The Rainbow - Page 45/493

She did not know this, she did not understand. They had

looked at each other, and had accepted each other. It was so,

then there was nothing to balk at, it was complete between

them.

At the wedding, his face was stiff and expressionless. He

wanted to drink, to get rid of his forethought and afterthought,

to set the moment free. But he could not. The suspense only

tightened at his heart. The jesting and joviality and jolly,

broad insinuation of the guests only coiled him more. He could

not hear. That which was impending obsessed him, he could not

get free.

She sat quiet, with a strange, still smile. She was not

afraid. Having accepted him, she wanted to take him, she

belonged altogether to the hour, now. No future, no past, only

this, her hour. She did not even notice him, as she sat beside

him at the head of the table. He was very near, their coming

together was close at hand. What more!

As the time came for all the guests to go, her dark face was

softly lighted, the bend of her head was proud, her grey eyes

clear and dilated, so that the men could not look at her, and

the women were elated by her, they served her. Very wonderful

she was, as she bade farewell, her ugly wide mouth smiling with

pride and recognition, her voice speaking softly and richly in

the foreign accent, her dilated eyes ignoring one and all the

departing guests. Her manner was gracious and fascinating, but

she ignored the being of him or her to whom she gave her

hand.

And Brangwen stood beside her, giving his hearty handshake to

his friends, receiving their regard gratefully, glad of their

attention. His heart was tormented within him, he did not try to

smile. The time of his trial and his admittance, his Gethsemane

and his Triumphal Entry in one, had come now.

Behind her, there was so much unknown to him. When he

approached her, he came to such a terrible painful unknown. How

could he embrace it and fathom it? How could he close his arms

round all this darkness and hold it to his breast and give

himself to it? What might not happen to him? If he stretched and

strained for ever he would never be able to grasp it all, and to

yield himself naked out of his own hands into the unknown power!

How could a man be strong enough to take her, put his arms round

her and have her, and be sure he could conquer this awful

unknown next his heart? What was it then that she was, to which

he must also deliver himself up, and which at the same time he

must embrace, contain?

He was to be her husband. It was established so. And he

wanted it more than he wanted life, or anything. She stood

beside him in her silk dress, looking at him strangely, so that

a certain terror, horror took possession of him, because she was

strange and impending and he had no choice. He could not bear to

meet her look from under her strange, thick brows.