Celibates - LightNovelsOnl.com
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She had caught sight of his bedroom as she had pa.s.sed through the pa.s.sage. She believed herself capable and willing to sit by his sick- bed and nurse him. She did not as a rule care for sick people, but she thought she would like to nurse him.
The hansom turned through the Chelsea streets getting nearer and nearer to the studio. She wondered who was nursing him--there must be some one there.... The hansom stopped. She got out and knocked. The door was opened by a young woman who looked like a servant, but Mildred was not deceived by her appearance. 'One of his models come to nurse him,' she thought.
'I have heard,' she said, 'that Mr. Hoskin is ill.'
'Yes, he is very ill, I'm sorry to say.'
'I should like to see him. Will you inquire?'
'He's not well enough to see any one to-day. He has just dozed off. I couldn't awake him. But I'll give him any message.'
'Give him my card and say I would like to see him. Stay, I'll write a word upon it.'
While Mildred wrote on the card the girl watched her--her face was full of suspicion; and when she read the name, an involuntary 'Oh'
escaped from her, and Mildred knew that Ralph had spoken of her.
'Probably,' she thought, 'she has been his mistress. She wouldn't be here nursing, if she hadn't been.'
'I'll give him your card.'
There was nothing for it but to lower her eyes and murmur 'thank you,'
and before she reached the end of the street her discomfort had materially increased. She was humiliated and angry, humiliated that that girl should have seen through her so easily, angry that Ralph should have spoken about her to his mistress; for she was sure that the woman was, or had been, his mistress. She regretted having asked to see Ralph, but she had asked for an appointment, she could hardly get out of it now.... She would have to meet that woman again, but she wanted to see Ralph.
'Ralph, I suppose, told her the truth.'
A moment's reflection convinced Mildred that that was probably the case, and rea.s.sured, she went to bed wondering when she would get a letter. She might get one in the morning. She was. not disappointed; the first letter she opened read as follows:--
MADAM,--Mr. Hoskin begs me to thank you for your kind inquiry. He is feeling a little stronger and will be glad to see you. His best time is in the afternoon about three o'clock. Could you make it convenient to call about that time?
'I think it right to warn you that it would be well not to speak of anything that would be likely to excite him, for the doctor says that all hope of his recovery depends on his being kept quiet.--I am, Madam, yours truly,
'ELLEN GIBBS.'
'Ellen Gibbs, so that is her name,' thought Mildred. There was a note of authority in the letter which did not escape Mildred's notice and which she easily translated into a note of animosity, if not of hatred. Mildred did not like meeting this woman, something told her that it would be wiser not, but she wanted to see Ralph, and an expression of vindictiveness came into her cunning eyes. 'If she dares to try to oppose me, she'll soon find out her mistake. I'll very soon settle her, a common woman like that. Moreover she has been his mistress, I have not, she will quail before me, I shall have no difficulty in getting the best of her.'
'To-morrow. This letter was written last night, so I have to go to see him to-day, this afternoon, three o'clock, I shall have to go up after lunch by the two o'clock train. That will get me there by three.... I wonder if he is really dying? If I were to go and see him and he were to recover it would be like beginning it over again.... But I don't know why every base thought and calculation enter my head. I don't know why such thoughts should come into my head, I don't know why they do come, I don't call them nor do their promptings affect me. I am going to see him because I was once very fond of him, because I caused him, through no fault of mine, a great deal of suffering--because it appears that he's dying for love of me. I know he'd like to see me before he dies, that's why I am going, and yet horrid thoughts will come into my head; to hear me thinking, any one would imagine it was only on account of my own vanity that I wanted to see him, whereas it is quite the contrary. As a rule I hate sick people, and I'm sure it is most disagreeable to me to meet that woman.'
The two o'clock train took her to town, a hansom from Victoria to the studio; she dismissed the hansom at the corner and walked up the street thinking of the woman who would open the door to her. There was something about the woman she didn't like. But it didn't matter; she would be shown in at once, and of course left alone with Ralph...
Supposing the woman were to sit there all the while. But it was too late now, she had knocked.
'I've come to see Mr. Hoskin.' Feeling that her speech was too abrupt she added, 'I hope he is better to-day.'
'Yes, I'm thankful to say he's a little better.'
Mildred stopped in the pa.s.sage, and Ellen said:
'Mr. Hoskin isn't in his bedroom. We've put him into the studio.'
'I hope she doesn't think that I've been in his bedroom,' thought Mildred. Ralph lay in a small iron bed, hardly more than a foot from the floor, and his large features, wasted by illness, seemed larger than ever. But a glow appeared in his dying eyes at the sight of Mildred. Ellen placed a chair by his bedside and said:
'I will go out for a short walk. I shan't be away more than half an hour.'
Their eyes said, 'We shall be alone for half an hour,' and she took the thin hand he extended to her.
'Oh, Ralph, I'm sorry to find you ill.... But you're better to-day, aren't you?'
'Yes, I feel a little better to-day. It was good of you to come.'
'I came at once.'
'How did you hear I was ill? We've not written to each other for a long while.'
'I heard it in the National. Miss Brand told me.'
'You know her?'
'I remember, she wrote about the new pictures for an American paper.'
'Yes. How familiar it sounds, those dear days in the National.'
Ralph's eyes were fixed upon her. She could not bear their wistfulness, and she lowered hers.
'She told me you were ill.'
'But when did you return from France? Tell me.'
'About six weeks ago. I fell ill the moment I got back.'
'What was the matter?'
'I had overdone it. I had overworked myself. I had let myself run down. The doctor said that I didn't eat enough meat. You know I never did care for meat.'
'I remember.'
'When I got better I was ordered to the seaside, then I went on a visit to some friends and didn't get back to Sutton till Christmas. We had a lot of stupid people staying with us. I couldn't do any work while they were in the house. When they left I began a picture, but I tried too difficult subjects and got into trouble with my drawing. You said I'd never succeed. I often thought of what you said. Well, then, I went to the National. Nellie Brand told me you were ill, that you had been ill for some time, at least a month.'
A thin smile curled Ralph's red lips and his eyes seemed to grow more wistful. 'I've been ill more than a month,' he said. 'But no matter, Nellie Brand told you and---'
'Of course I could not stay at the National. I felt I must see you. I didn't know how. ... My feet turned towards St. James' Park. I stood on the little bridge thinking. You know I was very fond of you, Ralph, only it was in my way and you weren't satisfied.' She looked at him sideways, so that her bright brown eyes might have all their charm; his pale eyes, wistful and dying, were fixed on her, not intently as a few moments before, but vaguely, and the thought stirred in her that he might die before her eyes. In that case what was she to do? 'Are you listening?' she said.
'Oh yes, I'm listening,' he answered, his smile was rea.s.suring, and she said:
'Suddenly I felt that--that I must see you. I felt I must know what was the matter, so I took a cab and came straight here. Your servant---'
'You mean Ellen.'
'I thought she was your servant, she said that you were lying down and could not be disturbed. She did not seem to wish me to see you or to know what was the matter.'
'I was asleep when you called yesterday, but when I heard of your visit I told her to write the letter which you received this morning.
It was kind of you to come.'