Two Studies
By Mrs. Murray Hickson
I—At the Cross Roads
” For to no man is it given to understand a woman, nor to
any woman
to understand a man.”
THE boat from Dieppe had just arrived, and the passengers
were pushing from
the decks on to the quay. A tall
woman, wrapped in a handsome mantle
trimmed with sables,
waited for her turn to cross the gangway. Her eyes,
wandering
restlessly over the little crowd of spectators that had
assembled to
watch for the arrival of the boat, met those of a man who
pressed
into the throng towards her. She started, and a sudden flush,
beautiful but transitory, touched her face into a youthfulness
which
it did not otherwise possess. The man took off his hat
in salute, and,
holding it above his head, thrust forward to the
foot of the gangway. He
kept his eyes fastened upon her face ;
and the expression of his own, in
spite of the smile on his lips,
was doubtful and anxious. She returned his
look gravely, yet
with a certain tenderness in her glance. Beckoning to
the maid
who followed her, she slipped adroitly before a party of
staggering
sea-sick tourists, and made her way on to the quay.
Their
Their hands met in a pressure, which, on his part, was both
close and
lingering.
“I could not help it,” he said. “You will forgive me for
coming ? ”
She smiled a little. “But I meant to stay all night at the
hotel. I am
tired. My maid is always ill on the crossing,
so I wrote from Paris, and
ordered rooms and dinner to be ready
for us.”
” Yes, so they told me at the hotel. I must go up to town
this evening, but
I could not wait until to-morrow to see you.”
He said the last words under
his breath. The maid had gone
to pass the luggage through the
custom-house. Her mistress
sat down on a bench inside the waiting-room.
She looked up at
the man beside her, and sighed a little.
” I am glad that you came,” she said gently.
” You got my letter ? ”
” Yes.”
The colour had faded from her face, the light from her eyes.
She rose and
turned towards the door.
“It is hardly necessary for us to wait here,” she said. “Let
us go on to
the hotel. Mary can follow with the luggage.”
They walked together side by side ; he, trying to shelter her
from the
driving rain, she, heedless of the present, shrinking from
what was to
come with an unavailing dread.
The dull October afternoon was closing in ; already the gas
was lit in the
sitting-room into which they were shown. She
reached up to it and turned
down the glaring flame till it burned
low and dim. The room was cheerless
and dreary : on one side a
long black horsehair-covered sofa ; on the
other a chiffonier, with
coloured bead mats and models of flowers in wax
upon it. A
square table, covered with a red cloth, stood in the middle of
the
room,
room, and on it was a large battered tea-tray. A waiter brought
in a teapot
and some hot water, stirred the fire into a blaze, and
retired, shutting
the door carefully behind him.
The woman threw off her cloak, and sat down beside the table.
She took up
the heavy metal teapot and poised it in her slender
hand.
” Will you have some tea ? ” she said to her companion.
He was standing beside her, and she looked at him as she
spoke. Something
in the strained expression of his face shook her
hardly-held composure
beyond the power of control. Her hands
trembled, and setting the teapot
down again unsteadily, she rose
to her feet and confronted him. Her own
face was as pale as his ;
their eyes looked into each other’s, his
seeking, hers evading, a
solution to the problem which confronted them.
“For God’s sake,” said the man, “don’t let us meet like this.
Anything is
better than aloofness between us two. If you cannot
forgive me, say so ; I
deserve it.” He stretched out his hands to
her as he spoke ; but she,
shivering a little, drew back from his
touch.
” If it were only that,” she said, “the matter would be simple
enough.
Forgive you ! I don’t feel—at least the soul of me
doesn’t—that I have much to forgive. When one demands an
impossibility, one should not complain of failure.”
He looked bewildered. ” I don’t think I understand,” he said
gently. “Sit
down here and explain what you mean, and I will
try to see the matter
through your eyes. It looks black enough
now through mine—I can
imagine it to be unpardonable in yours,”
he added bitterly. She sat down
obediently upon the sofa. He
was going to take his place beside her, but
hesitated and finally
drew a chair opposite.
She looked at him despairingly. “I shall never make you
understand,”
understand,” she said. ” I don’t understand myself. You will
have to give
me time.”
” Perhaps, after keeping silence so long, I ought never to have
told you.
Such vulgar infidelities are better left unrevealed.”
She was silent. Her hands, which she held clenched in her lap,
were very
cold, and presently she fell to rubbing them softly one
over the other.
The man set his lips closer together ; he had
often so chafed her hands
for her, and he longed to do so now. It
seemed monstrous that, when at
last their love was free and
admissible, they two should feel apart the
one from the other.
Yet he recognised, with dreary assent, that such was
the case.
He regretted the sense of honour which had goaded him, ere he
and she should begin their new life together, into an absolute
frankness about the past. And yet did he regret it ? He doubted
his power
to possess his soul in secret, away from hers, and, if that
were so,
better a confession now than later, when their union would
be irrevocable.
