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       # 2025-07-15 - The Man Whom The Trees Loved by Algernon Blackwood
       
 (IMG) Tree Fairy
       
       I am posting this full text for inclusion in my "Interludes"
       personal anthology.  The key conceptual theme i took from this story
       is "relationship".  Relationship is inevitable, and it happens
       either in a positive, intentional way, or a negative, shadowy way.
       Relationship exists with each person, place, and idea that a person
       comes into contact with.  It makes perfect sense for friends, ideas,
       or trees to be a rival and a threat to a romantic relationship,
       depending on the attitudes of all involved.
       
       See also:
       
 (TXT) Blackwood's Greenwood
       
       # Chapter 1
       
       He painted trees as by some special divining instinct of their essential
       qualities. He understood them. He knew why in an oak forest, for
       instance, each individual was utterly distinct from its fellows, and why
       no two beeches in the whole world were alike. People asked him down to
       paint a favorite lime or silver birch, for he caught the individuality
       of a tree as some catch the individuality of a horse. How he managed it
       was something of a puzzle, for he never had painting lessons, his
       drawing was often wildly inaccurate, and, while his perception of a Tree
       Personality was true and vivid, his rendering of it might almost
       approach the ludicrous. Yet the character and personality of that
       particular tree stood there alive beneath his brush--shining, frowning,
       dreaming, as the case might be, friendly or hostile, good or evil. It
       emerged.
       
       There was nothing else in the wide world that he could paint; flowers
       and landscapes he only muddled away into a smudge; with people he was
       helpless and hopeless; also with animals. Skies he could sometimes
       manage, or effects of wind in foliage, but as a rule he left these all
       severely alone. He kept to trees, wisely following an instinct that was
       guided by love. It was quite arresting, this way he had of making a tree
       look almost like a being--alive. It approached the uncanny.
       
       "Yes, Sanderson knows what he's doing when he paints a tree!" thought
       old David Bittacy, C.B., late of the Woods and Forests. "Why, you can
       almost hear it rustle. You can smell the thing. You can hear the rain
       drip through its leaves. You can almost see the branches move. It
       grows." For in this way somewhat he expressed his satisfaction, half to
       persuade himself that the twenty guineas were well spent (since his wife
       thought otherwise), and half to explain this uncanny reality of life
       that lay in the fine old cedar framed above his study table.
       
       Yet in the general view the mind of Mr. Bittacy was held to be austere,
       not to say morose. Few divined in him the secretly tenacious love of
       nature that had been fostered by years spent in the forests and jungles
       of the eastern world. It was odd for an Englishman, due possibly to that
       Eurasian ancestor. Surreptitiously, as though half ashamed of it, he had
       kept alive a sense of beauty that hardly belonged to his type, and was
       unusual for its vitality. Trees, in particular, nourished it. He, also,
       understood trees, felt a subtle sense of communion with them, born
       perhaps of those years he had lived in caring for them, guarding,
       protecting, nursing, years of solitude among their great shadowy
       presences. He kept it largely to himself, of course, because he knew the
       world he lived in. HE also kept it from his wife--to some extent. He
       knew it came between them, knew that she feared it, was opposed. But
       what he did not know, or realize at any rate, was the extent to which
       she grasped the power which they wielded over his life. Her fear, he
       judged, was simply due to those years in India, when for weeks at a time
       his calling took him away from her into the jungle forests, while she
       remained at home dreading all manner of evils that might befall him.
       This, of course, explained her instinctive opposition to the passion for
       woods that still influenced and clung to him. It was a natural survival
       of those anxious days of waiting in solitude for his safe return.
       
       For Mrs. Bittacy, daughter of an evangelical clergy-man, was a
       self-sacrificing woman, who in most things found a happy duty in sharing
       her husband's joys and sorrows to the point of self-obliteration. Only
       in this matter of the trees she was less successful than in others. It
       remained a problem difficult of compromise.
       
       He knew, for instance, that what she objected to in this portrait of the
       cedar on their lawn was really not the price he had given for it, but
       the unpleasant way in which the transaction emphasized this breach
       between their common interests--the only one they had, but deep.
       
       Sanderson, the artist, earned little enough money by his strange talent;
       such checks were few and far between. The owners of fine or interesting
       trees who cared to have them painted singly were rare indeed, and the
       "studies" that he made for his own delight he also kept for his own
       delight. Even were there buyers, he would not sell them. Only a few, and
       these peculiarly intimate friends, might even see them, for he disliked
       to hear the undiscerning criticisms of those who did not understand. Not
       that he minded laughter at his craftsmanship--he admitted it with
       scorn--but that remarks about the personality of the tree itself could
       easily wound or anger him. He resented slighting observations concerning
       them, as though insults offered to personal friends who could not answer
       for themselves. He was instantly up in arms.
       
       "It really is extraordinary," said a Woman who Understood, "that you can
       make that cypress seem an individual, when in reality all cypresses are
       so _exactly_ alike."
       
       And though the bit of calculated flattery had come so near to saying the
       right, true, thing, Sanderson flushed as though she had slighted a
       friend beneath his very nose. Abruptly he passed in front of her and
       turned the picture to the wall.
       
       "Almost as queer," he answered rudely, copying her silly emphasis, "as
       that _you_ should have imagined individuality in your husband, Madame,
       when in reality all men are so _exactly_ alike!"
       
       Since the only thing that differentiated her husband from the mob was
       the money for which she had married him, Sanderson's relations with that
       particular family terminated on the spot, chance of prospective orders
       with it. His sensitiveness, perhaps, was morbid. At any rate the way to
       reach his heart lay through his trees. He might be said to love trees.
       He certainly drew a splendid inspiration from them, and the source of a
       man's inspiration, be it music, religion, or a woman, is never a safe
       thing to criticize.
       
       "I do think, perhaps, it was just a little extravagant, dear," said Mrs.
       Bittacy, referring to the cedar check, "when we want a lawnmower so
       badly too. But, as it gives you such pleasure--"
       
       "It reminds me of a certain day, Sophia," replied the old gentleman,
       looking first proudly at herself, then fondly at the picture, "now long
       gone by. It reminds me of another tree--that Kentish lawn in the spring,
       birds singing in the lilacs, and some one in a muslin frock waiting
       patiently beneath a certain cedar--not the one in the picture, I know,
       but--"
       
       "I was not waiting," she said indignantly, "I was picking fir-cones for
       the schoolroom fire--"
       
       "Fir-cones, my dear, do not grow on cedars, and schoolroom fires were
       not made in June in my young days."
       
       "And anyhow it isn't the same cedar."
       
       "It has made me fond of all cedars for its sake," he answered, "and it
       reminds me that you are the same young girl still--"
       
       She crossed the room to his side, and together they looked out of the
       window where, upon the lawn of their Hampshire cottage, a ragged Lebanon
       stood in a solitary state.
       
       "You're as full of dreams as ever," she said gently, "and I don't regret
       the check a bit--really. Only it would have been more real if it had
       been the original tree, wouldn't it?"
       
       "That was blown down years ago. I passed the place last year, and
       there's not a sign of it left," he replied tenderly. And presently, when
       he released her from his side, she went up to the wall and carefully
       dusted the picture Sanderson had made of the cedar on their present
       lawn. She went all round the frame with her tiny handkerchief, standing
       on tiptoe to reach the top rim.
       
       "What I like about it," said the old fellow to himself when his wife had
       left the room, "is the way he has made it live. All trees have it, of
       course, but a cedar taught it to me first--the 'something' trees possess
       that make them know I'm there when I stand close and watch. I suppose I
       felt it then because I was in love, and love reveals life everywhere."
       He glanced a moment at the Lebanon looming gaunt and somber through the
       gathering dusk. A curious wistful expression danced a moment through his
       eyes. "Yes, Sanderson has seen it as it is," he murmured, "solemnly
       dreaming there its dim hidden life against the Forest edge, and as
       different from that other tree in Kent as I am from--from the vicar,
       say. It's quite a stranger, too. I don't know anything about it really.
       That other cedar I loved; this old fellow I respect. Friendly
       though--yes, on the whole quite friendly. He's painted the friendliness
       right enough. He saw that. I'd like to know that man better," he added.
       "I'd like to ask him how he saw so clearly that it stands there between
       this cottage and the Forest--yet somehow more in sympathy with us than
       with the mass of woods behind--a sort of go-between. _That_ I never
       noticed before. I see it now--through his eyes. It stands there like a
       sentinel--protective rather."
       
       He turned away abruptly to look through the window. He saw the great
       encircling mass of gloom that was the Forest, fringing their little
       lawn. It pressed up closer in the darkness. The prim garden with its
       formal beds of flowers seemed an impertinence almost--some little
       colored insect that sought to settle on a sleeping monster--some gaudy
       fly that danced impudently down the edge of a great river that could
       engulf it with a toss of its smallest wave. That Forest with its
       thousand years of growth and its deep spreading being was some such
       slumbering monster, yes. Their cottage and garden stood too near its
       running lip. When the winds were strong and lifted its shadowy skirts of
       black and purple... He loved this feeling of the Forest Personality; he
       had always loved it.
       
       "Queer," he reflected, "awfully queer, that trees should bring me such a
       sense of dim, vast living! I used to feel it particularly, I remember,
       in India; in Canadian woods as well; but never in little English woods
       till here. And Sanderson's the only man I ever knew who felt it too.
       He's never said so, but there's the proof," and he turned again to the
       picture that he loved. A thrill of unaccustomed life ran through him as
       he looked. "I wonder; by Jove, I wonder," his thoughts ran on, "whether
       a tree--er--in any lawful meaning of the term can be--alive. I remember
       some writing fellow telling me long ago that trees had once been moving
       things, animal organisms of some sort, that had stood so long feeding,
       sleeping, dreaming, or something, in the same place, that they had lost
       the power to get away...!"
       
       Fancies flew pell-mell about his mind, and, lighting a cheroot, he
       dropped into an armchair beside the open window and let them play.
       Outside the blackbirds whistled in the shrubberies across the lawn. He
       smelt the earth and trees and flowers, the perfume of mown grass, and
       the bits of open heath-land far away in the heart of the woods. The
       summer wind stirred very faintly through the leaves. But the great New
       Forest hardly raised her sweeping skirts of black and purple shadow.
       
       Mr. Bittacy, however, knew intimately every detail of that wilderness of
       trees within. He knew all the purple coombs splashed with yellow waves
       of gorse; sweet with juniper and myrtle, and gleaming with clear and
       dark-eyed pools that watched the sky. There hawks hovered, circling hour
       by hour, and the flicker of the peewit's flight with its melancholy,
       petulant cry, deepened the sense of stillness. He knew the solitary
       pines, dwarfed, tufted, vigorous, that sang to every lost wind,
       travelers like the gypsies who pitched their bush-like tents beneath
       them; he knew the shaggy ponies, with foals like baby centaurs; the
       chattering jays, the milky call of the cuckoos in the spring, and the
       boom of the bittern from the lonely marshes. The undergrowth of watching
       hollies, he knew too, strange and mysterious, with their dark,
       suggestive beauty, and the yellow shimmer of their pale dropped leaves.
       
       Here all the Forest lived and breathed in safety, secure from
       mutilation. No terror of the axe could haunt the peace of its vast
       subconscious life, no terror of devastating Man afflict it with the
       dread of premature death. It knew itself supreme; it spread and preened
       itself without concealment. It set no spires to carry warnings, for no
       wind brought messages of alarm as it bulged outwards to the sun and
       stars.
       
       But, once its leafy portals left behind, the trees of the countryside
       were otherwise. The houses threatened them; they knew themselves in
       danger. The roads were no longer glades of silent turf, but noisy, cruel
       ways by which men came to attack them. They were civilized, cared
       for--but cared for in order that some day they might be put to death.
       Even in the villages, where the solemn and immemorial repose of giant
       chestnuts aped security, the tossing of a silver birch against their
       mass, impatient in the littlest wind, brought warning. Dust clogged
       their leaves. The inner humming of their quiet life became inaudible
       beneath the scream and shriek of clattering traffic. They longed and
       prayed to enter the great Peace of the Forest yonder, but they could not
       move. They knew, moreover, that the Forest with its august, deep
       splendor despised and pitied them. They were a thing of artificial
       gardens, and belonged to beds of flowers all forced to grow one way...
       
       "I'd like to know that artist fellow better," was the thought upon which
       he returned at length to the things of practical life. "I wonder if
       Sophia would mind him for a bit--?" He rose with the sound of the gong,
       brushing the ashes from his speckled waistcoat. He pulled the waistcoat
       down. He was slim and spare in figure, active in his movements. In the
       dim light, but for that silvery moustache, he might easily have passed
       for a man of forty. "I'll suggest it to her anyhow," he decided on his
       way upstairs to dress. His thought really was that Sanderson could
       probably explain his world of things he had always felt about--trees. A
       man who could paint the soul of a cedar in that way must know it all.
       
       "Why not?" she gave her verdict later over the bread-and-butter pudding;
       "unless you think he'd find it dull without companions."
       
       "He would paint all day in the Forest, dear. I'd like to pick his brains
       a bit, too, if I could manage it."
       
       "You can manage anything, David," was what she answered, for this
       elderly childless couple used an affectionate politeness long since
       deemed old-fashioned. The remark, however, displeased her, making her
       feel uneasy, and she did not notice his rejoinder, smiling his pleasure
       and content--"Except yourself and our bank account, my dear." This
       passion of his for trees was of old a bone of contention, though very
       mild contention. It frightened her. That was the truth. The Bible, her
       Baedeker for earth and heaven, did not mention it. Her husband, while
       humoring her, could never alter that instinctive dread she had. He
       soothed, but never changed her. She liked the woods, perhaps as spots
       for shade and picnics, but she could not, as he did, love them.
       
       And after dinner, with a lamp beside the open window, he read aloud from
       _ The Times_ the evening post had brought, such fragments as he thought
       might interest her. The custom was invariable, except on Sundays, when,
       to please his wife, he dozed over Tennyson or Farrar as their mood might
       be. She knitted while he read, asked gentle questions, told him his
       voice was a "lovely reading voice," and enjoyed the little discussions
       that occasions prompted because he always let her with them with "Ah,
       Sophia, I had never thought of it quite in _that_ way before; but now
       you mention it I must say I think there's something in it..."
       
       For David Bittacy was wise. It was long after marriage, during his
       months of loneliness spent with trees and forests in India, his wife
       waiting at home in the Bungalow, that his other, deeper side had
       developed the strange passion that she could not understand. And after
       one or two serious attempts to let her share it with him, he had given
       up and learned to hide it from her. He learned, that is, to speak of it
       only casually, for since she knew it was there, to keep silence
       altogether would only increase her pain. So from time to time he skimmed
       the surface just to let her show him where he was wrong and think she
       won the day. It remained a debatable land of compromise. He listened
       with patience to her criticisms, her excursions and alarms, knowing that
       while it gave her satisfaction, it could not change himself. The thing
       lay in him too deep and true for change. But, for peace' sake, some
       meeting-place was desirable, and he found it thus.
       
       It was her one fault in his eyes, this religious mania carried over from
       her upbringing, and it did no serious harm. Great emotion could shake it
       sometimes out of her. She clung to it because her father taught it her
       and not because she had thought it out for herself. Indeed, like many
       women, she never really _thought_ at all, but merely reflected the
       images of others' thinking which she had learned to see. So, wise in his
       knowledge of human nature, old David Bittacy accepted the pain of being
       obliged to keep a portion of his inner life shut off from the woman he
       deeply loved. He regarded her little biblical phrases as oddities that
       still clung to a rather fine, big soul--like horns and little useless
       things some animals have not yet lost in the course of evolution while
       they have outgrown their use.
       
       "My dear, what is it? You frightened me!" She asked it suddenly, sitting
       up so abruptly that her cap dropped sideways almost to her ear. For
       David Bittacy behind his crackling paper had uttered a sharp exclamation
       of surprise. He had lowered the sheet and was staring at her over the
       tops of his gold glasses.
       
       "Listen to this, if you please," he said, a note of eagerness in his
       voice, "listen to this, my dear Sophia. It's from an address by Francis
       Darwin before the Royal Society. He is president, you know, and son of
       the great Darwin. Listen carefully, I beg you. It is _most_ significant."
       
