5088 lines
240 KiB
Plaintext
5088 lines
240 KiB
Plaintext
*****The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Turn of the Screw*****
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The Turn of the Screw, by Henry James
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February, 1995 [Etext #209]
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*****The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Turn of the Screw*****
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The text is from the first American appearance in book form.
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THE TURN OF THE SCREW
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The story had held us, round the fire, sufficiently breathless,
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but except the obvious remark that it was gruesome, as, on Christmas
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Eve in an old house, a strange tale should essentially be,
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I remember no comment uttered till somebody happened to say that it
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was the only case he had met in which such a visitation had fallen
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on a child. The case, I may mention, was that of an apparition
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in just such an old house as had gathered us for the occasion--
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an appearance, of a dreadful kind, to a little boy sleeping
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in the room with his mother and waking her up in the terror of it;
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waking her not to dissipate his dread and soothe him to sleep again,
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but to encounter also, herself, before she had succeeded in doing so,
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the same sight that had shaken him. It was this observation
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that drew from Douglas--not immediately, but later in the evening--
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a reply that had the interesting consequence to which I call attention.
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Someone else told a story not particularly effective, which I saw
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he was not following. This I took for a sign that he had himself
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something to produce and that we should only have to wait.
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We waited in fact till two nights later; but that same evening,
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before we scattered, he brought out what was in his mind.
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"I quite agree--in regard to Griffin's ghost, or whatever it was--
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that its appearing first to the little boy, at so tender an age,
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adds a particular touch. But it's not the first occurrence
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of its charming kind that I know to have involved a child.
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If the child gives the effect another turn of the screw,
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what do you say to TWO children--?"
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"We say, of course," somebody exclaimed, "that they give two turns!
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Also that we want to hear about them."
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I can see Douglas there before the fire, to which he had got up
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to present his back, looking down at his interlocutor with his
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hands in his pockets. "Nobody but me, till now, has ever heard.
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It's quite too horrible." This, naturally, was declared by several
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voices to give the thing the utmost price, and our friend,
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with quiet art, prepared his triumph by turning his eyes
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over the rest of us and going on: "It's beyond everything.
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Nothing at all that I know touches it."
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"For sheer terror?" I remember asking.
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He seemed to say it was not so simple as that; to be really at a loss how to
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qualify it. He passed his hand over his eyes, made a little wincing grimace.
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"For dreadful--dreadfulness!"
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"Oh, how delicious!" cried one of the women.
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He took no notice of her; he looked at me, but as if, instead of me, he saw
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what he spoke of. "For general uncanny ugliness and horror and pain."
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"Well then," I said, "just sit right down and begin."
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He turned round to the fire, gave a kick to a log, watched it
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an instant. Then as he faced us again: "I can't begin.
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I shall have to send to town." There was a unanimous groan
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at this, and much reproach; after which, in his preoccupied way,
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he explained. "The story's written. It's in a locked drawer--
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it has not been out for years. I could write to my man and
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enclose the key; he could send down the packet as he finds it."
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It was to me in particular that he appeared to propound this--
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appeared almost to appeal for aid not to hesitate.
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He had broken a thickness of ice, the formation of many a winter;
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had had his reasons for a long silence. The others resented
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postponement, but it was just his scruples that charmed me.
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I adjured him to write by the first post and to agree with us
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for an early hearing; then I asked him if the experience
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in question had been his own. To this his answer was prompt.
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"Oh, thank God, no!"
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"And is the record yours? You took the thing down?"
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"Nothing but the impression. I took that HERE"--he tapped his heart.
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"I've never lost it."
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"Then your manuscript--?"
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"Is in old, faded ink, and in the most beautiful hand." He hung
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fire again. "A woman's. She has been dead these twenty years.
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She sent me the pages in question before she died."
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They were all listening now, and of course there was somebody
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to be arch, or at any rate to draw the inference. But if he put
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the inference by without a smile it was also without irritation.
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"She was a most charming person, but she was ten years older
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than I. She was my sister's governess," he quietly said.
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"She was the most agreeable woman I've ever known in her position;
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she would have been worthy of any whatever. It was long ago,
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and this episode was long before. I was at Trinity,
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and I found her at home on my coming down the second summer.
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I was much there that year--it was a beautiful one; and we had,
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in her off-hours, some strolls and talks in the garden--
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talks in which she struck me as awfully clever and nice.
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Oh yes; don't grin: I liked her extremely and am glad to this day
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to think she liked me, too. If she hadn't she wouldn't have told me.
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She had never told anyone. It wasn't simply that she said so,
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but that I knew she hadn't. I was sure; I could see.
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You'll easily judge why when you hear."
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"Because the thing had been such a scare?"
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He continued to fix me. "You'll easily judge," he repeated:
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"YOU will."
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I fixed him, too. "I see. She was in love."
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He laughed for the first time. "You ARE acute.
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Yes, she was in love. That is, she had been. That came out--
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she couldn't tell her story without its coming out.
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I saw it, and she saw I saw it; but neither of us spoke of it.
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I remember the time and the place--the corner of the lawn,
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the shade of the great beeches and the long, hot summer afternoon.
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It wasn't a scene for a shudder; but oh--!" He quitted the fire
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and dropped back into his chair.
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"You'll receive the packet Thursday morning?" I inquired.
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"Probably not till the second post."
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"Well then; after dinner--"
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"You'll all meet me here?" He looked us round again. "Isn't anybody going?"
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It was almost the tone of hope.
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"Everybody will stay!"
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"_I_ will" --and "_I_ will!" cried the ladies whose departure
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had been fixed. Mrs. Griffin, however, expressed the need
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for a little more light. "Who was it she was in love with?"
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"The story will tell," I took upon myself to reply.
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"Oh, I can't wait for the story!"
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"The story WON'T tell," said Douglas; "not in any literal, vulgar way."
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"More's the pity, then. That's the only way I ever understand."
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"Won't YOU tell, Douglas?" somebody else inquired.
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He sprang to his feet again. "Yes--tomorrow. Now I must go to bed.
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Good night." And quickly catching up a candlestick, he left
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us slightly bewildered. From our end of the great brown hall
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we heard his step on the stair; whereupon Mrs. Griffin spoke.
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"Well, if I don't know who she was in love with, I know
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who HE was."
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"She was ten years older," said her husband.
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"Raison de plus--at that age! But it's rather nice,
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his long reticence."
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"Forty years!" Griffin put in.
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"With this outbreak at last."
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"The outbreak," I returned, "will make a tremendous occasion
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of Thursday night;" and everyone so agreed with me that,
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in the light of it, we lost all attention for everything else.
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The last story, however incomplete and like the mere opening
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of a serial, had been told; we handshook and "candlestuck,"
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as somebody said, and went to bed.
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I knew the next day that a letter containing the key had,
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by the first post, gone off to his London apartments;
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but in spite of--or perhaps just on account of--the eventual
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diffusion of this knowledge we quite let him alone till
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after dinner, till such an hour of the evening, in fact,
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as might best accord with the kind of emotion on which our
|
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hopes were fixed. Then he became as communicative as we could
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desire and indeed gave us his best reason for being so.
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We had it from him again before the fire in the hall,
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as we had had our mild wonders of the previous night.
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It appeared that the narrative he had promised to read us really
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required for a proper intelligence a few words of prologue.
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Let me say here distinctly, to have done with it,
|
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that this narrative, from an exact transcript of my own made
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much later, is what I shall presently give. Poor Douglas,
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before his death--when it was in sight--committed to me
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the manuscript that reached him on the third of these days
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and that, on the same spot, with immense effect, he began
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to read to our hushed little circle on the night of the fourth.
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The departing ladies who had said they would stay didn't,
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of course, thank heaven, stay: they departed, in consequence
|
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of arrangements made, in a rage of curiosity, as they professed,
|
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produced by the touches with which he had already worked us up.
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But that only made his little final auditory more compact and select,
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kept it, round the hearth, subject to a common thrill.
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The first of these touches conveyed that the written statement
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took up the tale at a point after it had, in a manner, begun.
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The fact to be in possession of was therefore that his old friend,
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the youngest of several daughters of a poor country parson,
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had, at the age of twenty, on taking service for the first time
|
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in the schoolroom, come up to London, in trepidation, to answer
|
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in person an advertisement that had already placed her in brief
|
|
correspondence with the advertiser. This person proved, on her
|
|
presenting herself, for judgment, at a house in Harley Street,
|
|
that impressed her as vast and imposing--this prospective
|
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patron proved a gentleman, a bachelor in the prime of life,
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|
such a figure as had never risen, save in a dream or an old novel,
|
|
before a fluttered, anxious girl out of a Hampshire vicarage.
|
|
One could easily fix his type; it never, happily, dies out.
|
|
He was handsome and bold and pleasant, offhand and gay and kind.
|
|
He struck her, inevitably, as gallant and splendid,
|
|
but what took her most of all and gave her the courage she
|
|
afterward showed was that he put the whole thing to her as
|
|
a kind of favor, an obligation he should gratefully incur.
|
|
She conceived him as rich, but as fearfully extravagant--
|
|
saw him all in a glow of high fashion, of good looks,
|
|
of expensive habits, of charming ways with women.
|
|
He had for his own town residence a big house filled
|
|
with the spoils of travel and the trophies of the chase;
|
|
but it was to his country home, an old family place in Essex,
|
|
that he wished her immediately to proceed.
|
|
|
|
He had been left, by the death of their parents in India,
|
|
guardian to a small nephew and a small niece, children of a younger,
|
|
a military brother, whom he had lost two years before.
|
|
These children were, by the strangest of chances for a man
|
|
in his position--a lone man without the right sort of
|
|
experience or a grain of patience--very heavily on his hands.
|
|
It had all been a great worry and, on his own part doubtless,
|
|
a series of blunders, but he immensely pitied the poor chicks
|
|
and had done all he could; had in particular sent them
|
|
down to his other house, the proper place for them being
|
|
of course the country, and kept them there, from the first,
|
|
with the best people he could find to look after them,
|
|
parting even with his own servants to wait on them and going
|
|
down himself, whenever he might, to see how they were doing.
|
|
The awkward thing was that they had practically no other
|
|
relations and that his own affairs took up all his time.
|
|
He had put them in possession of Bly, which was healthy and secure,
|
|
and had placed at the head of their little establishment--
|
|
but below stairs only--an excellent woman, Mrs. Grose,
|
|
whom he was sure his visitor would like and who had formerly been
|
|
maid to his mother. She was now housekeeper and was also acting
|
|
for the time as superintendent to the little girl, of whom,
|
|
without children of her own, she was, by good luck, extremely fond.
|
|
There were plenty of people to help, but of course the young lady
|
|
who should go down as governess would be in supreme authority.
|
|
She would also have, in holidays, to look after the small boy,
|
|
who had been for a term at school--young as he was to be sent,
|
|
but what else could be done?--and who, as the holidays were
|
|
about to begin, would be back from one day to the other.
|
|
There had been for the two children at first a young lady
|
|
whom they had had the misfortune to lose. She had done
|
|
for them quite beautifully--she was a most respectable person--
|
|
till her death, the great awkwardness of which had, precisely,
|
|
left no alternative but the school for little Miles.
|
|
Mrs. Grose, since then, in the way of manners and things,
|
|
had done as she could for Flora; and there were, further, a cook,
|
|
a housemaid, a dairywoman, an old pony, an old groom,
|
|
and an old gardener, all likewise thoroughly respectable.
|
|
|
|
So far had Douglas presented his picture when someone put a question.
|
|
"And what did the former governess die of?--of so much respectability?"
|
|
|
|
Our friend's answer was prompt. "That will come out.
|
|
I don't anticipate."
|
|
|
|
"Excuse me--I thought that was just what you ARE doing."
|
|
|
|
"In her successor's place," I suggested, "I should have wished to learn
|
|
if the office brought with it--"
|
|
|
|
"Necessary danger to life?" Douglas completed my thought.
|
|
"She did wish to learn, and she did learn. You shall hear tomorrow
|
|
what she learned. Meanwhile, of course, the prospect struck her
|
|
as slightly grim. She was young, untried, nervous: it was a vision
|
|
of serious duties and little company, of really great loneliness.
|
|
She hesitated--took a couple of days to consult and consider.
|
|
But the salary offered much exceeded her modest measure,
|
|
and on a second interview she faced the music, she engaged."
|
|
And Douglas, with this, made a pause that, for the benefit
|
|
of the company, moved me to throw in--
|
|
|
|
"The moral of which was of course the seduction exercised by the splendid
|
|
young man. She succumbed to it."
|
|
|
|
He got up and, as he had done the night before, went to the fire,
|
|
gave a stir to a log with his foot, then stood a moment with his back to us.
|
|
"She saw him only twice."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, but that's just the beauty of her passion."
|
|
|
|
A little to my surprise, on this, Douglas turned round to me.
|
|
"It WAS the beauty of it. There were others," he went on,
|
|
"who hadn't succumbed. He told her frankly all his difficulty--
|
|
that for several applicants the conditions had been prohibitive.
|
|
They were, somehow, simply afraid. It sounded dull--it sounded strange;
|
|
and all the more so because of his main condition."
|
|
|
|
"Which was--?"
|
|
|
|
"That she should never trouble him--but never, never:
|
|
neither appeal nor complain nor write about anything;
|
|
only meet all questions herself, receive all moneys from
|
|
his solicitor, take the whole thing over and let him alone.
|
|
She promised to do this, and she mentioned to me that when,
|
|
for a moment, disburdened, delighted, he held her hand,
|
|
thanking her for the sacrifice, she already felt rewarded."
|
|
|
|
"But was that all her reward?" one of the ladies asked.
|
|
|
|
"She never saw him again."
|
|
|
|
"Oh!" said the lady; which, as our friend immediately left us again,
|
|
was the only other word of importance contributed to the subject till,
|
|
the next night, by the corner of the hearth, in the best chair,
|
|
he opened the faded red cover of a thin old-fashioned gilt-edged album.
|
|
The whole thing took indeed more nights than one, but on the first occasion
|
|
the same lady put another question. "What is your title?"
|
|
|
|
"I haven't one."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, _I_ have!" I said. But Douglas, without heeding me,
|
|
had begun to read with a fine clearness that was like a rendering
|
|
to the ear of the beauty of his author's hand.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I
|
|
|
|
|
|
I remember the whole beginning as a succession of flights and drops,
|
|
a little seesaw of the right throbs and the wrong. After rising, in town,
|
|
to meet his appeal, I had at all events a couple of very bad days--
|
|
found myself doubtful again, felt indeed sure I had made a mistake.
|
|
In this state of mind I spent the long hours of bumping,
|
|
swinging coach that carried me to the stopping place at which I
|
|
was to be met by a vehicle from the house. This convenience,
|
|
I was told, had been ordered, and I found, toward the close
|
|
of the June afternoon, a commodious fly in waiting for me.
|
|
Driving at that hour, on a lovely day, through a country to which
|
|
the summer sweetness seemed to offer me a friendly welcome,
|
|
my fortitude mounted afresh and, as we turned into the avenue,
|
|
encountered a reprieve that was probably but a proof of the point
|
|
to which it had sunk. I suppose I had expected, or had dreaded,
|
|
something so melancholy that what greeted me was a good surprise.
|
|
I remember as a most pleasant impression the broad, clear front,
|
|
its open windows and fresh curtains and the pair of maids
|
|
looking out; I remember the lawn and the bright flowers and
|
|
the crunch of my wheels on the gravel and the clustered treetops
|
|
over which the rooks circled and cawed in the golden sky.
|
|
The scene had a greatness that made it a different affair from
|
|
my own scant home, and there immediately appeared at the door,
|
|
with a little girl in her hand, a civil person who dropped me as decent
|
|
a curtsy as if I had been the mistress or a distinguished visitor.
|
|
I had received in Harley Street a narrower notion of the place,
|
|
and that, as I recalled it, made me think the proprietor still
|
|
more of a gentleman, suggested that what I was to enjoy might be
|
|
something beyond his promise.
|
|
|
|
I had no drop again till the next day, for I was carried
|
|
triumphantly through the following hours by my introduction
|
|
to the younger of my pupils. The little girl who accompanied
|
|
Mrs. Grose appeared to me on the spot a creature so charming
|
|
as to make it a great fortune to have to do with her.
|
|
She was the most beautiful child I had ever seen, and I afterward
|
|
wondered that my employer had not told me more of her.
|
|
I slept little that night--I was too much excited;
|
|
and this astonished me, too, I recollect, remained with me,
|
|
adding to my sense of the liberality with which I was treated.
|
|
The large, impressive room, one of the best in the house, the great
|
|
state bed, as I almost felt it, the full, figured draperies,
|
|
the long glasses in which, for the first time, I could see
|
|
myself from head to foot, all struck me--like the extraordinary
|
|
charm of my small charge--as so many things thrown in.
|
|
It was thrown in as well, from the first moment, that I
|
|
should get on with Mrs. Grose in a relation over which,
|
|
on my way, in the coach, I fear I had rather brooded.
|
|
The only thing indeed that in this early outlook might have
|
|
made me shrink again was the clear circumstance of her being
|
|
so glad to see me. I perceived within half an hour that she
|
|
was so glad--stout, simple, plain, clean, wholesome woman--
|
|
as to be positively on her guard against showing it too much.
|
|
I wondered even then a little why she should wish not to show it,
|
|
and that, with reflection, with suspicion, might of course
|
|
have made me uneasy.
|
|
|
|
But it was a comfort that there could be no uneasiness in a
|
|
connection with anything so beatific as the radiant image of my
|
|
little girl, the vision of whose angelic beauty had probably
|
|
more than anything else to do with the restlessness that,
|
|
before morning, made me several times rise and wander
|
|
about my room to take in the whole picture and prospect;
|
|
to watch, from my open window, the faint summer dawn,
|
|
to look at such portions of the rest of the house as I
|
|
could catch, and to listen, while, in the fading dusk,
|
|
the first birds began to twitter, for the possible recurrence
|
|
of a sound or two, less natural and not without, but within,
|
|
that I had fancied I heard. There had been a moment when I
|
|
believed I recognized, faint and far, the cry of a child;
|
|
there had been another when I found myself just consciously
|
|
starting as at the passage, before my door, of a light footstep.
|
|
But these fancies were not marked enough not to be thrown off,
|
|
and it is only in the light, or the gloom, I should rather say,
|
|
of other and subsequent matters that they now come back to me.
|
|
To watch, teach, "form" little Flora would too evidently
|
|
be the making of a happy and useful life. It had been
|
|
agreed between us downstairs that after this first occasion
|
|
I should have her as a matter of course at night, her small
|
|
white bed being already arranged, to that end, in my room.
|
|
What I had undertaken was the whole care of her, and she
|
|
had remained, just this last time, with Mrs. Grose only as
|
|
an effect of our consideration for my inevitable strangeness
|
|
and her natural timidity. In spite of this timidity--
|
|
which the child herself, in the oddest way in the world,
|
|
had been perfectly frank and brave about, allowing it,
|
|
without a sign of uncomfortable consciousness, with the deep,
|
|
sweet serenity indeed of one of Raphael's holy infants,
|
|
to be discussed, to be imputed to her, and to determine us--
|
|
I feel quite sure she would presently like me. It was part
|
|
of what I already liked Mrs. Grose herself for, the pleasure I
|
|
could see her feel in my admiration and wonder as I sat at supper
|
|
with four tall candles and with my pupil, in a high chair and
|
|
a bib, brightly facing me, between them, over bread and milk.
|
|
There were naturally things that in Flora's presence could
|
|
pass between us only as prodigious and gratified looks,
|
|
obscure and roundabout allusions.
|
|
|
|
"And the little boy--does he look like her? Is he too so very remarkable?"
|
|
|
|
One wouldn't flatter a child. "Oh, miss, MOST remarkable.
|
|
If you think well of this one!"--and she stood there with a plate
|
|
in her hand, beaming at our companion, who looked from one of us
|
|
to the other with placid heavenly eyes that contained nothing
|
|
to check us.
|
|
|
|
"Yes; if I do--?"
|
|
|
|
"You WILL be carried away by the little gentleman!"
|
|
|
|
"Well, that, I think, is what I came for--to be carried away.
|
|
I'm afraid, however," I remember feeling the impulse to add,
|
|
"I'm rather easily carried away. I was carried away in London!"
|
|
|
|
I can still see Mrs. Grose's broad face as she took this in.
|
|
"In Harley Street?"
|
|
|
|
"In Harley Street."
|
|
|
|
"Well, miss, you're not the first--and you won't be the last."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I've no pretension," I could laugh, "to being the only one.
|
|
My other pupil, at any rate, as I understand, comes back tomorrow?"
|
|
|
|
"Not tomorrow--Friday, miss. He arrives, as you did, by the coach,
|
|
under care of the guard, and is to be met by the same carriage."
|
|
|
|
I forthwith expressed that the proper as well as the pleasant and
|
|
friendly thing would be therefore that on the arrival of the public
|
|
conveyance I should be in waiting for him with his little sister;
|
|
an idea in which Mrs. Grose concurred so heartily that I somehow
|
|
took her manner as a kind of comforting pledge--never falsified,
|
|
thank heaven!--that we should on every question be quite at one.
|
|
Oh, she was glad I was there!
|
|
|
|
What I felt the next day was, I suppose, nothing that could
|
|
be fairly called a reaction from the cheer of my arrival;
|
|
it was probably at the most only a slight oppression produced
|
|
by a fuller measure of the scale, as I walked round them,
|
|
gazed up at them, took them in, of my new circumstances.
|
|
They had, as it were, an extent and mass for which I had not
|
|
been prepared and in the presence of which I found myself,
|
|
freshly, a little scared as well as a little proud.
|
|
Lessons, in this agitation, certainly suffered some delay;
|
|
I reflected that my first duty was, by the gentlest arts I
|
|
could contrive, to win the child into the sense of knowing me.
|
|
I spent the day with her out-of-doors; I arranged with her,
|
|
to her great satisfaction, that it should be she, she only,
|
|
who might show me the place. She showed it step by step
|
|
and room by room and secret by secret, with droll, delightful,
|
|
childish talk about it and with the result, in half an hour,
|
|
of our becoming immense friends. Young as she was, I was struck,
|
|
throughout our little tour, with her confidence and courage
|
|
with the way, in empty chambers and dull corridors, on crooked
|
|
staircases that made me pause and even on the summit of an old
|
|
machicolated square tower that made me dizzy, her morning music,
|
|
her disposition to tell me so many more things than she asked,
|
|
rang out and led me on. I have not seen Bly since the day
|
|
I left it, and I daresay that to my older and more informed
|
|
eyes it would now appear sufficiently contracted. But as my
|
|
little conductress, with her hair of gold and her frock of blue,
|
|
danced before me round corners and pattered down passages,
|
|
I had the view of a castle of romance inhabited by a rosy sprite,
|
|
such a place as would somehow, for diversion of the young idea,
|
|
take all color out of storybooks and fairytales.
|
|
Wasn't it just a storybook over which I had fallen adoze
|
|
and adream? No; it was a big, ugly, antique, but convenient house,
|
|
embodying a few features of a building still older, half-replaced and
|
|
half-utilized, in which I had the fancy of our being almost
|
|
as lost as a handful of passengers in a great drifting ship.
|
|
Well, I was, strangely, at the helm!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
II
|
|
|
|
|
|
This came home to me when, two days later, I drove over
|
|
with Flora to meet, as Mrs. Grose said, the little gentleman;
|
|
and all the more for an incident that, presenting itself
|
|
the second evening, had deeply disconcerted me.
|
|
The first day had been, on the whole, as I have expressed,
|
|
reassuring; but I was to see it wind up in keen apprehension.
|
|
The postbag, that evening--it came late--contained a letter
|
|
for me, which, however, in the hand of my employer,
|
|
I found to be composed but of a few words enclosing another,
|
|
addressed to himself, with a seal still unbroken. "This, I recognize,
|
|
is from the headmaster, and the headmaster's an awful bore.
|
|
Read him, please; deal with him; but mind you don't report.
|
|
Not a word. I'm off!" I broke the seal with a great effort--
|
|
so great a one that I was a long time coming to it;
|
|
took the unopened missive at last up to my room and only
|
|
attacked it just before going to bed. I had better have let it
|
|
wait till morning, for it gave me a second sleepless night.
|
|
With no counsel to take, the next day, I was full of distress;
|
|
and it finally got so the better of me that I determined
|
|
to open myself at least to Mrs. Grose.
|
|
|
|
"What does it mean? The child's dismissed his school."
|
|
|
|
She gave me a look that I remarked at the moment; then, visibly,
|
|
with a quick blankness, seemed to try to take it back.
|
|
"But aren't they all--?"
|
|
|
|
"Sent home--yes. But only for the holidays. Miles may never go
|
|
back at all."
|
|
|
|
Consciously, under my attention, she reddened. "They won't take him?"
|
|
|
|
"They absolutely decline."
|
|
|
|
At this she raised her eyes, which she had turned from me;
|
|
I saw them fill with good tears. "What has he done?"
|
|
|
|
I hesitated; then I judged best simply to hand her my letter--
|
|
which, however, had the effect of making her, without taking it,
|
|
simply put her hands behind her. She shook her head sadly.
|
|
"Such things are not for me, miss."
|
|
|
|
My counselor couldn't read! I winced at my mistake, which I
|
|
attenuated as I could, and opened my letter again to repeat it
|
|
to her; then, faltering in the act and folding it up once more,
|
|
I put it back in my pocket. "Is he really BAD?"
|
|
|
|
The tears were still in her eyes. "Do the gentlemen say so?"
|
|
|
|
"They go into no particulars. They simply express their regret that it
|
|
should be impossible to keep him. That can have only one meaning."
|
|
Mrs. Grose listened with dumb emotion; she forbore to ask me what this
|
|
meaning might be; so that, presently, to put the thing with some coherence
|
|
and with the mere aid of her presence to my own mind, I went on:
|
|
"That he's an injury to the others."
|
|
|
|
At this, with one of the quick turns of simple folk, she suddenly flamed up.
|
|
"Master Miles! HIM an injury?"
|
|
|
|
There was such a flood of good faith in it that, though I had not yet
|
|
seen the child, my very fears made me jump to the absurdity of the idea.
|
|
I found myself, to meet my friend the better, offering it,
|
|
on the spot, sarcastically. "To his poor little innocent mates!"
|
|
|
|
"It's too dreadful," cried Mrs. Grose, "to say such cruel things!
|
|
Why, he's scarce ten years old."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes; it would be incredible."
|
|
|
|
She was evidently grateful for such a profession. "See him, miss, first.
|
|
THEN believe it!" I felt forthwith a new impatience to see him;
|
|
it was the beginning of a curiosity that, for all the next hours,
|
|
was to deepen almost to pain. Mrs. Grose was aware, I could judge,
|
|
of what she had produced in me, and she followed it up with assurance.
|
|
"You might as well believe it of the little lady. Bless her,"
|
|
she added the next moment--"LOOK at her!"
|
|
|
|
I turned and saw that Flora, whom, ten minutes before, I had established
|
|
in the schoolroom with a sheet of white paper, a pencil, and a copy
|
|
of nice "round o's," now presented herself to view at the open door.
|
|
She expressed in her little way an extraordinary detachment from
|
|
disagreeable duties, looking to me, however, with a great childish light
|
|
that seemed to offer it as a mere result of the affection she had conceived
|
|
for my person, which had rendered necessary that she should follow me.
|
|
I needed nothing more than this to feel the full force of Mrs. Grose's
|
|
comparison, and, catching my pupil in my arms, covered her with kisses
|
|
in which there was a sob of atonement.
|
|
|
|
Nonetheless, the rest of the day I watched for further occasion
|
|
to approach my colleague, especially as, toward evening,
|
|
I began to fancy she rather sought to avoid me. I overtook her,
|
|
I remember, on the staircase; we went down together, and at the
|
|
bottom I detained her, holding her there with a hand on her arm.
|
|
"I take what you said to me at noon as a declaration that
|
|
YOU'VE never known him to be bad."
|
|
|
|
She threw back her head; she had clearly, by this time,
|
|
and very honestly, adopted an attitude. "Oh, never known him--
|
|
I don't pretend THAT!"
|
|
|
|
I was upset again. "Then you HAVE known him--?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes indeed, miss, thank God!"
|
|
|
|
On reflection I accepted this. "You mean that a boy who never is--?"
|
|
|
|
"Is no boy for ME!"
|
|
|
|
I held her tighter. "You like them with the spirit to be naughty?"
|
|
Then, keeping pace with her answer, "So do I!" I eagerly brought out.
|
|
"But not to the degree to contaminate--"
|
|
|
|
"To contaminate?"--my big word left her at a loss.
|
|
I explained it. "To corrupt."
|
|
|
|
She stared, taking my meaning in; but it produced in her an odd laugh.
|
|
"Are you afraid he'll corrupt YOU?" She put the question with such a fine
|
|
bold humor that, with a laugh, a little silly doubtless, to match her own,
|
|
I gave way for the time to the apprehension of ridicule.
|
|
|
|
But the next day, as the hour for my drive approached, I cropped
|
|
up in another place. "What was the lady who was here before?"
|
|
|
|
"The last governess? She was also young and pretty--
|
|
almost as young and almost as pretty, miss, even as you."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, then, I hope her youth and her beauty helped her!"
|
|
I recollect throwing off. "He seems to like us young and pretty!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, he DID," Mrs. Grose assented: "it was the way he liked everyone!"
|
|
She had no sooner spoken indeed than she caught herself up.
|
|
"I mean that's HIS way--the master's."
|
|
|
|
I was struck. "But of whom did you speak first?"
|
|
|
|
She looked blank, but she colored. "Why, of HIM."
|
|
|
|
"Of the master?"
|
|
|
|
"Of who else?"
|
|
|
|
There was so obviously no one else that the next moment I
|
|
had lost my impression of her having accidentally said more
|
|
than she meant; and I merely asked what I wanted to know.
|
|
"Did SHE see anything in the boy--?"
|
|
|
|
"That wasn't right? She never told me."
|
|
|
|
I had a scruple, but I overcame it. "Was she careful--particular?"