He looked once more at the little hands, motion-
less again in her lap,
and longed to take them in his own. But
his heart failed him. It was the
old trouble, the old difficulty ;
the difference of outlook between the
sexes. A pity, he thought,
that this modern woman whom he loved, had so
imbued him with
her modern views that he had been unable to keep his own
counsel. And yet, even if her gospel of equality separated them,
he
felt it to be, after all, a true one. He would not have forgiven
her such
a fault as he had confessed, and for which, manlike, he
expected
absolution. But there the difference of sex came in,
while, when absolute
confidence only was demanded, he felt
that she had an equal right to it
with himself. After all, she
expected, and he had given, only what was her
due. If it
ruined both their lives so much the worse for them. He won-
dered—would it ?
” I shall
” I shall never make you understand,” she repeated, breaking a
silence
which both felt unendurable. ” But try to be patient with
me. It is not
that I do not love you ; at least I think not. It
is not that I do not
forgive you. It seems to me that I need
your forgiveness more than you
need mine. But I feel that
we have both failed, and that the failure has
soiled and spoilt our
love.” She looked at him piteously.
” Yes ? ” he said. ” Go on.”
” All these years that we have loved one another and hidden it
from the
world, I thought our love was a beautiful thing, good for
us both. Though
I could not be your wife, I imagined that I
was everything else you needed
: your friend, your comrade, your
very heart and life. As your love raised
and made me a better
woman, so I believed that my love made you a better
man.”
He was leaning forward in his chair ; a puzzled frown upon his
forehead.
” It did,” he said ; ” it does. Go on.”
” Then, when I heard at last that he was dead, and that we
were
free—you and I, to love and to marry—it seemed as if the
joy
would kill me. I wrote to you—you know what I wrote.
And then your
letter. . . . Perhaps I was over-sensitive ; perhaps
it came at the wrong
moment——”
She stopped, and he rose to his feet.
” Never mind,” he said. ” Don’t say any more ; it hurts
you. You can’t get
over it, and no wonder. I despise myself,
and I am going.”
She put out her hands to stop him.
“Wait,” she said. ” Indeed—indeed, you do not understand.”
She rose
also, and stood before him. “Oh ! ” she went on, with
shaking lips, ” but
you must understand, you must. I see—I
suppose that I expected too much. All that hopeless waiting—
all
all those long years—and then the constant strain and restlessness
of it all. Don’t think I blame you—much. I think I com-
prehend. It
is not that, though that hurts me too ; but I
see now that the whole thing
has been a horrible mistake from
the first. It was insane pride that made
me so sure your welfare
lay in my hands. I was dragging you down, not, as
I imagined,
helping you to be what I believed you were. I was selfish ; I
thought more of myself than I did of you——”
” If that is your opinion of yourself,” he interrupted bitterly,
” what
must you think of me ? I—who took all you could give
to me, and
then had not the manhood to keep out of vulgar
dissipation, nor the pluck
to hold my tongue about it and save
you the pain and humiliation of the
knowledge.”
Suddenly she stretched out her hands to him.
” Oh, no ! not that ! ” she said, with a sob ; ” don’t say that.
You were
right to tell me.”
He took her hands in his, and, almost timidly, drew her
towards him.
” I expected more than a man is capable of; it is my fault. I
dragged you
down,” she repeated, insistently.
“That is not true, and you know it,” he answered. “The
fault was mine,
but——”
He drew her closer. ” Can’t you forgive it ? ” he whispered.
” You were not
my wife—I had no hope of ever winning you—
yet I could give
my love to no one else. My heart has never
been disloyal to you for a
moment, and——” he hesitated.
” There are so few who would
have done otherwise,” he added,
hurriedly.
She still held herself braced away from his gentle compulsion.
” I—I
suppose so,” she said, under her breath.
” And now—now, when at last you will be my own, surely
you
you could not doubt me ? It would be horrible, impossible.”
His voice
dropped again into a murmur.
” Can’t you forgive me—and forget ? ”
There was a pause. His eyes devoured her face.
” Give me time,” she said. ” I don’t think we see it in
the same light ;
and if you do not understand I cannot explain
myself. But give me time, I
beg of you.”
* * * * *
An hour afterwards the maid came in, and found her mistress
sitting over
the dying fire. The girl turned up the gas and, in
the sudden glare, the
dreary hotel sitting-room looked more
tawdry and commonplace than ever.
The tablecover was pulled
awry ; the curtains, dragged across the window,
were ragged and
dirty ; under the maid’s feet, as she crossed the floor,
some bits
of scattered coal crunched uncomfortably. She knelt on the
hearth-rug and raked the ashes together, trying to rekindle a
blaze. Her
mistress looked on apathetically.
