<h2>CHAPTER XXXIX<br/> <span class="f8">AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">I chatted</span> with Mrs. Jack for a few minutes with
what nonchalance I could muster, for I wanted to
cover up Marjory’s retreat. I have not the faintest
idea what we talked about; I only know that the dear old
lady sat and beamed on me, with her lips pursed up in
thought, and went on with her knitting. She agreed with
everything I said, whatever it was. I longed to follow
Marjory and comfort her. I could see that she was distressed,
though I did not know the measure of it. I
waited patiently, however, for I knew that she would
either come to me, or send me word to join her when she
wanted me.</p>
<p>She must have come back very quietly, almost tip-toe,
for I had not heard a sound when I saw her in the doorway.
She was beckoning to me, but in such a manner
that Mrs. Jack could not see her. I was about to go
quietly, but she held up a warning hand with five fingers
outspread; from which I took it that I was to follow in
five minutes.</p>
<p>I stole away quietly, priding myself on the fact that
Mrs. Jack did not notice my departure; but on thinking
the matter over later, I came to the conclusion that the
quiet old lady knew a good deal more of what was going
on round her than appeared on the surface. Her little
homily to Marjory on a wife’s duty has set me thinking
many a time since.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I found Marjory, as I expected, in the Ladies’ Room.
She was looking out of the window when I came in. I
took her in my arms for an instant, and she laid her head
on my shoulder. Then she drew herself away, and
pointed to a great chair close by for me to sit down.
When I was seated she took a little stool, and placing it
beside me, sat at my feet. From our position I had to
look down at her, and she had to look up at me. Often
and often since then have I recalled the picture she made,
sitting there in her sweet graceful simplicity. Well may
I remember it, for through many and many an aching
hour has every incident of that day, however trivial, been
burned into my brain. Marjory leant one elbow on the
arm of my chair, and put the other hand in mine with a
sweet confiding gesture which touched me to the heart.
Since our peril of two nights before, she was very, very
dear to me. All the selfishness seemed to have disappeared
from my affection for her, and I was her true
lover as purely as it is given to a man to be. She wanted
to speak; I could see that it was an effort to do so, for
her breast heaved a few times, as a diver breathes before
making his downward leap. Then she mastered herself,
and with infinite grace and tenderness spoke:</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I have been very selfish and inconsiderate.
Oh! yes I have” for I was commencing a protest. “I
know it now. Mrs. Jack was quite right. It never occurred
to me what a brute I have been; and you so good
to me, and so patient. Well, dear, that’s all over now!
I want to tell you, right here, that if you like I’ll go away
with you to-morrow—to-day if you wish; and we’ll let
every one know that we are married, and go and live
together.” She stopped, and we sat hand in hand with
our fingers clasping. I remained quite still with a calm
that amazed me, for my brain was in a whirl. But somehow
there came to me, even as it had come to her, a sense<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</SPAN></span>
of duty. How could I accept such a sweet sacrifice. The
very gravity of her preparation for thought and speech
showed me that she was loth to leave the course on which
she had entered. That she loved me I had no doubt;
was it not for me that she was willing to give it all up.
And then my course of action rose clear before me. Instinctively
I stood up as I spoke to her, and I felt that big
stalwart man as I was, the pretty self-denying girl at my
feet ruled me, for she was more to me than my own
wishes, my own hopes, my own soul.</p>
<p>“Marjory, do you remember when you sat on the
throne in the cave, and gave me the accolade?” She
bowed her head in acquiescence; her eyes fell, and her
face and ears grew rosy pink. “Well, when you dubbed
me your knight, and I took the vow, I meant all I said!
Your touch on my shoulder was more to me than if it had
come from the Queen on her throne, with all the glory
of a thousand years behind her. Oh, my dear, I was in
earnest—in earnest then, as I am in earnest now. I was,
and am, your true knight! You are my lady; to serve,
and make her feet walk in easy ways! It is a terrible
temptation to me to take what you have offered as done,
and walk straightway into Paradise in our new life. But,
my dear! my dear! I too can be selfish if I am tempted
too far; and I must not think of my own wishes alone.
Since I first saw your face I have dreamt a dream. That
a time would come when you, with all the world to choose
from, would come to me of your own free will. When
you wouldn’t want to look back with regret at anything,
done or undone. I want you to be happy; to look forward
only—unless the backward thought is of happiness.
