III
At noon next day when I called, I found Boris walking
restlessly about his studio.
"Geneviève is asleep just now," he told me,
"the sprain is nothing, but why should she have such a high fever? The
doctor can't account for it; or else he will not," he muttered.
"Geneviève has a fever?"
I asked.
"I should say so, and has actually been a little
light-headed at intervals all night. The idea!—gay little Geneviève, without a
care in the world,—and she keeps saying her heart's broken, and she wants to
die!"
My own heart stood still.
Boris leaned against the door of his studio, looking
down, his hands in his pockets, his kind, keen eyes clouded, a new line of trouble
drawn "over the mouth's good mark, that made the smile." The maid had
orders to summon him the instant Geneviève opened her eyes. We waited and
waited, and Boris, growing restless, wandered about, fussing with modelling wax
and red clay. Suddenly he started for the next room. "Come and see my
rose-coloured bath full of death!" he cried.
"Is it death?" I asked, to humour his mood.
"You are not prepared to call it life, I
suppose," he answered. As he spoke he plucked a solitary gold-fish
squirming and twisting out of its globe. "We'll send this one after the
other—wherever that is," he said. There was feverish excitement in his
voice. A dull weight of fever lay on my limbs and on my brain as I followed him
to the fair crystal pool with its pink-tinted sides; and he dropped the
creature in. Falling, its scales flashed with a hot orange gleam in its angry
twistings and contortions; the moment it struck the liquid it became rigid and
sank heavily to the bottom. Then came the milky foam, the splendid hues radiating
on the surface and then the shaft of pure serene light broke through from
seemingly infinite depths. Boris plunged in his hand and drew out an exquisite
marble thing, blue-veined, rose-tinted, and glistening with opalescent drops.
"Child's play," he muttered, and looked
wearily, longingly at me,—as if I could answer such questions! But Jack Scott
came in and entered into the "game," as he called it, with ardour.
Nothing would do but to try the experiment on the white rabbit then and there.
I was willing that Boris should find distraction from his cares, but I hated to
see the life go out of a warm, living creature and I declined to be present.
Picking up a book at random, I sat down in the studio to read. Alas! I had
found The King in Yellow. After a few moments, which seemed ages, I was
putting it away with a nervous shudder, when Boris and Jack came in bringing
their marble rabbit. At the same time the bell rang above, and a cry came from
the sick-room. Boris was gone like a flash, and the next moment he called,
"Jack, run for the doctor; bring him back with you. Alec, come here."
I went and stood at her door. A frightened maid came
out in haste and ran away to fetch some remedy. Geneviève, sitting bolt
upright, with crimson cheeks and glittering eyes, babbled incessantly and
resisted Boris' gentle restraint. He called me to help. At my first touch she
sighed and sank back, closing her eyes, and then—then—as we still bent above
her, she opened them again, looked straight into Boris' face—poor fever-crazed
girl!—and told her secret. At the same instant our three lives turned into new
channels; the bond that held us so long together snapped for ever and a new
bond was forged in its place, for she had spoken my name, and as the fever
tortured her, her heart poured out its load of hidden sorrow. Amazed and dumb I
bowed my head, while my face burned like a live coal, and the blood surged in
my ears, stupefying me with its clamour. Incapable of movement, incapable of
speech, I listened to her feverish words in an agony of shame and sorrow. I
could not silence her, I could not look at Boris. Then I felt an arm upon my
shoulder, and Boris turned a bloodless face to mine.
"It is not your fault, Alec; don't grieve so if
she loves you—" but he could not finish; and as the doctor stepped swiftly
into the room, saying—"Ah, the fever!" I seized Jack Scott and
hurried him to the street, saying, "Boris would rather be alone." We
crossed the street to our own apartments, and that night, seeing I was going to
be ill too, he went for the doctor again. The last thing I recollect with any
distinctness was hearing Jack say, "For Heaven's sake, doctor, what ails
him, to wear a face like that?" and I thought of The King in Yellow and the Pallid Mask.
