Complete Works of Bram Stoker (280 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Bram Stoker
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‘By all means!  It is not much!’ he almost felt like smiling as he spoke.  Mr. Stonehouse, after a short pause, as if arranging his thoughts, spoke:

‘Let me tell you what I am.  I began life with nothing but a fair education such as all our American boys get.  But from a good mother I got an idea that to be honest was the best of all things; from a strenuous father, who, however, could not do well for himself, I learned application to work and how best to use and exercise such powers as were in me.  From the start things prospered with me.  Men who knew me trusted me; some came with offers to share in my enterprise.  Thus I had command of what capital I could use; I was able to undertake great works and to carry them through.  Fortune kept growing and growing; for as I got wealthier I found newer and larger and more productive uses for my money.  And in all my work I can say before God I never willingly wronged any man.  I am proud to be able to say that my name stands good wherever it has been used.  It may seem egotistical that I say such things of myself.  It may seem bad taste; but I speak because I have a motive in so doing.  I want you to understand at the outset that in my own country, wherever I am known and in my own work, my name is a strength.’

He paused a while.  Harold sat still; he knew that such man would not, could not, speak in such a way without a strong motive; and to learn that motive he waited.

‘When you were in the water making what headway you could in that awful sea  —  when my little child’s life hung in the balance, and the anguish of my wife’s heart nearly tore my heart in two, I said to myself, “If we had a son I should wish him to be like that.”  I meant it then, and I mean it now!  Come to me as you are!  Faults, and past, and all.  Forget the past!  Whatever it was we will together try to wipe it out.  Much may be done in restoring where there has been any wrong-doing.  Take my name as your own.  It will protect you from the result of what ever has been, and give you an opportunity to find your place again.  You are not bad in heart I know.  Whatever you have done has not been from base motives.  Few of us are spotless as to facts.  You and I will show ourselves  —  for unless God wills to the opposite we shall confide in none other  —  that a strong, brave man may win back all that was lost.  Let me call you by my name and hold you as the son of my heart; and it will be a joy and pleasure to my declining years.’

As he had spoken, Harold’s thought’s had at first followed in some wonderment.  But gradually, as his noble purpose unfolded, based as it was on a misconception as to the misdoing of which he himself had spoken, he had been almost stricken dumb.  At the first realisation of what was intended he could not have spoken had he tried; but at the end he had regained his thoughts and his voice.  There was still wonderment in it, as realising from the long pause that the old man had completed his suggestion, he spoke:

‘If I understand aright you are offering me your name!  Offering to share your honour with me.  With me, whom, if again I understand, you take as having committed some crime?’

‘I inferred from what you said and from your sadness, your desire to shun your kind, that there was, if not a crime, some fault which needed expiation.’

‘But your honour, sir; your honour!’  There was a proud look in the old man’s eyes as he said quietly:

‘It was my desire, is my desire, to share with you what I have that is best; and that, I take it, is not the least valuable of my possessions, such as they are!  And why not?  You have given to me all that makes life sweet; without which it would be unbearable.  That child who came to my wife and me when I was old and she had passed her youth is all in all to us both.  Had your strength and courage been for barter in the moments when my child was quivering between life and death, I would have cheerfully purchased them with not half but all!  Sir, I should have given my soul!  I can say this now, for gratitude is above all barter; and surely it is allowed to a father to show gratitude for the life of his child!’

This great-hearted generosity touched Harold to the quick.  He could hardly speak for a few minutes.  Then instinctively grasping the old man’s hand he said:

‘You overwhelm me.  Such noble trust and generosity as you have shown me demands a return of trust.  But I must think!  Will you remain here and let me return to you in a little while?’

He rose quickly and slipped down the iron ladder, passing into the darkness and the mist and the flying spray.

CHAPTER XXVII  —  AGE’S WISDOM

Harold went to and fro on the deserted deck.  All at once the course he had to pursue opened out before him.  He was aware that what the noble-minded old man offered him was fortune, great fortune in any part of the world.  He would have to be refused, but the refusal should be gently done.  He, believing that the other had done something very wrong, had still offered to share with him his name, his honour.  Such confidence demanded full confidence in return; the unwritten laws which governed the men amongst whom he had been brought up required it.

