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She turned anguished eyes, that held scarcely any comprehension in the immensity of their fatigue, towards the entering figure.
It was that of the old Infirmarian, who put down the lighted candle and threw up her hands of dismay as her gaze met that of the younger nun.
Mindful of the hour of silence, she asked no question, but she took Alex away to the convent infirmary, and placed her in a bed of which the mattress seemed strangely and wonderfully soft after the _pailla.s.se_ in her cell, and gave her a hot, sweet, strongly scented _tisane_ and bade her sleep.
"Mais demain?" whispered Alex.
She was thinking of the early departure in the raw morning cold, when the convoy that was leaving for South America would be driven away from the convent. But the Infirmarian shook her head and shuffled slowly away, leaving the room in darkness.
She was old and very tired, and for her there was no _demain_, except the glorious dawn that should herald the day of Eternity.
Alex lay awake in the merciful darkness and envisaged the culmination of long years of stifled repression and self-deception.
She knew now, as she had never let herself know before, what had sustained her through the dragging years after the final objective of her vows had been left behind.
She knew that she had thought herself to be answering to a call of G.o.d, when she had been hearing only the voice of Mother Gertrude, and had been craving only for Mother Gertrude's tenderness and approbation.
Physical pangs of terror shot through her and shook her from head to foot as she realized to what she had bound herself, which now presented itself to her overstrung perceptions only in the crudest terms.
To live without earthly affection, to relinquish love as she understood it, in terms of human sympathy, for an ideal to which she knew, with tardy and unerring certainty, that nothing within her would ever conform.
She knew now, with that appalling clear-sightedness to which humanity is mercifully a stranger until or unless the last outposts of sanity are almost reached, that the vocation of which they all spoke so glibly had never been hers.
She had entered a life for which her every instinct declared her to be utterly unfitted, in search of that which her few short years in the outside world had denied her. The convent instinct, engrained in her at last, added to the anguish of startled horror at the wickedness of her own state of mind.
_G.o.d is not mocked_, she thought. Alex had tried to cheat G.o.d, and for ten years He had stayed His hand and had allowed her deception to go on.
And now it had all fallen on her--shame and punishment and despair, and nowhere any human help or consolation to turn to. She prayed frenziedly in the darkness, but no comfort came to her. She stifled in the pillow the imploring crying aloud of Mother Gertrude's name that sprang to her lips, but with a pang that sickened her, she recalled the Superior's parting from her that evening, her undeviating fidelity to an austere ideal which should also have been Alex'.
There was nothing anywhere.
And with that final certainty of negation came a rigidity of despair that no terms of time or s.p.a.ce could measure.
Alex fell into exhaustion, then into a state of coma that became heavy, dreamless sleep enduring far into the next day. She woke to instant, stabbing recollection. It was a grey, leaden day, with rain las.h.i.+ng the window-panes, and at first Alex thought that it might be still early morning, but there was all the far-away, indescribable stir that tells of a household when the day's work is in full swing, and presently she realized that it must be the middle of the morning.
"They have gone," she thought, but the words conveyed no meaning to her.
The Infirmarian came in to her and spoke, and asked whether she felt fit to get up, and although on the day before Alex had so craved for rest, she heard her own voice replying indifferently that she thought she was quite well, and that she was ready to rise at once.
"You are sure you have taken no chill? You must have been there in Mother Gertrude's room for a long time after you were taken faint....
Can you remember?" The nun looked at her, puzzled and anxious.
"Did I faint?"
"I think so, surely. You were almost unconscious when I came in, quite by chance, and found you there, almost frozen, poor little Sister! Now tell me--?" The old Infirmarian put a few stereotyped questions such as she addressed to all those of her patients whose ailments could not be immediately diagnosed at sight.
Alex' matter-of-fact replies, for the most part denials of the suggested ills, left her no wiser. Finally she decided on a _refroidiss.e.m.e.nt_.
"Put a piece of flannel over your chest," she said gravely, "and you had, perhaps, better spend recreation indoors until the spell of cold is over."
"Thank you," said Sister Alexandra lifelessly. "What time is it?"
"Nearly eleven. Have you any duties for which you should be replaced this morning?"
"There are a lot of things, I think," said Alex vaguely, "but I can get up."
"Very well," the Infirmarian acquiesced unemotionally. "There is much work to be done, as you say, and we nuns cannot afford to be ill for long."
Alex did not think that she was ill--she was quite able to get up and to dress herself, although her head was aching and her hands shook oddly.
She reflected with dull surprise that all the poignant misery of the days that had gone before seemed to have left her. Evidently this was what people meant by "getting over things." One suffered until one could bear no more, and then it was all numbness and inertia.
She felt a sort of surprised grat.i.tude to G.o.d at the cessation of pain, as one who had undergone torture might feel towards the torturers for some brief respite.
Her thankfulness made tears come into her eyes, and she forced them back with a sort of wonder at herself, but that odd disposition to weep still remained with her.
As she went downstairs, rather slowly and cautiously, because her knees were shaking so strangely, she met a very little girl, the pet and baby of the whole establishment, climbing upwards. She was holding up the corners of her diminutive black ap.r.o.n with both hands, and after looking at the nun silently for a moment, she showed her that it contained two tiny, struggling kittens. "Les pet.i.ts enfants de Minet," she announced gravely, and went on climbing, clasping her burden tenderly.
Alex could never have told what it was that struck her with so unbearable a sense of pathos in the sight of the little childish figure.
Quite suddenly the tears began to pour down her face, and she could neither have checked them nor have a.s.signed any reason for them.
She went on downstairs, wiping the blinding tears from her sight, and amazed at the violence of the uncontrollable sobs that were noiselessly shaking her.
Something had suddenly given way within her and pa.s.sed far beyond her own control.
It was as though she could never stop crying again.
XXI
Father Farrell
For what seemed a long while afterwards--a period which, indeed, covered three or four weeks--Alex learnt to be intensely and humbly grateful for the convent law that would not allow any form of personalities in intercourse.
She was utterly unable to cease from crying, and in spite of her shame and almost her terror, the tears continued to stream down her face in the chapel, in the refectory, even at the hour of recreation.
n.o.body asked her any questions. One or two of the nuns looked at her compa.s.sionately, or made some kindly, little, friendly remark; a lay-sister now and then offered her an unexpected piece of help in her work, and the Infirmarian occasionally sent her a cup of _bouillon_ for dinner, but it was n.o.body's business to offer inquiries, and had any one done so, the rule would have compelled Sister Alexandra to reply by a generality and to change the conversation without delay.
Only the Superior was ent.i.tled to probe deeper, and at first the Frenchwoman who was temporarily succeeding Mother Gertrude was too much occupied by her new cares to see much of her community individually.
Alex was relieved when the Christmas holidays began, and she had no longer to fear the notice of the sharp-eyed children, but in the reduction of work surrounding the festive season, it became impossible that her breakdown should continue to pa.s.s unnoticed. She did not herself know what was the matter, and could scarcely have given a cause for those incessant tears, except that she was unutterably weary and miserable, and that they had pa.s.sed far beyond her own control.
The idea that that continuous weeping could have any connection with a physical nervous breakdown never occurred to her.
It was with surprise, and very little thought of cause and effect, that she one night noticed her own extraordinary loss of flesh. She had never been anything but thin and slightly built, but now she quite suddenly perceived that her arms and legs in the last two months had taken on an astounding and literal resemblance to long sticks of white wood. All the way up from wrist to armpit, her left hand, with thumb and middle finger joined, could span the circ.u.mference of her right arm.
It seemed incredible.