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Felix O’Day
Chapter 15
Francis Hopkinson Smith
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       _ Chapter XV
       The day following Stephen's visit was one of many spent by Lady Barbara
       in working at "home," as she called the simple apartment in which Martha
       had given her shelter.
       With the aid of a shop-girl whose mother Martha had known, she had found
       employment at Rosenthal's, on upper Third Avenue. There had been need
       of an expert needlewoman in a department recently opened, and Mangan,
       in charge of the work, had taken her name and address. The repairing of
       rare laces had been one of her triumphs when a girl, she having placed
       an inset in the middle of an old piece of Valenciennes which had
       deceived even the experts at Kensington Museum. And so, when one of
       Rosenthal's agents had looked up her lodgings, had seen Martha, and
       noted "Mrs. Stanton's" quiet refinement, he had at once given her the
       place. She had retained, with Martha's advice, the name that Dalton had
       assumed for her on her arrival in New York, and Rosenthal's pay-roll and
       messengers knew her by no other.
       These days at home bad been gradually extended, her employer finding
       that she could work there more satisfactorily, and of late the greater
       part of each week had been spent in the small suite of rooms in St.
       Mark's Place--much to Martha's delight, who had arranged her own duties
       so as to be with her mistress. The good woman had long since given up
       night-nursing, and the few patrons dependent upon her during the day
       had had to be content with an "exchange," which she generally managed to
       obtain, there being one or two of the fraternity on whom she could call.
       And these days, in spite of the sorrow hovering over her charge, Martha
       never found wholly unhappy. They constantly reminded her of the
       good times at Oakdale when she used to bring in her young mistress's
       breakfast. She could recall the dainty, white egg-shell china, the squat
       silver service bearing the Carnavon arms, and the film of lace which she
       used to throw around her ladyship's shoulders, lifting her hair to give
       it room. The butler would bring the tray to the door, and Martha would
       carry it herself to the bedside, where she would be met with the
       cry, "Must I get up?" or the more soothing greeting of, "Oh, you good
       Martha--well, give me my wrapper!"
       The delicate porcelain and heirloom silver were missing now, and so
       was the filmy lace, but the tired mistress, could sleep as long as she
       pleased, thank Heaven! and the same loving care be given her. And the
       meal could be as nicely served, even though the thick cup cost but a
       penny and the tea was poured from an earthen pot kept hot on the stove.
       Martha's deft hands relieved her mistress, too, of many other little
       necessary duties, such as the repair of her clothes; having them
       carefully laid out for the morning so that the nap might be prolonged
       and time be given for the care of the beautiful hair and frail hands;
       helping her dress; serving her breakfast, and getting her ready for the
       day's work. These services over, Martha would move the small pine table
       close to the sill of the window, where the light was better, spread a
       clean white towel over its top, and sit beside her while she sewed.
       This restful, almost happy, life had been rudely shaken, if not entirely
       wrecked, by Stephen's visit. Up to that time, Lady Barbara--who had been
       nearly three weeks with Martha--had not only delighted in her work,
       but had shown an enviable pride in keeping pace with her employer's
       engagements, often working rather late into the night to finish her
       allotment on time.
       The particular work uppermost in her mind on the night Stephen had
       called was the repairing of a costly Spanish mantilla which had
       been picked up in Spain by one of Rosenthal's customers. Through the
       carelessness of a packer, it had been badly slashed near the centre--an
       ugly, ragged tear which only the most skilful of needles could restore.
       Mangan, some days before, had given it to her to repair with special
       instructions to return it at a given time, when he had agreed to deliver
       it to its owner. It was with a sudden gripping of her heart, therefore,
       that Martha on her return from an errand at noon had found the mantilla,
       promised for that very afternoon at three o'clock, lying neglected on
       the table, Lady Barbara sitting by the window with listless hands and
       drooping head. She grew still more anxious when at the appointed hour
       Rosenthal's messenger rapped at the door and stood silently waiting, his
       presence voicing the purpose of his mission, and she heard her mistress
       say, without an attempt at explanation: "I am sorry, tell Mr. Mangan,
       but the Spanish mantilla is not finished. Some of the other pieces are
       ready, but you need not wait. I cannot stop now, even to do them up
       properly, but I will bring the mantilla myself to-morrow. Please say so
       to Mr. Mangan."
