<h2><SPAN name="XIX"></SPAN>XIX</h2>
<br/>
<p>The train was speeding through the forest country of Chantilly.
A pale moon had risen, and beneath its light the straight forest
roads, interminably long, stretched into the distance; the vaporous
masses of young and budding trees hurried past the eye of the
traveller; so, also, the white hamlets, already dark and silent;
the stations with their lights and figures; the great wood-piles
beside the line.</p>
<p>Delafield, in his second-class carriage, sat sleepless and
erect. The night was bitterly cold. He wore the light overcoat in
which he had left the Hôtel du Rhin that afternoon for a
stroll before dinner, and had no other wrap or covering. But he
felt nothing, was conscious of nothing but the rushing current of
his own thoughts.</p>
<p>The events of the two preceding days, the meaning of them, the
significance of his own action and its consequences--it was with
these materials that his mind dealt perpetually, combining,
interpreting, deducing, now in one way, now in another. His mood
contained both excitement and dread. But with a main temper of
calmness, courage, invincible determination, these elements did not
at all interfere.</p>
<p>The day before, he had left London with his cousins, the Duke of
Chudleigh, and young Lord Elmira, the invalid boy. They were bound
to Paris to consult a new doctor, and Jacob had offered to convey
them there. In spite of all the apparatus of servants and couriers
with which they were surrounded, they always seemed to him, on
their journeys, a singularly lonely and hapless pair, and he knew
that they leaned upon him and prized his company.</p>
<p>On the way to Paris, at the Calais buffet, he had noticed Henry
Warkworth, and had given him a passing nod. It had been understood
the night before in Heribert Street that they would both be
crossing on the morrow.</p>
<p>On the following day--the day of Julie's journey--Delafield, who
was anxiously awaiting the return of his two companions from their
interview with the great physician they were consulting, was
strolling up the Rue de la Paix, just before luncheon, when,
outside the Hôtel Mirabeau, he ran into a man whom he
immediately perceived to be Warkworth.</p>
<p>Politeness involved the exchange of a few sentences, although a
secret antagonism between the two men had revealed itself from the
first day of their meeting in Lady Henry's drawing-room. Each word
of their short conversation rang clearly through Delafield's
memory.</p>
<p>"You are at the 'Rhin'?" said Warkworth.</p>
<p>"Yes, for a couple more days. Shall we meet at the Embassy
to-morrow?"</p>
<p>"No. I dined there last night. My business here is done. I start
for Rome to-night."</p>
<p>"Lucky man. They have put on a new fast train, haven't
they?"</p>
<p>"Yes. You leave the Gare de Lyon at 7.15, and you are at Rome
the second morning, in good time."</p>
<p>"Magnificent! Why don't we all rush south? Well, good-bye again,
and good luck."</p>
<p>They touched hands perfunctorily and parted.</p>
<p>This happened about mid-day. While Delafield and his cousins
were lunching, a telegram from the Duchess of Crowborough was
handed to Jacob. He had wired to her early in the morning to ask
for the address in Paris of an old friend of his, who was also a
cousin of hers. The telegram contained:</p>
<p>/# "Thirty-six Avenue Friedland. Lord Lackington heart-attack
this morning. Dying. Has asked urgently for Julie. Blanche Moffatt
detained Florence by daughter's illness. All circumstances most
sad. Woman Heribert Street gave me Bruges address. Have wired Julie
there." #/</p>
<p>The message set vibrating in Delafield's mind the tender memory
which already existed there of his last talk with Julie, of her
strange dependence and gentleness, her haunting and pleading
personality. He hoped with all his heart she might reach the old
man in time, that his two sons, Uredale and William, would treat
