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- The Touchstone, by Edith Wharton
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- May, 1995 [Etext #267]
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-
-
- THE TOUCHSTONE
- By Edith Wharton
-
-
-
- I
-
-
- Professor Joslin, who, as our readers are doubtless aware, is
- engaged in writing the life of Mrs. Aubyn, asks us to state that
- he will be greatly indebted to any of the famous novelist's
- friends who will furnish him with information concerning the
- period previous to her coming to England. Mrs. Aubyn had so few
- intimate friends, and consequently so few regular correspondents,
- that letters will be of special value. Professor Joslin's address
- is 10 Augusta Gardens, Kensington, and he begs us to say that he
- will promptly return any documents entrusted to him."
-
- Glennard dropped the Spectator and sat looking into the fire. The
- club was filling up, but he still had to himself the small inner
- room, with its darkening outlook down the rainstreaked prospect of
- Fifth Avenue. It was all dull and dismal enough, yet a moment
- earlier his boredom had been perversely tinged by a sense of
- resentment at the thought that, as things were going, he might in
- time have to surrender even the despised privilege of boring
- himself within those particular four walls. It was not that he
- cared much for the club, but that the remote contingency of having
- to give it up stood to him, just then, perhaps by very reason of
- its insignificance and remoteness, for the symbol of his
- increasing abnegations; of that perpetual paring-off that was
- gradually reducing existence to the naked business of keeping
- himself alive. It was the futility of his multiplied shifts and
- privations that made them seem unworthy of a high attitude; the
- sense that, however rapidly he eliminated the superfluous, his
- cleared horizon was likely to offer no nearer view of the one
- prospect toward which he strained. To give up things in order to
- marry the woman one loves is easier than to give them up without
- being brought appreciably nearer to such a conclusion.
-
- Through the open door he saw young Hollingsworth rise with a yawn
- from the ineffectual solace of a brandy-and-soda and transport his
- purposeless person to the window. Glennard measured his course
- with a contemptuous eye. It was so like Hollingsworth to get up
- and look out of the window just as it was growing too dark to see
- anything! There was a man rich enough to do what he pleased--had
- he been capable of being pleased--yet barred from all conceivable
- achievement by his own impervious dulness; while, a few feet off,
- Glennard, who wanted only enough to keep a decent coat on his back
- and a roof over the head of the woman he loved, Glennard, who had
- sweated, toiled, denied himself for the scant measure of
- opportunity that his zeal would have converted into a kingdom--sat
- wretchedly calculating that, even when he had resigned from the
- club, and knocked off his cigars, and given up his Sundays out of
- town, he would still be no nearer attainment.
-
- The Spectator had slipped to his feet and as he picked it up his
- eye fell again on the paragraph addressed to the friends of Mrs.
- Aubyn. He had read it for the first time with a scarcely
- perceptible quickening of attention: her name had so long been
- public property that his eye passed it unseeingly, as the crowd in
- the street hurries without a glance by some familiar monument.
-
- "Information concerning the period previous to her coming to
- England. . . ." The words were an evocation. He saw her again as
- she had looked at their first meeting, the poor woman of genius
- with her long pale face and short-sighted eyes, softened a little
- by the grace of youth and inexperience, but so incapable even then
- of any hold upon the pulses. When she spoke, indeed, she was
- wonderful, more wonderful, perhaps, than when later, to Glennard's
- fancy at least, the conscious of memorable things uttered seemed
- to take from even her most intimate speech the perfect bloom of
- privacy. It was in those earliest days, if ever, that he had come
- near loving her; though even then his sentiment had lived only in
- the intervals of its expression. Later, when to be loved by her
- had been a state to touch any man's imagination, the physical
- reluctance had, inexplicably, so overborne the intellectual
- attraction, that the last years had been, to both of them, an
- agony of conflicting impulses. Even now, if, in turning over old
- papers, his hand lit on her letters, the touch filled him with
- inarticulate misery. . . .
-
- "She had so few intimate friends . . . that letters will be of
- special value." So few intimate friends! For years she had had
- but one; one who in the last years had requited her wonderful
- pages, her tragic outpourings of love, humility, and pardon, with
- the scant phrases by which a man evades the vulgarest of
- sentimental importunities. He had been a brute in spite of
- himself, and sometimes, now that the remembrance of her face had
- faded, and only her voice and words remained with him, he chafed
- at his own inadequacy, his stupid inability to rise to the height
- of her passion. His egoism was not of a kind to mirror its
- complacency in the adventure. To have been loved by the most
- brilliant woman of her day, and to have been incapable of loving
- her, seemed to him, in looking back, the most derisive evidence of
- his limitations; and his remorseful tenderness for her memory was
- complicated with a sense of irritation against her for having
- given him once for all the measure of his emotional capacity. It
- was not often, however, that he thus probed the past. The public,
- in taking possession of Mrs. Aubyn, had eased his shoulders of
- their burden. There was something fatuous in an attitude of
- sentimental apology toward a memory already classic: to reproach
- one's self for not having loved Margaret Aubyn was a good deal
- like being disturbed by an inability to admire the Venus of Milo.
- From her cold niche of fame she looked down ironically enough on
- his self-flagellations. . . . It was only when he came on
- something that belonged to her that he felt a sudden renewal of
- the old feeling, the strange dual impulse that drew him to her
- voice but drove him from her hand, so that even now, at sight of
- anything she had touched, his heart contracted painfully. It
- happened seldom nowadays. Her little presents, one by one, had
- disappeared from his rooms, and her letters, kept from some
- unacknowledged puerile vanity in the possession of such treasures,
- seldom came beneath his hand. . . .
-
- "Her letters will be of special value--" Her letters! Why, he
- must have hundreds of them--enough to fill a volume. Sometimes it
- used to seem to him that they came with every post--he used to
- avoid looking in his letter-box when he came home to his rooms--
- but her writing seemed to spring out at him as he put his key in
- the door--.
-
- He stood up and strolled into the other room. Hollingsworth,
- lounging away from the window, had joined himself to a languidly
- convivial group of men to whom, in phrases as halting as though
- they struggled to define an ultimate idea, he was expounding the
- cursed nuisance of living in a hole with such a damned climate
- that one had to get out of it by February, with the contingent
- difficulty of there being no place to take one's yacht to in
- winter but that other played-out hole, the Riviera. From the
- outskirts of this group Glennard wandered to another, where a
- voice as different as possible from Hollingsworth's colorless
- organ dominated another circle of languid listeners.
-
- "Come and hear Dinslow talk about his patent: admission free," one
- of the men sang out in a tone of mock resignation.
-
- Dinslow turned to Glennard the confident pugnacity of his smile.
- "Give it another six months and it'll be talking about itself," he
- declared. "It's pretty nearly articulate now."
-
- "Can it say papa?" someone else inquired.
-
- Dinslow's smile broadened. "You'll be deuced glad to say papa to
- IT a year from now," he retorted. "It'll be able to support even
- you in affluence. Look here, now, just let me explain to you--"
-
- Glennard moved away impatiently. The men at the club--all but
- those who were "in it"--were proverbially "tired" of Dinslow's
- patent, and none more so than Glennard, whose knowledge of its
- merits made it loom large in the depressing catalogue of lost
- opportunities. The relations between the two men had always been
- friendly, and Dinslow's urgent offers to "take him in on the
- ground floor" had of late intensified Glennard's sense of his own
- inability to meet good luck half way. Some of the men who had
- paused to listen were already in evening clothes, others on their
- way home to dress; and Glennard, with an accustomed twinge of
- humiliation, said to himself that if he lingered among them it was
- in the miserable hope that one of the number might ask him to
- dine. Miss Trent had told him that she was to go to the opera
- that evening with her rich aunt; and if he should have the luck to
- pick up a dinner-invitation he might join her there without extra
- outlay.
-
- He moved about the room, lingering here and there in a tentative
- affectation of interest; but though the men greeted him pleasantly
- no one asked him to dine. Doubtless they were all engaged, these
- men who could afford to pay for their dinners, who did not have to
- hunt for invitations as a beggar rummages for a crust in an ash-
- barrel! But no--as Hollingsworth left the lessening circle about
- the table an admiring youth called out--"Holly, stop and dine!"
-
- Hollingsworth turned on him the crude countenance that looked like
- the wrong side of a more finished face. "Sorry I can't. I'm in
- for a beastly banquet."
-
- Glennard threw himself into an arm-chair. Why go home in the rain
- to dress? It was folly to take a cab to the opera, it was worse
- folly to go there at all. His perpetual meetings with Alexa Trent
- were as unfair to the girl as they were unnerving to himself.
- Since he couldn't marry her, it was time to stand aside and give a
- better man the chance--and his thought admitted the ironical
- implication that in the terms of expediency the phrase might stand
- for Hollingsworth.
-
-
-
- II
-
-
- He dined alone and walked home to his rooms in the rain. As he
- turned into Fifth Avenue he caught the wet gleam of carriages on
- their way to the opera, and he took the first side street, in a
- moment of irritation against the petty restrictions that thwarted
- every impulse. It was ridiculous to give up the opera, not
- because one might possibly be bored there, but because one must
- pay for the experiment.
-
- In his sitting-room, the tacit connivance of the inanimate had
- centred the lamp-light on a photograph of Alexa Trent, placed, in
- the obligatory silver frame, just where, as memory officiously
- reminded him, Margaret Aubyn's picture had long throned in its
- stead. Miss Trent's features cruelly justified the usurpation.
