'And Helena--I should have nothing but mortification. When she was

asleep I could not look at her. She is such a strange, incongruous

creature. But I should be responsible for her. She believes in me as if

I had the power of God. What should I think of myself?' Siegmund leaned with his head against the window, watching the country

whirl past, but seeing nothing. He thought imaginatively, and his

imagination destroyed him. He pictured Beatrice in the country. He

sketched the morning--breakfast haphazard at a late hour; the elder

children rushing off without food, miserable and untidy, the youngest

bewildered under her swift, indifferent preparations for school. He

thought of Beatrice in the evening, worried and irritable, her bills

unpaid, the work undone, declaiming lamentably against the cruelty of

her husband, who had abandoned her to such a burden of care while he

took his pleasure elsewhere.

This line exhausted or intolerable, Siegmund switched off to the

consideration of his own life in town. He would go to America; the

agreement was signed with the theatre manager. But America would be only

a brief shutting of the eyes and closing of the mouth. He would wait for

the home-coming to Helena, and she would wait for him. It was

inevitable; then would begin--what? He would never have enough money to

keep Helena, even if he managed to keep himself. Their meetings would

then be occasional and clandestine. Ah, it was intolerable!

'If I were rich,' said Siegmund, 'all would be plain. I would give each

of my children enough, and Beatrice, and we would go away; but I am

nearly forty; I have no genius; I shall never be rich,' Round and round

went his thoughts like oxen over a threshing floor, treading out the

grain. Gradually the chaff flew away; gradually the corn of conviction

gathered small and hard upon the floor.

As he sat thinking, Helena leaned across to him and laid her hand on his

knee.

'If I have made things more difficult,' she said, her voice harsh with

pain, 'you will forgive me.' He started. This was one of the cruel cuts of pain that love gives,

filling the eyes with blood. Siegmund stiffened himself; slowly he

smiled, as he looked at her childish, plaintive lips, and her large eyes

haunted with pain.

'Forgive you?' he repeated. 'Forgive you for five days of perfect

happiness; the only real happiness I have ever known!' Helena tightened her fingers on his knee. She felt herself stinging with

painful joy; but one of the ladies was looking her curiously. She leaned

back in her place, and turned to watch at the shocks of corn strike

swiftly, in long rows, across her vision.




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