her kindly, and that it would be found when the end came that he
had made due provision for her as his granddaughter.</p>
<p>But he had small leisure to give to thoughts of this kind. The
physician's report in the morning had not been encouraging, and his
two travelling companions demanded all the sympathy and support he
could give them. He went out with them in the afternoon to the
Hôtel de la Terrasse at St. Germain. The Duke, a nervous
hypochondriac, could not sleep in the noise of Paris, and was
accustomed to a certain apartment in this well-known hotel, which
was often reserved for him. Jacob left them about six o'clock to
return to Paris. He was to meet one of the Embassy
attachés--an old Oxford friend--at the Café Gaillard
for dinner. He dressed at the "Rhin," put on an overcoat, and set
out to walk to the Rue Gaillard about half-past seven. As he
approached the "Mirabeau," he saw a cab with luggage standing at
the door. A man came out with the hotel <i>concierge</i>. To his
astonishment, Delafield recognized Warkworth.</p>
<p>The young officer seemed in a hurry and out of temper. At any
rate, he jumped into the cab without taking any notice of the two
<i>sommeliers</i> and the <i>concierge</i> who stood round
expectant of francs, and when the <i>concierge</i> in his stiffest
manner asked where the man was to drive, Warkworth put his head out
of the window and said, hastily, to the <i>cocher</i>:</p>
<p>"D'abord, à la Gare de Sceaux! Puis, je vous dirai. Mais
dépêchez-vous!"</p>
<p>The cab rolled away, and Delafield walked on.</p>
<p>Half-past seven, striking from all the Paris towers! And
Warkworth's intention in the morning was to leave the Gare de Lyon
at 7.15. But it seemed he was now bound, at 7.30, for the Gare de
Sceaux, from which point of departure it was clear that no
reasonable man would think of starting for the Eternal City.</p>
<p>"<i>D'abord,</i> à la Gare de Sceaux!"</p>
<p>Then he was not catching a train?--at any rate, immediately. He
had some other business first, and was perhaps going to the station
to deposit his luggage?</p>
<p>Suddenly a thought, a suspicion, flashed through Delafield's
mind, which set his heart thumping in his breast. In after days he
was often puzzled to account for its origin, still more for the
extraordinary force with which it at once took possession of all
his energies. In his more mystical moments of later life he rose to
the secret belief that God had spoken to him.</p>
<p>At any rate, he at once hailed a cab, and, thinking no more of
his dinner engagement, he drove post-haste to the Nord Station. In
those days the Calais train arrived at eight. He reached the
station a few minutes before it appeared. When at last it drew up,
amid the crowd on the platform it took him only a few seconds to
distinguish the dark and elegant head of Julie Le Breton.</p>
<p>A pang shot through him that pierced to the very centre of life.
He was conscious of a prayer for help and a clear mind. But on his
way to the station he had rapidly thought out a plan on which to
act should this mad notion in his brain turn out to have any
support in reality.</p>
<p>It had so much support that Julie Le Breton was there--in
Paris--and not at Bruges, as she had led the Duchess to suppose.
And when she turned her startled face upon him, his wild fancy
became, for himself, a certainty.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>"Amiens! Cinq minutes d'arrêt."</p>
<p>Delafield got out and walked up and down the platform. He passed
the closed and darkened windows of the sleeping-car; and it seemed
to his abnormally quickened sense that he was beside her, bending
over her, and that he said to her:</p>
<p>"Courage! You are saved! Let us thank God!"</p>
<p>A boy from the refreshment-room came along, wheeling a barrow on
which were tea and coffee.</p>
<p>Delafield eagerly drank a cup of tea and put his hand into his
pocket to pay for it. He found there three francs and his ticket.
