<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0064" id="link2H_4_0064"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XXV. </h2>
<p>Six strides of the horse into the darkness and Kate's hysteria was gone.
She had been lost to herself the whole day-through, and now she possessed
herself again. She grew quiet and silent, and even solemn. But Pete
rattled on with cheerful talk about the day's doings. At the doors of the
houses on the road as they passed, people were standing in the half-light
to wave them salutations, and Pete sent back his answers in shouts and
laughter. Turning the bridge they saw a little group at the porch of the
"Ginger."</p>
<p>"There's company waiting for us yonder," said Pete, giving the mare a
touch of the whip.</p>
<p>"Let us get on," said Kate in a nervous whisper.</p>
<p>"Aw, let's be neighbourly, you know," said Pete. "It wouldn't be dacent to
disappoint people at all. We'll hawl up for a minute just, and hoof up the
time at a gallop. Woa, lass, woa, mare, woa, bogh!"</p>
<p>As the gig drew up at the inn door, a voice out of the porch cried, "Joy
to you, Capt'n, and joy to your lady, and long life and prosperity to you
both, and may the Lord give you children and health and happiness to rear
them, and may you see your children's children, and may they call you
blessed."</p>
<p>"Glasses round. Mrs. Kelly," shouted Pete.</p>
<p>"Go on, please," said Kate in a fretful whisper, and she tugged at Pete's
sleeve.</p>
<p>The stars came out; the moon gave a peep; the late hay of the Curragh sent
a sweet odour through the night. Kate shuddered and Pete covered her
shoulders with a rug. Then he began to sing snatches. He sang bits of all
the songs that had been sung that night, but kept coming back at intervals
to an old Manx ditty which begins—</p>
<p>"Little red bird of the black turf ground,<br/>
Where did you sleep last night?"<br/></p>
<p>Thus he sang like a great boy as he went rolling down the dark road, and
Kate sat by his side and trembled.</p>
<p>They came to the town, rattled down the Parliament Street, passed the
Court-house under the trees, turned the sharp angle by the market-place,
and drew up at Elm Cottage in the corner.</p>
<p>"Home at last," cried Pete, and he leapt to the ground.</p>
<p>A dog began to bark inside the house. "D'ye hear him?" said Pete. "That's
the master in charge."</p>
<p>The porch door was opened, and a comfortable-looking woman in a widow's
cap came out with a lighted candle shaded by her hand.</p>
<p>"And this is your housekeeper, Mrs. Gorry," said Pete.</p>
<p>Kate did not answer. Her eyes had been fixed in a rigid stare on the
hind-quarters of the horse, which were steaming in the light of the lamps.
Pete lifted her down as he had lifted her up. Then Mrs. Gorry took her by
the hand, and saying, "Mind the step, ma'am—this way, ma'am," led
her through the gate and along the garden path, and up to the porch. The
porch opened on a square hall, furnished as a sitting-room. A fire was
burning, a lamp was lit, the table was laid for supper, and the place was
warm and cosy.</p>
<p>"<i>There!</i> What d'ye say to <i>that</i>?" cried Pete, coming behind
with the whip in his hand.</p>
<p>Kate looked around; she did not speak; her eyes began to fill.</p>
<p>"Isn't it fit for a Dempster's lady?" said Pete, sweeping the whip-handle
round the room like a showman.</p>
<p>Kate could bear no more. She sank into a chair and burst into a fit of
tears. Pete's glowing face dropped in an instant.</p>
<p>"Dear heart alive, darling, what is it?" he said. "My poor girl, what's
troubling you at all? Tell me, now—tell me, bogh, tell me."</p>
<p>"It's nothing, Pete, nothing. Don't ask me," said Kate. But still she
sobbed as if her heart would break.</p>
<p>Pete stood a moment by her side, smoothing her arm with his hand. Then he
said, with a crack and a quaver in his great voice, "It <i>is</i> hard for
a girl, I know that, to lave father and mother and every one and
everything that's been sweet and dear to her since she was a child, and to
come to the house of her husband and say, 'The past has been very good to
me; but still and for all, I'm for trusting the future to you.' It's hard,
