<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0038" id="link2HCH0038"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XXXVIII </h2>
<p>'Jealousy is cruel as the grave.'<br/></p>
<p>Stephen pondered not a little on this meeting with his old friend and
once-beloved exemplar. He was grieved, for amid all the distractions of
his latter years a still small voice of fidelity to Knight had lingered on
in him. Perhaps this staunchness was because Knight ever treated him as a
mere disciple—even to snubbing him sometimes; and had at last,
though unwittingly, inflicted upon him the greatest snub of all, that of
taking away his sweetheart. The emotional side of his constitution was
built rather after a feminine than a male model; and that tremendous wound
from Knight's hand may have tended to keep alive a warmth which
solicitousness would have extinguished altogether.</p>
<p>Knight, on his part, was vexed, after they had parted, that he had not
taken Stephen in hand a little after the old manner. Those words which
Smith had let fall concerning somebody having a prior claim to Elfride,
would, if uttered when the man was younger, have provoked such a query as,
'Come, tell me all about it, my lad,' from Knight, and Stephen would
straightway have delivered himself of all he knew on the subject.</p>
<p>Stephen the ingenuous boy, though now obliterated externally by Stephen
the contriving man, returned to Knight's memory vividly that afternoon. He
was at present but a sojourner in London; and after attending to the two
or three matters of business which remained to be done that day, he walked
abstractedly into the gloomy corridors of the British Museum for the
half-hour previous to their closing. That meeting with Smith had reunited
the present with the past, closing up the chasm of his absence from
England as if it had never existed, until the final circumstances of his
previous time of residence in London formed but a yesterday to the
circumstances now. The conflict that then had raged in him concerning
Elfride Swancourt revived, strengthened by its sleep. Indeed, in those
many months of absence, though quelling the intention to make her his
wife, he had never forgotten that she was the type of woman adapted to his
nature; and instead of trying to obliterate thoughts of her altogether, he
had grown to regard them as an infirmity it was necessary to tolerate.</p>
<p>Knight returned to his hotel much earlier in the evening than he would
have done in the ordinary course of things. He did not care to think
whether this arose from a friendly wish to close the gap that had slowly
been widening between himself and his earliest acquaintance, or from a
hankering desire to hear the meaning of the dark oracles Stephen had
hastily pronounced, betokening that he knew something more of Elfride than
Knight had supposed.</p>
<p>He made a hasty dinner, inquired for Smith, and soon was ushered into the
young man's presence, whom he found sitting in front of a comfortable
fire, beside a table spread with a few scientific periodicals and art
reviews.</p>
<p>'I have come to you, after all,' said Knight. 'My manner was odd this
morning, and it seemed desirable to call; but that you had too much sense
to notice, Stephen, I know. Put it down to my wanderings in France and
Italy.'</p>
<p>'Don't say another word, but sit down. I am only too glad to see you
again.'</p>
<p>Stephen would hardly have cared to tell Knight just then that the minute
before Knight was announced he had been reading over some old letters of
Elfride's. They were not many; and until to-night had been sealed up, and
stowed away in a corner of his leather trunk, with a few other mementoes
and relics which had accompanied him in his travels. The familiar sights
and sounds of London, the meeting with his friend, had with him also
revived that sense of abiding continuity with regard to Elfride and love
which his absence at the other side of the world had to some extent
suspended, though never ruptured. He at first intended only to look over
these letters on the outside; then he read one; then another; until the
whole was thus re-used as a stimulus to sad memories. He folded them away
again, placed them in his pocket, and instead of going on with an
examination into the state of the artistic world, had remained musing on
the strange circumstance that he had returned to find Knight not the
husband of Elfride after all.</p>
<p>The possibility of any given gratification begets a cumulative sense of
its necessity. Stephen gave the rein to his imagination, and felt more
intensely than he had felt for many months that, without Elfride, his life
would never be any great pleasure to himself, or honour to his Maker.</p>
<p>They sat by the fire, chatting on external and random subjects, neither
caring to be the first to approach the matter each most longed to discuss.
On the table with the periodicals lay two or three pocket-books, one of
them being open. Knight seeing from the exposed page that the contents
were sketches only, began turning the leaves over carelessly with his
finger. When, some time later, Stephen was out of the room, Knight
proceeded to pass the interval by looking at the sketches more carefully.</p>
<p>The first crude ideas, pertaining to dwellings of all kinds, were roughly
outlined on the different pages. Antiquities had been copied; fragments of
Indian columns, colossal statues, and outlandish ornament from the temples
of Elephanta and Kenneri, were carelessly intruded upon by outlines of
modern doors, windows, roofs, cooking-stoves, and household furniture;
everything, in short, which comes within the range of a practising
architect's experience, who travels with his eyes open. Among these
occasionally appeared rough delineations of mediaeval subjects for carving
or illumination—heads of Virgins, Saints, and Prophets.</p>
<p>Stephen was not professedly a free-hand draughtsman, but he drew the human
figure with correctness and skill. In its numerous repetitions on the
sides and edges of the leaves, Knight began to notice a peculiarity. All
the feminine saints had one type of feature. There were large nimbi and
small nimbi about their drooping heads, but the face was always the same.
