No position in life is more terrible to face than that of the
widowed mother left alone in the world with her unborn baby. When
the child is her first one,--when, besides the natural horror and
agony of the situation, she has also to confront the unknown
dangers of that new and dreaded experience,--her plight is still
more pitiable. But when the widowed mother is one who has never
been a wife,--when in addition to all these pangs of bereavement
and fear, she has further to face the contempt and hostility of a
sneering world, as Herminia had to face it,--then, indeed, her lot
becomes well-nigh insupportable; it is almost more than human
nature can bear up against. So Herminia found it. She might have
died of grief and loneliness then and there, had it not been for
the sudden and unexpected rousing of her spirit of opposition by
Dr. Merrick's words. That cruel speech gave her the will and the
power to live. It saved her from madness. She drew herself up at
once with an injured woman's pride, and, facing her dead Alan's
father with a quick access of energy,--
"You are wrong," she said, stilling her heart with one hand.
"These rooms are mine,--my own, not dear Alan's. I engaged them
myself, for my own use, and in my own name, as Herminia Barton.
You can stay here if you wish. I will not imitate your cruelty by
refusing you access to them; but if you remain here, you must treat
me at least with the respect that belongs to my great sorrow, and
with the courtesy due to an English lady."
Her words half cowed him. He subsided at once. In silence he
stepped over to his dead son's bedside. Mechanically, almost
unconsciously, Herminia went on with the needful preparations for
Alan's funeral. Her grief was so intense that she bore up as if
stunned; she did what was expected of her without thinking or
feeling it. Dr. Merrick stopped on at Perugia till his son was
buried. He was frigidly polite meanwhile to Herminia. Deeply as
he differed from her, the dignity and pride with which she had
answered his first insult impressed him with a certain sense of
respect for her character, and made him feel at least he could not
be rude to her with impunity. He remained at the hotel, and
superintended the arrangements for his son's funeral. As soon as
that was over, and Herminia had seen the coffin lowered into the
grave of all her hopes, save one, she returned to her rooms alone,--
more utterly alone than she had ever imagined any human being
could feel in a cityful of fellow-creatures.
She must shape her path now for herself without Alan's aid, without
Alan's advice. And her bitterest enemies in life, she felt sure,
would henceforth be those of Alan's household.
Yet, lonely as she was, she determined from the first moment no
course was left open for her save to remain at Perugia. She
couldn't go away so soon from the spot where Alan was laid,--from
all that remained to her now of Alan. Except his unborn baby,--
the baby that was half his, half hers,--the baby predestined to
regenerate humanity. Oh, how she longed to fondle it! Every
arrangement had been made in Perugia for the baby's advent; she
would stand by those arrangements still, in her shuttered room,
partly because she couldn't tear herself away from Alan's grave;
partly because she had no heart left to make the necessary
arrangements elsewhere; but partly also because she wished Alan's
baby to be born near Alan's side, where she could present it after
birth at its father's last resting-place. It was a fanciful wish,
she knew, based upon ideas she had long since discarded; but these
ancestral sentiments echo long in our hearts; they die hard with us
all, and most hard with women.
She would stop on at Perugia, and die in giving birth to Alan's
baby; or else live to be father and mother in one to it.
So she stopped and waited; waited in tremulous fear, half longing
for death, half eager not to leave that sacred baby an orphan. It
would be Alan's baby, and might grow in time to be the world's true
savior. For, now that Alan was dead, no hope on earth seemed too
great to cherish for Alan's child within her.
And oh, that it might be a girl, to take up the task she herself
had failed in!
The day after the funeral, Dr. Merrick called in for the last time
at her lodgings. He brought in his hand a legal-looking paper,
which he had found in searching among Alan's effects, for he had
carried them off to his hotel, leaving not even a memento of her
ill-starred love to Herminia. "This may interest you," he said
dryly. "You will see at once it is in my son's handwriting."
Herminia glanced over it with a burning face. It was a will in her
favor, leaving absolutely everything of which he died possessed "to
my beloved friend, Herminia Barton."
Herminia had hardly the means to keep herself alive till her baby
was born; but in those first fierce hours of ineffable bereavement
what question of money could interest her in any way? She stared
at it, stupefied. It only pleased her to think Alan had not
forgotten her.
The sordid moneyed class of England will haggle over bequests and
settlements and dowries on their bridal eve, or by the coffins of
their dead. Herminia had no such ignoble possibilities. How could
he speak of it in her presence at a moment like this? How obtrude
such themes on her august sorrow?
"This was drawn up," Dr. Merrick went on in his austere voice, "the
very day before my late son left London. But, of course, you will
have observed it was never executed."
And in point of fact Herminia now listlessly noted that it lacked
Alan's signature.
"That makes it, I need hardly say, of no legal value," the father
went on, with frigid calm. "I bring it round merely to show you
that my son intended to act honorably towards you. As things stand,
of course, he has died intestate, and his property, such as it is,
will follow the ordinary law of succession. For your sake, I am
sorry it should be so; I could have wished it otherwise. However, I
need not remind you"--he picked his phrases carefully with icy
precision--"that under circumstances like these neither you nor your
child have any claim whatsoever upon my son's estate. Nor have I
any right over it. Still"--he paused for a second, and that
incisive mouth strove to grow gentle, while Herminia hot with shame,
confronted him helplessly--"I sympathize with your position, and do
not forget it was Alan who brought you here. Therefore, as an act
of courtesy to a lady in whom he was personally interested . . . if
a slight gift of fifty pounds would be of immediate service to you
in your present situation, why, I think, with the approbation of his
brothers and sisters, who of course inherit--"
Herminia turned upon him like a wounded creature. She thanked the
blind caprice which governs the universe that it gave her strength
at that moment to bear up under his insult. With one angry hand
she waved dead Alan's father inexorably to the door. "Go," she
said simply. "How dare you? how dare you? Leave my rooms this
instant."
Dr. Merrick still irresolute, and anxious in his way to do what he
thought was just, drew a roll of Italian bank notes from his
waistcoat pocket, and laid them on the table. "You may find these
useful," he said, as he retreated awkwardly.
Herminia turned upon him with the just wrath of a great nature
outraged. "Take them up!" she cried fiercely. "Don't pollute my
table!" Then, as often happens to all of us in moments of deep
emotion, a Scripture phrase, long hallowed by childish familiarity,
rose spontaneous to her lips. "Take them up!" she cried again.
"Thy money perish with thee!"
Dr. Merrick took them up, and slank noiselessly from the room,
murmuring as he went some inarticulate words to the effect that he
had only desired to serve her. As soon as he was gone, Herminia's
nerve gave way. She flung herself into a chair, and sobbed long
and violently.
It was no time for her, of course, to think about money. Sore
pressed as she was, she had just enough left to see her safely
through her confinement. Alan had given her a few pounds for
housekeeping when they first got into the rooms, and those she
kept; they were hers; she had not the slightest impulse to restore
them to his family. All he left was hers too, by natural justice;
and she knew it. He had drawn up his will, attestation clause and
all, with even the very date inserted in pencil, the day before
they quitted London together; but finding no friends at the club to
witness it, he had put off executing it; and so had left Herminia
entirely to her own resources. In the delirium of his fever, the
subject never occurred to him. But no doubt existed as to the
nature of his last wishes; and if Herminia herself had been placed
in a similar position to that of the Merrick family, she would have
scorned to take so mean an advantage of the mere legal omission.
By this time, of course, the story of her fate had got across to
England, and was being read and retold by each man or woman after
his or her own fashion. The papers mentioned it, as seen through
the optic lens of the society journalist, with what strange
refraction. Most of them descried in poor Herminia's tragedy
nothing but material for a smile, a sneer, or an innuendo. The
Dean himself wrote to her, a piteous, paternal note, which bowed
her down more than ever in her abyss of sorrow. He wrote as a dean
must,--gray hairs brought down with sorrow to the grave; infinite
mercy of Heaven; still room for repentance; but oh, to keep away
from her pure young sisters! Herminia answered with dignity, but
with profound emotion. She knew her father too well not to
sympathize greatly with his natural view of so fatal an episode.
So she stopped on alone for her dark hour in Perugia. She stopped
on, untended by any save unknown Italians whose tongue she hardly
spoke, and uncheered by a friendly voice at the deepest moment of
trouble in a woman's history. Often for hours together she sat
alone in the cathedral, gazing up at a certain mild-featured
Madonna, enshrined above an altar. The unwedded widow seemed to
gain some comfort from the pitying face of the maiden mother.
Every day, while still she could, she walked out along the
shadeless suburban road to Alan's grave in the parched and crowded
cemetery. Women trudging along with crammed creels on their backs
turned round to stare at her. When she could no longer walk, she
sat at her window towards San Luca and gazed at it. There lay the
only friend she possessed in Perugia, perhaps in the universe.
The dreaded day arrived at last, and her strong constitution
enabled Herminia to live through it. Her baby was born, a
beautiful little girl, soft, delicate, wonderful, with Alan's blue
eyes, and its mother's complexion. Those rosy feet saved Herminia.
As she clasped them in her hands--tiny feet, tender feet--she felt
she had now something left to live for,--her baby, Alan's baby, the
baby with a future, the baby that was destined to regenerate
humanity.
So warm! So small! Alan's soul and her own, mysteriously blended.
Still, even so, she couldn't find it in her heart to give any
joyous name to dead Alan's child. Dolores she called it, at Alan's
grave. In sorrow had she borne it; its true name was Dolores.