CHAPTER X
THE ANGEL
It was many hours before she awoke and in all those hours she neverdreamed. She only slept and slept and slept in total unconsciousness,wrapt about in the silence of her desert.
She awoke at length quite fully, quite suddenly, to a sense of appallingloneliness, to a desolation unutterable. She opened her eyes wide upon adarkness that could be felt, and almost cried aloud with the terror ofit. For a few palpitating moments it seemed to her that the mostdreadful thing that could possibly happen to her had come upon herunawares.
And then, even as she started up in a wild horror, a voice spoke to her,a hand touched her, and her fear was stayed.
"Stella!" the voice said, and steady fingers came up out of the darknessand closed upon her arm.
Her heart gave one great leap within her, and was still. She did notspeak in answer, for she could not. She could only sit in the darknessand wait. If it were a dream, it would pass--ah, so swiftly! If it werereality, surely, surely he would speak again!
He spoke--softly through the silence. "I don't want to startle you. Areyou startled? I've put out the lamp. You are not afraid?"
Her voice came back to her; her heart jerked on, beating strangely,spasmodically, like a maimed thing. "Am I awake?" she said. "Isit--really--you?"
"Yes," he said. "Can you listen to me a moment? You won't be afraid?"
She quivered at the repeated question. "Everard--no!"
He was silent then, as if he did not know how to continue. And she,finding her strength, leaned to him in the darkness, feeling for him,still hardly believing that it was not a dream.
He took her wandering hand and held it imprisoned. The firmness of hisgrasp reassured her, but it came to her that his hands were cold; andshe wondered.
"I have something to say to you," he said.
She sat quite still in his hold, but it frightened her. "Where are you?"she whispered.
"I am just--kneeling by your side," he said. "Don't tremble--or beafraid! There is nothing to frighten you. Stella," his voice came almostin a whisper. "Hanani--the _ayah_--told you something in the ruinedtemple at Khanmulla. Can you remember what it was?"
"Ah!" she said. "Do you mean about--Ralph Dacre?"
"I do mean that," he said. "I don't know if you actually believed it.It may have sounded--fantastic. But--it was true."
"Ah!" she said again. And then she knew why he had turned out the lamp.It was that he might not see her face when he told her--or she his.
He went on; his hold upon her had tightened, but she knew that he wasunconscious of it. It was as if he clung to her in anguish--though sheheard no sign of suffering in his low voice. "I have done the utmost tokeep the truth from you--but Fate has been against me all through. Isent him away from you in the first place because I heard--toolate--that he had a wife in England. I married you because--" he pausedmomentarily--"ah well, that doesn't come into the story," he said. "Imarried you, believing you free. Then came Bernard, and told me that thewife--Dacre's wife--had died just before his marriage to you. That alsocame--too late."
He stopped again, and she knew that his head was bowed upon his armsthough she could not free her hand to touch it.
"You know the rest," he said, and his voice came to her oddly broken andunfamiliar. "I kept it from you. I couldn't bear the thought of yourfacing--that,--especially after--after the birth of--the child. Evenwhen you found out I had tricked you in that native rig-out, I couldn'tendure the thought of your knowing. I nearly killed myself that night.It seemed the only way. But Bernard stopped me. I told him the truth.He said I was wrong not to tell you. But--somehow--I couldn't."
"Oh, I wish--I wish you had," she breathed.
"Do you? Well,--I couldn't. It's hard enough to tell you now. You wereso wonderful, so beautiful, and they had flung mud at you from thebeginning. I thought I had made you safe, dear, instead of--dragging youdown."
"Everard!" Her voice was quick and passionate. She made a sudden effortand freed one hand; but he caught it again sharply.
"No, you mustn't, Stella! I haven't finished. Wait!"
His voice compelled her; she submitted hardly knowing that she did so.
"It is over now," he said. "The fellow is dead. But, Stella,--he hadfound out--what I had found out. And he was on his way to you. He meantto--claim you."
She shuddered--a hard, convulsive shudder--as if some loathsome thinghad touched her. "But--I would never have gone back," she said.
