A Fool There Was - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel A Fool There Was Part 28 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"What do you mean?" she demanded.
Elinor shrugged her shoulders, a little and answered:
"You're compromising. You're hedging. If he isn't good enough to live with, he isn't good to be married to."
"But," Kathryn protested. "I can't live with him, Nell! You know as well as I how impossible that is."
"Then," returned Elinor, rising, "divorce him."
Kathryn shook her head, wearily.
"I can't do that, either."
The other turned.
"Then what are you going to do?" she demanded. "Are you going on forever being honest neither with him nor with yourself--compromising on the one hand with your womanhood, on the other with your selfishness? How long has it been since you made the slightest effort to see him, or to send anyone to him?"
Kathryn answered, slowly:
"Not since the time I tried to go, and Tom went before me. I--I have thought, often, of going.... But, somehow, I've been--afraid." In almost a whisper, she repeated, "Yes.... Afraid!"
Elinor VanVorst raised her shoulders in an expressive gesture. It conveyed more plainly than could words that her end of the argument was done--her case was rested.
Kathryn considered long, earnestly, in silence. Divorce him! Divorce John Schuyler! It had occurred to her--it had occurred to her in the long silences of the night--in the thousands of aeons that had lain, ofttimes, between the setting of the sun and the rising thereof.... Divorce him! ...
It was a thought that stung. He had been to her all that any man could have been. He had been a man of whom her head was proud and her heart fond with the great love that lies in the heart of a good woman. He it was, and G.o.d, who had given her the little child that she could see from where she sat, rolling, a tumbled little heap of white lace and whirling brown legs on the broad expanse of the green lawn. He it was who had taken the first of her life--who had shown her what it was to live....
And then this thing had come--this awful, hideous thing that had stretched even her very life to the breaking point, and drained from it the wealth of sweetness to the uttermost drop.... She felt resentment, yes, and horror, and disgust. Yet there were other things, she knew, though she could not have told how she knew. There was something that was hidden--something unknown and unknowable....
Long, she thought, and earnestly--as she had thought so many, many times before--times without end.... At length she rose. Firm little chin was set; violet eyes were firm.
She said, slowly:
"I think I see your point, Nell. You're right.'
"And you'll divorce him?"
Kathryn shook her head.
"No," she replied softly, "I'll go to him."
Elinor started.
"What!" she cried, untrustful of her own ears.
"I have failed in my duty; you have shown me wherein I have failed. I'll go to him."
Elinor caught her hand.
"Kate!" she pleaded. "Kate, dear, listen to me! I haven't shown you your duty if that's what you consider your duty.... I'll tell you something that you haven't thought of.... Muriel."
In almost a gasp, her sister cried:
"Muriel! ... Muriel!"
"Can you take her with you?" demanded Elinor.
Kathryn shook her head.
"No," she replied. "Of course not. I shall leave her here, with you."
Her sister shook her head.
"Do you see?" she queried. "Can you go to him, and live with him, as wife?" Kathryn made no answer. Again Elinor shook her head, gently.
"Don't you understand," she asked. "It's compromise on compromise-- hedging on hedging. Can't you see how impossible it all is? ... how utterly impossible?"
Torn of anguish, of inability to solve the problems that G.o.d had laid before her, Kathryn turned beseeching eyes to her sister.
"But what shall I do, Nell?" she asked, beseechingly. "What can I do....
Wasn't it hard enough, even that way?"
Elinor replied, gently:
"Too hard. I want to make it easier. I want you to leave him irrevocably.
Then you can forget him; but not until then."
Kathryn was silent.
"What does Tom say?" she asked, at length. She had learned to depend much upon the big-bodied, big-hearted, big-minded friend of late.
"I haven't asked him," returned her sister. "But I will, now."
She rose, quickly, and went to the rose-strewn arbor-way. She could see Blake, out upon the broad lawn, playing with the child that he loved, boyish, natural, whole-souled, with all the enthusiasm unspoiled that G.o.d gives not to many who are grown.
"Tom!" she called.
"Yes?" he answered.
"Will you come here, to us, for a moment? Let Muriel stay with Mawkins."
"Right, oh!" he called, cheerily. In another moment he stood in the opening of the arbor, hair rumpled, clothing awry.
"Well?" he asked, inquiringly.
Elinor began, slowly:
"Tom, Kate and I have been talking, seriously. I want her to leave John Schuyler--legally leave him--leave him for all time. It's the only fair-- the only right--thing to do. I'm not going to argue. It is all sufficiently plain. She can't live with him; and yet, as long as she is his wife, she has no right to be away from him. And she can never go to him."
"She wants your opinion, Tom," she went on. "She's always respected your judgment more than mine--more than that of anyone save the man upon whom she may never depend again."