I was very ill, for the strain of two years which I
had endured since that fatal May morning when Geneviève murmured, "I love
you, but I think I love Boris best," told on me at last. I had never
imagined that it could become more than I could endure. Outwardly tranquil, I had
deceived myself. Although the inward battle raged night after night, and I,
lying alone in my room, cursed myself for rebellious thoughts unloyal to Boris
and unworthy of Geneviève, the morning always brought relief, and I returned to
Geneviève and to my dear Boris with a heart washed clean by the tempests of the
night.
Never in word or deed or thought while with them had I
betrayed my sorrow even to myself.
The mask of self-deception was no longer a mask for
me, it was a part of me. Night lifted it, laying bare the stifled truth below;
but there was no one to see except myself, and when the day broke the mask fell
back again of its own accord. These thoughts passed through my troubled mind as
I lay sick, but they were hopelessly entangled with visions of white creatures,
heavy as stone, crawling about in Boris' basin,—of the wolf's head on the rug,
foaming and snapping at Geneviève, who lay smiling beside it. I thought, too,
of the King in Yellow wrapped in the fantastic colours of his tattered mantle,
and that bitter cry of Cassilda, "Not upon us, oh King, not upon us!"
Feverishly I struggled to put it from me, but I saw the lake of Hali, thin and
blank, without a ripple or wind to stir it, and I saw the towers of Carcosa
behind the moon. Aldebaran, the Hyades, Alar, Hastur, glided through the
cloud-rifts which fluttered and flapped as they passed like the scolloped
tatters of the King in Yellow. Among all these, one sane thought persisted. It
never wavered, no matter what else was going on in my disordered mind, that my
chief reason for existing was to meet some requirement of Boris and Geneviève.
What this obligation was, its nature, was never clear; sometimes it seemed to
be protection, sometimes support, through a great crisis. Whatever it seemed to
be for the time, its weight rested only on me, and I was never so ill or so
weak that I did not respond with my whole soul. There were always crowds of
faces about me, mostly strange, but a few I recognized, Boris among them.
Afterward they told me that this could not have been, but I know that once at
least he bent over me. It was only a touch, a faint echo of his voice, then the
clouds settled back on my senses, and I lost him, but he did stand there and bend over me once at least.
At last, one morning I awoke to find the sunlight
falling across my bed, and Jack Scott reading beside me. I had not strength
enough to speak aloud, neither could I think, much less remember, but I could
smile feebly, as Jack's eye met mine, and when he jumped up and asked eagerly
if I wanted anything, I could whisper, "Yes—Boris." Jack moved to the
head of my bed, and leaned down to arrange my pillow: I did not see his face,
but he answered heartily, "You must wait, Alec; you are too weak to see
even Boris."
I waited and I grew strong; in a few days I was able
to see whom I would, but meanwhile I had thought and remembered. From the
moment when all the past grew clear again in my mind, I never doubted what I
should do when the time came, and I felt sure that Boris would have resolved
upon the same course so far as he was concerned; as for what pertained to me
alone, I knew he would see that also as I did. I no longer asked for any one. I
never inquired why no message came from them; why during the week I lay there,
waiting and growing stronger, I never heard their name spoken. Preoccupied with
my own searchings for the right way, and with my feeble but determined fight
against despair, I simply acquiesced in Jack's reticence, taking for granted
that he was afraid to speak of them, lest I should turn unruly and insist on
seeing them. Meanwhile I said over and over to myself, how would it be when
life began again for us all? We would take up our relations exactly as they
were before Geneviève fell ill. Boris and I would look into each other's eyes,
and there would be neither rancour nor cowardice nor mistrust in that glance. I
would be with them again for a little while in the dear intimacy of their home,
and then, without pretext or explanation, I would disappear from their lives
for ever. Boris would know; Geneviève—the only comfort was that she would never
know. It seemed, as I thought it over, that I had found the meaning of that
sense of obligation which had persisted all through my delirium, and the only
possible answer to it. So, when I was quite ready, I beckoned Jack to me one
day, and said—
"Jack, I want Boris at once; and take my dearest
greeting to Geneviève...."
