<h3><SPAN name="XXIX" id="XXIX"></SPAN>XXIX</h3>
<h3>Forgiveness</h3>
<p>The weather broke suddenly, and it became cold and rainy. For two or
three days Alex sat in her sitting-room at Malden Road and heard the
trams and the omnibuses clash past, and the children screaming to one
another in the street. She could hardly have said when she had first
realized that it was impossible for her to go on living. But the
determination, now that it was there, full-grown, had brought with it a
sense of utter finality.</p>
<p>For two or three days she felt stunned, and yet driven by a desperate
feeling that it was necessary for her to think, to make a plan. But she
could not think.</p>
<p>Then one evening Mrs. Hoxton, the landlady, said to her curiously:</p>
<p>"Wouldn't you like a fire, tonight?" She seldom said "Miss" in speaking
to Alex. "It's so chilly, all of a sudden, and you look ill, really,
now, you do."</p>
<p>Alex felt rather surprised. Perhaps she was ill, which would account for
the impossibility of consecutive thought. A fire would be very nice. She
shivered involuntarily, looking at her little empty grate crammed with
cut paper. She remembered that there was no need to consider expense any
more.</p>
<p>"Yes, I'd like a fire, please," she said gently. And that evening she
sat close to the pleasant blaze, flickering on the wall, and dimly
recalling to her the nursery at Clevedon Square in the old days, and the
power of thought came back to her.</p>
<p>It was as though the warmth and companionship of the flames had suddenly
unsealed something frozen up within her, and she became more herself
than she had been for many months. With the horrible, pressing dread of
an unbearable present and an unimaginable future lifted from her heart,
Alex felt a pervading lucidity of thought, to which she had for years
been a stranger, take possession of her. She knew suddenly that she was,
for a little while, to regain faculties that had been atrophied within
her since the far, free days of her girlhood. She began to reflect.</p>
<p>Why had life, to which she had looked forward so eagerly, with such
confident anticipation of some wonderful happiness, which should be in
proportion to the immense capacity for realizing it which she knew to
exist within her, have proved to be only a succession of defeats, of
receding hopes and of unfulfilled desires?</p>
<p>Alex did not question that the fault lay with herself. From her baby
days, under the unvarnished plain speaking of old Nurse, she had known
herself to be the black sheep of every flock. And she had not sinned
splendidly, dramatically, either. Her sins had been those of petty
meanness, of shirking and evading, of small self-indulgences and
childish tyranny at the expense of others, of vulgar lies and
half-truths.</p>
<p>Those sins which find little or no place in the decalogue, and which
stand lowest in the scale by which the opinion of others is meted out to
us.</p>
<p>Those are the things which are not forgiven. That was it, Alex told
herself, with a feeling of having suddenly struck the keynote.
Forgiveness.</p>
<p>Forgiveness was the key to everything. Alex, in the sudden surety of
vision that had come to her, did not doubt that her own interpretation
of the word was the right one. Forgiveness meant understanding—not
condemnation and subsequent pardon. It did not mean the bewildered,
scandalized, and yet regretful oblivion to which Cedric would consign
her memory and that of her many failings, it did not mean Barbara's
detached, indifferent kindness, carefully measured in terms of material
resources, nor Pamela's and Archie's good-natured patronage,
half-stifled in mirth, of which the very object was the gulf that
separated them from their sister. It did not even mean Violet's soft
pity and unresentful acceptance of facts that amazed her. Looking
further back, Alex knew that it did not mean either the serious,
perplexed pardon that Sir Francis had tendered to his troublesome
daughter, or Lady Isabel's half-complaining, half-affectionate
remonstrances.</p>
<p>It did not in any way occur to her to blame them for a lack of which she
had all her life been subconsciously aware in all their forbearance. She
told herself, with a fresh sense of enlightenment, that they had not
understood because it was in none of them to have yielded to those
temptations which had beset and mastered her so easily. Measuring her
frailty by their own strength, they had only seen her utter failure in
resistance, and been shamed and grieved by it. Alex knew that in herself
was another standard of forgiveness; she could never condemn, for the
simple reason that she herself had failed, in every sense of the word.