darling; I know it's hard."</p>
<p>"Oh, leave me! leave me!" cried Kate, still weeping.</p>
<p>Pete brushed his sleeve across his eyes, and said, "Take her upstairs,
Mrs. Gorry, while I'm putting up the mare at the 'Saddle.'"</p>
<p>Then he whistled to the dog, which had been watching him from the
hearthrug, and went out of the house. The handle of the whip dragged after
him along the floor.</p>
<p>Mrs. Gorry, full of trouble, took Kate to her room. Would she not eat her
supper? Then salts were good for headache-should she bring a bottle from
her box? After many fruitless inquiries and nervous protestations, the
good soul bade Kate good-night and left her.</p>
<p>Being alone, Kate broke into yet wilder paroxysms of weeping. The
storm-cloud which had been gathering had burst at last. It seemed as if
the whole weight of the day had been deferred until then. The piled-up
hopes of weeks had waited for that hour, to be cast down in the sight of
her own eyes. It was all over. The fight with Fate was done, and the
frantic merriment with which she had kept down her sense of the place
where the blind struggle had left her made the sick recoil more bitter.</p>
<p>She thought of Philip, and her trouble began to moderate. Somewhere out of
the uncrushed part of her womanhood there came one flicker of womanly
pride to comfort her. She saw Philip at last from the point of revenge. He
loved her; he would never cease to love her. Do what he might to banish
the thought of her, she would be with him always; the more surely with
him, the more reproachfully and unattainably, because she would be the
wife of another man. If he could put her away from him in the daytime, and
in the presence of those worldly aims for which he had sacrificed her,
when night came he would be able to put her away no more. He would never
sleep but he would see her. In every dream he would stretch out his arms
to her, but she would not be there, and he would awake with sobs and in
torment. There was a real joy in this thought, although it tore her heart
so terribly.</p>
<p>She got strength from the cruel comforting, and Mrs. Gorry in the room
below, listening intently, heard her crying cease. With her face still
shut in both her hands, she was telling herself that she had nothing to
reproach herself with; that she could not have acted differently; that she
had not really made this marriage; that she had only submitted to it,
being swept along by the pitiless tide, which was her father, and Pete,
and everybody. She was telling herself, too, that, after all, she had done
well. Here she lay in close harbour from the fierce storm which had
threatened her. She was safe, she was at peace.</p>
<p>The room lay still. The night was very quiet within those walls. Kate drew
down her hands and looked about her. The fire was burning gently, and
warming her foot on the sheepskin rug that lay in front of it. A lamp
burned low on a table behind her chair. At one side there was a wardrobe
of the shape of an old press, but with a tall mirror in the door; on the
other side there was the bed, with the pink curtains hanging like a tent.
The place had a strange look of familiarity. It seemed as if she had known
it all her life. She rose to look around, and then the inner sense leapt
to the outer vision, and she saw how it was. The room was a reproduction
of her own bedroom at home, only newer and more luxurious. It was almost
as if some ghost of herself had been there while she slept—as if her
own hand had done everything in a dream of her girlhood wherein common
things had become grand.</p>
<p>Kate's eyes began to fill afresh, and she turned to take off her cloak. As
she did so, she saw something on the dressing-table with a label attached
to it. She took it up. It was a little mirror, a handglass like her own
old one, only framed in ivory, and the writing on the label ran—</p>
<p>Insted of The one that is bruk with fond Luv to Kirry.<br/>
<br/>
peat.<br/></p>
<p>Her heart was now beating furiously. A flood of feeling had rushed over
her. She dropped the glass as if it stung her fingers. With both hands she
covered her face. Everything in the room seemed to be accusing her.
