The Woodlanders - Page 263/314

He replied, yearningly, "I--I don't like you to go away."

"Oh, Giles," said she, "I know--I know! But--I am a woman, and you are

a man. I cannot speak more plainly. 'Whatsoever things are pure,

whatsoever things are of good report'--you know what is in my mind,

because you know me so well."

"Yes, Grace, yes. I do not at all mean that the question between us

has not been settled by the fact of your marriage turning out

hopelessly unalterable. I merely meant--well, a feeling no more."

"In a week, at the outside, I should be discovered if I stayed here:

and I think that by law he could compel me to return to him."

"Yes; perhaps you are right. Go when you wish, dear Grace."

His last words that evening were a hopeful remark that all might be

well with her yet; that Mr. Fitzpiers would not intrude upon her life,

if he found that his presence cost her so much pain. Then the window

was closed, the shutters folded, and the rustle of his footsteps died

away.

No sooner had she retired to rest that night than the wind began to

rise, and, after a few prefatory blasts, to be accompanied by rain.

The wind grew more violent, and as the storm went on, it was difficult

to believe that no opaque body, but only an invisible colorless thing,

was trampling and climbing over the roof, making branches creak,

springing out of the trees upon the chimney, popping its head into the

flue, and shrieking and blaspheming at every corner of the walls. As

in the old story, the assailant was a spectre which could be felt but

not seen. She had never before been so struck with the devilry of a

gusty night in a wood, because she had never been so entirely alone in

spirit as she was now. She seemed almost to be apart from herself--a

vacuous duplicate only. The recent self of physical animation and

clear intentions was not there.

Sometimes a bough from an adjoining tree was swayed so low as to smite

the roof in the manner of a gigantic hand smiting the mouth of an

adversary, to be followed by a trickle of rain, as blood from the

wound. To all this weather Giles must be more or less exposed; how

much, she did not know.

At last Grace could hardly endure the idea of such a hardship in

relation to him. Whatever he was suffering, it was she who had caused

it; he vacated his house on account of her. She was not worth such

self-sacrifice; she should not have accepted it of him. And then, as

her anxiety increased with increasing thought, there returned upon her

mind some incidents of her late intercourse with him, which she had

heeded but little at the time. The look of his face--what had there

been about his face which seemed different from its appearance as of

yore? Was it not thinner, less rich in hue, less like that of ripe

autumn's brother to whom she had formerly compared him? And his voice;

she had distinctly noticed a change in tone. And his gait; surely it

had been feebler, stiffer, more like the gait of a weary man. That

slight occasional noise she had heard in the day, and attributed to

squirrels, it might have been his cough after all.