       The extreme lassitude of her manner only added to Martha's anxiety and,
       as the afternoon wore on, she watched Lady Barbara's every move with
       ever-increasing alarm. Now and then her poor mistress would drop her
       needle, turn her face to the window, and look out into vacancy, her
       mouth quivering as if with some inward thought which she had neither the
       will nor the desire to voice aloud.
       As the hours lengthened, this mental absorption and growing physical
       weariness were followed by a certain nervous tension, so pronounced
       that the nurse, accustomed to various forms of feminine breakdowns, had
       already determined what remedies to use should the symptoms increase.
       That Stephen's visit was responsible for this condition, she now no
       longer doubted. What she had intended as a relief had only complicated
       the situation. And yet in going over all that had happened and all that
       was likely to happen, she became more than ever convinced that either
       his visit must be repeated, or that she alone must make the announcement
       that had trembled on Stephen's lips. She had recognized, almost from the
       first, that despite the relief her mistress had enjoyed in the little
       apartment some strong, masculine hand and mind were needed to stem the
       tide of further disaster. Her own practical common sense also told her
       that their present way of living was far too precarious to be counted
       upon. Lady Barbara's position with Rosenthal was but temporary. At any
       moment it might be lost, and then would follow another dreary hunt for
       work, with all its rebuffs, and sooner or later the delicately nurtured
       woman would succumb and go under in a mental or physical collapse, the
       hospital her only alternative.
       None of these forebodings, it must be said, had filled Lady Barbara's
       mind. As long as she continued under Martha's care she could rest in
       peace, free from the dread of the drunken step on the stair or the rude
       bursting in of her chamber door. Free, too, from other deadly terrors
       which had pursued her, and of which she could not even think without a
       shudder, for try as she could she never forgot Dalton's willingness to
       turn their home into a gamblers' resort.
       That he would force her to return to him for any other purpose she did
       not believe. He had no legal hold upon her--such as an Englishman has
       upon his wife--and, as he had pawned everything of value she possessed
       and most of her clothes, she could be of no further use to him, except
       by applying to her father or to her friends for pecuniary relief. This,
       as she had told him, she would rather die than do, and from the oaths he
       had muttered at the time she was convinced he believed her.
       All she wanted now was to earn her bread, help Martha with her rent,
       and, when the day's work was over, creep into her arms and rest.
       And yet, while it was true that Stephen's visit had been responsible for
       her nervous breakdown, it was not for the reason that Martha supposed.
       His reference to her private affairs had of course offended her, and
       justly so, but there was something else which hurt her far more--a
       something in the old ship-chandler's manner when he spoke to her which
       forced to the front a question ever present in her mind, whatever her
       task and however tender the ministrations of the old nurse; one that
       during all her sojourn under this kindly roof had haunted her, like a
       nightmare.
       And it was this. What did the look mean that she sometimes surprised in
       Martha's eyes--the same look she had detected in Stephen's? Were they
       looks of pity or were they--and she shuddered--looks of scorn? This was
       the nightmare which had haunted her, the problem she could not fathom.
       And because she could not fathom it, she had passed a wakeful night, and
       this long, unhappy day. This mystery must end, and that very night.
       When the shadows fell and the evening meal was ready, she put away
       her work, smoothed her hair and took her seat beside the nurse, eating
       little and answering Martha's anxious, but carefully worded questions in
       monosyllables. With the end of the meal, she pushed back her chair and
       sought her bedroom, saying that, if Martha did not mind, she would throw
       herself on her bed and rest awhile.
       She lay there listening until the last clink of the plates and cups and
       the moving of the table told her that the evening's work was done and
       the things put away; then she called:
       "Martha, won't you come and sit beside me, so that you can brush out my
       hair? I want to talk to you. You need not bring the lamp, I have light
       enough."
