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Mr. Pigott had written his last sentence advisedly. "Some day," he said to himself, "those young people will have to put their pride in their pocket." He might have known that the Haviland pride was not of the kind that goes conveniently into any pocket, even an empty one.
But Katherine worked her hardest, and gave little heed to these things.
She saw her own chances of success dwindling farther into the distance, and was surprised to see how little she cared, for a curious callousness had come over her of late. Selfish ambition--selfish, because it often persists in living when all other things are dead--seemed to have died in her at last. Had she overcome it? Or was it that she had really ceased to care? She had too much to think of to be able to settle that question just now.
After all, she had another source of pride. Vincent had begun by looking to her as a protection against his worst self; and when his mother died suddenly that winter, his last link with home being broken, he became more and more dependent on Katherine. And now, though the tie of comrades.h.i.+p between them was closer than ever, he had no longer any need of her. He could go alone. His will was free, his intellect was awake.
He read hard now. All his old ardours and enthusiasms returned to him; he worked on the Pioneer-book, recasting his favourite parts, beating the whole into shape, and hunting down the superfluous adjective with a manly delight in the new sport. Katherine had shown the revised ma.n.u.script to Knowles, and he had found her a publisher and worked him into the right frame of mind. Katherine had suppressed part of that publisher's verdict: it was to the effect that, though the text was up to the average merit of its kind, the ill.u.s.trations would form the most valuable portion of the work.
Hardy had submitted the final revision of his proofs to Katherine. But on one point he was resolute: "I want the dedication to stand as it is, Sis." And Katherine nodded her head and was silent.
He often talked about Audrey now. He was no longer bitter and vindictive, as he had been in the days of his degradation. His old feeling for her had returned to him, unchanged, except for the refining process he himself had undergone. His love was enn.o.bled now by an infinite pity. Not that he had lost sight of what she had done for him; but now that his eyes were clearer, he saw her as she was, and felt to the full the pathos of her vanity.
Wyndham's book was severely criticised in Devon Street. One day, about four months after its appearance, Hardy had returned to the subject nearest his heart, and was discussing it with Katherine as he sat to her for his portrait, now nearly finished. He had just pleasantly told her that he wished he had managed to fall in love with her instead of with Audrey; she would have made something very different of him--a remark to which Katherine made no answer, treating it, as Hardy thought, with the contempt it deserved. Then he broke out, as he had done many a time before.
"I don't know how it is. When I was away from her, I used to think of her as a sort of amateur angel leading me on." (Katherine smiled; it was very evident that Audrey had "led him on.") "When I was with her she seemed to be a little devil, encouraging everything that was bad in me.
I don't know how she did it; but she did. And yet, Kathy, whatever they may say, I don't believe she's bad. I don't swear, of course, that she's a paragon of goodness----"
"Isn't there a medium?"
"But she was a sweet little thing before she met that scoundrel Wyndham.
Wasn't she?"
But Katherine was giving the whole of her attention to Vincent's nose.
"Putting Audrey out of the question, I don't think much of Mr. Langley Wyndham. I don't like his books; I can't breathe in his stuffy drawing-rooms. Why can't the fellow open his windows sometimes and let in a little of G.o.d's fresh air? As you know, I believe he's even a shadier character than I am."
"He hasn't got a character; it's all run to literature."
"H'm--I'm not so sure about that."
Katherine had laid down her brushes, and was examining her work with her head on one side. "Well, he can't draw a character, anyhow; Laura's simply impossible."
"I don't know. Laura is Audrey, and Audrey's a funny person."
"I used to think that Audrey wasn't a person--that she was made up of little bits of people stuck together."
"That's not bad, Sis. She _is_ made up of bits of people stuck together."
"Yes; but the thing is, what makes them stick? Mr. Wyndham doesn't go into that, and _that's_ Audrey. His work is clever--too clever by half--but it's terribly superficial."
Hardy meditated on that saying; then he began again.
"You've done a great deal for me, Kathy. I sometimes think that if you'd given your mind to it, you could have made something of Audrey. You know, poor little thing, she used to think she was very strong-minded; but she was more easily twisted about than any woman I know. That's what made her so fickle. If there's any truth in that stupid story of Wyndham's, she must have been like a piece of putty in her hands. I believe, if you could have got hold of her, you could have done her some good."
"I don't believe in doing people good."
"I do. I'm a case in point."
"No, you're not."
"I am. You did _me_ good."
"I'm very glad to hear it. If I did, it's because I never thought about it. Now, if I tried my hand on Audrey, I should set to work with the fixed intention of doing her good; therefore I should fail miserably.
It's a different thing altogether."
"I see no difference myself."
Katherine was silent. Her charity had covered the mult.i.tude of Vincent's sins. Why had she not been able to spare a corner of it for Audrey's?
"Come," said Hardy, "it's not as if she was really very bad."
"No, it's not; there'd be some chance then. There is a medium, and the medium is hopeless. The wonder is you never found that out."
"I did. I knew it all the time; yet I loved her. It made no difference--nothing ever will. I've tried to kill my feeling for her, but it's no use--I can't. I should have to kill myself first; and even then I believe I should find it waiting for me in Hades when I got there."
"After all, why should you try to kill it, Vincent?"
"It's the shame of it, Sis."
Katherine might have thought that on the contrary he seemed rather proud of the permanence of his affections, but she was too much preoccupied to be aware of his moral absurdity.
"Well, I don't know much about these things; but it seems to me that even if she doesn't love you, even if she isn't everything you thought she was, there's no reason to be ashamed of loving her."
"Ah, Kathy, you never loved any one like that."
Her colour changed. "No. It isn't every one who can love like that."
"What would you do if you were in my case--if you'd given yourself away like me? Supposing you went and lost your little heart to some man-fiend who was, we'll say, about as bad a lot as I am, and who had the execrable taste not to care a rap for you,--wouldn't you feel ashamed of him and yourself too?"
Katherine's white face flushed; she looked away from him, and answered steadily--
"No, I wouldn't."
He thought he had hurt her feelings, and was about to change the subject when she turned a beaming face to him.
"But then, you see, I don't love anything much."
"Good as you are, you'd be a better woman if you did."
"Of course there are exceptions. I've some sort of affection for the Witch and Ted."
"Ted is a very fine boy, and the Witch is a very fine picture, but--well, some day you'll have an affection for something else; it won't be a boy, and it won't be a picture. Then, Sis, you'll know what it is to feel, and your art will go pop."
"Oh, I hope not. But it's not true; look at Ted."
"Ted's a man, and you are a woman. Ten to one, a really great pa.s.sion improves a man's art: it plays the deuce with a woman's."
"I don't believe it!" said Katherine, with rather more warmth than the occasion demanded.