       "I _am_ listening, David," she said with some astonishment, looking up.
       She stopped her knitting. For a second she glanced behind her. Something
       had suddenly changed in the room, and it made her feel wide awake,
       though before she had been almost dozing. Her husband's voice and manner
       had introduced this new thing. Her instincts rose in warning. "_Do_
       read it, dear." He took a deep breath, looking first again over the rims
       of his glasses to make quite sure of her attention. He had evidently
       come across something of genuine interest, although herself she often
       found the passages from these "Addresses" somewhat heavy.
       
       In a deep, emphatic voice he read aloud:
       
       '"It is impossible to know whether or not plants are conscious; but it
       is consistent with the doctrine of continuity that in all living things
       there is something psychic, and if we accept this point of view--'"
       
       "_If_," she interrupted, scenting danger.
       
       He ignored the interruption as a thing of slight value he was accustomed
       to.
       
       '"If we accept this point of view,'" he continued, '"we must believe
       that in plants there exists a faint copy of _what we know as
       consciousness in ourselves_ .'"
       
       He laid the paper down and steadily stared at her. Their eyes met. He
       had italicized the last phrase.
       
       For a minute or two his wife made no reply or comment. They stared at
       one another in silence. He waited for the meaning of the words to reach
       her understanding with full import. Then he turned and read them again
       in part, while she, released from that curious driving look in his eyes,
       instinctively again glanced over her shoulder round the room. It was
       almost as if she felt some one had come in to them unnoticed.
       
       "We must believe that in plants there exists a faint copy of what we
       know as consciousness in ourselves."
       
       "_If_," she repeated lamely, feeling before the stare of those
       questioning eyes she must say something, but not yet having gathered her
       wits together quite.
       
       "_Consciousness_," he rejoined. And then he added gravely: "That, my
       dear, is the statement of a scientific man of the Twentieth Century."
       
       Mrs. Bittacy sat forward in her chair so that her silk flounces crackled
       louder than the newspaper. She made a characteristic little sound
       between sniffling and snorting. She put her shoes closely together, with
       her hands upon her knees.
       
       "David," she said quietly, "I think these scientific men are simply
       losing their heads. There is nothing in the Bible that I can remember
       about any such thing whatsoever."
       
       "Nothing, Sophia, that I can remember either," he answered patiently.
       Then, after a pause, he added, half to himself perhaps more than to her:
       "And, now that I come to think about it, it seems that Sanderson once
       said something to me that was similar.
       
       "Then Mr. Sanderson is a wise and thoughtful man, and a safe man," she
       quickly took up, "if he said that."
       
       For she thought her husband referred to her remark about the Bible, and
       not to her judgment of the scientific men. And he did not correct her
       mistake.
       
       "And plants, you see, dear, are not the same as trees," she drove her
       advantage home, "not quite, that is."
       
       "I agree," said David quietly; "but both belong to the great vegetable
       kingdom."
       
       There was a moment's pause before she answered.
       
       "Pah! the vegetable kingdom, indeed!" She tossed her pretty old head.
       And into the words she put a degree of contempt that, could the
       vegetable kingdom have heard it, might have made it feel ashamed for
       covering a third of the world with its wonderful tangled network of
       roots and branches, delicate shaking leaves, and its millions of spires
       that caught the sun and wind and rain. Its very right to existence
       seemed in question.
       
       # Chapter 2
       
       Sanderson accordingly came down, and on the whole his short visit
       was a success. Why he came at all was a mystery to those who heard of
       it, for he never paid visits and was certainly not the kind of man to
       court a customer. There must have been something in Bittacy he liked.
       
       Mrs. Bittacy was glad when he left. He brought no dress-suit for one
       thing, not even a dinner-jacket, and he wore very low collars with big
       balloon ties like a Frenchman, and let his hair grow longer than was
       nice, she felt. Not that these things were important, but that she
       considered them symptoms of something a little disordered. The ties were
       unnecessarily flowing.
       
       For all that he was an interesting man, and, in spite of his
       eccentricities of dress and so forth, a gentleman. "Perhaps," she
       reflected in her genuinely charitable heart, "he had other uses for the
       twenty guineas, an invalid sister or an old mother to support!" She had
       no notion of the cost of brushes, frames, paints, and canvases. Also she
       forgave him much for the sake of his beautiful eyes and his eager
       enthusiasm of manner. So many men of thirty were already blase.
       
       Still, when the visit was over, she felt relieved. She said nothing
       about his coming a second time, and her husband, she was glad to notice,
       had likewise made no suggestion. For, truth to tell, the way the younger
       man engrossed the older, keeping him out for hours in the Forest,
       talking on the lawn in the blazing sun, and in the evenings when the
       damp of dusk came creeping out from the surrounding woods, all
       regardless of his age and usual habits, was not quite to her taste. Of
       course, Mr. Sanderson did not know how easily those attacks of Indian
       fever came back, but David surely might have told him.
       
       They talked trees from morning to night. It stirred in her the old
       subconscious trail of dread, a trail that led ever into the darkness of
       big woods; and such feelings, as her early evangelical training taught
       her, were temptings. To regard them in any other way was to play with
       danger.
       
       Her mind, as she watched these two, was charged with curious thoughts of
       dread she could not understand, yet feared the more on that account. The
       way they studied that old mangy cedar was a trifle unnecessary, unwise,
       she felt. It was disregarding the sense of proportion which deity had
       set upon the world for men's safe guidance.
       
       Even after dinner they smoked their cigars upon the low branches that
       swept down and touched the lawn, until at length she insisted on their
       coming in. Cedars, she had somewhere heard, were not safe after sundown;
       it was not wholesome to be too near them; to sleep beneath them was even
       dangerous, though what the precise danger was she had forgotten. The
       upas was the tree she really meant.
       
       At any rate she summoned David in, and Sanderson came presently after
       him.
       
       For a long time, before deciding on this peremptory step, she had
       watched them surreptitiously from the drawing-room window--her husband
       and her guest. The dusk enveloped them with its damp veil of gauze. She
       saw the glowing tips of their cigars, and heard the drone of voices.
       Bats flitted overhead, and big, silent moths whirred softly over the
       rhododendron blossoms. And it came suddenly to her, while she watched,
       that her husband had somehow altered these last few days--since Mr.
       Sanderson's arrival in fact. A change had come over him, though what it
       was she could not say. She hesitated, indeed, to search. That was the
       instinctive dread operating in her. Provided it passed she would rather
       not know. Small things, of course, she noticed; small outward signs. He
       had neglected _The Times_ for one thing, left off his speckled
       waistcoats for another. He was absent-minded sometimes; showed vagueness
       in practical details where hitherto he showed decision. And--he had
       begun to talk in his sleep again.
       
       These and a dozen other small peculiarities came suddenly upon her with
       the rush of a combined attack. They brought with them a faint distress
       that made her shiver. Momentarily her mind was startled, then confused,
       as her eyes picked out the shadowy figures in the dusk, the cedar
       covering them, the Forest close at their backs. And then, before she
       could think, or seek internal guidance as her habit was, this whisper,
       muffled and very hurried, ran across her brain: "It's Mr. Sanderson.
       Call David in at once!"
       
       And she had done so. Her shrill voice crossed the lawn and died away
       into the Forest, quickly smothered. No echo followed it. The sound fell
       dead against the rampart of a thousand listening trees.
       
       "The damp is so very penetrating, even in summer," she murmured when
       they came obediently. She was half surprised at her open audacity, half
       repentant. They came so meekly at her call. "And my husband is sensitive
       to fever from the East. No, _please do not throw away your cigars. We
       can sit by the open window and enjoy the evening while you smoke_."
       
       She was very talkative for a moment; subconscious excitement was the
       cause.
       
       "It is so still--so wonderfully still," she went on, as no one spoke;
       "so peaceful, and the air so very sweet ... and God is always near to
       those who need His aid." The words slipped out before she realized quite
       what she was saying, yet fortunately, in time to lower her voice, for no
       one heard them. They were, perhaps, an instinctive expression of relief.
       It flustered her that she could have said the thing at all.
       
       Sanderson brought her shawl and helped to arrange the chairs; she
       thanked him in her old-fashioned, gentle way, declining the lamps which
       he had offered to light. "They attract the moths and insects so, I
       think!"
       
       The three of them sat there in the gloaming. Mr. Bittacy's white
       moustache and his wife's yellow shawl gleaming at either end of the
       little horseshoe, Sanderson with his wild black hair and shining eyes
       midway between them. The painter went on talking softly, continuing
       evidently the conversation begun with his host beneath the cedar. Mrs.
       Bittacy, on her guard, listened--uneasily.
       
       "For trees, you see, rather conceal themselves in daylight. They reveal
       themselves fully only after sunset. I never _know_ a tree," he bowed
       here slightly towards the lady as though to apologize for something he
       felt she would not quite understand or like, "until I've seen it in the
       night. Your cedar, for instance," looking towards her husband again so
       that Mrs. Bittacy caught the gleaming of his turned eyes, "I failed with
       badly at first, because I did it in the morning. You shall see to-morrow
       what I mean--that first sketch is upstairs in my portfolio; it's quite
       another tree to the one you bought. That view"--he leaned forward,
       lowering his voice--"I caught one morning about two o'clock in very
       faint moonlight and the stars. I saw the naked being of the thing--"
       
       "You mean that you went out, Mr. Sanderson, at that hour?" the old lady
       asked with astonishment and mild rebuke. She did not care particularly
       for his choice of adjectives either.
       
       "I fear it was rather a liberty to take in another's house, perhaps," he
       answered courteously. "But, having chanced to wake, I saw the tree from
       my window, and made my way downstairs."
       
       "It's a wonder Boxer didn't bit you; he sleeps loose in the hall," she
       said.
       
       "On the contrary. The dog came out with me. I hope," he added, "the
       noise didn't disturb you, though it's rather late to say so. I feel
       quite guilty." His white teeth showed in the dusk as he smiled. A smell
       of earth and flowers stole in through the window on a breath of
       wandering air.
       
       Mrs. Bittacy said nothing at the moment. "We both sleep like tops," put
       in her husband, laughing. "You're a courageous man, though, Sanderson,
       and, by Jove, the picture justifies you. Few artist would have taken so
       much trouble, though I read once that Holman Hunt, Rossetti, or some one
       of that lot, painted all night in his orchard to get an effect of
       moonlight that he wanted."
       
       He chattered on. His wife was glad to hear his voice; it made her feel
       more easy in her mind. But presently the other held the floor again, and
       her thoughts grew darkened and afraid. Instinctively she feared the
       influence on her husband. The mystery and wonder that lie in woods, in
       forests, in great gatherings of trees everywhere, seemed so real and
       present while he talked.
       
       "The Night transfigures all things in a way," he was saying; "but
       nothing so searchingly as trees. From behind a veil that sunlight hangs
       before them in the day they emerge and show themselves. Even buildings
       do that--in a measure--but trees particularly. In the daytime they
       sleep; at night they wake, they manifest, turn active--live. You
       remember," turning politely again in the direction of his hostess, "how
       clearly Henley understood that?"
       
       "That socialist person, you mean?" asked the lady. Her tone and accent
       made the substantive sound criminal. It almost hissed, the way she
       uttered it.
       
       "The poet, yes," replied the artist tactfully, "the friend of Stevenson,
       you remember, Stevenson who wrote those charming children's verses."
       
       He quoted in a low voice the lines he meant. It was, for once, the time,
       the place, and the setting all together. The words floated out across
       the lawn towards the wall of blue darkness where the big Forest swept
       the little garden with its league-long curve that was like the
       shore-line of a sea. A wave of distant sound that was like surf
       accompanied his voice, as though the wind was fain to listen too:
       
       > Not to the staring Day,
       > For all the importunate questionings he pursues
       > In his big, violent voice,
       > Shall those mild things of bulk and multitude,
       > The trees--God's sentinels ...
       > Yield of their huge, unutterable selves
       > But at the word
       > Of the ancient, sacerdotal Night,
       > Night of many secrets, whose effect--
       > Transfiguring, hierophantic, dread--
       > Themselves alone may fully apprehend,
       > They tremble and are changed:
       > In each the uncouth, individual soul
       > Looms forth and glooms
       > Essential, and, their bodily presences
       > Touched with inordinate significance,
       > Wearing the darkness like a livery
       > Of some mysterious and tremendous guild,
       > They brood--they menace--they appall.
       
       The voice of Mrs. Bittacy presently broke the silence that followed.
       
       "I like that part about God's sentinels," she murmured. There was no
       sharpness in her tone; it was hushed and quiet. The truth, so musically
       uttered, muted her shrill objections though it had not lessened her
       alarm. Her husband made no comment; his cigar, she noticed, had gone
       out.
       
       "And old trees in particular," continued the artist, as though to
       himself, "have very definite personalities. You can offend, wound,
       please them; the moment you stand within their shade you feel whether
       they come out to you, or whether they withdraw." He turned abruptly
       towards his host. "You know that singular essay of Prentice Mulford's,
       no doubt 'God in the Trees'--extravagant perhaps, but yet with a fine
       true beauty in it? You've never read it, no?" he asked.
       
       But it was Mrs. Bittacy who answered; her husband keeping his curious
       deep silence.
       
       "I never did!" It fell like a drip of cold water from the face muffled
       in the yellow shawl; even a child could have supplied the remainder of
       the unspoken thought.
       
       "Ah," said Sanderson gently, "but there _is_ 'God' in the trees. God in
       a very subtle aspect and sometimes--I have known the trees express it
       too--that which is _not_ God--dark and terrible. Have you ever noticed,
       too, how clearly trees show what they want--choose their companions, at
       least? How beeches, for instance, allow no life too near them--birds or
       squirrels in their boughs, nor any growth beneath? The silence in the
       beech wood is quite terrifying often! And how pines like bilberry bushes
       at their feet and sometimes little oaks--all trees making a clear,
       deliberate choice, and holding firmly to it? Some trees obviously--it's
       very strange and marked--seem to prefer the human."
       
       The old lady sat up crackling, for this was more than she could permit.
       Her stiff silk dress emitted little sharp reports.
       
       "We know," she answered, "that He was said to have walked in the garden
       in the cool of the evening"--the gulp betrayed the effort that it cost
       her--"but we are nowhere told that He hid in the trees, or anything like
       that. Trees, after all, we must remember, are only large vegetables."
       
       "True," was the soft answer, "but in everything that grows, has life,
       that is, there's mystery past all finding out. The wonder that lies
       hidden in our own souls lies also hidden, I venture to assert, in the
       stupidity and silence of a mere potato."
       
       The observation was not meant to be amusing. It was _not_ amusing. No
       one laughed. On the contrary, the words conveyed in too literal a sense
       the feeling that haunted all that conversation. Each one in his own way
       realized--with beauty, with wonder, with alarm--that the talk had
       somehow brought the whole vegetable kingdom nearer to that of man. Some
       link had been established between the two. It was not wise, with that
       great Forest listening at their very doors, to speak so plainly. The
       forest edged up closer while they did so.
       
       And Mrs. Bittacy, anxious to interrupt the horrid spell, broke suddenly
       in upon it with a matter-of-fact suggestion. She did not like her
       husband's prolonged silence, stillness. He seemed so negative--so
       changed.
       
       "David," she said, raising her voice, "I think you're feeling the
       dampness. It's grown chilly. The fever comes so suddenly, you know, and
       it might be wide to take the tincture. I'll go and get it, dear, at
       once. It's better." And before he could object she had left the room to
       bring the homeopathic dose that she believed in, and that, to please
       her, he swallowed by the tumbler-full from week to week.
       
       And the moment the door closed behind her, Sanderson began again, though
       now in quite a different tone. Mr. Bittacy sat up in his chair. The two
       men obviously resumed the conversation--the real conversation
       interrupted beneath the cedar--and left aside the sham one which was so
       much dust merely thrown in the old lady's eyes.
       
       "Trees love you, that's the fact," he said earnestly. "Your service to
       them all these years abroad has made them know you."
       
       "Know me?"
       
       "Made them, yes,"--he paused a moment, then added,--"made them _aware
       of your presence_; aware of a force outside themselves that
       deliberately seeks their welfare, don't you see?"
       
       "By Jove, Sanderson--!" This put into plain language actual sensations
       he had felt, yet had never dared to phrase in words before. "They get
       into touch with me, as it were?" he ventured, laughing at his own
       sentence, yet laughing only with his lips.
       
       "Exactly," was the quick, emphatic reply. "They seek to blend with
       something they feel instinctively to be good for them, helpful to their
       essential beings, encouraging to their best expression--their life."
       
       "Good Lord, Sir!" Bittacy heard himself saying, "but you're putting my
       own thoughts into words. D'you know, I've felt something like that for
       years. As though--" he looked round to make sure his wife was not there,
       then finished the sentence--"as though the trees were after me!"
       
       "'Amalgamate' seems the best word, perhaps," said Sanderson slowly.
       "They would draw you to themselves. Good forces, you see, always seek to
       merge; evil to separate; that's why Good in the end must always win the
       day--everywhere. The accumulation in the long run becomes overwhelming.
       Evil tends to separation, dissolution, death. The comradeship of trees,
       their instinct to run together, is a vital symbol. Trees in a mass are
       good; alone, you may take it generally, are--well, dangerous. Look at a
       monkey-puzzler, or better still, a holly. Look at it, watch it,
       understand it. Did you ever see more plainly an evil thought made
       visible? They're wicked. Beautiful too, oh yes! There's a strange,
       miscalculated beauty often in evil--"
       
       "That cedar, then--?"
       
       "Not evil, no; but alien, rather. Cedars grow in forests all together.
       The poor thing has drifted, that is all."
       
       They were getting rather deep. Sanderson, talking against time, spoke so
       fast. It was too condensed. Bittacy hardly followed that last bit. His
       mind floundered among his own less definite, less sorted thoughts, till
       presently another sentence from the artist startled him into attention
       again.
       
       "That cedar will protect you here, though, because you both have
       humanized it by your thinking so lovingly of its presence. The others
       can't get past it, as it were."
       
       "Protect me!" he exclaimed. "Protect me from their love?"
       
       Sanderson laughed. "We're getting rather mixed," he said; "we're talking
       of one thing in the terms of another really. But what I mean is--you
       see--that their love for you, their 'awareness' of your personality and
       presence involves the idea of winning you--across the border--into
       themselves--into their world of living. It means, in a way, taking you
       over."
       
       The ideas the artist started in his mind ran furious wild races to and
       fro. It was like a maze sprung suddenly into movement. The whirling of
       the intricate lines bewildered him. They went so fast, leaving but half
       an explanation of their goal. He followed first one, then another, but a
       new one always dashed across to intercept before he could get anywhere.
       
       "But India," he said, presently in a lower voice, "India is so far
       away--from this little English forest. The trees, too, are utterly
       different for one thing?"
       
       The rustle of skirts warned of Mrs. Bittacy's approach. This was a
       sentence he could turn round another way in case she came up and pressed
       for explanation.
       
       "There is communion among trees all the world over," was the strange
       quick reply. "They always know."
       
       "They always know! You think then--?"
       
       "The winds, you see--the great, swift carriers! They have their ancient
       rights of way about the world. An easterly wind, for instance, carrying
       on stage by stage as it were--linking dropped messages and meanings from
       land to land like the birds--an easterly wind--"
       
       Mrs. Bittacy swept in upon them with the tumbler--
       
       "There, David," she said, "that will ward off any beginnings of attack.
       Just a spoonful, dear. Oh, oh! not _all_ !" for he had swallowed half
       the contents at a single gulp as usual; "another dose before you go to
       bed, and the balance in the morning, first thing when you wake."
       
       She turned to her guest, who put the tumbler down for her upon a table
       at his elbow. She had heard them speak of the east wind. She emphasized
       the warning she had misinterpreted. The private part of the conversation
       came to an abrupt end.
       
       "It is the one thing that upsets him more than any other--an east wind,"
       she said, "and I am glad, Mr. Sanderson, to hear you think so too."
       
       # Chapter 3
       
       A deep hush followed, in the middle of which an owl was heard calling
       its muffled note in the forest. A big moth whirred with a soft collision
       against one of the windows. Mrs. Bittacy started slightly, but no one
       spoke. Above the trees the stars were faintly visible. From the distance
       came the barking of a dog.
       
       Bittacy, relighting his cigar, broke the little spell of silence that
       had caught all three.
       
       "It's rather a comforting thought," he said, throwing the match out of
       the window, "that life is about us everywhere, and that there is really
       no dividing line between what we call organic and inorganic."
       
       "The universe, yes," said Sanderson, "is all one, really. We're puzzled
       by the gaps we cannot see across, but as a fact, I suppose, there are no
       gaps at all."
       
       Mrs. Bittacy rustled ominously, holding her peace meanwhile. She feared
       long words she did not understand. Beelzebub lay hid among too many
       syllables.
       
       "In trees and plants especially, there dreams an exquisite life that no
       one yet has proved unconscious."
       
       "Or conscious either, Mr. Sanderson," she neatly interjected. "It's only
       man that was made after His image, not shrubberies and things..."
       
       Her husband interposed without delay.
       
       "It is not necessary," he explained suavely, "to say that they're alive
       in the sense that we are alive. At the same time," with an eye to his
       wife, "I see no harm in holding, dear, that all created things contain
       some measure of His life Who made them. It's only beautiful to hold that
       He created nothing dead. We are not pantheists for all that!" he added
       soothingly.
       
       "Oh, no! Not that, I hope!" The word alarmed her. It was worse than
       pope. Through her puzzled mind stole a stealthy, dangerous thing ...
       like a panther.
       
       "I like to think that even in decay there's life," the painter murmured.
       "The falling apart of rotten wood breeds sentiency, there's force and
       motion in the falling of a dying leaf, in the breaking up and crumbling
       of everything indeed. And take an inert stone: it's crammed with heat
       and weight and potencies of all sorts. What holds its particles together
       indeed? We understand it as little as gravity or why a needle always
       turns to the 'North.' Both things may be a mode of life..."
       
       "You think a compass has a soul, Mr. Sanderson?" exclaimed the lady with
       a crackling of her silk flounces that conveyed a sense of outrage even
       more plainly than her tone. The artist smiled to himself in the
       darkness, but it was Bittacy who hastened to reply.
       
       "Our friend merely suggests that these mysterious agencies," he said
       quietly, "may be due to some kind of life we cannot understand. Why
       should water only run downhill? Why should trees grow at right angles to
       the surface of the ground and towards the sun? Why should the worlds
       spin for ever on their axes? Why should fire change the form of
       everything it touches without really destroying them? To say these
       things follow the law of their being explains nothing. Mr. Sanderson
       merely suggests--poetically, my dear, of course--that these may be
       manifestations of life, though life at a different stage to ours."
       
       "The '_breath_ of life,' we read, 'He breathed into them. These things
       do not breathe." She said it with triumph.
       
       Then Sanderson put in a word. But he spoke rather to himself or to his
       host than by way of serious rejoinder to the ruffled lady.
       
       "But plants do breathe too, you know," he said. "They breathe, they eat,
       they digest, they move about, and they adapt themselves to their
       environment as men and animals do. They have a nervous system too... at
       least a complex system of nuclei which have some of the qualities of
       nerve cells. They may have memory too. Certainly, they know definite
       action in response to stimulus. And though this may be physiological, no
       one has proved that it is only that, and not--psychological."
       
       He did not notice, apparently, the little gasp that was audible behind
       the yellow shawl. Bittacy cleared his throat, threw his extinguished
       cigar upon the lawn, crossed and recrossed his legs.
       
       "And in trees," continued the other, "behind a great forest, for
       instance," pointing towards the woods, "may stand a rather splendid
       Entity that manifests through all the thousand individual trees--some
       huge collective life, quite as minutely and delicately organized as our
       own. It might merge and blend with ours under certain conditions, so
       that we could understand it by _being_ it, for a time at least. It
       might even engulf human vitality into the immense whirlpool of its own
       vast dreaming life. The pull of a big forest on a man can be tremendous
       and utterly overwhelming."
       
       The mouth of Mrs. Bittacy was heard to close with a snap. Her shawl, and
       particularly her crackling dress, exhaled the protest that burned within
       her like a pain. She was too distressed to be overawed, but at the same
       time too confused 'mid the litter of words and meanings half understood,
       to find immediate phrases she could use. Whatever the actual meaning of
       his language might be, however, and whatever subtle dangers lay
       concealed behind them meanwhile, they certainly wove a kind of gentle
       spell with the glimmering darkness that held all three delicately
       enmeshed there by that open window. The odors of dewy lawn, flowers,
       trees, and earth formed part of it.
       
       "The moods," he continued, "that people waken in us are due to their
       hidden life affecting our own. Deep calls to sleep. A person, for
       instance, joins you in an empty room: you both instantly change. The new
       arrival, though in silence, has caused a change of mood. May not the
       moods of Nature touch and stir us in virtue of a similar prerogative?
       The sea, the hills, the desert, wake passion, joy, terror, as the case
       may be; for a few, perhaps," he glanced significantly at his host so
       that Mrs. Bittacy again caught the turning of his eyes, "emotions of a
       curious, flaming splendor that are quite nameless. Well ... whence come
       these powers? Surely from nothing that is ... dead! Does not the
       influence of a forest, its sway and strange ascendancy over certain
       minds, betray a direct manifestation of life? It lies otherwise beyond
       all explanation, this mysterious emanation of big woods. Some natures,
       of course, deliberately invite it. The authority of a host of
       trees,"--his voice grew almost solemn as he said the words--"is
       something not to be denied. One feels it here, I think, particularly."
       
       There was considerable tension in the air as he ceased speaking. Mr.
       Bittacy had not intended that the talk should go so far. They had
       drifted. He did not wish to see his wife unhappy or afraid, and he was
       aware--acutely so--that her feelings were stirred to a point he did not
       care about. Something in her, as he put it, was "working up" towards
       explosion.
       
       He sought to generalize the conversation, diluting this accumulated
       emotion by spreading it.
       
       "The sea is His and He made it," he suggested vaguely, hoping Sanderson
       would take the hint, "and with the trees it is the same..."
       
       "The whole gigantic vegetable kingdom, yes," the artist took him up,
       "all at the service of man, for food, for shelter and for a thousand
       purposes of his daily life. Is it not striking what a lot of the globe
       they cover ... exquisitely organized life, yet stationary, always ready
       to our had when we want them, never running away? But the taking them,
       for all that, not so easy. One man shrinks from picking flowers, another
       from cutting down trees. And, it's curious that most of the forest tales
       and legends are dark, mysterious, and somewhat ill-omened. The
       forest-beings are rarely gay and harmless. The forest life was felt as
       terrible. Tree-worship still survives to-day. Wood-cutters... those who
       take the life of trees... you see a race of haunted men..."
       
       He stopped abruptly, a singular catch in his voice. Bittacy felt
       something even before the sentences were over. His wife, he knew, felt
       it still more strongly. For it was in the middle of the heavy silence
       following upon these last remarks, that Mrs. Bittacy, rising with a
       violent abruptness from her chair, drew the attention of the others to
       something moving towards them across the lawn. It came silently. In
       outline it was large and curiously spread. It rose high, too, for the
       sky above the shrubberies, still pale gold from the sunset, was dimmed
       by its passage. She declared afterwards that it move in "looping
       circles," but what she perhaps meant to convey was "spirals."
       
       She screamed faintly. "It's come at last! And it's you that brought it!"
       
       She turned excitedly, half afraid, half angry, to Sanderson. With a
       breathless sort of gasp she said it, politeness all forgotten. "I knew
       it ... if you went on. I knew it. Oh! Oh!" And she cried again, "Your
       talking has brought it out!" The terror that shook her voice was rather
       dreadful.
       
       But the confusion of her vehement words passed unnoticed in the first
       surprise they caused. For a moment nothing happened.
       
       "What is it you think you see, my dear?" asked her husband, startled.
       Sanderson said nothing. All three leaned forward, the men still sitting,
       but Mrs. Bittacy had rushed hurriedly to the window, placing herself of
       a purpose, as it seemed, between her husband and the lawn. She pointed.
       Her little hand made a silhouette against the sky, the yellow shawl
       hanging from the arm like a cloud.
       
       "Beyond the cedar--between it and the lilacs." The voice had lost its
       shrillness; it was thin and hushed. "There ... now you see it going
       round upon itself again--going back, thank God!... going back to the
       Forest." It sank to a whisper, shaking. She repeated, with a great
       dropping sigh of relief--"Thank God! I thought ... at first ... it was
       coming here ... to us!... David ... to _you_ !"
       
       She stepped back from the window, her movements confused, feeling in the
       darkness for the support of a chair, and finding her husband's
       outstretched hand instead. "Hold me, dear, hold me, please ... tight. Do
       not let me go." She was in what he called afterwards "a regular state."
       He drew her firmly down upon her chair again.
       
       "Smoke, Sophie, my dear," he said quickly, trying to make his voice calm
       and natural. "I see it, yes. It's smoke blowing over from the gardener's
       cottage..."
       
       "But, David,"--and there was a new horror in her whisper now--"it made a
       noise. It makes it still. I hear it swishing." Some such word she
       used--swishing, sishing, rushing, or something of the kind. "David, I'm
       very frightened. It's something awful! That man has called it out...!"
       
       "Hush, hush," whispered her husband. He stroked her trembling hand
       beside him.
       
       "It is in the wind," said Sanderson, speaking for the first time, very
       quietly. The expression on his face was not visible in the gloom, but
       his voice was soft and unafraid. At the sound of it, Mrs. Bittacy
       started violently again. Bittacy drew his chair a little forward to
       obstruct her view of him. He felt bewildered himself, a little, hardly
       knowing quite what to say or do. It was all so very curious and sudden.
       
       But Mrs. Bittacy was badly frightened. It seemed to her that what she
       saw came from the enveloping forest just beyond their little garden. It
       emerged in a sort of secret way, moving towards them as with a purpose,
       stealthily, difficultly. Then something stopped it. It could not advance
       beyond the cedar. The cedar--this impression remained with her
       afterwards too--prevented, kept it back. Like a rising sea the Forest
       had surged a moment in their direction through the covering darkness,
       and this visible movement was its first wave. Thus to her mind it
       seemed... like that mysterious turn of the tide that used to frighten
       and mystify her in childhood on the sands. The outward surge of some
       enormous Power was what she felt... something to which every instinct in
       her being rose in opposition because it threatened her and hers. In that
       moment she realized the Personality of the Forest... menacing.
       
       In the stumbling movement that she made away from the window and towards
       the bell she barely caught the sentence Sanderson--or was it her
       husband?--murmured to himself: "It came because we talked of it; our
       thinking made it aware of us and brought it out. But the cedar stops it.
       It cannot cross the lawn, you see..."
       
       All three were standing now, and her husband's voice broke in with
       authority while his wife's fingers touched the bell.
       
       "My dear, I should _not_ say anything to Thompson." The anxiety he felt
       was manifest in his voice, but his outward composure had returned. "The
       gardener can go..."
       
       Then Sanderson cut him short. "Allow me," he said quickly. "I'll see if
       anything's wrong." And before either of them could answer or object, he
       was gone, leaping out by the open window. They saw his figure vanish
       with a run across the lawn into the darkness.
       
       A moment later the maid entered, in answer to the bell, and with her
       came the loud barking of the terrier from the hall.
       
       "The lamps," said her master shortly, and as she softly closed the door
       behind her, they heard the wind pass with a mournful sound of singing
       round the outer walls. A rustle of foliage from the distance passed
       within it.
       
       "You see, the wind _is_ rising. It _was_ the wind!" He put a
       comforting arm about her, distressed to feel that she was trembling. But
       he knew that he was trembling too, though with a kind of odd elation
       rather than alarm. "And it _was_ smoke that you saw coming from
       Stride's cottage, or from the rubbish heaps he's been burning in the
       kitchen garden. The noise we heard was the branches rustling in the
       wind. Why should you be so nervous?"
       
       A thin whispering voice answered him:
       
       "I was afraid for _you_, dear. Something frightened me for _you_.
       That man makes me feel so uneasy and uncomfortable for his influence
       upon you. It's very foolish, I know. I think... I'm tired; I feel so
       overwrought and restless." The words poured out in a hurried jumble and
       she kept turning to the window while she spoke.
       
       "The strain of having a visitor," he said soothingly, "has taxed you.
       We're so unused to having people in the house. He goes to-morrow." He
       warmed her cold hands between his own, stroking them tenderly. More, for
       the life of him, he could not say or do. The joy of a strange, internal
       excitement made his heart beat faster. He knew not what it was. He knew
       only, perhaps, whence it came.
       
