Jack Raymond

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Jack Raymond Page 12

by Этель Лилиан Войнич


  For them it was a hard summer; at times, indeed, so hard that Jack's courage would have failed him but for the indomitable patience of hers. The disease had not yet reached its most painful stage; but there were already many long, sleepless nights, when Jack would sit with her, reading aloud or, if she was too ill for that, watching beside her silently. Often she entreated him to leave her and go back to bed. "I shall be quite comfortable," she would say, secretly dreading the lonely horror of the night, yet fearing lest the want of sleep should injure his health.

  "Let me have all I can of you, mother," he would answer softly; and she would submit with a little sigh of relief.

  Day would come at last, and with it Theo, light-footed and radiant, carrying dewy trails of honeysuckle to wreathe the foot of her bed. "Have you had a good night, mummy?" Sometimes he would notice Jack's haggard face. "You work too hard, old fellow," he would say. Once he came up behind him in the garden and slipped a hand through his arm; a wonderful hand, strong and slender, with the live finger-tips of the musician. "Jack," he said, "I've been worrying about you. I believe you have some trouble."

  Jack paused a moment, then looked up with his grave smile. "A love trouble, do you think? My dear boy, I'm just an ordinary cart-horse; I can't get out of my harness to fall in love like you artists. By the way, what's become of the girl you wrote that song for last summer?"

  Theo's tendency to fall in love was a stand­ing joke in the household. A less adoring mother than Helen might have grown a little impatient of his raptures over now one girl and now another whom he had sat beside at a concert or seen passing in the street. He would find resemblances to the Libyan sybil, or the Madonna delle Pie, or Our Lady of the Rocks, where Jack with his slower imagination could see only a woman like any other woman. Once, rambling round the coast, they passed a fisherman's bare-footed daughter, sitting on a low rock at the water's edge, mending her father's nets; her wind-roughened hair hang­ing on her shoulders, a red sunset behind her and wet sands gleaming all around. For a week Theo was restless and miserable; he would tramp in pouring rain over windy cliffs to the village where she lived, and come back in the evening, wet to the skin, and pallid with weariness and disappointment because he had not seen her. Then came Sunday, and he saw her going to church in her best clothes, shiny boots cramping her feet and the thick hair dragged up under a horrible monstrosity of a hat, nodding and wagging with huge magenta roses. He came home, with a tragic face, but cured. Nothing remained of his passion for the bare-legged unknown girl but an exquisite little violin romance, which he called: "The Fishing-Nets."

  The holidays over, he went back to Germany. Helen had persisted in keeping the truth from him. "But, mother," Jack said at last; "he must know some time. Don't let it come with a shock at the end. And... Germany is such a long way off."

  "There's still time; let him have his first concerts in peace. We can send for him when I get worse. And when he does come, dear, you must keep the bad sights from him. I... have seen a person dying of cancer, and I don't want Theo..."

  "Mother!" Jack broke in, "that is not fair. He is a human creature, and you have no right to rob him of a human inheritance. You stand with a shield in front of him, and he will never learn to live."

  "He will learn soon enough — afterwards."

  "Afterwards... and you will go lonely this last winter..." "Not lonely, dear, when I have you." "Oh, yes, you have me, of course; but I'm not Theo. Mother, you have been sacrificed all your life; and now at the very end... It's wicked to carry unselfishness to that; it's not just."

  "It would not be just for me to hamper his development. An artist is a high priest before the Lord; he belongs to all men and to no man. I have no right to take him from his music because I happen to be dying; that is for mothers whose sons have no genius."

  Jack stood looking on the floor, his teeth set.

  "Then thank God I have no genius!" he said at last. She drew him down to her and kissed his forehead.

  "Even I may thank God for that."

  When Theo had gone, Jack brought her up to London, and took lodgings near Kew Gardens, for himself and her. The daily jour­ney to and from town was a heavy addition to the fatigue of his life, but it gave Helen fresh air to breathe and trees to look at, and enabled him to be with her for the few months left to them.

  That winter he failed in his examination; it was the only occasion in his student life when this happened.