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose appeared to try to be conscientious.
|
|
"About some things--yes."
|
|
|
|
"But not about all?"
|
|
|
|
Again she considered. "Well, miss--she's gone.
|
|
I won't tell tales."
|
|
|
|
"I quite understand your feeling," I hastened to reply; but I thought it,
|
|
after an instant, not opposed to this concession to pursue:
|
|
"Did she die here?"
|
|
|
|
"No--she went off."
|
|
|
|
I don't know what there was in this brevity of Mrs. Grose's that struck
|
|
me as ambiguous. "Went off to die?" Mrs. Grose looked straight
|
|
out of the window, but I felt that, hypothetically, I had a right
|
|
to know what young persons engaged for Bly were expected to do.
|
|
"She was taken ill, you mean, and went home?"
|
|
|
|
"She was not taken ill, so far as appeared, in this house.
|
|
She left it, at the end of the year, to go home, as she said,
|
|
for a short holiday, to which the time she had put in had
|
|
certainly given her a right. We had then a young woman--
|
|
a nursemaid who had stayed on and who was a good girl and clever;
|
|
and SHE took the children altogether for the interval.
|
|
But our young lady never came back, and at the very moment I
|
|
was expecting her I heard from the master that she was dead."
|
|
|
|
I turned this over. "But of what?"
|
|
|
|
"He never told me! But please, miss," said Mrs. Grose,
|
|
"I must get to my work."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
III
|
|
|
|
|
|
Her thus turning her back on me was fortunately not, for my just
|
|
preoccupations, a snub that could check the growth of our mutual esteem.
|
|
We met, after I had brought home little Miles, more intimately
|
|
than ever on the ground of my stupefaction, my general emotion:
|
|
so monstrous was I then ready to pronounce it that such a child
|
|
as had now been revealed to me should be under an interdict.
|
|
I was a little late on the scene, and I felt, as he stood wistfully
|
|
looking out for me before the door of the inn at which the coach had
|
|
put him down, that I had seen him, on the instant, without and within,
|
|
in the great glow of freshness, the same positive fragrance of purity,
|
|
in which I had, from the first moment, seen his little sister.
|
|
He was incredibly beautiful, and Mrs. Grose had put her finger on it:
|
|
everything but a sort of passion of tenderness for him was swept away
|
|
by his presence. What I then and there took him to my heart for was
|
|
something divine that I have never found to the same degree in any child--
|
|
his indescribable little air of knowing nothing in the world but love.
|
|
It would have been impossible to carry a bad name with a greater
|
|
sweetness of innocence, and by the time I had got back to Bly with him
|
|
I remained merely bewildered--so far, that is, as I was not outraged--
|
|
by the sense of the horrible letter locked up in my room, in a drawer.
|
|
As soon as I could compass a private word with Mrs. Grose I declared
|
|
to her that it was grotesque.
|
|
|
|
She promptly understood me. "You mean the cruel charge--?"
|
|
|
|
"It doesn't live an instant. My dear woman, LOOK at him!"
|
|
|
|
She smiled at my pretention to have discovered his charm.
|
|
"I assure you, miss, I do nothing else! What will you say, then?"
|
|
she immediately added.
|
|
|
|
"In answer to the letter?" I had made up my mind. "Nothing."
|
|
|
|
"And to his uncle?"
|
|
|
|
I was incisive. "Nothing."
|
|
|
|
"And to the boy himself?"
|
|
|
|
I was wonderful. "Nothing."
|
|
|
|
She gave with her apron a great wipe to her mouth. "Then I'll stand by you.
|
|
We'll see it out."
|
|
|
|
"We'll see it out!" I ardently echoed, giving her my hand to make
|
|
it a vow.
|
|
|
|
She held me there a moment, then whisked up her apron again with her
|
|
detached hand. "Would you mind, miss, if I used the freedom--"
|
|
|
|
"To kiss me? No!" I took the good creature in my arms and, after we
|
|
had embraced like sisters, felt still more fortified and indignant.
|
|
|
|
This, at all events, was for the time: a time so full that,
|
|
as I recall the way it went, it reminds me of all the art
|
|
I now need to make it a little distinct. What I look
|
|
back at with amazement is the situation I accepted.
|
|
I had undertaken, with my companion, to see it out, and I was
|
|
under a charm, apparently, that could smooth away the extent
|
|
and the far and difficult connections of such an effort.
|
|
I was lifted aloft on a great wave of infatuation and pity.
|
|
I found it simple, in my ignorance, my confusion, and perhaps
|
|
my conceit, to assume that I could deal with a boy whose
|
|
education for the world was all on the point of beginning.
|
|
I am unable even to remember at this day what proposal I framed
|
|
for the end of his holidays and the resumption of his studies.
|
|
Lessons with me, indeed, that charming summer, we all had
|
|
a theory that he was to have; but I now feel that, for weeks,
|
|
the lessons must have been rather my own. I learned something--
|
|
at first, certainly--that had not been one of the teachings of
|
|
my small, smothered life; learned to be amused, and even amusing,
|
|
and not to think for the morrow. It was the first time,
|
|
in a manner, that I had known space and air and freedom,
|
|
all the music of summer and all the mystery of nature.
|
|
And then there was consideration--and consideration was sweet.
|
|
Oh, it was a trap--not designed, but deep--to my imagination,
|
|
to my delicacy, perhaps to my vanity; to whatever, in me,
|
|
was most excitable. The best way to picture it all is to say
|
|
that I was off my guard. They gave me so little trouble--
|
|
they were of a gentleness so extraordinary. I used to speculate--
|
|
but even this with a dim disconnectedness--as to how the rough future
|
|
(for all futures are rough!) would handle them and might bruise them.
|
|
They had the bloom of health and happiness; and yet,
|
|
as if I had been in charge of a pair of little grandees,
|
|
of princes of the blood, for whom everything, to be right,
|
|
would have to be enclosed and protected, the only form that,
|
|
in my fancy, the afteryears could take for them was that of
|
|
a romantic, a really royal extension of the garden and the park.
|
|
It may be, of course, above all, that what suddenly broke
|
|
into this gives the previous time a charm of stillness--
|
|
that hush in which something gathers or crouches.
|
|
The change was actually like the spring of a beast.
|
|
|
|
In the first weeks the days were long; they often, at their finest,
|
|
gave me what I used to call my own hour, the hour when, for my pupils,
|
|
teatime and bedtime having come and gone, I had, before my final retirement,
|
|
a small interval alone. Much as I liked my companions, this hour was
|
|
the thing in the day I liked most; and I liked it best of all when,
|
|
as the light faded--or rather, I should say, the day lingered and the last
|
|
calls of the last birds sounded, in a flushed sky, from the old trees--
|
|
I could take a turn into the grounds and enjoy, almost with a sense
|
|
of property that amused and flattered me, the beauty and dignity of
|
|
the place. It was a pleasure at these moments to feel myself tranquil
|
|
and justified; doubtless, perhaps, also to reflect that by my discretion,
|
|
my quiet good sense and general high propriety, I was giving pleasure--
|
|
if he ever thought of it!--to the person to whose pressure I had responded.
|
|
What I was doing was what he had earnestly hoped and directly asked of me,
|
|
and that I COULD, after all, do it proved even a greater joy than I
|
|
had expected. I daresay I fancied myself, in short, a remarkable young
|
|
woman and took comfort in the faith that this would more publicly appear.
|
|
Well, I needed to be remarkable to offer a front to the remarkable things
|
|
that presently gave their first sign.
|
|
|
|
It was plump, one afternoon, in the middle of my very hour:
|
|
the children were tucked away, and I had come out for my stroll.
|
|
One of the thoughts that, as I don't in the least shrink now
|
|
from noting, used to be with me in these wanderings was that it
|
|
would be as charming as a charming story suddenly to meet someone.
|
|
Someone would appear there at the turn of a path and would stand
|
|
before me and smile and approve. I didn't ask more than that--
|
|
I only asked that he should KNOW; and the only way to be sure he knew
|
|
would be to see it, and the kind light of it, in his handsome face.
|
|
That was exactly present to me--by which I mean the face was--
|
|
when, on the first of these occasions, at the end of a long
|
|
June day, I stopped short on emerging from one of the plantations
|
|
and coming into view of the house. What arrested me on the spot--
|
|
and with a shock much greater than any vision had allowed for--
|
|
was the sense that my imagination had, in a flash, turned real.
|
|
He did stand there!--but high up, beyond the lawn and at the very top of
|
|
the tower to which, on that first morning, little Flora had conducted me.
|
|
This tower was one of a pair--square, incongruous, crenelated structures--
|
|
that were distinguished, for some reason, though I could see
|
|
little difference, as the new and the old. They flanked opposite
|
|
ends of the house and were probably architectural absurdities,
|
|
redeemed in a measure indeed by not being wholly disengaged nor
|
|
of a height too pretentious, dating, in their gingerbread antiquity,
|
|
from a romantic revival that was already a respectable past.
|
|
I admired them, had fancies about them, for we could all profit
|
|
in a degree, especially when they loomed through the dusk,
|
|
by the grandeur of their actual battlements; yet it was not at
|
|
such an elevation that the figure I had so often invoked seemed
|
|
most in place.
|
|
|
|
It produced in me, this figure, in the clear twilight, I remember,
|
|
two distinct gasps of emotion, which were, sharply, the shock
|
|
of my first and that of my second surprise. My second was a
|
|
violent perception of the mistake of my first: the man who met
|
|
my eyes was not the person I had precipitately supposed.
|
|
There came to me thus a bewilderment of vision of which,
|
|
after these years, there is no living view that I can hope to give.
|
|
An unknown man in a lonely place is a permitted object of fear
|
|
to a young woman privately bred; and the figure that faced
|
|
me was--a few more seconds assured me--as little anyone
|
|
else I knew as it was the image that had been in my mind.
|
|
I had not seen it in Harley Street--I had not seen it anywhere.
|
|
The place, moreover, in the strangest way in the world, had,
|
|
on the instant, and by the very fact of its appearance,
|
|
become a solitude. To me at least, making my statement
|
|
here with a deliberation with which I have never made it,
|
|
the whole feeling of the moment returns. It was as if,
|
|
while I took in--what I did take in--all the rest of the scene
|
|
had been stricken with death. I can hear again, as I write,
|
|
the intense hush in which the sounds of evening dropped.
|
|
The rooks stopped cawing in the golden sky, and the friendly
|
|
hour lost, for the minute, all its voice. But there was no
|
|
other change in nature, unless indeed it were a change that I
|
|
saw with a stranger sharpness. The gold was still in the sky,
|
|
the clearness in the air, and the man who looked at me over
|
|
the battlements was as definite as a picture in a frame.
|
|
That's how I thought, with extraordinary quickness,
|
|
of each person that he might have been and that he was not.
|
|
We were confronted across our distance quite long enough for me
|
|
to ask myself with intensity who then he was and to feel,
|
|
as an effect of my inability to say, a wonder that in a few
|
|
instants more became intense.
|
|
|
|
The great question, or one of these, is, afterward, I know,
|
|
with regard to certain matters, the question of how long
|
|
they have lasted. Well, this matter of mine, think what you
|
|
will of it, lasted while I caught at a dozen possibilities,
|
|
none of which made a difference for the better, that I could see,
|
|
in there having been in the house--and for how long, above all?--
|
|
a person of whom I was in ignorance. It lasted while I
|
|
just bridled a little with the sense that my office demanded
|
|
that there should be no such ignorance and no such person.
|
|
It lasted while this visitant, at all events--and there was a touch
|
|
of the strange freedom, as I remember, in the sign of familiarity
|
|
of his wearing no hat--seemed to fix me, from his position,
|
|
with just the question, just the scrutiny through the fading light,
|
|
that his own presence provoked. We were too far apart
|
|
to call to each other, but there was a moment at which,
|
|
at shorter range, some challenge between us, breaking the hush,
|
|
would have been the right result of our straight mutual stare.
|
|
He was in one of the angles, the one away from the house,
|
|
very erect, as it struck me, and with both hands on the ledge.
|
|
So I saw him as I see the letters I form on this page;
|
|
then, exactly, after a minute, as if to add to the spectacle,
|
|
he slowly changed his place--passed, looking at me hard all
|
|
the while, to the opposite corner of the platform. Yes, I had
|
|
the sharpest sense that during this transit he never took his
|
|
eyes from me, and I can see at this moment the way his hand,
|
|
as he went, passed from one of the crenelations to the next.
|
|
He stopped at the other corner, but less long, and even
|
|
as he turned away still markedly fixed me. He turned away;
|
|
that was all I knew.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
IV
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was not that I didn't wait, on this occasion,
|
|
for more, for I was rooted as deeply as I was shaken.
|
|
Was there a "secret" at Bly--a mystery of Udolpho or an insane,
|
|
an unmentionable relative kept in unsuspected confinement?
|
|
I can't say how long I turned it over, or how long, in a confusion
|
|
of curiosity and dread, I remained where I had had my collision;
|
|
I only recall that when I re-entered the house darkness had quite
|
|
closed in. Agitation, in the interval, certainly had held me
|
|
and driven me, for I must, in circling about the place, have walked
|
|
three miles; but I was to be, later on, so much more overwhelmed
|
|
that this mere dawn of alarm was a comparatively human chill.
|
|
The most singular part of it, in fact--singular as the rest had been--
|
|
was the part I became, in the hall, aware of in meeting Mrs. Grose.
|
|
This picture comes back to me in the general train--the impression,
|
|
as I received it on my return, of the wide white panelled space,
|
|
bright in the lamplight and with its portraits and red carpet,
|
|
and of the good surprised look of my friend, which immediately
|
|
told me she had missed me. It came to me straightway,
|
|
under her contact, that, with plain heartiness, mere relieved
|
|
anxiety at my appearance, she knew nothing whatever that
|
|
could bear upon the incident I had there ready for her.
|
|
I had not suspected in advance that her comfortable face would
|
|
pull me up, and I somehow measured the importance of what I
|
|
had seen by my thus finding myself hesitate to mention it.
|
|
Scarce anything in the whole history seems to me so odd
|
|
as this fact that my real beginning of fear was one,
|
|
as I may say, with the instinct of sparing my companion.
|
|
On the spot, accordingly, in the pleasant hall and with her
|
|
eyes on me, I, for a reason that I couldn't then have phrased,
|
|
achieved an inward resolution--offered a vague pretext
|
|
for my lateness and, with the plea of the beauty of the night
|
|
and of the heavy dew and wet feet, went as soon as possible
|
|
to my room.
|
|
|
|
Here it was another affair; here, for many days after,
|
|
it was a queer affair enough. There were hours, from day
|
|
to day--or at least there were moments, snatched even from
|
|
clear duties--when I had to shut myself up to think.
|
|
It was not so much yet that I was more nervous than I could
|
|
bear to be as that I was remarkably afraid of becoming so;
|
|
for the truth I had now to turn over was, simply and clearly,
|
|
the truth that I could arrive at no account whatever of
|
|
the visitor with whom I had been so inexplicably and yet,
|
|
as it seemed to me, so intimately concerned. It took little
|
|
time to see that I could sound without forms of inquiry
|
|
and without exciting remark any domestic complications.
|
|
The shock I had suffered must have sharpened all my senses;
|
|
I felt sure, at the end of three days and as the result
|
|
of mere closer attention, that I had not been practiced
|
|
upon by the servants nor made the object of any "game."
|
|
Of whatever it was that I knew, nothing was known around me.
|
|
There was but one sane inference: someone had taken
|
|
a liberty rather gross. That was what, repeatedly, I dipped
|
|
into my room and locked the door to say to myself.
|
|
We had been, collectively, subject to an intrusion;
|
|
some unscrupulous traveler, curious in old houses, had made
|
|
his way in unobserved, enjoyed the prospect from the best point
|
|
of view, and then stolen out as he came. If he had given me
|
|
such a bold hard stare, that was but a part of his indiscretion.
|
|
The good thing, after all, was that we should surely see
|
|
no more of him.
|
|
|
|
This was not so good a thing, I admit, as not to leave me to judge that what,
|
|
essentially, made nothing else much signify was simply my charming work.
|
|
My charming work was just my life with Miles and Flora, and through nothing
|
|
could I so like it as through feeling that I could throw myself into it
|
|
in trouble. The attraction of my small charges was a constant joy,
|
|
leading me to wonder afresh at the vanity of my original fears, the distaste
|
|
I had begun by entertaining for the probable gray prose of my office.
|
|
There was to be no gray prose, it appeared, and no long grind;
|
|
so how could work not be charming that presented itself as daily beauty?
|
|
It was all the romance of the nursery and the poetry of the schoolroom.
|
|
I don't mean by this, of course, that we studied only fiction
|
|
and verse; I mean I can express no otherwise the sort of interest
|
|
my companions inspired. How can I describe that except by saying that
|
|
instead of growing used to them--and it's a marvel for a governess:
|
|
I call the sisterhood to witness!--I made constant fresh discoveries.
|
|
There was one direction, assuredly, in which these discoveries stopped:
|
|
deep obscurity continued to cover the region of the boy's conduct at school.
|
|
It had been promptly given me, I have noted, to face that mystery without
|
|
a pang. Perhaps even it would be nearer the truth to say that--without
|
|
a word--he himself had cleared it up. He had made the whole charge absurd.
|
|
My conclusion bloomed there with the real rose flush of his innocence:
|
|
he was only too fine and fair for the little horrid, unclean school world,
|
|
and he had paid a price for it. I reflected acutely that the sense
|
|
of such differences, such superiorities of quality, always, on the part
|
|
of the majority--which could include even stupid, sordid headmasters--
|
|
turn infallibly to the vindictive.
|
|
|
|
Both the children had a gentleness (it was their only fault,
|
|
and it never made Miles a muff) that kept them--how shall I
|
|
express it?--almost impersonal and certainly quite unpunishable.
|
|
They were like the cherubs of the anecdote, who had--
|
|
morally, at any rate--nothing to whack! I remember feeling
|
|
with Miles in especial as if he had had, as it were, no history.
|
|
We expect of a small child a scant one, but there was in this
|
|
beautiful little boy something extraordinarily sensitive,
|
|
yet extraordinarily happy, that, more than in any creature
|
|
of his age I have seen, struck me as beginning anew each day.
|
|
He had never for a second suffered. I took this as a
|
|
direct disproof of his having really been chastised.
|
|
If he had been wicked he would have "caught" it, and I should
|
|
have caught it by the rebound--I should have found the trace.
|
|
I found nothing at all, and he was therefore an angel.
|
|
He never spoke of his school, never mentioned a comrade or a master;
|
|
and I, for my part, was quite too much disgusted to allude to them.
|
|
Of course I was under the spell, and the wonderful part
|
|
is that, even at the time, I perfectly knew I was.
|
|
But I gave myself up to it; it was an antidote to any pain,
|
|
and I had more pains than one. I was in receipt in these days
|
|
of disturbing letters from home, where things were not going well.
|
|
But with my children, what things in the world mattered?
|
|
That was the question I used to put to my scrappy retirements.
|
|
I was dazzled by their loveliness.
|
|
|
|
There was a Sunday--to get on--when it rained with such force
|
|
and for so many hours that there could be no procession to church;
|
|
in consequence of which, as the day declined, I had arranged
|
|
with Mrs. Grose that, should the evening show improvement,
|
|
we would attend together the late service. The rain happily stopped,
|
|
and I prepared for our walk, which, through the park and by the
|
|
good road to the village, would be a matter of twenty minutes.
|
|
Coming downstairs to meet my colleague in the hall, I remembered a pair
|
|
of gloves that had required three stitches and that had received them--
|
|
with a publicity perhaps not edifying--while I sat with the children
|
|
at their tea, served on Sundays, by exception, in that cold,
|
|
clean temple of mahogany and brass, the "grown-up" dining room.
|
|
The gloves had been dropped there, and I turned in to recover them.
|
|
The day was gray enough, but the afternoon light still lingered,
|
|
and it enabled me, on crossing the threshold, not only to recognize,
|
|
on a chair near the wide window, then closed, the articles I wanted,
|
|
but to become aware of a person on the other side of the window
|
|
and looking straight in. One step into the room had sufficed;
|
|
my vision was instantaneous; it was all there. The person looking
|
|
straight in was the person who had already appeared to me.
|
|
He appeared thus again with I won't say greater distinctness,
|
|
for that was impossible, but with a nearness that represented
|
|
a forward stride in our intercourse and made me, as I met him,
|
|
catch my breath and turn cold. He was the same--he was the same,
|
|
and seen, this time, as he had been seen before, from the waist up,
|
|
the window, though the dining room was on the ground floor, not going
|
|
down to the terrace on which he stood. His face was close to the glass,
|
|
yet the effect of this better view was, strangely, only to show me
|
|
how intense the former had been. He remained but a few seconds--
|
|
long enough to convince me he also saw and recognized; but it was
|
|
as if I had been looking at him for years and had known him always.
|
|
Something, however, happened this time that had not happened before;
|
|
his stare into my face, through the glass and across the room,
|
|
was as deep and hard as then, but it quitted me for a moment
|
|
during which I could still watch it, see it fix successively
|
|
several other things. On the spot there came to me the added
|
|
shock of a certitude that it was not for me he had come there.
|
|
He had come for someone else.
|
|
|
|
The flash of this knowledge--for it was knowledge in the midst
|
|
of dread--produced in me the most extraordinary effect,
|
|
started as I stood there, a sudden vibration of duty and courage.
|
|
I say courage because I was beyond all doubt already far gone.
|
|
I bounded straight out of the door again, reached that of the house,
|
|
got, in an instant, upon the drive, and, passing along the terrace
|
|
as fast as I could rush, turned a corner and came full in sight.
|
|
But it was in sight of nothing now--my visitor had vanished.
|
|
I stopped, I almost dropped, with the real relief of this;
|
|
but I took in the whole scene--I gave him time to reappear.
|
|
I call it time, but how long was it? I can't speak
|
|
to the purpose today of the duration of these things.
|
|
That kind of measure must have left me: they couldn't
|
|
have lasted as they actually appeared to me to last.
|
|
The terrace and the whole place, the lawn and the garden beyond it,
|
|
all I could see of the park, were empty with a great emptiness.
|
|
There were shrubberies and big trees, but I remember
|
|
the clear assurance I felt that none of them concealed him.
|
|
He was there or was not there: not there if I didn't see him.
|
|
I got hold of this; then, instinctively, instead of returning
|
|
as I had come, went to the window. It was confusedly present
|
|
to me that I ought to place myself where he had stood.
|
|
I did so; I applied my face to the pane and looked,
|
|
as he had looked, into the room. As if, at this moment,
|
|
to show me exactly what his range had been, Mrs. Grose,
|
|
as I had done for himself just before, came in from the hall.
|
|
With this I had the full image of a repetition of what had
|
|
already occurred. She saw me as I had seen my own visitant;
|
|
she pulled up short as I had done; I gave her something
|
|
of the shock that I had received. She turned white,
|
|
and this made me ask myself if I had blanched as much.
|
|
She stared, in short, and retreated on just MY lines,
|
|
and I knew she had then passed out and come round to me
|
|
and that I should presently meet her. I remained where I was,
|
|
and while I waited I thought of more things than one.
|
|
But there's only one I take space to mention. I wondered why
|
|
SHE should be scared.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
V
|
|
|
|
|
|
Oh, she let me know as soon as, round the corner of the house, she loomed
|
|
again into view. "What in the name of goodness is the matter--?"
|
|
She was now flushed and out of breath.
|
|
|
|
I said nothing till she came quite near. "With me?"
|
|
I must have made a wonderful face. "Do I show it?"
|
|
|
|
"You're as white as a sheet. You look awful."
|
|
|
|
I considered; I could meet on this, without scruple, any innocence.
|
|
My need to respect the bloom of Mrs. Grose's had dropped,
|
|
without a rustle, from my shoulders, and if I wavered for the instant
|
|
it was not with what I kept back. I put out my hand to her and she
|
|
took it; I held her hard a little, liking to feel her close to me.
|
|
There was a kind of support in the shy heave of her surprise.
|
|
"You came for me for church, of course, but I can't go."
|
|
|
|
"Has anything happened?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes. You must know now. Did I look very queer?"
|
|
|
|
"Through this window? Dreadful!"
|
|
|
|
"Well," I said, "I've been frightened." Mrs. Grose's eyes expressed
|
|
plainly that SHE had no wish to be, yet also that she knew too well
|
|
her place not to be ready to share with me any marked inconvenience.
|
|
Oh, it was quite settled that she MUST share! "Just what you
|
|
saw from the dining room a minute ago was the effect of that.
|
|
What _I_ saw--just before--was much worse."
|
|
|
|
Her hand tightened. "What was it?"
|
|
|
|
"An extraordinary man. Looking in."
|
|
|
|
"What extraordinary man?"
|
|
|
|
"I haven't the least idea."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose gazed round us in vain. "Then where is he gone?"
|
|
|
|
"I know still less."
|
|
|
|
"Have you seen him before?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes--once. On the old tower."
|
|
|
|
She could only look at me harder. "Do you mean he's a stranger?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, very much!"
|
|
|
|
"Yet you didn't tell me?"
|
|
|
|
"No--for reasons. But now that you've guessed--"
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose's round eyes encountered this charge. "Ah, I haven't guessed!"
|
|
she said very simply. "How can I if YOU don't imagine?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't in the very least."
|
|
|
|
"You've seen him nowhere but on the tower?"
|
|
|
|
"And on this spot just now."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose looked round again. "What was he doing on the tower?"
|
|
|
|
"Only standing there and looking down at me."
|
|
|
|
She thought a minute. "Was he a gentleman?"
|
|
|
|
I found I had no need to think. "No." She gazed in deeper wonder. "No."
|
|
|
|
"Then nobody about the place? Nobody from the village?"
|
|
|
|
"Nobody--nobody. I didn't tell you, but I made sure."
|
|
|
|
She breathed a vague relief: this was, oddly, so much to the good.
|
|
It only went indeed a little way. "But if he isn't a gentleman--"
|
|
|
|
"What IS he? He's a horror."
|
|
|
|
"A horror?"
|
|
|
|
"He's--God help me if I know WHAT he is!"