       She peered close into his face through the gloom, and said a curious
       thing. "I thought, David, for a moment... you seemed... different. My
       nerves are all on edge to-night." She made no further reference to her
       husband's visitor.
       
       A sound of footsteps from the lawn warned of Sanderson's return, as he
       answered quickly in a lowered tone--"There's no need to be afraid on my
       account, dear girl. There's nothing wrong with me. I assure you; I never
       felt so well and happy in my life."
       
       Thompson came in with the lamps and brightness, and scarcely had she
       gone again when Sanderson in turn was seen climbing through the window.
       
       "There's nothing," he said lightly, as he closed it behind him.
       "Somebody's been burning leaves, and the smoke is drifting a little
       through the trees. The wind," he added, glancing at his host a moment
       significantly, but in so discreet a way that Mrs. Bittacy did not
       observe it, "the wind, too, has begun to roar... in the Forest...
       further out."
       
       But Mrs. Bittacy noticed about him two things which increased her
       uneasiness. She noticed the shining of his eyes, because a similar light
       had suddenly come into her husband's; and she noticed, too, the apparent
       depth of meaning he put into those simple words that "the wind had begun
       to roar in the Forest ...further out." Her mind retained the
       disagreeable impression that he meant more than he said. In his tone lay
       quite another implication. It was not actually "wind" he spoke of, and
       it would not remain "further out"...rather, it was coming in. Another
       impression she got too--still more unwelcome--was that her husband
       understood his hidden meaning.
       
       # Chapter 4
       
       "David, dear," she observed gently as soon as they were alone
       upstairs, "I have a horrible uneasy feeling about that man. I cannot get
       rid of it." The tremor in per voice caught all his tenderness.
       
       He turned to look at her. "Of what kind, my dear? You're so imaginative
       sometimes, aren't you?"
       
       "I think," she hesitated, stammering a little, confused, still
       frightened, "I mean--isn't he a hypnotist, or full of those theosophical
       ideas, or something of the sort? You know what I mean--"
       
       He was too accustomed to her little confused alarms to explain them away
       seriously as a rule, or to correct her verbal inaccuracies, but to-night
       he felt she needed careful, tender treatment. He soothed her as best he
       could.
       
       "But there's no harm in that, even if he is," he answered quietly.
       "Those are only new names for very old ideas, you know, dear." There was
       no trace of impatience in his voice.
       
       "That's what I mean," she replied, the texts he dreaded rising in an
       unuttered crowd behind the words. "He's one of those things that we are
       warned would come--one of those Latter-Day things." For her mind still
       bristled with the bogeys of the Antichrist and Prophecy, and she had
       only escaped the Number of the Beast, as it were, by the skin of her
       teeth. The Pope drew most of her fire usually, because she could
       understand him; the target was plain and she could shoot. But this
       tree-and-forest business was so vague and horrible. It terrified her.
       "He makes me think," she went on, "of Principalities and Powers in high
       places, and of things that walk in the darkness. I did _not_ like the
       way he spoke of trees getting alive in the night, and all that; it made
       me think of wolves in sheep's clothing. And when I saw that awful thing
       in the sky above the lawn--"
       
       But he interrupted her at once, for that was something he had decided it
       was best to leave unmentioned. Certainly it was better not discussed.
       
       "He only meant, I think, Sophie," he put in gravely, yet with a little
       smile, "that trees may have a measure of conscious life--rather a nice
       idea on the whole, surely,--something like that bit we read in the Times
       the other night, you remember--and that a big forest may possess a sort
       of Collective Personality. Remember, he's an artist, and poetical."
       
       "It's dangerous," she said emphatically. "I feel it's playing with fire,
       unwise, unsafe--"
       
       "Yet all to the glory of God," he urged gently. "We must not shut our
       ears and eyes to knowledge--of any kind, must we?"
       
       "With you, David, the wish is always farther than the thought," she
       rejoined. For, like the child who thought that "suffered under Pontius
       Pilate" was "suffered under a bunch of violets," she heard her proverbs
       phonetically and reproduced them thus. She hoped to convey her warning
       in the quotation. "And we must always try the spirits whether they be of
       God," she added tentatively.
       
       "Certainly, dear, we can always do that," he assented, getting into bed.
       
       But, after a little pause, during which she blew the light out, David
       Bittacy settling down to sleep with an excitement in his blood that was
       new and bewilderingly delightful, realized that perhaps he had not said
       quite enough to comfort her. She was lying awake by his side, still
       frightened. He put his head up in the darkness.
       
       "Sophie," he said softly, "you must remember, too, that in any case
       between us and--and all that sort of thing--there is a great gulf fixed,
       a gulf that cannot be crossed--er--while we are still in the body."
       
       And hearing no reply, he satisfied himself that she was already asleep
       and happy. But Mrs. Bittacy was not asleep. She heard the sentence, only
       she said nothing because she felt her thought was better unexpressed.
       She was afraid to hear the words in the darkness. The Forest outside was
       listening and might hear them too--the Forest that was "roaring further
       out."
       
       And the thought was this: That gulf, of course, existed, but Sanderson
       had somehow bridged it.
       
       It was much later than night when she awoke out of troubled, uneasy
       dreams and heard a sound that twisted her very nerves with fear. It
       passed immediately with full waking, for, listen as she might, there was
       nothing audible but the inarticulate murmur of the night. It was in her
       dreams she heard it, and the dreams had vanished with it. But the sound
       was recognizable, for it was that rushing noise that had come across the
       lawn; only this time closer. Just above her face while she slept had
       passed this murmur as of rustling branches in the very room, a sound of
       foliage whispering. "A going in the tops of the mulberry trees," ran
       through her mind. She had dreamed that she lay beneath a spreading tree
       somewhere, a tree that whispered with ten thousand soft lips of green;
       and the dream continued for a moment even after waking.
       
       She sat up in bed and stared about her. The window was open at the top;
       she saw the stars; the door, she remembered, was locked as usual; the
       room, of course, was empty. The deep hush of the summer night lay over
       all, broken only by another sound that now issued from the shadows close
       beside the bed, a human sound, yet unnatural, a sound that seized the
       fear with which she had waked and instantly increased it. And, although
       it was one she recognized as familiar, at first she could not name it.
       Some seconds certainly passed--and, they were very long ones--before she
       understood that it was her husband talking in his sleep.
       
       The direction of the voice confused and puzzled her, moreover, for it
       was not, as she first supposed, beside her. There was distance in it.
       The next minute, by the light of the sinking candle flame, she saw his
       white figure standing out in the middle of the room, half-way towards
       the window. The candle-light slowly grew. She saw him move then nearer
       to the window, with arms outstretched. His speech was low and mumbled,
       the words running together too much to be distinguishable.
       
       And she shivered. To her, sleep-talking was uncanny to the point of
       horror; it was like the talking of the dead, mere parody of a living
       voice, unnatural.
       
       "David!" she whispered, dreading the sound of her own voice, and half
       afraid to interrupt him and see his face. She could not bear the sight
       of the wide-opened eyes. "David, you're walking in your sleep. Do--come
       back to bed, dear, _please!_"
       
       Her whisper seemed so dreadfully loud in the still darkness. At the
       sound of her voice he paused, then turned slowly round to face her. His
       widely-opened eyes stared into her own without recognition; they looked
       through her into something beyond; it was as though he knew the
       direction of the sound, yet cold not see her. They were shining, she
       noticed, as the eyes of Sanderson had shone several hours ago; and his
       face was flushed, distraught. Anxiety was written upon every feature.
       And, instantly, recognizing that the fever was upon him, she forgot her
       terror temporarily in practical considerations. He came back to bed
       without waking. She closed his eyelids. Presently he composed himself
       quietly to sleep, or rather to deeper sleep. She contrived to make him
       swallow something from the tumbler beside the bed.
       
       Then she rose very quietly to close the window, feeling the night air
       blow in too fresh and keen. She put the candle where it could not reach
       him. The sight of the big Baxter Bible beside it comforted her a little,
       but all through her under-being ran the warnings of a curious alarm. And
       it was while in the act of fastening the catch with one hand and pulling
       the string of the blind with the other, that her husband sat up again in
       bed and spoke in words this time that were distinctly audible. The eyes
       had opened wide again. He pointed. She stood stock still and listened,
       her shadow distorted on the blind. He did not come out towards her as at
       first she feared.
       
       The whispering voice was very clear, horrible, too, beyond all she had
       ever known.
       
       "They are roaring in the Forest further out... and I... must go and
       see." He stared beyond her as he said it, to the woods. "They are
       needing me. They sent for me..." Then his eyes wandering back again to
       things within the room, he lay down, his purpose suddenly changed. And
       that change was horrible as well, more horrible, perhaps, because of its
       revelation of another detailed world he moved in far away from her.
       
       The singular phrase chilled her blood, for a moment she was utterly
       terrified. That tone of the somnambulist, differing so slightly yet so
       distressingly from normal, waking speech, seemed to her somehow wicked.
       Evil and danger lay waiting thick behind it. She leaned against the
       window-sill, shaking in every limb. She had an awful feeling for a
       moment that something was coming in to fetch him.
       
       "Not yet, then," she heard in a much lower voice from the bed, "but
       later. It will be better so... I shall go later..."
       
       The words expressed some fringe of these alarms that had haunted her so
       long, and that the arrival and presence of Sanderson seemed to have
       brought to the very edge of a climax she could not even dare to think
       about. They gave it form; they brought it closer; they sent her thoughts
       to her Deity in a wild, deep prayer for help and guidance. For here was
       a direct, unconscious betrayal of a world of inner purposes and claims
       her husband recognized while he kept them almost wholly to himself.
       
       By the time she reached his side and knew the comfort of his touch, the
       eyes had closed again, this time of their own accord, and the head lay
       calmly back upon the pillows. She gently straightened the bed clothes.
       She watched him for some minutes, shading the candle carefully with one
       hand. There was a smile of strangest peace upon the face.
       
       Then, blowing out the candle, she knelt down and prayed before getting
       back into bed. But no sleep came to her. She lay awake all night
       thinking, wondering, praying, until at length with the chorus of the
       birds and the glimmer of the dawn upon the green blind, she fell into a
       slumber of complete exhaustion.
       
       But while she slept the wind continued roaring in the Forest further
       out. The sound came closer--sometimes very close indeed.
       
       # Chapter 5
       
       With the departure of Sanderson the significance of the curious
       incidents waned, because the moods that had produced them passed away.
       Mrs. Bittacy soon afterwards came to regard them as some growth of
       disproportion that had been very largely, perhaps, in her own mind. It
       did not strike her that this change was sudden for it came about quite
       naturally. For one thing her husband never spoke of the matter, and for
       another she remembered how many things in life that had seemed
       inexplicable and singular at the time turned out later to have been
       quite commonplace.
       
       Most of it, certainly, she put down to the presence of the artist and to
       his wild, suggestive talk. With his welcome removal, the world turned
       ordinary again and safe. The fever, though it lasted as usual a short
       time only, had not allowed of her husband's getting up to say good-bye,
       and she had conveyed his regrets and adieux. In the morning Mr.
       Sanderson had seemed ordinary enough. In his town hat and gloves, as she
       saw him go, he seemed tame and unalarming.
       
       "After all," she thought as she watched the pony-cart bear him off,
       "he's only an artist!" What she had thought he might be otherwise her
       slim imagination did not venture to disclose. Her change of feeling was
       wholesome and refreshing. She felt a little ashamed of her behavior. She
       gave him a smile--genuine because the relief she felt was genuine--as he
       bent over her hand and kissed it, but she did not suggest a second
       visit, and her husband, she noted with satisfaction and relief, had said
       nothing either.
       
       The little household fell again into the normal and sleepy routine to
       which it was accustomed. The name of Arthur Sanderson was rarely if ever
       mentioned. Nor, for her part, did she mention to her husband the
       incident of his walking in his sleep and the wild words he used. But to
       forget it was equally impossible. Thus it lay buried deep within her
       like a center of some unknown disease of which it was a mysterious
       symptom, waiting to spread at the first favorable opportunity. She
       prayed against it every night and morning: prayed that she might forget
       it--that God would keep her husband safe from harm.
       
       For in spite of much surface foolishness that many might have read as
       weakness. Mrs. Bittacy had balance, sanity, and a fine deep faith. She
       was greater than she knew. Her love for her husband and her God were
       somehow one, an achievement only possible to a single-hearted nobility
       of soul.
       
       There followed a summer of great violence and beauty; of beauty, because
       the refreshing rains at night prolonged the glory of the spring and
       spread it all across July, keeping the foliage young and sweet; of
       violence, because the winds that tore about the south of England brushed
       the whole country into dancing movement. They swept the woods
       magnificently, and kept them roaring with a perpetual grand voice. Their
       deepest notes seemed never to leave the sky. They sang and shouted, and
       torn leaves raced and fluttered through the air long before their
       usually appointed time. Many a tree, after days of roaring and dancing,
       fell exhausted to the ground. The cedar on the lawn gave up two limbs
       that fell upon successive days, at the same hour too--just before dusk.
       The wind often makes its most boisterous effort at that time, before it
       drops with the sun, and these two huge branches lay in dark ruin
       covering half the lawn. They spread across it and towards the house.
       They left an ugly gaping space upon the tree, so that the Lebanon looked
       unfinished, half destroyed, a monster shorn of its old-time comeliness
       and splendor. Far more of the Forest was now visible than before; it
       peered through the breach of the broken defenses. They could see from
       the windows of the house now--especially from the drawing-room and
       bedroom windows--straight out into the glades and depths beyond.
       
       Mrs. Bittacy's niece and nephew, who were staying on a visit at the
       time, enjoyed themselves immensely helping the gardeners carry off the
       fragments. It took two days to do this, for Mr. Bittacy insisted on the
       branches being moved entire. He would not allow them to be chopped;
       also, he would not consent to their use as firewood. Under his
       superintendence the unwieldy masses were dragged to the edge of the
       garden and arranged upon the frontier line between the Forest and the
       lawn. The children were delighted with the scheme. They entered into it
       with enthusiasm. At all costs this defense against the inroads of the
       Forest must be made secure. They caught their uncle's earnestness, felt
       even something of a hidden motive that he had; and the visit, usually
       rather dreaded, became the visit of their lives instead. It was Aunt
       Sophia this time who seemed discouraging and dull.
       
       "She's got so old and funny," opined Stephen.
       
       But Alice, who felt in the silent displeasure of her aunt some secret
       thing that alarmed her, said:
       
       "I think she's afraid of the woods. She never comes into them with us,
       you see."
       
       "All the more reason then for making this wall impreg--all fat and thick
       and solid," he concluded, unable to manage the longer word. "Then
       nothing--simply _nothing_--can get through. Can't it, Uncle David?"
       
       And Mr. Bittacy, jacket discarded and working in his speckled waistcoat,
       went puffing to their aid, arranging the massive limb of the cedar like
       a hedge.
       
       "Come on," he said, "whatever happens, you know, we must finish before
       it's dark. Already the wind is roaring in the Forest further out." And
       Alice caught the phrase and instantly echoed it. "Stevie," she cried
       below her breath, "look sharp, you lazy lump. Didn't you hear what Uncle
       David said? It'll come in and catch us before we've done!"
       
       They worked like Trojans, and, sitting beneath the wisteria tree that
       climbed the southern wall of the cottage, Mrs. Bittacy with her knitting
       watched them, calling from time to time insignificant messages of
       counsel and advice. The messages passed, of course, unheeded. Mostly,
       indeed, they were unheard, for the workers were too absorbed. She warned
       her husband not to get too hot, Alice not to tear her dress, Stephen not
       to strain his back with pulling. Her mind hovered between the
       homeopathic medicine-chest upstairs and her anxiety to see the business
       finished.
       
       For this breaking up of the cedar had stirred again her slumbering
       alarms. It revived memories of the visit of Mr. Sanderson that had been
       sinking into oblivion; she recalled his queer and odious way of talking,
       and many things she hoped forgotten drew their heads up from that
       subconscious region to which all forgetting is impossible. They looked
       at her and nodded. They were full of life; they had no intention of
       being pushed aside and buried permanently. "Now look!" they whispered,
       "didn't we tell you so?" They had been merely waiting the right moment
       to assert their presence. And all her former vague distress crept over
       her. Anxiety, uneasiness returned. That dreadful sinking of the heart
       came too.
       
       This incident of the cedar's breaking up was actually so unimportant,
       and yet her husband's attitude towards it made it so significant. There
       was nothing that he said in particular, or did, or left undone that
       frightened, her, but his general air of earnestness seemed so
       unwarranted. She felt that he deemed the thing important. He was so
       exercised about it. This evidence of sudden concern and interest, buried
       all the summer from her sight and knowledge, she realized now had been
       buried purposely, he had kept it intentionally concealed. Deeply
       submerged in him there ran this tide of other thoughts, desires, hopes.
       What were they? Whither did they lead? The accident to the tree betrayed
       it most unpleasantly, and, doubtless, more than he was aware.
       
       She watched his grave and serious face as he worked there with the
       children, and as she watched she felt afraid. It vexed her that the
       children worked so eagerly. They unconsciously supported him. The thing
       she feared she would not even name. But it was waiting.
       
       Moreover, as far as her puzzled mind could deal with a dread so vague
       and incoherent, the collapse of the cedar somehow brought it nearer. The
       fact that, all so ill-explained and formless, the thing yet lay in her
       consciousness, out of reach but moving and alive, filled her with a kind
       of puzzled, dreadful wonder. Its presence was so very real, its power so
       gripping, its partial concealment so abominable. Then, out of the dim
       confusion, she grasped one thought and saw it stand quite clear before
       her eyes. She found difficulty in clothing it in words, but its meaning
       perhaps was this: That cedar stood in their life for something friendly;
       its downfall meant disaster; a sense of some protective influence about
       the cottage, and about her husband in particular, was thereby weakened.
       
       "Why do you fear the big winds so?" he had asked her several days
       before, after a particularly boisterous day; and the answer she gave
       surprised her while she gave it. One of those heads poked up
       unconsciously, and let slip the truth.
       
       "Because, David, I feel they--bring the Forest with them," she faltered.
       "They blow something from the trees--into the mind--into the house."
       
       He looked at her keenly for a moment.
       
       "That must be why I love them then," he answered. "They blow the souls
       of the trees about the sky like clouds."
       
       The conversation dropped. She had never heard him talk in quite that way
       before.
       
       And another time, when he had coaxed her to go with him down one of the
       nearer glades, she asked why he took the small hand-axe with him, and
       what he wanted it for.
       
       "To cut the ivy that clings to the trunks and takes their life away," he
       said.
       
       "But can't the verdurers do that?" she asked. "That's what they're paid
       for, isn't it?"
       
       Whereupon he explained that ivy was a parasite the trees knew not how to
       fight alone, and that the verdurers were careless and did not do it
       thoroughly. They gave a chop here and there, leaving the tree to do the
       rest for itself if it could.
       
       "Besides, I like to do it for them. I love to help them and protect," he
       added, the foliage rustling all about his quiet words as they went.
       
       And these stray remarks, as his attitude towards the broken cedar,
       betrayed this curious, subtle change that was going forward to his
       personality. Slowly and surely all the summer it had increased.
       
       It was growing--the thought startled her horribly--just as a tree grows,
       the outer evidence from day to day so slight as to be unnoticeable, yet
       the rising tide so deep and irresistible. The alteration spread all
       through and over him, was in both mind and actions, sometimes almost in
       his face as well. Occasionally, thus, it stood up straight outside
       himself and frightened her. His life was somehow becoming linked so
       intimately with trees, and with all that trees signified. His interests
       became more and more their interests, his activity combined with theirs,
       his thoughts and feelings theirs, his purpose, hope, desire, his fate--
       
       His fate! The darkness of some vague, enormous terror dropped its shadow
       on her when she thought of it. Some instinct in her heart she dreaded
       infinitely more than death--for death meant sweet translation for his
       soul--came gradually to associate the thought of him with the thought of
       trees, in particular with these Forest trees. Sometimes, before she
       could face the thing, argue it away, or pray it into silence, she found
       the thought of him running swiftly through her mind like a thought of
       the Forest itself, the two most intimately linked and joined together,
       each a part and complement of the other, one being.
       
       The idea was too dim for her to see it face to face. Its mere
       possibility dissolved the instant she focused it to get the truth behind
       it. It was too utterly elusive, made, protæan. Under the attack of even
       a minute's concentration the very meaning of it vanished, melted away.
       The idea lay really behind any words that she could ever find, beyond
       the touch of definite thought.
       
       Her mind was unable to grapple with it. But, while it vanished, the
       trail of its approach and disappearance flickered a moment before her
       shaking vision. The horror certainly remained.
       
       Reduced to the simple human statement that her temperament sought
       instinctively, it stood perhaps at this: Her husband loved her, and he
       loved the trees as well; but the trees came first, claimed parts of him
       she did not know. _She_ loved her God and him. _He_ loved the trees
       and her.
       
       Thus, in guise of some faint, distressing compromise, the matter shaped
       itself for her perplexed mind in the terms of conflict. A silent, hidden
       battle raged, but as yet raged far away. The breaking of the cedar was a
       visible outward fragment of a distant and mysterious encounter that was
       coming daily closer to them both. The wind, instead of roaring in the
       Forest further out, now cam nearer, booming in fitful gusts about its
       edge and frontiers.
       
       Meanwhile the summer dimmed. The autumn winds went sighing through the
       woods, leaves turned to golden red, and the evenings were drawing in
       with cozy shadows before the first sign of anything seriously untoward
       made its appearance. It came then with a flat, decided kind of violence
       that indicated mature preparation beforehand. It was not impulsive nor
       ill-considered. In a fashion it seemed expected, and indeed inevitable.
       For within a fortnight of their annual change to the little village of
       Seillans above St. Raphael--a change so regular for the past ten years
       that it was not even discussed between them--David Bittacy abruptly
       refused to go.
       
       Thompson had laid the tea-table, prepared the spirit lamp beneath the
       urn, pulled down the blinds in that swift and silent way she had, and
       left the room. The lamps were still unlit. The fire-light shone on the
       chintz armchairs, and Boxer lay asleep on the black horse-hair rug. Upon
       the walls the gilt picture frames gleamed faintly, the pictures
       themselves indistinguishable. Mrs. Bittacy had warmed the teapot and was
       in the act of pouring the water in to heat the cups when her husband,
       looking up from his chair across the hearth, made the abrupt
       announcement:
       
       "My dear," he said, as though following a train of thought of which she
       only heard this final phrase, "it's really quite impossible for me to
       go."
       
       And so abrupt, inconsequent, it sounded that she at first misunderstood.
       She thought he meant to go out into the garden or the woods. But her
       heart leaped all the same. The tone of his voice was ominous.
       
       "Of course not," she answered, "it would be _most_ unwise. Why should
       you--?" She referred to the mist that always spread on autumn nights
       upon the lawn, but before she finished the sentence she knew that _he_
       referred to something else. And her heart then gave its second horrible
       leap.
       
       "David! You mean abroad?" she gasped.
       
       "I mean abroad, dear, yes."
       
       It reminded her of the tone he used when saying good-bye years ago,
       before one of those jungle expeditions she dreaded. His voice then was
       so serious, so final. It was serious and final now. For several moments
       she could think of nothing to say. She busied herself with the teapot.
       She had filled one cup with hot water till it overflowed, and she
       emptied it slowly into the slop-basin, trying with all her might not to
       let him see the trembling of her hand. The firelight and the dimness of
       the room both helped her. But in any case he would hardly have noticed
       it. His thoughts were far away...
       
       # Chapter 6
       
       Mrs. Bittacy had never liked their present home. She preferred a flat,
       more open country that left approaches clear. She liked to see things
       coming. This cottage on the very edge of the old hunting grounds of
       William the Conqueror had never satisfied her ideal of a safe and
       pleasant place to settle down in. The sea-coast, with treeless downs
       behind and a clear horizon in front, as at Eastbourne, say, was her
       ideal of a proper home.
       
       It was curious, this instinctive aversion she felt to being shut in--by
       trees especially; a kind of claustrophobia almost; probably due, as has
       been said, to the days in India when the trees took her husband off and
       surrounded him with dangers. In those weeks of solitude the feeling had
       matured. She had fought it in her fashion, but never conquered it.
       Apparently routed, it had a way of creeping back in other forms. In this
       particular case, yielding to his strong desire, she thought the battle
       won, but the terror of the trees came back before the first month had
       passed. They laughed in her face.
       
       She never lost knowledge of the fact that the leagues of forest lay
       about their cottage like a mighty wall, a crowding, watching, listening
       presence that shut them in from freedom and escape. Far from morbid
       naturally, she did her best to deny the thought, and so simple and
       unartificial was her type of mind that for weeks together she would
       wholly lose it. Then, suddenly it would return upon her with a rush of
       bleak reality. It was not only in her mind; it existed apart from any
       mere mood; a separate fear that walked alone; it came and went, yet when
       it went--went only to watch her from another point of view. It was in
       abeyance--hidden round the corner.
       
       The Forest never let her go completely. It was ever ready to encroach.
       All the branches, she sometimes fancied, stretched one way--towards
       their tiny cottage and garden, as though it sought to draw them in and
       merge them in itself. Its great, deep-breathing soul resented the
       mockery, the insolence, the irritation of the prim garden at its very
       gates. It would absorb and smother them if it could. And every wind that
       blew its thundering message over the huge sounding-board of the million,
       shaking trees conveyed the purpose that it had. They had angered its
       great soul. At its heart was this deep, incessant roaring.
       
       All this she never framed in words, the subtleties of language lay far
       beyond her reach. But instinctively she felt it; and more besides. It
       troubled her profoundly. Chiefly, moreover, for her husband. Merely for
       herself, the nightmare might have left her cold. It was David's peculiar
       interest in the trees that gave the special invitation. Jealousy, then,
       in its most subtle aspect came to strengthen this aversion and dislike,
       for it came in a form that no reasonable wife could possibly object to.
       Her husband's passion, she reflected, was natural and inborn. It had
       decided his vocation, fed his ambition, nourished his dreams, desires,
       hopes. All his best years of active life had been spent in the care and
       guardianship of trees. He knew them, understood their secret life and
       nature, "managed" them intuitively as other men "managed" dogs and
       horses. He could not live for long away from them without a strange,
       acute nostalgia that stole his peace of mind and consequently his
       strength of body. A forest made him happy and at peace; it nursed and
       fed and soothed his deepest moods. Trees influenced the sources of his
       life, lowered or raised the very heart-beat in him. Cut off from them he
       languished as a lover of the sea can droop inland, or a mountaineer may
       pine in the flat monotony of the plains.
       
       This she could understand, in a fashion at least, and make allowances
       for. She had yielded gently, even sweetly, to his choice of their
       English home; for in the little island there is nothing that suggests
       the woods of wilder countries so nearly as the New Forest. It has the
       genuine air and mystery, the depth and splendor, the loneliness, and
       there and there the strong, untamable quality of old-time forests as
       Bittacy of the Department knew them.
       
       In a single detail only had he yielded to her wishes. He consented to a
       cottage on the edge, instead of in the heart of it. And for a dozen
       years now they had dwelt in peace and happiness at the lips of this
       great spreading thing that covered so many leagues with its tangle of
       swamps and moors and splendid ancient trees.
       
       Only with the last two years or so--with his own increasing age, and
       physical decline perhaps--had come this marked growth of passionate
       interest in the welfare of the Forest. She had watched it grow, at first
       had laughed at it, then talked sympathetically so far as sincerity
       permitted, then had argued mildly, and finally come to realize that its
       treatment lay altogether beyond her powers, and so had come to fear it
       with all her heart.
       
       The six weeks they annually spent away from their English home, each
       regarded very differently, of course. For her husband it meant a painful
       exile that did his health no good; he yearned for his trees--the sight
       and sound and smell of them; but for herself it meant release from a
       haunting dread--escape. To renounce those six weeks by the sea on the
       sunny, shining coast of France, was almost more than this little woman,
       even with her unselfishness, could face.
       
       After the first shock of the announcement, she reflected as deeply as
       her nature permitted, prayed, wept in secret--and made up her mind.
       Duty, she felt clearly, pointed to renouncement. The discipline would
       certainly be severe--she did not dream at the moment how severe!--but
       this fine, consistent little Christian saw it plain; she accepted it,
       too, without any sighing of the martyr, though the courage she showed
       was of the martyr order. Her husband should never know the cost. In all
       but this one passion his unselfishness was ever as great as her own. The
       love she had borne him all these years, like the love she bore her
       anthropomorphic deity, was deep and real. She loved to suffer for them
       both. Besides, the way her husband had put it to her was singular. It
       did not take the form of a mere selfish predilection. Something higher
       than two wills in conflict seeking compromise was in it from the
       beginning.
       
       "I feel, Sophia, it would be really more than I could manage," he said
       slowly, gazing into the fire over the tops of his stretched-out muddy
       boots. "My duty and my happiness lie here with the Forest and with you.
       My life is deeply rooted in this place. Something I can't define
       connects my inner being with these trees, and separation would make me
       ill--might even kill me. My hold on life would weaken; here is my source
       of supply. I cannot explain it better than that." He looked up steadily
       into her face across the table so that she saw the gravity of his
       expression and the shining of his steady eyes.
       
       "David, you feel it as strongly as that!" she said, forgetting the tea
       things altogether.
       
       "Yes," he replied, "I do. And it's not of the body only, I feel it in my
       soul."
       
       The reality of what he hinted at crept into that shadow-covered room
       like an actual Presence and stood beside them. It came not by the
       windows or the door, but it filled the entire space between the walls
       and ceiling. It took the heat from the fire before her face. She felt
       suddenly cold, confused a little, frightened. She almost felt the rush
       of foliage in the wind. It stood between them.
       
       "There are things--some things," she faltered, "we are not intended to
       know, I think." The words expressed her general attitude to life, not
       alone to this particular incident.
       
       And after a pause of several minutes, disregarding the criticism as
       though he had not heard it--"I cannot explain it better than that, you
       see," his grave voice answered. "There is this deep, tremendous
       link,--some secret power they emanate that keeps me well and happy
       and--alive. If you cannot understand, I feel at least you may be able
       to--forgive." His tone grew tender, gentle, soft. "My selfishness, I
       know, must seem quite unforgivable. I cannot help it somehow; these
       trees, this ancient Forest, both seem knitted into all that makes me
       live, and if I go--"
       
       There was a little sound of collapse in his voice. He stopped abruptly,
       and sank back in his chair. And, at that, a distinct lump came up into
       her throat which she had great difficulty in managing while she went
       over and put her arms about him.
       
       "My dear," she murmured, "God will direct. We will accept His guidance.
       He has always shown the way before."
       
       "My selfishness afflicts me--" he began, but she would not let him
       finish.
       
       "David, He will direct. Nothing shall harm you. You've never once been
       selfish, and I cannot bear to hear you say such things. The way will
       open that is best for you--for both of us." She kissed him, she would
       not let him speak; her heart was in her throat, and she felt for him far
       more than for herself.
       
       And then he had suggested that she should go alone perhaps for a shorter
       time, and stay in her brother's villa with the children, Alice and
       Stephen. It was always open to her as she well knew.
       
       "You need the change," he said, when the lamps had been lit and the
       servant had gone out again; "you need it as much as I dread it. I could
       manage somehow until you returned, and should feel happier that way if
       you went. I cannot leave this Forest that I love so well. I even feel,
       Sophie dear"--he sat up straight and faced her as he half whispered
       it--"that I can _never_ leave it again. My life and happiness lie here
       together."
       
       And eve while scorning the idea that she could leave him alone with the
       Influence of the Forest all about him to have its unimpeded way, she
       felt the pangs of that subtle jealousy bite keen and close. He loved the
       Forest better than herself, for he placed it first. Behind the words,
       moreover, hid the unuttered thought that made her so uneasy. The terror
       Sanderson had brought revived and shook its wings before her very eyes.
       For the whole conversation, of which this was a fragment, conveyed the
       unutterable implication that while he could not spare the trees, they
       equally could not spare him. The vividness with which he managed to
       conceal and yet betray the fact brought a profound distress that crossed
       the border between presentiment and warning into positive alarm.
       
       He clearly felt that the trees would miss him--the trees he tended,
       guarded, watched over, loved.
       
       "David, I shall stay here with you. I think you need me really,--don't
       you?" Eagerly, with a touch of heart-felt passion, the words poured out.
       
       "Now more than ever, dear. God bless you for you sweet unselfishness.
       And your sacrifice," he added, "is all the greater because you cannot
       understand the thing that makes it necessary for me to stay."
       
       "Perhaps in the spring instead--" she said, with a tremor in the voice.
       
       "In the spring--perhaps," he answered gently, almost beneath his breath.
       "For they will not need me then. All the world can love them in the
       spring. It's in the winter that they're lonely and neglected. I wish to
       stay with them particularly then. I even feel I ought to--and I must."
       
       And in this way, without further speech, the decision was made. Mrs.
       Bittacy, at least, asked no more questions. Yet she could not bring
       herself to show more sympathy than was necessary. She felt, for one
       thing, that if she did, it might lead him to speak freely, and to tell
       her things she could not possibly bear to know. And she dared not take
       the risk of that.
       
       # Chapter 7
       
       This was at the end of summer, but the autumn followed close. The
       conversation really marked the threshold between the two seasons, and
       marked at the same time the line between her husband's negative and
       aggressive state. She almost felt she had done wrong to yield; he grew
       so bold, concealment all discarded. He went, that is, quite openly to
       the woods, forgetting all his duties, all his former occupations. He
       even sought to coax her to go with him. The hidden thing blazed out
       without disguise. And, while she trembled at his energy, she admired the
       virile passion he displayed. Her jealousy had long ago retired before
       her fear, accepting the second place. Her one desire now was to protect.
       The wife turned wholly mother.
       
       He said so little, but--he hated to come in. From morning to night he
       wandered in the Forest; often he went out after dinner; his mind was
       charged with trees--their foliage, growth, development; their wonder,
       beauty, strength; their loneliness in isolation, their power in a herded
       mass. He knew the effect of every wind upon them; the danger from the
       boisterous north, the glory from the west, the eastern dryness, and the
       soft, moist tenderness that a south wind left upon their thinning
       boughs. He spoke all day of their sensations: how they drank the fading
       sunshine, dreamed in the moonlight, thrilled to the kiss of stars. The
       dew could bring them half the passion of the night, but frost sent them
       plunging beneath the ground to dwell with hopes of a later coming
       softness in their roots. They nursed the life they carried--insects,
       larvae, chrysalis--and when the skies above them melted, he spoke of
       them standing "motionless in an ecstasy of rain," or in the noon of
       sunshine "self-poised upon their prodigy of shade."
       
       And once in the middle of the night she woke at the sound of his voice,
       and heard him--wide awake, not talking in his sleep--but talking towards
       the window where the shadow of the cedar fell at noon:
       
       > O art thou sighing for Lebanon
       > In the long breeze that streams to thy delicious East?
       > Sighing for Lebanon,
       > Dark cedar;
       
       and, when, half charmed, half terrified, she turned and called to him
       by name, he merely said--
       
       "My dear, I felt the loneliness--suddenly realized it--the alien
       desolation of that tree, set here upon our little lawn in England when
       all her Eastern brothers call her in sleep." And the answer seemed so
       queer, so "un-evangelical," that she waited in silence till he slept
       again. The poetry passed her by. It seemed unnecessary and out of place.
       It made her ache with suspicion, fear, jealousy.
       
       The fear, however, seemed somehow all lapped up and banished soon
       afterwards by her unwilling admiration of the rushing splendor of her
       husband's state. Her anxiety, at any rate, shifted from the religious to
       the medical. She thought he might be losing his steadiness of mind a
       little. How often in her prayers she offered thanks for the guidance
       that had made her stay with him to help and watch is impossible to say.
       It certainly was twice a day.
       
       She even went so far once, when Mr. Mortimer, the vicar, called, and
       brought with him a more or less distinguished doctor--as to tell the
       professional man privately some symptoms of her husband's queerness. And
       his answer that there was "nothing he could prescribe for" added not a
       little to her sense of unholy bewilderment. No doubt Sir James had never
       been "consulted" under such unorthodox conditions before. His sense of
       what was becoming naturally overrode his acquired instincts as a skilled
       instrument that might help the race.
       
       "No fever, you think?" she asked insistently with hurry, determined to
       get something from him.
       
       "Nothing that _I_ can deal with, as I told you, Madam," replied the
       offended allopathic Knight.
       
       Evidently he did not care about being invited to examine patients in
       this surreptitious way before a teapot on the lawn, chance of a fee most
       problematical. He liked to see a tongue and feel a thumping pulse; to
       know the pedigree and bank account of his questioner as well. It was
       most unusual, in abominable taste besides. Of course it was. But the
       drowning woman seized the only straw she could.
       
       For now the aggressive attitude of her husband overcame her to the point
       where she found it difficult even to question him. Yet in the house he
       was so kind and gentle, doing all he could to make her sacrifice as easy
       as possible.
       
       "David, you really _are_ unwise to go out now. The night is damp and
       very chilly. The ground is soaked in dew. You'll catch your death of
       cold."
       
       His face lightened. "Won't you come with me, dear,--just for once? I'm
       only going to the corner of the hollies to see the beech that stands so
       lonely by itself."
       
       She had been out with him in the short dark afternoon, and they had
       passed that evil group of hollies where the gypsies camped. Nothing else
       would grow there, but the hollies thrive upon the stony soil.
       
       "David, the beech is all right and safe." She had learned his
       phraseology a little, made clever out of due season by her love.
       "There's no wind to-night."
       
       "But it's rising," he answered, "rising in the east. I heard it in the
       bare and hungry larches. They need the sun and dew, and always cry out
       when the wind's upon them from the east."
       
       She sent a short unspoken prayer most swiftly to her deity as she heard
       him say it. For every time now, when he spoke in this familiar, intimate
       way of the life of the trees, she felt a sheet of cold fasten tight
       against her very skin and flesh. She shivered. How could he possibly
       know such things?
       
       Yet, in all else, and in the relations of his daily life, he was sane
       and reasonable, loving, kind and tender. It was only on the subject of
       the trees he seemed unhinged and queer. Most curiously it seemed that,
       since the collapse of the cedar they both loved, though in different
       fashion, his departure from the normal had increased. Why else did he
       watch them as a man might watch a sickly child? Why did he hunger
       especially in the dusk to catch their "mood of night" as he called it?
       Why think so carefully upon them when the frost was threatening or the
       wind appeared to rise?
       
       As she put it so frequently now herself--How could he possibly _know_
       such things?
       
       He went. As she closed the front door after him she heard the distant
       roaring in the Forest.
       
       And then it suddenly struck her: How could she know them too?
       
       It dropped upon her like a blow that she felt at once all over, upon
       body, heart and mind. The discovery rushed out from its ambush to
       overwhelm. The truth of it, making all arguing futile, numbed her
       faculties. But though at first it deadened her, she soon revived, and
       her being rose into aggressive opposition. A wild yet calculated courage
       like that which animates the leaders of splendid forlorn hopes flamed in
       her little person--flamed grandly, and invincible. While knowing herself
       insignificant and weak, she knew at the same time that power at her back
       which moves the worlds. The faith that filled her was the weapon in her
       hands, and the right by which she claimed it; but the spirit of utter,
       selfless sacrifice that characterized her life was the means by which
       she mastered its immediate use. For a kind of white and faultless
       intuition guided her to the attack. Behind her stood her Bible and her
       God.
       
       How so magnificent a divination came to her at all may well be a matter
       for astonishment, though some clue of explanation lies, perhaps, in the
       very simpleness of her nature. At any rate, she saw quite clearly
       certain things; saw them in moments only--after prayer, in the still
       silence of the night, or when left alone those long hours in the house
       with her knitting and her thoughts--and the guidance which then flashed
       into her remained, even after the manner of its coming was forgotten.
       
       They came to her, these things she saw, formless, wordless; she could
       not put them into any kind of language; but by the very fact of being
       uncaught in sentences they retained their original clear vigor.
       
       Hours of patient waiting brought the first, and the others followed
       easily afterwards, by degrees, on subsequent days, a little and a
       little. Her husband had been gone since early morning, and had taken his
       luncheon with him. She was sitting by the tea things, the cups and
       teapot warmed, the muffins in the fender keeping hot, all ready for his
       return, when she realized quite abruptly that this thing which took him
       off, which kept him out so many hours day after day, this thing that was
       against her own little will and instincts--was enormous as the sea. It
       was no mere prettiness of single Trees, but something massed and
       mountainous. About her rose the wall of its huge opposition to the sky,
       its scale gigantic, its power utterly prodigious. What she knew of it
       hitherto as green and delicate forms waving and rustling in the winds
       was but, as it were the spray of foam that broke into sight upon the
       nearer edge of viewless depths far, far away. The trees, indeed, were
       sentinels set visibly about the limits of a camp that itself remained
       invisible. The awful hum and murmur of the main body in the distance
       passed into that still room about her with the firelight and hissing
       kettle. Out yonder--in the Forest further out--the thing that was ever
       roaring at the center was dreadfully increasing.
       
       The sense of definite battle, too--battle between herself and the Forest
       for his soul--came with it. Its presentiment was as clear as though
       Thompson had come into the room and quietly told her that the cottage
       was surrounded. "Please, ma'am, there are trees come up about the
       house," she might have suddenly announced. And equally might have heard
       her own answer: "It's all right, Thompson. The main body is still far
       away."
       
       Immediately upon its heels, then, came another truth, with a close
       reality that shocked her. She saw that jealousy was not confined to the
       human and animal world alone, but ran though all creation. The Vegetable
       Kingdom knew it too. So-called inanimate nature shared it with the rest.
       Trees felt it. This Forest just beyond the window--standing there in the
       silence of the autumn evening across the little lawn--this Forest
       understood it equally. The remorseless, branching power that sought to
       keep exclusively for itself the thing it loved and needed, spread like a
       running desire through all its million leaves and stems and roots. In
       humans, of course, it was consciously directed; in animals it acted with
       frank instinctiveness; but in trees this jealousy rose in some blind
       tide of impersonal and unconscious wrath that would sweep opposition
       from its path as the wind sweeps powdered snow from the surface of the
       ice. Their number was a host with endless reinforcements, and once it
       realized its passion was returned the power increased... Her husband
       loved the trees... They had become aware of it... They would take him
       from her in the end...
       
       Then, while she heard his footsteps in the hall and the closing of the
       front door, she saw a third thing clearly;--realized the widening of the
       gap between herself and him. This other love had made it. All these
       weeks of the summer when she felt so close to him, now especially when
       she had made the biggest sacrifice of her life to stay by his side and
       help him, he had been slowly, surely--drawing away. The estrangement was
       here and now--a fact accomplished. It had been all this time maturing;
       there yawned this broad deep space between them. Across the empty
       distance she saw the change in merciless perspective. It revealed his
       face and figure, dearly-loved, once fondly worshipped, far on the other
       side in shadowy distance, small, the back turned from her, and moving
       while she watched--moving away from her.
       
       They had their tea in silence then. She asked no questions, he
       volunteered no information of his day. The heart was big within her, and
       the terrible loneliness of age spread through her like a rising icy
       mist. She watched him, filling all his wants. His hair was untidy and
       his boots were caked with blackish mud. He moved with a restless,
       swaying motion that somehow blanched her cheek and sent a miserable
       shivering down her back. It reminded her of trees. His eyes were very
       bright.
       
       He brought in with him an odor of the earth and forest that seemed to
       choke her and make it difficult to breathe; and--what she noticed with a
       climax of almost uncontrollable alarm--upon his face beneath the
       lamplight shone traces of a mild, faint glory that made her think of
       moonlight falling upon a wood through speckled shadows. It was his
       new-found happiness that shone there, a happiness uncaused by her and in
       which she had no part.
       
       In his coat was a spray of faded yellow beech leaves. "I brought this
       from the Forest to you," he said, with all the air that belonged to his
       little acts of devotion long ago. And she took the spray of leaves
       mechanically with a smile and a murmured "thank you, dear," as though he
       had unknowingly put into her hands the weapon for her own destruction
       and she had accepted it.
       
       And when the tea was over and he left the room, he did not go to his
       study, or to change his clothes. She heard the front door softly shut
       behind him as he again went out towards the Forest.
       
       A moment later she was in her room upstairs, kneeling beside the
       bed--the side she slept on--and praying wildly through a flood of tears
       that God would save and keep him to her. Wind brushed the window panes
       behind her while she knelt.
       
       # Chapter 8
       
       One sunny November morning, when the strain had reached a pitch that
       made repression almost unmanageable, she came to an impulsive decision,
       and obeyed it. Her husband had again gone out with luncheon for the day.
       She took adventure in her hands and followed him. The power of
       seeing-clear was strong upon her, forcing her up to some unnatural level
       of understanding. To stay indoors and wait inactive for his return
       seemed suddenly impossible. She meant to know what he knew, feel what he
       felt, put herself in his place. She would dare the fascination of the
       Forest--share it with him. It was greatly daring; but it would give her
       greater understanding how to help and save him and therefore greater
       Power. She went upstairs a moment first to pray.
       
       In a thick, warm skirt, and wearing heavy boots--those walking boots she
       used with him upon the mountains about Seillans--she left the cottage by
       the back way and turned towards the Forest. She could not actually
       follow him, for he had started off an hour before and she knew not
       exactly his direction. What was so urgent in her was the wish to be with
       him in the woods, to walk beneath leafless branches just as he did: to
       be there when he was there, even though not together. For it had come to
       her that she might thus share with him for once this horrible mighty
       life and breathing of the trees he loved. In winter, he had said, they
       needed him particularly, and winter now was coming. Her love must bring
       her something of what he felt himself--the huge attraction, the suction
       and the pull of all the trees. Thus, in some vicarious fashion, she
       might share, though unknown to himself, this very thing that was taking
       him away from her. She might thus even lessen its attack upon himself.
       
       The impulse came to her clairvoyantly, and she obeyed without a sign of
       hesitation. Deeper comprehension would come to her of the whole awful
       puzzle. And come it did, yet not in the way she imagined and expected.
       
       The air was very still, the sky a cold pale blue, but cloudless. The
       entire Forest stood silent, at attention. It knew perfectly well that
       she had come. It knew the moment when she entered; watched and followed
       her; and behind her something dropped without a sound and shut her in.
       Her feet upon the glades of mossy grass fell silently, as the oaks and
       beeches shifted past in rows and took up their positions at her back. It
       was not pleasant, this way they grew so dense behind her the instant she
       had passed. She realized that they gathered in an ever-growing army,
       massed, herded, trooped, between her and the cottage, shutting off
       escape. They let her pass so easily, but to get out again she would know
       them differently--thick, crowded, branches all drawn and hostile.
       Already their increasing numbers bewildered her. In front, they looked
       so sparse and scattered, with open spaces where the sunshine fell; but
       when she turned it seemed they stood so close together, a serried army,
       darkening the sunlight. They blocked the day, collected all the shadows,
       stood with their leafless and forbidding rampart like the night. They
       swallowed down into themselves the very glade by which she came. For
       when she glanced behind her--rarely--the way she had come was shadowy
       and lost.
       
       Yet the morning sparkled overhead, and a glance of excitement ran
       quivering through the entire day. It was what she always knew as
       "children's weather," so clear and harmless, without a sign of danger,
       nothing ominous to threaten or alarm. Steadfast in her purpose, looking
       back as little as she dared, Sophia Bittacy marched slowly and
       deliberately into the heart of the silent woods, deeper, ever deeper.
       
       And then, abruptly, in an open space where the sunshine fell unhindered,
       she stopped. It was one of the breathing places of the forest. Dead,
       withered bracken lay in patches of unsightly grey. There were bits of
       heather too. All round the trees stood looking on--oak, beech, holly,
       ash, pine, larch, with here and there small groups of juniper. On the
       lips of this breathing space of the woods she stopped to rest,
       disobeying her instinct for the first time. For the other instinct in
       her was to go on. She did not really want to rest.
       
       This was the little act that brought it to her--the wireless message
       from a vast Emitter.
       
       "I've been stopped," she thought to herself with a horrid qualm.
       
