“He cannot say, my dear. We can’t any of us,” said Godfrey. “But I shall be able to in the morning. I know that. I shall be in every hour to see.”
Godfrey sent word on the morrow that prayers would not be held, implying that concentration appeared unthinkable. He came to the breakfast table later than usual, and in a more deliberate manner, preoccupied to the exclusion of daily custom.
“Well, does the opinion of all of you agree with mine this morning? I don’t think there is much change. I can’t say that I do.”
“The absence of mind has become almost a trance,” said Matthew. “She seemed to be sleeping most of the night. I went in at three and at five. Gregory and Griselda thought she had slept. Unless she was just lying in a coma, with closed eyes. What did you think?”
“Oh, well, I can hardly say. I was very exhausted,” said his father, pulling back his chair with his eyes on it.
“What time in the night did you first see her?” said Matthew. “I met Gregory in her room at about three. I hadn’t been in until then.”
“Yes, yes, I think you are right. I don’t think there is much difference between her state and a trance. A trance, a coma, a sort of stupor is what I should call it.”
“I want to know how gradually the change came on.”
“I can hardly say. I slept a very exhausted sleep. You think there is a definite change, then? That is what you would say?”
“Undoubtedly, by now. But I should like to tell Dufferin when it began. What was the earliest hour you saw her?”
“When I saw her just now, I thought there was a change certainly,” said Godfrey.
Griselda let a sound of laughter escape.
“I wish I had the spirit to laugh,” said her father, regarding her with knitted brows.
“I know how you must wish it,” said Jermyn, “from being in the same situation. This is not an occasion when a night of unbroken rest makes for self-confidence in the morning.”
“Oh, well, no, it is not. That is the truth about me,” said Godfrey, his voice breaking out towards fullness. “I slept like a man recovering from sickness, and that in effect was what I was doing. The strain of submitting to this cannot be supported easily. Every ounce of my energy was drained out. I hadn’t enough, after what I had been through, to raise my head from the pillow. It might have been me and not your mother in a trance, for all the difference there was.”
“Unfortunately there was a fundamental difference,” said Matthew.
“Unfortunately? Well, I don’t know what you mean by that. I should have thought you would be glad to have one of your parents in a fit state. How would you like to face what is on us now, without me at the helm, or somewhere in the background where I could be relied upon?”
“As absolutely as anywhere,” said Matthew.
“Yes, well, have it as you will. Somewhere in the background I said, didn’t I? It is a good thing that some of us had a good night, and are not in a state of nerves this morning. Well, what arrangements are you going to make, Matthew, since you are at the helm, and not I?”
“I thought I would go after breakfast and bring Dufferin back.”
“Yes, do, my dear boy. It is you at the helm indeed. If any two people can put things right for us, they are you and our friend, the doctor.”
“We can only tell where they are wrong,” said Matthew.
“Ah, well, that is half the battle,” said his father, “to know where things are wrong. To set them right is a small step after that.”
“We could do a great deal if that were so,” said Matthew.
“You are really worried, my son?”
“Yes, I am, Father.”
Godfrey rose and paced the room in simple, open dissatisfaction with fate. When the carriage returned, he gave a sigh that seemed to hold relief, since this feeling must now supervene.
“Well, whatever is coming upon us, we shall know it now. Our time of suspense is over. And suspense is the worst part. Reality is as nothing to it. We can feel the worst is behind.”
He conducted Dufferin and Matthew to Harriet’s room, and Griselda and the younger brothers remained below.
“Who would you rather was ill, Mother or Father?” said Gregory, setting himself to pass the time. “You would all rather that Father was ill, and that you had a respite from Mother.”
“That is near enough,” said Jermyn.
“And I would rather it all came true of Father,” said Gregory. “So Mother is first.”
“There is Matthew’s vote to be taken,” said Griselda.
“Why does Matthew hate Mother?” said Gregory.
“Well, you must know, as you know all,” said his brother.
“Because she does not admire him,” said Gregory.
“She does not admire any of us,” said Griselda.
“She does,” said Gregory. “You and me. And Jermyn up to a point.”
“She loves you the most,” said Griselda.
“Love does not count like admiration,” said Gregory. “She loves Matthew. Children hate parents who love and do not admire them.”
“But not parents children?” said Griselda.
“Children never admire their parents,” said Gregory. “Parents have nothing deeper than love.”
“You admire Mother,” said Jermyn.
“Yes, and sometimes Father,” said Gregory. “But I am very unlike other people.”
“Not as much as you think,” said Jermyn.
“No, that could hardly be; but still very unlike,” said Gregory. “So unlike that I have not found these moments like hours. They were not like hours. They are over. I have helped you through them.”
The three men came from the room above, Godfrey walking first.
“Well, Doctor, we are here together prepared for what you have to say to us. We know that in the kindness of your heart you would spare us; but we ask you to tell us the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Strong in the faith we share with her upstairs, we will bear ourselves worthily. You need not fear that the flicker of an eyelid will betray us.”
“It is a mental breakdown,” said Dufferin. “Her heredity is against her. She got by degrees into a nervous state, and it went from bad to worse, as you all know. The climax came when she made up her mind to end her life. The decision in itself must have been a terrible strain, and she was not in a condition to bear a strain. Very few lives include one on that scale. Then the shock of realising that she had done it, and could not face it, was too much for her mind. It was at once the last and the worst thing. We cannot know what that moment meant. It is not in us to guess what it was.”
“Is there hope that she may get well?” said Griselda.
“Yes, great hope; I think it is almost a certainty. It will take time, possibly years, but I do not think it will be years. We will have her moved to a suitable place. It will be better for her, and fairer to her in the end. You will see that it will, when you have a chance to consider. The brain doctor will come down to-morrow, but he can only say the same.”
“No, Doctor, no, I refuse to sanction it,” said Godfrey. “I will countenance nothing that throws any doubt upon my confidence in you. I have in you great, complete and perfect faith. I will not be a party to any slur cast upon it.”
“It is no slur; it is the usual thing. Brain disease is not what 1 do the most at. You can show your faith by giving me a free hand. The other man will come and tell you what I have.”
“He will, Doctor,” said Godfrey. “We shall not need to give him an ear, but you may do with us what you will. We bow to any decision of yours.”
“Your mother is not suffering, you know,” said Dufferin, looking at Griselda’s face. “She will not suffer in body or mind, even when she begins to recover, as I believe she will. She will not know in what way she has been ill, until she is well. Her suffering is past. You saw and talked to her after that.”