That profile—how well Knight knew that profile!</p>
<p>Had there been but one specimen of the familiar countenance, he might have
passed over the resemblance as accidental; but a repetition meant more.
Knight thought anew of Smith's hasty words earlier in the day, and looked
at the sketches again and again.</p>
<p>On the young man's entry, Knight said with palpable agitation—</p>
<p>'Stephen, who are those intended for?'</p>
<p>Stephen looked over the book with utter unconcern, 'Saints and angels,
done in my leisure moments. They were intended as designs for the stained
glass of an English church.'</p>
<p>'But whom do you idealize by that type of woman you always adopt for the
Virgin?'</p>
<p>'Nobody.'</p>
<p>And then a thought raced along Stephen's mind and he looked up at his
friend.</p>
<p>The truth is, Stephen's introduction of Elfride's lineaments had been so
unconscious that he had not at first understood his companion's drift. The
hand, like the tongue, easily acquires the trick of repetition by rote,
without calling in the mind to assist at all; and this had been the case
here. Young men who cannot write verses about their Loves generally take
to portraying them, and in the early days of his attachment Smith had
never been weary of outlining Elfride. The lay-figure of Stephen's
sketches now initiated an adjustment of many things. Knight had recognized
her. The opportunity of comparing notes had come unsought.</p>
<p>'Elfride Swancourt, to whom I was engaged,' he said quietly.</p>
<p>'Stephen!'</p>
<p>'I know what you mean by speaking like that.'</p>
<p>'Was it Elfride? YOU the man, Stephen?'</p>
<p>'Yes; and you are thinking why did I conceal the fact from you that time
at Endelstow, are you not?'</p>
<p>'Yes, and more—more.'</p>
<p>'I did it for the best; blame me if you will; I did it for the best. And
now say how could I be with you afterwards as I had been before?'</p>
<p>'I don't know at all; I can't say.'</p>
<p>Knight remained fixed in thought, and once he murmured—</p>
<p>'I had a suspicion this afternoon that there might be some such meaning in
your words about my taking her away. But I dismissed it. How came you to
know her?' he presently asked, in almost a peremptory tone.</p>
<p>'I went down about the church; years ago now.'</p>
<p>'When you were with Hewby, of course, of course. Well, I can't understand
it.' His tones rose. 'I don't know what to say, your hoodwinking me like
this for so long!'</p>
<p>'I don't see that I have hoodwinked you at all.'</p>
<p>'Yes, yes, but'——</p>
<p>Knight arose from his seat, and began pacing up and down the room. His
face was markedly pale, and his voice perturbed, as he said—</p>
<p>'You did not act as I should have acted towards you under those
circumstances. I feel it deeply; and I tell you plainly, I shall never
forget it!'</p>
<p>'What?'</p>
<p>'Your behaviour at that meeting in the family vault, when I told you we
were going to be married. Deception, dishonesty, everywhere; all the
world's of a piece!'</p>
<p>Stephen did not much like this misconstruction of his motives, even though
it was but the hasty conclusion of a friend disturbed by emotion.</p>
<p>'I could do no otherwise than I did, with due regard to her,' he said
stiffly.</p>
<p>'Indeed!' said Knight, in the bitterest tone of reproach. 'Nor could you
with due regard to her have married her, I suppose! I have hoped—longed—that
HE, who turns out to be YOU, would ultimately have done that.'</p>
<p>'I am much obliged to you for that hope. But you talk very mysteriously. I
think I had about the best reason anybody could have had for not doing
that.'</p>
<p>'Oh, what reason was it?'</p>
<p>'That I could not.'</p>
<p>'You ought to have made an opportunity; you ought to do so now, in bare
justice to her, Stephen!' cried Knight, carried beyond himself. 'That you
know very well, and it hurts and wounds me more than you dream to find you
never have tried to make any reparation to a woman of that kind—so
trusting, so apt to be run away with by her feelings—poor little
fool, so much the worse for her!'</p>
<p>'Why, you talk like a madman! You took her away from me, did you not?'</p>
<p>'Picking up what another throws down can scarcely be called "taking away."
