<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
<p>In little more than two weeks Dowie descended from her train in the
London station and took a hansom cab which carried her through the
familiar streets to Eaton Square. She was comforted somewhat by the mere
familiarity of things—even by the grade of smoke which seemed in some
way to be different from the smoke of Manchester's cotton factory
chimneys—by the order of rattle and roar and rumble, which had a
homelike sound. She had not felt at home in Manchester and she had not
felt quite at home with Henrietta though she had done her duty by her.
Their worlds had been far apart and daily adjustment to circumstances is
not easy though it may be accomplished without the betrayal of any
outward sign. His lordship's summons had come soon, as he had said it
would, but he had made it possible for her to leave in the little house
a steady and decent woman to take her place when she gave it up.</p>
<p>She had made her journey from the North with an anxiously heavy heart in
her breast. She was going to "take on" a responsibility which included
elements previously quite unknown to her. She was going to help to hide
something, to live with a strange secret trouble and while she did so
must wear her accustomed, respectable and decorous manner and aspect.
Whatsoever alarmed or startled her, she must not seem to be startled or
alarmed. As his lordship had carried himself with his usual bearing,
spoken in his high-bred calm voice and not once failed in the
naturalness of his expr<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187"></SPAN></span>ession—even when he had told her the whole
strange plan—so she must in any circumstances which arose and in any
difficult situation wear always the aspect of a well-bred and trained
servant who knew nothing which did not concern her and did nothing which
ordinary domestic service did not require that she should do. She must
always seem to be only Sarah Ann Dowson and never forget. But delicate
and unusual as this problem was, it was not the thing which made her
heart heavy. Several times during her journey she had been obliged to
turn her face towards the window of the railway carriage and away from
her fellow passengers so that she might very quickly and furtively touch
her eyes with her handkerchief because she did not want any one to see
the tear which obstinately welled up in spite of her efforts to keep it
back.</p>
<p>She had heard of "trouble" in good families, had even been related to
it. She knew how awful it was and what desperate efforts were made, what
desperate means resorted to, in the concealment of it. And how difficult
and almost impossible it was to cope with it and how it seemed sometimes
as if the whole fabric of society and custom combined to draw attention
to mere trifles which in the end proved damning evidence.</p>
<p>And it was Miss Robin she was going to—her own Miss Robin who had never
known a child of her own age or had a girl friend—who had been cut off
from innocent youth and youth's happiness and intimacies.</p>
<p>"It's been one of those poor mad young war weddings," she kept saying to
herself, "though no one will believe her. If she hadn't been so ignorant
of life and so lonely! But just as she fell down worshipping that dear
little chap in the Gardens because he was the first she'd ever
seen—it's only nature that the first beautif<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188"></SPAN></span>ul young thing her own age
that looked at her with love rising up in him should set it rising in
her—where God had surely put it if ever He put love as part of life in
any girl creature His hand made. But Oh! I can <i>see</i> no one will believe
her! The world's heart's so wicked. I know, poor lamb. Her Dowie knows.
And her left like this!"</p>
<p>It was when her thoughts reached this point that the tear would gather
in the corner of her eye and would have trickled down her cheek if she
had not turned away towards the window.</p>
<p>But above all things she told herself she must present only Dowie's face
when she reached Eaton Square. There were the servants who knew nothing
and must know nothing but that Mrs. Dowson had come to take care of poor
Miss Lawless who had worked too hard and was looking ill and was to be
sent into the country to some retreat her grace had chosen because it
was far enough away to allow of her being cut off from war news and
work, if her attendants were faithful and firm. Every one knew Mrs.
Dowson would be firm and faithful. Then there were the ladies who went
in and out of the house in these days. If they saw her by any chance
they might ask kind interested questions about the pretty creature they
had liked. They might inquire as to symptoms, they might ask where she
was to be taken to be nursed. Dowie knew that after she had seen Robin
herself she could provide suitable symptoms and she knew, as she knew
how to breathe and walk, exactly the respectful voice and manner in
which she could make her replies and how natural she could cause it to
appear that she had not yet been told their destination—her grace
being still undecided. Dowie's decent intelligence knew the methods of
her c<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189"></SPAN></span>lass and their value when perfectly applied. A nurse or a young
lady's maid knew only what she was told and did not ask questions.</p>
<p>But what she thought of most anxiously was Robin herself. His lordship
had given her no instructions. Part of his seeming to understand her was
that he had seemed to be sure that she would know what to say and what
to leave unsaid. She was glad of that because it left her free to think
the thing over and make her own quiet plans. She drew more than one
tremulous sigh as she thought it out. In the first place—little Miss
Robin seemed like a baby to her yet! Oh, she <i>was</i> a baby! Little Miss
Robin just in her teens and with her childish asking eyes and her soft
childish mouth! Her a young married lady and needing to be taken care
of! She was too young to be married—if it was ever so! And if
everything had been done all right and proper with wedding cake and
veil, orange blossoms and St. George's, Hanover Square, she still would
have been too young and would have looked almost cruelly like a child.
And at a time such as this Dowie would have known she was one to be
treated with great delicacy and tender reserve. But as it was—a little
shamed thing to be hidden away—to be saved from the worst of fates for
any girl—with nothing in her hand to help her—how would it be wisest
to face her, how could one best be a comfort and a help?</p>
<p>How the sensible and tender creature gave her heart and brain to her
reflections! How she balanced one chance and one emotion against
another! Her conclusion was, as Coombe had known it would be, drawn from
the experience of practical wisdom and an affection as deep as the
experience was broad.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"She won't be afraid of Dowie," she thought, "if it's just Dowie that
looks at her exactly as she always did. In her little soul she may be
frightened to death but if it's only Dowie she sees—not asking
questions or looking curious and unnatural, she'll get over it and know
she's got something to hold on to. What she needs is something she can
hold on to—something that won't tremble when she does—and that looks
at her in the way she was used to when she was happy and safe. What I
must do with her is what I must do with the others—just look and talk
and act as Dowie always did, however hard it is. Perhaps when we get
away to the quiet place we're going to hide in, she may begin to want to
talk to me. But not a question do I ask or look until she's ready to
open her poor heart to me."</p>
<hr class="chap" style='width: 45%;' />
<p>She had herself well under control when she reached her destination. She
had bathed her face and freshened herself with a cup of hot tea at the
station. She entered the house quite with her usual manner and was
greeted with obvious welcome by her fellow servants. They had missed her
and were glad to see her again. She reported herself respectfully to
Mrs. James in the housekeeper's sitting room and they had tea again and
a confidential talk.</p>
<p>"I'm glad you could leave your niece, Mrs. Dowson," the housekeeper
said. "It's high time poor little Miss Lawless was sent away from
London. She's not fit for war work now or for anything but lying in bed
in a quiet place where she can get fresh country air and plenty of fresh
eggs, and good milk and chicken broth. And she needs a motherly woman
like you to watch her carefully."</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Does she look as delicate as all that?" said Dowie concernedly.</p>
<p>"She'll lie in the graveyard in a few months if something's not done.
I've seen girls look like her before this." And Mrs. James said it
almost sharply.</p>
<p>But even with this preparation and though Lord Coombe had spoken
seriously of the state of the girl's health, Dowie was not ready to
encounter without a fearful sense of shock what she confronted a little
later when she went to Robin's sitting room as she was asked to.</p>
<p>When she tapped upon the door and in response to a faint sounding "Come
in" entered the pretty place, Robin rose from her seat by the fire and
came towards her holding out her arms.</p>
<p>"I'm so glad you came, Dowie dear," she said, "I'm <i>so</i> glad." She put
the arms close round Dowie's neck and kissed her and held her cheek
against the comfortable warm one a moment before she let go. "I'm so
<i>glad</i>, dear," she murmured and it was even as she felt the arms close
about her neck and the cheek press hers that Dowie caught her breath and
held it so that she might not seem to gasp. They were such thin frail
arms, the young body on which the dress hung loose was only a shadow of
the round slimness which had been so sweet.</p>
<p>But it was when the arm released her and they stood apart and looked at
each other that she felt the shock in full force while Robin continued
her greetings.</p>
<p>"Did you leave Henrietta and the children quite well?" she was saying.
"Is the new baby a pretty one?"</p>
<p>Dowie had not been one of those who had seen the gradual development of
the physical change in her.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192"></SPAN></span> It came upon her suddenly. She had left a young creature all softly
rounded girlhood, sweet curves and life glow and bloom. She found
herself holding a thin hand and looking into a transparent, sharpened
small face whose eyes were hollowed. The silk of the curls on the
forehead had a dankness and lifelessness which almost made her catch her
breath again. Like Mrs. James she herself had more than once had the
experience of watching young creatures slip into what the nurses of her
day called "rapid decline" and she knew all the piteous portents of the
early stages—the waxen transparency of sharpened features and the damp
clinging hair. These two last were to her mind the most significant of
the early terrors.</p>
<p>And in less than five minutes she knew that the child was not going to
talk about herself and that she had been right in making up her own mind
to wait. Whatsoever the strain of silence, there would be no speech now.