- She had the kind of beauty that comes of a happy accord of face
- and spirit. It is not given to many to have the lips and eyes of
- their rarest mood, and some women go through life behind a mask
- expressing only their anxiety about the butcher's bill or their
- inability to see a joke. With Miss Trent, face and mind had the
- same high serious contour. She looked like a throned Justice by
- some grave Florentine painter; and it seemed to Glennard that her
- most salient attribute, or that at least to which her conduct gave
- most consistent expression, was a kind of passionate justice--the
- intuitive feminine justness that is so much rarer than a reasoned
- impartiality. Circumstances had tragically combined to develop
- this instinct into a conscious habit. She had seen more than most
- girls of the shabby side of life, of the perpetual tendency of
- want to cramp the noblest attitude. Poverty and misfortune had
- overhung her childhood and she had none of the pretty delusions
- about life that are supposed to be the crowning grace of girlhood.
- This very competence, which gave her a touching reasonableness,
- made Glennard's situation more difficult than if he had aspired to
- a princess bred in the purple. Between them they asked so little--
- they knew so well how to make that little do--but they understood
- also, and she especially did not for a moment let him forget, that
- without that little the future they dreamed of was impossible.
-
- The sight of her photograph quickened Glennard's exasperation. He
- was sick and ashamed of the part he was playing. He had loved her
- now for two years, with the tranquil tenderness that gathers depth
- and volume as it nears fulfilment; he knew that she would wait for
- him--but the certitude was an added pang. There are times when
- the constancy of the woman one cannot marry is almost as trying as
- that of the woman one does not want to.
-
- Glennard turned up his reading-lamp and stirred the fire. He had
- a long evening before him and he wanted to crowd out thought with
- action. He had brought some papers from his office and he spread
- them out on his table and squared himself to the task. . . .
-
- It must have been an hour later that he found himself
- automatically fitting a key into a locked drawer. He had no more
- notion than a somnambulist of the mental process that had led up
- to this action. He was just dimly aware of having pushed aside
- the papers and the heavy calf volumes that a moment before had
- bounded his horizon, and of laying in their place, without a trace
- of conscious volition, the parcel he had taken from the drawer.
-
- The letters were tied in packets of thirty or forty. There were a
- great many packets. On some of the envelopes the ink was fading;
- on others, which bore the English post-mark, it was still fresh.
- She had been dead hardly three years, and she had written, at
- lengthening intervals, to the last. . . .
-
- He undid one of the earlier packets--little notes written during
- their first acquaintance at Hillbridge. Glennard, on leaving
- college, had begun life in his uncle's law office in the old
- university town. It was there that, at the house of her father,
- Professor Forth, he had first met the young lady then chiefly
- distinguished for having, after two years of a conspicuously
- unhappy marriage, returned to the protection of the paternal roof.
-
- Mrs. Aubyn was at that time an eager and somewhat tragic young
- woman, of complex mind and undeveloped manners, whom her crude
- experience of matrimony had fitted out with a stock of
- generalizations that exploded like bombs in the academic air of
- Hillbridge. In her choice of a husband she had been fortunate
- enough, if the paradox be permitted, to light on one so signally
- gifted with the faculty of putting himself in the wrong that her
- leaving him had the dignity of a manifesto--made her, as it were,
- the spokeswoman of outraged wifehood. In this light she was
- cherished by that dominant portion of Hillbridge society which was
- least indulgent to conjugal differences, and which found a
- proportionate pleasure in being for once able to feast openly on a
- dish liberally seasoned with the outrageous. So much did this
- endear Mrs. Aubyn to the university ladies that they were disposed
- from the first to allow her more latitude of speech and action
- than the ill-used wife was generally accorded in Hillbridge, where
- misfortune was still regarded as a visitation designed to put
- people in their proper place and make them feel the superiority of
- their neighbors. The young woman so privileged combined with a
- kind of personal shyness an intellectual audacity that was like a
- deflected impulse of coquetry: one felt that if she had been
- prettier she would have had emotions instead of ideas. She was in
- fact even then what she had always remained: a genius capable of
- the acutest generalizations, but curiously undiscerning where her
- personal susceptibilities were concerned. Her psychology failed
- her just where it serves most women and one felt that her brains
- would never be a guide to her heart. Of all this, however,
- Glennard thought little in the first year of their acquaintance.
- He was at an age when all the gifts and graces are but so much
- undiscriminated food to the ravening egoism of youth. In seeking
- Mrs. Aubyn's company he was prompted by an intuitive taste for the
- best as a pledge of his own superiority. The sympathy of the
- cleverest woman in Hillbridge was balm to his craving for
- distinction: it was public confirmation of his secret sense that
- he was cut out for a bigger place. It must not be understood that
- Glennard was vain. Vanity contents itself with the coarsest diet;
- there is no palate so fastidious as that of self-distrust. To a
- youth of Glennard's aspirations the encouragement of a clever
- woman stood for the symbol of all success. Later, when he had
- begun to feel his way, to gain a foothold, he would not need such
- support; but it served to carry him lightly and easily over what
- is often a period of insecurity and discouragement.
-
- It would be unjust, however, to represent his interest in Mrs.
- Aubyn as a matter of calculation. It was as instinctive as love,
- and it missed being love by just such a hair-breadth deflection
- from the line of beauty as had determined the curve of Mrs.
- Aubyn's lips. When they met she had just published her first
- novel, and Glennard, who afterward had an ambitious man's
- impatience of distinguished women, was young enough to be dazzled
- by the semi-publicity it gave her. It was the kind of book that
- makes elderly ladies lower their voices and call each other "my
- dear" when they furtively discuss it; and Glennard exulted in the
- superior knowledge of the world that enabled him to take as a
- matter of course sentiments over which the university shook its
- head. Still more delightful was it to hear Mrs. Aubyn waken the
- echoes of academic drawing-rooms with audacities surpassing those
- of her printed page. Her intellectual independence gave a touch
- of comradeship to their intimacy, prolonging the illusion of
- college friendships based on a joyous interchange of heresies.
- Mrs. Aubyn and Glennard represented to each other the augur's wink
- behind the Hillbridge idol: they walked together in that light of
- young omniscience from which fate so curiously excludes one's
- elders.
-
- Husbands who are notoriously inopportune, may even die
- inopportunely, and this was the revenge that Mr. Aubyn, some two
- years after her return to Hillbridge, took upon his injured wife.
- He died precisely at the moment when Glennard was beginning to
- criticise her. It was not that she bored him; she did what was
- infinitely worse--she made him feel his inferiority. The sense of
- mental equality had been gratifying to his raw ambition; but as
- his self-knowledge defined itself, his understanding of her also
- increased; and if man is at times indirectly flattered by the
- moral superiority of woman, her mental ascendency is extenuated by
- no such oblique tribute to his powers. The attitude of looking up
- is a strain on the muscles; and it was becoming more and more
- Glennard's opinion that brains, in a woman, should be merely the
- obverse of beauty. To beauty Mrs. Aubyn could lay no claim; and
- while she had enough prettiness to exasperate him by her
- incapacity to make use of it, she seemed invincibly ignorant of
- any of the little artifices whereby women contrive to palliate
- their defects and even to turn them into graces. Her dress never
- seemed a part of her; all her clothes had an impersonal air, as
- though they had belonged to someone else and been borrowed in an
- emergency that had somehow become chronic. She was conscious
- enough of her deficiencies to try to amend them by rash imitations
- of the most approved models; but no woman who does not dress well
- intuitively will ever do so by the light of reason, and Mrs.
- Aubyn's plagiarisms, to borrow a metaphor of her trade, somehow
- never seemed to be incorporated with the text.
-
- Genius is of small use to a woman who does not know how to do her
- hair. The fame that came to Mrs. Aubyn with her second book left
- Glennard's imagination untouched, or had at most the negative
- effect of removing her still farther from the circle of his
- contracting sympathies. We are all the sport of time; and fate
- had so perversely ordered the chronology of Margaret Aubyn's
- romance that when her husband died Glennard felt as though he had
- lost a friend.
-
- It was not in his nature to be needlessly unkind; and though he
- was in the impregnable position of the man who has given a woman
- no more definable claim on him than that of letting her fancy that
- he loves her, he would not for the world have accentuated his
- advantage by any betrayal of indifference. During the first year
- of her widowhood their friendship dragged on with halting renewals
- of sentiment, becoming more and more a banquet of empty dishes
- from which the covers were never removed; then Glennard went to
- New York to live and exchanged the faded pleasures of intercourse
- for the comparative novelty of correspondence. Her letters, oddly
- enough, seemed at first to bring her nearer than her presence.
- She had adopted, and she successfully maintained, a note as
- affectionately impersonal as his own; she wrote ardently of her
- work, she questioned him about his, she even bantered him on the
- inevitable pretty girl who was certain before long to divert the
- current of his confidences. To Glennard, who was almost a
- stranger in New York, the sight of Mrs. Aubyn's writing was like a
- voice of reassurance in surroundings as yet insufficiently aware
- of him. His vanity found a retrospective enjoyment in the
- sentiment his heart had rejected, and this factitious emotion
- drove him once or twice to Hillbridge, whence, after scenes of
- evasive tenderness, he returned dissatisfied with himself and her.
- As he made room for himself in New York and peopled the space he
- had cleared with the sympathies at the disposal of agreeable and
- self-confident young men, it seemed to him natural to infer that
- Mrs. Aubyn had refurnished in the same manner the void he was not
- unwilling his departure should have left. But in the dissolution
- of sentimental partnerships it is seldom that both associates are
- able to withdraw their funds at the same time; and Glennard
- gradually learned that he stood for the venture on which Mrs.
- Aubyn had irretrievably staked her all. It was not the kind of
- figure he cared to cut. He had no fancy for leaving havoc in his
- wake and would have preferred to sow a quick growth of oblivion in
- the spaces wasted by his unconsidered inroads; but if he supplied
- the seed it was clearly Mrs. Aubyn's business to see to the
- raising of the crop. Her attitude seemed indeed to throw his own
- reasonableness into distincter relief: so that they might have
- stood for thrift and improvidence in an allegory of the
- affections.
-
- It was not that Mrs. Aubyn permitted herself to be a pensioner on
- his bounty. He knew she had no wish to keep herself alive on the
- small change of sentiment; she simply fed on her own funded
- passion, and the luxuries it allowed her made him, even then,
- dimly aware that she had the secret of an inexhaustible alchemy.
-
- Their relations remained thus negatively tender till she suddenly
- wrote him of her decision to go abroad to live. Her father had
- died, she had no near ties in Hillbridge, and London offered more
- scope than New York to her expanding personality. She was already
- famous and her laurels were yet unharvested.
-
- For a moment the news roused Glennard to a jealous sense of lost
- opportunities. He wanted, at any rate, to reassert his power
- before she made the final effort of escape. They had not met for
- over a year, but of course he could not let her sail without
- seeing her. She came to New York the day before her departure,
- and they spent its last hours together. Glennard had planned no
- course of action--he simply meant to let himself drift. They both
- drifted, for a long time, down the languid current of
- reminiscence; she seemed to sit passive, letting him push his way
- back through the overgrown channels of the past. At length she
- reminded him that they must bring their explorations to an end.
- He rose to leave, and stood looking at her with the same
- uncertainty in his heart. He was tired of her already--he was
- always tired of her--yet he was not sure that he wanted her to go.
-
- "I may never see you again," he said, as though confidently
- appealing to her compassion.
-
- Her look enveloped him. "And I shall see you always--always!"
-
- "Why go then--?" escaped him.
-
- "To be nearer you," she answered; and the words dismissed him like
- a closing door.
-
- The door was never to reopen; but through its narrow crack
- Glennard, as the years went on, became more and more conscious of
- an inextinguishable light directing its small ray toward the past
- which consumed so little of his own commemorative oil. The
- reproach was taken from this thought by Mrs. Aubyn's gradual
- translation into terms of universality. In becoming a personage
- she so naturally ceased to be a person that Glennard could almost
- look back to his explorations of her spirit as on a visit to some
- famous shrine, immortalized, but in a sense desecrated, by popular
- veneration.
-
- Her letters, from London, continued to come with the same tender
- punctuality; but the altered conditions of her life, the vistas of
- new relationships disclosed by every phrase, made her
- communications as impersonal as a piece of journalism. It was as
- though the state, the world, indeed, had taken her off his hands,
- assuming the maintenance of a temperament that had long exhausted
- his slender store of reciprocity.
-
- In the retrospective light shed by the letters he was blinded to
- their specific meaning. He was not a man who concerned himself
- with literature, and they had been to him, at first, simply the
- extension of her brilliant talk, later the dreaded vehicle of a
- tragic importunity. He knew, of course, that they were wonderful;
- that, unlike the authors who give their essence to the public and
- keep only a dry rind for their friends, Mrs. Aubyn had stored of
- her rarest vintage for this hidden sacrament of tenderness.
- Sometimes, indeed, he had been oppressed, humiliated almost, by
- the multiplicity of her allusions, the wide scope of her
- interests, her persistence in forcing her superabundance of
- thought and emotion into the shallow receptacle of his sympathy;
- but he had never thought of the letters objectively, as the
- production of a distinguished woman; had never measured the
- literary significance of her oppressive prodigality. He was
- almost frightened now at the wealth in his hands; the obligation
- of her love had never weighed on him like this gift of her
- imagination: it was as though he had accepted from her something
- to which even a reciprocal tenderness could not have justified his
- claim.
-
- He sat a long time staring at the scattered pages on his desk; and
- in the sudden realization of what they meant he could almost fancy
- some alchemistic process changing them to gold as he stared. He
- had the sense of not being alone in the room, of the presence of
- another self observing from without the stirring of subconscious
- impulses that sent flushes of humiliation to his forehead. At
- length he stood up, and with the gesture of a man who wishes to
- give outward expression to his purpose--to establish, as it were,
- a moral alibi--swept the letters into a heap and carried them
- toward the grate. But it would have taken too long to burn all
- the packets. He turned back to the table and one by one fitted
- the pages into their envelopes; then he tied up the letters and
- put them back into the locked drawer.
-
-
-
- III
-
-
- It was one of the laws of Glennard's intercourse with Miss Trent
- that he always went to see her the day after he had resolved to
- give her up. There was a special charm about the moments thus
- snatched from the jaws of renunciation; and his sense of their
- significance was on this occasion so keen that he hardly noticed
- the added gravity of her welcome.
-
- His feeling for her had become so vital a part of him that her
- nearness had the quality of imperceptibly readjusting his point of
- view, so that the jumbled phenomena of experience fell at once
- into a rational perspective. In this redistribution of values the
- sombre retrospect of the previous evening shrank to a mere cloud
- on the edge of consciousness. Perhaps the only service an unloved
- woman can render the man she loves is to enhance and prolong his
- illusions about her rival. It was the fate of Margaret Aubyn's
- memory to serve as a foil to Miss Trent's presence, and never had
- the poor lady thrown her successor into more vivid relief.
-
- Miss Trent had the charm of still waters that are felt to be
- renewed by rapid currents. Her attention spread a tranquil
- surface to the demonstrations of others, and it was only in days
- of storm that one felt the pressure of the tides. This
- inscrutable composure was perhaps her chief grace in Glennard's
- eyes. Reserve, in some natures, implies merely the locking of
- empty rooms or the dissimulation of awkward encumbrances; but Miss
- Trent's reticence was to Glennard like the closed door to the
- sanctuary, and his certainty of divining the hidden treasure made
- him content to remain outside in the happy expectancy of the
- neophyte.
-
- "You didn't come to the opera last night," she began, in the tone
- that seemed always rather to record a fact than to offer a
- reflection on it.
-
- He answered with a discouraged gesture. "What was the use? We
- couldn't have talked."
-
- "Not as well as here," she assented; adding, after a meditative
- pause, "As you didn't come I talked to Aunt Virginia instead."
-
- "Ah!" he returned, the fact being hardly striking enough to detach
- him from the contemplation of her hands, which had fallen, as was
- their wont, into an attitude full of plastic possibilities. One
- felt them to be hands that, moving only to some purpose, were
- capable of intervals of serene inaction.
-
- "We had a long talk," Miss Trent went on; and she waited again
- before adding, with the increased absence of stress that marked
- her graver communications, "Aunt Virginia wants me to go abroad
- with her."
-
- Glennard looked up with a start. "Abroad? When?"
-
- "Now--next month. To be gone two years."
-
- He permitted himself a movement of tender derision. "Does she
- really? Well, I want you to go abroad with ME--for any number of
- years. Which offer do you accept?"
-
- "Only one of them seems to require immediate consideration," she
- returned, with a smile.
-
- Glennard looked at her again. "You're not thinking of it?"
-
- Her gaze dropped and she unclasped her hands. Her movements were
- so rare that they might have been said to italicize her words.
- "Aunt Virginia talked to me very seriously. It will be a great
- relief to mother and the others to have me provided for in that
- way for two years. I must think of that, you know." She glanced
- down at her gown which, under a renovated surface, dated back to
- the first days of Glennard's wooing. "I try not to cost much--but
- I do."
-
- "Good Lord!" Glennard groaned.
-
- They sat silent till at length she gently took up the argument.
- "As the eldest, you know, I'm bound to consider these things.
- Women are such a burden. Jim does what he can for mother, but
- with his own children to provide for it isn't very much. You see,
- we're all poor together."
-
- "Your aunt isn't. She might help your mother."
-
- "She does--in her own way."
-
- "Exactly--that's the rich relation all over! You may be miserable
- in any way you like, but if you're to be happy you've got to be so
- in her way--and in her old gowns."
-
- "I could be very happy in Aunt Virginia's old gowns," Miss Trent
- interposed.
-
- "Abroad, you mean?"
-
- "I mean wherever I felt that I was helping. And my going abroad
- will help."
-
- "Of course--I see that. And I see your considerateness in putting
- its advantages negatively."
-
- "Negatively?"
-
- "In dwelling simply on what the going will take you from, not on
- what it will bring you to. It means a lot to a woman, of course,
- to get away from a life like this." He summed up in a disparaging
- glance the background of indigent furniture. "The question is how
- you'll like coming back to it."
-
- She seemed to accept the full consequences of his thought. "I
- only know I don't like leaving it."
-
- He flung back sombrely, "You don't even put it conditionally
- then?"
-
- Her gaze deepened. "On what?"
-
- He stood up and walked across the room. Then he came back and
- paused before her. "On the alternative of marrying me."
-
- The slow color--even her blushes seemed deliberate--rose to her
- lower lids; her lips stirred, but the words resolved themselves
- into a smile and she waited.
-
- He took another turn, with the thwarted step of the man whose
- nervous exasperation escapes through his muscles.
-
- "And to think that in fifteen years I shall have a big practice!"
-
- Her eyes triumphed for him. "In less!"
-
- "The cursed irony of it! What do I care for the man I shall be
- then? It's slaving one's life away for a stranger!" He took her
- hands abruptly. "You'll go to Cannes, I suppose, or Monte Carlo?
- I heard Hollingsworth say to-day that he meant to take his yacht
- over to the Mediterranean--"
-
- She released herself. "If you think that--"
-
- "I don't. I almost wish I did. It would be easier, I mean." He
- broke off incoherently. "I believe your Aunt Virginia does,
- though. She somehow connotes Hollingsworth and the
- Mediterranean." He caught her hands again. "Alexa--if we could
- manage a little hole somewhere out of town?"
-
- "Could we?" she sighed, half yielding.
-
- "In one of those places where they make jokes about the
- mosquitoes," he pressed her. "Could you get on with one servant?"
-
- "Could you get on without varnished boots?"
-
- "Promise me you won't go, then!"
