Inthemorningshegotupfromhersleeplessbed,seemedtoeatherbreakfast,andwentofftoherhospital。Thereshewashedupplatesanddishes,withastonyface,darkundertheeyes。
ThenewscametoPiersoninaletterfromThirza,receivedatlunch—
time。Hereaditwithadreadfulaching。Poor,poorlittleNollie!
Whatanawfultroubleforher!Andhe,too,wentabouthisworkwiththenightmarethoughtthathehadtobreakthenewstoherthatevening。Neverhadhefeltmorelonely,moredreadfullyinwantofthemotherofhischildren。Shewouldhaveknownhowtosoothe,howtocomfort。Onherheartthechildcouldhavesobbedawaygrief。
Andallthathour,fromseventoeight,whenhewasusuallyinreadinesstofulfilthefunctionsofGod’ssubstitutetohisparishioners,hespentinprayerofhisown,forguidancehowtoinflictandhealthisblow。When,atlast,Noelcame,heopened。
thedoortoherhimself,and,puttingbackthehairfromherforehead,said:"Comeinhereamoment,mydarling!"Noelfollowedhimintothestudy,andsatdown。"Iknowalready,Daddy。"Piersonwasmoredismayedbythisstoicismthanhewouldhavebeenbyanynaturaloutburst。Hestood,timidlystrokingherhair,murmuringtoherwhathehadsaidtoGratian,andtosomanyothersinthesedays:
"Thereisnodeath;lookforwardtoseeinghimagain;Godismerciful"Andhemarvelledatthecalmnessofthatpaleface——soyoung。
"Youareverybrave,mychild!"hesaid。
"There’snothingelsetobe,isthere?"
"Isn’tthereanythingIcandoforyou,Nollie?"
"No,Daddy。"
"Whendidyouseeit?"
"Lastnight。"Shehadalreadyknownfortwenty—fourhourswithouttellinghim!
"Haveyouprayed,mydarling?"
"No。"
"Try,Nollie!"
"No。"
"Ah,try!"
"Itwouldberidiculous,Daddy;youdon’tknow。"
Grievouslyupsetandbewildered,Piersonmovedawayfromher,andsaid:
"Youlookdreadfullytired。Wouldyoulikeahotbath,andyourdinnerinbed?"
"I’dlikesometea;that’sall。"Andshewentout。
Whenhehadseenthattheteahadgoneuptoher,hetoowentout;
and,movedbyalongingforwoman’shelp,tookacabtoLeila’sflat。
III
1
OnleavingtheconcertLeilaandJimmyForthadsecuredataxi;avehiclewhich,atnight,inwartime,hascertainadvantagesforthosewhodesiretobecomebetteracquainted。Vibration,sufficientnoise,darkness,areguaranteed;andallthatislackingforthefurtheranceofemotionisthescentofhoneysuckleandroses,orevenofthewhitefloweringcreeperwhichonthestoepatHighConstantiahadsmelledsomuchsweeterthanpetrol。
WhenLeilafoundherselfwithFortinthatlonelinesstowhichshehadbeenlookingforward,shewasovercomebyanaccessofnervoussilence。Shehadbeenpassingthroughastrangetimeforweekspast。
Everynightsheexaminedhersensationswithoutquiteunderstandingthemasyet。Whenawomancomestoherage,theworld—forceisliabletotakepossession,saying:
"Youwereyoung,youwerebeautiful,youstillhavebeauty,youarenot,cannotbe,old。Clingtoyouth,clingtobeauty;takeallyoucanget,beforeyourfacegetslinesandyourhairgrey;itisimpossiblethatyouhavebeenlovedforthelasttime。"
ToseeJimmyFortattheconcert,talkingtoNoel,hadbroughtthisemotiontoahead。Shewasnotofagrudgingnature,andcouldgenuinelyadmireNoel,buttheideathatJimmyFortmightalsoadmiredisturbedhergreatly。Hemustnot;itwasnotfair;hewastooold—
—besides,thegirlhadherboy;andshehadtakencarethatheshouldknowit。So,leaningtowardshim,whileabare—shoulderedyoungladysang,shehadwhispered:
"Penny?"