  Before the questioning began he knew that he was going to fail; he had passed a terrible night at Helen's bedside, and his head ached and throbbed so that the floor seemed heaving beneath him. Taking his place, he looked round at his fellow-students. Some were nervously excited, some depressed; a few quite composed and business-like. He watched them, for a moment, with a kind of vague curiosity; they seemed to him so far away, so anxious over matters of no moment. Nothing was of any consequence, really, except the hopeless things. Cancer, for instance; perhaps they would be asked about that; the examiners putting questions and the students answering them would think they knew something about it, as if a man could know anything about cancer till the person he loves best is dying of it. Then he knows, the only thing there is to know: that there is nothing, nothing, nothing he can do.

  He shut his eyes; the horror of last night came over him, stifling, intolerable. "Oh, this is no use!" he thought; "I'm good for nothing to-day; I'd better go." Then he pulled himself together and plunged stolidly into the task set him.

  At the end of the day one of the examiners came up to him with friendly concern. "You're not looking yourself to-day, Ray­mond; I'm afraid you don't feel quite up to the mark."

  "No, not quite," Jack answered. "I was a fool to come. I have failed, of course?"

  "I... fear so. You look as if you ought to be in bed. What's wrong?"

  "Oh, nothing much, thank you."

  Two or three days afterwards the same examiner saw him in the street and crossed over to speak to him.

  "Raymond, Professor Brooks dined with me yesterday, and talked about you. Why didn't you tell us you'd been up all night with a cancer patient? You were not fit to go in for the examination. I'm very sorry about it; he tells me you've been having a terribly hard time."

  Jack's eyes flashed.

  "Yes; and so has the woman that washes the dissecting-room floor. She lost her baby last week, and I found her crying on the stairs over her bread and cheese. But she didn't shirk her scrubbing; people's private troubles have got nothing to do with their work."

  The examiner looked at him, puzzled. "I'm very sorry," he said again gently. "Your mother, isn't it? Have you plenty of friends in London?"

  "Thank you; Professor Brooks has been very kind; so has the doctor who attends her. As for friends, there's nothing any one can do."

  "Well, if there should be, will you let me know? And as for the examination, don't worry about that; you'll pass it next year. You have the makings of a good doctor."

  Theo, meanwhile, had taken Berlin, Paris, and Vienna by storm. The enthusiasm aroused by his playing might have turned a wiser head; but his nature was singularly free from petty vanity and self-conceit, and the effect which success produced on him was not what might have been expected in the case of an impressionable lad of eighteen suddenly springing from obscurity to fame. For the first month or two it amused him; he sent home delicious pen and ink caricatures of him­self as "the last new Mumbo Jumbo" en­throned, with a lion's mane, still short and stubbly, sprouting behind long, asinine ears; or as a gawky country bumpkin, grinning through a violin bow for the delectation of spectacled musical critics and fearsome society dowagers.

  Very soon the favours of the public began to disgust him. "The people stare at me," he wrote, "as if I were a gorilla in a cage; and clap when I come on, till I feel inclined to say: 'Here we are!' like a circus clown, and turn a back somersault off the platform. It's utterly hopeless to try to play decently; how can you get anywhere near to your music with an audience that is only thin
king about which leg you stand on and how you part your hair? And I hate the women! They click their fans all through the concert out of time; and afterwards they come up to you in low-necked frocks and tight stays; and talk about their souls, with just yards of satin and velvet kicking about the floor under your feet that you'd give your best G string to be able to pick up and hide their shoulders with. I know they ill-treat their servants."

  The next letter contained a cheque, and a figure dancing on one leg for joy. "Darling mummy," the hurried pencil scrawl began: "here are grapes and carriage drives to go on with. Hauptmann" (the impresario) "has stumped up some money, and there'll be plenty more soon. Hurry, hurry, hurry and get well, and wear the lace I'm sending by this post. You're never to scrimp and save and go with­out things any more; and old Jack Sober­sides can buy all the skeletons he wants."

  "Mother," Jack said, as he laid the letter down, " it is cruel to keep him in the dark any longer."