And the shape that confidence should take?  He must first disabuse his new friend’s mind of criminal or unworthy cause for his going away.  For the sake of his own name and that of his dead father that should be done.  Then he would have to suggest the real cause . . . He would in this have to trust Mr. Stonehouse’s honour for secrecy.  But he was worthy of trust.  He would, of course, give no name, no clue; but he would put things generally in a way that he could understand.

When his mind was so far made up he wanted to finish the matter, so he turned to the wheelhouse and climbed the ladder again.  It was not till he sat in the shelter by his companion that he became aware that he had become wet with the spray.  The old man wishing to help him in his embarrassment said:

‘Well?’ Harold began at once; the straightforward habit of his life stood to him now:

‘Let me say first, sir, what will I know give you pleasure.’  The old man extended his hand; he had been hoping for acceptance, and this seemed like it.  Harold laid his hand on it for an instant only, and then raised it as if to say ‘Wait’:

‘You have been so good to me, so nobly generous in your wishes that I feel I owe you a certain confidence.  But as it concerns not myself alone I will ask that it be kept a secret between us two.  Not to be told to any other; not even your wife!’

‘I will hold your secret sacred.  Even from my wife; the first secret I shall have ever kept from her.’

‘First, then, let me say, and this is what I know will rejoice you, that I am not leaving home and country because of any crime I have committed; not from any offence against God or man, or law.  Thank God! I am free from such.  I have always tried to live uprightly . . . ‘  Here a burst of pain overcame him, and with a dry sob he added: ‘And that is what makes the terrible unfairness of it all!’

The old man laid a kindly hand on his shoulder and kept it there for a few moments.

‘My poor boy!  My poor boy!’ was all he said.  Harold shook himself as if to dislodge the bitter thoughts.  Mastering himself he went on:

‘There was a lady with whom I was very much thrown in contact since we were children.  Her father was my father’s friend.  My friend too, God knows; for almost with his dying breath he gave sanction to my marrying his daughter, if it should ever be that she should care for me in that way.  But he wished me to wait, and, till she was old enough to choose, to leave her free.  For she is several years younger than I am; and I am not very old yet  —  except in heart!  All this, you understand, was said in private to me; none other knew it.  None knew of it even till this moment when I tell you that such a thing has been.’  He paused; the other said:

‘Believe me that I value your confidence, beyond all words!’  Harold felt already the good effects of being able to speak of his pent-up trouble.  Already this freedom from the nightmare loneliness of his own thoughts seemed to be freeing his very soul.

‘I honestly kept to his wishes.  Before God, I did!  No man who loved a woman, honoured her, worshipped her, could have been more scrupulously careful as to leaving her free.  What it was to me to so hold myself no one knows; no one ever will know.  For I loved her, do love her, with every nerve and fibre of my heart.  All our lives we had been friends; and I believed we loved and trusted each other.  But . . . but then there came a day when I found by chance that a great trouble threatened her.  Not from anything wrong that she had done; but from something perhaps foolish, harmlessly foolish except that she did not know . . . ‘  He stopped suddenly, fearing he might have said overmuch of Stephen’s side of the affair.  ‘When I came to her aid, however, meaning the best, and as single-minded as a man can be, she misunderstood my words, my meaning, my very coming; and she said things which cannot be unsaid.  Things . . . matters were so fixed that I could not explain; and I had to listen.  She said things that I did not believe she could have said to me, to anyone.  Things that I did not think she could have thought . . . I dare say she was right in some ways.  I suppose I bungled in my desire to be unselfish.  What she said came to me in new lights upon what I had done . . . But anyhow her statements were such that I felt I could not, should not, remain.  My very presence must have been a trouble to her hereafter.  There was nothing for it but to come away.  There was no place for me!  No hope for me!  There is none on this side of the grave! . . . For I love her still, more than ever.  I honour and worship her still, and ever will, and ever must! . . . I am content to forego my own happiness; but I feel there is a danger to her from what has been.  That there is and must be to her unhappiness even from the fact that it was I who was the object of her wrath; and this adds to my woe.  Worst of all is . . . the thought and the memory that she should have done so; she who . . . she . . . ‘

He turned away overcome and hid his face in his hands.  The old man sat still; he knew that at such a moment silence is the best form of sympathy.  But his heart glowed; the wisdom of his years told him that he had heard as yet of no absolute bar to his friend’s ultimate happiness.

