too?â
âGerald! I donât care thatââ she snapped her fingersâfor Gerald. I never have. We might as well have the truth now weâre at it. But I do care for Cyril. Iâm a rotter, through and through, I admit it. I dare say heâs a rotter, too. But my feeling for himâthat isnât rotten. Iâd die for him, do you hear? Iâd die for him!â
âThat is easily said,â said Clare derisively.
âYou think Iâm not in earnest? Listen, if you go on with this beastly business, Iâll kill myself. Sooner than have Cyril brought into it and ruined, Iâd do that.â
Clare remained unimpressed.
âYou donât believe me?â said Vivien, panting.
âSuicide needs a lot of courage.â
Vivien flinched back as though she had been struck.
âYouâve got me there. Yes, Iâve no pluck. If there were an easy wayââ
âThereâs an easy way in front of you,â said Clare. âYouâve only got to run straight down that green slope. It would be all over in a couple of minutes. Remember that child last year.â
âYes,â said Vivien thoughtfully. âThat would be easyâquite easyâif one really wanted toââ
Clare laughed.
Vivien turned to her.
âLetâs have this out once more. Canât you see that by keeping silence as long as you have, youâveâyouâve no right to go back on it now? Iâll not see Cyril again.Iâll be a good wife to GeraldâI swear I will. Or Iâll go away and never see him again? Whichever you like. Clareââ
Clare got up.
âI advise you,â she said, âto tell your husband yourselfâ¦otherwiseâI shall.â
âI see,â said Vivien softly. âWell, I canât let Cyril sufferâ¦â
She got up, stood still as though considering for a minute or two, then ran lightly down to the path, but instead of stopping, crossed it and went down the slope. Once she half turned her head and waved a hand gaily to Clare, then she ran on gaily, lightly, as a child might run, out of sightâ¦
Clare stood petrified. Suddenly she heard cries, shouts, a clamour of voices. Thenâsilence.
She picked her way stiffly down to the path. About a hundred yards away a party of people coming up it had stopped. They were staring and pointing. Clare ran down and joined them.
âYes, Miss, someoneâs fallen over the cliff. Two men have gone downâto see.â
She waited. Was it an hour, or eternity, or only a few minutes?
A man came toiling up the ascent. It was the Vicar in his shirt sleeves. His coat had been taken off to cover what lay below.
âHorrible,â he said, his face was very white. âMercifully death must have been instantaneous.â
He saw Clare, and came over to her.
âThis must have been a terrible shock to you. You were taking a walk together, I understand?â
Clare heard herself answering mechanically.
Yes. They had just parted. No, Lady Leeâs manner had been quite normal. One of the group interposed the information that the lady was laughing and waving her hand. A terribly dangerous placeâthere ought to be a railing along the path.
The Vicarâs voice rose again.
âAn accidentâyes, clearly an accident.â
And then suddenly Clare laughedâa hoarse, raucous laugh that echoed along the cliff.
â Thatâs a damned lie ,â she said. â I killed her .â
She felt someone patting her shoulder, a voice spoke soothingly.
âThere, there. Itâs all right. Youâll be all right presently.â
VI
But Clare was not all right presently. She was never all right again. She persisted in the delusionâcertainly a delusion, since at least eight persons had witnessed the sceneâthat she had killed Vivien Lee.
She was very miserable till Nurse Lauriston came to take charge. Nurse Lauriston was
Deborah J. Ross
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My Angel My Hell