-
- "What are you thinking of, Stephen?"
-
- "I don't know," he stammered, the question giving unexpected form
- to his intention. "It's all in the air yet, of course; but I
- picked up a tip the other day--"
-
- "You're not speculating?" she cried, with a kind of superstitious
- terror.
-
- "Lord, no. This is a sure thing--I almost wish it wasn't; I mean
- if I can work it--" He had a sudden vision of the
- comprehensiveness of the temptation. If only he had been less
- sure of Dinslow! His assurance gave the situation the base
- element of safety.
-
- "I don't understand you," she faltered.
-
- "Trust me, instead!" he adjured her, with sudden energy; and
- turning on her abruptly, "If you go, you know, you go free," he
- concluded.
-
- She drew back, paling a little. "Why do you make it harder for
- me?"
-
- "To make it easier for myself," he retorted.
-
-
-
- IV
-
-
- Glennard, the next afternoon, leaving his office earlier than
- usual, turned, on his way home, into one of the public libraries.
-
- He had the place to himself at that closing hour, and the
- librarian was able to give an undivided attention to his tentative
- request for letters--collections of letters. The librarian
- suggested Walpole.
-
- "I meant women--women's letters."
-
- The librarian proffered Hannah More and Miss Martineau.
-
- Glennard cursed his own inarticulateness. "I mean letters to--to
- some one person--a man; their husband--or--"
-
- "Ah," said the inspired librarian, "Eloise and Abailard."
-
- "Well--something a little nearer, perhaps," said Glennard, with
- lightness. "Didn't Merimee--"
-
- "The lady's letters, in that case, were not published."
-
- "Of course not," said Glennard, vexed at his blunder.
-
- "There are George Sand's letters to Flaubert."
-
- "Ah!" Glennard hesitated. "Was she--were they--?" He chafed at
- his own ignorance of the sentimental by-paths of literature.
-
- "If you want love-letters, perhaps some of the French eighteenth
- century correspondences might suit you better--Mlle. Aisse or
- Madame de Sabran--"
-
- But Glennard insisted. "I want something modern--English or
- American. I want to look something up," he lamely concluded.
-
- The librarian could only suggest George Eliot.
-
- "Well, give me some of the French things, then--and I'll have
- Merimee's letters. It was the woman who published them, wasn't
- it?"
-
- He caught up his armful, transferring it, on the doorstep, to a
- cab which carried him to his rooms. He dined alone, hurriedly, at
- a small restaurant near by, and returned at once to his books.
-
- Late that night, as he undressed, he wondered what contemptible
- impulse had forced from him his last words to Alexa Trent. It was
- bad enough to interfere with the girl's chances by hanging about
- her to the obvious exclusion of other men, but it was worse to
- seem to justify his weakness by dressing up the future in delusive
- ambiguities. He saw himself sinking from depth to depth of
- sentimental cowardice in his reluctance to renounce his hold on
- her; and it filled him with self-disgust to think that the highest
- feeling of which he supposed himself capable was blent with such
- base elements.
-
- His awakening was hardly cheered by the sight of her writing. He
- tore her note open and took in the few lines--she seldom exceeded
- the first page--with the lucidity of apprehension that is the
- forerunner of evil.
-
- "My aunt sails on Saturday and I must give her my answer the day
- after to-morrow. Please don't come till then--I want to think the
- question over by myself. I know I ought to go. Won't you help me
- to be reasonable?"
-
- It was settled, then. Well, he would be reasonable; he wouldn't
- stand in her way; he would let her go. For two years he had been
- living some other, luckier man's life; the time had come when he
- must drop back into his own. He no longer tried to look ahead, to
- grope his way through the endless labyrinth of his material
- difficulties; a sense of dull resignation closed in on him like a
- fog.
-
- "Hullo, Glennard!" a voice said, as an electric-car, late that
- afternoon, dropped him at an uptown corner.
-
- He looked up and met the interrogative smile of Barton Flamel, who
- stood on the curbstone watching the retreating car with the eye of
- a man philosophic enough to remember that it will be followed by
- another.
-
- Glennard felt his usual impulse of pleasure at meeting Flamel; but
- it was not in this case curtailed by the reaction of contempt that
- habitually succeeded it. Probably even the few men who had known
- Flamel since his youth could have given no good reason for the
- vague mistrust that he inspired. Some people are judged by their
- actions, others by their ideas; and perhaps the shortest way of
- defining Flamel is to say that his well-known leniency of view was
- vaguely divined to include himself. Simple minds may have
- resented the discovery that his opinions were based on his
- perceptions; but there was certainly no more definite charge
- against him than that implied in the doubt as to how he would
- behave in an emergency, and his company was looked upon as one of
- those mildly unwholesome dissipations to which the prudent may
- occasionally yield. It now offered itself to Glennard as an easy
- escape from the obsession of moral problems, which somehow could
- no more be worn in Flamel's presence than a surplice in the
- street.
-
- "Where are you going? To the club?" Flamel asked; adding, as the
- younger man assented, "Why not come to my studio instead? You'll
- see one bore instead of twenty."
-
- The apartment which Flamel described as his studio showed, as its
- one claim to the designation, a perennially empty easel; the rest
- of its space being filled with the evidences of a comprehensive
- dilettanteism. Against this background, which seemed the visible
- expression of its owner's intellectual tolerance, rows of fine
- books detached themselves with a prominence, showing them to be
- Flamel's chief care.
-
- Glennard glanced with the eye of untrained curiosity at the lines
- of warm-toned morocco, while his host busied himself with the
- uncorking of Apollinaris.
-
- "You've got a splendid lot of books," he said.
-
- "They're fairly decent," the other assented, in the curt tone of
- the collector who will not talk of his passion for fear of talking
- of nothing else; then, as Glennard, his hands in his pockets,
- began to stroll perfunctorily down the long line of bookcases--
- "Some men," Flamel irresistibly added, "think of books merely as
- tools, others as tooling. I'm between the two; there are days
- when I use them as scenery, other days when I want them as
- society; so that, as you see, my library represents a makeshift
- compromise between looks and brains, and the collectors look down
- on me almost as much as the students."
-
- Glennard, without answering, was mechanically taking one book
- after another from the shelves. His hands slipped curiously over
- the smooth covers and the noiseless subsidence of opening pages.
- Suddenly he came on a thin volume of faded manuscript.
-
- "What's this?" he asked, with a listless sense of wonder.
-
- "Ah, you're at my manuscript shelf. I've been going in for that
- sort of thing lately." Flamel came up and looked over his
- shoulders. "That's a bit of Stendhal--one of the Italian stories--
- and here are some letters of Balzac to Madame Commanville."
-
- Glennard took the book with sudden eagerness. "Who was Madame
- Commanville?"
-
- "His sister." He was conscious that Flamel was looking at him
- with the smile that was like an interrogation point. "I didn't
- know you cared for this kind of thing."
-
- "I don't--at least I've never had the chance. Have you many
- collections of letters?"
-
- "Lord, no--very few. I'm just beginning, and most of the
- interesting ones are out of my reach. Here's a queer little
- collection, though--the rarest thing I've got--half a dozen of
- Shelley's letters to Harriet Westbrook. I had a devil of a time
- getting them--a lot of collectors were after them."
-
- Glennard, taking the volume from his hand, glanced with a kind of
- repugnance at the interleaving of yellow cris-crossed sheets.
- "She was the one who drowned herself, wasn't she?"
-
- Flamel nodded. "I suppose that little episode adds about fifty
- per cent. to their value," he said, meditatively.
-
- Glennard laid the book down. He wondered why he had joined
- Flamel. He was in no humor to be amused by the older man's talk,
- and a recrudescence of personal misery rose about him like an icy
- tide.
-
- "I believe I must take myself off," he said. "I'd forgotten an
- engagement."
-
- He turned to go; but almost at the same moment he was conscious of
- a duality of intention wherein his apparent wish to leave revealed
- itself as a last effort of the will against the overmastering
- desire to stay and unbosom himself to Flamel.
-
- The older man, as though divining the conflict, laid a detaining
- pressure on his arm.
-
- "Won't the engagement keep? Sit down and try one of these cigars.
- I don't often have the luck of seeing you here."
-
- "I'm rather driven just now," said Glennard, vaguely. He found
- himself seated again, and Flamel had pushed to his side a low
- stand holding a bottle of Apollinaris and a decanter of cognac.
-
- Flamel, thrown back in his capacious arm-chair, surveyed him
- through a cloud of smoke with the comfortable tolerance of the man
- to whom no inconsistencies need be explained. Connivance was
- implicit in the air. It was the kind of atmosphere in which the
- outrageous loses its edge. Glennard felt a gradual relaxing of
- his nerves.
-
- "I suppose one has to pay a lot for letters like that?" he heard
- himself asking, with a glance in the direction of the volume he
- had laid aside.
-
- "Oh, so-do--depends on circumstances." Flamel viewed him
- thoughtfully. "Are you thinking of collecting?"
-
- Glennard laughed. "Lord, no. The other way round."
-
- "Selling?"
-
- "Oh, I hardly know. I was thinking of a poor chap--"
-
- Flamel filled the pause with a nod of interest.
-
- "A poor chap I used to know--who died--he died last year--and who
- left me a lot of letters, letters he thought a great deal of--he
- was fond of me and left 'em to me outright, with the idea, I
- suppose, that they might benefit me somehow--I don't know--I'm not
- much up on such things--" he reached his hand to the tall glass
- his host had filled.
-
- "A collection of autograph letters, eh? Any big names?"
-
- "Oh, only one name. They're all letters written to him--by one
- person, you understand; a woman, in fact--"
-
- "Oh, a woman," said Flamel, negligently.
-
- Glennard was nettled by his obvious loss of interest. "I rather
- think they'd attract a good deal of notice if they were
- published."
