Far Above Rubies
By Netta Syrett
OLD Dr. Hilcrest’s little house on the Bushberry Road, just
outside
Crewford Village, had a new tenant, and Crew-
ford was shaken to its
foundations with excitement and expecta-
tion.
All Crewford had so long been “led to the grave,” as Briggs
the town-crier
somewhat unfortunately expressed it, by old Dr.
Hilcrest, and his
spectacled nose and white beard had become such
indispensable features in
the village, that the inhabitants were
thrown into a state of incredulous
amazement at the news of his
projected retirement. Scarcely had they time
to recover breath
from the astounding intelligence, before the newcomer
was
actually upon them. “A boy, a mere boy, too!” as Miss
Saunders
exclaimed to another maiden lady, her bosom friend.
“Scarcely
seven-and-twenty I should think. My dear Sophy, it
is
hardly—delicate !”
Crewford, however, was not long in making the discovery
that the young
doctor was an acquisition. The children of Mr.
Miles, the lawyer, who
lived opposite Miss Saunders, and were
conveniently stricken with measles
the very day of his arrival,
disobediently flattened their noses against
the windows to watch
for his coming, and began to laugh before ever he
shook his fist
at
at them from the gate ; and Miss Saunders herself implored her
friend to
have no scruples about consulting him for bronchitis.
“He is steady as a
churchwarden, my dear, and has the dignified
manner of a man of sixty,”
was her verdict.
His little study in the small, old-fashioned house, where his
bachelor
predecessor had lived so many years, looked very
pleasant and cosy one
October evening, about a month after his
arrival.
The chintz curtains were close drawn : there were a bright fire,
a pair of
slippers warming on the rug, and a large armchair drawn
up close to the
fender, in which lay a half-smoked pipe. The
doctor was taking books out
of a large packing case, and putting
them on to the shelves which lined
the room. When the last
volume was in its place, he pushed the box aside,
and sinking
luxuriously into the big chair, took off his boots, and thrust
his
feet into the warmed slippers. He dropped the boots with a
thud
beside the fender, stooped for his pipe, relighted it, and sank
back with
a sigh of relief, puffing contentedly. His eyes travelled
about the room,
resting now on a picture, newly hung, now
on the gay flowered curtains.
The fire flickered and murmured
softly, and little ruddy gleams danced on
the wall, and bright,
sudden flashes were reflected in the old-fashioned,
low-hanging
glass opposite.
Strong was pleasantly tired by the long day’s round, and the
little room
seemed to him the embodiment of warmth and com-
fort. Lounging in the big
chair, his head thrown back, his
slippered feet thrust out towards the
blaze, and his hands in his
pockets, he gazed dreamily at the blue smoke
wreaths from his
pipe, and allowed his thoughts to stray over the past few
years.
He was young—Miss Saunders had rather over, than under-
stated his age, in putting him down as seven-and-twenty—but
already
already he looked back upon much hard, uphill work. The son
of a poor
clergyman, the education necessary to fit him for the
profession of his
choice, had been acquired at the price of much
personal self-denial, and,
as he also recognised, of considerable
sacrifice at home. A troubled
contraction of the brows, was
the outcome of a remembrance of his father’s
thin, stooping
figure bending over his books in the shabby little library
at the
Devonshire Vicarage.
His college days at Cambridge, and afterwards as a student at
Guy’s, marred
as they were by the necessity of looking at every
halfpenny spent on
pleasure, were almost forgotten in the vivid
memory of the June afternoon
when Mollie Kendall first came to
the rooms he shared with her brother.
Mollie and he had been
engaged now four years. Four years of incessant,
untiring work
on Strong’s part, had resulted in the country practice for
which his
old father had with difficulty advanced the money, and though he
recognised the inevitable struggle before him, he was undaunted.
Fortune had hitherto favoured the brave ; there was no reason for
doubting
a continuance of her kindness.
He rose presently, with a yawn, and began to whistle softly, out
of sheer
content. He looked very boyish as he lounged about the
room arranging his
few possessions—photographs, a vase or two
—on the
mantel-piece or window ledge. The study was not yet
completely furnished,
and this evening arrangement of books and
pictures was a never ending
satisfaction to him. He altered the
position of one photograph many times
before deciding on its
destination, and then took it down once more and
stood a moment
with it in his hand, looking at it. When he replaced it, it
was
with a gentle touch. His whistling ceased.