Hitherto she had thought only of Philip. Now for the first time she
thought of Pete.</p>
<p>She had wronged him—deeply, awfully, beyond atonement or hope of
forgiveness. He loved her; he had married her; he had brought her to his
home, to this harbour of safety, and she had deceived and betrayed him—she
had suffered herself to be married to him while still loving another man.</p>
<p>A sudden faintness seized her. She grew dizzy and almost fell. A more
terrible memory had come behind. The thought was like ravens flapping
their black wings on her brain. She felt her temples beating against her
hands. They seemed to be sucking the life out of her heart.</p>
<p>Just then the voice of Pete came beating up the echoes between the house
and the chapel beyond the garden—</p>
<p>"Little red bird of the black turf ground,<br/>
Where did you sleep last night?"<br/></p>
<p>She heard him open the garden gate, clash it back, come up the path with
an eager step, shut the door of the house and chain it on the inside. Then
she heard his deep voice speaking below.</p>
<p>"Better now, Mrs. Gorry?"</p>
<p>"Aw, better, sir, yes, and quiet enough this ten minutes."</p>
<p>"Give her time, the bogh! Be aisy with the like, be aisy."</p>
<p>Presently she heard him send off Mrs. Gorry for the night, saying he
should want no supper, and should be going to bed soon. Then the house
became quiet, and the smell of tobacco smoke came floating up the stairs.</p>
<p>Kate's hot breath on her hands grew damp against her face. She felt
herself swooning, and she caught hold of the mantelpiece.</p>
<p>"It cannot be," she thought. "He must not come. I will go down to him and
say, 'Pete, forgive me, I am really the wife of another.'"</p>
<p>Then she would tell him everything. Yes, she would confess all now. Oh,
she would not be afraid. His love was great. He would do what she wished.</p>
<p>She made one step towards the door, and was pulled up as by a curb. Pete
would say, "Do you mean that you have been using me as a cloak? Do you ask
me to live in this house, side by side with you, and let no one suspect
that we are apart? Then why did you not ask me yesterday? Why do you ask
me to-day, when it is too late to choose?"</p>
<p>No, she could not confess. If confession had been difficult yesterday, it
was a thousand times more difficult to-day, and it would be a thousand
thousand times more difficult tomorrow.</p>
<p>Kate caught up the cloak she had thrown aside. She must go away. Anywhere,
anywhere, no matter where. That was the one thing left to her—the
only escape from the wild tangle of dread and pain. Pete was in the hall;
there must be a way out at the back; she would find it.</p>
<p>She lowered the lamp, and turned the handle of the door. Then she saw a
light moving on the landing, and heard a soft step on the stairs. It was
Pete, with a candle, coming up in his stockinged feet. He stopped midway,
as if he heard the click of the latch, and then went noiselessly down
again.</p>
<p>Kate closed the door. She would not go. If she left the house that night
she would cover Pete with suspicion and disgrace. The true secret would
never be known; the real offender would never suffer; but the finger of
scorn would be raised at the one man who had sheltered and shielded her,
and he would die of humiliation and blind self-reproach.</p>
<p>This reflection restrained her for the moment, and when the stress of it
was spent she was mastered by a fear that was far more terrible. For good
or for all she was now married to Pete, and he had the rights of a
husband. He had a right to come to her, and he <i>would</i> come. It was
inevitable; it had to be. No boy or girl love now, no wooing, no dallying,
no denying, but a grim reality of life—a reality that comes to every
woman who is married to a man. She was married to Pete. In the eye of the
world, in the eye of the law, she was his, and to fly from him was
impossible.</p>
<p>She must remain. God himself had willed it As for the shame of her former
relation to Philip, it was her own secret. God alone knew of it, and He
would keep it safe. It was the dark chamber of her heart which God only
could unlock. He would never unlock it until the Day of Judgment, and then
Philip would be standing by her side, and she would cast it back upon him,
and say, "His, not mine, O God," and the Great Judge of all would judge
between them.</p>
<p>But she began to cry again, like a child in the dark. As she threw off her
cloak a second time, her dress crinkled, and she looked down at it and
remembered that it was her wedding-dress. Then she looked around at the
room, and remembered that it was her wedding chamber. She remembered how
she had dreamt of coming in her bridal dress to her bridal room—proud,
afraid, tingling with love, blushing with joy, whispering to herself,
"This is for me—and this—and this. <i>He</i> has given it, for
he loves me and I love him, and he is mine and I am his, and he is my love
and my lord, and he is coming to—"</p>
<p>There was a gentle knocking at the door. It made her flesh creep. The
knock came again. It went shrieking through and through her.</p>
<p>"Kirry," whispered a voice from without.</p>
<p>She did not stir.</p>
<p>"It's only Pete."</p>
<p>She neither spoke nor moved.</p>
<p>There was silence for a moment, and then, half nervously, half jovially,
half in laughter, half with emotion as if the heart outside was
palpitating, the voice came again, "I'm coming in, darling!"</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PART" id="link2H_PART___"></SPAN></p>
<h2> PART IV. MAN AND WIFE. </h2>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />