CHAPTER VI
THE VEIL IS LIFTED
"MISS CHAMPION! Oh, here you are! Your turn next, please. The last
item of the local programme is in course of performance, after which
the duchess explains Velma's laryngitis--let us hope she will not
call it 'appendicitis'--and then I usher you up. Are you ready?"
Garth Dalmain, as master of ceremonies, had sought Jane Champion on
the terrace, and stood before her in the soft light of the hanging
Chinese lanterns. The crimson rambler in his button-hole, and his
red silk socks, which matched it, lent an artistic touch of colour
to the conventional black and white of his evening clothes.
Jane looked up from the comfortable depths of her wicker chair; then
smiled at his anxious face.
"I am ready," she said, and rising, walked beside him. "Has it gone
well?" she asked. "Is it a good audience?"
"Packed," replied Garth, "and the duchess has enjoyed herself. It
has been funnier than usual. But now comes the event of the evening.
I say, where is your score?"
"Thanks," said Jane. "I shall play it from memory. It obviates the
bother of turning over."
They passed into the concert-room and stood behind screens and a
curtain, close to the half-dozen steps leading, from the side, up on
to the platform.
"Oh, hark to the duchess!" whispered Garth. "My NIECE, JANE
CHAMPION, HAS KINDLY CONSENTED TO STEP INTO THE BREACH--' Which
means that you will have to step up on to that platform in another
half-minute. Really it would be kinder to you if she said less about
Velma. But never mind; they are prepared to like anything. There!
APPENDICITIS! I told you so. Poor Madame Velma! Let us hope it won't
get into the local papers. Oh, goodness! She is going to enlarge on
new-fangled diseases. Well, it gives us a moment's breathing space.
. . . I say, Miss Champion, I was chaffing this afternoon about
sharps and flats. I can play that accompaniment for you if you like.
No? Well, just as you think best. But remember, it takes a lot of
voice to make much effect in this concert-room, and the place is
crowded. Now--the duchess has done. Come on. Mind the bottom step.
Hang it all! How dark it is behind this curtain!"
Garth gave her his hand, and Jane mounted the steps and passed into
view of the large audience assembled in the Overdene concert-room.
Her tall figure seemed taller than usual as she walked alone across
the rather high platform. She wore a black evening gown of soft
material, with old lace at her bosom and one string of pearls round
her neck. When she appeared, the audience gazed at her and applauded
doubtfully. Velma's name on the programme had raised great
expectations; and here was Miss Champion, who certainly played very
nicely, but was not supposed to be able to sing, volunteering to
sing Velma's song. A more kindly audience would have cheered her to
the echo, voicing its generous appreciation of her effort, and
sanguine expectation of her success. This audience expressed its
astonishment, in the dubiousness of its faint applause.
Jane smiled at them good-naturedly; sat down at the piano, a
Bechstein grand; glanced at the festoons of white roses and the
cross of crimson ramblers; then, without further preliminaries,
struck the opening chord and commenced to sing.
The deep, perfect voice thrilled through the room.
A sudden breathless hush fell upon the audience.
Each syllable penetrated the silence, borne on a tone so tender and
so amazingly sweet, that casual hearts stood still and marvelled at
their own emotion; and those who felt deeply already, responded with
a yet deeper thrill to the magic of that music.
"The hours I spent with thee, dear heart,
Are as a string of pearls to me;
I count them over, ev'ry one apart,
My rosary,--my rosary."
Softly, thoughtfully, tenderly, the last two words were breathed
into the silence, holding a world of reminiscence--a large-hearted
woman's faithful remembrance of tender moments in the past.
The listening crowd held its breath. This was not a song. This was
the throbbing of a heart; and it throbbed in tones of such
sweetness, that tears started unbidden.
Then the voice, which had rendered the opening lines so quietly,
rose in a rapid crescendo of quivering pain.
"Each hour a pearl, each pearl a prayer,
To still a heart in absence wrung;
I tell each bead unto the end, and there--
A cross is hung!"
The last four words were given with a sudden power and passion which
electrified the assembly. In the pause which followed, could be
heard the tension of feeling produced. But in another moment the
quiet voice fell soothingly, expressing a strength of endurance
which would fail in no crisis, nor fear to face any depths of pain;
yet gathering to itself a poignancy of sweetness, rendered richer by
the discipline of suffering.
"O memories that bless and burn!
O barren gain and bitter loss!
I kiss each bead, and strive at last to learn
To kiss the cross . . . to kiss the cross."
Only those who have heard Jane sing THE ROSARY can possibly realise
how she sang "I KISS EACH BEAD." The lingering retrospection in each
word; breathed out a love so womanly, so beautiful, so tender, that
her identity was forgotten--even by those in the audience who knew
her best--in the magic of her rendering of the song.
The accompaniment, which opens with a single chord, closes with a
single note.