Andhehadwhisperedback:
"Tellyouafterwards。"
Thathadcomfortedher。Shewouldmakehimtakeherhome。Itwastimesheshowedherheart。
Andnow,inthecab,resolvedtomakeherfeelingsknown,insuddenshynessshefounditverydifficult。Love,towhichforquitethreeyearsshehadbeenastranger,wascometolifewithinher。Theknowledgewasatoncesosweet,andsodisturbing,thatshesatwithfaceaverted,unabletoturnthepreciousminutestoaccount。Theyarrivedattheflatwithouthavingdonemorethanagreethatthestreetsweredark,andthemoonbright。Shegotoutwithasenseofbewilderment,andsaidratherdesperately:
"Youmustcomeupandhaveacigarette。It’squiteearly,still。"
Hewentup。
"Waitjustaminute,"saidLeila。
Sittingtherewithhisdrinkandhiscigarette,hestaredatsomesunflowersinabowl——FamilleRose——andwaitedjustten;smilingalittle,recallingthenoseofthefairyprincess,andthedaintywayherlipsshapedthewordsshespoke。Ifshehadnothadthatluckyyoungdevilofasoldierboy,onewouldhavewantedtobucklehershoes,layone’scoatinthemudforher,orwhatevertheydidinfairytales。Onewouldhavewanted——ah!whatwouldonenothavewanted!Hangthatsoldierboy!Leilasaidhewastwenty—two。ByGeorge!howolditmadeamanfeelwhowasrisingforty,andtenderontheoff—fore!Nofairyprincessesforhim!Thenawhiffofperfumecametohisnostrils;and,lookingup,hesawLeilastandingbeforehim,inalonggarmentofdarksilk,whenceherwhitearmspeepedout。
"Anotherpenny?Doyourememberthesethings,Jimmy?TheMalaywomenusedtoweartheminCapeTown。Youcan’tthinkwhatareliefitistogetoutofmyslave’sdress。Oh!I’msosickofnursing!
Jimmy,Iwanttoliveagainalittle!"
Thegarmenthadtakenfifteenyearsoffherage,andagardenia,justwherethesilkcrossedonherbreast,seemednowhiterthanherskin。
Hewonderedwhimsicallywhetherithaddroppedtoheroutofthedark!
"Live?"hesaid。"Why!Don’tyoualways?"
Sheraisedherhandssothatthedarksilkfell,backfromthewholelengthofthosewhitearms。
"Ihaven’tlivedfortwoyears。Oh,Jimmy!Helpmetolivealittle!Life’ssoshort,now。"
Hereyesdisturbedhim,strainedandpathetic;thesightofherarms;
thescentoftheflowerdisturbedhim;hefelthischeeksgrowingwarm,andlookeddown。
Sheslippedsuddenlyforwardontoherkneesathisfeet,tookhishand,presseditwithbothofhers,andmurmured:
"Lovemealittle!Whatelseisthere?Oh!Jimmy,whatelseisthere?"
Andwiththescentoftheflower,crushedbytheirhands,stirringhissenses,Fortthought:’Ah,whatelseisthere,intheseforsakendays?’
