost anyone whom I loved very much."</p>
<p>"Never?" Mr. Lapsley asked, staring at her with
wide-open eyes.</p>
<p>"No, never, I think."</p>
<p>He got up and came across to her, standing near to
her, looking down upon her. She saw that she had
aroused his interest, that she had suddenly switched his
attention upon herself.</p>
<p>She had aroused him in the only way that he could
be aroused, by stirring his pity for her. She knew
exactly how suddenly he saw her—as a lonely, unhappy,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</SPAN></span>
deserted old maid. She did not mind; that the attention
of any one single human being should be centred
upon her for herself was a very wonderful, touching
thing.</p>
<p>Silence fell between them; the pretty room, grey and
silver in the half-light, gathered intimately around them.
When at last he went away it seemed that the last ten
minutes had added years to their knowledge of one
another.</p>
<p>A strange time for Lizzie followed. Edmund Lapsley
had rushed into her life with a precipitate urgency
that showed how empty before it had been. But there
was more than their mere contact in the affair. She
was fighting a battle; all her energies were in it; she
was ruthless, savage, tooth-and-nail; he should be
snatched from this spiritualism.</p>
<p>It was a silent battle. He never spoke to her again
of it. He did not say whether he went or not, and she
did not ask him. But soon they were meeting almost
every day, and she felt with a strange, almost savage
pleasure that her influence over him grew with every
meeting. She discovered many things about his character.
He was weak, undecided, almost subservient, a man
whom she would have despised perhaps had it not been
for the real sweetness that lay at the roots of him. She
very quickly understood how this girl, Margaret, although
so young and so ignorant of the world, must
have dominated him. "Any woman could!" she
thought almost angrily to herself, and yet there was a
kind of pride behind her anger.</p>
<p>She would not confess to herself that what she was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</SPAN></span>
really fighting was the memory of the dead girl, or, if
she confessed at all, it was to console herself with the
thought that it was right for him now to "cheer up a
little."</p>
<p>Cheer up he did; it was curious to watch the rapidity
with which he responded to Lizzie's energy and humour
and vitality.</p>
<p>At last she challenged him:</p>
<p>"Well, what about Dr. Orloff?" she asked.</p>
<p>He looked at her with a sudden startled glance, then
almost under his breath he said: "I don't go any more; I
thought you didn't want me to."</p>
<p>So sudden a confession of her power took her breath
away. She asked her next question.</p>
<p>"But Margaret?" she said. He answered that as
though he were arguing some long-debated question with
himself:</p>
<p>"I don't know," he replied slowly. "You were right.
That wasn't the proper way to bring her back, even
though it were genuine. I must tell you, Miss Rand,"
he said suddenly flinging up his head and looking across
at her, "you've shown me so many things since we first
met. I was getting into a very bad way, indulging
myself in my grief. Margaret wouldn't have liked that
either, but it wasn't until I knew you that I saw what
I was doing. Thank you."</p>
<p>"Oh, you mustn't!" She shook her head. "You
mustn't take me for Gospel like that Mr. Lapsley. You
make me frightened for my responsibility. We are
friends, and we must help one another, but we must keep
our independence."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He shook his head, smiling.</p>
<p>"There's always been somebody who's taken my independence
away," he said. "And I like it."</p>
<p>After he had gone she had the tussle of her life. She
ate dinner alone, then sat far into the night fighting.
Why should she fight at all? Here was the charge given
straight into her hand, the gift for which she had longed
and longed, the very man for her, the man whom she
could care for as she would her child. Care for and
protect and guide and govern. Govern! Like a torch
flaring between dark walls that word lit her soul for
her. Govern! That was what she wanted; all her
life she had wanted it.</p>
<p>She wanted to feel her power, to dominate, to command.
And all for his good. She loved him, she
loved his sweetness and his goodness and his simplicity.
She could make him happy and contented and at ease
for the rest of his days. He should never have another
anxiety, never another responsibility. Why fight then?
Wasn't it obviously the best thing in the world, both for
him and for her? She needed him. He her. She
abandoned herself then to happy, tender thoughts of
their life together. What it would be! What they
could do with old Mrs. McKenzie's money! She sat
there trying to lose herself in that golden future. She
could not quite lose herself. Threading it was again
and again the warning that something was not right
with it, that she was pursuing some course that she
should not. The clock struck half-past eleven. She
gave a little shiver. The room was cold. She knew<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</SPAN></span>
then, with that little shiver, of what she had been thinking.
Margaret Lapsley....</p>
<p>Why should she be thinking of her? She was dead.
She could not complain. And if she were still consciously
with them, surely she would rather that he
should be cared for and loved and guarded than pursue
a lonely life full of regrets and melancholy. What
kind of girl had she been? Had she loved him as he
had loved her? How young she had died! How
young and fresh and happy!... Lizzie shivered
again. Ah! She was old. Fifty and old—old in
thoughts and hopes and dreams. Pervaded by a damp
mist of unhappiness, she went to bed and lay there, looking
into the dark.</p>
<p>With the morning her scruples had vanished. She
saw Margaret Lapsley no more. She was her own sane,
matter-of-fact mistress. A delightful fortnight followed.