“Next year, perhaps—certainly next year, I should think,” was
in his
mind. He tossed paper and envelopes out of the table
drawer,
drawer, and sat down to write and tell her. The letter was a long
one;
Mollie read parts of it next day more than once, and smiled
and blushed,
and put the paper to her lips, and then re-read the
account of his new
patients with considerable, if somewhat abated,
interest.
He had been called in by the Gilmans, at the Court, to attend
one of the
maids, he wrote ; they were the richest people in the
neighbourhood ; it
was a good connection, in fact, and the
Gilmans themselves seemed rather
jolly.
Strong had recalled Mrs. Gilman as he mentioned her name
with a momentary
feeling of curiosity. He had only exchanged
half-a-dozen words with her,
and she was not pretty, but she had
certainly a curious charm of
manner.
Mrs. Gilman stood by the window in her drawing-room some
days later, and,
half concealed by the heavy velvet curtains,
watched the doctor’s dog-cart
whirl down the drive. She did not
return to the fire till the last flash
of wheels had disappeared round
the bend by the lodge. Then, with a little
shiver, she pulled the
curtain further over the window, and turned away, a
smile
struggling ineffectually with a somewhat pronounced yawn, as she
came back to the sofa. She pulled the cushions on to the floor
close
to the fire, and threw herself down upon them, leaning back
against the
couch. A half-opened book lay upon the padded arm
of the sofa, just above
her head. She stretched a lazy hand for
it, found it was out of reach, and
indifferently abandoned the
effort.
Nestling more luxuriously among the cushions, she clasped her
slender hands
round her knees, and looked dreamily into the fire.
Occasionally a little amused smile robbed her face for a moment
of its
jaded expression, but her listless attitude, the droop of her
shoulders,
shoulders, and a restless movement of her head now and again,
spoke
eloquently of hopeless, unmitigated boredom.
The room in which she sat, though small—Barbara Gilman
hated big
rooms—was furnished luxuriously. The folds of the
heavy curtains
over doors and windows gleamed in the firelight,
which flashed also on the
silver toys with which the many
small tables were loaded, on the shining
cushions tossed on the
floor, and on the fragile china and glass of the
tea-table.
Mrs. Gilman glanced at the linen-covered tray on which the
tea-cups stood,
and at the almost empty cake basket, and smiled
again.
“He was a very unsophisticated boy—and awfully amusing when
he
talked with so grave an air about Dawson’s tiresome illness—
just as
though it wasn’t sufficiently annoying to have one’s maid
ill, with the
hunt ball coming on and not a rag to wear, without
discussing her stupid
symptoms by the hour ! However,” Mrs.
Gilman shrugged her shoulders with a
sensation of lazy satis
faction, “we drifted pretty far from Dawson’s
cough before tea
was over.”
“I really didn’t know such men existed in this age,” she told
herself, her
thoughts wandering languidly. “John-Bullism I
know, and decadence (in the
happy day in town), but what is
this ? It’s the sort of thing one used to
read about in stories
that were not oblivious of the young person. High
ideals, youth-
ful enthusiasms, innocence—or is it
ignorance—of evil ? They
are all such exhausting things in their
way, but how curious to find
them combined in one individual—and
that a man. Really one
might almost derive a new sensation from the study
of such a
being. And a new sensation here, of
all places in the world !
No, it’s certainly not to be despised.”
She moved a little to shield her face from the fire, and then
turned
turned her head, her quick glance lighting now on one, now on
another part
of the room. She regretted she had not bought
a white-and-gold screen she
had seen in town, for the corner by
the door, and determined to send for
it. She remembered, too, a
wonderful Eastern jar, of green metal, the
colour of a peacock’s
neck with the sun upon it ; but there was no place
for it.
She satisfied herself that every niche of the room was occupied
before turning with a dissatisfied air to the fire again. There was
absolutely nothing more to be bought for the room, unless she
made a
thorough change in its style, and turned out the present
furniture. She
entertained the idea for a moment, but it was too
much trouble to think
out, and her vague plans drifted aimlessly
for a breathing space, and
dissolved, and she yawned again.
Life was a dull affair, and things were
only desirable till one
obtained them. How she had longed for pretty rooms
and
dainty clothes to wear and delicious things to eat, in the old day,
at home, in the shabby little villa at Wandsworth. Well ! a
miracle
had happened, or so it had seemed to her, on her engage-
ment to Jim
Gilman, and now she had her heart’s desires.
Were they disappointing?