ToJimmyFort,whohadasenseofhumour,andwasinsomesortaphilosopher,thehaphazardwaylifesettledthingsseldomfailedtoseemamusing。ButwhenhewalkedawayfromLeila’shewaspensive。
Shewasagoodsort,aprettycreature,asportswoman,anenchantress;but——shewasdecidedlymature。Andherehewas——
involvedinhelpingherto"live";involvedalmostalarmingly,fortherehadbeennomistakingthefactthatshehadreallyfalleninlovewithhim。
Thiswasflatteringandsweet。Timesweresad,andpleasurescarce,but——!Therovinginstinctwhichhadkepthim,fromhisyouthup,rollingabouttheworld,shiedinstinctivelyatbonds,howeverpleasant,thestrengthandthicknessofwhichhecouldnotgauge;or,wasitthatperhapsforthefirsttimeinhislifehehadbeenpeepingintofairylandoflate,andthisaffairwithLeilawasbynomeansfairyland?Hehadanotherreason,moreunconscious,foruneasiness。Hisheart,forallhiswanderings,wassoft,hehadalwaysfounditdifficulttohurtanyone,especiallyanyonewhodidhimthehonourtolovehim。Asortofpresentimentweighedonhimwhilehewalkedthemoonlitstreetsatthismostemptyhour,wheneventhelatetaxishadceasedtorun。Wouldshewanthimtomarryher?Woulditbehisduty,ifshedid?Andthenhefoundhimselfthinkingoftheconcert,andthatgirl’sface,listeningtothetaleshewastellingher。’Deucedqueerworld,’hethought,’thewaythingsgo!Iwonderwhatshewouldthinkofus,ifsheknew——andthatgoodpadre!Phew!’
Hemadesuchveryslowprogress,forfearofgivingwayinhisleg,andhavingtospendthenightonadoor—step,thathehadplentyoftimeforrumination;butsinceitbroughthimnoconfidencewhatever,hebeganatlasttofeel:’Well;itmightbealotworse。Takethegoodsthegodssendyouanddon’tfuss!’AndsuddenlyherememberedwithextremevividnessthatnightonthestoepatHighConstantia,andthoughtwithdismay:’Icouldhaveplungedinoverheadandearsthen;andnow——Ican’t!That’slifeallover!PoorLeila!Memiserum,too,perhaps——whoknows!’
IV
WhenLeilaopenedherdoortoEdwardPierson,hereyesweresmiling,andherlipsweresoft。Sheseemedtosmileandbesoftallover,andshetookbothhishands。Everythingwasapleasuretoherthatday,eventhesightofthissadface。Shewasinloveandwaslovedagain;hadapresentandafutureoncemore,notonlyherownfullpast;andshemustfinishwithEdwardinhalfanhour,forJimmywascoming。Shesatdownonthedivan,tookhishandinasisterlyway,andsaid:
"Tellme,Edward;Icanseeyou’reintrouble。Whatisit?"
"Noel。Theboyshewasfondofhasbeenkilled。"
Shedroppedhishand。
"Oh,no!Poorchild!It’stoocruel!"Tearsstartedupinhergreyeyes,andshetouchedthemwithatinyhandkerchief。"Poor,poorlittleNoel!Wassheveryfondofhim?"
"Averysudden,shortengagement;butI’mafraidshetakesitdesperatelytoheart。Idon’tknowhowtocomforther;onlyawomancould。Icametoaskyou:Doyouthinksheoughttogoonwithherwork?Whatdoyouthink,Leila?Ifeellost!"
Leila,gazingathim,thought:’Lost?Yes,youlooklost,mypoorEdward!’
"Ishouldlethergoon,"shesaid:"ithelps;it’stheonlythingthatdoeshelp。I’llseeifIcangetthemtolethercomeintothewards。Sheoughttobeintouchwithsufferingandthemen;thatkitchenworkwilltryherawfullyjustnow:Washeveryyoung?"
"Yes。Theywantedtogetmarried。Iwasopposedtoit。"
Leila’slipcurledeversolittle。’Youwouldbe!’shethought。
"Icouldn’tbeartothinkofNolliegivingherselfhastily,likethat;theyhadonlyknowneachotherthreeweeks。Itwasveryhardforme,Leila。Andthensuddenlyhewassenttothefront。"
ResentmentwelledupinLeila。Thekill—Joys!Asiflifedidn’tkilljoyfastenough!Hercousin’sfaceatthatmomentwasalmostabhorrenttoher,itsgentleperplexedgoodnessdarkenedandwarpedbythatmonkishlook。Sheturnedaway,glancedattheclockoverthehearth,andthought:’Yes,andhewouldstopJimmyandme!Hewouldsay:"Oh,no!dearLeila——youmustn’tlove——it’ssin!"HowIhatethatword!’