After paying for the tea he examined his purse. That contained an
English half-crown.</p>
<p>So he had had with him just enough to get his own second-class
ticket, her first-class, and a sleeping-car. That was good fortune,
seeing that the bulk of his money, with his return ticket, was
reposing in his dressing-case at the Hôtel du Rhin.</p>
<p>"En voiture! En voiture, s'il vous plaît!"</p>
<p>He settled himself once more in his corner, and the train rushed
on. This time it was the strange hour at the Gare du Nord which he
lived through again, her white face opposite to him in the
refreshment-room, the bewilderment and misery she had been so
little able to conceal, her spasmodic attempts at conversation, a
few vague words about Lord Lackington or the Duchess, and then
pauses, when her great eyes, haggard and weary, stared into
vacancy, and he knew well enough that her thoughts were with
Warkworth, and that she was in fierce rebellion against his
presence there, and this action into which he had forced her.</p>
<p>As for him, he perfectly understood the dilemma in which she
stood. Either she must accept the duty of returning to the
death-bed of the old man, her mother's father, or she must confess
her appointment with Warkworth.</p>
<p>Yet--suppose he had been mistaken? Well, the telegram from the
Duchess covered his whole action. Lord Lackington <i>was</i> dying;
and apart from all question of feeling, Julie Le Breton's friends
must naturally desire that he should see her, acknowledge her
before his two sons, and, with their consent, provide for her
before his death.</p>
<p>But, ah, he had not been mistaken! He remembered her hurried
refusal when he had asked her if he should telegraph for her to her
Paris "friends"--how, in a sudden shame, he had turned away that he
might not see the beloved false face as she spoke, might not seem
to watch or suspect her.</p>
<p>He had just had time to send off a messenger, first to his
friend at the Café Gaillard, and then to the Hôtel du
Rhin, before escorting her to the sleeping-car.</p>
<p>Ah, how piteous had been that dull bewilderment with which she
had turned to him!</p>
<p>"But--my ticket?"</p>
<p>"Here they are. Oh, never mind--we will settle in town. Try to
sleep. You must be very tired."</p>
<p>And then it seemed to him that her lips trembled, like those of
a miserable child; and surely, surely, she must hear that mad
beating of his pulse!</p>
<p>Boulogne was gone in a flash. Here was the Somme, stretched in a
pale silver flood beneath the moon--a land of dunes and stunted
pines, of wide sea-marshes, over which came the roar of the
Channel. Then again the sea was left behind, and the rich Picard
country rolled away to right and left. Lights here and there, in
cottage or villa--the lights, perhaps, of birth or
death--companions of hope or despair.</p>
<p>Calais!</p>
<p>The train moved slowly up to the boat-side. Delafield jumped
out. The sleeping-car was yielding up its passengers. He soon made
out the small black hat and veil, the slender form in the dark
travelling-dress.</p>
<p>Was she fainting? For she seemed to him to waver as he
approached her, and the porter who had taken her rugs and bag was
looking at her in astonishment. In an instant he had drawn her arm
within his, and was supporting her as he best could,</p>
<p>"The car was very hot, and I am so tired. I only want some
air."</p>
<p>They reached the deck.</p>
<p>"You will go down-stairs?"</p>
<p>"No, no--some air!" she murmured, and he saw that she could
hardly keep her feet.</p>
<p>But in a few moments they had reached the shelter on the upper
deck usually so well filled with chairs and passengers on a day
crossing. Now it was entirely deserted. The boat was not full, the
night was cold and stormy, and the stream of passengers had poured
down into the shelter of the lower deck.</p>
<p>Julie sank into a chair. Delafield hurriedly loosened the shawl
she carried with her from its attendant bag and umbrella, and
wrapped it round her.</p>
<p>"It will be a rough crossing," he said, in her ear. "Can you
stand it on deck?"</p>
<p>"I am a good sailor. Let me stay here."</p>
<p>Her eyes closed. He stooped over her in an anguish. One of the
boat officials approached him.</p>
<p>"Madame ferait mieux de descendre, monsieur. La traversée
ne sera pas bonne."</p>
<p>Delafield explained that the lady must have air, and was a good
sailor. Then he pressed into the man's hand his three francs, and
sent him for brandy and an extra covering of some kind. The man
went unwillingly.</p>
<p>During the whole bustle of departure, Delafield saw nothing but
Julie's helpless and motionless form; he heard nothing but the
faint words by which, once or twice, she tried to convey to him
that she was not unconscious.</p>
<p>The brandy came. The man who brought it again objected to
Julie's presence on deck. Delafield took no heed. He was absorbed
in making Julie swallow some of the brandy.</p>
<p>At last they were off. The vessel glided slowly out of the old
harbor, and they were immediately in rough water.</p>
<p>Delafield was roused by a peremptory voice at his elbow.</p>
<p>"This lady ought not to stay here, sir. There is plenty of room
in the ladies' cabin."</p>
<p>Delafield looked up and recognized the captain of the boat, the
same man who, thirty-six hours before, had shown special civilities
to the Duke of Chudleigh and his party.</p>
<p>"Ah, you are Captain Whittaker," he said.</p>
<p>The shrewd, stout man who had accosted him raised his eyebrows
in astonishment.</p>
<p>Delafield drew him aside a moment. After a short conversation
the captain lifted his cap and departed, with a few words to the
subordinate officer who had drawn his attention to the matter.