‘I am rejoiced, my dear boy, at what you tell me of your own conduct.  It would have made no difference to me had it been otherwise.  But it would have meant a harder and longer climb back to the place you should hold.  But it really seems that nothing is so hopeless as you think.  Believe me, my dear young friend who are now as a son to my heart, that there will be bright days for you yet . . . ‘  He paused a moment, but mastering himself went on in a quiet voice:

‘I think you are wise to go away.  In the solitudes and in danger things that are little in reality will find their true perspective; and things that are worthy will appear in their constant majesty.’

He stood, and laying once again his hand on the young man’s shoulder said:

‘I recognise that I  —  that we, for my wife and little girl would be at one with me in my wish, did they know of it, must not keep you from your purpose of fighting out your trouble alone.  Every man, as the Scotch proverb says, must “dree his own weird.”  I shall not, I must not, ask you for any promise; but I trust that if ever you do come back you will make us all glad by seeing you.  And remember that what I said of myself and of all I have  —  all  —  holds good so long as I shall live!’

Before Harold could reply he had slipped down the ladder and was gone.

During the rest of the voyage, with the exception of one occasion, he did not allude to the subject again by word or implication, and Harold was grateful to him for it.

On the night before Fire Island should be sighted Harold was in the bow of the great ship looking out with eyes in which gleamed no hope.  To him came through the darkness Mr. Stonehouse.  He heard the footsteps and knew them; so with the instinct of courtesy, knowing that his friend would not intrude on his solitude without purpose, he turned and met him.  When the American stood beside him he said, studiously avoiding looking at his companion:

‘This is the last night we shall be together, and, if I may, there is one thing I would like to say to you.’

‘Say all you like, sir,’ said Harold as heartily as he could, ‘I am sure it is well meant; and for that at any rate I shall be grateful to you.’

‘You will yet be grateful, I think!’ he answered gravely.  ‘When it comes back to you in loneliness and solitude you will, I believe, think it worth being grateful for.  I don’t mean that you will be grateful to me, but for the thing itself.  I speak out of the wisdom of many years.  At your time of life the knowledge cannot come from observation.  It may my poor boy, come through pain; and if what I think is correct you will even in due time be grateful to the pain which left such golden residuum.’  He paused, and Harold grew interested.  There was something in the old man’s manner which presaged a truth; he, at least, believed it.  So the young man listened at first with his ears; and as the other spoke, his heart listened too:

‘Young men are apt to think somewhat wrongly of women they love and respect.  We are apt to think that such women are of a different clay from ourselves.  Nay! that they are not compact of clay at all, but of some faultless, flawless material which the Almighty keeps for such fine work.  It is only in middle age that men  —  except scamps, who learn this bad side of knowledge young  —  realise that women are human beings like themselves.  It may be, you know, that you may have misjudged this young lady!  That you have not made sufficient allowance for her youth, her nature, even the circumstances under which she spoke.  You have told me that she was in some deep grief or trouble.  May it not have been that this in itself unnerved her, distorted her views, aroused her passion till all within and around was tinged with the jaundice of her concern, her humiliation  —  whatever it was that destroyed for the time that normal self which you had known so long.  May it not have been that her bitterest memory even since may be of the speaking of these very words which sent you out into the wide world to hide yourself from men.  I have thought, waking and sleeping, of your position ever since you honoured me with your confidence; and with every hour the conviction has strengthened in me that there is a way out of this situation which sends a man like you into solitude with a heart hopeless and full of pain; and which leaves her perhaps in greater pain, for she has not like you the complete sense of innocence.  But at present there is no way out but through time and thought.  Whatever may be her ideas or wishes she is powerless.  She does not know your thoughts, no matter how she may guess at them.  She does not know where you are or how to reach you, no matter how complete her penitence may be.  And oh! my dear young friend, remember that you are a strong man, and she is a woman.  Only a woman in her passion and her weakness after all.  Think this all over, my poor boy!  You will have time and opportunity where you are going.  God help you to judge wisely!’  After a pause of a few seconds he said abruptly: ‘Good night!’ and moved quickly away.

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