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way so that she could give all her care to t he patient’s recovery.
“There are times,” she said, “when a young wife is best left alone in
a mother’s care. I have had daughters myself, and I know. You may
safely leave her to me and the physician, and when your business is
done, return to escort h er to her new home.”
Nicholas agreed that the landlady talked sense, and when he had
promised that he would ride from Iffley every day to make inquiry, which
he would immediately communicate to Dymchurch by stagecoach, the Doctor
felt in a happier frame of mind.]
“Allow me to know a little more about women than you do, you old
anchorite,” he laughed. “And since she seems adverse to my presence, I
promise you I will not worry her. I will only call her news and submit
it on to you.”
“I warrant that after a day or so’s rest,” said Syn, “she will be
asking you to sing her your cheerful songs of Spain. I know so well
that you will cheer her back to speedy health and good spirits.”
“I’ll do my best to that end, believe me,” said Nicholas heartily.
“When you return I will put my best coach and cattle at your command,
to make her journey easier.”
Two days later Doctor Syn knelt by his wife’s bed, and with his arms
around her took a loving farewell. She clung to him like a frightened
child and whispered, “Take care of yourself, dear Christopher, and
promise me that nothing shall make you unhappy.”
“So long as we love each other, nothing could,” he answered.
And so he left her, riding his own horse, and leading another which
Nicholas had lent hi m for this saddle-bags.
In this way he accomplished the journey quicker than had he taken
coach. His welcome to Dymchurch was enthusiastic. He found that the
builders had completed the improvements to the vicarage, and he was
satisfied that Imogene’s every wish had been most tastefully carried
out. Joyfully the Doctor wrote to his wife telling her that here was a
home of which they could be proud, and in which he knew they would find
happiness.
Nicholas was as good as his word, and each day his letters were more
cheerful than the last, describing Imogene’s improvement. The great day
of Induction came, and with great solemnity the Dignitaries of
Canterbury instituted and invested their “Well-beloved in Christ,
Christopher Syn, Doctor of Right, Members and Appurtenances thereunto
belonging.”
It was arranged that he should preach his inauguration sermon upon
the following Sunday, and then post back to Oxford to bring his wife,
whom the whole village were agog to welcome. On the Saturday morning
Tony left his friend sitting in the completed Spanish alcove, for the
sun was warm and bright, and the Doctor wished to contemplate his
address in the open air. He had not been alone, however, above a few
moments when Tony returned with a letter in his hand.
“You will forgive me, Christopher, disturbing your mediations, but
the Mail has just driven by, and I warrant brings you the most
delightful inspiration.”
“From our good Nicholas?” asked Syn, joyfully holding out his hand
for the letter.
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“No, better still,” laughed Tony. “It is from Imogene herself. This
shows that she is better. I will leave you to read it in peace, and
will call for you at di
Court-House.
“It will be nice to read my first letter in her own Spanish garden,”
said Doctor Syn, smiling happily.
Some two hours later Tony re-entered the Vicarage garden, but this
time with his wife upon his arm. Approaching the alcove, the young man
called out gaily, “Study hours are over, Christopher. Di
What news from Imogene?”
Receiving no answer, and thinking that the parson might have retired
to his new library, they entered the alcove and received a shock.
Doctor Syn sat in one of the Spanish seats staring vacantly before him.
He sat rigidly, high tightly griped fits pressed hard upon his knees.
All youth had gone from his face, and his cheeks were a ghastly pallor.
His lips were drawn apart in a hideous grin, showing clenched teeth
biting hard. But what horrified his friends most was to perceive a vivid
white lock that had appeared miraculously in his long raven hair, and,
adding to their terror, they both heard a continual deep moaning that
steadily arose from his throat.
“In heaven’s name wha t ails you, man?” cried Tony when he could find
his voice.
The Doctor’s unseeing eyes did not flicker, but the moaning increased
until it shaped these words, “The Lord gave, and the Lord has taken
away.” Without warning the stricken man’s finer twitche d convulsively,
and a crumpled piece of paper fell upon the Spanish paving-stones.
Slowly he got to his feet with all the action of an old paralyzed man,
and raising his arms to the sky, he shook his clawing fingers at what he
seemed to see there. He the n completed his text with the most damnable
alteration, as he cried in a loud voice, full of venom, “Cursed be the
name of the Lord,”
“Is Imogene dead?” whispered Tony.
“Had it been only that,” he moaned, “you would not have found me here
so stricken. I have received a letter straight from Hell. If you have
courage, read it.”
Standing erect, and as tense as a soldier about to be shot, he
pointed to the letter, without looking at it. Terrified, Tony’s wife
bent down, picked it up and gave it all crumbled to her husband, who
mechanically smoothed it out, and without knowing what he did, read it
aloud in a low, scared voice.
“I ca
did I not guess that I loved Nicholas? He lives in the s un I worship,
while you, with all your goodness, float in mists—cold mists. With an
aching heart for you and for myself, I must obey the orders of what is
stronger than myself. From you I have gone to follow my destiny. You
will never find us. I implore you not to seek. When you read this we
shall be far way. We are already fleeing from cold England, and from now
the seas will ever roll between us.
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All blame is mine, not yours. I do not matter. I have damned myself.
But I ca
life in Dymchurch mists. The sun has drawn me to him. But that you will
serve the solemn God whom you are sworn to serve is the dearest wish of
one that was your wife, called Imogene.”
Tony crumpled the letter once more as Syn had done, and in a voice
choking with tears of rage hissed out, “That spawn of Satan! We’ll spit
him with good steel like his uncle. This is my quarrel, Christopher.
God’s curses on them both.”
“No, Tony man, I love her! cried Syn. “I have blasphemed God, but you
are my friend.” Clasping his hands though in prayer, he hid his face in
the folds of Tony’s cravat and prayed aloud not to his God, but to his
friend. “O spare me a little, that I may recover my strength, before I
go hence, and be no more seen.”
Following this despairing cry with sobs that shook him to the soul,
Nature, or the God whom he had cursed, knowing he could stand no more,
touched him with gentle fingers, and snapped all further reason from his
brain, so that he collapsed in dead weight against the body of his
friend. To Tony, too, Nature or God was kind, and lent him such
strength as he had never yet possessed. He lifted the unconscious body
of the parson, as easily, as tenderly as he would no doubt carry his own