The piteous darkness of her eye held a stillness that was
heart-breaking. It was a stillness of such touching endurance of
something inevitable. Whatsoever had happened to her, whatsoever was
going to happen to her, she would make no sound. She would outwardly be
affectionate, pretty-mannered Miss Robin just as Dowie herself would
give all her strength to trying to seem to be nothing and nobody but
Dowie. And what it would cost of effort to do it well!</p>
<p>When they sat down together it was because she drew Robin by the thin
little hand to an easy chair and she still held the thin hand when she
sat near her.</p>
<p>"Henrietta's quite well, I'm glad to say," she answered. "And the baby's
a nice plump little fellow. I left them very comfortable—and I think in
time Henrietta will be married again."</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Married again!" said Robin. "Again!"</p>
<p>"He's a nice well-to-do man and he's fond of her and he's fond of
children. He's never had any and he's always wanted them."</p>
<p>"Has he?" Robin murmured. "That's very nice for Henrietta." But there
was a shadow in her eyes which was rather like frightened bewilderment.</p>
<p>Dowie still holding the mere nothing of a hand, stroked and patted it
now and then as she described Mr. Jenkinson and the children and the
life in the house in Manchester. She wanted to gain time and commonplace
talk helped her.</p>
<p>"She won't be married again until her year's up," she explained. "And
it's the best thing she could do—being left a young widow with children
and nothing to live on. Mr. Jenkinson can give her more than she's ever
had in the way of comforts."</p>
<p>"Did she love poor Jem very much?" Robin asked.</p>
<p>"She was very much taken with him in her way when she married him,"
Dowie said. "He was a cheerful, joking sort of young man and girls like
Henrietta like jokes and fun. But they were neither of them romantic and
it had begun to be a bit hard when the children came. She'll be very
comfortable with Mr. Jenkinson and being comfortable means being
happy—to Henrietta."</p>
<p>Then Robin smiled a strange little ghost of a smile—but there were no
dimples near it.</p>
<p>"You haven't told me that I am thin, Dowie," she said. "I know I am
thin, but it doesn't matter. And I am glad you kissed me first. That
made me sure that you were Dowie and not only a dream. Everything has
been seeming as if it were a
dream—everything—myself—everybody—even you—<i>you</i>!" And the small
hand clutched her hard<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></SPAN></span>.</p>
<p>A large lump climbed into Dowie's throat but she managed it bravely.</p>
<p>"It's no use telling people they're thin," she answered with stout good
cheer. "It doesn't help to put flesh on them. And there are a good many
young ladies working themselves thin in these days. You're just one of
them that's going to be taken care of. I'm not a dream, Miss Robin, my
dear. I'm just your own Dowie and I'm going to take care of you as I did
when you were six."</p>
<p>She actually felt the bones of the small hand as it held her own still
closer. It began to tremble because Robin had begun to tremble. But
though she was trembling and her eyes looked very large and frightened,
the silence was still deep within them.</p>
<p>"Yes," the low voice faltered, "you will take care of me. Thank you,
Dowie dear. I—must let people take care of me. I know that. I am like
Henrietta."</p>
<p>And that was all.</p>
<hr class="chap" style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"She's very much changed, your grace," Dowie said breathlessly when she
went to the Duchess afterwards. There had been no explanation or going
into detail but she knew that she might allow herself to be breathless
when she stood face to face with her grace. "Does she cough? Has she
night sweats? Has she any appetite?"</p>
<p>"She does not cough yet," the Duchess answered, but her grave eyes were
as troubled as Dowie's own. "Doctor Redcliff will tell you everything.
He will see you alone. We are sending her away with you because you
love her and will know how to take care of her. We are very anx<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></SPAN></span>ious."</p>
<p>"Your grace," Dowie faltered and one of the tears she had forced back
when she was in the railway carriage rose insubordinately and rolled
down her cheek, "just once I nursed a young lady who—looked as she does
now. I did my best with all my heart, the doctors did their best,
everybody that loved her did their best—and there were a good many. We
watched over her for six months."</p>
<p>"Six months?" the Duchess' voice was an unsteady thing.</p>
<p>"At the end of six months we laid her away in a pretty country
churchyard, with flowers heaped all over her—and her white little hands
full of them. And she hadn't—as much to contend with—as Miss Robin
has."</p>
<p>And in the minute of dead silence which followed more tears fell. No one
tried to hold them back and some of them were the tears of the old
Duchess.</p>
<hr class="chap" style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></SPAN></span></p>
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