       Martha hurried in and settled herself beside the narrow bed. Lady
       Barbara lifted her head so that the tresses were free for Martha's
       hands, and sinking back on the pillow said almost in a whisper: "I have
       been thinking of your brother, and want your help. What did he mean when
       he said that things could not go on as they were with me? And that he
       was going to put a stop to them if he could?"
       Martha caught herself just in time. She was not ready yet to divulge
       her plans for her mistress's relief, and the question had taken her
       unawares. "He never forgets, my lady, what he owes your people," she
       answered at last. "And when he saw you, he was so sorry for you he was
       all shrivelled up."
       She had the mass of blonde hair in her fingers now, the comb in hand
       prepared to straighten out the tangle.
       For a moment Lady Barbara lay still, then turning her cheek, her eyes
       fixed on Martha's, she said in firmer tones: "You are to tell me the
       truth, you know; that is why I sent for you."
       "I have told it, my lady."
       "And you are keeping nothing back?"
       "Nothing."
       The thin hand crept out and grasped the nurse's wrist.
       "Then you are sure your brother does not despise me, Martha?"
       "MY LADY! How can you say such a thing!" exclaimed Martha, dropping the
       comb.
       "Well, everybody else does--everybody I know--and a great many I never
       saw and who never saw me. And now about yourself--and you must tell me
       frankly--do you hate me, Martha?"
       "Hate you, you poor Lamb"--tears were now choking her--"you, whom I held
       in my arms?--Oh, don't talk that way to me--I can't stand it, my lady!
       Ever since you were a child, I--"
       "Yes, Martha, that is one reason for my asking you. You did love me as
       a child--but do you love me as a woman? A child is forgiven because it
       knows no better; a woman DOES know. Tell me, straight from your heart; I
       want to know; it will not make any difference in the way I love you. You
       have been everything to me, father, mother--everything, Martha. Tell me,
       do you forgive me?"
       "I have nothing to forgive, my lady," she answered, her voice clearing,
       her will asserting itself. "You have always been my lady and you always
       will be. Maybe you'd better not talk any more--you are all tired out,
       and--"
       "Oh, yes, I will talk and you must Listen. Don't pick up my comb. Never
       mind about my hair now. I know very well that there is not a single
       human being at home who would not shut the door in my face. Some of them
       do not understand, and never will, and I should never try to explain
       my life to them. I have suffered for my mistakes and made myself an
       outcast, and nobody has any compassion for an outcast. That is why I sit
       and wonder about Stephen, and why I have sat all day and wondered about
       you, and whether I ought to run away, for I could not stay here if you
       felt about me as I know those people feel at home. I want you to love
       me, Martha. Oh! yes, you prove it. You do everything for me, but way
       down deep in your heart, how do you feel? Do you love me as you always
       did?--LOVE, Martha, not just pity, or feeling sorry like Stephen, or
       blaming me like the others? Yes, yes, yes, I know it, but I have wanted
       you to tell me. I am so in the dark. There, there, don't cry! Just one
       thing more. What did your brother mean when he said there were others
       who would lift me out of my misery?"
       Again the old servant, brushing away her tears, hesitated to reply. She
       had sent for Stephen to answer this very question, and her mistress had
       practically driven him from the room. How, then, was she to meet it?
       "He meant Mr. Felix, and if you had only listened, my lady, he would
       have--"
       "Yes, I knew he did--although he did not dare say it," she cried with
       sudden intensity, sinking deeper back in her pillow as if to protect
       herself even from Martha. "I did not listen, for I never want to hear
       his name again. He drove me to what I did. He let me leave his house
       without so much as a word of regret, and not one line did he write
       me the whole time I was at my father's. Two months, Martha!
       TWO--WHOLE--MONTHS!" The words seemed to clog in her throat. "All
       that time he hid himself in his club, abusing me to every man he met.
       Somebody told me so. What was I to do? He had turned over to his father
       every shilling he possessed and left me without a penny--or, worse
       still, dependent on my father, and you know what that means! And then,
       when I could stand it no longer and went home, he sailed for South
       Africa on a shooting expedition."
       Martha listened patiently. The outburst was not what she had expected,
       but she knew the unburdening would help in the end. She slid one plump
       hand under the tired head, and with the other stroked back the mass of
       hair from the damp forehead--very gently, as she might have calmed some
       fevered patient.