Jane struck it softly, lingeringly; then rose, turned from the
piano, and was leaving the platform, when a sudden burst of wild
applause broke from the audience. Jane hesitated, paused, looked at
her aunt's guests as if almost surprised to find them there. Then
the slow smile dawned in her eyes and passed to her lips. She stood
in the centre of the platform for a moment, awkwardly, almost shyly;
then moved on as men's voices began to shout "Encore! 'core!" and
left the platform by the side staircase.
But there, behind the scenes, in the semi-darkness of screens and
curtains, a fresh surprise awaited Jane, more startling than the
enthusiastic tumult of her audience.
At the foot of the staircase stood Garth Dalmain. His face was
absolutely colourless, and his eyes shone out from it like burning
stars. He remained motionless until she stepped from the last stair
and stood close to him. Then with a sudden movement he caught her by
the shoulders and turned her round.
"Go back!" he said, and the overmastering need quivering in his
voice drew Jane's eyes to his in mute astonishment. "Go back at once
and sing it all over again, note for note, word for word, just as
before. Ah, don't stand here waiting! Go back now! Go back at once!
Don't you know that you MUST?"
Jane looked into those shining eyes. Something she saw in them
excused the brusque command of his tone. Without a word, she quietly
mounted the steps and walked across the platform to the piano.
People were still applauding, and redoubled their demonstrations of
delight as she appeared; but Jane took her seat at the instrument
without giving them a thought.
She was experiencing a very curious and unusual sensation. Never
before in her whole life had she obeyed a peremptory command. In her
childhood's days, Fraulein and Miss Jebb soon found out that they
could only obtain their desires by means of carefully worded
requests, or pathetic appeals to her good feelings and sense of
right. An unreasonable order, or a reasonable one unexplained,
promptly met with a point-blank refusal. And this characteristic
still obtained, though modified by time; and even the duchess, as a
rule, said "please" to Jane.
But now a young man with a white face and blazing eyes had
unceremoniously swung her round, ordered her up the stairs, and
commanded her to sing a song over again, note for note, word for
word, and she was meekly going to obey.
As she took her seat, Jane suddenly made up her mind not to sing The
Rosary again. She had many finer songs in her repertoire. The
audience expected another. Why should she disappoint those
expectations because of the imperious demands of a very highly
excited boy?
She commenced the magnificent prelude to Handel's "Where'er you
walk," but, as she played it, her sense of truth and justice
intervened. She had not come back to sing again at the bidding of a
highly excited boy, but of a deeply moved man; and his emotion was
of no ordinary kind. That Garth Dalmain should have been so moved as
to forget even momentarily his punctilious courtesy of manner, was
the highest possible tribute to her art and to her song. While she
played the Handel theme--and played it so that a whole orchestra
seemed marshalled upon the key-board under those strong, firm
finger--she suddenly realised, though scarcely understanding it, the
MUST of which Garth had spoken, and made up her mind to yield to its
necessity. So; when the opening bars were ended, instead of singing
the grand song from Semele she paused for a moment; struck once more
The Rosary's; opening chord; and did as Garth had bidden her to do.
"The hours I spent with thee, dear heart,
Are as a string of pearls to me;
I count them over, ev'ry one apart,
My rosary,--my rosary.
"Each hour a pearl, each pearl a prayer,
To still a heart in absence wrung;
I tell each bead unto the end, and there--
A cross is hung!
"O memories that bless and burn!
O barren gain and bitter loss!
I kiss each bead, and strive at last to learn
To kiss the cross . . . to kiss the cross."
When Jane left the platform, Garth was still standing motionless at
the foot of the stairs. His face was just as white as before, but
his eyes had lost that terrible look of unshed tears, which had sent
her back, at his bidding, without a word of question or
remonstrance. A wonderful light now shone in them; a light of
adoration, which touched Jane's heart because she had never before
seen anything quite like it. She smiled as she came slowly down the
steps, and held out both hands to him with an unconscious movement
of gracious friendliness. Garth stepped close to the bottom of the
staircase and took them in his, while she was still on the step
above him.
For a moment he did not speak. Then in a low voice, vibrant with
emotion: "My God!" he said, "Oh, my God!"
"Hush," said Jane; "I never like to hear that name spoken lightly,
Dal."
"Spoken lightly!" he exclaimed. "No speaking lightly would be
possible for me to-night. 'Every perfect gift is from above.' When
words fail me to speak of the gift, can you wonder if I apostrophise
the Giver?"
Jane looked steadily into his shining eyes, and a smile of pleasure
illumined her own. "So you liked my song?" she said.
"Liked--liked your song?" repeated Garth, a shade of perplexity
crossing his face. "I do not know whether I liked your song."
"Then why this flattering demonstration?" inquired Jane, laughing.
"Because," said Garth, very low, "you lifted the veil, and I--I
passed within."
He was still holding her hands in his; and, as he spoke the last two
words, he turned them gently over and, bending, kissed each palm
with an indescribably tender reverence; then, loosing them, stood on
one side, and Jane went out on to the terrace alone.