However, we shall not agree too well upon that subject, so we had better
part.'</p>
<p>'But I am quite certain you misapprehend something most grievously,' said
Stephen, shaken to the bottom of his heart. 'What have I done; tell me? I
have lost Elfride, but is that such a sin?'</p>
<p>'Was it her doing, or yours?'</p>
<p>'Was what?'</p>
<p>'That you parted.'</p>
<p>'I will tell you honestly. It was hers entirely, entirely.'</p>
<p>'What was her reason?'</p>
<p>'I can hardly say. But I'll tell the story without reserve.'</p>
<p>Stephen until to-day had unhesitatingly held that she grew tired of him
and turned to Knight; but he did not like to advance the statement now, or
even to think the thought. To fancy otherwise accorded better with the
hope to which Knight's estrangement had given birth: that love for his
friend was not the direct cause, but a result of her suspension of love
for himself.</p>
<p>'Such a matter must not be allowed to breed discord between us,' Knight
returned, relapsing into a manner which concealed all his true feeling, as
if confidence now was intolerable. 'I do see that your reticence towards
me in the vault may have been dictated by prudential considerations.' He
concluded artificially, 'It was a strange thing altogether; but not of
much importance, I suppose, at this distance of time; and it does not
concern me now, though I don't mind hearing your story.'</p>
<p>These words from Knight, uttered with such an air of renunciation and
apparent indifference, prompted Smith to speak on—perhaps with a
little complacency—of his old secret engagement to Elfride. He told
the details of its origin, and the peremptory words and actions of her
father to extinguish their love.</p>
<p>Knight persevered in the tone and manner of a disinterested outsider. It
had become more than ever imperative to screen his emotions from Stephen's
eye; the young man would otherwise be less frank, and their meeting would
be again embittered. What was the use of untoward candour?</p>
<p>Stephen had now arrived at the point in his ingenuous narrative where he
left the vicarage because of her father's manner. Knight's interest
increased. Their love seemed so innocent and childlike thus far.</p>
<p>'It is a nice point in casuistry,' he observed, 'to decide whether you
were culpable or not in not telling Swancourt that your friends were
parishioners of his. It was only human nature to hold your tongue under
the circumstances. Well, what was the result of your dismissal by him?'</p>
<p>'That we agreed to be secretly faithful. And to insure this we thought we
would marry.'</p>
<p>Knight's suspense and agitation rose higher when Stephen entered upon this
phase of the subject.</p>
<p>'Do you mind telling on?' he said, steadying his manner of speech.</p>
<p>'Oh, not at all.'</p>
<p>Then Stephen gave in full the particulars of the meeting with Elfride at
the railway station; the necessity they were under of going to London,
unless the ceremony were to be postponed. The long journey of the
afternoon and evening; her timidity and revulsion of feeling; its
culmination on reaching London; the crossing over to the down-platform and
their immediate departure again, solely in obedience to her wish; the
journey all night; their anxious watching for the dawn; their arrival at
St. Launce's at last—were detailed. And he told how a village woman
named Jethway was the only person who recognized them, either going or
coming; and how dreadfully this terrified Elfride. He told how he waited
in the fields whilst this then reproachful sweetheart went for her pony,
and how the last kiss he ever gave her was given a mile out of the town,
on the way to Endelstow.</p>
<p>These things Stephen related with a will. He believed that in doing so he
established word by word the reasonableness of his claim to Elfride.</p>
<p>'Curse her! curse that woman!—that miserable letter that parted us!
O God!'</p>
<p>Knight began pacing the room again, and uttered this at further end.</p>
<p>'What did you say?' said Stephen, turning round.</p>
<p>'Say? Did I say anything? Oh, I was merely thinking about your story, and
the oddness of my having a fancy for the same woman afterwards. And that
now I—I have forgotten her almost; and neither of us care about her,
except just as a friend, you know, eh?'</p>
<p>Knight still continued at the further end of the room, somewhat in shadow.</p>
<p>'Exactly,' said Stephen, inwardly exultant, for he was really deceived by
Knight's off-hand manner.</p>
<p>Yet he was deceived less by the completeness of Knight's disguise than by
the persuasive power which lay in the fact that Knight had never before
deceived him in anything. So this supposition that his companion had
ceased to love Elfride was an enormous lightening of the weight which had
turned the scale against him.</p>
<p>'Admitting that Elfride COULD love another man after you,' said the elder,
under the same varnish of careless criticism, 'she was none the worse for
that experience.'</p>
<p>'The worse? Of course she was none the worse.'</p>
<p>'Did you ever think it a wild and thoughtless thing for her to do?'</p>
<p>'Indeed, I never did,' said Stephen. 'I persuaded her. She saw no harm in
it until she decided to return, nor did I; nor was there, except to the
extent of indiscretion.'</p>
<p>'Directly she thought it was wrong she would go no further?'</p>
<p>'That was it. I had just begun to think it wrong too.'</p>
<p>'Such a childish escapade might have been misrepresented by any
evil-disposed person, might it not?'</p>
<p>'It might; but I never heard that it was. Nobody who really knew all the
