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Trent looked at him blankly. It seemed as though he had not heard the question, or, at any rate, had not taken in its meaning.
"What did you say?" he muttered, his brows contracting painfully.
Miles slung the various packages with which he was burdened on to the ground, and leaned up leisurely against the gatepost. It was characteristic of him that, although the day was never long enough for the work he crowded into it, he could always find time to give a helping hand to a pal with his back against the wall.
"Out with it, man!" he said. "What's up?"
Slowly recognition came back in the other's eyes.
"What I might have antic.i.p.ated," he answered, at last, in a curious flat voice, devoid of expression. "I've sunk a degree or two lower in Sara's estimation since the war broke out."
Miles regarded him quietly for a moment, a queer, half-humorous glint in his eyes.
"I suppose she doesn't know you've half-beggared yourself, helping on the financial side?"
"A man could hardly do less, could he?" he returned awkwardly. "But if she did know--which she doesn't--it would make no earthly difference."
"Then--it's because you're not soldiering?"
"Exactly. I've not volunteered."
"Well"--composedly--"why don't you?"
Trent laughed shortly.
"That's my affair."
"With your physique you could w.a.n.gle the age limit," pursued Miles imperturbably.
"I should have to 'w.a.n.gle' a good deal more than that,"--harshly. "Have you forgotten that I was chucked from the Army?"
"There's such a thing as enlisting under another name."
"There is--and then of running up against one of the old crowd and being recognized! It isn't so easy to lose your ident.i.ty. I've had my lesson on that."
Miles looked away quickly. The hard, implacable stare of the other man's eyes, with the blazing defiance, hurt him. It spoke too poignantly of a bitterness that had eaten into the heart. But he had put his hand to the plough, and he refused to turn back.
"Wouldn't it"--he spoke with a sudden gentleness, the gentleness of the surgeon handling a torn limb--"wouldn't it help to straighten things out with Sara?"
"If it did, it would only make matters worse. No. Take it from me, Herrick, that soldiering is the one thing of all others I can't do."
He turned away as though to signify that the discussion was at an end.
"I don't see it," persisted Miles. "On the contrary, it's the one thing that might make her believe in you. In spite of that Indian Frontier business."
Garth swung suddenly round, a dull, dangerous gleam in his eyes. But Miles bore the savage glance serenely. He had applied the spur with intention. The other was suffering--suffering intolerably--in a dumb silence that shut him in alone with his agony. That silence must be broken, no matter what the means.
"You'd wipe out the stigma of cowardice, if you volunteered," he went on deliberately.
Garth laughed derisively.
"Cut it out, Herrick," he flung back. "I'm not a d.a.m.ned story-book hero, out for whitewash and the V.C."
But Miles continued undeterred.
"And you'd convince Sara," he finished quietly.
A stifled exclamation broke from Garth.
"To what end?" he burst out violently. "Can't you realize that's just the one thing in the world forbidden me? Sara is--oh, well, it's impossible to say what she is, but I suppose most good women are half angel. And if I gave her the smallest chance, she'd begin to believe in me again--to ask questions I cannot answer. . . . What's the use?
I can't get away from the court-martial and all that followed. I can't clear myself. And I could never offer Sara anything more than a name that has been disgraced--a miserable half-life with a man who can't hold up his head amongst his fellows! Yes"--answering the unspoken question in Herrick's eyes--"I know what you're thinking--that I was willing to marry her once. But I believed, then, that--Garth Trent had cut himself free from the past. Now I know"--more quietly--"that there is no such thing as getting away from the mistakes one has made. . . . I'm tied hand and foot--every way! And it's better Sara should continue to think the worst of me. Then, in the future, she may find some sort of happiness--with Durward, perhaps." His lips greyed a little, but he went on. "The worse she thinks me, the easier it will be for her to cut me out of her life."
"Then do you mean"--Miles spoke very slowly--that you are--deliberately--holding back from soldiering?"
"Quite deliberately!" It was like the snap of a tormented animal, baited beyond bearing. "If I could go with a clean name, as other men can----Good G.o.d, man! Do you think I haven't thought it out--knocked my head against every stone wall in the whole d.a.m.ned business?"
Miles was silent. There was so much of truth in all Garth said, so much of warped vision, biased by the man's profound bitterness of soul, that he could find no answer.
After a moment Garth spoke again, jerkily, as though under pressure.
"There's my promise to Elisabeth, as well. That binds me if I were recognized and taxed with my ident.i.ty. I should have to hold my peace--and stick it all over again! . . . There's a limit to a man's endurance."
Then, after a pause: "If I could go--and be sure of not returning"--grimly--"I'd go to-morrow--the Foreign Legion, anyway. But sometimes a man hasn't even the right to get himself neatly killed out of the way."
"What are you driving at now?"
"I should think it's plain enough! Don't you see what it would mean to Sara if--that--happened? She'd never believe--afterwards--that I'm as black as I'm painted, and I should saddle her with an intolerable burden of self-reproach. No, the Army is a closed door for me. . . . d.a.m.n it, Herrick!" with the sudden nervous violence of a man goaded past endurance. "Can't you understand? I ought never to have come into her life at all. I've only messed things up for her--d.a.m.nably. The least I can do is to clear out of it so that she'll never regret my going. . . .
I've gone under, and a man who's gone under had better stay there."
Both men were silent--Trent with the bitter, brooding silence of a man who has battered uselessly against the bars that hem him in, and who at last recognizes that they can never be forced asunder, Herrick trying to focus his vision to that of the man beside him.
"No"--Garth spoke with a finality there was no disputing--"I've been buried three-and-twenty years, and my resurrection hasn't been exactly a success. There's no place in the world for me unless some one else pays the price. It's better for every one concerned that I should--stay buried."
CHAPTER x.x.xIII
OVER THE MOUNTAINS
"He didn't do it!"
Suddenly, Sara found herself saying the words aloud in the darkness and solitude of the night.
Since her meeting with Garth, on her way to the hospital, every hour had been an hour of conflict. That brief, strained interview had shaken her to the depths of her being, and, unable to sleep when night came, she had lain, staring wide-eyed into the dark, struggling against its influence.
Little enough had been said. It had been the silences, the dumb, pa.s.sion-filled silences, vibrant with all that must not be spoken, which had tried her endurance to the utmost, and she had fled, at last, incontinently, because she had felt her resolution weakening each moment she and Garth remained together--because, with him beside her, the love against which she had been fighting for twelve long months had wakened into fierce life again, beating down her puny efforts to withstand it.
The mere sound of his voice, the lightest touch of his hand, had power to thrill her from head to foot, to rock those barriers which his own act had forced her to build up between them.