” That is how I feel,” she said to herself. ” It is all dead now ;
he will
never understand it ; but that is how I feel. If it had
been before his
love for me—but now I know I was no help to him,
only a hindrance,
and all the best of me seems cold and numb.”
The maid rose from her knees ; a tiny flame was flickering in
the grate.
She went out again, and left her mistress sitting there
before the
reviving fire.
II—A Vigil
WHEN ten o’clock struck she moved uneasily in her chair.
The dainty Dresden
china timepiece on the overmantel
had been a wedding present, and, as the
soft notes of the hour
broke
broke upon the silence, her thoughts turned swiftly into memories.
The
years had been few and short, yet the changes they had
brought, though
subtle, were unmistakable. There was nothing
tangible, nothing of which
she could complain, and yet, for the
last few months, she had known, in a
vague, puzzled way, that
trouble was closing in upon her. The nature of
that trouble she
had not faced or analysed ; she put all definition away
for as long
as might be possible.
To-night she had not felt any special uneasiness. He might
have stayed at
the club, or been detained in the City—such delays
had happened
frequently of late, and had not seemed to her of
much moment. She had
grown accustomed to the lack of con-
sideration which made him neglect to
send her a telegram, but
now the chiming of the clock caught her
attention, and, of a
sudden, her mind awoke, expanding to receive the
impression of
impending disturbance. There was no particular reason for
this
impression, only a certainty of misfortune which she felt advancing
towards her in the coming hours.
She rose and crossed the hall into the dining-room. She had
waited for him
until half-past eight, and then had dined alone,
after which the table was
relaid in readiness for his return. That
morning, when he left the house,
he had kissed her with almost
his old tenderness, and she wanted to
express her gratitude for that
kiss. She wandered round the table,
rearranging the silver with
solicitous fingers. It was still just possible
that he had not dined
in town ; his wife hoped not. He would be sure to
catch the
10.15 down train—never since their marriage had he been
later
—his supper should be a cosy meal. There were oysters in the
house, and she went into the kitchen to see that they were
opened.
The kitchen was warm and comfortable. She stood for a few
minutes,
minutes, her foot upon the fender, chatting to the servants ; they
had been
with her since her marriage, and they loved and cared for
her.
” Your master won’t be home till past eleven,” she said ; ” when
you have
laid the supper you can go to bed. I will wait upon him
myself.” She
turned to leave the kitchen, but lingered for a
moment in the red glow of
the fire. Her own part of the house
was so still and lonely ; here, at any
rate, was companionship and
a refuge from haunting fancies. Her maid
dragged forward a chair,
but she shook her head, smiling.
” I have so much to do, and my book is interesting,” she said,
as she
opened the door. It swung behind her, and the cook, knife
in hand, paused
to lift her eyes and meet those of her fellow-servant.
Neither of the
women said a word. They heard the drawing-room
door shut softly. The maid
sat down again beside the hearth, and
the cook went on with her work.
* * * * *
At a quarter to eleven the servants fastened the doors and went
upstairs to
bed. The silence settled down again. Now and then
she heard the regular
beat of hoofs upon the road as a carriage
passed the windows ; a wind got
up and flicked the frozen snow
against the panes ; the fire burned clear
and bright, with a regular
throb of flame or the occasional splutter and
crackle of a log.
At eleven o’clock she laid her open book upon the table, and
went out into
the hall. It was very cold, and she shivered a little
as she opened the
door and looked out upon the night. The air
was keen and frosty, a frail
moon, its edges veiled by intermittent
cloud, rode in the sky, and the
stars snapped as though the
sharpened atmosphere struck sparks from their
steady shining.
The road lay white and deserted, here and there a light
shone
from the neighbouring houses, but for the most part the village
had
had already gone to sleep. Presently, as she stood there, the
distant sound
of a train sweeping through the country caught her
listening ears. It
paused, then broke again upon the silence. She
smiled a little and went
back into the house, shutting the door
behind her. The train was late, but
it had come at last ; in ten
minutes he would be here. There was no use in
sitting down
again during those ten short minutes ; she wanted to be
ready,
when his step rang on the hard road, to open the door immediately.
Meantime she trod softly about the drawing-room, shifting the
ornaments upon the overmantel a shade to right or left, and ex-
amining
the pretty things upon her silver table with abstracted,
unremarking eyes.
For many weeks the rift between her and her husband had
been widening.
To-day, by his unaccustomed tenderness, he had
re-awakened hers, and she
longed for him as she had longed for
him in the dead days which seemed so
far away. But the minutes
slipped into half an hour, and still he did not
come. Then fear
crept into her heart, and her imagination—always
vivid—left now
alone in the solitude of the night, played havoc
with her reason.