       She looked about her in this quiet, ancient place. Nothing stirred.
       There was no life nor sign of life; no birds sang; no rabbits scuttled
       off at her approach. The stillness was bewildering, and gravity hung
       down upon it like a heavy curtain. It hushed the heart in her. Could
       this be part of what her husband felt--this sense of thick entanglement
       with stems, boughs, roots, and foliage?
       
       "This has always been as it is now," she thought, yet not knowing why
       she thought it. "Ever since the Forest grew it has been still and secret
       here. It has never changed." The curtain of silence drew closer while
       she said it, thickening round her. "For a thousand years--I'm here with
       a thousand years. And behind this place stand all the forests of the
       world!"
       
       So foreign to her temperament were such thoughts, and so alien to all
       she had been taught to look for in Nature, that she strove against them.
       She made an effort to oppose. But they clung and haunted just the same;
       they refused to be dispersed. The curtain hung dense and heavy as though
       its texture thickened. The air with difficulty came through.
       
       And then she thought that curtain stirred. There was movement somewhere.
       That obscure dim thing which ever broods behind the visible appearances
       of trees came nearer to her. She caught her breath and stared about her,
       listening intently. The trees, perhaps because she saw them more in
       detail now, it seemed to her had changed. A vague, faint alteration
       spread over them, at first so slight she scarcely would admit it, then
       growing steadily, though still obscurely, outwards. "They tremble and
       are changed," flashed through her mind the horrid line that Sanderson
       had quoted. Yet the change was graceful for all the uncouthness
       attendant upon the size of so vast a movement. They had turned in her
       direction. That was it. _They saw her._ In this way the change
       expressed itself in her groping, terrified thought. Till now it had been
       otherwise: she had looked at them from her own point of view; now they
       looked at her from theirs. They stared her in the face and eyes; they
       stared at her all over. In some unkind, resentful, hostile way, they
       watched her. Hitherto in life she had watched them variously, in
       superficial ways, reading into them what her own mind suggested. Now
       they read into her the things they actually _were_, and not merely
       another's interpretations of them.
       
       They seemed in their motionless silence there instinct with life, a
       life, moreover, that breathed about her a species of terrible soft
       enchantment that bewitched. It branched all through her, climbing to the
       brain. The Forest held her with its huge and giant fascination. In this
       secluded breathing spot that the centuries had left untouched, she had
       stepped close against the hidden pulse of the whole collective mass of
       them. They were aware of her and had turned to gaze with their myriad,
       vast sight upon the intruder. They shouted at her in the silence. For
       she wanted to look back at them, but it was like staring at a crowd, and
       her glance merely shifted from one tree to another, hurriedly, finding
       in none the one she sought. They saw her so easily, each and all. The
       rows that stood behind her also stared. But she could not return the
       gaze. Her husband, she realized, could. And their steady stare shocked
       her as though in some sense she knew that she was naked. They saw so
       much of her: she saw of them--so little.
       
       Her efforts to return their gaze were pitiful. The constant shifting
       increased her bewilderment. Conscious of this awful and enormous sight
       all over her, she let her eyes first rest upon the ground, and then she
       closed them altogether. She kept the lids as tight together as ever they
       would go.
       
       But the sight of the trees came even into that inner darkness behind the
       fastened lids, for there was no escaping it. Outside, in the light, she
       still knew that the leaves of the hollies glittered smoothly, that the
       dead foliage of the oaks hung crisp in the air about her, that the
       needles of the little junipers were pointing all one way. The spread
       perception of the Forest was focused on herself, and no mere shutting of
       the eyes could hide its scattered yet concentrated stare--the
       all-inclusive vision of great woods.
       
       There was no wind, yet here and there a single leaf hanging by its
       dried-up stalk shook all alone with great rapidity--rattling. It was the
       sentry drawing attention to her presence. And then, again, as once long
       weeks before, she felt their Being as a tide about her. The tide had
       turned. That memory of her childhood sands came back, when the nurse
       said, "The tide has turned now; we must go in," and she saw the mass of
       piled-up waters, green and heaped to the horizon, and realized that it
       was slowly coming in. The gigantic mass of it, too vast for hurry,
       loaded with massive purpose, she used to feel, was moving towards
       herself. The fluid body of the sea was creeping along beneath the sky to
       the very spot upon the yellow sands where she stood and played. The
       sight and thought of it had always overwhelmed her with a sense of
       awe--as though her puny self were the object of the whole sea's advance.
       "The tide has turned; we had better now go in."
       
       This was happening now about her--the same thing was happening in the
       woods--slow, sure, and steady, and its motion as little discernible as
       the sea's. The tide had turned. The small human presence that had
       ventured among its green and mountainous depths, moreover, was its
       objective.
       
       That all was clear within her while she sat and waited with tight-shut
       lids. But the next moment she opened her eyes with a sudden realization
       of something more. The presence that it sought was after all not hers.
       It was the presence of some one other than herself. And then she
       understood. Her eyes had opened with a click, it seemed, but the sound,
       in reality, was outside herself.
       
       Across the clearing where the sunshine lay so calm and still, she saw
       the figure of her husband moving among the trees--a man, like a tree,
       walking.
       
       With hands behind his back, and head uplifted, he moved quite slowly, as
       though absorbed in his own thoughts. Hardly fifty paces separated them,
       but he had no inkling of her presence there so near. With mind intent
       and senses all turned inwards, he marched past her like a figure in a
       dream, and like a figure in a dream she saw him go. Love, yearning, pity
       rose in a storm within her, but as in nightmare she found no words or
       movement possible. She sat and watched him go--go from her--go into the
       deeper reaches of the green enveloping woods. Desire to save, to bid him
       stop and turn, ran in a passion through her being, but there was nothing
       she could do. She saw him go away from her, go of his own accord and
       willingly beyond her; she saw the branches drop about his steps and hid
       him. His figure faded out among the speckled shade and sunlight. The
       trees covered him. The tide just took him, all unresisting and content
       to go. Upon the bosom of the green soft sea he floated away beyond her
       reach of vision. Her eyes could follow him no longer. He was gone.
       
       And then for the first time she realized, even at that distance, that
       the look upon his face was one of peace and happiness--rapt, and caught
       away in joy, a look of youth. That expression now he never showed to
       her. But she _had_ known it. Years ago, in the early days of their
       married life, she had seen it on his face. Now it no longer obeyed the
       summons of her presence and her love. The woods alone could call it
       forth; it answered to the trees; the Forest had taken every part of
       him--from her--his very heart and soul.
       
       Her sight that had plunged inwards to the fields of faded memory now
       came back to outer things again. She looked about her, and her love,
       returning empty-handed and unsatisfied, left her open to the invading of
       the bleakest terror she had ever known. That such things could be real
       and happen found her helpless utterly. Terror invaded the quietest
       corners of her heart, that had never yet known quailing. She could
       not--for moments at any rate--reach either her Bible or her God.
       Desolate in an empty world of fear she sat with eyes too dry and hot for
       tears, yet with a coldness as of ice upon her very flesh. She stared,
       unseeing, about her. That horror which stalks in the stillness of the
       noonday, when the glare of an artificial sunshine lights up the
       motionless trees, moved all about her. In front and behind she was aware
       of it. Beyond this stealthy silence, just within the edge of it, the
       things of another world were passing. But she could not know them. Her
       husband knew them, knew their beauty and their awe, yes, but for her
       they were out of reach. She might not share with him the very least of
       them. It seemed that behind and through the glare of this wintry noonday
       in the heart of the woods there brooded another universe of life and
       passion, for her all unexpressed. The silence veiled it, the stillness
       hid it; but he moved with it all and understood. His love interpreted
       it.
       
       She rose to her feet, tottered feebly, and collapsed again upon the
       moss. Yet for herself she felt no terror; no little personal fear could
       touch her whose anguish and deep longing streamed all out to him whom
       she so bravely loved. In this time of utter self-forgetfulness, when she
       realized that the battle was hopeless, thinking she had lost even her
       God, she found Him again quite close beside her like a little Presence
       in this terrible heart of the hostile Forest. But at first she did not
       recognize that He was there; she did not know Him in that strangely
       unacceptable guise. For He stood so very close, so very intimate, so
       very sweet and comforting, and yet so hard to understand--as
       Resignation.
       
       Once more she struggled to her feet, and this time turned successfully
       and slowly made her way along the mossy glade by which she came. And at
       first she marveled, though only for a moment, at the ease with which she
       found the path. For a moment only, because almost at once she saw the
       truth. The trees were glad that she should go. They helped her on her
       way. The Forest did not want her.
       
       The tide was coming in, indeed, yet not for her.
       
       And so, in another of those flashes of clear-vision that of late had
       lifted life above the normal level, she saw and understood the whole
       terrible thing complete.
       
       Till now, though unexpressed in thought or language, her fear had been
       that the woods her husband loved would somehow take him from her--to
       merge his life in theirs--even to kill him on some mysterious way. This
       time she saw her deep mistake, and so seeing, let in upon herself the
       fuller agony of horror. For their jealousy was not the petty jealousy of
       animals or humans. They wanted him because they loved him, but they did
       _ not_ want him dead. Full charged with his splendid life and enthusiasm
       they wanted him. They wanted him--alive.
       
       It was she who stood in their way, and it was she whom they intended to
       remove.
       
       This was what brought the sense of abject helplessness. She stood upon
       the sands against an entire ocean slowly rolling in against her. For, as
       all the forces of a human being combine unconsciously to eject a grain
       of sand that has crept beneath the skin to cause discomfort, so the
       entire mass of what Sanderson had called the Collective Consciousness of
       the Forest strove to eject this human atom that stood across the path of
       its desire. Loving her husband, she had crept beneath its skin. It was
       her they would eject and take away; it was her they would destroy, not
       him. Him, whom they loved and needed, they would keep alive. They meant
       to take him living. She reached the house in safety, though she never
       remembered how she found her way. It was made all simple for her. The
       branches almost urged her out.
       
       But behind her, as she left the shadowed precincts, she felt as though
       some towering Angel of the Woods let fall across the threshold the
       flaming sword of a countless multitude of leaves that formed behind her
       a barrier, green, shimmering, and impassable. Into the Forest she never
       walked again.
       
       
       And she went about her daily duties with a calm and quietness that was a
       perpetual astonishment even to herself, for it hardly seemed of this
       world at all. She talked to her husband when he came in for tea--after
       dark. Resignation brings a curious large courage--when there is nothing
       more to lose. The soul takes risks, and dares. Is it a curious short-cut
       sometimes to the heights?
       
       "David, I went into the Forest, too, this morning, soon after you I
       went. I saw you there."
       
       "Wasn't it wonderful?" he answered simply, inclining his head a little.
       There was no surprise or annoyance in his look; a mild and gentle
       _ennui_ rather. He asked no real question. She thought of some garden
       tree the wind attacks too suddenly, bending it over when it does not
       want to bend--the mild unwillingness with which it yields. She often saw
       him this way now, in the terms of trees.
       
       "It was very wonderful indeed, dear, yes," she replied low, her voice
       not faltering though indistinct. "But for me it was too--too strange and
       big."
       
       The passion of tears lay just below the quiet voice all unbetrayed.
       Somehow she kept them back.
       
       There was a pause, and then he added:
       
       "I find it more and more so every day." His voice passed through the
       lamp-lit room like a murmur of the wind in branches. The look of youth
       and happiness she had caught upon his face out there had wholly gone,
       and an expression of weariness was in its place, as of a man distressed
       vaguely at finding himself in uncongenial surroundings where he is
       slightly ill at ease. It was the house he hated--coming back to rooms
       and walls and furniture. The ceilings and closed windows confined him.
       Yet, in it, no suggestion that he found _her_ irksome. Her presence
       seemed of no account at all; indeed, he hardly noticed her. For whole
       long periods he lost her, did not know that she was there. He had no
       need of her. He lived alone. Each lived alone.
       
       The outward signs by which she recognized that the awful battle was
       against her and the terms of surrender accepted were pathetic. She put
       the medicine-chest away upon the shelf; she gave the orders for his
       pocket-luncheon before he asked; she went to bed alone and early,
       leaving the front door unlocked, with milk and bread and butter in the
       hall beside the lamp--all concessions that she felt impelled to make.
       Fore more and more, unless the weather was too violent, he went out
       after dinner even, staying for hours in the woods. But she never slept
       until she heard the front door close below, and knew soon afterwards his
       careful step come creeping up the stairs and into the room so softly.
       Until she heard his regular deep breathing close beside her, she lay
       awake. All strength or desire to resist had gone for good. The thing
       against her was too huge and powerful. Capitulation was complete, a fact
       accomplished. She dated it from the day she followed him to the Forest.
       
       Moreover, the time for evacuation--her own evacuation--seemed
       approaching. It came stealthily ever nearer, surely and slowly as the
       rising tide she used to dread. At the high-water mark she stood waiting
       calmly--waiting to be swept away. Across the lawn all those terrible
       days of early winter the encircling Forest watched it come, guiding its
       silent swell and currents towards her feet. Only she never once gave up
       her Bible or her praying. This complete resignation, moreover, had
       somehow brought to her a strange great understanding, and if she could
       not share her husband's horrible abandonment to powers outside himself,
       she could, and did, in some half-groping way grasp at shadowy meanings
       that might make such abandonment--possible, yes, but more than merely
       possible--in some extraordinary sense not evil.
       
       Hitherto she had divided the beyond-world into two sharp halves--spirits
       good or spirits evil. But thoughts came to her now, on soft and very
       tentative feet, like the footsteps of the gods which are on wool, that
       besides these definite classes, there might be other Powers as well,
       belonging definitely to neither one nor other. Her thought stopped dead
       at that. But the big idea found lodgment in her little mind, and, owing
       to the largeness of her heart, remained there unejected. It even brought
       a certain solace with it.
       
       The failure--or unwillingness, as she preferred to state it--of her God
       to interfere and help, that also she came in a measure to understand.
       For here, she found it more and more possible to imagine, was perhaps no
       positive evil at work, but only something that usually stands away from
       humankind, something alien and not commonly recognized. There _was_ a
       gulf fixed between the two, and Mr. Sanderson _had_ bridged it, by his
       talk, his explanations, his attitude of mind. Through these her husband
       had found the way into it. His temperament and natural passion for the
       woods had prepared the soul in him, and the moment he saw the way to go
       he took it--the line of least resistance. Life was, of course, open to
       all, and her husband had the right to choose it where he would. He had
       chosen it--away from her, away from other men, but not necessarily away
       from God. This was an enormous concession that she skirted, never really
       faced; it was too revolutionary to face. But its possibility peeped into
       her bewildered mind. It might delay his progress, or it might advance
       it. Who could know? And why should God, who ordered all things with such
       magnificent detail, from the pathway of a sun to the falling of a
       sparrow, object to his free choice, or interfere to hinder him and stop?
       
       She came to realize resignation, that is, in another aspect. It gave her
       comfort, if not peace. She fought against all belittling of her God. It
       was, perhaps, enough that He--knew.
       
       "You are not alone, dear in the trees out there?" she ventured one
       night, as he crept on tiptoe into the room not far from midnight. "God
       is with you?"
       
       "Magnificently," was the immediate answer, given with enthusiasm, "for
       He is everywhere. And I only wish that you--"
       
       But she stuffed the clothes against her ears. That invitation on his
       lips was more than she could bear to hear. It seemed like asking her to
       hurry to her own execution. She buried her face among the sheets and
       blankets, shaking all over like a leaf.
       
       # Chapter 9
       
       And so the thought that she was the one to go remained and grew. It was,
       perhaps, first sign of that weakening of the mind which indicated the
       singular manner of her going. For it was her mental opposition, the
       trees felt, that stood in their way. Once that was overcome,
       obliterated, her physical presence did not matter. She would be
       harmless.
       
       Having accepted defeat, because she had come to feel that his obsession
       was not actually evil, she accepted at the same time the conditions of
       an atrocious loneliness. She stood now from her husband farther than
       from the moon. They had no visitors. Callers were few and far between,
       and less encouraged than before. The empty dark of winter was before
       them. Among the neighbors was none in whom, without disloyalty to her
       husband, she could confide. Mr. Mortimer, had he been single, might have
       helped her in this desert of solitude that preyed upon her mind, but his
       wife was there the obstacle; for Mrs. Mortimer wore sandals, believed
       that nuts were the complete food of man, and indulged in other
       idiosyncrasies that classed her inevitably among the "latter signs"
       which Mrs. Bittacy had been taught to dread as dangerous. She stood most
       desolately alone.
       
