<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
<p>What had next brought him back, clearly—though after how long?—was
Mrs. Muldoon’s voice, coming to him from quite near, from so near
that he seemed presently to see her as kneeling on the ground before
him while he lay looking up at her; himself not wholly on the ground,
but half-raised and upheld—conscious, yes, of tenderness of support
and, more particularly, of a head pillowed in extraordinary softness
and faintly refreshing fragrance. He considered, he wondered,
his wit but half at his service; then another face intervened, bending
more directly over him, and he finally knew that Alice Staverton had
made her lap an ample and perfect cushion to him, and that she had to
this end seated herself on the lowest degree of the staircase, the rest
of his long person remaining stretched on his old black-and-white slabs.
They were cold, these marble squares of his youth; but <i>he</i> somehow
was not, in this rich return of consciousness—the most wonderful
hour, little by little, that he had ever known, leaving him, as it did,
so gratefully, so abysmally passive, and yet as with a treasure of intelligence
waiting all round him for quiet appropriation; dissolved, he might call
it, in the air of the place and producing the golden glow of a late
autumn afternoon. He had come back, yes—come back from further
away than any man but himself had ever travelled; but it was strange
how with this sense what he had come back <i>to</i> seemed really the
great thing, and as if his prodigious journey had been all for the sake
of it. Slowly but surely his consciousness grew, his vision of
his state thus completing itself; he had been miraculously <i>carried</i>
back—lifted and carefully borne as from where he had been picked
up, the uttermost end of an interminable grey passage. Even with
this he was suffered to rest, and what had now brought him to knowledge
was the break in the long mild motion.</p>
<p>It had brought him to knowledge, to knowledge—yes, this was
the beauty of his state; which came to resemble more and more that of
a man who has gone to sleep on some news of a great inheritance, and
then, after dreaming it away, after profaning it with matters strange
to it, has waked up again to serenity of certitude and has only to lie
and watch it grow. This was the drift of his patience—that
he had only to let it shine on him. He must moreover, with intermissions,
still have been lifted and borne; since why and how else should he have
known himself, later on, with the afternoon glow intenser, no longer
at the foot of his stairs—situated as these now seemed at that
dark other end of his tunnel—but on a deep window-bench of his
high saloon, over which had been spread, couch-fashion, a mantle of
soft stuff lined with grey fur that was familiar to his eyes and that
one of his hands kept fondly feeling as for its pledge of truth.
Mrs. Muldoon’s face had gone, but the other, the second he had
recognised, hung over him in a way that showed how he was still propped
and pillowed. He took it all in, and the more he took it the more
it seemed to suffice: he was as much at peace as if he had had food
and drink. It was the two women who had found him, on Mrs. Muldoon’s
having plied, at her usual hour, her latch-key—and on her having
above all arrived while Miss Staverton still lingered near the house.
She had been turning away, all anxiety, from worrying the vain bell-handle—her
calculation having been of the hour of the good woman’s visit;
but the latter, blessedly, had come up while she was still there, and
they had entered together. He had then lain, beyond the vestibule,
very much as he was lying now—quite, that is, as he appeared to
have fallen, but all so wondrously without bruise or gash; only in a
depth of stupor. What he most took in, however, at present, with
the steadier clearance, was that Alice Staverton had for a long unspeakable
moment not doubted he was dead.</p>
<p>“It must have been that I <i>was</i>.” He made
it out as she held him. “Yes—I can only have died.
You brought me literally to life. Only,” he wondered, his
eyes rising to her, “only, in the name of all the benedictions,
how?”</p>
<p>It took her but an instant to bend her face and kiss him, and something
in the manner of it, and in the way her hands clasped and locked his
head while he felt the cool charity and virtue of her lips, something
in all this beatitude somehow answered everything.</p>
<p>“And now I keep you,” she said.</p>
<p>“Oh keep me, keep me!” he pleaded while her face still
hung over him: in response to which it dropped again and stayed close,
clingingly close. It was the seal of their situation—of
which he tasted the impress for a long blissful moment in silence.
But he came back. “Yet how did you know—?”</p>
<p>“I was uneasy. You were to have come, you remember—and
you had sent no word.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I remember—I was to have gone to you at one to-day.”
It caught on to their “old” life and relation—which
were so near and so far. “I was still out there in my strange
darkness—where was it, what was it? I must have stayed there
so long.” He could but wonder at the depth and the duration
of his swoon.</p>
<p>“Since last night?” she asked with a shade of fear for
her possible indiscretion.</p>
<p>“Since this morning—it must have been: the cold dim dawn
of to-day. Where have I been,” he vaguely wailed, “where
have I been?” He felt her hold him close, and it was as
if this helped him now to make in all security his mild moan.
“What a long dark day!”</p>
<p>All in her tenderness she had waited a moment. “In the
cold dim dawn?” she quavered.</p>
<p>But he had already gone on piecing together the parts of the whole
prodigy. “As I didn’t turn up you came straight—?”</p>
<p>She barely cast about. “I went first to your hotel—where
they told me of your absence. You had dined out last evening and
hadn’t been back since. But they appeared to know you had
been at your club.”</p>
<p>“So you had the idea of <i>this</i>—?”</p>
<p>“Of what?” she asked in a moment.</p>
<p>“Well—of what has happened.”</p>
<p>“I believed at least you’d have been here. I’ve
known, all along,” she said, “that you’ve been coming.”</p>
<p>“‘Known’ it—?”</p>
<p>“Well, I’ve believed it. I said nothing to you
after that talk we had a month ago—but I felt sure. I knew
you <i>would</i>,” she declared.</p>
<p>“That I’d persist, you mean?”</p>
<p>“That you’d see him.”</p>
<p>“Ah but I didn’t!” cried Brydon with his long wail.