"Ithinkthemostdreadfulthinginlife,"shesaidabruptly,"isthewaypeoplesuppresstheirnaturalinstincts;whattheysuppressinthemselvestheymakeotherpeoplesuppresstoo,iftheycan;andthat’sthecauseofhalfthemiseryinthisworld。"
Thenatthesurpriseonhisfaceatthislittleoutburst,whosecausehecouldnotknow,sheaddedhastily:"IhopeNoelwillgetoveritquickly,andfindsomeoneelse。"
"Yes。Iftheyhadbeenmarried——howmuchworseitwouldhavebeen。
ThankGod,theyweren’t!"
"Idon’tknow。Theywouldhavehadanhourofbliss。Evenanhourofblissisworthsomethinginthesedays。"
"Tothosewhoonlybelieveinthis’life——perhaps。"
’Tenminutesmore!’shethought:’Oh,whydoesn’thego?’Butatthatverymomenthegotup,andinstantlyherheartwentouttohimagain。
"I’msosorry,Edward。IfIcanhelpinanyway——I’lltrymybestwithNoelto—morrow;anddocometomewheneveryoufeelinclined。"
Shetookhishandinhers;afraidthathewouldsitdownagain,sheyetcouldnothelpasoftglanceintohiseyes,andalittlerushofpityingwarmthinthepressureofherhand。
Piersonsmiled;thesmilewhichalwaysmadehersorryforhim。
"Good—bye,Leila;you’reverygoodandkindtome。Good—bye。"
Herbosomswelledwithreliefandcompassion;and——shelethimout。
Runningupstairsagainshethought:’I’vejusttime。WhatshallI
puton?PoorEdward,poorNoel!WhatcolourdoesJimmylike?Oh!
Whydidn’tIkeephimthosetenyearsago——whatutterwaste!’And,feverishlyadorningherself,shecamebacktothewindow,andstoodthereinthedarktowatch,whilesomejasminewhichgrewbelowsentupitsscenttoher。’WouldImarryhim?’shethought,’ifheaskedme?Buthewon’taskme——whyshouldhenow?Besides,Icouldn’tbearhimtofeelIwantedpositionormoneyfromhim。Ionlywantlove——love——love!’Thesilentrepetitionofthatwordgaveherawonderfulsenseofsolidityandcomfort。Solongassheonlywantedlove,surelyhewouldgiveit。
Atallfigureturneddownpastthechurch,comingtowardsher。Itwashe!Andsuddenlyshebethoughtherself。Shewenttothelittleblackpiano,satdown,andbegantosingthesongshehadsungtohimtenyearsago:"IfIcouldbethefallingdewandfallontheeallday!"Shedidnotevenlookroundwhenhecamein,butcontinuedtocroonoutthewords,consciousofhimjustbehindhershoulderinthedark。Butwhenshehadfinished,shegotupandthrewherarmsroundhim,strainedhimtoher,andburstintotearsonhisshoulder;
thinkingofNoelandthatdeadboy,thinkingofthemillionsofotherboys,thinkingofherownhappiness,thinkingofthosetenyearswasted,ofhowshortwaslife,andlove;thinking——hardlyknowingwhatshethought!AndJimmyFort,verymovedbythisemotionwhichheonlyhalfunderstood,pressedhertightlyinhisarms,andkissedherwetcheeksandherneck,paleandwarminthedarkness。
V
1
Noelwentonwithherworkforamonth,andthen,onemorning,faintedoverapileofdishes。Thenoiseattractedattention,andMrs。Lynchwassummoned。
ThesightofherlyingtheresodeadlywhitetaxedLeila’snervesseverely。Butthegirlrevivedquickly,andacabwassentfor。
Leilawentwithher,andtoldthedrivertostopatCamelotMansions。
Whytakeherhomeinthisstate,whynotsavethejolting,andletherrecoverproperly?Theywentupstairsarminarm。Leilamadeherliedownonthedivan,andputahot—waterbottletoherfeet。Noelwasstillsopassiveandpalethateventospeaktoherseemedacruelty。And,goingtoherlittlesideboard,LeilastealthilyextractedapintbottleofsomechampagnewhichJimmyForthadsentin,andtookitwithtwoglassesandacorkscrewintoherbedroom。
Shedrankalittleherself,andcameoutbearingaglasstothegirl。
Noelshookherhead,andhereyesseemedtosay:"DoyoureallythinkI’msoeasilymended?"ButLeilahadbeenthroughtoomuchinhertimetodespiseearthlyremedies,andsheheldittothegirl’slipsuntilshedrank。Itwasexcellentchampagne,and,sinceNoelhadneveryettouchedalcohol,hadaninstantaneouseffect。Hereyesbrightened;littleredspotscameupinhercheeks。Andsuddenlysherolledoverandburiedherfacedeepinacushion。Withhershorthair,shelookedsolikeachildlyingthere,thatLeilakneltdown,strokingherhead,andsaying:"There,there;mylove!There,there!"