       Solitude, therefore, in which the mind unhindered feeds upon its own
       delusions, was the assignable cause of her gradual mental disruption and
       collapse.
       
       With the definite arrival of the colder weather her husband gave up his
       rambles after dark; evenings were spent together over the fire; he read
       The Times; they even talked about their postponed visit abroad in the
       coming spring. No restlessness was on him at the change; he seemed
       content and easy in his mind; spoke little of the trees and woods;
       enjoyed far better health than if there had been change of scene, and to
       herself was tender, kind, solicitous over trifles, as in the distant
       days of their first honeymoon.
       
       But this deep calm could not deceive her; it meant, she fully
       understood, that he felt sure of himself, sure of her, and sure of the
       trees as well. It all lay buried in the depths of him, too secure and
       deep, too intimately established in his central being to permit of those
       surface fluctuations which betray disharmony within. His life was hid
       with trees. Even the fever, so dreaded in the damp of winter, left him
       free. She now knew why: the fever was due to their efforts to obtain
       him, his efforts to respond and go--physical results of a fierce unrest
       he had never understood till Sanderson came with his wicked
       explanations. Now it was otherwise. The bridge was made. And--he had
       gone.
       
       And she, brave, loyal, and consistent soul, found herself utterly alone,
       even trying to make his passage easy. It seemed that she stood at the
       bottom of some huge ravine that opened in her mind, the walls whereof
       instead of rock were trees that reached enormous to the sky, engulfing
       her. God alone knew that she was there. He watched, permitted, even
       perhaps approved. At any rate--He knew.
       
       During those quiet evenings in the house, moreover, while they sat over
       the fire listening to the roaming winds about the house, her husband
       knew continual access to the world his alien love had furnished for him.
       Never for a single instant was he cut off from it. She gazed at the
       newspaper spread before his face and knees, saw the smoke of his cheroot
       curl up above the edge, noticed the little hole in his evening socks,
       and listened to the paragraphs he read aloud as of old. But this was all
       a veil he spread about himself of purpose. Behind it--he escaped. It was
       the conjurer's trick to divert the sight to unimportant details while
       the essential thing went forward unobserved. He managed wonderfully; she
       loved him for the pains he took to spare her distress; but all the while
       she knew that the body lolling in that armchair before her eyes
       contained the merest fragment of his actual self. It was little better
       than a corpse. It was an empty shell. The essential soul of him was out
       yonder with the Forest--farther out near that ever-roaring heart of it.
       
       And, with the dark, the Forest came up boldly and pressed against the
       very walls and windows, peering in upon them, joining hands above the
       slates and chimneys. The winds were always walking on the lawn and
       gravel paths; steps came and went and came again; some one seemed always
       talking in the woods, some one was in the building too. She passed them
       on the stairs, or running soft and muffled, very large and gentle, down
       the passages and landings after dusk, as though loose fragments of the
       Day had broken off and stayed there caught among the shadows, trying to
       get out. They blundered silently all about the house. They waited till
       she passed, then made a run for it. And her husband always knew. She saw
       him more than once deliberately avoid them--because _she_ was there.
       More than once, too, she saw him stand and listen when he thought she
       was not near, then heard herself the long bounding stride of their
       approach across the silent garden. Already _he_ had heard them in the
       windy distance of the night, far, far away. They sped, she well knew,
       along that glade of mossy turf by which she last came out; it cushioned
       their tread exactly as it had cushioned her own.
       
       It seemed to her the trees were always in the house with him, and in
       their very bedroom. He welcomed them, unaware that she also knew, and
       trembled.
       
       One night in their bedroom it caught her unawares. She woke out of deep
       sleep and it came upon her before she could gather her forces for
       control.
       
       The day had been wildly boisterous, but now the wind had dropped, only
       its rags went fluttering through the night. The rays of the full moon
       fell in a shower between the branches. Overhead still raced the scud and
       wrack, shaped like hurrying monsters; but below the earth was quiet.
       Still and dripping stood the hosts of trees. Their trunks gleamed wet
       and sparkling where the moon caught them. There was a strong smell of
       mould and fallen leaves. The air was sharp--heavy with odor.
       
       And she knew all this the instant that she woke; for it seemed to her
       that she had been elsewhere--following her husband--as though she had
       been _out_! There was no dream at all, merely the definite, haunting
       certainty. It dived away, lost, buried in the night. She sat upright in
       bed. She had come back.
       
       The room shone pale in the moonlight reflected through the windows, for
       the blinds were up, and she saw her husband's form beside her,
       motionless in deep sleep. But what caught her unawares was the horrid
       thing that by this fact of sudden, unexpected waking she had surprised
       these other things in the room, beside the very bed, gathered close
       about him while he slept. It was their dreadful boldness--herself of no
       account as it were--that terrified her into screaming before she could
       collect her powers to prevent. She screamed before she realized what she
       did--a long, high shriek of terror that filled the room, yet made so
       little actual sound. For wet and shimmering presences stood grouped all
       round that bed. She saw their outline underneath the ceiling, the green,
       spread bulk of them, their vague extension over walls and furniture.
       They shifted to and fro, massed yet translucent, mild yet thick, moving
       and turning within themselves to a hushed noise of multitudinous soft
       rustling. In their sound was something very sweet and sinning that fell
       into her with a spell of horrible enchantment. They were so mild, each
       one alone, yet so terrific in their combination. Cold seized her. The
       sheets against her body had turned to ice.
       
       She screamed a second time, though the sound hardly issued from her
       throat. The spell sank deeper, reaching to the heart; for it softened
       all the currents of her blood and took life from her in a
       stream--towards themselves. Resistance in that moment seemed impossible.
       
       Her husband then stirred in his sleep, and woke. And, instantly, the
       forms drew up, erect, and gathered themselves in some amazing way
       together. They lessened in extent--then scattered through the air like
       an effect of light when shadows seek to smother it. It was tremendous,
       yet most exquisite. A sheet of pale-green shadow that yet had form and
       substance filled the room. There was a rush of silent movement, as the
       Presences drew past her through the air,--and they were gone.
       
       But, clearest of all, she saw the manner of their going; for she
       recognized in their tumult of escape by the window open at the top, the
       same wide "looping circles"--spirals as it seemed--that she had seen
       upon the lawn those weeks ago when Sanderson had talked. The room once
       more was empty.
       
       In the collapse that followed, she heard her husband's voice, as though
       coming from some great distance. Her own replies she heard as well. Both
       were so strange and unlike their normal speech, the very words
       unnatural.
       
       "What is it, dear? Why do you wake me _now_ ?" And his voice whispered
       it with a sighing sound, like wind in pine boughs.
       
       "A moment since something went past me through the air of the room. Back
       to the night outside it went." Her voice, too, held the same note as of
       wind entangled among too many leaves.
       
       "My dear, it _was_ the wind."
       
       "But it called, David. It was calling _you_--by name!"
       
       "The air of the branches, dear, was what you heard. Now, sleep again, I
       beg you, sleep."
       
       "It had a crowd of eyes all through and over it--before and behind--"
       Her voice grew louder. But his own in reply sank lower, far away, and
       oddly hushed.
       
       "The moonlight, dear, upon the sea of twigs and boughs in the rain, was
       what you saw."
       
       "But it frightened me. I've lost my God--and you--I'm cold as death!"
       
       "My dear, it is the cold of the early morning hours. The whole world
       sleeps. Now sleep again yourself."
       
       He whispered close to her ear. She felt his hand stroking her. His voice
       was soft and very soothing. But only a part of him was there; only a
       part of him was speaking; it was a half-emptied body that lay beside her
       and uttered these strange sentences, even forcing her own singular
       choice of words. The horrible, dim enchantment of the trees was close
       about them in the room--gnarled, ancient, lonely trees of winter,
       whispering round the human life they loved.
       
       "And let me sleep again," she heard him murmur as he settled down among
       the clothes, "sleep back into that deep, delicious peace from which you
       called me."
       
       His dreamy, happy tone, and that look of youth and joy she discerned
       upon his features even in the filtered moonlight, touched her again as
       with the spell of those shining, mild green presences. It sank down into
       her. She felt sleep grope for her. On the threshold of slumber one of
       those strange vagrant voices that loss of consciousness lets loose cried
       faintly in her heart--
       
       "There is joy in the Forest over one sinner that--"
       
       Then sleep took her before she had time to realize even that she was
       vilely parodying one of her most precious texts, and that the
       irreverence was ghastly.
       
       And though she quickly slept again, her sleep was not as usual,
       dreamless. It was not woods and trees she dreamed of, but a small and
       curious dream that kept coming again and again upon her; that she stood
       upon a wee, bare rock I the sea, and that the tide was rising. The water
       first came to her feet, then to her knees, then to her waist. Each time
       the dream returned, the tide seemed higher. Once it rose to her neck,
       once even to her mouth, covering her lips for a moment so that she could
       not breathe. She did not wake between the dreams; a period of drab and
       dreamless slumber intervened. But, finally, the water rose above her
       eyes and face, completely covering her head.
       
       And then came explanation--the sort of explanation dreams bring. She
       understood. For, beneath the water, she had seen the world of seaweed
       rising from the bottom of the sea like a forest of dense green-long,
       sinuous stems, immense thick branches, millions of feelers spreading
       through the darkened watery depths the power of their ocean foliage. The
       Vegetable Kingdom was even in the sea. It was everywhere. Earth, air,
       and water helped it, way of escape there was none.
       
       And even underneath the sea she heard that terrible sound of
       roaring--was it surf or wind or voices?--further out, yet coming
       steadily towards her.
       
       And so, in the loneliness of that drab English winter, the mind of Mrs.
       Bittacy, preying upon itself, and fed by constant dread, went lost in
       disproportion. Dreariness filled the weeks with dismal, sunless skies
       and a clinging moisture that knew no wholesome tonic of keen frosts.
       Alone with her thoughts, both her husband and her God withdrawn into
       distance, she counted the days to Spring. She groped her way, stumbling
       down the long dark tunnel. Through the arch at the far end lay a
       brilliant picture of the violet sea sparkling on the coast of France.
       There lay safety and escape for both of them, could she but hold on.
       Behind her the trees blocked up the other entrance. She never once
       looked back.
       
       She drooped. Vitality passed from her, drawn out and away as by some
       steady suction. Immense and incessant was this sensation of her powers
       draining off. The taps were all turned on. Her personality, as it were,
       streamed steadily away, coaxed outwards by this Power that never wearied
       and seemed inexhaustible. It won her as the full moon wins the tide. She
       waned; she faded; she obeyed.
       
       At first she watched the process, and recognized exactly what was going
       on. Her physical life, and that balance of mind which depends on
       physical well-being, were being slowly undermined. She saw that clearly.
       Only the soul, dwelling like a star apart from these and independent of
       them, lay safe somewhere--with her distant God. That she
       knew--tranquilly. The spiritual love that linked her to her husband was
       safe from all attack. Later, in His good time, they would merge together
       again because of it. But meanwhile, all of her that had kinship with the
       earth was slowly going. This separation was being remorselessly
       accomplished. Every part of her the trees could touch was being steadily
       drained from her. She was being--removed.
       
       After a time, however, even this power of realization went, so that she
       no longer "watched the process" or knew exactly what was going on. The
       one satisfaction she had known--the feeling that it was sweet to suffer
       for his sake--went with it. She stood utterly alone with this terror of
       the trees ... mid the ruins of her broken and disordered mind.
       
       She slept badly; woke in the morning with hot and tired eyes; her head
       ached dully; she grew confused in thought and lost the clues of daily
       life in the most feeble fashion. At the same time she lost sight, too,
       of that brilliant picture at the exist of the tunnel; it faded away into
       a tiny semicircle of pale light, the violet sea and the sunshine the
       merest point of white, remote as a star and equally inaccessible. She
       knew now that she could never reach it. And through the darkness that
       stretched behind, the power of the trees came close and caught her,
       twining about her feet and arms, climbing to her very lips. She woke at
       night, finding it difficult to breathe. There seemed wet leaves pressing
       against her mouth, and soft green tendrils clinging to her neck. Her
       feet were heavy, half rooted, as it were, in deep, thick earth. Huge
       creepers stretched along the whole of that black tunnel, feeling about
       her person for points where they might fasten well, as ivy or the giant
       parasites of the Vegetable Kingdom settle down on the trees themselves
       to sap their life and kill them.
       
       Slowly and surely the morbid growth possessed her life and held her. She
       feared those very winds that ran about the wintry forest. They were in
       league with it. They helped it everywhere.
       
       "Why don't you sleep, dear?" It was her husband now who played the rĂ´le
       of nurse, tending her little wants with an honest care that at least
       aped the services of love. He was so utterly unconscious of the raging
       battle he had caused. "What is it keeps you so wide awake and restless?"
       
       "The winds," she whispered in the dark. For hours she had been watching
       the tossing of the trees through the blindless windows. "They go walking
       and talking everywhere to-night, keeping me awake. And all the time they
       call so loudly to you."
       
       And his strange whispered answer appalled her for a moment until the
       meaning of it faded and left her in a dark confusion of the mind that
       was now becoming almost permanent.
       
       "The trees excite them in the night. The winds are the great swift
       carriers. Go with them, dear--and not against. You'll find sleep that
       way if you do."
       
       "The storm is rising," she began, hardly knowing what she said.
       
       "All the more then--go with them. Don't resist. They'll take you to the
       trees, that's all."
       
       Resist! The word touched on the button of some text that once had helped
       her.
       
       "Resist the devil and he will flee from you," she heard her whispered
       answer, and the same second had buried her face beneath the clothes in a
       flood of hysterical weeping.
       
       But her husband did not seem disturbed. Perhaps he did not hear it, for
       the wind ran just then against the windows with a booming shout, and the
       roaring of the Forest farther out came behind the blow, surging into the
       room. Perhaps, too, he was already asleep again. She slowly regained a
       sort of dull composure. Her face emerged from the tangle of sheets and
       blankets. With a growing terror over her--she listened. The storm was
       rising. It came with a sudden and impetuous rush that made all further
       sleep for her impossible.
       
       Alone in a shaking world, it seemed, she lay and listened. That storm
       interpreted for her mind the climax. The Forest bellowed out its victory
       to the winds; the winds in turn proclaimed it to the Night. The whole
       world knew of her complete defeat, her loss, her little human pain. This
       was the roar and shout of victory that she listened to.
       
       For, unmistakably, the trees were shouting in the dark. These were
       sounds, too, like the flapping of great sails, a thousand at a time, and
       sometimes reports that resembled more than anything else the distant
       booming of enormous drums. The trees stood up--the whole beleaguering
       host of them stood up--and with the uproar of their million branches
       drummed the thundering message out across the night. It seemed as if
       they had all broken loose. Their roots swept trailing over field and
       hedge and roof. They tossed their bushy heads beneath the clouds with a
       wild, delighted shuffling of great boughs. With trunks upright they
       raced leaping through the sky. There was upheaval and adventure in the
       awful sound they made, and their cry was like the cry of a sea that has
       broken through its gates and poured loose upon the world...
       
       Through it all her husband slept peacefully as though he heard it not.
       It was, as she well knew, the sleep of the semi-dead. For he was out
       with all that clamoring turmoil. The part of him that she had lost was
       there. The form that slept so calmly at her side was but the shell, half
       emptied.
       
       And when the winter's morning stole upon the scene at length, with a
       pale, washed sunshine that followed the departing tempest, the first
       thing she saw, as she crept to the window and looked out, was the ruined
       cedar lying on the lawn. Only the gaunt and crippled trunk of it
       remained. The single giant bough that had been left to it lay dark upon
       the grass, sucked endways towards the Forest by a great wind eddy. It
       lay there like a mass of drift-wood from a wreck, left by the ebbing of
       a high spring-tide upon the sands--remnant of some friendly, splendid
       vessel that once sheltered men.
       
       And in the distance she heard the roaring of the Forest further out. Her
       husband's voice was in it.
       
       * * *
       
 (DIR) source: gopher://gopher.pglaf.org/1/1/1/3/7/11377/
       tags:   fantasy,personal anthology,outdoor,short story
       
       # Tags
       
 (DIR) fantasy
 (DIR) personal anthology
 (DIR) outdoor
 (DIR) short story