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'Kind of me to come! You must think badly of me if you think I could have stayed away. ... But now tell me, Ralph, what is the matter, what does the doctor say? Have you had the best medical advice, are you in want of anything? Can I do anything? Pray, don't hesitate. You know that I was, that I am, very fond of you, that I would do anything. You have been ill a long while now--what is the matter?'
'Thank you, dear. Things must take their course. What that course is it is impossible to say. I've had excellent medical advice and Ellen takes care of me.'
'But what is your illness? Nellie Brand told me that you caught a bad cold about a month ago. Perhaps a specialist---'
'Yes, I had a bad attack of influenza about a month or six weeks ago and I hadn't strength, the doctor said, to recover from it. I have been in bad health for some time. I've been disappointed. My painting hasn't gone very well lately. That was a disappointment.
Disappointment, I think, is as often the cause of a man's death as anything else. The doctors give it a name: influenza, or paralysis of the brain, failure of the heart's action, but these are the superficial causes of death. There is often a deeper reason: one which medical science is unable to take into account.'
'Oh, Ralph, you mean me. Don't say that I am the cause. It was not my fault. If I broke my engagement it was because I knew I could not have made you happy. There's no reason to be jealous, it wasn't for any other man. There never will be another man. I was really very fond of you. ... It wasn't my fault.'
'No, dear, it wasn't your fault. It wasn't any one's fault, it was the fault of luck.'
Mildred longed for tears, but her eyes remained dry, and they wandered round the studio examining and wondering at the various canvases. A woman who had just left her bath pa.s.sed her arms into the sleeves of a long white wrapper. There was something peculiarly attractive in the picture. The picture said something that had not been said before, and Mildred admired its naturalness. But she was still more interested in the fact that the picture had been painted from the woman who had opened the door to her.
'She sits for the figure and attends on him when he is ill, she must be his mistress. Since when I wonder?'
'How do you like it?' he asked.
'Very much. It is beautifully drawn, so natural and so original. How did you think of that movement? That is just how a woman pa.s.ses her arms into her wrapper when she get out of her bath. How did you think of it?'
'I don't know. She took the pose. I think the movement is all right.'
'Yes; it is a movement that happens every morning, yet no one thought of it before. How did you think of it?'
'I don't know, I asked her to take some poses and it came like that. I think it is good. I'm glad you like it.'
'It is very different from the stupid things we draw in the studio.'
'I told you that you'd do no good by going to France.' 'I learnt a good deal there. Every one cannot learn by themselves as you did. Only genius can do that.'
'Genius! A few little pictures ... I think I might have done something if I had got the chance. I should have liked to have finished that picture. It is a good beginning. I never did better.'
'Dearest, you will live to paint your picture. I want you to finish it. I want you to: live for my sake. ... I will buy that picture.'
'There's only one thing I should care to live for.'
'And that you shall have.' 'Then I'll try to live.' He raised himself a little in bed. His eyes were fixed on her and he tried hard to believe. 'I'm afraid,' he said, 'it's too late now.' She watched him with the eyes she knew he loved, and though ashamed of the question, she could not put it back, and it slipped through her lips.
'Would you sooner live for me than for that picture?'
'One never knows what one would choose,' he said. 'Such speculations are always vain, and never were they vainer than now. ... But I'm glad you like that movement. It doesn't matter even if I never finish it, I don't think it looks bad in its present state, does it?'
'It is a sketch, one of those things that could not be finished. ... I recognise the model. _She_ sat for it, didn't she?'
'Yes.'
'You seem very intimate. ... She seems very devoted.'
'She has been very good to me. ... Don't say anything against her.
I've nothing to conceal, Mildred. It is an old story. It began long before I knew you.'
'And continued while you knew me?'
'Yes.'
'And you never told me. Oh, Ralph, while you were telling me you loved me you were living with this woman.'
'It happened so. Things don't come out as straight or as nice as we'd like them to--that's the way things come out in life--a bit crooked, tangled, cracked. I only know that I loved you, I couldn't have done otherwise. That's the way things happened to come out. There's no other explanation.'
'And if I had consented to marry you, you'd have put her away.'
'Mildred, don't scold me. Things happened that way.'
Mildred did not answer and Ralph said:
'What are you thinking of?'
'Of the cruelty, of the wretchedness of it all.'
'Why look at that side of it? If I did wrong, I've been punished. She knows all. She has forgiven me. You can do as much? Forgive me, kiss me. I've never kissed you.'
'I cannot kiss you now. I hear her coming. Wipe those tears away. The doctor said that you were to be kept quiet.'
'Shall I see you again?'
'I don't think I can come again. She'll be here.'
'Mildred! What difference can it make?'
'We shall see. ...'
The door opened. Ellen came in, and Mildred got up to go.
'I hope you've enjoyed your walk, Miss Gibbs.'
'Yes, thank you. I haven't been out for some days.'
'Nursing is very fatiguing. ... Good-bye, Mr. Hoskin. I hope I shall soon hear that you're better. Perhaps Miss Gibbs will write.'
'Yes, I'll write, but I'm afraid Mr. Hoskin has been talking too much.
... Let me open the door for you.'
XII.