Unresentfully, she was able to sum it all up, as it were, when she told
herself, "People who would have resisted temptation themselves, can't
understand those who fall—so they can't really forgive. But the bad
ones, who know that they have given way all along the line, know that
any temptation would have been too strong for them—it's only chance
whether it comes their way or not—so they can understand."</p>
<p>She felt oddly contented, as at having reached a solution.</p>
<p>Later on, her thoughts turned to the past again, and to the childish
days when she had been the leading spirit in the Clevedon Square
nursery. But the memory of that past, incredible, security and
assurance, made her begin to cry, and she wiped away blinding tears and
told herself that she must not give way to them. She did not at first
quite know why she must reserve the tiny modicum of strength still left
her, but presently she realized that the end which had become inevitable
could not be reached without decisive action of her own.</p>
<p>Alex' logic was elementary, and its directness left her no loophole for
doubt.</p>
<p>She could endure the plane of existence on which she found herself no
longer. If she fled in search of other conditions, it was with full
certainty that these could not be less tolerable than those from which
she was flying, and at the back of her mind was a strange, growing hope
that perhaps that forgiveness of which her mind was full, might be found
beyond the veil.</p>
<p>"After all," thought Alex, "it's even chances. If religion is all true,
then I <i>must</i> go to hell, whether I kill myself or not, and if it isn't,
then perhaps I shall just go out and know nothing more—ever—or perhaps
it will be really a new beginning, and there will be somebody or
something who will forgive me, and let me start over again."</p>
<p>She began to feel rather excited, as though she were about to try an
experiment that might best be described as a gamble.</p>
<p>Mrs. Hoxton, coming in with the small supper-tray, looked at her sharply
two or three times, and when she had gone away again, Alex, turning to
the glass, saw that her eyes were shining and looking enormously large
and wide-pupilled.</p>
<p>"I believe I am happy tonight," she thought wonderingly.</p>
<p>While she ate her supper she tried to make a plan, but the excitement
within her was growing steadily, and she could only think out eager
self-justification for her own decision.</p>
<p>"It won't hurt any one else—nobody will mind. In fact, when they've got
over the first shock, it will be a relief to them all. They've been very
kind—Violet and Cedric—Violet most of all—but they haven't
understood. They'd have understood better if I'd been a bad woman—lived
with wicked men, or things like that. I suppose I should have done that
too, if it had come my way—but then I never had the temptation. I had
only little, mean, horrible temptations—and I didn't resist any of
them. The other sort of sin would have made me happier—it would have
meant a sort of success in a way—but I have been a failure at
everything—always."</p>
<p>Her heart hammering against her side, Alex resolved that in this, her
last disgrace, she would not fail.</p>
<p>Making no preparations, no written farewells, she rose presently and
went to her room, where she put on her thickest coat and tied a woollen
scarf over her head.</p>
<p>Then she went out.</p>
<p>It had stopped raining, and the air was soft and moist. It was a
starless night, and when Alex got to the Heath and away from the lighted
streets, it was very dark. Underneath her sense of adventure she was
conscious of terror—sheer physical terror—and also of the deeper dread
that her resolution might fail her.</p>
<p>"I mustn't—I mustn't," she kept on muttering to herself.</p>
<p>Then, as though reassuring somebody else, "But it's only like going for
a journey—to a quite new place where everything may be different and
much, much better ... or else to sleep, and never any waking up to
misery again.... Just one dreadful minute or two, perhaps, and then it
will all be over ... only a question of a little physical courage ...
not to struggle ... like taking gas ... much easier if one doesn't
struggle...."</p>
<p>She was struck by a sudden thought and said aloud, triumphantly, as
though she were defeating by her inspiration some one who was urging
difficulties upon her:</p>
<p>"I won't give myself any chances. I'll put big stones in my pocket and
tie my scarf over my mouth. That'll make it quicker, too."</p>
<p>When she came to the part of the Heath where the water lay, Alex began
to stoop down and hunt for stones. She pounced on each one that seemed
larger than its fellows with a sense of pride at her own success, and
put them into the pockets of her coat. The moon appeared palely through
clouds and then disappeared again, but not before she had taken her
bearings.</p>
<p>She was on one of the many wide bridges that span the long pools dotted
over the Heath—pools shelving at the sides with an effect of
shallowness and deepening suddenly in the middle. Alex threw an
indifferent glance at the dark water, and only felt annoyance that so
few stones should be loose upon the pathway, and none of them very large
ones. When her pockets were filled, she did not think the weight very
noticeable.</p>
<p>Then came another evanescent gleam of moonlight, and Alex, still with
that sharpening of all her perceptions, noticed that there was a man's
figure at the far end of the bridge. He appeared to be stationary,
leaning on the parapet and gazing down at the almost invisible pond.</p>
<p>She was conscious of vexation. His presence would surely interfere with
her scheme.</p>
<p>For a moment she wondered, detachedly enough, whether she should go away
and come back the following evening. But the next instant she recoiled