Yes—but they were also well worth
keeping. A hastily summoned
vision of the draughty dining-
room at Eglantine Villa, of the roast
mutton and boiled rice
puddings at the mid-day dinner, assured her of
this. Mrs. Gilman
was always frank with herself. Her material advantages
were well
worth keeping, even at the price of playing the part of the
affectionate wife, a rô1e which in itself was irksome. Still, as
she
reflected, every one pays in some form or other for cakes and
ale, and
Jim, though straightforward and good to the point of
exhaustion, was
providentially dense in proportion—and he was out
a great deal, and
there were always visits to town, and—Mrs.
Gilman smiled quietly,
and twisted the rings on her white fingers,
without
without pursuing reflection further, at this point. But visits to
town were
far too infrequent, and in the meantime here she
was mewed up in a
wretched country house, and Jim hated
visitors, and if you wanted to rely
on a man’s good nature it
wasn’t safe to urge things he disliked, too
frequently—and then
her thoughts all at once drifted to the doctor
again.
“He was awfully puzzled,” she told herself. “I can’t think
why I didn’t
laugh ! I wonder what he thought of me ?”
As a matter of fact, Strong was thinking of her at the moment:
sitting
frowning in his armchair, holding an extinct, half-forgotten
pipe
listlessly in his right hand. The mixture of admiration and
instinctive
repugnance which coloured his thoughts as he recalled
her, could she have
divined his mental state, would probably have
filled her with a
half-resentful sense of flattered vanity.
The sound of whistling, followed by the answering, hoarse
bark of dogs,
roused her from her lazy musing. She rose slowly
from her nest among the
cushions, stretching herself daintily,
with soft, slow movements, which
recalled the action of a graceful
little cat, reluctantly leaving the
warmth of the fire. She picked
up the pillows, and threw them hastily in
their right positions on
the sofa, and then crossed the room to a
high-backed chair, on
which an embroidered work-bag hung. She had taken
out its
contents, a strip of needle-work, and was bending over its
intricate
meshes with an absorbed air, before the door opened.
“Hullo, little woman ! how cosy and domestic you look.”
A breath of upland air entered the room with the man who
stood in rough
shooting-suit and gaiters, on the threshold. His
face was bronzed with
daily exposure to rain, sun, and wind, and
an outdoor atmosphere
surrounded him like an exhalation.
“I can come in, I suppose ? I’m not very dirty,” he assured
her, glancing
at his thick laced boots. “This room always
makes
makes me feel a clumsy brute,” he said, sinking down in an arm-
chair
opposite his wife. “A sort of rhinoceros in a parrot’s
cage !”
“Thank you,” she murmured, with a little grimace. “What
pretty similes you
choose, Jim.”
He laughed.
“They were never my strong point, I admit—but it’s a very
nice
little parrot.”
He got up, crossed the room to where she was sitting, and
bending down,
playfully pinched her ear.
She raised her face with a smile full of wifely devotion, and he
stooped to
kiss her.
“Had visitors ?” he asked presently, with a glance at the still
uncleared
tea-table.
“No. Oh ! yes—I forgot,” she added, carelessly rising to
ring the
bell. “Dr. Strong came in ; he called to see Dawson,
you know.”
“Ah ! What sort of fellow is he ?” He took a piece of cake
out of the
basket as he spoke, and placed a large crumb on the
nose of the terrier,
which had followed him into the room.
“Trust!”
“Oh ! a nice boy, I think. He’s very attentive—seems to
think
Dawson’s had rather a severe touch of influenza.”
“Paid for !” Milman exclaimed, and the dog seized the cake
with a snap of
his jaws.
“We’d better ask him to dinner, Bab.”
“Yes, I suppose we must,” she replied, going on with her
needlework.
Strong’s fears with regard to the seriousness of the maid’s ill-
ness were
not unfounded. A sharp attack of pleurisy followed
the
the influenza, and, as a consequence, his visits at the Court grew
more and
more frequent.
Mrs. Gilman was generally standing in the hall as he came
downstairs.
Behind her lithe, graceful figure, framed in the heavy drapery
round the
doorway, there was a glimpse of the richly scented, little
room, glowing
warmly in the firelight.
“Do you think she is better?” was her usual, anxious ques-
tion ; it was
accompanied by a necessary, upward glance at the
doctor who stood on the
stairs above her.
“Come in and tell me about her.” And then Strong followed
her into the
room, and sat down on the divan drawn up close to
the fire, before which
stood the tea-table, with its white, fringed
cloth and burden of dainty
silver.
By the end of the month he had spent many half hours in Mrs.
Gilman’s
drawing-room.