       "May I finish what Stephen tried to tell you, my lady?" she crooned,
       still stroking back the hair. "And may I first tell you that Mr. Felix
       never went to Africa?"
       "Oh, but he did!" she cried out again. "I know the men he went with.
       He was disgusted with the whole business--so he told one of his
       friends--and never wanted to see me or England again."
       "You are sure?"
       "Yes, I heard about it in Ostend when--" She did not finish the
       sentence.
       The nurse's free hand now closed on Lady Barbara's thin fingers, with a
       quiet, compelling softness, as if preparing her for a shock.
       "Mr. Felix--came here--to New York--my lady--and is here now--or was
       some weeks ago--doing nothing but walk the streets." The words had come
       one by one, Martha's clasp tightening as she spoke.
       The wasted figure lifted itself from the pillow and sat bolt upright.
       "MARTHA! What do you mean!"
       "Yes, right here in New York, my lady."
       "It isn't so!" Her hands were now clutching Martha's shoulders. "Tell me
       it isn't so! It can't be so!"
       "It's the blessed God's truth, every word of it! He and Stephen have
       been looking for you day and night."
       "Looking for me? Me! Oh, the shame of it, the shame!" Then with sudden
       fright: "But he must not find me! He shall not find me! You won't let
       him find me, will you, Martha?" Her arms were now tight about the old
       woman's neck, her agonized face turning wildly toward the door, as if
       she thought that Felix were already there. "You don't think he wants to
       kill me, do you?" she whispered at last, her face hidden in the nurse's
       neck.
       Martha folded her own strong arms about the shaking woman, warming and
       comforting her, as she had warmed and comforted the child. She would go
       through with it now to the end.
       "No, it's not you he wants to kill," she said firmly, when the trembling
       figure was still.
       Lady Barbara loosened her grasp and stared at her companion. "Then what
       does he want to see me for?" she asked, in a dazed, distracted tone.
       "He wants to help you. He never forgets that you were his wife. He'll
       have his arms around you the moment he gets his eyes on you, and all
       your troubles will be over."
       "But I do not want his help and I won't accept his help," she exclaimed,
       drawing herself up. "And I won't see him if he comes! You must not let
       me see him! Promise me you won't! And he must not find"--she hesitated
       as if unwilling to pronounce the name--"he must not find Mr. Dalton.
       There has been scandal enough. You do not think he wants to find Mr.
       Dalton, too, do you, Martha?" she added slowly, as if some new terror
       were growing on her.
       "That's what Stephen thinks--find him and kill him. That's why he wanted
       you to listen last night. That's why he wants to get you and Mr. Felix
       together. Mr. Dalton won't stay here if he knows Mr. Felix is looking
       for him. He's too big a coward."
       Lady Barbara shivered, drew her gown closer, and sank to the bed again,
       gazing straight before her. "Yes, that is what will happen, Martha--he
       would kill him. I see it all now. That is what would have happened to
       our gardener who ruined the gatekeeper's daughter, if the man had not
       left England. She was only a girl--hardly grown; yes, it all comes back
       to me. I remember what my husband did." She was still speaking under
       her breath, reciting the story more to herself than to Martha, her
       voice rising and falling, at times hardly audible. "Nothing--happened
       then--because my husband--did not find the man."
       She faced the nurse again. "You won't let him come here, will you,
       Martha?"
       "He'll come, my lady, if Stephen can get hold of him," came the positive
       reply. "He had a room in a lodging-house not far from here, but he left
       it, and Stephen doesn't know where he's gone. But he'll turn up again
       down at the shop, and then--"
       "But you must not let him come," she burst out.
       Again she sat upright. "I won't have it--please--PLEASE! I will go away
       if you do, where nobody will ever find me. I could not have him see
       me--see me like this." She looked at her thin hands and over her shabby
       gown. "Not like THIS!"