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose looked round once more; she fixed her eyes on the duskier distance,
|
|
then, pulling herself together, turned to me with abrupt inconsequence.
|
|
"It's time we should be at church."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I'm not fit for church!"
|
|
|
|
"Won't it do you good?"
|
|
|
|
"It won't do THEM--! I nodded at the house.
|
|
|
|
"The children?"
|
|
|
|
"I can't leave them now."
|
|
|
|
"You're afraid--?"
|
|
|
|
I spoke boldly. "I'm afraid of HIM."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose's large face showed me, at this, for the first time,
|
|
the faraway faint glimmer of a consciousness more acute:
|
|
I somehow made out in it the delayed dawn of an idea I myself
|
|
had not given her and that was as yet quite obscure to me.
|
|
It comes back to me that I thought instantly of this
|
|
as something I could get from her; and I felt it to be
|
|
connected with the desire she presently showed to know more.
|
|
"When was it--on the tower?"
|
|
|
|
"About the middle of the month. At this same hour."
|
|
|
|
"Almost at dark," said Mrs. Grose.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, no, not nearly. I saw him as I see you."
|
|
|
|
"Then how did he get in?"
|
|
|
|
"And how did he get out?" I laughed. "I had no opportunity to ask him!
|
|
This evening, you see," I pursued, "he has not been able to get in."
|
|
|
|
"He only peeps?"
|
|
|
|
"I hope it will be confined to that!" She had now let go my hand;
|
|
she turned away a little. I waited an instant; then I brought out:
|
|
"Go to church. Goodbye. I must watch."
|
|
|
|
Slowly she faced me again. "Do you fear for them?"
|
|
|
|
We met in another long look. "Don't YOU?" Instead of answering she came
|
|
nearer to the window and, for a minute, applied her face to the glass.
|
|
"You see how he could see," I meanwhile went on.
|
|
|
|
She didn't move. "How long was he here?"
|
|
|
|
"Till I came out. I came to meet him."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose at last turned round, and there was still more in her face.
|
|
"_I_ couldn't have come out."
|
|
|
|
"Neither could I!" I laughed again. "But I did come.
|
|
I have my duty."
|
|
|
|
"So have I mine," she replied; after which she added:
|
|
"What is he like?"
|
|
|
|
"I've been dying to tell you. But he's like nobody."
|
|
|
|
"Nobody?" she echoed.
|
|
|
|
"He has no hat." Then seeing in her face that she already,
|
|
in this, with a deeper dismay, found a touch of picture,
|
|
I quickly added stroke to stroke. "He has red hair, very red,
|
|
close-curling, and a pale face, long in shape, with straight,
|
|
good features and little, rather queer whiskers that are as red
|
|
as his hair. His eyebrows are, somehow, darker; they look
|
|
particularly arched and as if they might move a good deal.
|
|
His eyes are sharp, strange--awfully; but I only know clearly
|
|
that they're rather small and very fixed. His mouth's wide,
|
|
and his lips are thin, and except for his little whiskers he's
|
|
quite clean-shaven. He gives me a sort of sense of looking
|
|
like an actor."
|
|
|
|
"An actor!" It was impossible to resemble one less, at least,
|
|
than Mrs. Grose at that moment.
|
|
|
|
"I've never seen one, but so I suppose them. He's tall, active, erect,"
|
|
I continued, "but never--no, never!--a gentleman."
|
|
|
|
My companion's face had blanched as I went on; her round
|
|
eyes started and her mild mouth gaped. "A gentleman?"
|
|
she gasped, confounded, stupefied: "a gentleman HE?"
|
|
|
|
"You know him then?"
|
|
|
|
She visibly tried to hold herself. "But he IS handsome?"
|
|
|
|
I saw the way to help her. "Remarkably!"
|
|
|
|
"And dressed--?"
|
|
|
|
"In somebody's clothes. "They're smart, but they're not his own."
|
|
|
|
She broke into a breathless affirmative groan: "They're the master's!"
|
|
|
|
I caught it up. "You DO know him?"
|
|
|
|
She faltered but a second. "Quint!" she cried.
|
|
|
|
"Quint?"
|
|
|
|
"Peter Quint--his own man, his valet, when he was here!"
|
|
|
|
"When the master was?"
|
|
|
|
Gaping still, but meeting me, she pieced it all together.
|
|
"He never wore his hat, but he did wear--well, there were
|
|
waistcoats missed. They were both here--last year.
|
|
Then the master went, and Quint was alone."
|
|
|
|
I followed, but halting a little. "Alone?"
|
|
|
|
"Alone with US." Then, as from a deeper depth, "In charge," she added.
|
|
|
|
"And what became of him?"
|
|
|
|
She hung fire so long that I was still more mystified.
|
|
"He went, too," she brought out at last.
|
|
|
|
"Went where?"
|
|
|
|
Her expression, at this, became extraordinary. "God knows where!
|
|
He died."
|
|
|
|
"Died?" I almost shrieked.
|
|
|
|
She seemed fairly to square herself, plant herself more firmly to utter
|
|
the wonder of it. "Yes. Mr. Quint is dead."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
VI
|
|
|
|
|
|
It took of course more than that particular passage to place us
|
|
together in presence of what we had now to live with as we could--
|
|
my dreadful liability to impressions of the order so vividly
|
|
exemplified, and my companion's knowledge, henceforth--a knowledge
|
|
half consternation and half compassion--of that liability.
|
|
There had been, this evening, after the revelation left me,
|
|
for an hour, so prostrate--there had been, for either of us,
|
|
no attendance on any service but a little service of tears and vows,
|
|
of prayers and promises, a climax to the series of mutual challenges
|
|
and pledges that had straightway ensued on our retreating together to
|
|
the schoolroom and shutting ourselves up there to have everything out.
|
|
The result of our having everything out was simply to reduce
|
|
our situation to the last rigor of its elements. She herself had
|
|
seen nothing, not the shadow of a shadow, and nobody in the house
|
|
but the governess was in the governess's plight; yet she accepted
|
|
without directly impugning my sanity the truth as I gave it to her,
|
|
and ended by showing me, on this ground, an awestricken tenderness,
|
|
an expression of the sense of my more than questionable privilege,
|
|
of which the very breath has remained with me as that of the sweetest
|
|
of human charities.
|
|
|
|
What was settled between us, accordingly, that night, was that we
|
|
thought we might bear things together; and I was not even sure that,
|
|
in spite of her exemption, it was she who had the best of the burden.
|
|
I knew at this hour, I think, as well as I knew later, what I was
|
|
capable of meeting to shelter my pupils; but it took me some time
|
|
to be wholly sure of what my honest ally was prepared for to keep
|
|
terms with so compromising a contract. I was queer company enough--
|
|
quite as queer as the company I received; but as I trace over
|
|
what we went through I see how much common ground we must have
|
|
found in the one idea that, by good fortune, COULD steady us.
|
|
It was the idea, the second movement, that led me straight out,
|
|
as I may say, of the inner chamber of my dread. I could take
|
|
the air in the court, at least, and there Mrs. Grose could join me.
|
|
Perfectly can I recall now the particular way strength came to me
|
|
before we separated for the night. We had gone over and over every
|
|
feature of what I had seen.
|
|
|
|
"He was looking for someone else, you say--someone who was not you?"
|
|
|
|
"He was looking for little Miles." A portentous clearness now possessed me.
|
|
"THAT'S whom he was looking for."
|
|
|
|
"But how do you know?"
|
|
|
|
"I know, I know, I know!" My exaltation grew. "And YOU know, my dear!"
|
|
|
|
She didn't deny this, but I required, I felt, not even so much
|
|
telling as that. She resumed in a moment, at any rate:
|
|
"What if HE should see him?"
|
|
|
|
"Little Miles? That's what he wants!"
|
|
|
|
She looked immensely scared again. "The child?"
|
|
|
|
"Heaven forbid! The man. He wants to appear to THEM."
|
|
That he might was an awful conception, and yet, somehow, I could
|
|
keep it at bay; which, moreover, as we lingered there,
|
|
was what I succeeded in practically proving. I had an absolute
|
|
certainty that I should see again what I had already seen,
|
|
but something within me said that by offering myself bravely
|
|
as the sole subject of such experience, by accepting, by inviting,
|
|
by surmounting it all, I should serve as an expiatory victim
|
|
and guard the tranquility of my companions. The children,
|
|
in especial, I should thus fence about and absolutely save.
|
|
I recall one of the last things I said that night to Mrs. Grose.
|
|
|
|
"It does strike me that my pupils have never mentioned--"
|
|
|
|
She looked at me hard as I musingly pulled up. "His having been
|
|
here and the time they were with him?"
|
|
|
|
"The time they were with him, and his name, his presence, his history,
|
|
in any way."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, the little lady doesn't remember. She never heard or knew."
|
|
|
|
"The circumstances of his death?" I thought with some intensity.
|
|
"Perhaps not. But Miles would remember--Miles would know."
|
|
|
|
"Ah, don't try him!" broke from Mrs. Grose.
|
|
|
|
I returned her the look she had given me. "Don't be afraid."
|
|
I continued to think. "It IS rather odd."
|
|
|
|
"That he has never spoken of him?"
|
|
|
|
"Never by the least allusion. And you tell me they were `great friends'?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, it wasn't HIM!" Mrs. Grose with emphasis declared.
|
|
"It was Quint's own fancy. To play with him, I mean--
|
|
to spoil him." She paused a moment; then she added:
|
|
"Quint was much too free."
|
|
|
|
This gave me, straight from my vision of his face--SUCH a face!--
|
|
a sudden sickness of disgust. "Too free with MY boy?"
|
|
|
|
"Too free with everyone!"
|
|
|
|
I forbore, for the moment, to analyze this description further than
|
|
by the reflection that a part of it applied to several of the members
|
|
of the household, of the half-dozen maids and men who were still
|
|
of our small colony. But there was everything, for our apprehension,
|
|
in the lucky fact that no discomfortable legend, no perturbation
|
|
of scullions, had ever, within anyone's memory attached to the kind
|
|
old place. It had neither bad name nor ill fame, and Mrs. Grose,
|
|
most apparently, only desired to cling to me and to quake in silence.
|
|
I even put her, the very last thing of all, to the test. It was when,
|
|
at midnight, she had her hand on the schoolroom door to take leave.
|
|
"I have it from you then--for it's of great importance--that he was
|
|
definitely and admittedly bad?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, not admittedly. _I_ knew it--but the master didn't."
|
|
|
|
"And you never told him?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, he didn't like tale-bearing--he hated complaints.
|
|
He was terribly short with anything of that kind, and if people
|
|
were all right to HIM--"
|
|
|
|
"He wouldn't be bothered with more?" This squared well enough
|
|
with my impressions of him: he was not a trouble-loving gentleman,
|
|
nor so very particular perhaps about some of the company HE kept.
|
|
All the same, I pressed my interlocutress. "I promise you _I_
|
|
would have told!"
|
|
|
|
She felt my discrimination. "I daresay I was wrong.
|
|
But, really, I was afraid."
|
|
|
|
"Afraid of what?"
|
|
|
|
"Of things that man could do. Quint was so clever--he was so deep."
|
|
|
|
I took this in still more than, probably, I showed.
|
|
"You weren't afraid of anything else? Not of his effect--?"
|
|
|
|
"His effect?" she repeated with a face of anguish and waiting
|
|
while I faltered.
|
|
|
|
"On innocent little precious lives. They were in your charge."
|
|
|
|
"No, they were not in mine!" she roundly and distressfully returned.
|
|
"The master believed in him and placed him here because he was
|
|
supposed not to be well and the country air so good for him.
|
|
So he had everything to say. Yes"--she let me have it--"even
|
|
about THEM."
|
|
|
|
"Them--that creature?" I had to smother a kind of howl.
|
|
"And you could bear it!"
|
|
|
|
"No. I couldn't--and I can't now!" And the poor woman burst into tears.
|
|
|
|
A rigid control, from the next day, was, as I have said, to follow them;
|
|
yet how often and how passionately, for a week, we came back together
|
|
to the subject! Much as we had discussed it that Sunday night, I was,
|
|
in the immediate later hours in especial--for it may be imagined whether
|
|
I slept--still haunted with the shadow of something she had not told me.
|
|
I myself had kept back nothing, but there was a word Mrs. Grose had
|
|
kept back. I was sure, moreover, by morning, that this was not from
|
|
a failure of frankness, but because on every side there were fears.
|
|
It seems to me indeed, in retrospect, that by the time the morrow's sun
|
|
was high I had restlessly read into the fact before us almost all the
|
|
meaning they were to receive from subsequent and more cruel occurrences.
|
|
What they gave me above all was just the sinister figure of the living man--
|
|
the dead one would keep awhile!--and of the months he had continuously
|
|
passed at Bly, which, added up, made a formidable stretch.
|
|
The limit of this evil time had arrived only when, on the dawn of a
|
|
winter's morning, Peter Quint was found, by a laborer going to early work,
|
|
stone dead on the road from the village: a catastrophe explained--
|
|
superficially at least--by a visible wound to his head; such a wound
|
|
as might have been produced--and as, on the final evidence, HAD been--
|
|
by a fatal slip, in the dark and after leaving the public house,
|
|
on the steepish icy slope, a wrong path altogether, at the bottom of
|
|
which he lay. The icy slope, the turn mistaken at night and in liquor,
|
|
accounted for much--practically, in the end and after the inquest and
|
|
boundless chatter, for everything; but there had been matters in his life--
|
|
strange passages and perils, secret disorders, vices more than suspected--
|
|
that would have accounted for a good deal more.
|
|
|
|
I scarce know how to put my story into words that shall be
|
|
a credible picture of my state of mind; but I was in these days
|
|
literally able to find a joy in the extraordinary flight of
|
|
heroism the occasion demanded of me. I now saw that I had been
|
|
asked for a service admirable and difficult; and there would
|
|
be a greatness in letting it be seen--oh, in the right quarter!--
|
|
that I could succeed where many another girl might have failed.
|
|
It was an immense help to me--I confess I rather applaud myself
|
|
as I look back!--that I saw my service so strongly and so simply.
|
|
I was there to protect and defend the little creatures in
|
|
the world the most bereaved and the most lovable, the appeal
|
|
of whose helplessness had suddenly become only too explicit,
|
|
a deep, constant ache of one's own committed heart.
|
|
We were cut off, really, together; we were united in our danger.
|
|
They had nothing but me, and I--well, I had THEM. It
|
|
was in short a magnificent chance. This chance presented
|
|
itself to me in an image richly material. I was a screen--
|
|
I was to stand before them. The more I saw, the less they would.
|
|
I began to watch them in a stifled suspense, a disguised
|
|
excitement that might well, had it continued too long,
|
|
have turned to something like madness. What saved me,
|
|
as I now see, was that it turned to something else altogether.
|
|
It didn't last as suspense--it was superseded by horrible proofs.
|
|
Proofs, I say, yes--from the moment I really took hold.
|
|
|
|
This moment dated from an afternoon hour that I happened
|
|
to spend in the grounds with the younger of my pupils alone.
|
|
We had left Miles indoors, on the red cushion of a deep
|
|
window seat; he had wished to finish a book, and I had been
|
|
glad to encourage a purpose so laudable in a young man whose
|
|
only defect was an occasional excess of the restless.
|
|
His sister, on the contrary, had been alert to come out,
|
|
and I strolled with her half an hour, seeking the shade,
|
|
for the sun was still high and the day exceptionally warm.
|
|
I was aware afresh, with her, as we went, of how,
|
|
like her brother, she contrived--it was the charming thing
|
|
in both children--to let me alone without appearing to drop
|
|
me and to accompany me without appearing to surround.
|
|
They were never importunate and yet never listless.
|
|
My attention to them all really went to seeing them amuse
|
|
themselves immensely without me: this was a spectacle they seemed
|
|
actively to prepare and that engaged me as an active admirer.
|
|
I walked in a world of their invention--they had no occasion whatever
|
|
to draw upon mine; so that my time was taken only with being,
|
|
for them, some remarkable person or thing that the game of
|
|
the moment required and that was merely, thanks to my superior,
|
|
my exalted stamp, a happy and highly distinguished sinecure.
|
|
I forget what I was on the present occasion; I only remember
|
|
that I was something very important and very quiet and that Flora
|
|
was playing very hard. We were on the edge of the lake, and, as we
|
|
had lately begun geography, the lake was the Sea of Azof.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly, in these circumstances, I became aware that, on the
|
|
other side of the Sea of Azof, we had an interested spectator.
|
|
The way this knowledge gathered in me was the strangest thing
|
|
in the world--the strangest, that is, except the very much
|
|
stranger in which it quickly merged itself. I had sat down with
|
|
a piece of work--for I was something or other that could sit--
|
|
on the old stone bench which overlooked the pond; and in this
|
|
position I began to take in with certitude, and yet without
|
|
direct vision, the presence, at a distance, of a third person.
|
|
The old trees, the thick shrubbery, made a great and pleasant shade,
|
|
but it was all suffused with the brightness of the hot, still hour.
|
|
There was no ambiguity in anything; none whatever, at least,
|
|
in the conviction I from one moment to another found myself
|
|
forming as to what I should see straight before me and across
|
|
the lake as a consequence of raising my eyes. They were attached
|
|
at this juncture to the stitching in which I was engaged,
|
|
and I can feel once more the spasm of my effort not to move them
|
|
till I should so have steadied myself as to be able to make up
|
|
my mind what to do. There was an alien object in view--a figure
|
|
whose right of presence I instantly, passionately questioned.
|
|
I recollect counting over perfectly the possibilities,
|
|
reminding myself that nothing was more natural, for instance,
|
|
then the appearance of one of the men about the place, or even
|
|
of a messenger, a postman, or a tradesman's boy, from the village.
|
|
That reminder had as little effect on my practical
|
|
certitude as I was conscious--still even without looking--
|
|
of its having upon the character and attitude of our visitor.
|
|
Nothing was more natural than that these things should be
|
|
the other things that they absolutely were not.
|
|
|
|
Of the positive identity of the apparition I would assure myself
|
|
as soon as the small clock of my courage should have ticked out the
|
|
right second; meanwhile, with an effort that was already sharp enough,
|
|
I transferred my eyes straight to little Flora, who, at the moment,
|
|
was about ten yards away. My heart had stood still for an instant
|
|
with the wonder and terror of the question whether she too would see;
|
|
and I held my breath while I waited for what a cry from her, what some
|
|
sudden innocent sign either of interest or of alarm, would tell me.
|
|
I waited, but nothing came; then, in the first place--and there is
|
|
something more dire in this, I feel, than in anything I have to relate--
|
|
I was determined by a sense that, within a minute, all sounds from her
|
|
had previously dropped; and, in the second, by the circumstance that,
|
|
also within the minute, she had, in her play, turned her back to the water.
|
|
This was her attitude when I at last looked at her--looked with the confirmed
|
|
conviction that we were still, together, under direct personal notice.
|
|
She had picked up a small flat piece of wood, which happened to have in it
|
|
a little hole that had evidently suggested to her the idea of sticking
|
|
in another fragment that might figure as a mast and make the thing a boat.
|
|
This second morsel, as I watched her, she was very markedly and intently
|
|
attempting to tighten in its place. My apprehension of what she was doing
|
|
sustained me so that after some seconds I felt I was ready for more.
|
|
Then I again shifted my eyes--I faced what I had to face.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
VII
|
|
|
|
|
|
I got hold of Mrs. Grose as soon after this as I could; and I can
|
|
give no intelligible account of how I fought out the interval.
|
|
Yet I still hear myself cry as I fairly threw myself into her arms:
|
|
"They KNOW--it's too monstrous: they know, they know!"
|
|
|
|
"And what on earth--?" I felt her incredulity as she held me.
|
|
|
|
"Why, all that WE know--and heaven knows what else besides!"
|
|
Then, as she released me, I made it out to her, made it out perhaps only
|
|
now with full coherency even to myself. "Two hours ago, in the garden"--
|
|
I could scarce articulate--"Flora SAW!"
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose took it as she might have taken a blow in the stomach.
|
|
"She has told you?" she panted.
|
|
|
|
"Not a word--that's the horror. She kept it to herself!
|
|
The child of eight, THAT child!" Unutterable still,
|
|
for me, was the stupefaction of it.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose, of course, could only gape the wider.
|
|
"Then how do you know?"
|
|
|
|
"I was there--I saw with my eyes: saw that she was perfectly aware."
|
|
|
|
"Do you mean aware of HIM?"
|
|
|
|
"No--of HER." I was conscious as I spoke that I looked
|
|
prodigious things, for I got the slow reflection of them
|
|
in my companion's face. "Another person--this time;
|
|
but a figure of quite as unmistakable horror and evil:
|
|
a woman in black, pale and dreadful--with such an air also,
|
|
and such a face!--on the other side of the lake.
|
|
I was there with the child--quiet for the hour; and in the midst
|
|
of it she came."
|
|
|
|
"Came how--from where?"
|
|
|
|
"From where they come from! She just appeared and stood there--
|
|
but not so near."
|
|
|
|
"And without coming nearer?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, for the effect and the feeling, she might have been as close as you!"
|
|
|
|
My friend, with an odd impulse, fell back a step.
|
|
"Was she someone you've never seen?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes. But someone the child has. Someone YOU have."
|
|
Then, to show how I had thought it all out: "My predecessor--
|
|
the one who died."
|
|
|
|
"Miss Jessel?"
|
|
|
|
"Miss Jessel. You don't believe me?" I pressed.
|
|
|
|
She turned right and left in her distress. "How can you be sure?"
|
|
|
|
This drew from me, in the state of my nerves, a flash of impatience.
|
|
"Then ask Flora--SHE'S sure!" But I had no sooner spoken
|
|
than I caught myself up. "No, for God's sake, DON'T!"
|
|
She'll say she isn't--she'll lie!"
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose was not too bewildered instinctively to protest.
|
|
"Ah, how CAN you?"
|
|
|
|
"Because I'm clear. Flora doesn't want me to know."
|
|
|
|
"It's only then to spare you."
|
|
|
|
"No, no--there are depths, depths! The more I go over it,
|
|
the more I see in it, and the more I see in it, the more I fear.
|
|
I don't know what I DON'T see--what I DON'T fear!"
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose tried to keep up with me. "You mean you're afraid
|
|
of seeing her again?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, no; that's nothing--now!" Then I explained.
|
|
"It's of NOT seeing her."
|
|
|
|
But my companion only looked wan. "I don't understand you."
|
|
|
|
"Why, it's that the child may keep it up--and that the child assuredly
|
|
WILL--without my knowing it."
|
|
|
|
At the image of this possibility Mrs. Grose for a moment collapsed,
|
|
yet presently to pull herself together again, as if from the positive
|
|
force of the sense of what, should we yield an inch, there would
|
|
really be to give way to. "Dear, dear--we must keep our heads!
|
|
And after all, if she doesn't mind it--!" She even tried a grim joke.
|
|
"Perhaps she likes it!"
|
|
|
|
"Likes SUCH things--a scrap of an infant!"
|
|
|
|
"Isn't it just a proof of her blessed innocence?" my friend bravely inquired.
|
|
|
|
She brought me, for the instant, almost round.
|
|
"Oh, we must clutch at THAT--we must cling to it!
|
|
If it isn't a proof of what you say, it's a proof of--God knows what!
|
|
For the woman's a horror of horrors."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose, at this, fixed her eyes a minute on the ground;
|
|
then at last raising them, "Tell me how you know," she said.
|
|
|
|
"Then you admit it's what she was?" I cried.
|
|
|
|
"Tell me how you know," my friend simply repeated.
|
|
|
|
"Know? By seeing her! By the way she looked."
|
|
|
|
"At you, do you mean--so wickedly?"
|
|
|
|
"Dear me, no--I could have borne that. She gave me never a glance.
|
|
She only fixed the child."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose tried to see it. "Fixed her?"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, with such awful eyes!"
|
|
|
|
She stared at mine as if they might really have resembled them.
|
|
"Do you mean of dislike?"
|
|
|
|
"God help us, no. Of something much worse."
|
|
|
|
"Worse than dislike?--this left her indeed at a loss.
|
|
|
|
"With a determination--indescribable. With a kind of fury of intention."
|
|
|
|
I made her turn pale. "Intention?"
|
|
|
|
"To get hold of her." Mrs. Grose--her eyes just lingering
|
|
on mine--gave a shudder and walked to the window;
|
|
and while she stood there looking out I completed my statement.
|
|
"THAT'S what Flora knows."
|
|
|
|
After a little she turned round. "The person was in black, you say?"
|
|
|
|
"In mourning--rather poor, almost shabby. But--yes--with
|
|
extraordinary beauty." I now recognized to what I had at last,
|
|
stroke by stroke, brought the victim of my confidence, for she quite
|
|
visibly weighed this. "Oh, handsome--very, very," I insisted;
|
|
"wonderfully handsome. But infamous."
|
|
|
|
She slowly came back to me. "Miss Jessel--WAS infamous."
|
|
She once more took my hand in both her own, holding it
|
|
as tight as if to fortify me against the increase of alarm I
|
|
might draw from this disclosure. "They were both infamous,"
|
|
she finally said.
|
|
|
|
So, for a little, we faced it once more together; and I found absolutely
|
|
a degree of help in seeing it now so straight. "I appreciate,"
|
|
I said, "the great decency of your not having hitherto spoken;
|
|
but the time has certainly come to give me the whole thing."
|
|
She appeared to assent to this, but still only in silence;
|
|
seeing which I went on: "I must have it now. Of what did she die?
|
|
Come, there was something between them."
|
|
|
|
"There was everything."
|
|
|
|
"In spite of the difference--?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, of their rank, their condition"--she brought it woefully out.
|
|
"SHE was a lady."
|
|
|
|
I turned it over; I again saw. "Yes--she was a lady."
|
|
|
|
"And he so dreadfully below," said Mrs. Grose.
|
|
|
|
I felt that I doubtless needn't press too hard, in such company,
|
|
on the place of a servant in the scale; but there was nothing to prevent
|
|
an acceptance of my companion's own measure of my predecessor's abasement.
|
|
There was a way to deal with that, and I dealt; the more readily
|
|
for my full vision--on the evidence--of our employer's late clever,
|
|
good-looking "own" man; impudent, assured, spoiled, depraved.
|
|
"The fellow was a hound."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose considered as if it were perhaps a little a case
|
|
for a sense of shades. "I've never seen one like him.
|
|
He did what he wished."
|
|
|
|
"With HER?"
|
|
|
|
"With them all."
|
|
|
|
It was as if now in my friend's own eyes Miss Jessel had again appeared.
|
|
I seemed at any rate, for an instant, to see their evocation of her as
|
|
distinctly as I had seen her by the pond; and I brought out with decision:
|
|
"It must have been also what SHE wished!"