Henceforward they were unmolested, and presently the officer
brought a pillow and striped blanket, saying they might be useful
to the lady. Julie was soon comfortably placed, lying down on the
seat under the wooden shelter. Delicacy seemed to suggest that her
companion should leave her to herself.</p>
<p>Jacob walked up and down briskly, trying to shake off the cold
which benumbed him. Every now and then he paused to look at the
lights on the receding French coast, at its gray phantom line
sweeping southward under the stormy moon, or disappearing to the
north in clouds of rain. There was a roar of waves and a dashing of
spray. The boat, not a large one, was pitching heavily, and the few
male passengers who had at first haunted the deck soon
disappeared.</p>
<p>Delafield hung over the surging water in a strange exaltation,
half physical, half moral. The wild salt strength and savor of the
sea breathed something akin to that passionate force of will which
had impelled him to the enterprise in which he stood. No mere man
of the world could have dared it; most men of the world, as he was
well aware, would have condemned or ridiculed it. But for one who
saw life and conduct <i>sub specie æternitatis</i> it had
seemed natural enough.</p>
<p>The wind blew fierce and cold. He made his way back to Julie's
side. To his surprise, she had raised herself and was sitting
propped up against the corner of the seat, her veil thrown
back.</p>
<p>"You are better?" he said, stooping to her, so as to be heard
against the boom of the waves. "This rough weather does not affect
you?"</p>
<p>She made a negative sign. He drew his camp-stool beside her.
Suddenly she asked him what time it was. The haggard nobleness of
her pale face amid the folds of black veil, the absent passion of
the eye, thrilled to his heart. Where were her thoughts?</p>
<p>"Nearly four o'clock." He drew out his watch. "You see it is
beginning to lighten,"</p>
<p>And he pointed to the sky, in which that indefinable lifting of
the darkness which precedes the dawn was taking place, and to the
far distances of sea, where a sort of livid clarity was beginning
to absorb and vanquish that stormy play of alternate dark and
moonlight which had prevailed when they left the French shore.</p>
<p>He had hardly spoken, when he felt that her eyes were fixed upon
him.</p>
<p>To look at his watch, he had thrown open his long Newmarket
coat, forgetting that in so doing he disclosed the evening-dress in
which he had robed himself at the Hôtel du Rhin for his
friend's dinner at the Café Gaillard.</p>
<p>He hastily rebuttoned his coat, and turned his face seaward once
more. But he heard her voice, and was obliged to come close to her
that he might catch the words.</p>
<p>"You have given me your wraps," she said, with difficulty. "You
will suffer."</p>
<p>"Not at all. You have your own rug, and one that the captain
provided. I keep myself quite warm with moving about."</p>
<p>There was a pause. His mind began to fill with alarm. He was not
of the men who act a part with ease; but, having got through so
far, he had calculated on preserving his secret.</p>
<p>Flight was best, and he was just turning away when a gesture of
hers arrested him. Again he stooped till their faces were near
enough to let her voice reach him.</p>
<p>"Why are you in evening-dress?"</p>
<p>"I had intended to dine with a friend. There was not time to
change."</p>
<p>"Then you did not mean to cross to-night?"</p>
<p>He delayed a moment, trying to collect his thoughts.</p>
<p>"Not when I dressed for dinner, but some sudden news decided
me."</p>
<p>Her head fell back wearily against the support behind it. The
eyes closed, and he, thinking she would perhaps sleep, was about to
rise from his seat, when the pressure of her hand upon his arm