-
- Flamel still looked uninterested. "Love-letters, I suppose?"
-
- "Oh, just--the letters a woman would write to a man she knew well.
- They were tremendous friends, he and she."
-
- "And she wrote a clever letter?"
-
- "Clever? It was Margaret Aubyn."
-
- A great silence filled the room. It seemed to Glennard that the
- words had burst from him as blood gushes from a wound.
-
- "Great Scott!" said Flamel, sitting up. "A collection of Margaret
- Aubyn's letters? Did you say YOU had them?"
-
- "They were left me--by my friend."
-
- "I see. Was he--well, no matter. You're to be congratulated, at
- any rate. What are you going to do with them?"
-
- Glennard stood up with a sense of weariness in all his bones.
- "Oh, I don't know. I haven't thought much about it. I just
- happened to see that some fellow was writing her life--"
-
- "Joslin; yes. You didn't think of giving them to him?"
-
- Glennard had lounged across the room and stood staring up at a
- bronze Bacchus who drooped his garlanded head above the pediment
- of an Italian cabinet. "What ought I to do? You're just the
- fellow to advise me." He felt the blood in his cheek as he spoke.
-
- Flamel sat with meditative eye. "What do you WANT to do with
- them?" he asked.
-
- "I want to publish them," said Glennard, swinging round with
- sudden energy--"If I can--"
-
- "If you can? They're yours, you say?"
-
- "They're mine fast enough. There's no one to prevent--I mean
- there are no restrictions--" he was arrested by the sense that
- these accumulated proofs of impunity might precisely stand as the
- strongest check on his action.
-
- "And Mrs. Aubyn had no family, I believe?"
-
- "No."
-
- "Then I don't see who's to interfere," said Flamel, studying his
- cigar-tip.
-
- Glennard had turned his unseeing stare on an ecstatic Saint
- Catherine framed in tarnished gilding.
-
- "It's just this way," he began again, with an effort. "When
- letters are as personal as--as these of my friend's. . . . Well,
- I don't mind telling you that the cash would make a heap of
- difference to me; such a lot that it rather obscures my judgment--
- the fact is if I could lay my hand on a few thousands now I could
- get into a big thing, and without appreciable risk; and I'd like
- to know whether you think I'd be justified--under the
- circumstances. . . ." He paused, with a dry throat. It seemed to
- him at the moment that it would be impossible for him ever to sink
- lower in his own estimation. He was in truth less ashamed of
- weighing the temptation than of submitting his scruples to a man
- like Flamel, and affecting to appeal to sentiments of delicacy on
- the absence of which he had consciously reckoned. But he had
- reached a point where each word seemed to compel another, as each
- wave in a stream is forced forward by the pressure behind it; and
- before Flamel could speak he had faltered out--"You don't think
- people could say . . . could criticise the man. . . ."
-
- "But the man's dead, isn't he?"
-
- "He's dead--yes; but can I assume the responsibility without--"
-
- Flamel hesitated; and almost immediately Glennard's scruples gave
- way to irritation. If at this hour Flamel were to affect an
- inopportune reluctance--!
-
- The older man's answer reassured him. "Why need you assume any
- responsibility? Your name won't appear, of course; and as to your
- friend's, I don't see why his should, either. He wasn't a
- celebrity himself, I suppose?"
-
- "No, no."
-
- "Then the letters can be addressed to Mr. Blank. Doesn't that
- make it all right?"
-
- Glennard's hesitation revived. "For the public, yes. But I don't
- see that it alters the case for me. The question is, ought I to
- publish them at all?"
-
- "Of course you ought to." Flamel spoke with invigorating
- emphasis. "I doubt if you'd be justified in keeping them back.
- Anything of Margaret Aubyn's is more or less public property by
- this time. She's too great for any one of us. I was only
- wondering how you could use them to the best advantage--to
- yourself, I mean. How many are there?"
-
- "Oh, a lot; perhaps a hundred--I haven't counted. There may be
- more. . . ."
-
- "Gad! What a haul! When were they written?"
-
- "I don't know--that is--they corresponded for years. What's the
- odds?" He moved toward his hat with a vague impulse of flight.
-
- "It all counts," said Flamel, imperturbably. "A long
- correspondence--one, I mean, that covers a great deal of time--is
- obviously worth more than if the same number of letters had been
- written within a year. At any rate, you won't give them to
- Joslin? They'd fill a book, wouldn't they?"
-
- "I suppose so. I don't know how much it takes to fill a book."
-
- "Not love-letters, you say?"
-
- "Why?" flashed from Glennard.
-
- "Oh, nothing--only the big public is sentimental, and if they
- WERE--why, you could get any money for Margaret Aubyn's love-
- letters."
-
- Glennard was silent.
-
- "Are the letters interesting in themselves? I mean apart from the
- association with her name?"
-
- "I'm no judge." Glennard took up his hat and thrust himself into
- his overcoat. "I dare say I sha'n't do anything about it. And,
- Flamel--you won't mention this to anyone?"
-
- "Lord, no. Well, I congratulate you. You've got a big thing."
- Flamel was smiling at him from the hearth.
-
- Glennard, on the threshold, forced a response to the smile, while
- he questioned with loitering indifference--"Financially, eh?"
-
- "Rather; I should say so."
-
- Glennard's hand lingered on the knob. "How much--should you say?
- You know about such things."
-
- "Oh, I should have to see the letters; but I should say--well, if
- you've got enough to fill a book and they're fairly readable, and
- the book is brought out at the right time--say ten thousand down
- from the publisher, and possibly one or two more in royalties. If
- you got the publishers bidding against each other you might do
- even better; but of course I'm talking in the dark."
-
- "Of course," said Glennard, with sudden dizziness. His hand had
- slipped from the knob and he stood staring down at the exotic
- spirals of the Persian rug beneath his feet.
-
- "I'd have to see the letters," Flamel repeated.
-
- "Of course--you'd have to see them. . . ." Glennard stammered;
- and, without turning, he flung over his shoulder an inarticulate
- "Good-by. . . ."
-
-
-
- V
-
-
- The little house, as Glennard strolled up to it between the trees,
- seemed no more than a gay tent pitched against the sunshine. It
- had the crispness of a freshly starched summer gown, and the
- geraniums on the veranda bloomed as simultaneously as the flowers
- in a bonnet. The garden was prospering absurdly. Seed they had
- sown at random--amid laughing counter-charges of incompetence--had
- shot up in fragrant defiance of their blunders. He smiled to see
- the clematis unfolding its punctual wings about the porch. The
- tiny lawn was smooth as a shaven cheek, and a crimson rambler
- mounted to the nursery-window of a baby who never cried. A breeze
- shook the awning above the tea-table, and his wife, as he drew
- near, could be seen bending above a kettle that was just about to
- boil. So vividly did the whole scene suggest the painted bliss of
- a stage setting, that it would have been hardly surprising to see
- her step forward among the flowers and trill out her virtuous
- happiness from the veranda-rail.
-
- The stale heat of the long day in town, the dusty promiscuity of
- the suburban train were now but the requisite foil to an evening
- of scented breezes and tranquil talk. They had been married more
- than a year, and each home-coming still reflected the freshness of
- their first day together. If, indeed, their happiness had a flaw,
- it was in resembling too closely the bright impermanence of their
- surroundings. Their love as yet was but the gay tent of holiday-
- makers.
-
- His wife looked up with a smile. The country life suited her, and
- her beauty had gained depth from a stillness in which certain
- faces might have grown opaque.
-
- "Are you very tired?" she asked, pouring his tea.
-
- "Just enough to enjoy this." He rose from the chair in which he
- had thrown himself and bent over the tray for his cream. "You've
- had a visitor?" he commented, noticing a half-empty cup beside her
- own.
-
- "Only Mr. Flamel," she said, indifferently.
-
- "Flamel? Again?"
-
- She answered without show of surprise. "He left just now. His
- yacht is down at Laurel Bay and he borrowed a trap of the Dreshams
- to drive over here."
-
- Glennard made no comment, and she went on, leaning her head back
- against the cushions of her bamboo-seat, "He wants us to go for a
- sail with him next Sunday."
-
- Glennard meditatively stirred his tea. He was trying to think of
- the most natural and unartificial thing to say, and his voice
- seemed to come from the outside, as though he were speaking behind
- a marionette. "Do you want to?"
-
- "Just as you please," she said, compliantly. No affectation of
- indifference could have been as baffling as her compliance.
- Glennard, of late, was beginning to feel that the surface which, a
- year ago, he had taken for a sheet of clear glass, might, after
- all, be a mirror reflecting merely his own conception of what lay
- behind it.
-
- "Do you like Flamel?" he suddenly asked; to which, still engaged
- with her tea, she returned the feminine answer--"I thought you
- did."
-
- "I do, of course," he agreed, vexed at his own incorrigible
- tendency to magnify Flamel's importance by hovering about the
- topic. "A sail would be rather jolly; let's go."
-
- She made no reply and he drew forth the rolled-up evening papers
- which he had thrust into his pocket on leaving the train. As he
- smoothed them out his own countenance seemed to undergo the same
- process. He ran his eye down the list of stocks and Flamel's
- importunate personality receded behind the rows of figures pushing
- forward into notice like so many bearers of good news. Glennard's
- investments were flowering like his garden: the dryest shares
- blossomed into dividends, and a golden harvest awaited his sickle.
-
- He glanced at his wife with the tranquil air of the man who
- digests good luck as naturally as the dry ground absorbs a shower.
- "Things are looking uncommonly well. I believe we shall be able
- to go to town for two or three months next winter if we can find
- something cheap."
-
- She smiled luxuriously: it was pleasant to be able to say, with an
- air of balancing relative advantages, "Really, on the baby's
- account I shall be almost sorry; but if we do go, there's Kate
- Erskine's house . . . she'll let us have it for almost nothing. . . ."
