Claverhouse’s words gave him a sense of surprise.
“Well, Soulsby, I have done little since I saw you last; but I am going to get to wasting the paper to-morrow. A holiday is the thing for courting days, even for a scribbling old fellow; but I am beginning to long for the scribbling. And I must be at my other business — the earning of the bread. I have a reason for doing that in earnest.” He laid his hand on Perdita’s.
Soulsby looked at Perdita.
“You — you take great interest in your husband’s work, Mrs Claverhouse?”
“Oh, yes; it is everything to me,” said Perdita, with a soul-sinking feeling, that she had no choice but to give this account of her seeking this life.
“You — you have had a long journey,” said Soulsby, with a gentle deference, in which a note of perplexity was barely suppressed. “You are weary, I fear. I should not have disturbed you to-night.”
“Oh, no; I should have been sorry for you not to come. It has been my great wish to meet you,” said Perdita, speaking in her weariness simply for the ears of her husband.
“Ah, little one, you are certainly weary. Your voice is quite faint,” said Claverhouse. “Go up to your rest. Do not stay for me. Julia will do what you need for you.”
Perdita gave the guest her hand in silence, not daring to speak, and passed through the door, as he held it open; her husband remaining in his place.
Soulsby walked back slowly to his seat.
“Your wife looks very frail,” he said, in the easier tones which came to him with disturbed feeling.
“Yes, she is a fragile creature,” said Claverhouse. “She has earned her living with her brains; and it has been a lot unfit for her. I am thankful to feel her freed from the need to toil.”
“She — I suppose — what will she do while you are working?” said Soulsby, struggling with the instinct to be blunt. “She — she has interests of her own, of course. I–I meant — your life is hardly one which will bring her the usual pleasures of youth.”
“No, no, indeed; many young creatures would find it a dreary lot,” said Claverhouse. “But she is different from others. She has no thought for what is called pleasure. If she could, she would not seek it. Her life has been monotony and effort; and it is enough for her to be free. She is a lover of books in her woman’s way — an innocent lover as yet — prettily blind; but I shall teach her to understand. There is no one else I could see in my mother’s place.”
“She — you — she will enter into your work, as you do it?” said Soulsby.
“I shall teach her,” said Claverhouse. “Little by little she will learn; and she will find it no burden to help me, when the years are heavy.”
Soulsby was silent. He knew by the voice what was meant by the heaviness of the years. His misgiving for the helpless thing, he had seemed to see sacrificed in blindness, was lost in dread for the other — helpless no less — whose good he held of greatest worth. No word had passed between him and the playwright of the latter’s failing sight; though the thoughts of each had long been read by the other. In this strange experience of meeting his friend on his marriage day, he felt an impulse to break the long reserve.
“Sigismund,” he said — he had never used the baptismal name except in moments of significance—” should you not consult an oculist?”
Claverhouse gave a start, and was silent; his features contorting. “Have I not consulted one?” he muttered. “Have I not made my appeal to every one I have heard of? You think me a child or a madman. Which am I, because I am blind? Should I let my life slip from me, without putting out one hand to save it?”
“What?” said Soulsby, in low, agitated tones.
“What?” said Claverhouse with bitter mimicry, — continuing after the word in a broken voice. “Do you want me to explain — to put it into words?”
Soulsby was silent, his over — sensitiveness holding him tongue-tied, his face telling of deep trouble.
Claverhouse was also silent; keeping his eyes averted from the face of his friend, as though with shrinking to show himself anew the vanity of seeking to read what it told. Minutes passed before the silence was broken.
“I am going to begin to write to-morrow,” he said, with the constraint of passing to an easy subject from one which has moved unwilling emotion. “The conception I told you of has grown. I shall be able to work it out quickly.”
Soulsby responded in a similar spirit; and the talk went on as of old, with the sad, deep difference beneath, till the minute for parting.
As Claverhouse rose to bid his friend farewell, he seemed to hesitate, as though on the point of some words.
“I–I have faced the future, as far as what we spoke of goes,” he said, with a painful effort to save the next meeting from cloud. “It has taken me years to do it; but it is done now. I shall just go on, finding my happiness in the work that yields it; and what help I shall grow to need my wife will give. Do not let this trouble you, Soulsby. Come to-morrow at the same hour.”
Soulsby dared not ask if the sad-faced wife knew of what was before her. He wrung the playwright’s hand, as he had never wrung it before; seeking to give in the grasp what his lips could not speak, and his face spoke vainly; and Claverhouse turned to the chimney-piece, and covered his face with his hand.
In the upper chamber Perdita lay, with sleepless, suffering eyes. When she entered the room, she had sunk on her knees by the bed; and in the relief of solitude shed the tears of her weariness of body and soul. But as the shallower griefs were wept away, the others that were not to be met by tears, seemed to press more heavily. It was before her — and it had never been faced — the living the years out of sight of the creature, whose consciousness, mirrored in her own, had hitherto sustained her in her struggling. She rose to her feet, and stood rigid and dry-eyed, while her being seemed going out in unimaginable yearning; until the thought that her husband might be with her, with question of her tardiness in seeking rest, forced her to the effort of ceasing from struggle before she was exhausted, and the unconscious respite of bodily movement. She put off her garments and laid them aside; and making signs about the room of what she would have done in quietude of spirit, lay down in the bed for further fellowship with grief As her starving passion became exhausted by its own outcrying, she lay yielding her dulled powers to a survey of the life before her — the life in which the domestic ordering which had arrested her woman’s eagerness, had grown to a sordid labour in a cramping sphere, to be shrunk from, and left to serving hands; in which the content of knowing herself watched as the fellow of genius, had grown to shame in walking in sight, that had marked the conditions of this lot; in which the sustaining effort of feigning grasp of her husband’s aims, for maintenance in his eyes of the character she had sought, had grown to a stretch of wearying struggle, spreading over the weeks without respite or goal.
When her husband came to the room, she feigned sleep without effort; finding it the one thing yet in her power, to lie as if life was gone from her limbs. He came to the bedside, and caressed her hair, and kissed her lips. She felt the wandering touch of his hands, and his lips groping for her own; but she made no response in body or mind, almost feeling that she had lost the power of stirring or feeling a pang. Through the hours of the night she lay thus; fearing to move or weep, lest she should rouse the sleeper at her side, and dreading sleep for herself, that it must bring a new awakening to all she now had power to face.
At the morning meal she sat sick and silent, unable to swallow food, or to care for Julia’s eyes and thoughts. It was not till it ended, that she awoke to necessity, and forced herself to bend before it.