The thought of them and of his hostess, remained with him
during the long
evenings he spent in his own little study, smoking
and gazing into the
fire, with Mrs. Gilman’s red hair against a
background of emerald-green
cushion, vividly present to his
imagination.
Strangely enough, he did not think less often of Mollie Ken-
dall. She was
as clearly present in his mind, when he recalled
the little room at the
Court, as was Mrs. Gilman.
Indeed, he never thought of one woman without the other ;
they were
inseparable, incongruously linked in his thoughts. It
was, could he
conceivably have expressed the situation in metaphor,
as though he held
bound together a violet, fragrant, blue-eyed,
breathing frankly its story
of English woods, of streams babbling
through deep moss, of the children’s
ringing laughter and a fan-
tastically delicate orchid, scentless,
mysterious, its pale lips closed.
Strong
Strong was perplexed and baffled. Unfitted as his downright
objective
nature made him for the task of mental analysis, he
strove, with an almost
pathetic honesty, to unravel the web of
conflicting sensations which, he
felt uneasily, grew more involved
as time went on.
Two things were, however, clear to him. One, that he was not
in the
faintest degree in love with Mrs. Gilman ; the other, that
his love for
Mollie, his tenderness for her, his desire for their
marriage, were
intensified by his involuntary habit of con-
stantly contrasting her with
the woman who shared his thoughts
of her.
This conviction seemed to him to make it unnecessary to
contrive any means
of lessening his intimacy with the Gilmans, a
course which, in view of the
fact that the Court people were the
acknowledged leaders of the
neighbourhood, would have been in
the highest degree impolitic.
Nevertheless, and he was glad to
feel assured of this, he would have
risked any loss to his position
through taking such a step, if he had felt
it necessary.
He knew nothing of the modern claim for the imperative, almost
sacred
nature of impulse ; he knew, indeed, little of modern
thought on any
social subject, partly because of the engrossing,
objective character of
his work, but chiefly, perhaps, that his
nature was so opposed to its
teaching, that it was not so much
that he failed to assimilate, or
entirely rejected it, as that he passed
it by unheeding.
He did not understand his own hesitation in accepting the
Gilmans’
hospitality, and he was vaguely irritated by his own
undefined, irrational
scruples.
Why in the world should he not value the acquaintance of a
clever woman of
the world, who drew his thoughts from their
accustomed channels, and
forced them to recognise that there
The Yellow Book—Vol. XII. Q
were
were other paths worthy to be followed ? Paths that led in the
direction of
art and literature, as well as towards science. It was
good for him to
talk to her, he argued ; he was narrow, it was the
fault of his
profession, he acknowledged it, and wished for a wider
outlook.
At this point, the point where a little of the modern atmosphere
he ignored
would have saved him, his reflections invariably ran off
the right track.
To his unsophisticated intelligence, Mrs. Gilman
was brilliant, witty,
profound, simply because he had never had an
opportunity of comparing her
counterfeit coin—the catch-words,
the allusive jargon, the borrowed
paradoxes and epigrams of a
modern school—with what was its genuine
claim to brilliance and
distinction. It is easy to make a cheap glitter
for a man of
Strong’s type, and Mrs. Gilman practised the economies for
which
no alternative was possible. He was, moreover, so flatteringly
dazzled by paste that, in any case, diamonds would have been
sinfully
thrown away upon him.
Such as it was, however, her conversation represented for
Strong the only
culture obtainable in Crewford, and he strove to
consider the fact
powerful enough to account for the influence
she undoubtedly exercised
upon him.
But in his heart of hearts, when he began patiently to sift
motives and
emotions, he knew this did not solve the mystery of
the attraction which
drew him day after day to her room.
“Confound it !” he found himself exclaiming, half aloud, one
evening. “What
is it ? I don’t care for her. Good heavens,
no !” with a short laugh. “I
believe I—rather dislike her than
otherwise.”
He paused a moment, pondering over the idea, and dismissed it
with another
bewildered laugh, as one more insoluble problem.
“Don’t even know whether I dislike her ? Hang the woman,
any
any way, she occupies too much of my time. I won’t see so
much of her,” he
resolved suddenly ; “the girl’s all right now. I
can make that the
excuse.”
With the determination, his perplexities at once vanished. He
looked at
Mollie’s photograph for a moment before going in
search of his candle, and
a very tender, boyish smile came to his
lips before they framed themselves
for the soft whistling which
meant that his mind was at rest.