Atlastthegirlraisedherself;nowthatthepallid,masklikedespairofthelastmonthwasbroken,sheseemedonfire,andherfacehadawildlook。She,withdrewherselffromLeila’stouch,and,crossingherarmstightlyacrossherchest,said:
"Ican’tbearit;Ican’tsleep。Iwanthimback;Ihatelife——
Ihatetheworld。Wehadn’tdoneanything——onlyjustlovedeachother。Godlikespunishing;justbecausewelovedeachother;wehadonlyonedaytoloveeachother——onlyoneday——onlyone!"
Leilacouldseethelongwhitethroatabovethoserigidarmsstrainingandswallowing;itgaveherachokyfeelingtowatchit。
Thevoice,uncannilydaintyforallthewildnessofthewordsandface,wenton:
"Iwon’t——Idon’twanttolive。Ifthere’sanotherlife,Ishallgotohim。Andifthereisn’t——it’sjustsleep。"
Leilaputoutherhandtowardofthesewildwanderings。Likemostwomenwholivesimplythelifeoftheirsensesandemotions,shewasorthodox;orratherneverspeculatedonsuchthings。
"Tellmeaboutyourselfandhim,"shesaid。
Noelfastenedhergreateyesonhercousin。"Welovedeachother;
andchildrenareborn,aren’tthey,afteryou’veloved?Butminewon’tbe!"Fromthelookonherfaceratherthanfromherwords,thefullrealityofhermeaningcametoLeila,vanished,cameagain。
Nonsense!But——whatanawfulthing,iftrue!Thatwhichhadalwaysseemedtohersuchanexaggeratedoccurrenceinthecommonwalksoflife——why!now,itwasatragedy!Instinctivelysheraisedherselfandputherarmsroundthegirl。
"Mypoordear!"shesaid;"you’refancyingthings!"
ThecolourhadfadedoutofNoel’sface,and,withherheadthrownbackandhereyelidshalf—closed,shelookedlikeascornfulyoungghost。
"Ifitis——Ishan’tlive。Idon’tmeanto——it’seasytodie。
Idon’tmeanDaddytoknow。"
"Oh!mydear,mydear!"wasallLeilacouldstammer。
"Wasitwrong,Leila?"
"Wrong?Idon’tknow——wrong?Ifitreallyisso——itwas——
unfortunate。Butsurely,surely——you’remistaken?"
Noelshookherhead。"Ididitsothatweshouldbelongtoeachother。Nothingcouldhavetakenhimfromme。"
Leilacaughtatthegirl’swords。
"Then,mydear——hehasn’tquitegonefromyou,yousee?"