As the quarters struck slowly from the church clock in
the village,
and her own little timepiece chimed in musical response,
terror
and foreboding shook her spirit in their grip. She sat down again
before the fire, and tried to reason out some plausible excuse for
this unusual delay. No business that she was able to think of
could thus
detain her husband, nor had she ever known him to remain
away a whole
night without due notice given. He was often late
for dinner—that
signified nothing. Once or twice lately he had
come down by this last
train ; but even then he had prepared her
for his absence. Something very
grave, very unusual, must have
happened.
She lifted her head, and bent forward to rearrange the logs upon
the
the hearth. In so doing she dropped the poker, which fell with a
clash into
the fender, and the loud noise startled the echoes of the
sleeping house,
awaking in her mind a fresh train of thought. She
imagined him
ill—hurt—in some danger. And it was impossible
at this hour
to go to him or to be of any use. Besides, where
could she find him, how
penetrate the mystery and terror of this
long uncertainty ?
She went back into the hall and consulted a time-table. At
four o’clock a
train reached Wensbury ; if he came by that and
walked (he must walk,
since no cab would be available), he might
get home about five o’clock. If
he was unhurt she would know
—she would feel—— If he
did not come she must herself start
early in the morning and go up to town
to make inquiries.
Perhaps he had been run over in the streets, and she
would find
him in one of the hospitals. He might not be seriously hurt,
and
yet, again, if not seriously hurt why had no message come to her ?
Perhaps he was dead, and she—and she a widow. Her fingers
closed convulsively over the time-table in her hand, and she walked
back
to her seat before the fire, leaving the door into the hall open
behind
her. It was one o’clock now : hours must pass, even if he
came to
Wensbury, before this weight of suspense could be lifted
from her heart.
And what if he never came ? What if she never
saw him again alive ? She
considered that, if an accident only
had detained him—an accident
from which he should recover—she
could be glad and thankful.
Perhaps the pain, and her care,
might bring them once more together. And
if not, better even
death than another explanation which had flashed
across the back-
ground of her brain, to be dismissed with horror and
self-loathing.
If only there had been a reason for their slipping away
from one
another she could have borne it better. The very vagueness and
unreality of the gulf between them frightened her, and rendered
her
her more inarticulate. She had suffered and been still ; now, her
faculties
sharpened by suspense, she endured all the accumulated
pain of the last
two years fused and mingled with the fancies, fear,
and loneliness of the
moment.
Sometimes she paced the room ; sometimes, at the sound of a
chance footstep
or the rising of the wind, she opened the hall door
and stared out into
the night. Once she went upstairs to wake
the servants, but, recollecting
herself, came back and dropped once
more into the big chair by the fire.
With the self-torture of a high-strung brain she could formulate
no
explanations save the worst, until, as the hours wore on, mental
torment
brought with it the consequent relief of numbness.
* * * * *
When he came into the drawing-room the following evening
she rose from her
seat and welcomed him as usual. Her face was
drawn and white, but her
voice did not falter, and her eyes met
his unflinchingly.
He stood upon the hearth-rug before the fire, talking for a few
moments
carelessly, till a strained silence fell between them. He
took out his
watch and glanced at it, then, turning restlessly,
pushed the blazing logs
together with his foot.
” You got my letter ? I was sorry not to be home last night.
I m afraid,
little woman, that you waited dinner for me, but it was
too late to send
you a telegram.”
” Yes, your letter came this morning,” she said, apathetically.
The
reaction from last night’s tension had brought with it a strange
indifference. She felt that his presence meant nothing to her now,
that
his absence would have meant even less. Her heart was frozen.
Active pain
would have been better than this paralysis, and she
longed to feel, but
could not do so. He faced her once more ; his
glance met hers uneasily.
“You
” You understand how it was ? I was unable to help it,” he
said, his voice
stumbling a little as he spoke. She lifted her
head.
” Yes,” she said, ” I understand.”
He looked at her in silence, then picking up a paper, unfolded it
and began
to read. She shivered a little, and leant nearer to the
fire. Her thoughts
wandered vaguely. She knew that he had
lied to her, but she did not care.
The stealthy sorrow of her
married life, after stalking her spirit for a
couple of years, had
sprung upon her in the space of time which it took
her to read
his letter. Instinct guided her to the truth, and there it
left her.
The rest was a tangle, and, for the moment, she cared only for
the
physical comfort of apathy and quiescence.
She stretched out her cold hands to the blaze, while her husband
watched
her furtively from behind his newspaper.
The deep tones of the village clock, striking the half-hour, broke
upon the
silence ; and a moment later the timepiece on the mantel-
shelf chimed an
echoing response.
MLA citation:
Hickson, Mrs. Murray [Mabel Greenhow Kitcat]. “Two Studies.” The Yellow Book, vol. 5, April 1895, pp. 104-116. Yellow Book Digital Edition, edited by Dennis Denisoff and Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2010-2014. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. https://1890s.ca/YBV5_hickson_two/