-
- "Well, write her about it," he recommended, his eyes travelling on
- in search of the weather report. He had turned to the wrong page;
- and suddenly a line of black characters leapt out at him as from
- an ambush.
-
- "'Margaret Aubyn's Letters.' Two volumes. Out to-day. First
- edition of five thousand sold out before leaving the press.
- Second edition ready next week. THE BOOK OF THE YEAR. . . ."
-
- He looked up stupidly. His wife still sat with her head thrown
- back, her pure profile detached against the cushions. She was
- smiling a little over the prospect his last words had opened.
- Behind her head shivers of sun and shade ran across the striped
- awning. A row of maples and a privet hedge hid their neighbor's
- gables, giving them undivided possession of their leafy half-acre;
- and life, a moment before, had been like their plot of ground,
- shut off, hedged in from importunities, impenetrably his and hers.
- Now it seemed to him that every maple-leaf, every privet-bud, was
- a relentless human gaze, pressing close upon their privacy. It
- was as though they sat in a brightly lit room, uncurtained from a
- darkness full of hostile watchers. . . . His wife still smiled;
- and her unconsciousness of danger seemed, in some horrible way, to
- put her beyond the reach of rescue. . . .
-
- He had not known that it would be like this. After the first
- odious weeks, spent in preparing the letters for publication, in
- submitting them to Flamel, and in negotiating with the publishers,
- the transaction had dropped out of his consciousness into that
- unvisited limbo to which we relegate the deeds we would rather not
- have done but have no notion of undoing. From the moment he had
- obtained Miss Trent's promise not to sail with her aunt he had
- tried to imagine himself irrevocably committed. After that, he
- argued, his first duty was to her--she had become his conscience.
- The sum obtained from the publishers by Flamel's adroit
- manipulations and opportunely transferred to Dinslow's successful
- venture, already yielded a return which, combined with Glennard's
- professional earnings, took the edge of compulsion from their way
- of living, making it appear the expression of a graceful
- preference for simplicity. It was the mitigated poverty which can
- subscribe to a review or two and have a few flowers on the dinner-
- table. And already in a small way Glennard was beginning to feel
- the magnetic quality of prosperity. Clients who had passed his
- door in the hungry days sought it out now that it bore the name of
- a successful man. It was understood that a small inheritance,
- cleverly invested, was the source of his fortune; and there was a
- feeling that a man who could do so well for himself was likely to
- know how to turn over other people's money.
-
- But it was in the more intimate reward of his wife's happiness
- that Glennard tasted the full flavor of success. Coming out of
- conditions so narrow that those he offered her seemed spacious,
- she fitted into her new life without any of those manifest efforts
- at adjustment that are as sore to a husband's pride as the
- critical rearrangement of the bridal furniture. She had given
- him, instead, the delicate pleasure of watching her expand like a
- sea-creature restored to its element, stretching out the atrophied
- tentacles of girlish vanity and enjoyment to the rising tide of
- opportunity. And somehow--in the windowless inner cell of his
- consciousness where self-criticism cowered--Glennard's course
- seemed justified by its merely material success. How could such a
- crop of innocent blessedness have sprung from tainted soil?
-
-
-
- Now he had the injured sense of a man entrapped into a
- disadvantageous bargain. He had not known it would be like this;
- and a dull anger gathered at his heart. Anger against whom?
- Against his wife, for not knowing what he suffered? Against
- Flamel, for being the unconscious instrument of his wrong-doing?
- Or against that mute memory to which his own act had suddenly
- given a voice of accusation? Yes, that was it; and his punishment
- henceforth would be the presence, the unescapable presence, of the
- woman he had so persistently evaded. She would always be there
- now. It was as though he had married her instead of the other.
- It was what she had always wanted--to be with him--and she had
- gained her point at last. . . .
-
- He sprang up, as though in an impulse of flight. . . . The sudden
- movement lifted his wife's lids, and she asked, in the incurious
- voice of the woman whose life is enclosed in a magic circle of
- prosperity--"Any news?"
-
- "No--none--" he said, roused to a sense of immediate peril. The
- papers lay scattered at his feet--what if she were to see them?
- He stretched his arm to gather them up, but his next thought
- showed him the futility of such concealment. The same
- advertisement would appear every day, for weeks to come, in every
- newspaper; how could he prevent her seeing it? He could not
- always be hiding the papers from her. . . . Well, and what if she
- did see it? It would signify nothing to her, the chances were
- that she would never even read the book. . . . As she ceased to
- be an element of fear in his calculations the distance between
- them seemed to lessen and he took her again, as it were, into the
- circle of his conjugal protection. . . . Yet a moment before he
- had almost hated her! . . . He laughed aloud at his senseless
- terrors. . . . He was off his balance, decidedly.
-
- "What are you laughing at?" she asked.
-
- He explained, elaborately, that he was laughing at the
- recollection of an old woman in the train, an old woman with a lot
- of bundles, who couldn't find her ticket. . . . But somehow, in
- the telling, the humor of the story seemed to evaporate, and he
- felt the conventionality of her smile. He glanced at his watch,
- "Isn't it time to dress?"
-
- She rose with serene reluctance. "It's a pity to go in. The
- garden looks so lovely."
-
- They lingered side by side, surveying their domain. There was not
- space in it, at this hour, for the shadow of the elm-tree in the
- angle of the hedge; it crossed the lawn, cut the flower-border in
- two, and ran up the side of the house to the nursery window. She
- bent to flick a caterpillar from the honey-suckle; then, as they
- turned indoors, "If we mean to go on the yacht next Sunday," she
- suggested, "oughtn't you to let Mr. Flamel know?"
-
- Glennard's exasperation deflected suddenly. "Of course I shall
- let him know. You always seem to imply that I'm going to do
- something rude to Flamel."
-
- The words reverberated through her silence; she had a way of thus
- leaving one space in which to contemplate one's folly at arm's
- length. Glennard turned on his heel and went upstairs. As he
- dropped into a chair before his dressing-table he said to himself
- that in the last hour he had sounded the depths of his humiliation
- and that the lowest dregs of it, the very bottom-slime, was the
- hateful necessity of having always, as long as the two men lived,
- to be civil to Barton Flamel.
-
-
-
- VI
-
-
- THE week in town had been sultry, and the men, in the Sunday
- emancipation of white flannel and duck, filled the deck-chairs of
- the yacht with their outstretched apathy, following, through a
- mist of cigarette-smoke, the flitting inconsequences of the women.
- The part was a small one--Flamel had few intimate friends--but
- composed of more heterogeneous atoms than the little pools into
- which society usually runs. The reaction from the chief episode
- of his earlier life had bred in Glennard an uneasy distaste for
- any kind of personal saliency. Cleverness was useful in business;
- but in society it seemed to him as futile as the sham cascades
- formed by a stream that might have been used to drive a mill. He
- liked the collective point of view that goes with the civilized
- uniformity of dress-clothes, and his wife's attitude implied the
- same preference; yet they found themselves slipping more and more
- into Flamel's intimacy. Alexa had once or twice said that she
- enjoyed meeting clever people; but her enjoyment took the negative
- form of a smiling receptivity; and Glennard felt a growing
- preference for the kind of people who have their thinking done for
- them by the community.
-
- Still, the deck of the yacht was a pleasant refuge from the heat
- on shore, and his wife's profile, serenely projected against the
- changing blue, lay on his retina like a cool hand on the nerves.
- He had never been more impressed by the kind of absoluteness that
- lifted her beauty above the transient effects of other women,
- making the most harmonious face seem an accidental collocation of
- features.
-
- The ladies who directly suggested this comparison were of a kind
- accustomed to take similar risks with more gratifying results.
- Mrs. Armiger had in fact long been the triumphant alternative of
- those who couldn't "see" Alexa Glennard's looks; and Mrs.
- Touchett's claims to consideration were founded on that
- distribution of effects which is the wonder of those who admire a
- highly cultivated country. The third lady of the trio which
- Glennard's fancy had put to such unflattering uses, was bound by
- circumstances to support the claims of the other two. This was
- Mrs. Dresham, the wife of the editor of the Radiator. Mrs.
- Dresham was a lady who had rescued herself from social obscurity
- by assuming the role of her husband's exponent and interpreter;
- and Dresham's leisure being devoted to the cultivation of
- remarkable women, his wife's attitude committed her to the public
- celebration of their remarkableness. For the conceivable tedium
- of this duty, Mrs. Dresham was repaid by the fact that there were
- people who took HER for a remarkable woman; and who in turn
- probably purchased similar distinction with the small change of
- her reflected importance. As to the other ladies of the party,
- they were simply the wives of some of the men--the kind of women
- who expect to be talked to collectively and to have their
- questions left unanswered.
-
- Mrs. Armiger, the latest embodiment of Dresham's instinct for the
- remarkable, was an innocent beauty who for years had distilled
- dulness among a set of people now self-condemned by their
- inability to appreciate her. Under Dresham's tutelage she had
- developed into a "thoughtful woman," who read his leaders in the
- Radiator and bought the books he recommended. When a new novel
- appeared, people wanted to know what Mrs. Armiger thought of it;
- and a young gentleman who had made a trip in Touraine had recently
- inscribed to her the wide-margined result of his explorations.
-
- Glennard, leaning back with his head against the rail and a slit
- of fugitive blue between his half-closed lids, vaguely wished she
- wouldn't spoil the afternoon by making people talk; though he
- reduced his annoyance to the minimum by not listening to what was
- said, there remained a latent irritation against the general
- futility of words.
-
- His wife's gift of silence seemed to him the most vivid commentary
- on the clumsiness of speech as a means of intercourse, and his
- eyes had turned to her in renewed appreciation of this finer
- faculty when Mrs. Armiger's voice abruptly brought home to him the
- underrated potentialities of language.