“What do you and I care for any stupid woman, little girl !”
he would have
said, had Mollie herself been there to hear him.
“She is much better,” he said, following Mrs. Gilman, the
next day, into the
drawing-room, after his visit to the maid. He
stood talking by the
mantel-piece, as though in readiness to go as
soon as necessary
conversation should be over. “I think if I look
in again on Thursday or
Friday I needn’t trouble you again. She
will do now, if you take care of
her for a little while. She
oughtn t to begin work for a week or two. If
you could send her
home for a fortnight, or—”
“Two lumps ?” Mrs. Gilman interrupted. She held the sugar
suspended over
the tea-cup, and glanced up at him.
He hesitated.
“I really oughtn’t to stay, I haven’t made an end of work for
to-day,” he
began.
“But tea is one of the pleasures of life,” she returned, passing
the cup to
him, “not a mere duty to be scrupulously
avoided.”
There was a moment’s pause before he took the usual low chair
near the
fire, with a laugh.
Mrs. Gilman helped herself to one of the tiny cakes out of the
cake
basket.
“I always
“I always associate you with that chair, or the chair with you
—whichever you consider the prettiest way of putting it,” she
said,
with a little movement of her head towards Strong. She
addressed him in
the slow, lazy voice in which one intimate friend
might speak to another.
“It seems quite natural for you to be there. And this is
practically your
last visit ; I’m sorry. I shall miss our talks.”
There was the faintest
note of sadness in the last words. She
lifted the cup to her lips, set it
down untasted, and gazed a
moment absently into the fire.
Strong flushed, and moved a little uneasily, glanced furtively at
her, and
was glad that at the moment she was so obviously uncon-
scious of him.
“Yes,” he said, awkwardly, “we seem to have talked a great
deal. I was a
regular ignorant Philistine before you took me in
hand, Mrs. Gilman, and
I’m afraid I haven’t made much progress
in spite of your teaching. I’ve
ordered some of the books you
talk about, though, and I’m trying to
cultivate a taste for art ; but
—I’m really awfully sorry—I
still prefer my old hunting pictures
to Whistler. I’m afraid you’ll have
to give me up as a bad job.
I’m not a quick pupil.”
She turned her head slowly, and let her eyes dwell for a moment
on his
face.
“You are an interesting one,” she said, wistfully. “I have so
enjoyed our
talks. I—” she paused, hesitated a little, and dropped
her
eyes—”I am rather lonely. Don’t quite forsake me.” She
looked up at
him again, with a half-pleading, half-smiling glance,
and her voice was a
little tremulous.
Strong’s heart beat quicker.
“I shall be glad to come whenever you ask me,” he murmured.
There was a short silence.
His
His eyes were riveted in a sort of fascinated gaze on her half-
averted
face.
He was thinking, confusedly, how wonderfully she was dressed,
and how
Mollie would tease him about his efforts to describe what
she wore. Her
gown seemed to him a mist of soft, yet brilliant
colour, the firelight
flashed on the jewelled girdle at her waist,
and her white hands, clasped
on her lap, lay like gathered lilies on
a bed of dimly glowing flowers.
What was it that made her face
so attractive ? It was not pretty, even
framed as it was in low,
falling masses of glorious red hair—not
pretty, but curiously
fascinating. Her eyes were beautiful, yet he had
hitherto always
thought it was the expression of her eyes that repelled
him.
“How is the little lady !” she asked at last, turning sharply
to him. Her
voice had regained its accustomed half-mocking
brightness. The trend of
Strong’s reflections was suddenly
deflected.
Instinctively he resented the tone of the inquiry, and drew
himself up a
little stiffly before replying, “She is well, I
believe.”
She raised her eyebrows ironically.
“You believe !—you know you write every day.
And how soon
are you going to act Benedick to her Beatrice ?”
“Not so soon as I could wish,” he replied, putting the cup down
on the
table.
“You intend to hug your chains, I see,” she returned, leaning
her head back
against the cushion with a nestling movement with
which he had grown
familiar.
He did not reply, and she sat turning the rings on her finger
absently, and
looking into the red heart of the fire.
Strong wished to rise, make some excuse about work, and go,
but something
irresistibly impelled him to sit watching her.
The
The droop of her mouth, and her downcast eyes gave him an
odd uncomfortable
sensation. She moved at last with a half
sigh.
“I want you to see these,” she said at last, rising as she spoke
and moving
slowly towards the mantel-piece.
She drew an envelope from behind a little clock, and took some
photographs
from it.