“There’s somebody—an awful beast; whom I brought,
too horribly, to bay. But it’s not me.”</p>
<p>At this she bent over him again, and her eyes were in his eyes.
“No—it’s not you.” And it was as if, while
her face hovered, he might have made out in it, hadn’t it been
so near, some particular meaning blurred by a smile. “No,
thank heaven,” she repeated, “it’s not you!
Of course it wasn’t to have been.”</p>
<p>“Ah but it <i>was</i>,” he gently insisted. And
he stared before him now as he had been staring for so many weeks.
“I was to have known myself.”</p>
<p>“You couldn’t!” she returned consolingly.
And then reverting, and as if to account further for what she had herself
done, “But it wasn’t only <i>that</i>, that you hadn’t
been at home,” she went on. “I waited till the hour
at which we had found Mrs. Muldoon that day of my going with you; and
she arrived, as I’ve told you, while, failing to bring any one
to the door, I lingered in my despair on the steps. After a little,
if she hadn’t come, by such a mercy, I should have found means
to hunt her up. But it wasn’t,” said Alice Staverton,
as if once more with her fine intentions—“it wasn’t
only that.”</p>
<p>His eyes, as he lay, turned back to her. “What more then?”</p>
<p>She met it, the wonder she had stirred. “In the cold
dim dawn, you say? Well, in the cold dim dawn of this morning
I too saw you.”</p>
<p>“Saw <i>me</i>—?”</p>
<p>“Saw <i>him</i>,” said Alice Staverton. “It
must have been at the same moment.”</p>
<p>He lay an instant taking it in—as if he wished to be quite
reasonable. “At the same moment?”</p>
<p>“Yes—in my dream again, the same one I’ve named
to you. He came back to me. Then I knew it for a sign.
He had come to you.”</p>
<p>At this Brydon raised himself; he had to see her better. She
helped him when she understood his movement, and he sat up, steadying
himself beside her there on the window-bench and with his right hand
grasping her left. “<i>He</i> didn’t come to me.”</p>
<p>“You came to yourself,” she beautifully smiled.</p>
<p>“Ah I’ve come to myself now—thanks to you, dearest.
But this brute, with his awful face—this brute’s a black
stranger. He’s none of <i>me</i>, even as I <i>might</i>
have been,” Brydon sturdily declared.</p>
<p>But she kept the clearness that was like the breath of infallibility.
“Isn’t the whole point that you’d have been different?”</p>
<p>He almost scowled for it. “As different as <i>that</i>—?”</p>
<p>Her look again was more beautiful to him than the things of this
world. “Haven’t you exactly wanted to know <i>how</i>
different? So this morning,” she said, “you appeared
to me.”</p>
<p>“Like <i>him</i>?”</p>
<p>“A black stranger!”</p>
<p>“Then how did you know it was I?”</p>
<p>“Because, as I told you weeks ago, my mind, my imagination,
has worked so over what you might, what you mightn’t have been—to
show you, you see, how I’ve thought of you. In the midst
of that you came to me—that my wonder might be answered.
So I knew,” she went on; “and believed that, since the question
held you too so fast, as you told me that day, you too would see for
yourself. And when this morning I again saw I knew it would be
because you had—and also then, from the first moment, because
you somehow wanted me. <i>He</i> seemed to tell me of that.
So why,” she strangely smiled, “shouldn’t I like him?”</p>
<p>It brought Spencer Brydon to his feet. “You ‘like’
that horror—?”</p>
<p>“I <i>could</i> have liked him. And to me,” she
said, “he was no horror. I had accepted him.”</p>
<p>“‘Accepted’—?” Brydon oddly sounded.</p>
<p>“Before, for the interest of his difference—yes.
And as <i>I</i> didn’t disown him, as <i>I</i> knew him—which
you at last, confronted with him in his difference, so cruelly didn’t,
my dear,—well, he must have been, you see, less dreadful to me.
And it may have pleased him that I pitied him.”</p>
<p>She was beside him on her feet, but still holding his hand—still
with her arm supporting him. But though it all brought for him
thus a dim light, “You ‘pitied’ him?” he grudgingly,
resentfully asked.</p>
<p>“He has been unhappy, he has been ravaged,” she said.</p>
<p>“And haven’t I been unhappy? Am not I—you’ve
only to look at me!—ravaged?”</p>
<p>“Ah I don’t say I like him <i>better</i>,” she
granted after a thought. “But he’s grim, he’s
worn—and things have happened to him. He doesn’t make
shift, for sight, with your charming monocle.”</p>
<p>“No”—it struck Brydon; “I couldn’t
have sported mine ‘down-town.’ They’d have guyed
me there.”</p>
<p>“His great convex pince-nez—I saw it, I recognised the
kind—is for his poor ruined sight. And his poor right hand—!”</p>
<p>“Ah!” Brydon winced—whether for his proved identity
or for his lost fingers. Then, “He has a million a year,”
he lucidly added. “But he hasn’t you.”</p>
<p>“And he isn’t—no, he isn’t—<i>you</i>!”
she murmured, as he drew her to his breast.</p>
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