       "No, you won't go away, my lady." There was a ring of authority now
       in the nurse's voice. "You'll stay here. It's the only way out of this
       misery for you. As for Mr. Felix and that scoundrel who has ruined you,
       Mr. Felix will take care of him. But I'm going to let Mr. Felix in, if
       the dear Lord will let him come. Mr. Felix loves you and--"
       Her body stiffened. "He never loved me. He only loved his father," she
       cried angrily, and again she sank back on her pillow. "All my misery
       came from that."
       Martha bent closer. "You never got that right, my lady," she returned
       firmly. "You mustn't get angry with me, for I got to let it all out."
       She was the nurse no longer; no matter what happened, she would unburden
       her heart. "Mr. Felix isn't like other men. He stood by his father and
       helped him when he was in trouble, just as he'll stand by and help you,
       just as he helps everybody--Tom Moulton's daughter for one, that he
       picked up on the streets of London and sent home to her mother. If he'd
       killed Sam Lawson, who ruined her, he'd have given him what he deserved;
       and if he kills this man Dalton, he won't give him half what he deserves
       or what's coming to him sooner or later. Dalton isn't fit to live. He
       got Sir Carroll O'Day all tangled up so that his character and all his
       money was hanging by a thread, and then, when Mr. Felix gave up what he
       had to save Sir Carroll, Dalton coaxed you away. You didn't know that,
       did you? But it's true. That man Dalton ruined Mr. Felix's father. Oh,
       I know it all--and I have known it for a long time. Stephen told me all
       about it. No, don't stop me, my lady! I'm your old Martha, who's nursed
       you and sat by you many a night, and I'll never stop loving you as
       long as I live. I don't care what you do to me or what you have done to
       yourself. Your leaving Mr. Felix was like a good many other things you
       used to do when you were crossed. You would have your way, just as your
       father will have his way, no matter who is hurt. What Lord Carnavon
       wants, he wants, and there is no stopping him. Anybody else but his
       lordship would have hushed the matter up, instead of ruining everybody.
       But that's all past now; I don't love you any less for it; I'm only
       sorrier and sorrier for you every time I think of it. Now we've got to
       make another start. Stephen'll help and I'll work my fingers to the bone
       for you--and Mr. Felix'll help most of all."
       Except for the gesture of surprise when Dalton's part in the ruin of
       her husband's father was mentioned, Lady Barbara had listened to the
       breathless outburst without moving her head. Even when the words cut
       deepest she had made no protest. She knew the nurse's heart, and
       that every word was meant for her good. Her utter helplessness, too,
       confronted her, surrounded as she was by conditions she could neither
       withstand nor evade.
       "And if he comes, Martha," she asked in a low, resigned voice, "what
       will happen then?"
       "He'll get you out of this--take you where you needn't work the soul out
       of you."
       "Pay for my support, you mean?" she asked, with a certain dignity.
       "Of course; why not?"
       "Never--NEVER! I will never touch a penny of his money--I would rather
       starve than do it!"
       "Oh, it wouldn't be much--he's as poor as any of us. When Stephen saw
       him last, all he had was a rubber coat to keep him warm. But little as
       he has you'll get half or all of it."
       "Poor as--any of us! Oh, my God, Martha!" she groaned, covering her face
       with her hands. "I never thought it would come to that--I never thought
       he could be poor! I never thought he would suffer in that way. And it is
       my fault, Martha--all of it! You must not think I do not see it! Every
       word you say is true--and every one else knows that it is true. It was
       all vanity and selfishness and stubbornness, never caring whom I hurt,
       so that I had the things I wanted. I put the blame on my husband a while
       ago because I did not want you to hate me too much. All the women who
       do wrong talk that way, hoping for some comforting word in their misery.
       But it is I who am to blame, not he. I talk that way to myself in the
       night when I lie awake until I nearly lose my mind. Sometimes, too, I
       try to cheat myself by thinking that all these terrible things might not
       have happened had God not taken my baby. But I don't know. They might
       have happened just the same, my head was so full of all that was wicked.
       When I think of that, I am glad the baby died. It could never have
       called me mother. Oh, Martha, Martha, take me in your arms again--yes,
       like that--close against your breast! Kiss me, Martha, as you used to do
       when I was little! You do love me, don't you? And you will promise not
       to let my husband see me? And now go away, please, and leave me alone. I
       cannot stand any more." _