from the thought, as though seeing in it the promptings of her own
weakness.</p>
<p>"I am not frightened tonight—at least, hardly at all. If I wait I may
never feel like this again. I shall make a failure of it all, and that
would be worse than anything. I must do it tonight, while I'm not
frightened."</p>
<p>She was not cold. Walking in her heavy coat had warmed her, and the
evening was mild as well as damp. So she waited quietly in the shadow,
hoping that the man would presently move away.</p>
<p>The thought crossed her mind, with a certain humour, that the situation
held possibilities of romance.</p>
<p>"If it were in a book, he would save me at the last minute and fall in
love with me and it would all end happily. Or he would see me now, and
perhaps speak to me, and he would understand all I told him, and
persuade me not to. Anyhow, it would all come right."</p>
<p>She smiled in the darkness.</p>
<p>"But that won't happen to <i>me</i>. There never was any one—and nobody
would love me now, especially when they knew all about me." She
remembered the haggard, distorted countenance that the looking-glass had
shown her—the great, starting eyes with discoloured circles beneath
them, and the blackened, prominent teeth, more salient than ever from
the thinness of her face.</p>
<p>She could almost have laughed, without any conscious bitterness, at the
idea of any romance in connection with her present self.</p>
<p>And yet the girl, Alex Clare, could have loved—had looked forward to
love and to happiness as her rights, just as Pamela Clare did now.</p>
<p>But Pamela was different. Every one was—No!</p>
<p>It was Alex that was different—that had always been different.</p>
<p>She began to feel less warm, and shivered a little as she waited.</p>
<p>It occurred to her, not with any sense of fear, but with vexation, that
her purpose would be far more difficult of achievement if she waited
until she was physically chilled.</p>
<p>She looked up at the bridge again, and the figure was still there, at
the furthest end. Alex measured the length of the bridge with her eyes.</p>
<p>It was doubtful if he would see her from the furthest end of it, but she
reflected matter-of-factly:</p>
<p>"If I jump there will be the noise of a splash—and he might do
something—he would try to save me, I suppose—or run for help. It
wouldn't be safe. If he would <i>only</i> go."</p>
<p>She became irritated. With a sense of despair she determined to
circumvent the motionless, watchful figure.</p>
<p>Moving very quietly and almost soundlessly over the soft muddy ground,
Alex made her way from the path to the bank, and further and further
down it till only a short declivity of shelving mud lay between her and
the water.</p>
<p>She could feel the brambles catching in her thick coat as though pulling
her back, but she went on, cautiously and steadily. Once or twice she
pushed at the low, tangled bushes that impeded her progress, and paused
aghast at the rustling that ensued. But from the bridge above her there
came no sound.</p>
<p>Within a few steps of the dark water, her feet already sinking
ankle-deep into the wet, spongy ground, she stopped.</p>
<p>She realized with wondering joy that, after all, she was not very much
afraid. It was as though the self-confidence which had for so long
deserted her had come back now to carry her through the last need.</p>
<p>She felt proud, because she knew that for this once she was not going to
fail.</p>
<p>She talked to herself in a whisper:</p>
<p>"This one time—just a few minutes when it may be very bad—but remember
that it can't last long, and then it'll all be over. And perhaps
there'll never be anything more afterwards—like being always asleep,
and no one need be vexed or disappointed any more. But perhaps—"</p>
<p>She paused on the thought, and her heart began to beat faster with a
hopeful excitement such as she had not known for a very long while.</p>
<p>"Perhaps it will be much better than one imagines possible. Perhaps
there'll be real forgiveness and understanding—and then my having done
this won't matter. Anyway, I shall know very soon, if only I'm brave
just for a few minutes."</p>
<p>She drew a long breath, then, instinctively stretching her arms straight
out before her so as to balance herself, she began to move forward.</p>
<p>The first unmistakable touch of the water round her feet made her gasp
and stifle a scream, but she waded on, encouraging herself in a low
murmur, as though speaking to a child:</p>
<p>"It's only like going into the sea when one's bathing—pretend it's
that, then you won't be frightened. Just straight on—it will be over
quite soon—"</p>
<p>She was moving, slowly, but without pause, her hands held out in front
of her, the ground still beneath her slipping feet, which felt oddly
weighted. Once she began to pull the woollen scarf over her mouth, but
with the sense of breathlessness came the beginning of panic, and she
tore it away again.</p>
<p>"Go on—coward—coward," she urged herself. "Remember what it would mean
to make another muddle of this, and to fail."</p>
<p>The cold invaded her body and her teeth began to chatter.</p>
<p>For an instant she stood, surrounded by the silent water, cold and
terror and the weight of her now sodden clothing paralysing her, so that
she could move neither backwards to the shore nor forward into the
blackness in front of her.</p>
<p>"I must," muttered Alex, and wrenched one foot desperately out of the
mud below. With the forward movement, she lost her balance, and her
hands clutched instinctively at the water's level. Then the clogging
bottom of the pond sheered away suddenly from beneath her, and there was
only water, dark and icy and rushing, above and below and all round her.</p>
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