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose's face signified that it had been indeed, but she said
|
|
at the same time: "Poor woman--she paid for it!"
|
|
|
|
"Then you do know what she died of?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"No--I know nothing. I wanted not to know; I was glad enough I didn't;
|
|
and I thanked heaven she was well out of this!"
|
|
|
|
"Yet you had, then, your idea--"
|
|
|
|
"Of her real reason for leaving? Oh, yes--as to that.
|
|
She couldn't have stayed. Fancy it here--for a governess!
|
|
And afterward I imagined--and I still imagine. And what I
|
|
imagine is dreadful."
|
|
|
|
"Not so dreadful as what _I_ do," I replied; on which I must
|
|
have shown her--as I was indeed but too conscious--a front of
|
|
miserable defeat. It brought out again all her compassion for me,
|
|
and at the renewed touch of her kindness my power to resist broke down.
|
|
I burst, as I had, the other time, made her burst, into tears;
|
|
she took me to her motherly breast, and my lamentation overflowed.
|
|
"I don't do it!" I sobbed in despair; "I don't save or shield them!
|
|
It's far worse than I dreamed--they're lost!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
VIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
What I had said to Mrs. Grose was true enough: there were in the matter I
|
|
had put before her depths and possibilities that I lacked resolution to sound;
|
|
so that when we met once more in the wonder of it we were of a common mind
|
|
about the duty of resistance to extravagant fancies. We were to keep our
|
|
heads if we should keep nothing else--difficult indeed as that might be in
|
|
the face of what, in our prodigious experience, was least to be questioned.
|
|
Late that night, while the house slept, we had another talk in my room,
|
|
when she went all the way with me as to its being beyond doubt that I
|
|
had seen exactly what I had seen. To hold her perfectly in the pinch
|
|
of that, I found I had only to ask her how, if I had "made it up,"
|
|
I came to be able to give, of each of the persons appearing to me,
|
|
a picture disclosing, to the last detail, their special marks--a portrait
|
|
on the exhibition of which she had instantly recognized and named them.
|
|
She wished of course--small blame to her!--to sink the whole subject;
|
|
and I was quick to assure her that my own interest in it had now
|
|
violently taken the form of a search for the way to escape from it.
|
|
I encountered her on the ground of a probability that with recurrence--
|
|
for recurrence we took for granted--I should get used to my danger,
|
|
distinctly professing that my personal exposure had suddenly become
|
|
the least of my discomforts. It was my new suspicion that was intolerable;
|
|
and yet even to this complication the later hours of the day had brought
|
|
a little ease.
|
|
|
|
On leaving her, after my first outbreak, I had of course returned
|
|
to my pupils, associating the right remedy for my dismay with
|
|
that sense of their charm which I had already found to be a thing
|
|
I could positively cultivate and which had never failed me yet.
|
|
I had simply, in other words, plunged afresh into Flora's
|
|
special society and there become aware--it was almost a luxury!--
|
|
that she could put her little conscious hand straight upon
|
|
the spot that ached. She had looked at me in sweet speculation
|
|
and then had accused me to my face of having "cried."
|
|
I had supposed I had brushed away the ugly signs: but I
|
|
could literally--for the time, at all events--rejoice, under this
|
|
fathomless charity, that they had not entirely disappeared.
|
|
To gaze into the depths of blue of the child's eyes and pronounce
|
|
their loveliness a trick of premature cunning was to be guilty
|
|
of a cynicism in preference to which I naturally preferred
|
|
to abjure my judgment and, so far as might be, my agitation.
|
|
I couldn't abjure for merely wanting to, but I could repeat
|
|
to Mrs. Grose--as I did there, over and over, in the small hours--
|
|
that with their voices in the air, their pressure on one's heart,
|
|
and their fragrant faces against one's cheek, everything fell
|
|
to the ground but their incapacity and their beauty.
|
|
It was a pity that, somehow, to settle this once for all,
|
|
I had equally to re-enumerate the signs of subtlety that,
|
|
in the afternoon, by the lake had made a miracle of my show
|
|
of self-possession. It was a pity to be obliged to reinvestigate
|
|
the certitude of the moment itself and repeat how it had come
|
|
to me as a revelation that the inconceivable communion I
|
|
then surprised was a matter, for either party, of habit.
|
|
It was a pity that I should have had to quaver out again
|
|
the reasons for my not having, in my delusion, so much
|
|
as questioned that the little girl saw our visitant even
|
|
as I actually saw Mrs. Grose herself, and that she wanted,
|
|
by just so much as she did thus see, to make me suppose she
|
|
didn't, and at the same time, without showing anything,
|
|
arrive at a guess as to whether I myself did! It was a pity
|
|
that I needed once more to describe the portentous little activity
|
|
by which she sought to divert my attention--the perceptible
|
|
increase of movement, the greater intensity of play, the singing,
|
|
the gabbling of nonsense, and the invitation to romp.
|
|
|
|
Yet if I had not indulged, to prove there was nothing in it,
|
|
in this review, I should have missed the two or three dim elements
|
|
of comfort that still remained to me. I should not for instance have
|
|
been able to asseverate to my friend that I was certain--which was
|
|
so much to the good--that _I_ at least had not betrayed myself.
|
|
I should not have been prompted, by stress of need, by desperation
|
|
of mind--I scarce know what to call it--to invoke such further
|
|
aid to intelligence as might spring from pushing my colleague
|
|
fairly to the wall. She had told me, bit by bit, under pressure,
|
|
a great deal; but a small shifty spot on the wrong side of it
|
|
all still sometimes brushed my brow like the wing of a bat;
|
|
and I remember how on this occasion--for the sleeping house and
|
|
the concentration alike of our danger and our watch seemed to help--
|
|
I felt the importance of giving the last jerk to the curtain.
|
|
"I don't believe anything so horrible," I recollect saying;
|
|
"no, let us put it definitely, my dear, that I don't. But if I did,
|
|
you know, there's a thing I should require now, just without sparing
|
|
you the least bit more--oh, not a scrap, come!--to get out of you.
|
|
What was it you had in mind when, in our distress, before Miles came back,
|
|
over the letter from his school, you said, under my insistence,
|
|
that you didn't pretend for him that he had not literally EVER
|
|
been `bad'? He has NOT literally `ever,' in these weeks that I
|
|
myself have lived with him and so closely watched him; he has been
|
|
an imperturbable little prodigy of delightful, lovable goodness.
|
|
Therefore you might perfectly have made the claim for him
|
|
if you had not, as it happened, seen an exception to take.
|
|
What was your exception, and to what passage in your personal
|
|
observation of him did you refer?"
|
|
|
|
It was a dreadfully austere inquiry, but levity was not our note, and, at any
|
|
rate, before the gray dawn admonished us to separate I had got my answer.
|
|
What my friend had had in mind proved to be immensely to the purpose.
|
|
It was neither more nor less than the circumstance that for a period
|
|
of several months Quint and the boy had been perpetually together.
|
|
It was in fact the very appropriate truth that she had ventured to criticize
|
|
the propriety, to hint at the incongruity, of so close an alliance,
|
|
and even to go so far on the subject as a frank overture to Miss Jessel.
|
|
Miss Jessel had, with a most strange manner, requested her to mind her
|
|
business, and the good woman had, on this, directly approached little Miles.
|
|
What she had said to him, since I pressed, was that SHE liked to see
|
|
young gentlemen not forget their station.
|
|
|
|
I pressed again, of course, at this. "You reminded him that Quint
|
|
was only a base menial?"
|
|
|
|
"As you might say! And it was his answer, for one thing,
|
|
that was bad."
|
|
|
|
"And for another thing?" I waited. "He repeated your words to Quint?"
|
|
|
|
"No, not that. It's just what he WOULDN'T!" she could
|
|
still impress upon me. "I was sure, at any rate," she added,
|
|
"that he didn't. But he denied certain occasions."
|
|
|
|
"What occasions?"
|
|
|
|
"When they had been about together quite as if Quint were his tutor--
|
|
and a very grand one--and Miss Jessel only for the little lady.
|
|
When he had gone off with the fellow, I mean, and spent hours with him."
|
|
|
|
"He then prevaricated about it--he said he hadn't?"
|
|
Her assent was clear enough to cause me to add in a moment:
|
|
"I see. He lied."
|
|
|
|
"Oh!" Mrs. Grose mumbled. This was a suggestion that it didn't matter;
|
|
which indeed she backed up by a further remark. "You see, after all,
|
|
Miss Jessel didn't mind. She didn't forbid him."
|
|
|
|
I considered. "Did he put that to you as a justification?"
|
|
|
|
At this she dropped again. "No, he never spoke of it."
|
|
|
|
"Never mentioned her in connection with Quint?"
|
|
|
|
She saw, visibly flushing, where I was coming out. "Well, he didn't
|
|
show anything. He denied," she repeated; "he denied."
|
|
|
|
Lord, how I pressed her now! "So that you could see he knew
|
|
what was between the two wretches?"
|
|
|
|
"I don't know--I don't know!" the poor woman groaned.
|
|
|
|
"You do know, you dear thing," I replied; "only you haven't
|
|
my dreadful boldness of mind, and you keep back, out of timidity
|
|
and modesty and delicacy, even the impression that, in the past,
|
|
when you had, without my aid, to flounder about in silence,
|
|
most of all made you miserable. But I shall get it out of you yet!
|
|
There was something in the boy that suggested to you," I continued,
|
|
"that he covered and concealed their relation."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, he couldn't prevent--"
|
|
|
|
"Your learning the truth? I daresay! But, heavens," I fell,
|
|
with vehemence, athinking, "what it shows that they must,
|
|
to that extent, have succeeded in making of him!"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, nothing that's not nice NOW!" Mrs. Grose lugubriously pleaded.
|
|
|
|
"I don't wonder you looked queer," I persisted, "when I mentioned
|
|
to you the letter from his school!"
|
|
|
|
"I doubt if I looked as queer as you!" she retorted with homely force.
|
|
"And if he was so bad then as that comes to, how is he such an angel now?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, indeed--and if he was a fiend at school! How, how, how?
|
|
Well," I said in my torment, "you must put it to me again,
|
|
but I shall not be able to tell you for some days. Only, put it
|
|
to me again!" I cried in a way that made my friend stare.
|
|
"There are directions in which I must not for the present
|
|
let myself go." Meanwhile I returned to her first example--
|
|
the one to which she had just previously referred--
|
|
of the boy's happy capacity for an occasional slip.
|
|
"If Quint--on your remonstrance at the time you speak of--
|
|
was a base menial, one of the things Miles said to you,
|
|
I find myself guessing, was that you were another."
|
|
Again her admission was so adequate that I continued:
|
|
"And you forgave him that?"
|
|
|
|
"Wouldn't YOU?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes!" And we exchanged there, in the stillness,
|
|
a sound of the oddest amusement. Then I went on:
|
|
"At all events, while he was with the man--"
|
|
|
|
"Miss Flora was with the woman. It suited them all!"
|
|
|
|
It suited me, too, I felt, only too well; by which I mean
|
|
that it suited exactly the particularly deadly view I
|
|
was in the very act of forbidding myself to entertain.
|
|
But I so far succeeded in checking the expression of this view
|
|
that I will throw, just here, no further light on it than may be
|
|
offered by the mention of my final observation to Mrs. Grose.
|
|
"His having lied and been impudent are, I confess, less engaging
|
|
specimens than I had hoped to have from you of the outbreak in him
|
|
of the little natural man. Still," I mused, "They must do,
|
|
for they make me feel more than ever that I must watch."
|
|
|
|
It made me blush, the next minute, to see in my friend's face
|
|
how much more unreservedly she had forgiven him than her anecdote
|
|
struck me as presenting to my own tenderness an occasion for doing.
|
|
This came out when, at the schoolroom door, she quitted me.
|
|
"Surely you don't accuse HIM--"
|
|
|
|
"Of carrying on an intercourse that he conceals from me?
|
|
Ah, remember that, until further evidence, I now accuse nobody."
|
|
Then, before shutting her out to go, by another passage,
|
|
to her own place, "I must just wait," I wound up.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
IX
|
|
|
|
|
|
I waited and waited, and the days, as they elapsed,
|
|
took something from my consternation. A very few of them,
|
|
in fact, passing, in constant sight of my pupils,
|
|
without a fresh incident, sufficed to give to grievous fancies
|
|
and even to odious memories a kind of brush of the sponge.
|
|
I have spoken of the surrender to their extraordinary
|
|
childish grace as a thing I could actively cultivate,
|
|
and it may be imagined if I neglected now to address myself
|
|
to this source for whatever it would yield. Stranger than I
|
|
can express, certainly, was the effort to struggle against my
|
|
new lights; it would doubtless have been, however, a greater
|
|
tension still had it not been so frequently successful.
|
|
I used to wonder how my little charges could help guessing that I
|
|
thought strange things about them; and the circumstances that
|
|
these things only made them more interesting was not by itself
|
|
a direct aid to keeping them in the dark. I trembled lest they
|
|
should see that they WERE so immensely more interesting.
|
|
Putting things at the worst, at all events, as in meditation I
|
|
so often did, any clouding of their innocence could only be--
|
|
blameless and foredoomed as they were--a reason the more for
|
|
taking risks. There were moments when, by an irresistible impulse,
|
|
I found myself catching them up and pressing them to my heart.
|
|
As soon as I had done so I used to say to myself:
|
|
"What will they think of that? Doesn't it betray too much?"
|
|
It would have been easy to get into a sad, wild tangle about how
|
|
much I might betray; but the real account, I feel, of the hours
|
|
of peace that I could still enjoy was that the immediate
|
|
charm of my companions was a beguilement still effective
|
|
even under the shadow of the possibility that it was studied.
|
|
For if it occurred to me that I might occasionally excite
|
|
suspicion by the little outbreaks of my sharper passion for them,
|
|
so too I remember wondering if I mightn't see a queerness
|
|
in the traceable increase of their own demonstrations.
|
|
|
|
They were at this period extravagantly and preternaturally fond
|
|
of me; which, after all, I could reflect, was no more than a
|
|
graceful response in children perpetually bowed over and hugged.
|
|
The homage of which they were so lavish succeeded, in truth,
|
|
for my nerves, quite as well as if I never appeared to myself,
|
|
as I may say, literally to catch them at a purpose in it.
|
|
They had never, I think, wanted to do so many things for their
|
|
poor protectress; I mean--though they got their lessons better
|
|
and better, which was naturally what would please her most--
|
|
in the way of diverting, entertaining, surprising her;
|
|
reading her passages, telling her stories, acting her charades,
|
|
pouncing out at her, in disguises, as animals and historical
|
|
characters, and above all astonishing her by the "pieces" they
|
|
had secretly got by heart and could interminably recite.
|
|
I should never get to the bottom--were I to let myself go even now--
|
|
of the prodigious private commentary, all under still more
|
|
private correction, with which, in these days, I overscored
|
|
their full hours. They had shown me from the first a facility
|
|
for everything, a general faculty which, taking a fresh start,
|
|
achieved remarkable flights. They got their little tasks
|
|
as if they loved them, and indulged, from the mere exuberance
|
|
of the gift, in the most unimposed little miracles of memory.
|
|
They not only popped out at me as tigers and as Romans,
|
|
but as Shakespeareans, astronomers, and navigators.
|
|
This was so singularly the case that it had presumably
|
|
much to do with the fact as to which, at the present day,
|
|
I am at a loss for a different explanation: I allude to my
|
|
unnatural composure on the subject of another school for Miles.
|
|
What I remember is that I was content not, for the time,
|
|
to open the question, and that contentment must have sprung
|
|
from the sense of his perpetually striking show of cleverness.
|
|
He was too clever for a bad governess, for a parson's daughter,
|
|
to spoil; and the strangest if not the brightest thread
|
|
in the pensive embroidery I just spoke of was the impression
|
|
I might have got, if I had dared to work it out, that he was
|
|
under some influence operating in his small intellectual life
|
|
as a tremendous incitement.
|
|
|
|
If it was easy to reflect, however, that such a boy could postpone school,
|
|
it was at least as marked that for such a boy to have been
|
|
"kicked out" by a schoolmaster was a mystification without end.
|
|
Let me add that in their company now--and I was careful almost
|
|
never to be out of it--I could follow no scent very far. We lived
|
|
in a cloud of music and love and success and private theatricals.
|
|
The musical sense in each of the children was of the quickest,
|
|
but the elder in especial had a marvelous knack of catching and repeating.
|
|
The schoolroom piano broke into all gruesome fancies; and when that failed
|
|
there were confabulations in corners, with a sequel of one of them going
|
|
out in the highest spirits in order to "come in" as something new.
|
|
I had had brothers myself, and it was no revelation to me that little
|
|
girls could be slavish idolaters of little boys. What surpassed
|
|
everything was that there was a little boy in the world who could have
|
|
for the inferior age, sex, and intelligence so fine a consideration.
|
|
They were extraordinarily at one, and to say that they never either
|
|
quarreled or complained is to make the note of praise coarse for their
|
|
quality of sweetness. Sometimes, indeed, when I dropped into coarseness,
|
|
I perhaps came across traces of little understandings between them by
|
|
which one of them should keep me occupied while the other slipped away.
|
|
There is a naive side, I suppose, in all diplomacy; but if my pupils
|
|
practiced upon me, it was surely with the minimum of grossness.
|
|
It was all in the other quarter that, after a lull, the grossness broke out.
|
|
|
|
I find that I really hang back; but I must take my plunge.
|
|
In going on with the record of what was hideous at Bly,
|
|
I not only challenge the most liberal faith--for which I
|
|
little care; but--and this is another matter--I renew what I
|
|
myself suffered, I again push my way through it to the end.
|
|
There came suddenly an hour after which, as I look back,
|
|
the affair seems to me to have been all pure suffering;
|
|
but I have at least reached the heart of it,
|
|
and the straightest road out is doubtless to advance.
|
|
One evening--with nothing to lead up or to prepare it--
|
|
I felt the cold touch of the impression that had breathed
|
|
on me the night of my arrival and which, much lighter then,
|
|
as I have mentioned, I should probably have made little
|
|
of in memory had my subsequent sojourn been less agitated.
|
|
I had not gone to bed; I sat reading by a couple of candles.
|
|
There was a roomful of old books at Bly--last-century fiction,
|
|
some of it, which, to the extent of a distinctly deprecated renown,
|
|
but never to so much as that of a stray specimen, had reached
|
|
the sequestered home and appealed to the unavowed curiosity
|
|
of my youth. I remember that the book I had in my hand
|
|
was Fielding's Amelia; also that I was wholly awake.
|
|
I recall further both a general conviction that it was horribly
|
|
late and a particular objection to looking at my watch.
|
|
I figure, finally, that the white curtain draping,
|
|
in the fashion of those days, the head of Flora's
|
|
little bed, shrouded, as I had assured myself long before,
|
|
the perfection of childish rest. I recollect in short that,
|
|
though I was deeply interested in my author, I found myself,
|
|
at the turn of a page and with his spell all scattered,
|
|
looking straight up from him and hard at the door of my room.
|
|
There was a moment during which I listened, reminded of
|
|
the faint sense I had had, the first night, of there being
|
|
something undefinably astir in the house, and noted the soft
|
|
breath of the open casement just move the half-drawn blind.
|
|
Then, with all the marks of a deliberation that must have
|
|
seemed magnificent had there been anyone to admire it,
|
|
I laid down my book, rose to my feet, and, taking a candle,
|
|
went straight out of the room and, from the passage,
|
|
on which my light made little impression, noiselessly closed
|
|
and locked the door.
|
|
|
|
I can say now neither what determined nor what guided me, but I went
|
|
straight along the lobby, holding my candle high, till I came within sight
|
|
of the tall window that presided over the great turn of the staircase.
|
|
At this point I precipitately found myself aware of three things.
|
|
They were practically simultaneous, yet they had flashes of succession.
|
|
My candle, under a bold flourish, went out, and I perceived, by the uncovered
|
|
window, that the yielding dusk of earliest morning rendered it unnecessary.
|
|
Without it, the next instant, I saw that there was someone on the stair.
|
|
I speak of sequences, but I required no lapse of seconds to stiffen
|
|
myself for a third encounter with Quint. The apparition had reached
|
|
the landing halfway up and was therefore on the spot nearest the window,
|
|
where at sight of me, it stopped short and fixed me exactly as it had fixed
|
|
me from the tower and from the garden. He knew me as well as I knew him;
|
|
and so, in the cold, faint twilight, with a glimmer in the high glass
|
|
and another on the polish of the oak stair below, we faced each
|
|
other in our common intensity. He was absolutely, on this occasion,
|
|
a living, detestable, dangerous presence. But that was not the wonder
|
|
of wonders; I reserve this distinction for quite another circumstance:
|
|
the circumstance that dread had unmistakably quitted me and that there
|
|
was nothing in me there that didn't meet and measure him.
|
|
|
|
I had plenty of anguish after that extraordinary moment,
|
|
but I had, thank God, no terror. And he knew I had not--I found
|
|
myself at the end of an instant magnificently aware of this.
|
|
I felt, in a fierce rigor of confidence, that if I stood
|
|
my ground a minute I should cease--for the time, at least--
|
|
to have him to reckon with; and during the minute, accordingly,
|
|
the thing was as human and hideous as a real interview:
|
|
hideous just because it WAS human, as human as to have
|
|
met alone, in the small hours, in a sleeping house, some enemy,
|
|
some adventurer, some criminal. It was the dead silence of our
|
|
long gaze at such close quarters that gave the whole horror,
|
|
huge as it was, its only note of the unnatural. If I had met
|
|
a murderer in such a place and at such an hour, we still at
|
|
least would have spoken. Something would have passed, in life,
|
|
between us; if nothing had passed, one of us would have moved.
|
|
The moment was so prolonged that it would have taken but little
|
|
more to make me doubt if even _I_ were in life. I can't
|
|
express what followed it save by saying that the silence itself--
|
|
which was indeed in a manner an attestation of my strength--
|
|
became the element into which I saw the figure disappear;
|
|
in which I definitely saw it turn as I might have seen the low
|
|
wretch to which it had once belonged turn on receipt of an order,
|
|
and pass, with my eyes on the villainous back that no hunch
|
|
could have more disfigured, straight down the staircase
|
|
and into the darkness in which the next bend was lost.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X
|
|
|
|
|
|
I remained awhile at the top of the stair, but with the effect
|
|
presently of understanding that when my visitor had gone, he had gone:
|
|
then I returned to my room. The foremost thing I saw there
|
|
by the light of the candle I had left burning was that Flora's
|
|
little bed was empty; and on this I caught my breath with all
|
|
the terror that, five minutes before, I had been able to resist.
|
|
I dashed at the place in which I had left her lying and over which
|
|
(for the small silk counterpane and the sheets were disarranged)
|
|
the white curtains had been deceivingly pulled forward;
|
|
then my step, to my unutterable relief, produced an answering sound:
|
|
I perceived an agitation of the window blind, and the child,
|
|
ducking down, emerged rosily from the other side of it.
|
|
She stood there in so much of her candor and so little of her nightgown,
|
|
with her pink bare feet and the golden glow of her curls.
|
|
She looked intensely grave, and I had never had such a sense of losing
|
|
an advantage acquired (the thrill of which had just been so prodigious)
|
|
as on my consciousness that she addressed me with a reproach.
|
|
"You naughty: where HAVE you been?"--instead of challenging
|
|
her own irregularity I found myself arraigned and explaining.
|
|
She herself explained, for that matter, with the loveliest,
|
|
eagerest simplicity. She had known suddenly, as she lay there,
|
|
that I was out of the room, and had jumped up to see what had
|
|
become of me. I had dropped, with the joy of her reappearance,
|
|
back into my chair--feeling then, and then only, a little faint;
|
|
and she had pattered straight over to me, thrown herself upon
|
|
my knee, given herself to be held with the flame of the candle full
|
|
in the wonderful little face that was still flushed with sleep.
|
|
I remember closing my eyes an instant, yieldingly, consciously,
|
|
as before the excess of something beautiful that shone out of the blue
|
|
of her own. "You were looking for me out of the window?" I said.
|
|
"You thought I might be walking in the grounds?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, you know, I thought someone was"--she never blanched as she
|
|
smiled out that at me.
|
|
|
|
Oh, how I looked at her now! "And did you see anyone?"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, NO!" she returned, almost with the full privilege
|
|
of childish inconsequence, resentfully, though with a long
|
|
sweetness in her little drawl of the negative.
|
|
|
|
At that moment, in the state of my nerves, I absolutely believed
|
|
she lied; and if I once more closed my eyes it was before the dazzle
|
|
of the three or four possible ways in which I might take this up.
|
|
One of these, for a moment, tempted me with such singular intensity that,
|
|
to withstand it, I must have gripped my little girl with a spasm that,
|
|
wonderfully, she submitted to without a cry or a sign of fright.
|
|
Why not break out at her on the spot and have it all over?--
|
|
give it to her straight in her lovely little lighted face?
|
|
"You see, you see, you KNOW that you do and that you already quite
|
|
suspect I believe it; therefore, why not frankly confess it to me,
|
|
so that we may at least live with it together and learn perhaps,
|
|
in the strangeness of our fate, where we are and what it means?"
|
|
This solicitation dropped, alas, as it came: if I could immediately
|
|
have succumbed to it I might have spared myself--well, you'll see what.
|
|
Instead of succumbing I sprang again to my feet, looked at her bed,
|
|
and took a helpless middle way. "Why did you pull the curtain
|
|
over the place to make me think you were still there?"
|
|
|
|
Flora luminously considered; after which, with her little divine smile:
|
|
"Because I don't like to frighten you!"
|
|
|
|
"But if I had, by your idea, gone out--?"
|
|
|
|
She absolutely declined to be puzzled; she turned her eyes to the flame
|
|
of the candle as if the question were as irrelevant, or at any rate
|
|
as impersonal, as Mrs. Marcet or nine-times-nine. "Oh, but you know,"
|
|
she quite adequately answered, "that you might come back, you dear,
|
|
and that you HAVE!" And after a little, when she had got into bed,
|
|
I had, for a long time, by almost sitting on her to hold her hand,
|
|
to prove that I recognized the pertinence of my return.
|
|
|
|
You may imagine the general complexion, from that moment, of my nights.
|
|
I repeatedly sat up till I didn't know when; I selected moments when my
|
|
roommate unmistakably slept, and, stealing out, took noiseless turns
|
|
in the passage and even pushed as far as to where I had last met Quint.
|
|
But I never met him there again; and I may as well say at once
|
|
that I on no other occasion saw him in the house. I just missed,
|
|
on the staircase, on the other hand, a different adventure.
|
|
Looking down it from the top I once recognized the presence of a woman
|
|
seated on one of the lower steps with her back presented to me,
|
|
her body half-bowed and her head, in an attitude of woe, in her hands.
|
|
I had been there but an instant, however, when she vanished without
|
|
looking round at me. I knew, nonetheless, exactly what dreadful face
|
|
she had to show; and I wondered whether, if instead of being above I had
|
|
been below, I should have had, for going up, the same nerve I had lately
|
|
shown Quint. Well, there continued to be plenty of chance for nerve.
|
|
On the eleventh night after my latest encounter with that gentleman--
|
|
they were all numbered now--I had an alarm that perilously skirted it
|
|
and that indeed, from the particular quality of its unexpectedness,
|
|
proved quite my sharpest shock. It was precisely the first night during
|
|
this series that, weary with watching, I had felt that I might again
|
|
without laxity lay myself down at my old hour. I slept immediately and,
|
|
as I afterward knew, till about one o'clock; but when I woke it was
|
|
to sit straight up, as completely roused as if a hand had shook me.
|
|
I had left a light burning, but it was now out, and I felt an instant
|
|
certainty that Flora had extinguished it. This brought me to my feet
|
|
and straight, in the darkness, to her bed, which I found she had left.
|
|
A glance at the window enlightened me further, and the striking of a match
|
|
completed the picture.
|
|
|
|
The child had again got up--this time blowing out the taper, and had again,
|
|
for some purpose of observation or response, squeezed in behind
|
|
the blind and was peering out into the night. That she now saw--
|
|
as she had not, I had satisfied myself, the previous time--was proved
|
|
to me by the fact that she was disturbed neither by my reillumination
|
|
nor by the haste I made to get into slippers and into a wrap.
|
|
Hidden, protected, absorbed, she evidently rested on the sill--
|
|
the casement opened forward--and gave herself up. There was a great
|
|
still moon to help her, and this fact had counted in my quick decision.
|
|
She was face to face with the apparition we had met at the lake,
|
|
and could now communicate with it as she had not then been able to do.
|
|
What I, on my side, had to care for was, without disturbing her,
|
|
to reach, from the corridor, some other window in the same quarter.
|
|
I got to the door without her hearing me; I got out of it, closed it,
|
|
and listened, from the other side, for some sound from her.
|
|
While I stood in the passage I had my eyes on her brother's door,
|
|
which was but ten steps off and which, indescribably, produced in me
|
|
a renewal of the strange impulse that I lately spoke of as my temptation.
|
|
What if I should go straight in and march to HIS window?--what if,
|
|
by risking to his boyish bewilderment a revelation of my motive,
|
|
I should throw across the rest of the mystery the long halter
|
|
of my boldness?
|
|
|
|
This thought held me sufficiently to make me cross to his
|
|
threshold and pause again. I preternaturally listened; I figured
|
|
to myself what might portentously be; I wondered if his bed were
|
|
also empty and he too were secretly at watch. It was a deep,
|
|
soundless minute, at the end of which my impulse failed.
|
|
He was quiet; he might be innocent; the risk was hideous;
|
|
I turned away. There was a figure in the grounds--a figure
|
|
prowling for a sight, the visitor with whom Flora was engaged;
|
|
but it was not the visitor most concerned with my boy.
|
|
I hesitated afresh, but on other grounds and only for a few seconds;
|
|
then I had made my choice. There were empty rooms at Bly,
|
|
and it was only a question of choosing the right one.
|
|
The right one suddenly presented itself to me as the lower one--
|
|
though high above the gardens--in the solid corner of the house
|
|
that I have spoken of as the old tower. This was a large,
|
|
square chamber, arranged with some state as a bedroom, the extravagant
|
|
size of which made it so inconvenient that it had not for years,
|
|
though kept by Mrs. Grose in exemplary order, been occupied.
|
|
I had often admired it and I knew my way about in it; I had only,
|
|
after just faltering at the first chill gloom of its disuse,
|
|
to pass across it and unbolt as quietly as I could one of
|
|
the shutters. Achieving this transit, I uncovered the glass
|
|
without a sound and, applying my face to the pane, was able,
|
|
the darkness without being much less than within, to see that I
|
|
commanded the right direction. Then I saw something more.
|
|
The moon made the night extraordinarily penetrable and
|
|
showed me on the lawn a person, diminished by distance,
|
|
who stood there motionless and as if fascinated, looking up
|
|
to where I had appeared--looking, that is, not so much
|
|
straight at me as at something that was apparently above me.
|
|
There was clearly another person above me--there was a person
|
|
on the tower; but the presence on the lawn was not in the least
|
|
what I had conceived and had confidently hurried to meet.