  Slow tears gathered under her closed eye­lids; even the exertion of reading a letter was too much for her now, and her voice was tremulous with utter weariness.

  "You may tell him if you like, dear; it can't injure his success now." She broke off, then added nervously: "And... Jack..."

  "Yes, mother?"

  "You'll be sure and tell him it's... not such a bad case. You know the word 'cancer' always gives people such a shock; and of course it might easily be worse. And then the morphia is a great help..."

  "Yes, I'll tell him."

  He wrote, asking Theo to come home as soon as his concert engagements permitted, and telling him, not the whole truth, but enough to prepare him for hearing the rest. A telegram came in answer; Theo was on his way home, leaving the impresario to apologise to an excited Parisian audience.

  When the truth was told him at last he bore it with more dignity and patience than Jack had expected to see. The shock seemed to have awakened in him some dormant strain of his mother's character. In her presence he never lost his self-control; but Jack, coming into his room late at night, found him sitting by the window in a crouching posture, white and panic-stricken. He sprang up at the coming of the grave, protecting presence, and clung to Jack's hand like a scared child.

  "Oh, I'm so glad you've come! I... was afraid."

  Jack sat down with him on the edge of the bed, putting an arm round his shoulders to stop their nervous shivering. He could not understand; to him, grief was a different thing from this; but he had the large humility of the physician, and was content to watch and give what help he could, if need be, with­out understanding. Theo looked up after a

  little while; he was still white, but the shiver­ing had stopped, and his teeth no longer knocked together when he spoke.

  "You are good to me, old fellow," he said; "and I'm keeping you up when you're so tired."

  "That's all right; I'm used to being up."

  "Jack, are you never afraid, never?"

  "I don't understand. Afraid of what? "

  "Of death."

  Jack's brow drew itself down into an ugly line.

  "Well," he said slowly, "if one's going in for being afraid, there are worse things than death to be afraid of."

  "I don't mean one's own death — that's nothing; I mean..."

  "Other people's? Yes, that is worse; but one gets accustomed, in time."

  "No, not quite that. I mean... the everlasting presence, the idea of it, always there, always waiting for everything you love. I... never thought of it till now; it's like a pit dug under one's feet, saying: 'Tread over me if you dare.' It is as if we must go through all our life and be afraid to love; if the gods should see, they will take away the thing we love."

  Jack sat still, thinking, the sad lines deep about his mouth.

  "It doesn't matter," he said at last. "If nothing worse than death happens to the peo­ple that a fellow loves, he's lucky. It seems to me death makes a pretty poor show, con­sidering all the bother people have over dying. Anyhow, what's the use of worrying your head about that? Look here, Theo; if you get the horrors, or the blues, or anything, don't sit alone this way; hold on tight to me and I'll pull you through somehow."

  "Haven't you ever horrors and blues of your own without mine? And, besides, I can't hold on to you all my life."

  "Why not? What else am I there for? I can't play the fiddle."

  Theo rose with a sigh, stretching both arms above his head.

  "You may thank the gods for that," he said, as he let them fall. "Did you know old Hauptmann has wired again? He wants me back in Paris to-morrow night for the Beetho­ven concerto at the Chatelet."

  "Yes, and you must go and play your best; it will disappoint mother if you don't. Now tumble into bed, and be asleep in five minutes; you must start early to get in to town for the boat train. I'll call you; I shall be up in any case, to look after mother."

  Whether Theo's playing of the concerto next evening was up to his best level or no, it was good enough to satisfy both audience and impresario. He ground his teeth a little under the rain of applause that followed; his nerves were overstrung to the pitch that makes any sound appear a menace and any crowd a ravening beast. The excited audience, shout­ing, staring, clapping hands and waving pro­grammes, horrified and sickened him; he shut his eyes despairingly.

  "Bis! Bis!" they yelled at him. "Bis!"

  His breath came in quick pants of distress; he was almost ready to clap both hands over his ears and shut out the sound. It struck upon him like a blow, like sacrilege; it was as if he must cry out to them: "Stop! Hush,

  for shame! I can't play; my mother is dying."