All her life afterwards Lizzie looked back to
those fourteen days as the happiest of her time. They
were together now every afternoon. Very often in the
evening too they went to the theatre or music. He was
her faithful dog. He agreed with all her suggestions,
eagerly, implicitly. Mentally, he was not stupid; he
knew many things that she did not, and he was not so
submissive that he would not argue. He argued hotly,
growing excited, calling out protests in a high treble,
then suddenly laughing like a child. For those days
she abandoned herself utterly. She allowed herself to
be surrounded, to be hemmed in, by the companionship,
the care, the affection.... Oh, it was wonderful
for her! Only those who had known her years and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</SPAN></span>
years of loneliness could appreciate what it was to her
now to have this. She warmed her hands at the fire
of it and let the flames fan their heat upon her cheeks.</p>
<p>Once she said to him:</p>
<p>"Isn't it strange that we should have made friends
so quickly? It isn't generally my way. I'm a shy
character, you know."</p>
<p>"So am I," he answered her. "I never would have
talked to you as I have if you hadn't helped me. You
have helped me. Wonderfully, marvellously. I only
wish that Margaret could have known you. You
would have helped her too."</p>
<p>He talked to her now continually of Margaret, but
very happily, with great contentment.</p>
<p>"Margaret would have loved you," he liked to say.
Lizzie was not so sure.</p>
<p>Then suddenly came the afternoon, for days past
now inevitable, when he asked her to marry him.</p>
<p>They were sitting together in the Horton flat. It
was a day of intense heat. All the windows were
wide open, the blinds down, and into the dim, grey
shadowy air there struck shafts and lines of heat, bringing
with them a smell of dust and pavements. The
roses in a large yellow bowl on the centre table flung
their thick scent across the dusky mote-threaded light.
The hot town lay below them like a still sea basking
at the foot of their rock.</p>
<p>"I want you to marry me, Lizzie," he said. "It
may seem very soon after Margaret's death, but it's
what she would have wished, I know. Please, please
don't refuse me. I don't know how I have the impertinence<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</SPAN></span>
to ask, but I must. I can't help myself——"</p>
<p>At his words the happiness that had filled her heart
during the last fortnight suddenly left her, as water
ebbs out of a pool. She felt guilty, wicked, ashamed.
She had never before been so aware of his helplessness
and also of some strange, reproaching voice that blamed
her. Why should she be blamed? She looked at him
and longed to take his head in her hands and kiss
him and keep him beside her and never let him go
again.</p>
<p>At last she told him that she would give him her
answer the next day.</p>
<p>When at last he left her, she was miserable, weighted
with a sense of some horrible crime. And yet why?
What was there against such a marriage? She was
pursued that evening, that night. Next day she would
not see him, but sent down word that she was unwell
and would he come to-morrow? All that day,
keeping alone in her flat, feeling the waves of heat beat
about her, tired, exhausted, driven, the whole of her
life stole past her.</p>
<p>"Why should I not marry him? Why <i>must</i> I not
marry him?"</p>
<p>The consciousness that she was fighting somebody or
something grew with her through the day. Towards
evening, when the heat faded and dusk swallowed the
colours and patterns of her room, she seemed to hear
a voice: "You are not the wife for him. He will have
no freedom. He will lose his character. He will become
a shadow."</p>
<p>And her answer was almost spoken to the still and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</SPAN></span>
empty room. "But he will be happy. I will give him
everything. Why may I not think of myself at last
after all these years? I've waited and waited, and
worked and worked...."</p>
<p>And the answer came back: "You're old. You're
old. You're old." She <i>was</i> old. She felt that night
eighty, a hundred.</p>
<p>She went to bed at last; closed her eyes and slept.</p>
<p>She woke suddenly; the room swam in moonlight.
She had forgotten to draw her blinds. The high, blue
expanse of heaven flashing with fiery stars broke the
grey spaces of her room with splendour.</p>
<p>She lay in bed watching the stars. She was suddenly
aware that a figure stood there between her bed
and the thin shadowy pane. She gazed at it with no
fear, but rather as though she had known it before.</p>
<p>It was the figure of a young girl in a white dress.
Her hair was black, her face very, very young, her
eyes deep and innocent, full of light. Her hands were
lovely, thin and pale, shell-coloured against the starry
sky.</p>
<p>The women looked at one another. A little unspoken
dialogue fell between them.</p>
<p>"You are Margaret?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"You have come to tell me to leave him alone?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"Oh, don't you see? He won't be happy. He won't
grow. His soul won't grow with you. You are not
the woman for him. Someone else—perhaps—later—<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</SPAN></span>
but oh! let me have him a little longer just now. I
love him so! Don't take him from me!"</p>
<p>Lizzie smiled.</p>
<p>"You beautiful dear!... How young you are!
How lovely!"</p>
<p>"Leave him to me! Leave him to me!"</p>
<p>The moon fell into fleecy clouds. The room was
filled with shadow.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>With the morning nothing had been dimmed. Lizzie
was happy with a strange sense of companionship and
comfort.</p>
<p>When Edmund came she saw at once that he was
greatly troubled.</p>
<p>"Well?" he asked her.</p>
<p>"You've seen Margaret!" she cried. "Last night!"
He nodded his head.</p>
<p>"It may have been a dream...."</p>
<p>"You don't want to marry me...."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes! Don't think I would go back...." She
put her hands on his shoulders.</p>
<p>"It's all right, Edmund. I'm not going to marry
you. I'm too old. We're friends for always, but nothing
more. Margaret was right."</p>
<p>"Margaret!" He stared at her. "But you didn't
know her!"</p>
<p>"I know her now," she answered. Then, laughing,
"I've got two friends instead of one husband! Who
knows that I'm not the richer?"</p>
<p>As she spoke she seemed to feel on her cheek the
soft, gentle kiss of a young girl.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</SPAN></span></p>
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