|
|
The presence on the lawn--I felt sick as I made it out--
|
|
was poor little Miles himself.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XI
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was not till late next day that I spoke to Mrs. Grose;
|
|
the rigor with which I kept my pupils in sight making it often
|
|
difficult to meet her privately, and the more as we each felt
|
|
the importance of not provoking--on the part of the servants
|
|
quite as much as on that of the children--any suspicion
|
|
of a secret flurry or that of a discussion of mysteries.
|
|
I drew a great security in this particular from her mere
|
|
smooth aspect. There was nothing in her fresh face to pass
|
|
on to others my horrible confidences. She believed me,
|
|
I was sure, absolutely: if she hadn't I don't know what would
|
|
have become of me, for I couldn't have borne the business alone.
|
|
But she was a magnificent monument to the blessing of a want
|
|
of imagination, and if she could see in our little charges nothing
|
|
but their beauty and amiability, their happiness and cleverness,
|
|
she had no direct communication with the sources of my trouble.
|
|
If they had been at all visibly blighted or battered, she would
|
|
doubtless have grown, on tracing it back, haggard enough
|
|
to match them; as matters stood, however, I could feel her,
|
|
when she surveyed them, with her large white arms folded
|
|
and the habit of serenity in all her look, thank the Lord's
|
|
mercy that if they were ruined the pieces would still serve.
|
|
Flights of fancy gave place, in her mind, to a steady fireside glow,
|
|
and I had already begun to perceive how, with the development
|
|
of the conviction that--as time went on without a public accident--
|
|
our young things could, after all, look out for themselves,
|
|
she addressed her greatest solicitude to the sad case presented
|
|
by their instructress. That, for myself, was a sound simplification:
|
|
I could engage that, to the world, my face should tell no tales,
|
|
but it would have been, in the conditions, an immense added
|
|
strain to find myself anxious about hers.
|
|
|
|
At the hour I now speak of she had joined me, under pressure,
|
|
on the terrace, where, with the lapse of the season, the afternoon
|
|
sun was now agreeable; and we sat there together while, before us,
|
|
at a distance, but within call if we wished, the children
|
|
strolled to and fro in one of their most manageable moods.
|
|
They moved slowly, in unison, below us, over the lawn, the boy,
|
|
as they went, reading aloud from a storybook and passing
|
|
his arm round his sister to keep her quite in touch.
|
|
Mrs. Grose watched them with positive placidity; then I caught
|
|
the suppressed intellectual creak with which she conscientiously
|
|
turned to take from me a view of the back of the tapestry.
|
|
I had made her a receptacle of lurid things, but there was an odd
|
|
recognition of my superiority--my accomplishments and my function--
|
|
in her patience under my pain. She offered her mind to my
|
|
disclosures as, had I wished to mix a witch's broth and proposed it
|
|
with assurance, she would have held out a large clean saucepan.
|
|
This had become thoroughly her attitude by the time that,
|
|
in my recital of the events of the night, I reached the point
|
|
of what Miles had said to me when, after seeing him, at such
|
|
a monstrous hour, almost on the very spot where he happened
|
|
now to be, I had gone down to bring him in; choosing then,
|
|
at the window, with a concentrated need of not alarming the house,
|
|
rather that method than a signal more resonant. I had left
|
|
her meanwhile in little doubt of my small hope of representing
|
|
with success even to her actual sympathy my sense of the real
|
|
splendor of the little inspiration with which, after I had got
|
|
him into the house, the boy met my final articulate challenge.
|
|
As soon as I appeared in the moonlight on the terrace,
|
|
he had come to me as straight as possible; on which I had taken
|
|
his hand without a word and led him, through the dark spaces,
|
|
up the staircase where Quint had so hungrily hovered for him,
|
|
along the lobby where I had listened and trembled, and so to
|
|
his forsaken room.
|
|
|
|
Not a sound, on the way, had passed between us, and I had wondered--
|
|
oh, HOW I had wondered!--if he were groping about in his
|
|
little mind for something plausible and not too grotesque.
|
|
It would tax his invention, certainly, and I felt, this time,
|
|
over his real embarrassment, a curious thrill of triumph.
|
|
It was a sharp trap for the inscrutable! He couldn't play any
|
|
longer at innocence; so how the deuce would he get out of it?
|
|
There beat in me indeed, with the passionate throb of this
|
|
question an equal dumb appeal as to how the deuce _I_ should.
|
|
I was confronted at last, as never yet, with all the risk
|
|
attached even now to sounding my own horrid note.
|
|
I remember in fact that as we pushed into his little chamber,
|
|
where the bed had not been slept in at all and the window,
|
|
uncovered to the moonlight, made the place so clear that there
|
|
was no need of striking a match--I remember how I suddenly dropped,
|
|
sank upon the edge of the bed from the force of the idea
|
|
that he must know how he really, as they say, "had" me.
|
|
He could do what he liked, with all his cleverness to help him,
|
|
so long as I should continue to defer to the old tradition
|
|
of the criminality of those caretakers of the young who
|
|
minister to superstitions and fears. He "had" me indeed,
|
|
and in a cleft stick; for who would ever absolve me, who would
|
|
consent that I should go unhung, if, by the faintest tremor
|
|
of an overture, I were the first to introduce into our perfect
|
|
intercourse an element so dire? No, no: it was useless
|
|
to attempt to convey to Mrs. Grose, just as it is scarcely
|
|
less so to attempt to suggest here, how, in our short,
|
|
stiff brush in the dark, he fairly shook me with admiration.
|
|
I was of course thoroughly kind and merciful; never, never yet
|
|
had I placed on his little shoulders hands of such tenderness
|
|
as those with which, while I rested against the bed,
|
|
I held him there well under fire. I had no alternative but,
|
|
in form at least, to put it to him.
|
|
|
|
"You must tell me now--and all the truth. What did you go out for?
|
|
What were you doing there?"
|
|
|
|
I can still see his wonderful smile, the whites of his beautiful eyes,
|
|
and the uncovering of his little teeth shine to me in the dusk.
|
|
"If I tell you why, will you understand?" My heart,
|
|
at this, leaped into my mouth. WOULD he tell me why?
|
|
I found no sound on my lips to press it, and I was aware
|
|
of replying only with a vague, repeated, grimacing nod.
|
|
He was gentleness itself, and while I wagged my head at
|
|
him he stood there more than ever a little fairy prince.
|
|
It was his brightness indeed that gave me a respite.
|
|
Would it be so great if he were really going to tell me?
|
|
"Well," he said at last, "just exactly in order that you
|
|
should do this."
|
|
|
|
"Do what?"
|
|
|
|
"Think me--for a change--BAD!" I shall never forget the sweetness
|
|
and gaiety with which he brought out the word, nor how, on top of it,
|
|
he bent forward and kissed me. It was practically the end of everything.
|
|
I met his kiss and I had to make, while I folded him for a minute
|
|
in my arms, the most stupendous effort not to cry. He had given exactly
|
|
the account of himself that permitted least of my going behind it,
|
|
and it was only with the effect of confirming my acceptance of it that,
|
|
as I presently glanced about the room, I could say--
|
|
|
|
"Then you didn't undress at all?"
|
|
|
|
He fairly glittered in the gloom. "Not at all.
|
|
I sat up and read."
|
|
|
|
"And when did you go down?"
|
|
|
|
"At midnight. When I'm bad I AM bad!"
|
|
|
|
"I see, I see--it's charming. But how could you be sure I would know it?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I arranged that with Flora." His answers rang out with a readiness!
|
|
"She was to get up and look out."
|
|
|
|
"Which is what she did do." It was I who fell into the trap!
|
|
|
|
"So she disturbed you, and, to see what she was looking at,
|
|
you also looked--you saw."
|
|
|
|
"While you," I concurred, "caught your death in the night air!"
|
|
|
|
He literally bloomed so from this exploit that he could afford radiantly
|
|
to assent. "How otherwise should I have been bad enough?" he asked.
|
|
Then, after another embrace, the incident and our interview closed
|
|
on my recognition of all the reserves of goodness that, for his joke,
|
|
he had been able to draw upon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XII
|
|
|
|
|
|
The particular impression I had received proved in the morning light,
|
|
I repeat, not quite successfully presentable to Mrs. Grose,
|
|
though I reinforced it with the mention of still another remark
|
|
that he had made before we separated. "It all lies in half a
|
|
dozen words," I said to her, "words that really settle the matter.
|
|
'Think, you know, what I MIGHT do!' He threw that off to show
|
|
me how good he is. He knows down to the ground what he `might' do.
|
|
That's what he gave them a taste of at school."
|
|
|
|
"Lord, you do change!" cried my friend.
|
|
|
|
"I don't change--I simply make it out. The four, depend upon it,
|
|
perpetually meet. If on either of these last nights you had
|
|
been with either child, you would clearly have understood.
|
|
The more I've watched and waited the more I've felt that if
|
|
there were nothing else to make it sure it would be made
|
|
so by the systematic silence of each. NEVER, by a slip
|
|
of the tongue, have they so much as alluded to either of their
|
|
old friends, any more than Miles has alluded to his expulsion.
|
|
Oh, yes, we may sit here and look at them, and they may show
|
|
off to us there to their fill; but even while they pretend
|
|
to be lost in their fairytale they're steeped in their vision
|
|
of the dead restored. He's not reading to her," I declared;
|
|
"they're talking of THEM--they're talking horrors!
|
|
I go on, I know, as if I were crazy; and it's a wonder I'm not.
|
|
What I've seen would have made YOU so; but it has only made
|
|
me more lucid, made me get hold of still other things."
|
|
|
|
My lucidity must have seemed awful, but the charming creatures
|
|
who were victims of it, passing and repassing in their
|
|
interlocked sweetness, gave my colleague something to hold on by;
|
|
and I felt how tight she held as, without stirring in the breath
|
|
of my passion, she covered them still with her eyes.
|
|
"Of what other things have you got hold?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, of the very things that have delighted, fascinated, and yet,
|
|
at bottom, as I now so strangely see, mystified and troubled me.
|
|
Their more than earthly beauty, their absolutely unnatural goodness.
|
|
It's a game," I went on; "it's a policy and a fraud!"
|
|
|
|
"On the part of little darlings--?"
|
|
|
|
"As yet mere lovely babies? Yes, mad as that seems!"
|
|
The very act of bringing it out really helped me to
|
|
trace it--follow it all up and piece it all together.
|
|
"They haven't been good--they've only been absent.
|
|
It has been easy to live with them, because they're simply leading
|
|
a life of their own. They're not mine--they're not ours.
|
|
They're his and they're hers!"
|
|
|
|
"Quint's and that woman's?"
|
|
|
|
"Quint's and that woman's. They want to get to them."
|
|
|
|
Oh, how, at this, poor Mrs. Grose appeared to study them!
|
|
"But for what?"
|
|
|
|
"For the love of all the evil that, in those dreadful days,
|
|
the pair put into them. And to ply them with that evil still,
|
|
to keep up the work of demons, is what brings the others back."
|
|
|
|
"Laws!" said my friend under her breath. The exclamation was homely, but it
|
|
revealed a real acceptance of my further proof of what, in the bad time--
|
|
for there had been a worse even than this!--must have occurred. There could
|
|
have been no such justification for me as the plain assent of her experience
|
|
to whatever depth of depravity I found credible in our brace of scoundrels.
|
|
It was in obvious submission of memory that she brought out after a moment:
|
|
"They WERE rascals! But what can they now do?" she pursued.
|
|
|
|
"Do?" I echoed so loud that Miles and Flora, as they passed at
|
|
their distance, paused an instant in their walk and looked at us.
|
|
"Don't they do enough?" I demanded in a lower tone, while the children,
|
|
having smiled and nodded and kissed hands to us, resumed their exhibition.
|
|
We were held by it a minute; then I answered: "They can destroy them!"
|
|
At this my companion did turn, but the inquiry she launched was
|
|
a silent one, the effect of which was to make me more explicit.
|
|
"They don't know, as yet, quite how--but they're trying hard.
|
|
They're seen only across, as it were, and beyond--in strange places
|
|
and on high places, the top of towers, the roof of houses, the outside
|
|
of windows, the further edge of pools; but there's a deep design,
|
|
on either side, to shorten the distance and overcome the obstacle;
|
|
and the success of the tempters is only a question of time.
|
|
They've only to keep to their suggestions of danger."
|
|
|
|
"For the children to come?"
|
|
|
|
"And perish in the attempt!" Mrs. Grose slowly got up,
|
|
and I scrupulously added: "Unless, of course, we can prevent!"
|
|
|
|
Standing there before me while I kept my seat, she visibly
|
|
turned things over. "Their uncle must do the preventing.
|
|
He must take them away."
|
|
|
|
"And who's to make him?"
|
|
|
|
She had been scanning the distance, but she now dropped on me
|
|
a foolish face. "You, miss."
|
|
|
|
"By writing to him that his house is poisoned and his little
|
|
nephew and niece mad?"
|
|
|
|
"But if they ARE, miss?"
|
|
|
|
"And if I am myself, you mean? That's charming news to be sent him
|
|
by a governess whose prime undertaking was to give him no worry."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose considered, following the children again. "Yes, he do hate worry.
|
|
That was the great reason--"
|
|
|
|
"Why those fiends took him in so long? No doubt, though his
|
|
indifference must have been awful. As I'm not a fiend,
|
|
at any rate, I shouldn't take him in."
|
|
|
|
My companion, after an instant and for all answer, sat down again
|
|
and grasped my arm. "Make him at any rate come to you."
|
|
|
|
I stared. "To ME?" I had a sudden fear of what she might do. "'Him'?"
|
|
|
|
"He ought to BE here--he ought to help."
|
|
|
|
I quickly rose, and I think I must have shown her a queerer face
|
|
than ever yet. "You see me asking him for a visit?" No, with her
|
|
eyes on my face she evidently couldn't. Instead of it even--
|
|
as a woman reads another--she could see what I myself saw:
|
|
his derision, his amusement, his contempt for the breakdown
|
|
of my resignation at being left alone and for the fine machinery I
|
|
had set in motion to attract his attention to my slighted charms.
|
|
She didn't know--no one knew--how proud I had been to serve
|
|
him and to stick to our terms; yet she nonetheless took
|
|
the measure, I think, of the warning I now gave her.
|
|
"If you should so lose your head as to appeal to him for me--"
|
|
|
|
She was really frightened. "Yes, miss?"
|
|
|
|
"I would leave, on the spot, both him and you."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was all very well to join them, but speaking to them proved
|
|
quite as much as ever an effort beyond my strength--offered,
|
|
in close quarters, difficulties as insurmountable as before.
|
|
This situation continued a month, and with new aggravations
|
|
and particular notes, the note above all, sharper and sharper,
|
|
of the small ironic consciousness on the part of my pupils.
|
|
It was not, I am as sure today as I was sure then, my mere
|
|
infernal imagination: it was absolutely traceable that they
|
|
were aware of my predicament and that this strange relation made,
|
|
in a manner, for a long time, the air in which we moved.
|
|
I don't mean that they had their tongues in their cheeks or did
|
|
anything vulgar, for that was not one of their dangers:
|
|
I do mean, on the other hand, that the element of the unnamed
|
|
and untouched became, between us, greater than any other,
|
|
and that so much avoidance could not have been so successfully
|
|
effected without a great deal of tacit arrangement.
|
|
It was as if, at moments, we were perpetually coming into sight
|
|
of subjects before which we must stop short, turning suddenly
|
|
out of alleys that we perceived to be blind, closing with a little
|
|
bang that made us look at each other--for, like all bangs,
|
|
it was something louder than we had intended--the doors we
|
|
had indiscreetly opened. All roads lead to Rome, and there
|
|
were times when it might have struck us that almost every branch
|
|
of study or subject of conversation skirted forbidden ground.
|
|
Forbidden ground was the question of the return of the dead
|
|
in general and of whatever, in especial, might survive,
|
|
in memory, of the friends little children had lost.
|
|
There were days when I could have sworn that one of them had,
|
|
with a small invisible nudge, said to the other:
|
|
"She thinks she'll do it this time--but she WON'T!" To "do it"
|
|
would have been to indulge for instance--and for once in a way--
|
|
in some direct reference to the lady who had prepared them for
|
|
my discipline. They had a delightful endless appetite for passages
|
|
in my own history, to which I had again and again treated them;
|
|
they were in possession of everything that had ever happened to me,
|
|
had had, with every circumstance the story of my smallest adventures
|
|
and of those of my brothers and sisters and of the cat and the dog
|
|
at home, as well as many particulars of the eccentric nature
|
|
of my father, of the furniture and arrangement of our house,
|
|
and of the conversation of the old women of our village.
|
|
There were things enough, taking one with another, to chatter about,
|
|
if one went very fast and knew by instinct when to go round.
|
|
They pulled with an art of their own the strings of my invention
|
|
and my memory; and nothing else perhaps, when I thought
|
|
of such occasions afterward, gave me so the suspicion of being
|
|
watched from under cover. It was in any case over MY life,
|
|
MY past, and MY friends alone that we could take anything
|
|
like our ease--a state of affairs that led them sometimes without
|
|
the least pertinence to break out into sociable reminders.
|
|
I was invited--with no visible connection--to repeat afresh
|
|
Goody Gosling's celebrated mot or to confirm the details
|
|
already supplied as to the cleverness of the vicarage pony.
|
|
|
|
It was partly at such junctures as these and partly at quite
|
|
different ones that, with the turn my matters had now taken,
|
|
my predicament, as I have called it, grew most sensible.
|
|
The fact that the days passed for me without another encounter ought,
|
|
it would have appeared, to have done something toward soothing my nerves.
|
|
Since the light brush, that second night on the upper landing,
|
|
of the presence of a woman at the foot of the stair, I had seen nothing,
|
|
whether in or out of the house, that one had better not have seen.
|
|
There was many a corner round which I expected to come upon Quint,
|
|
and many a situation that, in a merely sinister way, would have favored
|
|
the appearance of Miss Jessel. The summer had turned, the summer had gone;
|
|
the autumn had dropped upon Bly and had blown out half our lights.
|
|
The place, with its gray sky and withered garlands, its bared spaces
|
|
and scattered dead leaves, was like a theater after the performance--
|
|
all strewn with crumpled playbills. There were exactly states of the air,
|
|
conditions of sound and of stillness, unspeakable impressions
|
|
of the KIND of ministering moment, that brought back to me,
|
|
long enough to catch it, the feeling of the medium in which,
|
|
that June evening out of doors, I had had my first sight of Quint,
|
|
and in which, too, at those other instants, I had, after seeing him
|
|
through the window, looked for him in vain in the circle of shrubbery.
|
|
I recognized the signs, the portents--I recognized the moment, the spot.
|
|
But they remained unaccompanied and empty, and I continued unmolested;
|
|
if unmolested one could call a young woman whose sensibility had,
|
|
in the most extraordinary fashion, not declined but deepened.
|
|
I had said in my talk with Mrs. Grose on that horrid scene of Flora's
|
|
by the lake--and had perplexed her by so saying--that it would from
|
|
that moment distress me much more to lose my power than to keep it.
|
|
I had then expressed what was vividly in my mind: the truth that,
|
|
whether the children really saw or not--since, that is, it was
|
|
not yet definitely proved--I greatly preferred, as a safeguard,
|
|
the fullness of my own exposure. I was ready to know the very worst
|
|
that was to be known. What I had then had an ugly glimpse of was
|
|
that my eyes might be sealed just while theirs were most opened.
|
|
Well, my eyes WERE sealed, it appeared, at present--
|
|
a consummation for which it seemed blasphemous not to thank God.
|
|
There was, alas, a difficulty about that: I would have thanked
|
|
him with all my soul had I not had in a proportionate measure this
|
|
conviction of the secret of my pupils.
|
|
|
|
How can I retrace today the strange steps of my obsession?
|
|
There were times of our being together when I would have been ready
|
|
to swear that, literally, in my presence, but with my direct sense
|
|
of it closed, they had visitors who were known and were welcome.
|
|
Then it was that, had I not been deterred by the very chance that
|
|
such an injury might prove greater than the injury to be averted,
|
|
my exultation would have broken out. "They're here, they're here,
|
|
you little wretches," I would have cried, "and you can't deny it now!"
|
|
The little wretches denied it with all the added volume of their
|
|
sociability and their tenderness, in just the crystal depths of which--
|
|
like the flash of a fish in a stream--the mockery of their advantage
|
|
peeped up. The shock, in truth, had sunk into me still deeper
|
|
than I knew on the night when, looking out to see either Quint
|
|
or Miss Jessel under the stars, I had beheld the boy over whose
|
|
rest I watched and who had immediately brought in with him--
|
|
had straightway, there, turned it on me--the lovely upward look with which,
|
|
from the battlements above me, the hideous apparition of Quint had played.
|
|
If it was a question of a scare, my discovery on this occasion
|
|
had scared me more than any other, and it was in the condition
|
|
of nerves produced by it that I made my actual inductions.
|
|
They harassed me so that sometimes, at odd moments, I shut myself
|
|
up audibly to rehearse--it was at once a fantastic relief and a
|
|
renewed despair--the manner in which I might come to the point.
|
|
I approached it from one side and the other while, in my room,
|
|
I flung myself about, but I always broke down in the monstrous
|
|
utterance of names. As they died away on my lips, I said to myself
|
|
that I should indeed help them to represent something infamous,
|
|
if, by pronouncing them, I should violate as rare a little case
|
|
of instinctive delicacy as any schoolroom, probably, had ever known.
|
|
When I said to myself: "THEY have the manners to be silent,
|
|
and you, trusted as you are, the baseness to speak!"
|
|
I felt myself crimson and I covered my face with my hands.
|
|
After these secret scenes I chattered more than ever, going on
|
|
volubly enough till one of our prodigious, palpable hushes occurred--
|
|
I can call them nothing else--the strange, dizzy lift or swim
|
|
(I try for terms!) into a stillness, a pause of all life, that had
|
|
nothing to do with the more or less noise that at the moment we
|
|
might be engaged in making and that I could hear through any deepened
|
|
exhilaration or quickened recitation or louder strum of the piano.
|
|
Then it was that the others, the outsiders, were there.
|
|
Though they were not angels, they "passed," as the French say,
|
|
causing me, while they stayed, to tremble with the fear of their
|
|
addressing to their younger victims some yet more infernal message
|
|
or more vivid image than they had thought good enough for myself.
|
|
|
|
What it was most impossible to get rid of was the cruel idea that,
|
|
whatever I had seen, Miles and Flora saw MORE--things terrible
|
|
and unguessable and that sprang from dreadful passages of intercourse
|
|
in the past. Such things naturally left on the surface,
|
|
for the time, a chill which we vociferously denied that we felt;
|
|
and we had, all three, with repetition, got into such splendid
|
|
training that we went, each time, almost automatically, to mark
|
|
the close of the incident, through the very same movements.
|
|
It was striking of the children, at all events, to kiss me inveterately
|
|
with a kind of wild irrelevance and never to fail--one or the other--
|
|
of the precious question that had helped us through many a peril.
|
|
"When do you think he WILL come? Don't you think we OUGHT
|
|
to write?"--there was nothing like that inquiry, we found
|
|
by experience, for carrying off an awkwardness. "He" of course
|
|
was their uncle in Harley Street; and we lived in much profusion
|
|
of theory that he might at any moment arrive to mingle in our circle.
|
|
It was impossible to have given less encouragement than he had done
|
|
to such a doctrine, but if we had not had the doctrine to fall back upon
|
|
we should have deprived each other of some of our finest exhibitions.
|
|
He never wrote to them--that may have been selfish, but it was a part
|
|
of the flattery of his trust of me; for the way in which a man
|
|
pays his highest tribute to a woman is apt to be but by the more
|
|
festal celebration of one of the sacred laws of his comfort;
|
|
and I held that I carried out the spirit of the pledge given not
|
|
to appeal to him when I let my charges understand that their own
|
|
letters were but charming literary exercises. They were too beautiful
|
|
to be posted; I kept them myself; I have them all to this hour.
|
|
This was a rule indeed which only added to the satiric effect of my being
|
|
plied with the supposition that he might at any moment be among us.
|
|
It was exactly as if my charges knew how almost more awkward
|
|
than anything else that might be for me. There appears to me,
|
|
moreover, as I look back, no note in all this more extraordinary
|
|
than the mere fact that, in spite of my tension and of their triumph,
|
|
I never lost patience with them. Adorable they must in truth
|
|
have been, I now reflect, that I didn't in these days hate them!
|
|
Would exasperation, however, if relief had longer been postponed,
|
|
finally have betrayed me? It little matters, for relief arrived.
|
|
I call it relief, though it was only the relief that a snap brings
|
|
to a strain or the burst of a thunderstorm to a day of suffocation.
|
|
It was at least change, and it came with a rush.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XIV
|
|
|
|
|
|
Walking to church a certain Sunday morning, I had little Miles at my side
|
|
and his sister, in advance of us and at Mrs. Grose's, well in sight.
|
|
It was a crisp, clear day, the first of its order for some time;
|
|
the night had brought a touch of frost, and the autumn air, bright and sharp,
|
|
made the church bells almost gay. It was an odd accident of thought
|
|
that I should have happened at such a moment to be particularly
|
|
and very gratefully struck with the obedience of my little charges.
|
|
Why did they never resent my inexorable, my perpetual society?
|
|
Something or other had brought nearer home to me that I had all but pinned
|
|
the boy to my shawl and that, in the way our companions were marshaled
|
|
before me, I might have appeared to provide against some danger of rebellion.
|
|
I was like a gaoler with an eye to possible surprises and escapes.
|
|
But all this belonged--I mean their magnificent little surrender--
|
|
just to the special array of the facts that were most abysmal.
|
|
Turned out for Sunday by his uncle's tailor, who had had a free
|
|
hand and a notion of pretty waistcoats and of his grand little air,
|
|
Miles's whole title to independence, the rights of his sex and situation,
|
|
were so stamped upon him that if he had suddenly struck for freedom
|
|
I should have had nothing to say. I was by the strangest of chances
|
|
wondering how I should meet him when the revolution unmistakably occurred.
|
|
I call it a revolution because I now see how, with the word he spoke,
|
|
the curtain rose on the last act of my dreadful drama, and the catastrophe
|
|
was precipitated. "Look here, my dear, you know," he charmingly said,
|
|
"when in the world, please, am I going back to school?"
|
|
|
|
Transcribed here the speech sounds harmless enough,
|
|
particularly as uttered in the sweet, high, casual pipe with which,
|
|
at all interlocutors, but above all at his eternal governess,
|
|
he threw off intonations as if he were tossing roses.
|
|
There was something in them that always made one "catch," and
|
|
I caught, at any rate, now so effectually that I stopped as short
|
|
as if one of the trees of the park had fallen across the road.
|
|
There was something new, on the spot, between us, and he was
|
|
perfectly aware that I recognized it, though, to enable me to do so,
|
|
he had no need to look a whit less candid and charming than usual.
|
|
I could feel in him how he already, from my at first finding
|
|
nothing to reply, perceived the advantage he had gained.
|
|
I was so slow to find anything that he had plenty of time,
|
|
after a minute, to continue with his suggestive but inconclusive smile:
|
|
"You know, my dear, that for a fellow to be with a lady ALWAYS--!"
|
|
His "my dear" was constantly on his lips for me, and nothing
|
|
could have expressed more the exact shade of the sentiment with
|
|
which I desired to inspire my pupils than its fond familiarity.
|
|
It was so respectfully easy.
|
|
|
|
But, oh, how I felt that at present I must pick my own phrases!
|
|
I remember that, to gain time, I tried to laugh, and I seemed to see in
|
|
the beautiful face with which he watched me how ugly and queer I looked.
|
|
"And always with the same lady?" I returned.
|
|
|
|
He neither blanched nor winked. The whole thing was virtually out
|
|
between us. "Ah, of course, she's a jolly, `perfect' lady; but, after all,
|
|
I'm a fellow, don't you see? that's--well, getting on."
|
|
|
|
I lingered there with him an instant ever so kindly.
|
|
"Yes, you're getting on." Oh, but I felt helpless!
|
|
|
|
I have kept to this day the heartbreaking little idea
|
|
of how he seemed to know that and to play with it.
|
|
"And you can't say I've not been awfully good, can you?"
|
|
|
|
I laid my hand on his shoulder, for, though I felt how much
|
|
better it would have been to walk on, I was not yet quite able.
|
|
"No, I can't say that, Miles."
|
|
|
|
"Except just that one night, you know--!"