  He turned to leave the platform, but on the steps the impresario thrust the violin into his hands. He pushed it back.

  "I can't... I'm tired..."

  "Give them something — anything — quick! or we shall never be done to-night. It's the only way to stop them."

  Theo took the instrument mechanically and returned to the platform. The roar of shouts and hand-clapping died down suddenly as he raised his bow. Then came silence, and he realised that he had nothing to play. He looked out over the sea of faces, blankly; his memory was a washed slate; not a note re­mained on it, not the name of a composer.

  Yet he must play something; the people down there with the upturned faces were wait­ing, waiting; and he had nothing to give them. A thin mist spread between him and the glar­ing lights; there was a dim space at the fur­ther end of the hall, and he fixed his eyes upon it, trying to remember. A room seemed to grow out of the shadows; half-

  darkened, wholly grief-stricken and cheerless; his mother, with her drawn face white upon the pillow, her wasted, piteous hands; and beside the bed a watching figure, silent, weary-eyed.

  He began to play. As for the audience, he had forgotten it; he was playing, not for the concert-goers of Paris, but for Jack and Helen. When he ended there was silence; then thun­derous applause burst out again. He shud­dered as he went down the steps.

  In the artist's room Conrad caught him by the arm. "Theo," he said hoarsely, "was that... your own?"

  Theo looked round him desperately; the maddening sound of applause filled him with terror; there seemed no escape from its ma­lignant pursuit.

  "I... made it up as I went along. Was it... was it very bad? Uncle Conrad, stop them; make them let me alone! I..."

  He was white and shivering. Conrad, too, was pale, but from another cause. He laid a solemn hand on the lad's shoulder.

  "Render thanks to God," he said, "for His great gift of genius."

  Theo burst suddenly into passionate sobs. "And mother is dying..."

  For the remainder of the winter he took no Continental engagements. The impresario argued, coaxed, and threatened in vain; then resigned himself with a shrug of the shoulders, and made arrangements for London concerts. These, fortunately, brought in enough money to keep the little household in comfort, and to surround Helen with small luxuries which did something to soften the hardness of a hard death.

  Toward
s the end she partly lost the sup­pressed manner which she had worn, like a nun's grave-clothes, through all the years of her widowhood. Conrad, who come twice from Paris to see her, even recognised at mo­ments the girl Helen whom he had known in his youth. Sometimes in the evening, hold­ing Jack's hand as he sat by her low couch before the fire, while Theo lay full-length on the hearth rug and watched her with adoring eyes, she would tell the two lads fragmentary stories of her life in Arctic deserts, of her hus­band and his death there, of her tragic youth and dreary middle age. But it was not often that she had strength to spare for anything but silent endurance. Her pain was borne with heroic cheerfulness; but it wore her out none the less surely for that.

  It was only during this last winter that she recovered something of the gift of improvisa­tion for which in her youth she had been re­markable. On the rare "good days" when she was neither suffering acutely nor faint and exhausted, she would slip unconsciously, while talking to Jack or Theo, into a rhapsodic form of expression, now in verse, now in prose, sometimes in an irregular rhythm like that of a chant.

  The last time that she left her room was in the beginning of March. Between two periods of bad weather came a few cloudless spring days, and the earliest flowers burst into sudden bloom. In Kew Gardens the shady spaces under trees were gracious with the drooping heads of snowdrops, and broad grassy slopes flashed back the sunlight from royal chalices of yellow crocus flowers.

  On the warmest afternoon Jack and Theo laid her upon her couch and carried her out into the Gardens, that she might see the coming of spring before she died.

  They took her to a wide, open space where crocuses, white and gold and purple, bloomed by tens of thousands, their bright heads erect, their stems a silver forest in the grass. Jack sat on a bench beside her; Theo, as usual, flung himself full-length upon the ground, his clasped hands behind his head, Helen lay looking out across the crocus field; the still­ness of her face made the two lads silent, as in the presence of death.

  "Mother," Jack said at last, "I'm afraid you ought to come in now."

 

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