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His eyes narrowed. "I must remind you," he said, "that I am not a boy. I will do what seems to me right,--right?" he interrupted himself, "why is it you can't see that it is right? Can't you realize that Elizabeth is _mine?_ It is amazing to me that you can't see that Nature gives her to me, by a Law that is greater than any human law that was ever made!"
"The animals know that law," she said. He would not hear her: "That unspeakable scoundrel stole her; he stole her just as much as if he had drugged her and kidnapped her. Yes; I take my own!"
His voice rang through the house; Elizabeth, in her room, s.h.i.+vering with excitement, wondering what they were saying, those two--heard the jar of furious sound, and crept, trembling, halfway down-stairs.
"I take my own," he repeated, "and I will make her happy; she belongs in my arms, if, my G.o.d! we die the next day!"
"Oh," said Helena Richie, suddenly sobbing, "what _am_ I to do? what am I to do?" As she spoke Elizabeth entered. David's start of dismay, his quick protest, "Go back, dear; don't, don't get into this!" was dominated by his mother's cry of relief; she rose from her chair and ran to Elizabeth, holding out entreating hands. "You will not let him be so mad, Elizabeth? You will not let him be so bad?"
"Mother, for Heaven's sake, stop!" David implored her; "this is awful!"
"He is not bad," Elizabeth said, in a low voice, pa.s.sing those outstretched hands without a look. All her old antagonism to an untempted nature seemed to leap into her face. "I heard you talking, and I came down. I could not let you reproach David."
"Haven't I the right to reproach him?--to save him from dishonoring himself as well as you?"
"You must not use that word!" Elizabeth cried out, trembling all over. "David is not dishonorable."
"Not dishonorable! Do you say there is nothing dishonorable in taking the wife of another man?"
"Elizabeth," David said, quietly, putting his arm around her, "my mother is very excited. We are not going to talk any more to- night. Do go up-stairs, dear." His one thought was to get her out of the room; it had been dreadful enough to struggle with his mother alone--power and pa.s.sion and youth, against terror and weakness. But to struggle in Elizabeth's presence would be shocking. Not, he a.s.sured himself, that he had the slightest misgiving as to the effect upon her of the arguments to which he had been obliged to listen, but...
"Do leave us, dearest," he said, in a low voice; the misgiving which he denied had driven the color out of his face.
His mother raised her hand with abrupt command: "No, Elizabeth must hear what I have to say." She heard it unmoved; the entreaty not to wound her uncle's love, and hurt Nannie's pride, and betray old Miss White's trust, did not touch her. All she said was, "I am sorry; but I can't help it. David wants me."
Then Helena Richie turned again to her son. "How do you mean to support your mistress, David? Of course the scandal will end your career."
Instantly Elizabeth quivered; the apprehension in her eyes made his words stumble: "There--there are other things than my profession. I am not afraid that I cannot support my _wife_."
But that flicker of alarm in Elizabeth's eyes had caught Helena Richie's attention. "Why, Elizabeth," she said, in an astonished voice. "_You love him!_" Then she added, simply: "Forgive me." Her words were without meaning to the other two, but they brought a burst of hope into her entreaty: "Then you won't ruin him! I know you won't ruin my boy--if you love him."
Elizabeth flinched: "David! I told you--that is what I--"
He caught her hand and pressed it to his mouth. "Darling, she doesn't understand."
"I _do_ understand!" his mother said. She paused for a breathless moment, and stood gripping the table, looking with dilating eyes and these two, who, loving each other, were yet preparing to murder Love. "I thank G.o.d," she said, and the elation in her face was almost joy; "I thank G.o.d, Elizabeth, that I understand the disgrace such wickedness will bring! No honest man will trust him; no decent woman will respect you! And listen, Elizabeth: even _you_ will not really trust him; and he will never entirely respect you!"