|
|
|
|
"That one night?" I couldn't look as straight as he.
|
|
|
|
"Why, when I went down--went out of the house."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes. But I forget what you did it for."
|
|
|
|
"You forget?"--he spoke with the sweet extravagance of childish reproach.
|
|
"Why, it was to show you I could!"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes, you could."
|
|
|
|
"And I can again."
|
|
|
|
I felt that I might, perhaps, after all, succeed in keeping
|
|
my wits about me. "Certainly. But you won't."
|
|
|
|
"No, not THAT again. It was nothing."
|
|
|
|
"It was nothing," I said. "But we must go on."
|
|
|
|
He resumed our walk with me, passing his hand into my arm.
|
|
"Then when AM I going back?"
|
|
|
|
I wore, in turning it over, my most responsible air.
|
|
"Were you very happy at school?"
|
|
|
|
He just considered. "Oh, I'm happy enough anywhere!"
|
|
|
|
"Well, then," I quavered, "if you're just as happy here--!"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, but that isn't everything! Of course YOU know a lot--"
|
|
|
|
"But you hint that you know almost as much?" I risked as he paused.
|
|
|
|
"Not half I want to!" Miles honestly professed.
|
|
"But it isn't so much that."
|
|
|
|
"What is it, then?"
|
|
|
|
"Well--I want to see more life."
|
|
|
|
"I see; I see." We had arrived within sight of the church and
|
|
of various persons, including several of the household of Bly,
|
|
on their way to it and clustered about the door to see us go in.
|
|
I quickened our step; I wanted to get there before the question
|
|
between us opened up much further; I reflected hungrily that,
|
|
for more than an hour, he would have to be silent; and I thought
|
|
with envy of the comparative dusk of the pew and of the almost
|
|
spiritual help of the hassock on which I might bend my knees.
|
|
I seemed literally to be running a race with some confusion
|
|
to which he was about to reduce me, but I felt that he had got
|
|
in first when, before we had even entered the churchyard,
|
|
he threw out--
|
|
|
|
"I want my own sort!"
|
|
|
|
It literally made me bound forward. "There are not many of your
|
|
own sort, Miles!" I laughed. "Unless perhaps dear little Flora!"
|
|
|
|
"You really compare me to a baby girl?"
|
|
|
|
This found me singularly weak. "Don't you, then, LOVE
|
|
our sweet Flora?"
|
|
|
|
"If I didn't--and you, too; if I didn't--!" he repeated as if
|
|
retreating for a jump, yet leaving his thought so unfinished that,
|
|
after we had come into the gate, another stop, which he imposed
|
|
on me by the pressure of his arm, had become inevitable.
|
|
Mrs. Grose and Flora had passed into the church, the other
|
|
worshippers had followed, and we were, for the minute,
|
|
alone among the old, thick graves. We had paused, on the path
|
|
from the gate, by a low, oblong, tablelike tomb.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, if you didn't--?"
|
|
|
|
He looked, while I waited, at the graves. "Well, you know what!"
|
|
But he didn't move, and he presently produced something that made
|
|
me drop straight down on the stone slab, as if suddenly to rest.
|
|
"Does my uncle think what YOU think?"
|
|
|
|
I markedly rested. "How do you know what I think?"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, well, of course I don't; for it strikes me you never tell me.
|
|
But I mean does HE know?"
|
|
|
|
"Know what, Miles?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, the way I'm going on."
|
|
|
|
I perceived quickly enough that I could make, to this inquiry,
|
|
no answer that would not involve something of a sacrifice
|
|
of my employer. Yet it appeared to me that we were all,
|
|
at Bly, sufficiently sacrificed to make that venial.
|
|
"I don't think your uncle much cares."
|
|
|
|
Miles, on this, stood looking at me. "Then don't you think he can
|
|
be made to?"
|
|
|
|
"In what way?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, by his coming down."
|
|
|
|
"But who'll get him to come down?"
|
|
|
|
"_I_ will!" the boy said with extraordinary brightness and emphasis.
|
|
He gave me another look charged with that expression and then marched
|
|
off alone into church.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XV
|
|
|
|
|
|
The business was practically settled from the moment I
|
|
never followed him. It was a pitiful surrender to agitation,
|
|
but my being aware of this had somehow no power to restore me.
|
|
I only sat there on my tomb and read into what my little
|
|
friend had said to me the fullness of its meaning;
|
|
by the time I had grasped the whole of which I had also embraced,
|
|
for absence, the pretext that I was ashamed to offer my pupils
|
|
and the rest of the congregation such an example of delay.
|
|
What I said to myself above all was that Miles had got something
|
|
out of me and that the proof of it, for him, would be just this
|
|
awkward collapse. He had got out of me that there was something
|
|
I was much afraid of and that he should probably be able to make
|
|
use of my fear to gain, for his own purpose, more freedom.
|
|
My fear was of having to deal with the intolerable question
|
|
of the grounds of his dismissal from school, for that was
|
|
really but the question of the horrors gathered behind.
|
|
That his uncle should arrive to treat with me of these things
|
|
was a solution that, strictly speaking, I ought now to have
|
|
desired to bring on; but I could so little face the ugliness
|
|
and the pain of it that I simply procrastinated and lived
|
|
from hand to mouth. The boy, to my deep discomposure,
|
|
was immensely in the right, was in a position to say to me:
|
|
"Either you clear up with my guardian the mystery of this
|
|
interruption of my studies, or you cease to expect me
|
|
to lead with you a life that's so unnatural for a boy."
|
|
What was so unnatural for the particular boy I was concerned
|
|
with was this sudden revelation of a consciousness and a plan.
|
|
|
|
That was what really overcame me, what prevented my going in.
|
|
I walked round the church, hesitating, hovering; I reflected
|
|
that I had already, with him, hurt myself beyond repair.
|
|
Therefore I could patch up nothing, and it was too
|
|
extreme an effort to squeeze beside him into the pew:
|
|
he would be so much more sure than ever to pass his arm
|
|
into mine and make me sit there for an hour in close,
|
|
silent contact with his commentary on our talk. For the first
|
|
minute since his arrival I wanted to get away from him.
|
|
As I paused beneath the high east window and listened to the sounds
|
|
of worship, I was taken with an impulse that might master me,
|
|
I felt, completely should I give it the least encouragement.
|
|
I might easily put an end to my predicament by getting
|
|
away altogether. Here was my chance; there was no one to stop me;
|
|
I could give the whole thing up--turn my back and retreat.
|
|
It was only a question of hurrying again, for a few preparations,
|
|
to the house which the attendance at church of so many of
|
|
the servants would practically have left unoccupied. No one,
|
|
in short, could blame me if I should just drive desperately off.
|
|
What was it to get away if I got away only till dinner?
|
|
That would be in a couple of hours, at the end of which--
|
|
I had the acute prevision--my little pupils would play at
|
|
innocent wonder about my nonappearance in their train.
|
|
|
|
"What DID you do, you naughty, bad thing? Why in the world,
|
|
to worry us so--and take our thoughts off, too, don't you know?--
|
|
did you desert us at the very door?" I couldn't meet such
|
|
questions nor, as they asked them, their false little lovely eyes;
|
|
yet it was all so exactly what I should have to meet that,
|
|
as the prospect grew sharp to me, I at last let myself go.
|
|
|
|
I got, so far as the immediate moment was concerned, away; I came straight
|
|
out of the churchyard and, thinking hard, retraced my steps through the park.
|
|
It seemed to me that by the time I reached the house I had made up my mind I
|
|
would fly. The Sunday stillness both of the approaches and of the interior,
|
|
in which I met no one, fairly excited me with a sense of opportunity.
|
|
Were I to get off quickly, this way, I should get off without a scene,
|
|
without a word. My quickness would have to be remarkable, however,
|
|
and the question of a conveyance was the great one to settle.
|
|
Tormented, in the hall, with difficulties and obstacles, I remember
|
|
sinking down at the foot of the staircase--suddenly collapsing there
|
|
on the lowest step and then, with a revulsion, recalling that it
|
|
was exactly where more than a month before, in the darkness of night
|
|
and just so bowed with evil things, I had seen the specter of the most
|
|
horrible of women. At this I was able to straighten myself; I went
|
|
the rest of the way up; I made, in my bewilderment, for the schoolroom,
|
|
where there were objects belonging to me that I should have to take.
|
|
But I opened the door to find again, in a flash, my eyes unsealed.
|
|
In the presence of what I saw I reeled straight back upon my resistance.
|
|
|
|
Seated at my own table in clear noonday light I saw a person whom,
|
|
without my previous experience, I should have taken at
|
|
the first blush for some housemaid who might have stayed
|
|
at home to look after the place and who, availing herself
|
|
of rare relief from observation and of the schoolroom
|
|
table and my pens, ink, and paper, had applied herself
|
|
to the considerable effort of a letter to her sweetheart.
|
|
There was an effort in the way that, while her arms rested on
|
|
the table, her hands with evident weariness supported her head;
|
|
but at the moment I took this in I had already become aware that,
|
|
in spite of my entrance, her attitude strangely persisted.
|
|
Then it was--with the very act of its announcing itself--
|
|
that her identity flared up in a change of posture.
|
|
She rose, not as if she had heard me, but with an indescribable
|
|
grand melancholy of indifference and detachment, and, within a
|
|
dozen feet of me, stood there as my vile predecessor.
|
|
Dishonored and tragic, she was all before me; but even as I
|
|
fixed and, for memory, secured it, the awful image passed away.
|
|
Dark as midnight in her black dress, her haggard beauty and her
|
|
unutterable woe, she had looked at me long enough to appear to say
|
|
that her right to sit at my table was as good as mine to sit at hers.
|
|
While these instants lasted, indeed, I had the extraordinary
|
|
chill of feeling that it was I who was the intruder.
|
|
It was as a wild protest against it that, actually addressing
|
|
her--"You terrible, miserable woman!"--I heard myself break
|
|
into a sound that, by the open door, rang through the long
|
|
passage and the empty house. She looked at me as if she
|
|
heard me, but I had recovered myself and cleared the air.
|
|
There was nothing in the room the next minute but the sunshine
|
|
and a sense that I must stay.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XVI
|
|
|
|
|
|
I had so perfectly expected that the return of my pupils would
|
|
be marked by a demonstration that I was freshly upset at having
|
|
to take into account that they were dumb about my absence.
|
|
Instead of gaily denouncing and caressing me, they made no allusion
|
|
to my having failed them, and I was left, for the time, on perceiving
|
|
that she too said nothing, to study Mrs. Grose's odd face.
|
|
I did this to such purpose that I made sure they had in some
|
|
way bribed her to silence; a silence that, however, I would
|
|
engage to break down on the first private opportunity.
|
|
This opportunity came before tea: I secured five minutes
|
|
with her in the housekeeper's room, where, in the twilight,
|
|
amid a smell of lately baked bread, but with the place all
|
|
swept and garnished, I found her sitting in pained placidity
|
|
before the fire. So I see her still, so I see her best:
|
|
facing the flame from her straight chair in the dusky,
|
|
shining room, a large clean image of the "put away"--
|
|
of drawers closed and locked and rest without a remedy.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes, they asked me to say nothing; and to please them--
|
|
so long as they were there--of course I promised.
|
|
But what had happened to you?"
|
|
|
|
"I only went with you for the walk," I said. "I had then to come
|
|
back to meet a friend."
|
|
|
|
She showed her surprise. "A friend--YOU?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes, I have a couple!" I laughed. "But did the children give
|
|
you a reason?"
|
|
|
|
"For not alluding to your leaving us? Yes; they said you would
|
|
like it better. Do you like it better?"
|
|
|
|
My face had made her rueful. "No, I like it worse!"
|
|
But after an instant I added: "Did they say why I should
|
|
like it better?"
|
|
|
|
"No; Master Miles only said, "We must do nothing but what she likes!"
|
|
|
|
"I wish indeed he would. And what did Flora say?"
|
|
|
|
"Miss Flora was too sweet. She said, `Oh, of course, of course!'--
|
|
and I said the same."
|
|
|
|
I thought a moment. "You were too sweet, too--I can hear you all.
|
|
But nonetheless, between Miles and me, it's now all out."
|
|
|
|
"All out?" My companion stared. "But what, miss?"
|
|
|
|
"Everything. It doesn't matter. I've made up my mind.
|
|
I came home, my dear," I went on, "for a talk with Miss Jessel."
|
|
|
|
I had by this time formed the habit of having Mrs. Grose
|
|
literally well in hand in advance of my sounding that note;
|
|
so that even now, as she bravely blinked under the signal
|
|
of my word, I could keep her comparatively firm. "A talk!
|
|
Do you mean she spoke?"
|
|
|
|
"It came to that. I found her, on my return, in the schoolroom."
|
|
|
|
"And what did she say?" I can hear the good woman still,
|
|
and the candor of her stupefaction.
|
|
|
|
"That she suffers the torments--!"
|
|
|
|
It was this, of a truth, that made her, as she filled out my picture, gape.
|
|
"Do you mean," she faltered, "--of the lost?"
|
|
|
|
"Of the lost. Of the damned. And that's why, to share them-"
|
|
I faltered myself with the horror of it.
|
|
|
|
But my companion, with less imagination, kept me up.
|
|
"To share them--?"
|
|
|
|
"She wants Flora." Mrs. Grose might, as I gave it to her, fairly have fallen
|
|
away from me had I not been prepared. I still held her there, to show I was.
|
|
"As I've told you, however, it doesn't matter."
|
|
|
|
"Because you've made up your mind? But to what?"
|
|
|
|
"To everything."
|
|
|
|
"And what do you call `everything'?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, sending for their uncle."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, miss, in pity do," my friend broke out.
|
|
|
|
"ah, but I will, I WILL! I see it's the only way.
|
|
What's `out,' as I told you, with Miles is that if he thinks
|
|
I'm afraid to--and has ideas of what he gains by that--
|
|
he shall see he's mistaken. Yes, yes; his uncle shall have it
|
|
here from me on the spot (and before the boy himself, if necessary)
|
|
that if I'm to be reproached with having done nothing again
|
|
about more school--"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, miss--" my companion pressed me.
|
|
|
|
"Well, there's that awful reason."
|
|
|
|
There were now clearly so many of these for my poor colleague that she
|
|
was excusable for being vague. "But--a-- which?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, the letter from his old place."
|
|
|
|
"You'll show it to the master?"
|
|
|
|
"I ought to have done so on the instant."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, no!" said Mrs. Grose with decision.
|
|
|
|
"I'll put it before him," I went on inexorably, "that I can't undertake
|
|
to work the question on behalf of a child who has been expelled--"
|
|
|
|
"For we've never in the least known what!" Mrs. Grose declared.
|
|
|
|
"For wickedness. For what else--when he's so clever and beautiful
|
|
and perfect? Is he stupid? Is he untidy? Is he infirm?
|
|
Is he ill-natured? He's exquisite--so it can be only THAT;
|
|
and that would open up the whole thing. After all," I said,
|
|
"it's their uncle's fault. If he left here such people--!"
|
|
|
|
"He didn't really in the least know them. The fault's mine."
|
|
She had turned quite pale.
|
|
|
|
"Well, you shan't suffer," I answered.
|
|
|
|
"The children shan't!" she emphatically returned.
|
|
|
|
I was silent awhile; we looked at each other. "Then what am
|
|
I to tell him?"
|
|
|
|
"You needn't tell him anything. _I_'ll tell him."
|
|
|
|
I measured this. "Do you mean you'll write--?" Remembering she couldn't, I
|
|
caught myself up. "How do you communicate?"
|
|
|
|
"I tell the bailiff. HE writes."
|
|
|
|
"And should you like him to write our story?"
|
|
|
|
My question had a sarcastic force that I had not fully intended,
|
|
and it made her, after a moment, inconsequently break down.
|
|
The tears were again in her eyes. "Ah, miss, YOU write!"
|
|
|
|
"Well--tonight," I at last answered; and on this we separated.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XVII
|
|
|
|
|
|
I went so far, in the evening, as to make a beginning.
|
|
The weather had changed back, a great wind was abroad,
|
|
and beneath the lamp, in my room, with Flora at peace beside me,
|
|
I sat for a long time before a blank sheet of paper and
|
|
listened to the lash of the rain and the batter of the gusts.
|
|
Finally I went out, taking a candle; I crossed the passage
|
|
and listened a minute at Miles's door. What, under my
|
|
endless obsession, I had been impelled to listen for was some
|
|
betrayal of his not being at rest, and I presently caught one,
|
|
but not in the form I had expected. His voice tinkled out.
|
|
"I say, you there--come in." It was a gaiety in the gloom!
|
|
|
|
I went in with my light and found him, in bed, very wide awake,
|
|
but very much at his ease. "Well, what are YOU up to?"
|
|
he asked with a grace of sociability in which it occurred
|
|
to me that Mrs. Grose, had she been present, might have looked
|
|
in vain for proof that anything was "out."
|
|
|
|
I stood over him with my candle. "How did you know I was there?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, of course I heard you. Did you fancy you made no noise?
|
|
You're like a troop of cavalry!" he beautifully laughed.
|
|
|
|
"Then you weren't asleep?"
|
|
|
|
"Not much! I lie awake and think."
|
|
|
|
I had put my candle, designedly, a short way off, and then, as he held
|
|
out his friendly old hand to me, had sat down on the edge of his bed.
|
|
"What is it," I asked, "that you think of?"
|
|
|
|
"What in the world, my dear, but YOU?"
|
|
|
|
"Ah, the pride I take in your appreciation doesn't insist on that!
|
|
I had so far rather you slept."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I think also, you know, of this queer business of ours."
|
|
|
|
I marked the coolness of his firm little hand.
|
|
"Of what queer business, Miles?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, the way you bring me up. And all the rest!"
|
|
|
|
I fairly held my breath a minute, and even from my glimmering taper
|
|
there was light enough to show how he smiled up at me from his pillow.
|
|
"What do you mean by all the rest?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you know, you know!"
|
|
|
|
I could say nothing for a minute, though I felt, as I held
|
|
his hand and our eyes continued to meet, that my silence
|
|
had all the air of admitting his charge and that nothing
|
|
in the whole world of reality was perhaps at that moment
|
|
so fabulous as our actual relation. "Certainly you shall go
|
|
back to school," I said, "if it be that that troubles you.
|
|
But not to the old place--we must find another, a better.
|
|
How could I know it did trouble you, this question,
|
|
when you never told me so, never spoke of it at all?"
|
|
His clear, listening face, framed in its smooth whiteness,
|
|
made him for the minute as appealing as some wistful
|
|
patient in a children's hospital; and I would have given,
|
|
as the resemblance came to me, all I possessed on earth really
|
|
to be the nurse or the sister of charity who might have helped
|
|
to cure him. Well, even as it was, I perhaps might help!
|
|
"Do you know you've never said a word to me about your school--
|
|
I mean the old one; never mentioned it in any way?"
|
|
|
|
He seemed to wonder; he smiled with the same loveliness.
|
|
But he clearly gained time; he waited, he called for guidance.
|
|
"Haven't I?" It wasn't for ME to help him--it was for
|
|
the thing I had met!
|
|
|
|
Something in his tone and the expression of his face, as I
|
|
got this from him, set my heart aching with such a pang as it
|
|
had never yet known; so unutterably touching was it to see his
|
|
little brain puzzled and his little resources taxed to play,
|
|
under the spell laid on him, a part of innocence and consistency.
|
|
"No, never--from the hour you came back. You've never
|
|
mentioned to me one of your masters, one of your comrades,
|
|
nor the least little thing that ever happened to you at school.
|
|
Never, little Miles--no, never--have you given me an inkling
|
|
of anything that MAY have happened there. Therefore you
|
|
can fancy how much I'm in the dark. Until you came out,
|
|
that way, this morning, you had, since the first hour I saw you,
|
|
scarce even made a reference to anything in your previous life.
|
|
You seemed so perfectly to accept the present." It was
|
|
extraordinary how my absolute conviction of his secret precocity
|
|
(or whatever I might call the poison of an influence that I
|
|
dared but half to phrase) made him, in spite of the faint
|
|
breath of his inward trouble, appear as accessible as an
|
|
older person--imposed him almost as an intellectual equal.
|
|
"I thought you wanted to go on as you are."
|
|
|
|
It struck me that at this he just faintly colored. He gave, at any rate,
|
|
like a convalescent slightly fatigued, a languid shake of his head.
|
|
"I don't--I don't. I want to get away."
|
|
|
|
"You're tired of Bly?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, no, I like Bly."
|
|
|
|
"Well, then--?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, YOU know what a boy wants!"
|
|
|
|
I felt that I didn't know so well as Miles, and I took temporary refuge.
|
|
"You want to go to your uncle?"
|
|
|
|
Again, at this, with his sweet ironic face, he made a movement on the pillow.
|
|
"Ah, you can't get off with that!"
|
|
|
|
I was silent a little, and it was I, now, I think, who changed color.
|
|
"My dear, I don't want to get off!"
|
|
|
|
"You can't, even if you do. You can't, you can't!"--
|
|
he lay beautifully staring. "My uncle must come down,
|
|
and you must completely settle things."
|
|
|
|
"If we do," I returned with some spirit, "you may be sure it
|
|
will be to take you quite away."
|
|
|
|
"Well, don't you understand that that's exactly what I'm working for?
|
|
You'll have to tell him--about the way you've let it all drop:
|
|
you'll have to tell him a tremendous lot!"
|
|
|
|
The exultation with which he uttered this helped
|
|
me somehow, for the instant, to meet him rather more.
|
|
"And how much will YOU, Miles, have to tell him?
|
|
There are things he'll ask you!"
|
|
|
|
He turned it over. "Very likely. But what things?"
|
|
|
|
"The things you've never told me. To make up his mind what to do with you.
|
|
He can't send you back--"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I don't want to go back!" he broke in. "I want a new field."
|
|
|
|
He said it with admirable serenity, with positive unimpeachable gaiety;
|
|
and doubtless it was that very note that most evoked for me the poignancy,
|
|
the unnatural childish tragedy, of his probable reappearance at the end of
|
|
three months with all this bravado and still more dishonor. It overwhelmed me
|
|
now that I should never be able to bear that, and it made me let myself go.
|
|
I threw myself upon him and in the tenderness of my pity I embraced him.
|
|
"Dear little Miles, dear little Miles--!"
|
|
|
|
My face was close to his, and he let me kiss him, simply taking it
|
|
with indulgent good humor. "Well, old lady?"
|
|
|
|
"Is there nothing--nothing at all that you want to tell me?"
|
|
|
|
He turned off a little, facing round toward the wall and holding
|
|
up his hand to look at as one had seen sick children look.
|
|
"I've told you--I told you this morning."
|
|
|
|
Oh, I was sorry for him! "That you just want me not to worry you?"
|
|
|
|
He looked round at me now, as if in recognition of my understanding him;
|
|
then ever so gently, "To let me alone," he replied.
|
|
|
|
There was even a singular little dignity in it, something that made
|
|
me release him, yet, when I had slowly risen, linger beside him.
|
|
God knows I never wished to harass him, but I felt that merely, at this,
|
|
to turn my back on him was to abandon or, to put it more truly, to lose him.
|
|
"I've just begun a letter to your uncle," I said.
|
|
|
|
"Well, then, finish it!"
|
|
|
|
I waited a minute. "What happened before?"
|
|
|
|
He gazed up at me again. "Before what?"
|
|
|
|
"Before you came back. And before you went away."
|
|
|
|
For some time he was silent, but he continued to meet my eyes.
|
|
"What happened?"
|
|
|
|
It made me, the sound of the words, in which it seemed to me
|
|
that I caught for the very first time a small faint quaver
|
|
of consenting consciousness--it made me drop on my knees beside
|
|
the bed and seize once more the chance of possessing him.
|
|
"Dear little Miles, dear little Miles, if you KNEW how I
|
|
want to help you! It's only that, it's nothing but that,
|
|
and I'd rather die than give you a pain or do you a wrong--
|
|
I'd rather die than hurt a hair of you. Dear little Miles"--
|
|
oh, I brought it out now even if I SHOULD go too far--"I
|
|
just want you to help me to save you!" But I knew in a moment
|
|
after this that I had gone too far. The answer to my appeal
|
|
was instantaneous, but it came in the form of an extraordinary
|
|
blast and chill, a gust of frozen air, and a shake of the room
|
|
as great as if, in the wild wind, the casement had crashed in.
|
|
The boy gave a loud, high shriek, which, lost in the rest
|
|
of the shock of sound, might have seemed, indistinctly, though I
|
|
was so close to him, a note either of jubilation or of terror.
|
|
I jumped to my feet again and was conscious of darkness.
|
|
So for a moment we remained, while I stared about me and saw
|
|
that the drawn curtains were unstirred and the window tight.
|
|
"Why, the candle's out!" I then cried.
|
|
|
|
"It was I who blew it, dear!" said Miles.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XVIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
The next day, after lessons, Mrs. Grose found a moment to say to me quietly:
|
|
"Have you written, miss?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes--I've written." But I didn't add--for the hour--that my letter,
|
|
sealed and directed, was still in my pocket. There would be time
|
|
enough to send it before the messenger should go to the village.
|
|
Meanwhile there had been, on the part of my pupils, no more brilliant,
|
|
more exemplary morning. It was exactly as if they had both had at heart
|
|
to gloss over any recent little friction. They performed the dizziest feats
|
|
of arithmetic, soaring quite out of MY feeble range, and perpetrated,
|
|
in higher spirits than ever, geographical and historical jokes.
|
|
It was conspicuous of course in Miles in particular that he appeared
|
|
to wish to show how easily he could let me down. This child, to my memory,
|
|
really lives in a setting of beauty and misery that no words can translate;
|
|
there was a distinction all his own in every impulse he revealed;
|
|
never was a small natural creature, to the uninitiated eye all frankness
|
|
and freedom, a more ingenious, a more extraordinary little gentleman.
|
|
I had perpetually to guard against the wonder of contemplation into which my
|
|
initiated view betrayed me; to check the irrelevant gaze and discouraged
|
|
sigh in which I constantly both attacked and renounced the enigma of
|
|
what such a little gentleman could have done that deserved a penalty.
|
|
Say that, by the dark prodigy I knew, the imagination of all evil HAD
|
|
been opened up to him: all the justice within me ached for the proof
|
|
that it could ever have flowered into an act.
|
|
|
|
He had never, at any rate, been such a little gentleman
|
|
as when, after our early dinner on this dreadful day,
|
|
he came round to me and asked if I shouldn't like him,
|
|
for half an hour, to play to me. David playing to Saul
|
|
could never have shown a finer sense of the occasion.
|
|
It was literally a charming exhibition of tact, of magnanimity,
|
|
and quite tantamount to his saying outright: "The true knights
|
|
we love to read about never push an advantage too far.
|
|
I know what you mean now: you mean that--to be let alone yourself
|
|
and not followed up--you'll cease to worry and spy upon me,
|
|
won't keep me so close to you, will let me go and come.
|
|
Well, I `come,' you see--but I don't go! There'll be plenty
|
|
of time for that. I do really delight in your society,
|
|
and I only want to show you that I contended for a principle."
|
|
It may be imagined whether I resisted this appeal or failed
|
|
to accompany him again, hand in hand, to the schoolroom.
|
|
He sat down at the old piano and played as he had never played;
|
|
and if there are those who think he had better have been kicking
|
|
a football I can only say that I wholly agree with them.
|
|
For at the end of a time that under his influence I had
|
|
quite ceased to measure, I started up with a strange sense
|
|
of having literally slept at my post. It was after luncheon,
|
|
and by the schoolroom fire, and yet I hadn't really,
|
|
in the least, slept: I had only done something much worse--
|
|
I had forgotten. Where, all this time, was Flora?
|
|
When I put the question to Miles, he played on a minute
|
|
before answering and then could only say: "Why, my dear,
|
|
how do _I_ know?"--breaking moreover into a happy laugh which,
|
|
immediately after, as if it were a vocal accompaniment,
|
|
he prolonged into incoherent, extravagant song.
|
|
|
|
I went straight to my room, but his sister was not there;
|
|
then, before going downstairs, I looked into several others.
|
|
As she was nowhere about she would surely be with Mrs. Grose, whom,
|
|
in the comfort of that theory, I accordingly proceeded in quest of.
|
|
I found her where I had found her the evening before,
|
|
but she met my quick challenge with blank, scared ignorance.
|
|
She had only supposed that, after the repast, I had carried
|
|
off both the children; as to which she was quite in her right,
|
|
for it was the very first time I had allowed the little
|
|
girl out of my sight without some special provision.