-
- "You've read them, of course, Mrs. Glennard?" he heard her ask;
- and, in reply to Alexa's vague interrogation--"Why, the 'Aubyn
- Letters'--it's the only book people are talking of this week."
-
- Mrs. Dresham immediately saw her advantage. "You HAVEN'T read
- them? How very extraordinary! As Mrs. Armiger says, the book's
- in the air; one breathes it in like the influenza."
-
- Glennard sat motionless, watching his wife.
-
- "Perhaps it hasn't reached the suburbs yet," she said, with her
- unruffled smile.
-
- "Oh, DO let me come to you, then!" Mrs. Touchett cried; "anything
- for a change of air! I'm positively sick of the book and I can't
- put it down. Can't you sail us beyond its reach, Mr. Flamel?"
-
- Flamel shook his head. "Not even with this breeze. Literature
- travels faster than steam nowadays. And the worst of it is that
- we can't any of us give up reading; it's as insidious as a vice
- and as tiresome as a virtue."
-
- "I believe it IS a vice, almost, to read such a book as the
- 'Letters,'" said Mrs. Touchett. "It's the woman's soul,
- absolutely torn up by the roots--her whole self laid bare; and to
- a man who evidently didn't care; who couldn't have cared. I don't
- mean to read another line; it's too much like listening at a
- keyhole."
-
- "But if she wanted it published?"
-
- "Wanted it? How do we know she did?"
-
- "Why, I heard she'd left the letters to the man--whoever he is--
- with directions that they should be published after his death--"
-
- "I don't believe it," Mrs. Touchett declared.
-
- "He's dead then, is he?" one of the men asked.
-
- "Why, you don't suppose if he were alive he could ever hold up his
- head again, with these letters being read by everybody?" Mrs.
- Touchett protested. "It must have been horrible enough to know
- they'd been written to him; but to publish them! No man could
- have done it and no woman could have told him to--"
-
- "Oh, come, come," Dresham judicially interposed; "after all,
- they're not love-letters."
-
- "No--that's the worst of it; they're unloved letters," Mrs.
- Touchett retorted.
-
- "Then, obviously, she needn't have written them; whereas the man,
- poor devil, could hardly help receiving them."
-
- "Perhaps he counted on the public to save him the trouble of
- reading them," said young Hartly, who was in the cynical stage.
-
- Mrs. Armiger turned her reproachful loveliness to Dresham. "From
- the way you defend him, I believe you know who he is."
-
- Everyone looked at Dresham, and his wife smiled with the superior
- air of the woman who is in her husband's professional secrets.
- Dresham shrugged his shoulders.
-
- "What have I said to defend him?"
-
- "You called him a poor devil--you pitied him."
-
- "A man who could let Margaret Aubyn write to him in that way? Of
- course I pity him."
-
- "Then you MUST know who he is," cried Mrs. Armiger, with a
- triumphant air of penetration.
-
- Hartly and Flamel laughed and Dresham shook his head. "No one
- knows; not even the publishers; so they tell me at least."
-
- "So they tell you to tell us," Hartly astutely amended; and Mrs.
- Armiger added, with the appearance of carrying the argument a
- point farther, "But even if HE'S dead and SHE'S dead, somebody
- must have given the letters to the publishers."
-
- "A little bird, probably," said Dresham, smiling indulgently on
- her deduction.
-
- "A little bird of prey then--a vulture, I should say--" another
- man interpolated.
-
- "Oh, I'm not with you there," said Dresham, easily. "Those
- letters belonged to the public."
-
- "How can any letters belong to the public that weren't written to
- the public?" Mrs. Touchett interposed.
-
- "Well, these were, in a sense. A personality as big as Margaret
- Aubyn's belongs to the world. Such a mind is part of the general
- fund of thought. It's the penalty of greatness--one becomes a
- monument historique. Posterity pays the cost of keeping one up,
- but on condition that one is always open to the public."
-
- "I don't see that that exonerates the man who gives up the keys of
- the sanctuary, as it were."
-
- "Who WAS he?" another voice inquired.
-
- "Who was he? Oh, nobody, I fancy--the letter-box, the slit in the
- wall through which the letters passed to posterity. . . ."
-
- "But she never meant them for posterity!"
-
- "A woman shouldn't write such letters if she doesn't mean them to
- be published. . . ."
-
- "She shouldn't write them to such a man!" Mrs. Touchett scornfully
- corrected.
-
- "I never keep letters," said Mrs. Armiger, under the obvious
- impression that she was contributing a valuable point to the
- discussion.
-
- There was a general laugh, and Flamel, who had not spoken, said,
- lazily, "You women are too incurably subjective. I venture to say
- that most men would see in those letters merely their immense
- literary value, their significance as documents. The personal
- side doesn't count where there's so much else."
-
- "Oh, we all know you haven't any principles," Mrs. Armiger
- declared; and Alexa Glennard, lifting an indolent smile, said: "I
- shall never write you a love-letter, Mr. Flamel."
-
- Glennard moved away impatiently. Such talk was as tedious as the
- buzzing of gnats. He wondered why his wife had wanted to drag him
- on such a senseless expedition. . . . He hated Flamel's crowd--
- and what business had Flamel himself to interfere in that way,
- standing up for the publication of the letters as though Glennard
- needed his defence? . . .
-
- Glennard turned his head and saw that Flamel had drawn a seat to
- Alexa's elbow and was speaking to her in a low tone. The other
- groups had scattered, straying in twos along the deck. It came
- over Glennard that he should never again be able to see Flamel
- speaking to his wife without the sense of sick mistrust that now
- loosened his joints. . . .
-
-
- Alexa, the next morning, over their early breakfast, surprised her
- husband by an unexpected request.
-
- "Will you bring me those letters from town?" she asked.
-
- "What letters?" he said, putting down his cup. He felt himself as
- helplessly vulnerable as a man who is lunged at in the dark.
-
- "Mrs. Aubyn's. The book they were all talking about yesterday."
-
- Glennard, carefully measuring his second cup of tea, said, with
- deliberation, "I didn't know you cared about that sort of thing."
-
- She was, in fact, not a great reader, and a new book seldom
- reached her till it was, so to speak, on the home stretch; but she
- replied, with a gentle tenacity, "I think it would interest me
- because I read her life last year."
-
- "Her life? Where did you get that?"
-
- "Someone lent it to me when it came out--Mr. Flamel, I think."
-
- His first impulse was to exclaim, "Why the devil do you borrow
- books of Flamel? I can buy you all you want--" but he felt
- himself irresistibly forced into an attitude of smiling
- compliance. "Flamel always has the newest books going, hasn't he?
- You must be careful, by the way, about returning what he lends
- you. He's rather crotchety about his library."
-
- "Oh, I'm always very careful," she said, with a touch of
- competence that struck him; and she added, as he caught up his
- hat: "Don't forget the letters."
-
- Why had she asked for the book? Was her sudden wish to see it the
- result of some hint of Flamel's? The thought turned Glennard
- sick, but he preserved sufficient lucidity to tell himself, a
- moment later, that his last hope of self-control would be lost if
- he yielded to the temptation of seeing a hidden purpose in
- everything she said and did. How much Flamel guessed, he had no
- means of divining; nor could he predicate, from what he knew of
- the man, to what use his inferences might be put. The very
- qualities that had made Flamel a useful adviser made him the most
- dangerous of accomplices. Glennard felt himself agrope among
- alien forces that his own act had set in motion. . . .
-
- Alexa was a woman of few requirements; but her wishes, even in
- trifles, had a definiteness that distinguished them from the fluid
- impulses of her kind. He knew that, having once asked for the
- book, she would not forget it; and he put aside, as an ineffectual
- expedient, his momentary idea of applying for it at the
- circulating library and telling her that all the copies were out.
- If the book was to be bought it had better be bought at once. He
- left his office earlier than usual and turned in at the first
- book-shop on his way to the train. The show-window was stacked
- with conspicuously lettered volumes. "Margaret Aubyn" flashed
- back at him in endless repetition. He plunged into the shop and
- came on a counter where the name reiterated itself on row after
- row of bindings. It seemed to have driven the rest of literature
- to the back shelves. He caught up a copy, tossing the money to an
- astonished clerk who pursued him to the door with the unheeded
- offer to wrap up the volumes.
-
- In the street he was seized with a sudden apprehension. What if
- he were to meet Flamel? The thought was intolerable. He called a
- cab and drove straight to the station where, amid the palm-leaf
- fans of a perspiring crowd, he waited a long half-hour for his
- train to start.
-
- He had thrust a volume in either pocket and in the train he dared
- not draw them out; but the detested words leaped at him from the
- folds of the evening paper. The air seemed full of Margaret
- Aubyn's name. The motion of the train set it dancing up and down
- on the page of a magazine that a man in front of him was reading. . . .
-
- At the door he was told that Mrs. Glennard was still out, and he
- went upstairs to his room and dragged the books from his pocket.
- They lay on the table before him like live things that he feared
- to touch. . . . At length he opened the first volume. A familiar
- letter sprang out at him, each word quickened by its glaring garb
- of type. The little broken phrases fled across the page like
- wounded animals in the open. . . . It was a horrible sight. . . .
- A battue of helpless things driven savagely out of shelter. He
- had not known it would be like this. . . .
-
- He understood now that, at the moment of selling the letters, he
- had viewed the transaction solely as it affected himself: as an
- unfortunate blemish on an otherwise presentable record. He had
- scarcely considered the act in relation to Margaret Aubyn; for
- death, if it hallows, also makes innocuous. Glennard's God was a
- god of the living, of the immediate, the actual, the tangible; all
- his days he had lived in the presence of that god, heedless of the
- divinities who, below the surface of our deeds and passions,
- silently forge the fatal weapons of the dead.