detained him. He sat still and the hand was withdrawn.</p>
<p>There was a lessening of the roar in their ears. Under the lee
of the English shore the wind was milder, the "terror-music" of the
sea less triumphant. And over everything was stealing the first
discriminating touch of the coming light. Her face was clear now;
and Delafield, at last venturing to look at her, saw that her eyes
were open again, and trembled at their expression. There was in
them a wild suspicion. Secretly, steadily, he nerved himself to
meet the blow that he foresaw.</p>
<p>"Mr. Delafield, have you told me all the truth?"</p>
<p>She sat up as she spoke, deadly pale but rigid. With an
impatient hand she threw off the wraps which had covered her. Her
face commanded an answer.</p>
<p>"Certainly I have told you the truth."</p>
<p>"Was it the whole truth? It seems--it seems to me that you were
not prepared yourself for this journey--that there is some
mystery--which I do not understand--which I resent!"</p>
<p>"But what mystery? When I saw you, I of course thought of
Evelyn's telegram."</p>
<p>"I should like to see that telegram."</p>
<p>He hesitated. If he had been more skilled in the little
falsehoods of every day he would simply have said that he had left
it at the hotel. But he lost his chance. Nor at the moment did he
clearly perceive what harm it would do to show it to her. The
telegram was in his pocket, and he handed it to her.</p>
<p>There was a dim oil-lamp in the shelter. With difficulty she
held the fluttering paper up and just divined the words. Then the
wind carried it away and blew it overboard. He rose and leaned
against the edge of the shelter, looking down upon her. There was
in his mind a sense of something solemn approaching, round which
this sudden lull of blast and wave seemed to draw a "wind-warm
space," closing them in.</p>
<p>"Why did you come with me?" she persisted, in an agitation she
could now scarcely control. "It is evident you had not meant to
travel. You have no luggage, and you are in evening-dress. And I
remember now--you sent two letters from the station!"</p>
<p>"I wished to be your escort."</p>
<p>Her gesture was almost one of scorn at the evasion.</p>
<p>"Why were you at the station at all? Evelyn had told you I was
at Bruges. And--you were dining out. I--I can't understand!"</p>
<p>She spoke with a frowning intensity, a strange queenliness, in
which was neither guilt nor confusion.</p>
<p>A voice spoke in Delafield's heart. "Tell her!" it said.</p>
<p>He bent nearer to her.</p>
<p>"Miss Le Breton, with what friends were you going to stay in
Paris?"</p>
<p>She breathed quick.</p>
<p>"I am not a school-girl, I think, that I should be asked
questions of that kind."</p>
<p>"But on your answer depends mine."</p>
<p>She looked at him in amazement. His gentle kindness had
disappeared. She saw, instead, that Jacob Delafield whom her
instinct had divined from the beginning behind the modest and
courteous outer man, the Jacob Delafield of whom she had told the
Duchess she was afraid.</p>
<p>But her passion swept every other thought out of its way. With
dim agony and rage she began to perceive that she had been
duped.</p>
<p>"Mr. Delafield"--she tried for calm--"I don't understand your
attitude, but, so far as I do understand it, I find it intolerable.
If you have deceived me--"</p>
<p>"I have not deceived you. Lord Lackington is dying."</p>
<p>"But that is not why you were at the station," she repeated,
passionately. "Why did you meet the English train?"</p>
<p>Her eyes, clear now in the cold light, shone upon him
imperiously.</p>
<p>Again the inner voice said: "Speak--get away from
conventionalities. Speak--soul to soul!"</p>
<p>He sat down once more beside her. His gaze sought the ground.