circumstances would have done otherwise than smile. If all the world had
known it, Elfride would still have remained the only one who thought her
action a sin. Poor child, she always persisted in thinking so, and was
frightened more than enough.'</p>
<p>'Stephen, do you love her now?'</p>
<p>'Well, I like her; I always shall, you know,' he said evasively, and with
all the strategy love suggested. 'But I have not seen her for so long that
I can hardly be expected to love her. Do you love her still?'</p>
<p>'How shall I answer without being ashamed? What fickle beings we men are,
Stephen! Men may love strongest for a while, but women love longest. I
used to love her—in my way, you know.'</p>
<p>'Yes, I understand. Ah, and I used to love her in my way. In fact, I loved
her a good deal at one time; but travel has a tendency to obliterate early
fancies.'</p>
<p>'It has—it has, truly.'</p>
<p>Perhaps the most extraordinary feature in this conversation was the
circumstance that, though each interlocutor had at first his suspicions of
the other's abiding passion awakened by several little acts, neither would
allow himself to see that his friend might now be speaking deceitfully as
well as he.</p>
<p>'Stephen.' resumed Knight, 'now that matters are smooth between us, I
think I must leave you. You won't mind my hurrying off to my quarters?'</p>
<p>'You'll stay to some sort of supper surely? didn't you come to dinner!'</p>
<p>'You must really excuse me this once.'</p>
<p>'Then you'll drop in to breakfast to-morrow.'</p>
<p>'I shall be rather pressed for time.'</p>
<p>'An early breakfast, which shall interfere with nothing?'</p>
<p>'I'll come,' said Knight, with as much readiness as it was possible to
graft upon a huge stock of reluctance. 'Yes, early; eight o'clock say, as
we are under the same roof.'</p>
<p>'Any time you like. Eight it shall be.'</p>
<p>And Knight left him. To wear a mask, to dissemble his feelings as he had
in their late miserable conversation, was such torture that he could
support it no longer. It was the first time in Knight's life that he had
ever been so entirely the player of a part. And the man he had thus
deceived was Stephen, who had docilely looked up to him from youth as a
superior of unblemished integrity.</p>
<p>He went to bed, and allowed the fever of his excitement to rage
uncontrolled. Stephen—it was only he who was the rival—only
Stephen! There was an anti-climax of absurdity which Knight, wretched and
conscience-stricken as he was, could not help recognizing. Stephen was but
a boy to him. Where the great grief lay was in perceiving that the very
innocence of Elfride in reading her little fault as one so grave was what
had fatally misled him. Had Elfride, with any degree of coolness, asserted
that she had done no harm, the poisonous breath of the dead Mrs. Jethway
would have been inoperative. Why did he not make his little docile girl
tell more? If on that subject he had only exercised the imperativeness
customary with him on others, all might have been revealed. It smote his
heart like a switch when he remembered how gently she had borne his
scourging speeches, never answering him with a single reproach, only
assuring him of her unbounded love.</p>
<p>Knight blessed Elfride for her sweetness, and forgot her fault. He
pictured with a vivid fancy those fair summer scenes with her. He again
saw her as at their first meeting, timid at speaking, yet in her eagerness
to be explanatory borne forward almost against her will. How she would
wait for him in green places, without showing any of the ordinary womanly
affectations of indifference! How proud she was to be seen walking with
him, bearing legibly in her eyes the thought that he was the greatest
genius in the world!</p>
<p>He formed a resolution; and after that could make pretence of slumber no
longer. Rising and dressing himself, he sat down and waited for day.</p>
<p>That night Stephen was restless too. Not because of the unwontedness of a
return to English scenery; not because he was about to meet his parents,
and settle down for awhile to English cottage life. He was indulging in
dreams, and for the nonce the warehouses of Bombay and the plains and
forts of Poonah were but a shadow's shadow. His dream was based on this
one atom of fact: Elfride and Knight had become separated, and their
engagement was as if it had never been. Their rupture must have occurred
soon after Stephen's discovery of the fact of their union; and, Stephen
went on to think, what so probable as that a return of her errant
affection to himself was the cause?</p>
<p>Stephen's opinions in this matter were those of a lover, and not the
balanced judgment of an unbiassed spectator. His naturally sanguine spirit
built hope upon hope, till scarcely a doubt remained in his mind that her
lingering tenderness for him had in some way been perceived by Knight, and
had provoked their parting.</p>
<p>To go and see Elfride was the suggestion of impulses it was impossible to
withstand. At any rate, to run down from St. Launce's to Castle Poterel, a
distance of less than twenty miles, and glide like a ghost about their old
haunts, making stealthy inquiries about her, would be a fascinating way of
passing the first spare hours after reaching home on the day after the
morrow.</p>
<p>He was now a richer man than heretofore, standing on his own bottom; and
the definite position in which he had rooted himself nullified old local
distinctions. He had become illustrious, even sanguine clarus, judging
from the tone of the worthy Mayor of St. Launce's.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />