<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0046" id="link2HCH0046"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XLVI </h2>
<h3> LISTENING </h3>
<p>On her way back to the Court her eyes saw only the white road before her
feet as she walked. She did not lift them until she found herself passing
the lych-gate at the entrance to the churchyard. Then suddenly she looked
up at the square grey stone tower where the bells hung, and from which
they called the village to church, or chimed for weddings—or gave
slowly forth to the silent air one heavy, regular stroke after another.
She looked and shuddered, and spoke aloud with a curious, passionate
imploring, like a child's.</p>
<p>"Oh, don't toll! Don't toll! You must not! You cannot!" Terror had sprung
upon her, and her heart was being torn in two in her breast. That was
surely what it seemed like—this agonising ache of fear. Now from
hour to hour she would be waiting and listening to each sound borne on the
air. Her thought would be a possession she could not escape. When she
spoke or was spoken to, she would be listening—when she was silent
every echo would hold terror, when she slept—if sleep should come to
her—her hearing would be awake, and she would be listening—listening
even then. It was not Betty Vanderpoel who was walking along the white
road, but another creature—a girl whose brain was full of abnormal
thought, and whose whole being made passionate outcry against the thing
which was being slowly forced upon her. If the bell tolled—suddenly,
the whole world would be swept clean of life—empty and clean. If the
bell tolled.</p>
<p>Before the entrance of the Court she saw, as she approached it, the
vicarage pony carriage, standing as it had stood on the day she had
returned from her walk on the marshes. She felt it quite natural that it
should be there. Mrs. Brent always seized upon any fragment of news, and
having seized on something now, she had not been able to resist the
excitement of bringing it to Lady Anstruthers and her sister.</p>
<p>She was in the drawing-room with Rosalie, and was full of her subject and
the emotion suitable to the occasion. She had even attained a certain
modified dampness of handkerchief. Rosalie's handkerchief, however, was
not damp. She had not even attempted to use it, but sat still, her eyes
brimming with tears, which, when she saw Betty, brimmed over and slipped
helplessly down her cheeks.</p>
<p>"Betty!" she exclaimed, and got up and went towards her, "I believe you
have heard."</p>
<p>"In the village, I heard something—yes," Betty answered, and after
giving greeting to Mrs. Brent, she led her sister back to her chair, and
sat near her.</p>
<p>This—the thought leaped upon her—was the kind of situation she
must be prepared to be equal to. In the presence of these who knew
nothing, she must bear herself as if there was nothing to be known. No one
but herself had the slightest knowledge of what the past months had
brought to her—no one in the world. If the bell tolled, no one in
the world but her father ever would know. She had no excuse for emotion.
None had been given to her. The kind of thing it was proper that she
should say and do now, in the presence of Mrs. Brent, it would be proper
and decent that she should say and do in all other cases. She must comport
herself as Betty Vanderpoel would if she were moved only by ordinary human
sympathy and regret.</p>
<p>"We must remember that we have only excited rumour to depend upon," she
said. "Lord Mount Dunstan has kept his village under almost military law.
He has put it into quarantine. No one is allowed to leave it, so there can
be no direct source of information. One cannot be sure of the entire truth
of what one hears. Often it is exaggerated cottage talk. The whole
neighbourhood is wrought up to a fever heat of excited sympathy. And
villagers like the drama of things."</p>
<p>Mrs. Brent looked at her admiringly, it being her fixed habit to admire
Miss Vanderpoel, and all such as Providence had set above her.</p>
<p>"Oh, how wise you are, Miss Vanderpoel!" she exclaimed, even devoutly. "It
is so nice of you to be calm and logical when everybody else is so upset.
You are quite right about villagers enjoying the dramatic side of
troubles. They always do. And perhaps things are not so bad as they say. I
ought not to have let myself believe the worst. But I quite broke down
under the ringers—I was so touched."</p>
<p>"The ringers?" faltered Lady Anstruthers</p>
<p>"The leader came to the vicar to tell him they wanted permission to toll—if
they heard tolling at Dunstan. Weaver's family lives within hearing of
Dunstan church bells, and one of his boys is to run across the fields and
bring the news to Stornham. And it was most touching, Miss Vanderpoel.
They feel, in their rustic way, that Lord Mount Dunstan has not been
treated fairly in the past. And now he seems to them a hero and a martyr—or
like a great soldier who has died fighting."</p>
<p>"Who MAY die fighting," broke from Miss Vanderpoel sharply.</p>
<p>"Who—who may——" Mrs. Brent corrected herself, "though
Heaven grant he will not. But it was the ringers who made me feel as if
all really was over. Thank you, Miss Vanderpoel, thank you for being so
practical and—and cool."</p>
<p>"It WAS touching," said Lady Anstruthers, her eyes brimming over again.
"And what the villagers feel is true. It goes to one's heart," in a little
outburst. "People have been unkind to him! And he has been lonely in that
great empty place—he has been lonely. And if he is dying to-day, he
is lonely even as he dies—even as he dies."</p>
<p>Betty drew a deep breath. For one moment there seemed to rise before her
vision of a huge room, whose stately size made its bareness a more
desolate thing. And Mr. Penzance bent low over the bed. She tore her
thought away from it.</p>
<p>"No! No!" she cried out in low, passionate protest. "There will be love
and yearning all about him everywhere. The villagers who are waiting—the
poor things he has worked for—the very ringers themselves, are all
pouring forth the same thoughts. He will feel even ours—ours too!
His soul cannot be lonely."</p>
<p>A few minutes earlier, Mrs. Brent had been saying to herself inwardly:
"She has not much heart after all, you know." Now she looked at her in
amazement.</p>
<p>The blue bells were under water in truth—drenched and drowned. And
yet as the girl stood up before her, she looked taller—more the
magnificent Miss Vanderpoel than ever—though she expressed a new
meaning.</p>
<p>"There is one thing the villagers can do for him," she said. "One thing we
can all do. The bell has not tolled yet. There is a service for those who
are—in peril. If the vicar will call the people to the church, we
can all kneel down there—and ask to be heard. The vicar will do that
I am sure—and the people will join him with all their hearts."</p>
<p>Mrs. Brent was overwhelmed.</p>
<p>"Dear, dear, Miss Vanderpoel!" she exclaimed. "THAT is touching, indeed it
is! And so right and so proper. I will drive back to the village at once.
The vicar's distress is as great as mine. You think of everything. The
service for the sick and dying. How right—how right!"</p>
<p>With a sense of an increase of value in herself, the vicar, and the
vicarage, she hastened back to the pony carriage, but in the hall she
seized Betty's hand emotionally.</p>
<p>"I cannot tell you how much I am touched by this," she murmured. "I did
not know you were—were a religious girl, my dear."</p>
<p>Betty answered with grave politeness.</p>
<p>"In times of great pain and terror," she said, "I think almost everybody
is religious—a little. If that is the right word."</p>
<p>There was no ringing of the ordinary call to service. In less than an
hour's time people began to come out of their cottages and wend their way
towards the church. No one had put on his or her Sunday clothes. The women
had hastily rolled down their sleeves, thrown off their aprons, and donned
everyday bonnets and shawls. The men were in their corduroys, as they had
come in from the fields, and the children wore their pinafores. As if by
magic, the news had flown from house to house, and each one who had heard
it had left his or her work without a moment's hesitation. They said but
little as they made their way to the church. Betty, walking with her
sister, was struck by the fact that there were more of them than formed
the usual Sunday morning congregation. They were doing no perfunctory
duty. The men's faces were heavily moved, most of the women wiped their
eyes at intervals, and the children looked awed. There was a suggestion of
hurried movement in the step of each—as if no time must be lost—as
if they must begin their appeal at once. Betty saw old Doby tottering
along stiffly, with his granddaughter and Mrs. Welden on either side of
him. Marlow, on his two sticks, was to be seen moving slowly, but
steadily.</p>
<p>Within the ancient stone walls, stiff old knees bent themselves with care,
and faces were covered devoutly by work-hardened hands. As she passed
through the churchyard Betty knew that eyes followed her affectionately,
and that the touching of foreheads and dropping of curtsies expressed a
special sympathy. In each mind she was connected with the man they came to
pray for—with the work he had done—with the danger he was in.
It was vaguely felt that if his life ended, a bereavement would have
fallen upon her. This the girl knew.</p>
<p>The vicar lifted his bowed head and began his service. Every man, woman
and child before him responded aloud and with a curious fervour—not
in decorous fear of seeming to thrust themselves before the throne, making
too much of their petitions, in the presence of the gentry. Here and there
sobs were to be heard. Lady Anstruthers followed the service timorously
and with tears. But Betty, kneeling at her side, by the round table in the
centre of the great square Stornham pew, which was like a room, bowed her
head upon her folded arms, and prayed her own intense, insistent prayer.</p>
<p>"God in Heaven!" was her inward cry. "God of all the worlds! Do not let
him die. 'If ye ask anything in my name that I will do.' Christ said it.
In the name of Jesus of Nazareth—do not let him die! All the worlds
are yours—all the power—listen to us—listen to us. Lord,
I believe—help thou my unbelief. If this terror robs me of faith,
and I pray madly—forgive, forgive me. Do not count it against me as
sin. You made him. He has suffered and been alone. It is not time—it
is not time yet for him to go. He has known no joy and no bright thing. Do
not let him go out of the warm world like a blind man. Do not let him die.
Perhaps this is not prayer, but raging. Forgive—forgive! All power
is gone from me. God of the worlds, and the great winds, and the myriad
stars—do not let him die!"</p>
<p>She knew her thoughts were wild, but their torrent bore her with them into
a strange, great silence. She did not hear the vicar's words, or the
responses of the people. She was not within the grey stone walls. She had
been drawn away as into the darkness and stillness of the night, and no
soul but her own seemed near. Through the stillness and the dark her
praying seemed to call and echo, clamouring again and again. It must reach
Something—it must be heard, because she cried so loud, though to the
human beings about her she seemed kneeling in silence. She went on and on,
repeating her words, changing them, ending and beginning again, pouring
forth a flood of appeal. She thought later that the flood must have been
at its highest tide when, singularly, it was stemmed. Without warning, a
wave of awe passed over her which strangely silenced her—and left
her bowed and kneeling, but crying out no more. The darkness had become
still, even as it had not been still before. Suddenly she cowered as she
knelt and held her breath. Something had drawn a little near. No thoughts—no
words—no cries were needed as the great stillness grew and spread,
and folded her being within it. She waited—only waited. She did not
know how long a time passed before she felt herself drawn back from the
silent and shadowy places—awakening, as it were, to the sounds in
the church.</p>
<p>"Our Father," she began to say, as simply as a child. "Our Father who art
in Heaven—hallowed be thy name." There was a stirring among the
congregation, and sounds of feet, as the people began to move down the
aisle in reverent slowness. She caught again the occasional sound of a
subdued sob. Rosalie gently touched her, and she rose, following her out
of the big pew and passing down the aisle after the villagers.</p>
<p>Outside the entrance the people waited as if they wanted to see her again.
Foreheads were touched as before, and eyes followed her. She was to the
general mind the centre of the drama, and "the A'mighty" would do well to
hear her. She had been doing his work for him "same as his lordship." They
did not expect her to smile at such a time, when she returned their
greetings, and she did not, but they said afterwards, in their cottages,
that "trouble or not she was a wonder for looks, that she was—Miss
Vanderpoel."</p>
<p>Rosalie slipped a hand through her arm, and they walked home together,
very close to each other. Now and then there was a questioning in Rosy's
look. But neither of them spoke once.</p>
<p>On an oak table in the hall a letter from Mr. Penzance was lying. It was
brief, hurried, and anxious. The rumour that Mount Dunstan had been ailing
was true, and that they had felt they must conceal the matter from the
villagers was true also. For some baffling reason the fever had not
absolutely declared itself, but the young doctors were beset by grave
forebodings. In such cases the most serious symptoms might suddenly
develop. One never knew. Mr. Penzance was evidently torn by fears which he
desperately strove to suppress. But Betty could see the anguish on his
fine old face, and between the lines she read dread and warning not put
into words. She believed that, fearing the worst, he felt he must prepare
her mind.</p>
<p>"He has lived under a great strain for months," he ended. "It began long
before the outbreak of the fever. I am not strong under my sense of the
cruelty of things—and I have never loved him as I love him to-day."</p>
<p>Betty took the letter to her room, and read it two or three times. Because
she had asked intelligent questions of the medical authority she had
consulted on her visit to London, she knew something of the fever and its
habits. Even her unclerical knowledge was such as it was not well to
reflect upon. She refolded the letter and laid it aside.</p>
<p>"I must not think. I must do something. It may prevent my listening," she
said aloud to the silence of her room.</p>
<p>She cast her eyes about her as if in search. Upon her desk lay a notebook.
She took it up and opened it. It contained lists of plants, of flower
seeds, of bulbs, and shrubs. Each list was headed with an explanatory
note.</p>
<p>"Yes, this will do," she said. "I will go and talk to Kedgers."</p>
<p>Kedgers and every man under him had been at the service, but they had
returned to their respective duties. Kedgers, giving directions to some
under gardeners who were clearing flower beds and preparing them for their
winter rest, turned to meet her as she approached. To Kedgers the sight of
her coming towards him on a garden path was a joyful thing. He had done
wonders, it is true, but if she had not stood by his side with inspiration
as well as confidence, he knew that things might have "come out
different."</p>
<p>"You was born a gardener, miss—born one," he had said months ago.</p>
<p>It was the time when flower beds must be planned for the coming year. Her
notebook was filled with memoranda of the things they must talk about.</p>
<p>It was good, normal, healthy work to do. The scent of the rich, damp,
upturned mould was a good thing to inhale. They walked from one end to
another, stood before clumps of shrubs, and studied bits of wall. Here a
mass of blue might grow, here low things of white and pale yellow. A
quickly-climbing rose would hang sheets of bloom over this dead tree. This
sheltered wall would hold warmth for a Marechal Niel.</p>
<p>"You must take care of it all—even if I am not here next year," Miss
Vanderpoel said.</p>
<p>Kedgers' absorbed face changed.</p>
<p>"Not here, miss," he exclaimed. "You not here! Things wouldn't grow,
miss." He checked himself, his weather-toughened skin reddening because he
was afraid he had perhaps taken a liberty. And then moving his hat
uneasily on his head, he took another. "But it's true enough," looking
down on the gravel walk, "we—we couldn't expect to keep you."</p>
<p>She did not look as if she had noticed the liberty, but she did not look
quite like herself, Kedgers thought. If she had been another young lady,
and but for his established feeling that she was somehow immune from all
ills, he would have thought she had a headache, or was low in her mind.</p>
<p>She spent an hour or two with him, and together they planned for the
changing seasons of the year to come. How she could keep her mind on a
thing, and what a head she had for planning, and what an eye for colour!
But yes—there was something a bit wrong somehow. Now and then she
would stop and stand still for a moment, and suddenly it struck Kedgers
that she looked as if she were listening.</p>
<p>"Did you think you heard something, miss?" he asked her once when she
paused and wore this look.</p>
<p>"No," she answered, "no." And drew him on quickly—almost as if she
did not want him to hear what she had seemed listening for.</p>
<p>When she left him and went back to the house, all the loveliness of
spring, summer and autumn had been thought out and provided for. Kedgers
stood on the path and looked after her until she passed through the
terrace door. He chewed his lip uneasily. Then he remembered something and
felt a bit relieved. It was the service he remembered.</p>
<p>"Ah! it's that that's upset her—and it's natural, seeing how she's
helped him and Dunstan village. It's only natural." He chewed his lip
again, and nodded his head in odd reflection. "Ay! Ay!" he summed her up.
"She's a great lady that—she's a great lady—same as if she'd
been born in a civilised land."</p>
<p>During the rest of the day the look of question in Rosalie's eyes changed
in its nature. When her sister was near her she found herself glancing at
her with a new feeling. It was a growing feeling, which gradually became—anxiousness.
Betty presented to her the aspect of one withdrawn into some remote space.
She was not living this day as her days were usually lived. She did not
sit still or stroll about the gardens quietly. The consecutiveness of her
action seemed broken. She did one thing after another, as if she must fill
each moment. This was not her Betty. Lady Anstruthers watched and thought
until, in the end, a new pained fear began to creep slowly into her mind,
and make her feel as if she were slightly trembling though her hands did
not shake. She did not dare to allow herself to think the thing she knew
she was on the brink of thinking. She thrust it away from her, and tried
not to think at all. Her Betty—her splendid Betty, whom nothing
could hurt—who could not be touched by any awful thing—her
dear Betty!</p>
<p>In the afternoon she saw her write notes steadily for an hour, then she
went out into the stables and visited the horses, talked to the coachman
and to her own groom. She was very kind to a village boy who had been
recently taken on as an additional assistant in the stable, and who was
rather frightened and shy. She knew his mother, who had a large family,
and she had, indeed, given the boy his place that he might be trained
under the great Mr. Buckham, who was coachman and head of the stables. She
said encouraging things which quite cheered him, and she spoke privately
to Mr. Buckham about him. Then she walked in the park a little, but not
for long. When she came back Rosalie was waiting for her.</p>
<p>"I want to take a long drive," she said. "I feel restless. Will you come
with me, Betty?" Yes, she would go with her, so Buckham brought the landau
with its pair of big horses, and they rolled down the avenue, and into the
smooth, white high road. He took them far—past the great marshes,
between miles of bared hedges, past farms and scattered cottages.
Sometimes he turned into lanes, where the hedges were closer to each
other, and where, here and there, they caught sight of new points of view
between trees. Betty was glad to feel Rosy's slim body near her side, and
she was conscious that it gradually seemed to draw closer and closer. Then
Rosy's hand slipped into hers and held it softly on her lap.</p>
<p>When they drove together in this way they were usually both of them rather
silent and quiet, but now Rosalie spoke of many things—of Ughtred,
of Nigel, of the Dunholms, of New York, and their father and mother.</p>
<p>"I want to talk because I'm nervous, I think," she said half
apologetically. "I do not want to sit still and think too much—of
father's coming. You don't mind my talking, do you, Betty?"</p>
<p>"No," Betty answered. "It is good for you and for me." And she met the
pressure of Rosy's hand halfway.</p>
<p>But Rosy was talking, not because she did not want to sit still and think,
but because she did not want Betty to do so. And all the time she was
trying to thrust away the thought growing in her mind.</p>
<p>They spent the evening together in the library, and Betty read aloud. She
read a long time—until quite late. She wished to tire herself as
well as to force herself to stop listening.</p>
<p>When they said good-night to each other Rosy clung to her as desperately
as she had clung on the night after her arrival. She kissed her again and
again, and then hung her head and excused herself.</p>
<p>"Forgive me for being—nervous. I'm ashamed of myself," she said.
"Perhaps in time I shall get over being a coward."</p>
<p>But she said nothing of the fact that she was not a coward for herself,
but through a slowly formulating and struggled—against fear, which
chilled her very heart, and which she could best cover by a pretence of
being a poltroon.</p>
<p>She could not sleep when she went to bed. The night seemed crowded with
strange, terrified thoughts. They were all of Betty, though sometimes she
thought of her father's coming, of her mother in New York, and of Betty's
steady working throughout the day. Sometimes she cried, twisting her hands
together, and sometimes she dropped into a feverish sleep, and dreamed
that she was watching Betty's face, yet was afraid to look at it.</p>
<p>She awakened suddenly from one of these dreams, and sat upright in bed to
find the dawn breaking. She rose and threw on a dressing-gown, and went to
her sister's room because she could not bear to stay away.</p>
<p>The door was not locked, and she pushed it open gently. One of the windows
had its blind drawn up, and looked like a patch of dull grey. Betty was
standing upright near it. She was in her night-gown, and a long black
plait of hair hung over one shoulder heavily. She looked all black and
white in strong contrast. The grey light set her forth as a tall ghost.</p>
<p>Lady Anstruthers slid forward, feeling a tightness in her chest.</p>
<p>"The dawn wakened me too," she said.</p>
<p>"I have been waiting to see it come," answered Betty. "It is going to be a
dull, dreary day."</p>
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