“They have just come home. Do you think they are like
me ?” she asked,
leaning over her shoulder at Strong, who rose and
followed her to the
mantel-piece.
He took them from her and examined them one by one.
“Well, what do you think of them ?” she asked, softly. She
was standing
close to him, and as she bent over the photographs
her thick, wavy hair
touched his hand. Strong withdrew it
hurriedly.
“They are charming,” he said, with an effort, and laid them on
the
mantel-piece.
She gave a little, low laugh of half-caressing mockery.
“You are not going to ask for one ? What a good boy ! Now
see virtue
rewarded.”
She chose the prettiest, and held it towards him, raising her eyes
at the
same time.
They were brilliant with laughing mockery, and something else
which for one
sudden moment sent the blood to his heart. Her
rich hair fell low against
her faintly flushed cheek, the fragrant
folds of her dress brushed his
hand. For one second he stood
penetrated by her rare tantalising beauty
before an irresistible
impulse seized him, and he bent swiftly, drew her
to him, and
kissed her.
She drew back, but kept her eyes on his face, and then in one
brief moment,
with all his faculties quickened, intensified by the
swift
swift reaction from sudden passion, Strong read intuitively Barbara
Gilman’s history of the past few weeks.
The flash penetrated the obscure recesses of his own mind at
the same
moment, and in the pitiless glare he saw what had
before been hidden from
him—the secret of her influence.
It was miserably, ludicrously
simple after all. As he looked at
the woman before him, he recognised that
in spite of the fact that
accident had made her the honoured wife of a man
near his own
rank in life, she belonged, by nature, to a class which she
herself
probably held in virtuous contempt and horror.
It was one of those moments of mutual revelation when speech
is recognised
as a clumsy, unnecessary middleman between soul
and soul.
As she looked at him, Mrs. Gilman’s eyes slowly dilated.
Their expression
of half insolent triumph faded. Resentful anger
took its place. This boy,
who, lacking all the qualities that go to
the making of a man of the
world, had filled her with contemp-
tuous amusement—this boy, dared
to despise her.
Her forehead contracted into a sudden frown.
“What are you thinking about ?” she asked sharply, the words
involuntarily
escaping her lips.
Strong still kept his eyes on her face. He was pale. She
noticed that he
looked all at once years older.
“I think I had better not tell you,” he replied deliberately,
taking up his
hat.
She flushed.
“I thought you might have been considering an apology,”
she said with
dangerous coldness, “but I don’t think you
need trouble. No apology,
however abject, could atone for
your disgraceful conduct. Please go.” She
pointed to the
door.
Strong
Strong continued to look at her, without changing his expres-
sion.
“Nevertheless, I apologise,” he said quietly. “It is a man’s
role to offer
an apology, I believe.”
She drew a deep breath.
“I am sorry I cannot accept it. It is perhaps fair to warn you
that I never
conceal anything from my husband,” she added over
her shoulder, as Strong
moved towards the door.
He bowed, turning with his hand on the door-handle, and the
faintest smile
on his lips. As he walked down the hall, the smile
deepened unpleasantly,
and he wondered vaguely that he could at
the moment find her icily
virtuous demeanour so grimly comic.
She saw the smile, and her lips whitened. Her heart beat fast
for anger. He
was master of the situation. She, a woman of the
world, had been
out-matched and despised by a green boy ! The
photograph she had given him
lay on the mantel-piece. She
snatched it up with a sudden movement, tore
it again and again,
and flung it on to the fire.
She stood motionless a moment, gazing at the leaping flames,
her eyebrows
drawn together, then, in a frenzy of rage, she struck
her hand against the
marble side of the fireplace.
It was bruised, and the pain brought tears to her eyes, as she
put it to
her lips in a fury of self-pity. There was a step out-
side, the
door-handle was turned, and her husband entered.
“All in the dark, Bab !” he called cheerfully, stumbling against
a
chair.
She turned from the fire, and went swiftly to meet him, breaking
into
sobs.
Then, as he caught her in his arms with incoherent, wondering,
soothing
words, she clung to him, caressing him.
“Oh ! I wanted you so badly,” she murmured through her
tears.
tears. “You dear Jim—you dear Jim, don’t be angry, will you ?
I want
to tell you something—something dreadful !”
* * * * *
Two months later, Strong stood by the window in his
dismantled study,
reading a letter in the waning light of a
December afternoon.
The same packing-cases that had lumbered the room three
months before,
stood again on the skirting against the wall.
They were full of pictures
and books. The walls were bare ;
the tables without covers. A
travelling-rug and a half-filled
portmanteau lay on the floor. His face,
thrown into relief by the
light that entered through a side window, was
terribly altered. It
had the grey pallor that comes of anxiety and
suspense. There
were hollows in his cheeks, and the hand that held the
paper
nearer to the light, trembled like the hand of an old man. The
letter was from his sister, giving him particulars of his father’s
death.
It was incoherent, as words written under the strain of
grief usually are,
but the keynote of the letter was struck in the
stress she laid on the
fact that her father seemed to make no effort
to rally from his illness,
when he heard that Strong was giving up
the Crewford practice. “He was
weak before, of course,” she
wrote with unintentional cruelty, “but when
he heard the news,
he seemed utterly crushed and broken, and hardly spoke
again. I
did all I could to keep from him the reports we hear about you,
and the reason you are leaving Crewford, but ill news flies, Jack,
and we couldn’t help hearing the gossip. I have not heard from
Mollie,
since Major Kendall went down to Crewford a week ago.
Do write
plainly—but it doesn’t seem to matter now father has
gone.”
There was more of the letter, but he threw it down unfinished
with a
laugh.
“No,
“No, it really doesn’t matter,” he repeated half aloud, and
began to search
in a leather case which he took from his breast-
pocket for another letter
which he knew by heart. It was a
broken-hearted little note from Mollie.
He glanced through it,
crumpled the paper fiercely in his hand, and then
smoothed it
again to read the last sentence.
“We sail for India to-morrow. Father’s leave is over and he
insists on
taking me out with him ; we shall not come home for
years. I dare not
think of it—I hope I shall die before—”
Strong looked again at the date. She had sailed the previous
day.
He drew a chair up slowly before the empty table and
deliberately tore both
letters, Mollie’s and his sister’s into shreds.
He took great pains to
fold the paper exactly, and apparently gave
his whole mind to the task.
When they were reduced to a heap
of infinitesimal fragments, he rose,
opened the window, and
scattered them to the wind. The white scraps
whirled and eddied
over the bare rose bushes before the window, and
drifted like
flakes of snow on to the earth at their roots. When the last
flake was at rest, he closed the window softly, as though some one
lay dead in the room, turned the key in the lock, stooped over the
portmanteau a moment, and took from it something which he put
on the
table.
There were a few trifles still unpacked on the mantel-piece, and
he turned
to it and began to collect them mechanically and place
them neatly in the
packing-case. He surprised himself in the act,
and laughed aloud. What
would packing-cases and pictures
matter in a few moments ? He turned over
the last photograph
and glanced at it. It was of his sister. As he looked,
his left
hand slid over the table, feeling for what he had laid there. He
grasped it presently, and stood a full minute looking from it to the
portrait
portrait in his other hand. All at once with a groan, he flung the
pistol
from him, and at the same time dropped the photograph
savagely into the
packing case.
“Damn it !” he muttered. “A fellow mustn’t even die. He’s
got to live, and
to try and keep a sister he doesn’t care for out of
the workhouse.”
* * * * *
Five or six years later, Mrs. Gilman was driving down
Piccadilly. There was
a crush at the corner of Bond Street, and
the carriage drew up close to
the curb. As she sat idly watching
the passers-by, she saw with a start of
recognition Strong’s face
amongst them. He stopped at the edge of the
pavement, waiting
to cross, and in a moment their eyes met. Involuntarily,
with a
woman’s instinct, she glanced first at his clothes, as the best
source of information as to prosperity, or the reverse. He was as
well dressed as she remembered him at Crewford, years ago, and,
as she
noticed this, her heart began to beat fast with a sense of
resentful
anger. He was doing well then after all. His eyes
were still fixed upon
her, and she forced herself to meet his gaze.
Once more, as in the
drawing-room at the Court five years ago,
their long look was eloquent.
She saw before her a man pre-
maturely aged, his face lined, with work
perhaps, possibly with
suffering, though of that she could not guess. All
traces of the
boy had vanished ; it was a calm, inscrutable face, the lips
closely
pressed together, the eyes steady and quiet. He looked full at
her, calmly, indifferently even, and as she returned his glance
the
flame of anger flared more fiercely. She had robbed him of
life’s joys, it
was true, but he had conquered—she felt it.
Again he was master of
the situation. His look, too impersonal
to be even critical, scorched
her.
With a swift, violent movement she leant forward in the carriage.