Now, if you give up your purpose and come to me with
the feeling that you have only made a choice, the regret
that you did not have the opportunity you longed for,
may grow and grow, till—till it may become an unhappiness.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</SPAN></span>
Let me be sententious for a moment. ‘Remember
Lot’s wife’ was not merely the warning of a fact; it
touched a great allegory. You and I are young; we are
both happy; we have all the world before us, and numberless
good things to thank God for. I want you to
enjoy them to the full; and, my dear one, I will not stand
in your way in anything which you may wish. Be free,
Marjory, be quite free! The girl I want beside my
hearth is one who would rather be there than anywhere
else in the wide world. Isn’t that worth wishing for;
isn’t it worth waiting for? It may be selfish in the highest
plane of selfishness; I suppose it is. But anyhow, it
is my dream; and I love you so truly and so steadfastly
that I am not afraid to wait!”</p>
<p>As I spoke, Marjory looked at me lovingly, more and
more. Then all at once she broke down, and began to
sob and cry as if her heart would break. That swept
away in a moment all my self-command; I took her in my
arms and tried to comfort her. Kisses and sweet words
fairly rained upon her. Presently she grew calm, and
said as she gently disengaged herself:</p>
<p>“You don’t know how well you argue. I’m nearer at
this moment to giving up all my plans, than I ever
thought I should be in my life. Wait a little longer,
dear. Only a little; the time may be shorter than you
think. But this you may take for your comfort now, and
your remembrance later; that in all my life, whatever
may come, I shall never forget your goodness to me,
your generosity, your love, your sympathy—your—!
But there, you are indeed my Knight; and I love you
with all my heart and soul!” and she threw herself into
my arms.</p>
<p>When I left Crom after lunch the weather seemed to
have changed. There was a coldness in the air which
emphasised the rustling of the dry leaves as they were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</SPAN></span>
swept by intermittent puffs of wind. Altogether there
was a sense of some presage of gloom—or disaster—of
discontent, I knew not what. I was loth to part with
Marjory, but we both felt it was necessary I should go.
I had not had my letters for three days; and besides
there were a thousand things to be attended to about
the house at Whinnyfold. Moreover, we began to think
of the treasure, the portable part of which—the jewels—was
left almost open in the dining room. I did not want
to alarm Marjory by any dim fears of my own; I knew
that, in any case, there might be a reaction from her present
high spirits. The remembrance of the trials and
anxieties of the past few days would come back to her
in the silence of the night. She saw, however, with the
new eyes of her wifely love, that I was anxious about
something; justly inferring that it was about her, she
said to me quietly:</p>
<p>“You need not be alarmed about me, darling. I
promise you I shall not stir out of the house till you
come. But you will come as early as you can to-morrow;
won’t you. Somehow, I don’t like your leaving me now.
I used not to mind it; but to-day it all seems different.
We don’t seem to be the same to each other, do we,
since we felt that water creep up us in the dark. However,
I shall be very good. I have a lot of work to do,
and letters to write; and the time may not go so very
slowly, or seem so very long, till I see my husband
again.”</p>
<p>Oh! it was sweet to look in her eyes, and see the love
that shone from them; to hear the delicate cooing music
of her voice. My heart seemed to fly back to her as I
moved away; and every step I took, its strings seemed
nearer and nearer to the breaking point. When I looked
back at the turn of the winding avenue between the fir
trees, the last I saw through my dimming eyes was the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</SPAN></span>
wave of her hand and the shining of her eyes blending
into one mass of white light.</p>
<p>In my rooms at the hotel I found a lot of letters about
business, and a few from friends. There was one however
which made me think. It was in the writing of
Adams, and was as follows, no place or date being
given:</p>
<p>“The people at Crom had better be careful of their
servants! There is a footman who often goes out after
dark and returns just before morning. He may be in
league with enemies. Anyhow, where he gets out and
in, and how, others may do the same. <abbr title="verbum sapienti sufficient">Verb. sap, suff.
A.</abbr>”</p>
<p>We had been watched then, and by the Secret Service
detectives. I was glad that Marjory had promised not
to go out till I came. If “Mac’s men” had seen her,
others might also; and the eyes of the others might have
been more penetrating, or their reasoning powers more
keen. However, I thought it well to send her a word
of warning. I copied Adams’s letter into mine, with just
a word or two of love added. I was amazed to find that
altogether it ran to several pages! The gillie of the
hotel took it over in a pony cart, with instructions to
bring me back an answer to Whinnyfold. For safety I
enclosed it in an envelope to Mrs. Jack. Then, when I
had written a few notes and telegrams, I biked over to
my house on the cliff.</p>
<p>It was a bleak afternoon and everything seemed grey,
sky and sea alike; even the rocks, with their crowning
of black seaweed swept with the foam of lapping waves.