Noel’slipsformeda"No"whichwasinaudible。"ButDaddy!"shewhispered。
Edward’sfacecamebeforeLeilasovividlythatshecouldhardlyseethegirlforthetorturedshapeofit。Thenthehedonistinherrevoltedagainstthatasceticvision。Herworldlyjudgmentcondemnedanddeploredthiscalamity,herinstinctcouldnothelpapplaudingthathouroflifeandlove,snatchedoutofthejawsofdeath。"Needheeverknow?"shesaid。
"IcouldneverlietoDaddy。Butitdoesn’tmatter。Whyshouldonegoonliving,whenlifeisrotten?"
Outsidethesunwasshiningbrightly,thoughitwaslateOctober。
Leilagotupfromherknees。Shestoodatthewindowthinkinghard。
"Mydear,"shesaidatlast,"youmustn’tgetmorbid。Lookatme!
I’vehadtwohusbands,and——and——well,aprettystormyupanddowntimeofit;andIdaresayI’vegotlotsoftroublebeforeme。ButI’mnotgoingtocavein。Normustyou。ThePiersonshaveplentyofpluck;youmustn’tbeatraitortoyourblood。That’sthelastthing。Yourboywouldhavetoldyoutostickit。Theseareyour’trenches,’andyou’renotgoingtobedowned,areyou?"
Aftershehadspokentherewasalongsilence,beforeNoelsaid:
"Givemeacigarette,Leila。"
Leilaproducedthelittleflatcaseshecarried。
"That’sbrave,"shesaid。"Nothing’sincurableatyourage。Onlyonething’sincurable——gettingold。"
Noellaughed。"That’scurabletoo,isn’tit?"
"Notwithoutsurrender。"
Againtherewasasilence,whilethebluefumefromtwocigarettesfast—smoked,rosetowardsthelowceiling。ThenNoelgotupfromthedivan,andwentovertothepiano。Shewasstillinherhospitaldressoflilac—colouredlinen,andwhileshestoodtheretouchingthekeys,playingachordnow,andthen,Leila’sheartfelthollowfromcompassion;shewassohappyherselfjustnow,andthischildsoverywretched!
"Playtome,"shesaid;"no——don’t;I’llplaytoyou。"Andsittingdown,shebegantoplayandsingalittleFrenchsong,whosefirstlineran:"Sionestjolie,joliecommevous。"Itwassoft,gay,charming。Ifthegirlcried,somuchthebetter。ButNoeldidnotcry。Sheseemedsuddenlytohaverecoveredallherself—possession。
Shespokecalmly,answeredLeila’squestionswithoutemotion,andsaidshewouldgohome。Leilawentoutwithher,andwalkedsomewayinthedirectionofherhome;distressed,butfranklyataloss。AtthebottomofPortlandPlaceNoelstoppedandsaid:"I’mquiteallrightnow,Leila;thankyouawfully。Ishalljustgohomeandliedown。AndIshallcometo—morrow,thesameasusual。Goodbye!"