|
|
Of course now indeed she might be with the maids, so that the
|
|
immediate thing was to look for her without an air of alarm.
|
|
This we promptly arranged between us; but when, ten minutes
|
|
later and in pursuance of our arrangement, we met in the hall,
|
|
it was only to report on either side that after guarded inquiries
|
|
we had altogether failed to trace her. For a minute there,
|
|
apart from observation, we exchanged mute alarms, and I could
|
|
feel with what high interest my friend returned me all those I
|
|
had from the first given her.
|
|
|
|
"She'll be above," she presently said--"in one of the rooms
|
|
you haven't searched."
|
|
|
|
"No; she's at a distance." I had made up my mind.
|
|
"She has gone out."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose stared. "Without a hat?"
|
|
|
|
I naturally also looked volumes. "Isn't that woman always without one?"
|
|
|
|
"She's with HER?"
|
|
|
|
"She's with HER!" I declared. "We must find them."
|
|
|
|
My hand was on my friend's arm, but she failed for the moment,
|
|
confronted with such an account of the matter, to respond to my pressure.
|
|
She communed, on the contrary, on the spot, with her uneasiness.
|
|
"And where's Master Miles?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, HE'S with Quint. They're in the schoolroom."
|
|
|
|
"Lord, miss!" My view, I was myself aware--and therefore I suppose my tone--
|
|
had never yet reached so calm an assurance.
|
|
|
|
"The trick's played," I went on; "they've successfully worked their plan.
|
|
He found the most divine little way to keep me quiet while she went off."
|
|
|
|
"'Divine'?" Mrs. Grose bewilderedly echoed.
|
|
|
|
"Infernal, then!" I almost cheerfully rejoined.
|
|
"He has provided for himself as well. But come!"
|
|
|
|
She had helplessly gloomed at the upper regions.
|
|
"You leave him--?"
|
|
|
|
"So long with Quint? Yes--I don't mind that now."
|
|
|
|
She always ended, at these moments, by getting possession of
|
|
my hand, and in this manner she could at present still stay me.
|
|
But after gasping an instant at my sudden resignation,
|
|
"Because of your letter?" she eagerly brought out.
|
|
|
|
I quickly, by way of answer, felt for my letter, drew it forth, held it up,
|
|
and then, freeing myself, went and laid it on the great hall table.
|
|
"Luke will take it," I said as I came back. I reached the house door
|
|
and opened it; I was already on the steps.
|
|
|
|
My companion still demurred: the storm of the night and the early
|
|
morning had dropped, but the afternoon was damp and gray.
|
|
I came down to the drive while she stood in the doorway.
|
|
"You go with nothing on?"
|
|
|
|
"What do I care when the child has nothing? I can't wait
|
|
to dress," I cried, "and if you must do so, I leave you.
|
|
Try meanwhile, yourself, upstairs."
|
|
|
|
"With THEM?" Oh, on this, the poor woman promptly joined me!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XIX
|
|
|
|
|
|
We went straight to the lake, as it was called at Bly, and I daresay
|
|
rightly called, though I reflect that it may in fact have been a sheet
|
|
of water less remarkable than it appeared to my untraveled eyes.
|
|
My acquaintance with sheets of water was small, and the pool
|
|
of Bly, at all events on the few occasions of my consenting,
|
|
under the protection of my pupils, to affront its surface
|
|
in the old flat-bottomed boat moored there for our use,
|
|
had impressed me both with its extent and its agitation.
|
|
The usual place of embarkation was half a mile from the house,
|
|
but I had an intimate conviction that, wherever Flora might be,
|
|
she was not near home. She had not given me the slip for any
|
|
small adventure, and, since the day of the very great one
|
|
that I had shared with her by the pond, I had been aware,
|
|
in our walks, of the quarter to which she most inclined.
|
|
This was why I had now given to Mrs. Grose's steps so marked
|
|
a direction--a direction that made her, when she perceived it,
|
|
oppose a resistance that showed me she was freshly mystified.
|
|
"You're going to the water, Miss?--you think she's IN--?"
|
|
|
|
"She may be, though the depth is, I believe, nowhere very great.
|
|
But what I judge most likely is that she's on the spot from which,
|
|
the other day, we saw together what I told you."
|
|
|
|
"When she pretended not to see--?"
|
|
|
|
"With that astounding self-possession? I've always been sure she wanted
|
|
to go back alone. And now her brother has managed it for her."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose still stood where she had stopped. "You suppose they
|
|
really TALK of them?"
|
|
|
|
"I could meet this with a confidence! "They say things that,
|
|
if we heard them, would simply appall us."
|
|
|
|
"And if she IS there--"
|
|
|
|
"Yes?"
|
|
|
|
"Then Miss Jessel is?"
|
|
|
|
"Beyond a doubt. You shall see."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, thank you!" my friend cried, planted so firm that,
|
|
taking it in, I went straight on without her. By the time
|
|
I reached the pool, however, she was close behind me, and I
|
|
knew that, whatever, to her apprehension, might befall me,
|
|
the exposure of my society struck her as her least danger.
|
|
She exhaled a moan of relief as we at last came in sight
|
|
of the greater part of the water without a sight of the child.
|
|
There was no trace of Flora on that nearer side of the bank
|
|
where my observation of her had been most startling,
|
|
and none on the opposite edge, where, save for a margin
|
|
of some twenty yards, a thick copse came down to the water.
|
|
The pond, oblong in shape, had a width so scant compared
|
|
to its length that, with its ends out of view, it might have
|
|
been taken for a scant river. We looked at the empty expanse,
|
|
and then I felt the suggestion of my friend's eyes.
|
|
I knew what she meant and I replied with a negative headshake.
|
|
|
|
"No, no; wait! She has taken the boat."
|
|
|
|
My companion stared at the vacant mooring place and then again across
|
|
the lake. "Then where is it?"
|
|
|
|
"Our not seeing it is the strongest of proofs. She has used it to go over,
|
|
and then has managed to hide it."
|
|
|
|
"All alone--that child?"
|
|
|
|
"She's not alone, and at such times she's not a child: she's an old,
|
|
old woman." I scanned all the visible shore while Mrs. Grose took again,
|
|
into the queer element I offered her, one of her plunges of submission;
|
|
then I pointed out that the boat might perfectly be in a small refuge
|
|
formed by one of the recesses of the pool, an indentation masked,
|
|
for the hither side, by a projection of the bank and by a clump of trees
|
|
growing close to the water.
|
|
|
|
"But if the boat's there, where on earth's SHE?"
|
|
my colleague anxiously asked.
|
|
|
|
"That's exactly what we must learn." And I started to walk further.
|
|
|
|
"By going all the way round?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly, far as it is. It will take us but ten minutes,
|
|
but it's far enough to have made the child prefer not to walk.
|
|
She went straight over."
|
|
|
|
"Laws!" cried my friend again; the chain of my logic was ever
|
|
too much for her. It dragged her at my heels even now,
|
|
and when we had got halfway round--a devious, tiresome process,
|
|
on ground much broken and by a path choked with overgrowth--
|
|
I paused to give her breath. I sustained her with a grateful arm,
|
|
assuring her that she might hugely help me; and this started
|
|
us afresh, so that in the course of but few minutes more we reached
|
|
a point from which we found the boat to be where I had supposed it.
|
|
It had been intentionally left as much as possible out of sight
|
|
and was tied to one of the stakes of a fence that came, just there,
|
|
down to the brink and that had been an assistance to disembarking.
|
|
I recognized, as I looked at the pair of short, thick oars,
|
|
quite safely drawn up, the prodigious character of the feat
|
|
for a little girl; but I had lived, by this time, too long
|
|
among wonders and had panted to too many livelier measures.
|
|
There was a gate in the fence, through which we passed,
|
|
and that brought us, after a trifling interval, more into the open.
|
|
Then, "There she is!" we both exclaimed at once.
|
|
|
|
Flora, a short way off, stood before us on the grass and smiled
|
|
as if her performance was now complete. The next thing she did,
|
|
however, was to stoop straight down and pluck--quite as if it
|
|
were all she was there for--a big, ugly spray of withered fern.
|
|
I instantly became sure she had just come out of the copse.
|
|
She waited for us, not herself taking a step, and I was
|
|
conscious of the rare solemnity with which we presently
|
|
approached her. She smiled and smiled, and we met; but it
|
|
was all done in a silence by this time flagrantly ominous.
|
|
Mrs. Grose was the first to break the spell: she threw
|
|
herself on her knees and, drawing the child to her breast,
|
|
clasped in a long embrace the little tender, yielding body.
|
|
While this dumb convulsion lasted I could only watch it--
|
|
which I did the more intently when I saw Flora's face peep
|
|
at me over our companion's shoulder. It was serious now--
|
|
the flicker had left it; but it strengthened the pang with which I
|
|
at that moment envied Mrs. Grose the simplicity of HER relation.
|
|
Still, all this while, nothing more passed between us save
|
|
that Flora had let her foolish fern again drop to the ground.
|
|
What she and I had virtually said to each other was that
|
|
pretexts were useless now. When Mrs. Grose finally got up she
|
|
kept the child's hand, so that the two were still before me;
|
|
and the singular reticence of our communion was even more
|
|
marked in the frank look she launched me. "I'll be hanged,"
|
|
it said, "if _I_'ll speak!"
|
|
|
|
It was Flora who, gazing all over me in candid wonder,
|
|
was the first. She was struck with our bareheaded aspect.
|
|
"Why, where are your things?"
|
|
|
|
"Where yours are, my dear!" I promptly returned.
|
|
|
|
She had already got back her gaiety, and appeared to take
|
|
this as an answer quite sufficient. "And where's Miles?"
|
|
she went on.
|
|
|
|
There was something in the small valor of it that quite finished me:
|
|
these three words from her were, in a flash like the glitter of a
|
|
drawn blade, the jostle of the cup that my hand, for weeks and weeks,
|
|
had held high and full to the brim that now, even before speaking,
|
|
I felt overflow in a deluge. "I'll tell you if you'll tell ME--"
|
|
I heard myself say, then heard the tremor in which it broke.
|
|
|
|
"Well, what?"
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose's suspense blazed at me, but it was too late now,
|
|
and I brought the thing out handsomely. "Where, my pet,
|
|
is Miss Jessel?"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XX
|
|
|
|
|
|
Just as in the churchyard with Miles, the whole thing was upon us.
|
|
Much as I had made of the fact that this name had never once,
|
|
between us, been sounded, the quick, smitten glare with
|
|
which the child's face now received it fairly likened
|
|
my breach of the silence to the smash of a pane of glass.
|
|
It added to the interposing cry, as if to stay the blow,
|
|
that Mrs. Grose, at the same instant, uttered over my violence--
|
|
the shriek of a creature scared, or rather wounded, which, in turn,
|
|
within a few seconds, was completed by a gasp of my own.
|
|
I seized my colleague's arm. "She's there, she's there!"
|
|
|
|
Miss Jessel stood before us on the opposite bank exactly as she
|
|
had stood the other time, and I remember, strangely, as the
|
|
first feeling now produced in me, my thrill of joy at having
|
|
brought on a proof. She was there, and I was justified;
|
|
she was there, and I was neither cruel nor mad.
|
|
She was there for poor scared Mrs. Grose, but she was there
|
|
most for Flora; and no moment of my monstrous time was perhaps
|
|
so extraordinary as that in which I consciously threw out to her--
|
|
with the sense that, pale and ravenous demon as she was, she would
|
|
catch and understand it--an inarticulate message of gratitude.
|
|
She rose erect on the spot my friend and I had lately quitted,
|
|
and there was not, in all the long reach of her desire,
|
|
an inch of her evil that fell short. This first vividness
|
|
of vision and emotion were things of a few seconds,
|
|
during which Mrs. Grose's dazed blink across to where I pointed
|
|
struck me as a sovereign sign that she too at last saw,
|
|
just as it carried my own eyes precipitately to the child.
|
|
The revelation then of the manner in which Flora was affected
|
|
startled me, in truth, far more than it would have done to find
|
|
her also merely agitated, for direct dismay was of course not
|
|
what I had expected. Prepared and on her guard as our pursuit
|
|
had actually made her, she would repress every betrayal;
|
|
and I was therefore shaken, on the spot, by my first
|
|
glimpse of the particular one for which I had not allowed.
|
|
To see her, without a convulsion of her small pink face, not even
|
|
feign to glance in the direction of the prodigy I announced,
|
|
but only, instead of that, turn at ME an expression of hard,
|
|
still gravity, an expression absolutely new and unprecedented
|
|
and that appeared to read and accuse and judge me--
|
|
this was a stroke that somehow converted the little girl
|
|
herself into the very presence that could make me quail.
|
|
I quailed even though my certitude that she thoroughly saw
|
|
was never greater than at that instant, and in the immediate
|
|
need to defend myself I called it passionately to witness.
|
|
"She's there, you little unhappy thing--there, there, THERE,
|
|
and you see her as well as you see me!" I had said shortly
|
|
before to Mrs. Grose that she was not at these times a child,
|
|
but an old, old woman, and that description of her could not
|
|
have been more strikingly confirmed than in the way in which,
|
|
for all answer to this, she simply showed me, without a concession,
|
|
an admission, of her eyes, a countenance of deeper and deeper,
|
|
of indeed suddenly quite fixed, reprobation. I was by this time--
|
|
if I can put the whole thing at all together--more appalled
|
|
at what I may properly call her manner than at anything else,
|
|
though it was simultaneously with this that I became aware
|
|
of having Mrs. Grose also, and very formidably, to reckon with.
|
|
My elder companion, the next moment, at any rate, blotted out
|
|
everything but her own flushed face and her loud, shocked protest,
|
|
a burst of high disapproval. "What a dreadful turn,
|
|
to be sure, miss! Where on earth do you see anything?"
|
|
|
|
I could only grasp her more quickly yet, for even while she
|
|
spoke the hideous plain presence stood undimmed and undaunted.
|
|
It had already lasted a minute, and it lasted while I continued,
|
|
seizing my colleague, quite thrusting her at it and presenting her to it,
|
|
to insist with my pointing hand. "You don't see her exactly as WE see?--
|
|
you mean to say you don't now--NOW? She's as big as a blazing fire!
|
|
Only look, dearest woman, LOOK--!" She looked, even as I did,
|
|
and gave me, with her deep groan of negation, repulsion, compassion--
|
|
the mixture with her pity of her relief at her exemption--a sense,
|
|
touching to me even then, that she would have backed me up if she could.
|
|
I might well have needed that, for with this hard blow of the proof that
|
|
her eyes were hopelessly sealed I felt my own situation horribly crumble,
|
|
I felt--I saw--my livid predecessor press, from her position, on my defeat,
|
|
and I was conscious, more than all, of what I should have from this
|
|
instant to deal with in the astounding little attitude of Flora.
|
|
Into this attitude Mrs. Grose immediately and violently entered,
|
|
breaking, even while there pierced through my sense of ruin a prodigious
|
|
private triumph, into breathless reassurance.
|
|
|
|
"She isn't there, little lady, and nobody's there--and you never see nothing,
|
|
my sweet! How can poor Miss Jessel--when poor Miss Jessel's dead and buried?
|
|
WE know, don't we, love?--and she appealed, blundering in, to the child.
|
|
"It's all a mere mistake and a worry and a joke--and we'll go home as fast
|
|
as we can!"
|
|
|
|
Our companion, on this, had responded with a strange,
|
|
quick primness of propriety, and they were again, with Mrs. Grose
|
|
on her feet, united, as it were, in pained opposition to me.
|
|
Flora continued to fix me with her small mask of reprobation,
|
|
and even at that minute I prayed God to forgive me for seeming
|
|
to see that, as she stood there holding tight to our friend's dress,
|
|
her incomparable childish beauty had suddenly failed,
|
|
had quite vanished. I've said it already--she was literally,
|
|
she was hideously, hard; she had turned common and almost ugly.
|
|
"I don't know what you mean. I see nobody. I see nothing.
|
|
I never HAVE. I think you're cruel. I don't like you!"
|
|
Then, after this deliverance, which might have been that of a
|
|
vulgarly pert little girl in the street, she hugged Mrs. Grose
|
|
more closely and buried in her skirts the dreadful little face.
|
|
In this position she produced an almost furious wail.
|
|
"Take me away, take me away--oh, take me away from HER!"
|
|
|
|
"From ME?" I panted.
|
|
|
|
"From you--from you!" she cried.
|
|
|
|
Even Mrs. Grose looked across at me dismayed, while I had
|
|
nothing to do but communicate again with the figure that,
|
|
on the opposite bank, without a movement, as rigidly still
|
|
as if catching, beyond the interval, our voices, was as vividly
|
|
there for my disaster as it was not there for my service.
|
|
The wretched child had spoken exactly as if she had got from
|
|
some outside source each of her stabbing little words, and I
|
|
could therefore, in the full despair of all I had to accept,
|
|
but sadly shake my head at her. "If I had ever doubted,
|
|
all my doubt would at present have gone. I've been living with
|
|
the miserable truth, and now it has only too much closed round me.
|
|
Of course I've lost you: I've interfered, and you've seen--
|
|
under HER dictation"--with which I faced, over the pool again,
|
|
our infernal witness--"the easy and perfect way to meet it.
|
|
I've done my best, but I've lost you. Goodbye." For Mrs. Grose
|
|
I had an imperative, an almost frantic "Go, go!" before which,
|
|
in infinite distress, but mutely possessed of the little girl
|
|
and clearly convinced, in spite of her blindness, that something
|
|
awful had occurred and some collapse engulfed us, she retreated,
|
|
by the way we had come, as fast as she could move.
|
|
|
|
Of what first happened when I was left alone I had no subsequent memory.
|
|
I only knew that at the end of, I suppose, a quarter of an hour,
|
|
an odorous dampness and roughness, chilling and piercing
|
|
my trouble, had made me understand that I must have thrown myself,
|
|
on my face, on the ground and given way to a wildness of grief.
|
|
I must have lain there long and cried and sobbed, for when I raised
|
|
my head the day was almost done. I got up and looked a moment,
|
|
through the twilight, at the gray pool and its blank, haunted edge,
|
|
and then I took, back to the house, my dreary and difficult course.
|
|
When I reached the gate in the fence the boat, to my surprise, was gone,
|
|
so that I had a fresh reflection to make on Flora's extraordinary
|
|
command of the situation. She passed that night, by the most tacit,
|
|
and I should add, were not the word so grotesque a false note,
|
|
the happiest of arrangements, with Mrs. Grose. I saw neither of them
|
|
on my return, but, on the other hand, as by an ambiguous compensation,
|
|
I saw a great deal of Miles. I saw--I can use no other phrase--
|
|
so much of him that it was as if it were more than it had ever been.
|
|
No evening I had passed at Bly had the portentous quality of this one;
|
|
in spite of which--and in spite also of the deeper depths of
|
|
consternation that had opened beneath my feet--there was literally,
|
|
in the ebbing actual, an extraordinarily sweet sadness.
|
|
On reaching the house I had never so much as looked for the boy;
|
|
I had simply gone straight to my room to change what I was wearing
|
|
and to take in, at a glance, much material testimony to Flora's rupture.
|
|
Her little belongings had all been removed. When later,
|
|
by the schoolroom fire, I was served with tea by the usual maid,
|
|
I indulged, on the article of my other pupil, in no inquiry whatever.
|
|
He had his freedom now--he might have it to the end! Well, he did
|
|
have it; and it consisted--in part at least--of his coming
|
|
in at about eight o'clock and sitting down with me in silence.
|
|
On the removal of the tea things I had blown out the candles
|
|
and drawn my chair closer: I was conscious of a mortal coldness
|
|
and felt as if I should never again be warm. So, when he appeared,
|
|
I was sitting in the glow with my thoughts. He paused a moment
|
|
by the door as if to look at me; then--as if to share them--
|
|
came to the other side of the hearth and sank into a chair.
|
|
We sat there in absolute stillness; yet he wanted, I felt,
|
|
to be with me.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XXI
|
|
|
|
|
|
Before a new day, in my room, had fully broken, my eyes opened
|
|
to Mrs. Grose, who had come to my bedside with worse news.
|
|
Flora was so markedly feverish that an illness was perhaps at hand;
|
|
she had passed a night of extreme unrest, a night agitated above
|
|
all by fears that had for their subject not in the least her former,
|
|
but wholly her present, governess. It was not against the possible
|
|
re-entrance of Miss Jessel on the scene that she protested--
|
|
it was conspicuously and passionately against mine. I was promptly
|
|
on my feet of course, and with an immense deal to ask; the more that my
|
|
friend had discernibly now girded her loins to meet me once more.
|
|
This I felt as soon as I had put to her the question of her sense
|
|
of the child's sincerity as against my own. "She persists in denying
|
|
to you that she saw, or has ever seen, anything?"
|
|
|
|
My visitor's trouble, truly, was great. "Ah, miss, it isn't a matter on which
|
|
I can push her! Yet it isn't either, I must say, as if I much needed to.
|
|
It has made her, every inch of her, quite old."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, I see her perfectly from here. She resents, for all
|
|
the world like some high little personage, the imputation
|
|
on her truthfulness and, as it were, her respectability.
|
|
`Miss Jessel indeed--SHE!' Ah, she's `respectable,' the chit!
|
|
The impression she gave me there yesterday was, I assure you,
|
|
the very strangest of all; it was quite beyond any of the others.
|
|
I DID put my foot in it! She'll never speak to me again."
|
|
|
|
Hideous and obscure as it all was, it held Mrs. Grose briefly silent;
|
|
then she granted my point with a frankness which, I made sure,
|
|
had more behind it. "I think indeed, miss, she never will.
|
|
She do have a grand manner about it!"
|
|
|
|
"And that manner"--I summed it up--"is practically what's the matter
|
|
with her now!"
|
|
|
|
Oh, that manner, I could see in my visitor's face, and not
|
|
a little else besides! "She asks me every three minutes if I
|
|
think you're coming in."
|
|
|
|
"I see--I see." I, too, on my side, had so much more than worked it out.
|
|
"Has she said to you since yesterday--except to repudiate her familiarity
|
|
with anything so dreadful--a single other word about Miss Jessel?"
|
|
|
|
"Not one, miss. And of course you know," my friend added,
|
|
"I took it from her, by the lake, that, just then and there
|
|
at least, there WAS nobody."
|
|
|
|
"Rather! and, naturally, you take it from her still."
|
|
|
|
"I don't contradict her. What else can I do?"
|
|
|
|
"Nothing in the world! You've the cleverest little person to deal with.
|
|
They've made them--their two friends, I mean--still cleverer
|
|
even than nature did; for it was wondrous material to play on!
|
|
Flora has now her grievance, and she'll work it to the end."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, miss; but to WHAT end?"
|
|
|
|
"Why, that of dealing with me to her uncle. She'll make me out to him
|
|
the lowest creature--!"
|
|
|
|
I winced at the fair show of the scene in Mrs. Grose's face;
|
|
she looked for a minute as if she sharply saw them together.
|
|
"And him who thinks so well of you!"
|
|
|
|
"He has an odd way--it comes over me now," I laughed,"--of proving it!
|
|
But that doesn't matter. What Flora wants, of course, is to get rid of me."
|
|
|
|
My companion bravely concurred. "Never again to so much as look at you."
|
|
|
|
"So that what you've come to me now for," I asked, "is to speed me on
|
|
my way?" Before she had time to reply, however, I had her in check.
|
|
"I've a better idea--the result of my reflections. My going WOULD seem
|
|
the right thing, and on Sunday I was terribly near it. Yet that won't do.
|
|
It's YOU who must go. You must take Flora."
|
|
|
|
My visitor, at this, did speculate. "But where in the world--?"
|
|
|
|
"Away from here. Away from THEM. Away, even most of all, now, from me.
|
|
Straight to her uncle."
|
|
|
|
"Only to tell on you--?"
|
|
|
|
"No, not `only'! To leave me, in addition, with my remedy."
|
|
|
|
She was still vague. "And what IS your remedy?"
|
|
|
|
"Your loyalty, to begin with. And then Miles's."
|
|
|
|
She looked at me hard. "Do you think he--?"
|
|
|
|
"Won't, if he has the chance, turn on me? Yes, I venture still
|
|
to think it. At all events, I want to try. Get off with his
|
|
sister as soon as possible and leave me with him alone."
|
|
I was amazed, myself, at the spirit I had still in reserve,
|
|
and therefore perhaps a trifle the more disconcerted
|
|
at the way in which, in spite of this fine example of it,
|
|
she hesitated. "There's one thing, of course," I went on:
|
|
"they mustn't, before she goes, see each other for three seconds."
|
|
Then it came over me that, in spite of Flora's presumable
|
|
sequestration from the instant of her return from the pool,
|
|
it might already be too late. "Do you mean," I anxiously asked,
|
|
"that they HAVE met?"
|
|
|
|
At this she quite flushed. "Ah, miss, I'm not such a fool as that!
|
|
If I've been obliged to leave her three or four times,
|
|
it has been each time with one of the maids, and at present,
|
|
though she's alone, she's locked in safe. And yet--and yet!"
|
|
There were too many things.
|
|
|
|
"And yet what?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, are you so sure of the little gentleman?"
|
|
|
|
"I'm not sure of anything but YOU. But I have, since last evening,
|
|
a new hope. I think he wants to give me an opening.
|
|
I do believe that--poor little exquisite wretch!--he wants to speak.
|
|
Last evening, in the firelight and the silence, he sat with me
|
|
for two hours as if it were just coming."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Grose looked hard, through the window, at the gray, gathering day.
|
|
"And did it come?"
|
|
|
|
"No, though I waited and waited, I confess it didn't, and it was
|
|
without a breach of the silence or so much as a faint allusion to his
|
|
sister's condition and absence that we at last kissed for good night.
|
|
All the same," I continued, "I can't, if her uncle sees her,
|
|
consent to his seeing her brother without my having given the boy--
|
|
and most of all because things have got so bad--a little more time."
|
|
|
|
My friend appeared on this ground more reluctant than I could
|
|
quite understand. "What do you mean by more time?"
|
|
|
|
"Well, a day or two--really to bring it out. He'll then be on
|
|
MY side--of which you see the importance. If nothing comes,
|
|
I shall only fail, and you will, at the worst, have helped me by doing,
|
|
on your arrival in town, whatever you may have found possible."
|
|
So I put it before her, but she continued for a little so inscrutably
|
|
embarrassed that I came again to her aid. "Unless, indeed,"
|
|
I wound up, "you really want NOT to go."
|
|
|
|
I could see it, in her face, at last clear itself;
|
|
she put out her hand to me as a pledge. "I'll go--I'll go.
|
|
I'll go this morning."
|
|
|
|
I wanted to be very just. "If you SHOULD wish still to wait,
|
|
I would engage she shouldn't see me."
|
|
|
|
"No, no: it's the place itself. She must leave it."
|
|
She held me a moment with heavy eyes, then brought out the rest.
|
|
"Your idea's the right one. I myself, miss--"
|
|
|
|
"Well?"
|
|
|
|
"I can't stay."
|
|
|
|
The look she gave me with it made me jump at possibilities.
|
|
"You mean that, since yesterday, you HAVE seen--?"
|
|
|
|
She shook her head with dignity. "I've HEARD--!"
|
|
|
|
"Heard?"
|
|
|
|
"From that child--horrors! There!" she sighed with tragic relief.
|
|
"On my honor, miss, she says things--!" But at this evocation she broke down;
|
|
she dropped, with a sudden sob, upon my sofa and, as I had seen her do before,
|
|
gave way to all the grief of it.
|
|
|
|
It was quite in another manner that I, for my part, let myself go.
|
|
"Oh, thank God!"
|
|
|
|
She sprang up again at this, drying her eyes with a groan. "'Thank God'?"
|
|
|
|
"It so justifies me!"
|
|
|
|
"It does that, miss!"
|
|
|
|
I couldn't have desired more emphasis, but I just hesitated.
|
|
"She's so horrible?"
|
|
|
|
I saw my colleague scarce knew how to put it. "Really shocking."
|
|
|
|
"And about me?"
|
|
|
|
"About you, miss--since you must have it. It's beyond everything,
|
|
for a young lady; and I can't think wherever she must have picked up--"
|
|
|
|
"The appalling language she applied to me? I can, then!"
|
|
I broke in with a laugh that was doubtless significant enough.
|
|
|
|
It only, in truth, left my friend still more grave.
|
|
"Well, perhaps I ought to also--since I've heard some of it before!
|
|
Yet I can't bear it," the poor woman went on while, with the same movement,
|
|
she glanced, on my dressing table, at the face of my watch.
|
|
"But I must go back."
|
|
|
|
I kept her, however. "Ah, if you can't bear it--!"
|
|
|
|
"How can I stop with her, you mean? Why, just FOR that:
|
|
to get her away. Far from this," she pursued, "far from THEM-"
|
|
|
|
"She may be different? She may be free?" I seized her almost with joy.
|
|
"Then, in spite of yesterday, you BELIEVE--"
|
|
|
|
"In such doings?" Her simple description of them required,
|
|
in the light of her expression, to be carried no further,
|
|
and she gave me the whole thing as she had never done.
|
|
"I believe."
|
|
|
|
Yes, it was a joy, and we were still shoulder to shoulder: if I might
|
|
continue sure of that I should care but little what else happened.
|
|
My support in the presence of disaster would be the same as it had
|
|
been in my early need of confidence, and if my friend would answer
|
|
for my honesty, I would answer for all the rest. On the point of
|
|
taking leave of her, nonetheless, I was to some extent embarrassed.
|
|
"There's one thing, of course--it occurs to me--to remember.
|
|
My letter, giving the alarm, will have reached town before you."
|
|
|
|
I now perceived still more how she had been beating about the bush and
|
|
how weary at last it had made her. "Your letter won't have got there.
|
|
Your letter never went."
|
|
|
|
"What then became of it?"
|
|
|
|
"Goodness knows! Master Miles--"
|
|
|
|
"Do you mean HE took it?" I gasped.
|
|
|
|
She hung fire, but she overcame her reluctance. "I mean that I saw yesterday,
|
|
when I came back with Miss Flora, that it wasn't where you had put it.
|
|
Later in the evening I had the chance to question Luke, and he declared
|
|
that he had neither noticed nor touched it." We could only exchange, on this,
|
|
one of our deeper mutual soundings, and it was Mrs. Grose who first brought
|
|
up the plumb with an almost elated "You see!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I see that if Miles took it instead he probably will have read it
|
|
and destroyed it."
|
|
|
|
"And don't you see anything else?"
|
|
|
|
I faced her a moment with a sad smile. "It strikes me that by this
|
|
time your eyes are open even wider than mine."
|
|
|
|
They proved to be so indeed, but she could still blush, almost, to show it.
|
|
"I make out now what he must have done at school." And she gave,
|
|
in her simple sharpness, an almost droll disillusioned nod. "He stole!"
|
|
|
|
I turned it over--I tried to be more judicial. "Well--perhaps."
|
|
|
|
She looked as if she found me unexpectedly calm.
|
|
"He stole LETTERS!"
|
|
|
|
She couldn't know my reasons for a calmness after all
|
|
pretty shallow; so I showed them off as I might.
|
|
"I hope then it was to more purpose than in this case!
|
|
The note, at any rate, that I put on the table yesterday,"
|
|
I pursued, "will have given him so scant an advantage--
|
|
for it contained only the bare demand for an interview--
|
|
that he is already much ashamed of having gone so far
|
|
for so little, and that what he had on his mind last evening
|
|
was precisely the need of confession." I seemed to myself,
|
|
for the instant, to have mastered it, to see it all.
|
|
"Leave us, leave us"--I was already, at the door, hurrying her off.
|
|
"I'll get it out of him. He'll meet me--he'll confess.
|
|
If he confesses, he's saved. And if he's saved--"
|
|
|
|
"Then YOU are?" The dear woman kissed me on this,
|
|
and I took her farewell. "I'll save you without him!"
|
|
she cried as she went.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XXII
|
|
|
|
|
|
Yet it was when she had got off--and I missed her on the spot--
|
|
that the great pinch really came. If I had counted on
|
|
what it would give me to find myself alone with Miles,
|
|
I speedily perceived, at least, that it would give me a measure.
|
|
No hour of my stay in fact was so assailed with apprehensions
|
|
as that of my coming down to learn that the carriage containing
|
|
Mrs. Grose and my younger pupil had already rolled out of the gates.
|
|
Now I WAS, I said to myself, face to face with the elements,
|
|
and for much of the rest of the day, while I fought
|
|
my weakness, I could consider that I had been supremely rash.
|
|
It was a tighter place still than I had yet turned round in;
|
|
all the more that, for the first time, I could see in
|
|
the aspect of others a confused reflection of the crisis.
|
|
What had happened naturally caused them all to stare;
|
|
there was too little of the explained, throw out whatever we might,
|
|
in the suddenness of my colleague's act. The maids and the men
|
|
looked blank; the effect of which on my nerves was an aggravation
|
|
until I saw the necessity of making it a positive aid.
|
|
It was precisely, in short, by just clutching the helm
|
|
that I avoided total wreck; and I dare say that, to bear up
|
|
at all, I became, that morning, very grand and very dry.
|
|
I welcomed the consciousness that I was charged with much to do,
|
|
and I caused it to be known as well that, left thus to myself,
|
|
I was quite remarkably firm. I wandered with that manner,
|
|
for the next hour or two, all over the place and looked,
|
|
I have no doubt, as if I were ready for any onset.
|
|
So, for the benefit of whom it might concern, I paraded
|
|
with a sick heart.
|
|
|
|
The person it appeared least to concern proved to be,
|
|
till dinner, little Miles himself. My perambulations had
|
|
given me, meanwhile, no glimpse of him, but they had tended
|
|
to make more public the change taking place in our relation
|
|
as a consequence of his having at the piano, the day before,
|
|
kept me, in Flora's interest, so beguiled and befooled.
|
|
The stamp of publicity had of course been fully given by her
|
|
confinement and departure, and the change itself was now ushered
|
|
in by our nonobservance of the regular custom of the schoolroom.
|
|
He had already disappeared when, on my way down, I pushed
|
|
open his door, and I learned below that he had breakfasted--
|
|
in the presence of a couple of the maids--with Mrs. Grose
|
|
and his sister. He had then gone out, as he said, for a stroll;
|
|
than which nothing, I reflected, could better have expressed
|
|
his frank view of the abrupt transformation of my office.
|
|
What he would not permit this office to consist of was yet
|
|
to be settled: there was a queer relief, at all events--I mean
|
|
for myself in especial--in the renouncement of one pretension.
|
|
If so much had sprung to the surface, I scarce put it too
|
|
strongly in saying that what had perhaps sprung highest
|
|
was the absurdity of our prolonging the fiction that I had
|
|
anything more to teach him. It sufficiently stuck out that,
|
|
by tacit little tricks in which even more than myself he carried
|
|
out the care for my dignity, I had had to appeal to him to let me
|
|
off straining to meet him on the ground of his true capacity.
|
|
He had at any rate his freedom now; I was never to touch it again;
|
|
as I had amply shown, moreover, when, on his joining me in
|
|
the schoolroom the previous night, I had uttered, on the subject
|
|
of the interval just concluded, neither challenge nor hint.
|
|
I had too much, from this moment, my other ideas.
|
|
Yet when he at last arrived, the difficulty of applying them,
|
|
the accumulations of my problem, were brought straight home to me
|
|
by the beautiful little presence on which what had occurred
|
|
had as yet, for the eye, dropped neither stain nor shadow.
|
|
|
|
To mark, for the house, the high state I cultivated I
|
|
decreed that my meals with the boy should be served,
|
|
as we called it, downstairs; so that I had been awaiting
|
|
him in the ponderous pomp of the room outside of the window
|
|
of which I had had from Mrs. Grose, that first scared Sunday,
|
|
my flash of something it would scarce have done to call light.
|
|
Here at present I felt afresh--for I had felt it again and again--
|
|
how my equilibrium depended on the success of my rigid will,
|
|
the will to shut my eyes as tight as possible to the truth
|
|
that what I had to deal with was, revoltingly, against nature.
|
|
I could only get on at all by taking "nature" into my
|
|
confidence and my account, by treating my monstrous
|
|
ordeal as a push in a direction unusual, of course,
|
|
and unpleasant, but demanding, after all, for a fair front,
|
|
only another turn of the screw of ordinary human virtue.
|
|
No attempt, nonetheless, could well require more tact than
|
|
just this attempt to supply, one's self, ALL the nature.
|
|
How could I put even a little of that article into a suppression
|
|
of reference to what had occurred? How, on the other hand, could I
|
|
make reference without a new plunge into the hideous obscure?
|
|
Well, a sort of answer, after a time, had come to me, and it
|
|
was so far confirmed as that I was met, incontestably, by the
|
|
quickened vision of what was rare in my little companion.
|
|
It was indeed as if he had found even now--as he had so often
|
|
found at lessons--still some other delicate way to ease me off.
|
|
Wasn't there light in the fact which, as we shared our solitude,
|
|
broke out with a specious glitter it had never yet quite worn?--
|
|
the fact that (opportunity aiding, precious opportunity which had
|
|
now come) it would be preposterous, with a child so endowed,
|
|
to forego the help one might wrest from absolute intelligence?
|
|
What had his intelligence been given him for but to save him?
|
|
Mightn't one, to reach his mind, risk the stretch of an angular
|
|
arm over his character? It was as if, when we were face
|
|
to face in the dining room, he had literally shown me the way.
|
|
The roast mutton was on the table, and I had dispensed
|
|
with attendance. Miles, before he sat down, stood a moment
|
|
with his hands in his pockets and looked at the joint,
|
|
on which he seemed on the point of passing some humorous judgment.
|
|
But what he presently produced was: "I say, my dear, is she
|
|
really very awfully ill?"
|
|
|
|
"Little Flora? Not so bad but that she'll presently be better.
|
|
London will set her up. Bly had ceased to agree with her.
|
|
Come here and take your mutton."
|
|
|
|
He alertly obeyed me, carried the plate carefully
|
|
to his seat, and, when he was established, went on.
|
|
"Did Bly disagree with her so terribly suddenly?"
|
|
|
|
"Not so suddenly as you might think. One had seen it coming on."
|
|
|
|
"Then why didn't you get her off before?"
|
|
|
|
"Before what?"
|
|
|
|
"Before she became too ill to travel."
|
|
|
|
I found myself prompt. "She's NOT too ill to travel:
|
|
she only might have become so if she had stayed.
|
|
This was just the moment to seize. The journey will dissipate
|
|
the influence"--oh, I was grand!--"and carry it off."
|
|
|
|
"I see, I see"--Miles, for that matter, was grand, too. He settled
|
|
to his repast with the charming little "table manner" that, from the day
|
|
of his arrival, had relieved me of all grossness of admonition.
|
|
Whatever he had been driven from school for, it was not for ugly feeding.
|
|
He was irreproachable, as always, today; but he was unmistakably
|
|
more conscious. He was discernibly trying to take for granted
|
|
more things than he found, without assistance, quite easy;
|
|
and he dropped into peaceful silence while he felt his situation.
|
|
Our meal was of the briefest--mine a vain pretense, and I had the things
|
|
immediately removed. While this was done Miles stood again with his
|
|
hands in his little pockets and his back to me--stood and looked
|
|
out of the wide window through which, that other day, I had seen
|
|
what pulled me up. We continued silent while the maid was with us--
|
|
as silent, it whimsically occurred to me, as some young couple who,
|
|
on their wedding journey, at the inn, feel shy in the presence
|
|
of the waiter. He turned round only when the waiter had left us.
|
|
"Well--so we're alone!"
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
XXIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
"Oh, more or less." I fancy my smile was pale. "Not absolutely.
|
|
We shouldn't like that!" I went on.
|
|
|
|
"No--I suppose we shouldn't. Of course we have the others."
|
|
|
|
"We have the others--we have indeed the others," I concurred.
|
|
|
|
"Yet even though we have them," he returned, still with his
|
|
hands in his pockets and planted there in front of me,
|
|
"they don't much count, do they?"
|
|
|
|
I made the best of it, but I felt wan.
|
|
"It depends on what you call `much'!"
|
|
|
|
"Yes"--with all accommodation--"everything depends!"
|
|
On this, however, he faced to the window again and presently
|
|
reached it with his vague, restless, cogitating step.
|
|
He remained there awhile, with his forehead against the glass,
|
|
in contemplation of the stupid shrubs I knew and the dull
|
|
things of November. I had always my hypocrisy of "work,"
|
|
behind which, now, I gained the sofa. Steadying myself
|
|
with it there as I had repeatedly done at those moments
|
|
of torment that I have described as the moments of my knowing
|
|
the children to be given to something from which I was barred,
|
|
I sufficiently obeyed my habit of being prepared for the worst.
|
|
But an extraordinary impression dropped on me as I
|
|
extracted a meaning from the boy's embarrassed back--
|
|
none other than the impression that I was not barred now.
|
|
This inference grew in a few minutes to sharp intensity
|
|
and seemed bound up with the direct perception that it was
|
|
positively HE who was. The frames and squares of the great
|
|
window were a kind of image, for him, of a kind of failure.
|
|
I felt that I saw him, at any rate, shut in or shut out.
|
|
He was admirable, but not comfortable: I took it in with a
|
|
throb of hope. Wasn't he looking, through the haunted pane,
|
|
for something he couldn't see?--and wasn't it the first time
|
|
in the whole business that he had known such a lapse?
|
|
The first, the very first: I found it a splendid portent.
|
|
It made him anxious, though he watched himself; he had been
|
|
anxious all day and, even while in his usual sweet little
|
|
manner he sat at table, had needed all his small strange
|
|
genius to give it a gloss. When he at last turned round
|
|
to meet me, it was almost as if this genius had succumbed.
|
|
"Well, I think I'm glad Bly agrees with ME!"
|
|
|
|
"You would certainly seem to have seen, these twenty-four hours,
|
|
a good deal more of it than for some time before. I hope,"
|
|
I went on bravely, "that you've been enjoying yourself."
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes, I've been ever so far; all round about--miles and miles away.
|
|
I've never been so free."
|
|
|
|
He had really a manner of his own, and I could only try to keep up with him.
|
|
"Well, do you like it?"
|
|
|
|
He stood there smiling; then at last he put into two words--"Do YOU?"--
|
|
more discrimination than I had ever heard two words contain.
|
|
Before I had time to deal with that, however, he continued as if
|
|
with the sense that this was an impertinence to be softened.
|
|
"Nothing could be more charming than the way you take it, for of
|
|
course if we're alone together now it's you that are alone most.
|
|
But I hope," he threw in, "you don't particularly mind!"
|
|
|
|
"Having to do with you?" I asked. "My dear child, how can I help minding?
|
|
Though I've renounced all claim to your company--you're so beyond me--
|
|
I at least greatly enjoy it. What else should I stay on for?"
|
|
|
|
He looked at me more directly, and the expression of his face,
|
|
graver now, struck me as the most beautiful I had ever found in it.
|
|
"You stay on just for THAT?"
|
|
|
|
"Certainly. I stay on as your friend and from the tremendous
|
|
interest I take in you till something can be done for you
|
|
that may be more worth your while. That needn't surprise you."
|
|
My voice trembled so that I felt it impossible to suppress the shake.
|
|
"Don't you remember how I told you, when I came and sat on your
|
|
bed the night of the storm, that there was nothing in the world I
|
|
wouldn't do for you?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, yes!" He, on his side, more and more visibly nervous, had a tone
|
|
to master; but he was so much more successful than I that, laughing out
|
|
through his gravity, he could pretend we were pleasantly jesting.
|
|
"Only that, I think, was to get me to do something for YOU!"
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"It was partly to get you to do something," I conceded.
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"But, you know, you didn't do it."
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"Oh, yes," he said with the brightest superficial eagerness,
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"you wanted me to tell you something."
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"That's it. Out, straight out. What you have on your mind, you know."
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"Ah, then, is THAT what you've stayed over for?"
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He spoke with a gaiety through which I could still catch the finest
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little quiver of resentful passion; but I can't begin to express
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the effect upon me of an implication of surrender even so faint.
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It was as if what I had yearned for had come at last only to
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astonish me. "Well, yes--I may as well make a clean breast of it.
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it was precisely for that."
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He waited so long that I supposed it for the purpose of repudiating the
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assumption on which my action had been founded; but what he finally said was:
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"Do you mean now--here?"
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"There couldn't be a better place or time." He looked round him uneasily,
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and I had the rare--oh, the queer!--impression of the very first symptom I had
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seen in him of the approach of immediate fear. It was as if he were suddenly
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afraid of me--which struck me indeed as perhaps the best thing to make him.
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Yet in the very pang of the effort I felt it vain to try sternness,
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and I heard myself the next instant so gentle as to be almost grotesque.
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"You want so to go out again?"
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"Awfully!" He smiled at me heroically, and the touching little
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bravery of it was enhanced by his actually flushing with pain.
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He had picked up his hat, which he had brought in, and stood
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twirling it in a way that gave me, even as I was just nearly
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reaching port, a perverse horror of what I was doing.
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To do it in ANY way was an act of violence, for what did
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it consist of but the obtrusion of the idea of grossness
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and guilt on a small helpless creature who had been for me
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a revelation of the possibilities of beautiful intercourse?
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Wasn't it base to create for a being so exquisite a mere
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alien awkwardness? I suppose I now read into our situation
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a clearness it couldn't have had at the time, for I seem to see
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our poor eyes already lighted with some spark of a prevision
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of the anguish that was to come. So we circled about,
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with terrors and scruples, like fighters not daring to close.
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But it was for each other we feared! That kept us a little
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longer suspended and unbruised. "I'll tell you everything,"
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Miles said--"I mean I'll tell you anything you like.
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You'll stay on with me, and we shall both be all right,
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and I WILL tell you--I WILL. But not now."
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"Why not now?"
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My insistence turned him from me and kept him once more at his window
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in a silence during which, between us, you might have heard a pin drop.
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Then he was before me again with the air of a person for whom,
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outside, someone who had frankly to be reckoned with was waiting.
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"I have to see Luke."
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I had not yet reduced him to quite so vulgar a lie, and I felt
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proportionately ashamed. But, horrible as it was, his lies made
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up my truth. I achieved thoughtfully a few loops of my knitting.
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"Well, then, go to Luke, and I'll wait for what you promise.
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Only, in return for that, satisfy, before you leave me,
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one very much smaller request."
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He looked as if he felt he had succeeded enough to be able still
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a little to bargain. "Very much smaller--?"
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"Yes, a mere fraction of the whole. Tell me"--oh, my work preoccupied me,
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and I was offhand!--"if, yesterday afternoon, from the table in the hall,
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you took, you know, my letter."
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XXIV
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My sense of how he received this suffered for a minute from something
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that I can describe only as a fierce split of my attention--
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a stroke that at first, as I sprang straight up, reduced me to
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the mere blind movement of getting hold of him, drawing him close,
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and, while I just fell for support against the nearest piece
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of furniture, instinctively keeping him with his back to the window.
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The appearance was full upon us that I had already had to deal with here:
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Peter Quint had come into view like a sentinel before a prison.
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The next thing I saw was that, from outside, he had reached the window,
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and then I knew that, close to the glass and glaring in through it,
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he offered once more to the room his white face of damnation.
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It represents but grossly what took place within me at the sight
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to say that on the second my decision was made; yet I believe that no
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woman so overwhelmed ever in so short a time recovered her grasp
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of the ACT. It came to me in the very horror of the immediate
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presence that the act would be, seeing and facing what I saw
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and faced, to keep the boy himself unaware. The inspiration--
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I can call it by no other name--was that I felt how voluntarily,
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how transcendently, I MIGHT. It was like fighting with a demon
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for a human soul, and when I had fairly so appraised it I saw how
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the human soul--held out, in the tremor of my hands, at arm's length--
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had a perfect dew of sweat on a lovely childish forehead.
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The face that was close to mine was as white as the face against
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the glass, and out of it presently came a sound, not low nor weak,
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but as if from much further away, that I drank like a waft of fragrance.
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"Yes--I took it."
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At this, with a moan of joy, I enfolded, I drew him close;
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and while I held him to my breast, where I could feel in the sudden
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fever of his little body the tremendous pulse of his little heart,
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I kept my eyes on the thing at the window and saw it move and shift
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its posture. I have likened it to a sentinel, but its slow wheel,
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for a moment, was rather the prowl of a baffled beast.
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My present quickened courage, however, was such that, not too
|
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much to let it through, I had to shade, as it were, my flame.
|
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Meanwhile the glare of the face was again at the window, the scoundrel
|
|
fixed as if to watch and wait. It was the very confidence
|
|
that I might now defy him, as well as the positive certitude,
|
|
by this time, of the child's unconsciousness, that made me go on.
|
|
"What did you take it for?"
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|
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"To see what you said about me."
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"You opened the letter?"
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|
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"I opened it."
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|
|
My eyes were now, as I held him off a little again,
|
|
on Miles's own face, in which the collapse of mockery
|
|
showed me how complete was the ravage of uneasiness.
|
|
What was prodigious was that at last, by my success,
|
|
his sense was sealed and his communication stopped:
|
|
he knew that he was in presence, but knew not of what,
|
|
and knew still less that I also was and that I did know.
|
|
And what did this strain of trouble matter when my eyes
|
|
went back to the window only to see that the air was clear
|
|
again and--by my personal triumph--the influence quenched?
|
|
There was nothing there. I felt that the cause was mine
|
|
and that I should surely get ALL. "And you found nothing!"--
|
|
I let my elation out.
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|
|
He gave the most mournful, thoughtful little headshake. "Nothing."
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"Nothing, nothing!" I almost shouted in my joy.
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|
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"Nothing, nothing," he sadly repeated.
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|
|
I kissed his forehead; it was drenched. "So what have you done with it?"
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|
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"I've burned it."
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|
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"Burned it?" It was now or never. "Is that what you did at school?"
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Oh, what this brought up! "At school?"
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|
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"Did you take letters?--or other things?"
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|
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"Other things?" He appeared now to be thinking of something far
|
|
off and that reached him only through the pressure of his anxiety.
|
|
Yet it did reach him. "Did I STEAL?"
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|
|
I felt myself redden to the roots of my hair as well as wonder if it were
|
|
more strange to put to a gentleman such a question or to see him take it
|
|
with allowances that gave the very distance of his fall in the world.
|
|
"Was it for that you mightn't go back?"
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|
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The only thing he felt was rather a dreary little surprise.
|
|
"Did you know I mightn't go back?"
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|
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"I know everything."
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|
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He gave me at this the longest and strangest look. "Everything?"
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|
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"Everything. Therefore DID you--?" But I couldn't say it again.
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|
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Miles could, very simply. "No. I didn't steal."
|
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|
|
My face must have shown him I believed him utterly; yet my hands--
|
|
but it was for pure tenderness--shook him as if to ask him why,
|
|
if it was all for nothing, he had condemned me to months of torment.
|
|
"What then did you do?"
|
|
|
|
He looked in vague pain all round the top of the room and drew his breath,
|
|
two or three times over, as if with difficulty. He might have been standing
|
|
at the bottom of the sea and raising his eyes to some faint green twilight.
|
|
"Well--I said things."
|
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|
|
"Only that?"
|
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|
|
"They thought it was enough!"
|
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|
|
"To turn you out for?"
|
|
|
|
Never, truly, had a person "turned out" shown so little
|
|
to explain it as this little person! He appeared to weigh
|
|
my question, but in a manner quite detached and almost helpless.
|
|
"Well, I suppose I oughtn't."
|
|
|
|
"But to whom did you say them?"
|
|
|
|
He evidently tried to remember, but it dropped--he had lost it.
|
|
"I don't know!"
|
|
|
|
He almost smiled at me in the desolation of his surrender,
|
|
which was indeed practically, by this time, so complete that I
|
|
ought to have left it there. But I was infatuated--I was blind
|
|
with victory, though even then the very effect that was to have
|
|
brought him so much nearer was already that of added separation.
|
|
"Was it to everyone?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"No; it was only to--" But he gave a sick little headshake.
|
|
"I don't remember their names."
|
|
|
|
"Were they then so many?"
|
|
|
|
"No--only a few. Those I liked."
|
|
|
|
Those he liked? I seemed to float not into clearness, but into
|
|
a darker obscure, and within a minute there had come to me out
|
|
of my very pity the appalling alarm of his being perhaps innocent.
|
|
It was for the instant confounding and bottomless, for if he
|
|
WERE innocent, what then on earth was _I_? Paralyzed, while it lasted,
|
|
by the mere brush of the question, I let him go a little, so that,
|
|
with a deep-drawn sigh, he turned away from me again; which, as he faced
|
|
toward the clear window, I suffered, feeling that I had nothing
|
|
now there to keep him from. "And did they repeat what you said?"
|
|
I went on after a moment.
|
|
|
|
He was soon at some distance from me, still breathing hard and again with
|
|
the air, though now without anger for it, of being confined against his will.
|
|
Once more, as he had done before, he looked up at the dim day as if, of what
|
|
had hitherto sustained him, nothing was left but an unspeakable anxiety.
|
|
"Oh, yes," he nevertheless replied--"they must have repeated them.
|
|
To those THEY liked," he added.
|
|
|
|
There was, somehow, less of it than I had expected; but I turned it over.
|
|
"And these things came round--?"
|
|
|
|
"To the masters? Oh, yes!" he answered very simply.
|
|
"But I didn't know they'd tell."
|
|
|
|
"The masters? They didn't--they've never told.
|
|
That's why I ask you."
|
|
|
|
He turned to me again his little beautiful fevered face.
|
|
"Yes, it was too bad."
|
|
|
|
"Too bad?"
|
|
|
|
"What I suppose I sometimes said. To write home."
|
|
|
|
I can't name the exquisite pathos of the contradiction given to such
|
|
a speech by such a speaker; I only know that the next instant I
|
|
heard myself throw off with homely force: "Stuff and nonsense!"
|
|
But the next after that I must have sounded stern enough.
|
|
"What WERE these things?"
|
|
|
|
My sternness was all for his judge, his executioner; yet it made him
|
|
avert himself again, and that movement made ME, with a single bound
|
|
and an irrepressible cry, spring straight upon him. For there again,
|
|
against the glass, as if to blight his confession and stay his answer,
|
|
was the hideous author of our woe--the white face of damnation.
|
|
I felt a sick swim at the drop of my victory and all the return of my battle,
|
|
so that the wildness of my veritable leap only served as a great betrayal.
|
|
I saw him, from the midst of my act, meet it with a divination,
|
|
and on the perception that even now he only guessed, and that the window
|
|
was still to his own eyes free, I let the impulse flame up to convert
|
|
the climax of his dismay into the very proof of his liberation.
|
|
"No more, no more, no more!" I shrieked, as I tried to press him against me,
|
|
to my visitant.
|
|
|
|
"Is she HERE?" Miles panted as he caught with his sealed eyes
|
|
the direction of my words. Then as his strange "she" staggered
|
|
me and, with a gasp, I echoed it, "Miss Jessel, Miss Jessel!"
|
|
he with a sudden fury gave me back.
|
|
|
|
I seized, stupefied, his supposition--some sequel to what we
|
|
had done to Flora, but this made me only want to show him
|
|
that it was better still than that. "It's not Miss Jessel!
|
|
But it's at the window--straight before us. It's THERE--
|
|
the coward horror, there for the last time!"
|
|
|
|
At this, after a second in which his head made the movement of a
|
|
baffled dog's on a scent and then gave a frantic little shake for air
|
|
and light, he was at me in a white rage, bewildered, glaring vainly
|
|
over the place and missing wholly, though it now, to my sense,
|
|
filled the room like the taste of poison, the wide, overwhelming presence.
|
|
"It's HE?"
|
|
|
|
I was so determined to have all my proof that I flashed into ice
|
|
to challenge him. "Whom do you mean by `he'?"
|
|
|
|
"Peter Quint--you devil!" His face gave again, round the room,
|
|
its convulsed supplication. "WHERE?"
|
|
|
|
They are in my ears still, his supreme surrender of the name
|
|
and his tribute to my devotion. "What does he matter now,
|
|
my own?--what will he EVER matter? _I_ have you,"
|
|
I launched at the beast, "but he has lost you forever!"
|
|
Then, for the demonstration of my work, "There, THERE!"
|
|
I said to Miles.
|
|
|
|
But he had already jerked straight round, stared, glared again,
|
|
and seen but the quiet day. With the stroke of the loss I was
|
|
so proud of he uttered the cry of a creature hurled over an abyss,
|
|
and the grasp with which I recovered him might have been that
|
|
of catching him in his fall. I caught him, yes, I held him--
|
|
it may be imagined with what a passion; but at the end
|
|
of a minute I began to feel what it truly was that I held.
|
|
We were alone with the quiet day, and his little heart,
|
|
dispossessed, had stopped.
|
|
|
|
|
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End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Turn of the Screw
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