Inside the house nothing had of course been stirred; but
it seemed so bleak without a fire and with the curtains
wide, that I made up a fire of billets and drew the heavy
curtains close. As I stood in the great bay window
and looked out on the fretting sea, and listened to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</SPAN></span>
soughing of the rising wind, a great melancholy seemed
to steal over me, so that I became in a way lost in a mist
of gloom. So far as I remember, my thoughts were
back with the time when I had seen the procession of
the dead coming up out of the sea from the Skares beyond,
and of the fierce looking Spaniard who walked
alone in their ranks and looked at me with living eyes.
I must have been in a sort of day-dream and unconscious
of all around me; for, though I had not noticed any one
approaching, I was startled by a knocking at the door.
The house was not quite finished; there were electric
bells in position, but they had not yet been charged, and
there was no knocker on the door. The knocking was
that of bare knuckles on a panel. I thought of course
that it was the gillie back from Crom, for I did not
expect any one else; so I went at once and opened the
door. I recoiled with pure wonder. There, looking
grave and dignified, an incarnation of the word ‘gentleman’
stood Don Bernardino. His eyes, though now
serene, and even kindly, were the eyes of the dead man
from the sea. Behind him, a few yards off, stood Gormala
MacNiel with an eager look on her face, half concealed by
such a grin as made me feel as though I had been trapped,
or in some way brought to book. The Spaniard at once
spoke:</p>
<p>“Sir, your pardon! I wish much that I may speak
with you in private, and soon. Forgive me if that I
trouble you, but it is on a matter of such moment, to me
at the least, that I have ventured an intrusion. I learned
at the hotel that you had hither come; so with the
guidance of this good lady, who did me much inform, I
have found.” As he spoke of Gormala, he half turned
and made a gesture towards her. She had been watching
our every movement with cat-like eagerness; but
when she saw that we were speaking of her, a dark look<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</SPAN></span>
swept her face, and she moved away scowling. The
Spaniard went on:</p>
<p>“What I have to say is secret, and I would be alone
with you. May it be that I enter your house; or will
you come to mine? I do not mean my castle of Crom,
but the house at Ellon which I have taken, until such
time as the Senora Jack and that so fair patriot of hers
shall wish to leave it.” His manner was so gravely courteous
and his bearing so noble, that I found it almost
impossible to mistrust him, even when there flashed
across my memory that dark red-eyed look of his at
Crom, which recalled so vividly the dead Spaniard with
the living eyes of hate in the procession of ghosts from
the Skares. I felt that, in any case, it could not do any
harm to hear what he had to say: ‘Forewarned is forearmed’
is a good apothegm in dealing with an enemy.
I motioned him into the house; he bowed gravely and
entered. As I shut the door behind us, I caught sight
of Gormala with an eager look on her face stealing
swiftly towards the house. She evidently wanted to be
near enough to watch, and to hear if she could.</p>
<p>As I was opening the door of the drawing-room for
Don Bernardino to enter, a sudden glimpse of its interior,
seen in the dim light through the chinks of the shutters,
changed my plans. This was the room improvised as a
dressing room for Marjory, and the clothes which she
had worn in the cave were scattered about the room,
hung over the backs of chairs to dry. Her toilet matters
also were on the table. Altogether I felt that to bring
the stranger into the room would not only be an indelicacy
towards my wife, but might in some way give a
clue to our enemy to guess our secret. With a hasty
excuse I closed the door and motioned my guest into the
dining room across the hall. I asked him to be seated,
and then went over to the window and pulled aside the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</SPAN></span>
curtains to give us light. I felt that somehow I was
safer in the light, and that it might enable me to learn
more than I could have done in the dim twilight of the
curtained room.</p>
<p>When I turned round, the Spaniard was still standing,
facing me. He appeared to be studiously keeping himself
still; but I could see that under his long black lashes
his eyes were roaming round the room. Unconsciously
to myself, as I know now, my eyes followed his and took
in the frightful untidiness of the place. The great hearth
was piled with extinct ashes; the table was littered with
unwashed cups and plates and dishes, for we had not
cleared up anything after our night in the cave. Rugs
and pillows were massed untidily on the floor, and the
stale provisions on the table made themselves manifest
in the close atmosphere of the room. I was moving over
to throw up the window so as to let in a little fresh air,
when I remembered that Gormala was probably outside
with her ears strained close to the wall to hear anything
that we might say. So, instead, I apologised for the disorder,
saying that I had camped me there for some days
whilst working at my book—the excuse I had given at
the hotel for my spells of solitary life.</p>
<p>The Spaniard bowed low with grave courtesy, and
implored that I would make no apology. If there were
anything not perfect, and for himself he did not see it,
such deficiencies were swept away and lost in the tide of
honour with which I had overwhelmed him in the permission
to enter my house; and much more to the same
effect.</p>
<p>Then he came to the serious side of things and began
to speak to the point.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</SPAN></span></p>
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