Then, with sharp suddenness, he looked her in the face.</p>
<p>"Miss Le Breton, you were going to Paris to meet Major
Warkworth?"</p>
<p>She drew back.</p>
<p>"And if I was?" she said, with a wild defiance.</p>
<p>"I had to prevent it, that was all."</p>
<p>His tone was calm and resolution itself.</p>
<p>"Who--who gave you authority over me?"</p>
<p>"One may save--even by violence. You were too precious to be
allowed to destroy yourself."</p>
<p>His look, so sad and strong, the look of a deep compassion,
fastened itself upon her. He felt himself, indeed, possessed by a
force not his own, that same force which in its supreme degree made
of St. Francis "the great tamer of souls."</p>
<p>"Who asked you to be our judge? Neither I nor Major Warkworth
owe you anything."</p>
<p>"No. But I owed you help--as a man--as your friend. The truth
was somehow borne in upon me. You were risking your honor--I threw
myself in the way."</p>
<p>Every word seemed to madden her.</p>
<p>"What--what could you know of the circumstances?" cried her
choked, laboring voice. "It is unpardonable--an outrage! You know
nothing either of him or of me."</p>
<p>She clasped her hands to her breast in a piteous, magnificent
gesture, as though she were defending her lover and her love.</p>
<p>"I know that you have suffered much," he said, dropping his eyes
before her, "but you would suffer infinitely more if--"</p>
<p>"If you had not interfered." Her veil had fallen over her face
again. She flung it back in impatient despair. "Mr. Delafield, I
can do without your anxieties."</p>
<p>"But not"--he spoke slowly--"without your own self-respect."</p>
<p>Julie's face trembled. She hid it in her hands.</p>
<p>"Go!" she said. "Go!"</p>
<p>He went to the farther end of the ship and stood there
motionless, looking towards the land but seeing nothing. On all
sides the darkness was lifting, and in the distance there gleamed
already the whiteness that was Dover. His whole being was shaken
with that experience which comes so rarely to cumbered and
superficial men--the intimate wrestle of one personality with
another. It seemed to him he was not worthy of it.</p>
<p>After some little time, when only a quarter of an hour lay
between the ship and Dover pier, he went back to Julie.</p>
<p>She was sitting perfectly still, her hands clasped in front of
her, her veil drawn down.</p>
<p>"May I say one word to you?" he said, gently.</p>
<p>She did not speak.</p>
<p>"It is this. What I have confessed to you to-night is, of
course, buried between us. It is as though it had never been said.
I have given you pain. I ask your pardon from the bottom of my
heart, and, at the same time"--his voice trembled--"I thank God
that I had the courage to do it!"</p>
<p>She threw him a glance that showed her a quivering lip and the
pallor of intense emotion.</p>
<p>"I know you think you were right," she said, in a voice dull and
strained, "but henceforth we can only be enemies. You have
tyrannized over me in the name of standards that you revere and I
reject. I can only beg you to let my life alone for the
future."</p>
<p>He said nothing. She rose, dizzily, to her feet. They were
rapidly approaching the pier.</p>
<br/>
<SPAN name="illus-356.jpg"></SPAN>
<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="images/illus-356.jpg"><ANTIMG src=
"images/illus-356.jpg" width="50%" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>"HER HANDS CLASPED IN FRONT OF HER"</b></p>
<br/>
<p>With the cold aloofness of one who feels it more dignified to
submit than to struggle, she allowed him to assist her in landing.
He put her into the Victoria train, travelling himself in another
carriage.</p>
<p>As he walked beside her down the platform of Victoria Station,
she said to him:</p>
<p>"I shall be obliged if you will tell Evelyn that I have
returned."</p>
<p>"I go to her at once."</p>
<p>She suddenly paused, and he saw that she was looking helplessly
at one of the newspaper placards of the night before. First among
its items appeared: "Critical state of Lord Lackington."</p>
<p>He hardly knew how far she would allow him to have any further
communication with her, but her pale exhaustion made it impossible
not to offer to serve her.</p>
<p>"It would be early to go for news now," he said, gently. "It
would disturb the house. But in a couple of hours from now"--the
station clock pointed to 6.15--"if you will allow me, I will leave
the morning bulletin at your door."</p>
<p>She hesitated.</p>
<p>"You must rest, or you will have no strength for nursing," he
continued, in the same studiously guarded tone. "But if you would
prefer another messenger--"</p>
<p>"I have none," and she raised her hand to her brow in mute,
unconscious confession of an utter weakness and bewilderment.</p>
<p>"Then let me go," he said, softly.</p>
<p>It seemed to him that she was so physically weary as to be
incapable either of assent or resistance. He put her into her cab,
and gave the driver his directions. She looked at him uncertainly.
But he did not offer his hand. From those blue eyes of his there
shot out upon her one piercing glance--manly, entreating, sad. He
lifted his hat and was gone.</p>
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