Strangway. Go! Please go!
Mrs. Bradmere. Men like you have been buried at cross-roads before now! Take care! God punishes!
Strangway. Is there a God?
Mrs. Bradmere. Ah! [With finality] You must see a doctor.
[Seeing that the look
on his face does not change, she opens the
door, and hurries away
into the moonlight.]
[Strangway crosses the room to where his wife’s picture hangs, and stands before it, his hands grasping the frame. Then he takes it from the wall, and lays it face upwards on the window seat.]
Strangway. [To himself] Gone! What is there, now?
[The sound of an owl’s
hooting is floating in, and of voices
from the green outside
the inn.]
Strangway. [To himself] Gone! Taken faith—hope—life!
[Jim Bere comes wandering into the open doorway.]
Jim Bere. Gude avenin’, zurr.
[At his slow gait, with
his feeble smile, he comes in, and
standing by the window-seat
beside the long dark coat that still
lies there, he looks
down at Strangway with his lost eyes.]
Jim. Yu threw un out of winder. I cud ’ave, once, I cud.
[Strangway neither
moves nor speaks; and Jim Bere goes on with
his unimaginably slow
speech]
They’m laughin’ at yu, zurr. An’ so I come to tell ’ee how to du. ’Twas full mune—when I caught ’em, him an’ my girl. I caught ’em. [With a strange and awful flash of fire] I did; an’ I tuk un [He taken up Strangway’s coat and grips it with his trembling hands, as a man grips another’s neck] like that—I tuk un. As the coat falls, like a body out of which the breath has been squeezed, Strangway, rising, catches it.
Strangway. [Gripping the coat] And he fell!
[He lets the coat fall
on the floor, and puts his foot on it.
Then, staggering back,
he leans against the window.]
Jim. Yu see, I loved ’er—I did. [The lost look comes back to his eyes] Then somethin’—I dunno—and—and——[He lifts his hand and passes it up and down his side] Twas like this for ever.
[They gaze at each other in silence.]
Jim. [At last] I come to tell yu. They’m all laughin’ at yu. But yu’m strong—yu go over to Durford to that doctor man, an’ take un like I did. [He tries again to make the sign of squeezing a man’s neck] They can’t laugh at yu no more, then. Tha’s what I come to tell yu. Tha’s the way for a Christian man to du. Gude naight, zurr. I come to tell yee.
[Strangway motions
to him in silence. And, very slowly, Jim
Bere passes out.]
[The voices of men coming down the green are heard.]