“Drive
“Drive on,” she called savagely to the man, who started,
flicked the horses
suddenly, and they plunged forward, narrowly
escaping the wheels of a
hansom. Before she was whirled past
him, she saw for the second time in
their acquaintance the ghost
of a smile upon his lips. Her face was white
as she leant back
in the corner of the victoria, her hands clenched under
the
carriage rug.
The same evening she and her husband were in the private
sitting-room of
their hotel at Westminster. She was putting
some feathery branches of
chrysanthemum into tall jars about the
room. Two or three of the flowers,
flame-coloured, with long,
curling petals like the tentacles of some sea
creature, lay on the
table. These she presently took up, and fastened at
her waist in
the loose folds of her evening dress. The harmony of the
gorgeous
colour of the flowers with the gown she wore, gave the supreme
perfecting touch to her appearance.
Her husband sat in an arm-chair by the fire, a cigarette between
his
fingers, and watched her. She felt the admiration in his eyes
and turned
to him lingeringly, with the slow smile which never
failed of the effect
she intended, in whatever direction it was
bestowed.
He rose immediately, put his arm round her, and turned her
face up to
his.
“‘Pon my word, I believe you are prettier than when I married
you, Bab !”
he declared with an awkward laugh.
She touched his cheek with her hair, and stood a moment while
he stroked it
tenderly, then gently moved away.
“Middleton’s late,” he observed, with a glance at the clock.
“Yes,” she returned, carelessly, “but there’s really plenty of
time.”
“I heard
“I heard something about that fellow, you know who I mean—
Strong—to-day,” he said presently, after a short silence.
She half-turned her head, then paused, and reached for a fan on
the
mantel-piece.
“Yes ?” she said, indifferently.
“The brute’s doing better than he deserves, though that’s not
saying much,”
he went on, his face darkening. “He’s scraped
some sort of practice
together in some God-forsaken suburb—
Hackney or Clapton, I
believe—and his sister’s keeping house for
him.”
“How did you hear?” She was shielding her face from the
fire with the fan
she held.
“Dr. Danford was talking about him, curiously enough, after
dinner last
night. It seems one of his children met with an
accident—thrown
from a pony or something—and was taken into
Strong’s place.”
There was a pause while Gilman puffed in silence, a frown
gathering.
“Danford spoke enthusiastically of the chap,” he went on after
a moment,
knocking the ashes from his cigarette ; “says he’s
bound to come to the
front. He’s read a paper before some
medical congress or other that’s
considered pretty brilliant. Con-
found our smooth, oily,
nineteenth-century manner of doing
business like this,” he broke out
fiercely, ” What wouldn’t I
give to have put a bullet through him that
time, instead of being
driven to ruin his practice by making the place too
hot to hold
him! One can’t let one’s wife’s name get bandied about,
though.
One has to keep her out of it—that’s the worst of it,” he
added,
gloomily, “or else—”
“Why do you talk about him ! What does it matter ?” she
asked, vehemently,
rising and crushing the fan in her hand as she
spoke.
spoke. How she hated the man ! The sound of his name
brought vividly before
her the quiet, indifferent glance he had
that morning bestowed upon her.
It roused once more the fury
of impotent anger with which she recognised
her utter powerless-
ness to affect him. And Jim, of course, blundering
idiot that
he was, must needs remind her. “I hate the subject,” she
exclaimed.
She was trembling, and her voice shook.
Her husband was on his feet in a moment.
“What a fool I am !” he said, seizing her hand. “Poor little
girl, how
could I remind you ! You are too good for me, Bab,”
he murmured tenderly,
bending over her. “I ought to have
realised what a good woman feels when a
brute like that dares to
insult her. But we’ll never speak of it again,
dear.”
She lifted her face for his kiss, and then gently disengaged her-
self as a
man’s voice became audible outside.
As she turned her head, an almost imperceptible smile curled
her lip, and
she laid her hand for one second against the front of
her low gown, where
she felt the edge of a stiff envelope, and
heard its faint rustle.
The door opened at the moment, and, for a breathing space,
the eyes of the
man who entered sought and met hers.
“Hullo, Middleton ! you’re late,” Gilman exclaimed. “We
shall have to start
at once if we’re going to hear the overture.
Bab and I had given you up,
and were just settling down to a
Darby and Joan evening, weren’t we, Bab
?”
MLA citation:
Syrett, Netta. “Far Above Rubies.” The Yellow Book, vol. 12, January 1897, pp. 250-272. Yellow Book Digital Edition, edited by Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2020. https://1890s.ca/YBV12_syrett_far/