Elizabeth slowly drew her hand from David's--and instantly he knew that she was frightened. What! Was he to lose her again? He shook with rage. When under that panic storm of words, that menace of distrust and disgrace, Elizabeth, in an agony of uncertainty, hid her face in her hands, David could have killed the robber who was trying to tear her from him. He burst into denunciation of the littleness which could regard their course in any other way than he did himself. He had no pity because his a.s.sailant was his mother. He gave no quarter because she was a woman; she was an enemy! an enemy who had stolen in out of the night to rob him of his lately won treasure. "Don't listen to her," he ended, hoa.r.s.ely; "she doesn't know what she is talking about!"
"But, David, that was what I said. I said it would be bad for you; she says it will ruin you--"
"It is a lie!" he said.
It was nearly three o'clock. They were all at the breaking-point of anger and terror.
"Elizabeth," Helena Richie implored, "if you love him, are you willing to destroy him? You could not bear to have me, his mother, speak of his dishonor; how about letting the world speak of it--if you love him?"
"David," Elizabeth said again, her shaking hands on his arm; "you hear what she says? Perhaps she is right. Oh, I think she is right! What shall I do?"
The entreaty was the entreaty of a child, a frightened, bewildered child. Helena Richie caught her breath; for a single strange moment she forgot her agony of fear for her son; the woman in her was stronger than the mother in her; some obscure impulse ranged her with this girl, as if against a common enemy.
"My dear, my dear!" she said, "he shall not have you. I will save you."
But Elizabeth was not listening. "David, if I should injure you"--
"You will ruin him," his mother repeated.
David gave her a deadly look. "You will kill me, Elizabeth, unless you come to me," he said, roughly. "Do you want to rob me again?--You've done it once," he reminded her; love made him brutal.
There was a moment of silence. The eyes of the mother and son crossed like swords. Elizabeth, standing between them, s.h.i.+vered; then slowly she turned to David, and held out her hands, her open palms falling at her sides with a gesture of complete and pitiful surrender. "Very well, David. I won't do it again. I won't hurt you again. I will do whatever you tell me."
David caught her in his arms. His mother trembled with despair; the absolute immovability of these two was awful!
"Elizabeth, he is selfish and wicked! David, have you no manhood?
Shame on you!" Contempt seemed her last resource; it did not touch him. "Wait two days," she implored him; "one day, even--"
"I told you we are going to-morrow," he said. He was urging Elizabeth gently from the room, but at his mother's voice she paused.
"Suppose," Helena Richie was saying--"suppose that Blair does not give you a divorce?"
Elizabeth looked into David's eyes silently.
"And," his mother said, "when David gets tired of you--what then?"
"Mother!"
"Men do tire of such women, Elizabeth. What then?"
"I am not afraid of that," the girl said.
The room was very still. The two looking into each other's eyes needed no words; the battling mother had apparently reached the end of effort. Yet it was not the end. As she stood there a slow illumination grew in her face--the knowledge, tragic and triumphant, that if Love would save others, itself it cannot save! ... "I'm not afraid that he will tire of me," Elizabeth had said; and David's mother, looking at him with ineffable compa.s.sion, said, very gently:
"I was not afraid of that, once, myself."
That was all. She was standing up, clinging to the table; her face gray, her chin shaking. They neither of them grasped the sense of her words; then suddenly David caught his breath:
"What did you say?"
"I said--" She stopped. "Oh, my poor David, I wouldn't tell you if I could help it; if only there was any other way! But there isn't. I have tried, oh, I have tried every other way." She put her hands over her face for an instant, then looked at him.
"David, I said that _I_ was not afraid, once, myself, that _my_ lover would tire of me." There was absolute silence in the room. "But he did, Elizabeth. He did. He did."
Then David said, "I don't understand."
"Yes, you do; you understand that a man once talked to me just as you are talking to Elizabeth; he said he would marry me when I got my divorce. I think he meant it--just as you mean it, now. At any rate, I believed him. Just as Elizabeth believes you."
David Richie stepped back violently; his whole face shuddered.
"You?" he said, "my mother? No!--no!--no!"
And his mother, gathering up her strength, cringing like some faithful dog struck across the face, pointed at him with one shaking hand.