Leilacouldonlygraspthegirl’shand,andsay:"Mydear,that’ssplendid。There’smanyaslip——besides,it’swar—time。"
Withthatsaying,enigmaticeventoherself,shewatchedthegirlmovingslowlyaway;andturnedbackherselftowardsherhospital,withadisturbedandcompassionateheart。
2
ButNoeldidnotgoeast;shewalkeddownRegentStreet。Shehadreceivedacertainmeasureofcomfort,beensteadiedbyherexperiencedcousin’svitality,andthenewthoughtssuggestedbythosewords:"Hehasn’tquitegonefromyou,hashe?""Besides,it’swar—time。"Leilahadspokenfreely,too,andthephysicalignoranceinwhichthegirlhadbeengropingtheselastweekswasnowremoved。
Likemostproudnatures,shedidnotnaturallythinkmuchabouttheopinionofotherpeople;besides,sheknewnothingoftheworld,itsfeelingsandjudgments。Hernightmarewasthethoughtofherfather’shorrorandgrief。Shetriedtolessenthatnightmarebyrememberinghisoppositiontohermarriage,andtheresentmentshehadfelt。Hehadneverrealised,neverunderstood,howsheandCyrilloved。Now,ifshewerereallygoingtohaveachild,itwouldbeCyril’s——Cyril’sson——Cyriloveragain。Theinstinctstrongerthanreason,refinement,tradition,upbringing,whichhadpushedheroninsuchhastetomakesureofunion——theirrepressiblepulseoflifefacedwithannihilation——seemedtorevivewithinher,andmakeherterriblesecretalmostprecious。Shehadreadabout"Warbabies"inthepapers,readwithadullcuriosity;butnowtheatmosphere,asitwere,ofthosewritingswasilluminedforher。Thesebabieswerewrong,werea"problem,"andyet,behindallthat,sheseemednowtoknowthatpeopleweregladofthem;theymadeup,theyfilledthegaps。Perhaps,whenshehadone,shewouldbeproud,secretlyproud,inspiteofeveryone,inspiteofherfather!TheyhadtriedtokillCyril——Godandeveryone;buttheyhadn’tbeenable,hewasalivewithinher!Aglowcameintoherface,walkingamongthebusyshoppingcrowd,andpeopleturnedtolookather;shehadthatappearanceofseeingnoone,nothing,whichisstrangeandattractivetothosewhohaveamomenttosparefromcontemplationoftheirownaffairs。Fullytwohoursshewanderedthus,beforegoingin,andonlylostthatexaltedfeelingwhen,inherownlittleroom,shehadtakenuphisphotograph,andwassittingonherbedgazingatit。
Shehadabadbreakdownthen。Lockedinthere,shelayonherbed,crying,dreadfullylonely,tillshefellasleepexhausted,withthetear—stainedphotographclutchedinhertwitchingfingers。Shewokewithastart。Itwasdark,andsomeonewasknockingonherdoor。
"MissNoel!"
Childishperversitykepthersilent。Whycouldn’ttheyleaveheralone?Theywouldleaveheraloneiftheyknew。Thensheheardanotherkindofknocking,andherfather’svoice:
"Nollie!Nollie!"
Shescrambledup,andopened。Helookedscared,andherheartsmoteher。
"It’sallright,Daddy;Iwasasleep。"
"Mydear,I’msorry,butdinner’sready。"
"Idon’twantanydinner;IthinkI’llgotobed。"
Thefrownbetweenhisbrowsdeepened。
"Youshouldn’tlockyourdoor,Nollie:Iwasquitefrightened。I
wentroundtothehospitaltobringyouhome,andtheytoldmeaboutyourfainting。Iwantyoutoseeadoctor。"
Noelshookherheadvigorously。"Oh,no!It’snothing!"
"Nothing?Tofaintlikethat?Come,mychild。Topleaseme。"Hetookherfaceinhishands。Noelshrankaway。
"No,Daddy。Iwon’tseeadoctor。Extravaganceinwartime!I
won’t。It’snogoodtryingtomakeme。I’llcomedownifyoulike;
Ishallbeallrightto—morrow。"
WiththisPiersonhadtobecontent;but,oftenthatevening,shesawhimlookingatheranxiously。Andwhenshewentup,hecameoutofhisstudy,followedtoherroom,andinsistedonlightingherfire。
Kissingheratthedoor,hesaidveryquietly:
"IwishIcouldbeamothertoyou,mychild!"
ForamomentitflashedthroughNoel:’Heknows!’then,bythepuzzledlookonhisface,sheknewthathedidnot。Ifonlyhedidknow;whataweightitwouldbeoffhermind!Butsheansweredquietlytoo;"Goodnight,Daddydear!"kissedhim,andshutthedoor。
Shesatdownbeforethelittlenewfire,andspreadherhandsouttoit;allwassocoldandwintryinherheart。Andthefirelightflickeredonherface,whereshadowslaythickunderhereyes,foralltheroundnessofhercheeks,andonherslimpalehands,andthesupplegraceofheryoungbody。Andoutinthenight,cloudsracedoverthemoon,whichhadcomefulloncemore。