When at last he made me understand that they were both
dead, I fell into a wild rage that tore all my little convalescent strength to
atoms. I raved and cursed myself into a relapse, from which I crawled forth
some weeks afterward a boy of twenty-one who believed that his youth was gone
for ever. I seemed to be past the capability of further suffering, and one day
when Jack handed me a letter and the keys to Boris' house, I took them without
a tremor and asked him to tell me all. It was cruel of me to ask him, but there
was no help for it, and he leaned wearily on his thin hands, to reopen the
wound which could never entirely heal. He began very quietly—
"Alec, unless you have a clue that I know nothing
about, you will not be able to explain any more than I what has happened. I
suspect that you would rather not hear these details, but you must learn them,
else I would spare you the relation. God knows I wish I could be spared the
telling. I shall use few words.
"That day when I left you in the doctor's care
and came back to Boris, I found him working on the 'Fates.' Geneviève, he said,
was sleeping under the influence of drugs. She had been quite out of her mind,
he said. He kept on working, not talking any more, and I watched him. Before
long, I saw that the third figure of the group—the one looking straight ahead,
out over the world—bore his face; not as you ever saw it, but as it looked then
and to the end. This is one thing for which I should like to find an
explanation, but I never shall.
"Well, he worked and I watched him in silence,
and we went on that way until nearly midnight. Then we heard the door open and
shut sharply, and a swift rush in the next room. Boris sprang through the
doorway and I followed; but we were too late. She lay at the bottom of the
pool, her hands across her breast. Then Boris shot himself through the
heart." Jack stopped speaking, drops of sweat stood under his eyes, and
his thin cheeks twitched. "I carried Boris to his room. Then I went back
and let that hellish fluid out of the pool, and turning on all the water,
washed the marble clean of every drop. When at length I dared descend the
steps, I found her lying there as white as snow. At last, when I had decided
what was best to do, I went into the laboratory, and first emptied the solution
in the basin into the waste-pipe; then I poured the contents of every jar and
bottle after it. There was wood in the fireplace, so I built a fire, and
breaking the locks of Boris' cabinet I burnt every paper, notebook and letter
that I found there. With a mallet from the studio I smashed to pieces all the
empty bottles, then loading them into a coal-scuttle, I carried them to the
cellar and threw them over the red-hot bed of the furnace. Six times I made the
journey, and at last, not a vestige remained of anything which might again aid
in seeking for the formula which Boris had found. Then at last I dared call the
doctor. He is a good man, and together we struggled to keep it from the public.
Without him I never could have succeeded. At last we got the servants paid and
sent away into the country, where old Rosier keeps them quiet with stories of
Boris' and Geneviève's travels in distant lands, from whence they will not
return for years. We buried Boris in the little cemetery of Sèvres. The doctor
is a good creature, and knows when to pity a man who can bear no more. He gave
his certificate of heart disease and asked no questions of me."
Then, lifting his head from his hands, he said,
"Open the letter, Alec; it is for us both."
I tore it open. It was Boris' will dated a year
before. He left everything to Geneviève, and in case of her dying childless, I
was to take control of the house in the Rue Sainte-Cécile, and Jack Scott the
management at Ept. On our deaths the property reverted to his mother's family
in Russia, with the exception of the sculptured marbles executed by himself.
These he left to me.
The page blurred under our eyes, and Jack got up and
walked to the window. Presently he returned and sat down again. I dreaded to
hear what he was going to say, but he spoke with the same simplicity and
gentleness.
"Geneviève lies before the Madonna in the marble
room. The Madonna bends tenderly above her, and Geneviève smiles back into that
calm face that never would have been except for her."
His voice broke, but he grasped my hand, saying,
"Courage, Alec." Next morning he left for Ept to fulfil his trust.
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