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With a little moan of weakness she stumbled to the door, holding to the end of the bed, the back of a chair, the handle of the door in her uncertain progress.
As soon as she heard the key turned, Janet entered and found Sally in her night-dress, a white ghost of what she was, swinging unsteadily before her--so a dead body, swung from a gallows, eddies in a lifting wind.
"Sally!" she exclaimed.
Sally stared at her. Her dry lips half-parted to make Janet's name.
Her eyes, burnt out in the deep black hollows, flickered with a light of thankful recognition. Then she swung forward, a dead weight on to Janet's shoulder.
For a moment, Janet held her there, looking over the shoulders that crumbled against her thin breast, at the disordered room before her.
She saw the crusts of bread, she saw the bed-clothes hanging to the floor. She gazed down at the unkempt head of hair that dragged lifelessly on her shoulder, and her eyes were wide in bewildered amazement.
"Great G.o.d!" she exclaimed.
And she realized how inadequate that was.
CHAPTER II
For three weeks Janet stayed with her, sleeping with her, arms tight-locked about her yielding body as they had often slept together in the days at Kew. With her own hands, she fed her; in the warmth of her big, generous heart, she nursed her back to life, as you revive some little bird, starved and cold, in the heat of your two hands.
During the first fortnight, she asked no questions. What had happened was obvious. She learnt from the people on the second floor in the office of the railway company that Traill had left his rooms; but under what circ.u.mstances and why, she made no inquiries. Brought face to face with the exigencies in the lives of others, there is a fund of common sense to be found in the character of the revolutionary woman. That Janet Hallard was an artist, now with a studio of sorts of her own, says nothing for her temperament and less for her art.
She had no conception of the higher life, and to her mind the inner mysticism was a jumble of confused nonsense--the blind leading the blind, for whom the ultimate ditch was a b.a.s.t.a.r.d theosophy. As a matter of fact, Janet had no mean ideas of design; but they were vigorous and, for her living, she had to struggle against the overwhelming sentimentalism of the _nouveau_ art.
In dealing with Sally then, a subject needing tact, common sense and an unyielding strength of purpose, she was more than eminently fitted to save her from the edge of the precipice towards which she had found her so blindly stumbling. It was just such a moment as when one sees one's dearest friend walking blindly to the verge of an abyss and knows that too sudden a cry, too swift a movement to save them, may plunge their reckless body for ever into eternity. In this moment, Janet kept her wits. With infinite care, with infinite tenderness, never weakening to the importunate demands that were made of her, giving up her work, giving up every other interest that she had, she slowly drew Sally back into the steady current of existence; saw day by day the life come tardily again into the bloodless cheeks, and watched the smearing shadows beneath the hollow eyes as they disappeared.
Then, at the end of a fortnight, she learnt in quavering sentences from Sally's lips, trembling as they told it, the story of her desertion.
"You shouldn't have followed him, Sally," she whispered gently at its conclusion.
"I know I shouldn't--I know I shouldn't. And so I know of course he isn't to blame. It's that woman--his sister. I always knew she hated me--knew it! She used to look at me like you look at soiled things in a shop! She pointed me out to him in the theatre. I can guess the things she said. She brought the other--the other one to see him.
Oh, wasn't it cunning of her? Mustn't she be a brute! Think what she's done to me! Look how wretched she's made my life! And she's got every single thing she can want. Oh, I don't wonder that people have their doubts about this marvellous mercy of G.o.d! I don't see any mercy in what's happened to me. I never saw any mercy in what happened to father; and yet he only did what he ought to have done."
The excitement was rising within her--a steady torrent lifting to the flood. Janet watched its progress steadily in her eyes. When it reached this point, she adroitly changed the current of her thoughts.
"What did your father do?" she asked with interest.
Sally looked up and the expression in her eyes changed.
"Have I never told you?"
"No."
"He consecrated too much wine one Easter Sunday where he was taking a _loc.u.m tenens_--and afterwards, when he had to drink it--it went to his head."
She told it so seriously that Janet was driven to choke the rush of laughter rising within her.
"Why did he have to drink it?" she asked.
"They have to. Consecrated wine mustn't be kept."
"But why not? Does it go bad?"
"Janet! No--but, don't you see?--they do keep it in the Roman Catholic Church--on the altar--that's why the little red lamp is always burning in front. That's why the people bow when they first come into the church. And don't you see they're afraid in the Anglican Church, that if the Bread and Wine were kept, people might venerate it as the real Presence, which of course it isn't."
"Isn't it?"
"No."
"Why not?"
"I couldn't tell you."
"Then he had to drink it all himself?"
"Yes."
"Why didn't he get somebody to help him?"
"He did try. He asked the warden--but the warden was a total abstainer."
Janet looked sternly out of the window.
"Then he asked a man he saw outside the church--but he was apparently an atheist. At any rate, he didn't believe in that."
"P'raps he thought the wine wasn't good?" Janet suggested.
"Oh no--he offered to drink it; but of course as he didn't believe--"
"Didn't believe in what? He believed it was wine, didn't he?"
"Oh yes--but he didn't believe in the Communion. So father had to drink it himself. And then, the Bishop came into the vestry and found him."
"What happened then?"
"Nothing then--but a few months later, he was appointed to the chaplaincy of a Union--of course a much smaller position than the one he had occupied."
"Didn't they give any reasons?"
"Oh yes--in a sort of a way. They said that they thought the rectors.h.i.+p of Cailsham was rather too responsible a post for him.
They asked him to accept the other in such a way that it would have been hard to refuse. Of course, they couldn't actually turn him out.
But mother hated him for going. It was soon after we left there that I came up to you in London. They were getting so poor. My brother couldn't be kept up at Oxford. The governess had to go. Father died not long after I left. I know what he died of. They called it a general break-up."
"Oh--I know that," said Janet. "There's the shot-gun prescription--all the pharmacopoeia ground into a pill and fired down the patient's throat. It must hit something. That general break-up is the double-barrelled diagnosis. You believe it was the resignation of the rectors.h.i.+p that finished him."
"Yes--I'm sure of it. I remember, the day I went away from home--when I came in to say good-bye to him, he was writing a sermon for Easter.