"No," he answered grimly, "you wouldn't. I was here, and I should haveshot him. They saved me that trouble."
"You were--here!" she said.
"Yes,--much nearer to you than you imagined." Almost curtly he answered."Did you think I would leave you at the mercy of those devils? You!" Hestopped himself sharply. "No I was here to protect you--and I wouldhave done it--though I should have shot myself afterwards. Even Bernardwould have seen the force of that. But it didn't come to pass that way.It wasn't intended that it should. Well, it is over. There are not manywho know--only Bernard, Tommy, and Ralston. They are going--ifpossible--to keep it dark, to suppress his name. I told them they must."His voice rang suddenly harsh, but softened again immediately. "That'sall, dear--or nearly all. I hope it hasn't shocked you unutterably. Ithink the secret is safe anyhow, so you won't have--that--to face. I'mgoing now. I'll send--Peter--to light the lamp and bring you somethingto eat. And you'll undress, won't you, and go to bed? It's late."
He made as if he would rise, but her hands turned swiftly in his, turnedand held him fast.
"Everard--Everard, why should you go?" she whispered tensely into thedarkness that hid his face.
He yielded in a measure to her hold, but he would not suffer himself tobe drawn nearer.
"Why?" she said again insistently.
He hesitated. "I think," he said slowly "that you will find an answer tothat question--possibly more than one--when you have had time to thinkit over."
"What do you mean?" she breathed.
"Must I put it into words?" he said.
She heard the pain in his voice, but for the first time she passed itby unheeded. "Yes, tell me!" she said. "I must know."
He was silent for a little, as if mustering his forces. Then, his handstight upon hers, he spoke. "In the first place, you are Dacre's widow,and not--my wife."
She quivered in his hold. "And then?" she whispered.
"And then," he said, "our baby is dead, so you are free fromall--obligations."
Her hands clenched hard upon his. "Is that all?"
"No." With sudden passion he answered her. "There are two more reasonswhy I should go. One is--that I have made your life a hell on earth. Youhave said it, and I know it to be true. Ah, you had better let mego--and go quickly. For your own sake--you had better!"
But she ignored the warning, holding him almost fiercely. "And the lastreason?" she said.
He was silent for a few seconds, and in his silence there was somethingof an electric quality, something that pierced and scorched yetstrangely drew her. "Someone else can tell you that," he said at length."It isn't that I am a broken man. I know that wouldn't affect you oneway or another. It is that I have done a thing that you would hate--yetthat I would do again to-morrow if the need arose. You can ask Ralstonwhat it is! Say I told you to! He knows."
"But I ask you," she said, and still her hands gripped his. "Everard,why don't you tell me? Are you--afraid to tell me?"
"No," he said.
"Then answer me!" she said, her breathing sharp and uneven. "Tell me thetruth! Make me understand you--once and for all!"
"You have always understood me," he said.
"No--no!" she protested.
"Well, nearly always," he amended. "As long as you have known mylove--you have known me. My love for you is myself--the immortal part.The rest--doesn't count."
"Ah!" she said, and suddenly the very soul of her rose up and spoke."Then you needn't tell me any more, dear love--dear love. I don't needto hear it. It
doesn't matter. It can't make any difference. Nothingever can again, for, as you say, nothing else counts. Go if youmust,--but if you do--I shall follow you--I shall follow you--to theworld's end."
"Stella!" he said.
"I mean it," she told him, and her voice throbbed with a fiery forcethat was deeper than passion, stronger than aught human. "You are mineand I am yours. God knows, dear,--God knows that is all that mattersnow. I didn't understand before. I do now, I think--suffering has taughtme--many things. Perhaps it is--His Angel."
"The Angel with the Flaming Sword," he said, under his breath.
"But the Sword is turned away," she said. "The way is open."
He got to his feet abruptly. "Wait!" he said. "Before you saythat--wait!"
He freed himself from her hold gently but very decidedly. She knew thatfor a second he stood close above her with arms outflung before heturned away. Then there came the rasp of a match, a sudden flare in thedarkness. She looked to see his face--and uttered a cry.
It was Hanani, the veiled _ayah_, who stooped to kindle the lamp....