-
-
-
- VII
-
-
- A knock roused him and looking up he saw his wife. He met her
- glance in silence, and she faltered out, "Are you ill?"
-
- The words restored his self-possession. "Ill? Of course not.
- They told me you were out and I came upstairs."
-
- The books lay between them on the table; he wondered when she
- would see them. She lingered tentatively on the threshold, with
- the air of leaving his explanation on his hands. She was not the
- kind of woman who could be counted on to fortify an excuse by
- appearing to dispute it.
-
- "Where have you been?" Glennard asked, moving forward so that he
- obstructed her vision of the books.
-
- "I walked over to the Dreshams for tea."
-
- "I can't think what you see in those people," he said with a
- shrug; adding, uncontrollably--"I suppose Flamel was there?"
-
- "No; he left on the yacht this morning."
-
- An answer so obstructing to the natural escape of his irritation
- left Glennard with no momentary resource but that of strolling
- impatiently to the window. As her eyes followed him they lit on
- the books.
-
- "Ah, you've brought them! I'm so glad," she exclaimed.
-
- He answered over his shoulder, "For a woman who never reads you
- make the most astounding exceptions!"
-
- Her smile was an exasperating concession to the probability that
- it had been hot in town or that something had bothered him.
-
- "Do you mean it's not nice to want to read the book?" she asked.
- "It was not nice to publish it, certainly; but after all, I'm not
- responsible for that, am I?" She paused, and, as he made no
- answer, went on, still smiling, "I do read sometimes, you know;
- and I'm very fond of Margaret Aubyn's books. I was reading
- 'Pomegranate Seed' when we first met. Don't you remember? It was
- then you told me all about her."
-
- Glennard had turned back into the room and stood staring at his
- wife. "All about her?" he repeated, and with the words
- remembrance came to him. He had found Miss Trent one afternoon
- with the novel in her hand, and moved by the lover's fatuous
- impulse to associate himself in some way with whatever fills the
- mind of the beloved, had broken through his habitual silence about
- the past. Rewarded by the consciousness of figuring impressively
- in Miss Trent's imagination he had gone on from one anecdote to
- another, reviving dormant details of his old Hillbridge life, and
- pasturing his vanity on the eagerness with which she received his
- reminiscences of a being already clothed in the impersonality of
- greatness.
-
- The incident had left no trace in his mind; but it sprang up now
- like an old enemy, the more dangerous for having been forgotten.
- The instinct of self-preservation--sometimes the most perilous
- that man can exercise--made him awkwardly declare--"Oh, I used to
- see her at people's houses, that was all;" and her silence as
- usual leaving room for a multiplication of blunders, he added,
- with increased indifference, "I simply can't see what you can find
- to interest you in such a book."
-
- She seemed to consider this intently. "You've read it, then?"
-
- "I glanced at it--I never read such things."
-
- "Is it true that she didn't wish the letters to be published?"
-
- Glennard felt the sudden dizziness of the mountaineer on a narrow
- ledge, and with it the sense that he was lost if he looked more
- than a step ahead.
-
- "I'm sure I don't know," he said; then, summoning a smile, he
- passed his hand through her arm. "I didn't have tea at the
- Dreshams, you know; won't you give me some now?" he suggested.
-
- That evening Glennard, under pretext of work to be done, shut
- himself into the small study opening off the drawing-room. As he
- gathered up his papers he said to his wife: "You're not going to
- sit indoors on such a night as this? I'll join you presently
- outside."
-
- But she had drawn her armchair to the lamp. "I want to look at my
- book," she said, taking up the first volume of the "Letters."
-
- Glennard, with a shrug, withdrew into the study. "I'm going to
- shut the door; I want to be quiet," he explained from the
- threshold; and she nodded without lifting her eyes from the book.
-
- He sank into a chair, staring aimlessly at the outspread papers.
- How was he to work, while on the other side of the door she sat
- with that volume in her hand? The door did not shut her out--he
- saw her distinctly, felt her close to him in a contact as painful
- as the pressure on a bruise.
-
- The sensation was part of the general strangeness that made him
- feel like a man waking from a long sleep to find himself in an
- unknown country among people of alien tongue. We live in our own
- souls as in an unmapped region, a few acres of which we have
- cleared for our habitation; while of the nature of those nearest
- us we know but the boundaries that march with ours. Of the points
- in his wife's character not in direct contact with his own,
- Glennard now discerned his ignorance; and the baffling sense of
- her remoteness was intensified by the discovery that, in one way,
- she was closer to him than ever before. As one may live for years
- in happy unconsciousness of the possession of a sensitive nerve,
- he had lived beside his wife unaware that her individuality had
- become a part of the texture of his life, ineradicable as some
- growth on a vital organ; and he now felt himself at once incapable
- of forecasting her judgment and powerless to evade its effects.
-
- To escape, the next morning, the confidences of the breakfast-
- table, he went to town earlier than usual. His wife, who read
- slowly, was given to talking over what she read, and at present
- his first object in life was to postpone the inevitable discussion
- of the letters. This instinct of protection in the afternoon, on
- his way uptown, guided him to the club in search of a man who
- might be persuaded to come out to the country to dine. The only
- man in the club was Flamel.
-
- Glennard, as he heard himself almost involuntarily pressing Flamel
- to come and dine, felt the full irony of the situation. To use
- Flamel as a shield against his wife's scrutiny was only a shade
- less humiliating than to reckon on his wife as a defence against
- Flamel.
-
- He felt a contradictory movement of annoyance at the latter's
- ready acceptance, and the two men drove in silence to the station.
- As they passed the bookstall in the waiting-room Flamel lingered a
- moment and the eyes of both fell on Margaret Aubyn's name,
- conspicuously displayed above a counter stacked with the familiar
- volumes.
-
- "We shall be late, you know," Glennard remonstrated, pulling out
- his watch.
-
- "Go ahead," said Flamel, imperturbably. "I want to get something--"
-
- Glennard turned on his heel and walked down the platform. Flamel
- rejoined him with an innocent-looking magazine in his hand; but
- Glennard dared not even glance at the cover, lest it should show
- the syllables he feared.
-
- The train was full of people they knew, and they were kept apart
- till it dropped them at the little suburban station. As they
- strolled up the shaded hill, Glennard talked volubly, pointing out
- the improvements in the neighborhood, deploring the threatened
- approach of an electric railway, and screening himself by a series
- of reflex adjustments from the imminent risk of any allusion to
- the "Letters." Flamel suffered his discourse with the bland
- inattention that we accord to the affairs of someone else's
- suburb, and they reached the shelter of Alexa's tea-table without
- a perceptible turn toward the dreaded topic.
-
- The dinner passed off safely. Flamel, always at his best in
- Alexa's presence, gave her the kind of attention which is like a
- beaconing light thrown on the speaker's words: his answers seemed
- to bring out a latent significance in her phrases, as the sculptor
- draws his statue from the block. Glennard, under his wife's
- composure, detected a sensibility to this manoeuvre, and the
- discovery was like the lightning-flash across a nocturnal
- landscape. Thus far these momentary illuminations had served only
- to reveal the strangeness of the intervening country: each fresh
- observation seemed to increase the sum-total of his ignorance.
- Her simplicity of outline was more puzzling than a complex
- surface. One may conceivably work one's way through a labyrinth;
- but Alexa's candor was like a snow-covered plain where, the road
- once lost, there are no landmarks to travel by.
-
- Dinner over, they returned to the veranda, where a moon, rising
- behind the old elm, was combining with that complaisant tree a
- romantic enlargement of their borders. Glennard had forgotten the
- cigars. He went to his study to fetch them, and in passing
- through the drawing-room he saw the second volume of the "Letters"
- lying open on his wife's table. He picked up the book and looked
- at the date of the letter she had been reading. It was one of the
- last . . . he knew the few lines by heart. He dropped the book
- and leaned against the wall. Why had he included that one among
- the others? Or was it possible that now they would all seem like
- that . . .?
-
- Alexa's voice came suddenly out of the dusk. "May Touchett was
- right--it IS like listening at a key-hole. I wish I hadn't read
- it!"
-
- Flamel returned, in the leisurely tone of the man whose phrases
- are punctuated by a cigarette, "It seems so to us, perhaps; but to
- another generation the book will be a classic."
-
- "Then it ought not to have been published till it had become a
- classic. It's horrible, it's degrading almost, to read the
- secrets of a woman one might have known." She added, in a lower
- tone, "Stephen DID know her--"
-
- "Did he?" came from Flamel.
-
- "He knew her very well, at Hillbridge, years ago. The book has
- made him feel dreadfully . . . he wouldn't read it . . . he didn't
- want me to read it. I didn't understand at first, but now I can
- see how horribly disloyal it must seem to him. It's so much worse
- to surprise a friend's secrets than a stranger's."
-
- "Oh, Glennard's such a sensitive chap," Flamel said, easily; and
- Alexa almost rebukingly rejoined, "If you'd known her I'm sure
- you'd feel as he does. . . ."
-
- Glennard stood motionless, overcome by the singular infelicity
- with which he had contrived to put Flamel in possession of the two
- points most damaging to his case: the fact that he had been a
- friend of Margaret Aubyn's, and that he had concealed from Alexa
- his share in the publication of the letters. To a man of less
- than Flamel's astuteness it must now be clear to whom the letters
- were addressed; and the possibility once suggested, nothing could
- be easier than to confirm it by discreet research. An impulse of
- self-accusal drove Glennard to the window. Why not anticipate
- betrayal by telling his wife the truth in Flamel's presence? If
- the man had a drop of decent feeling in him, such a course would
- be the surest means of securing his silence; and above all, it
- would rid Glennard of the necessity of defending himself against
- the perpetual criticism of his wife's belief in him. . . .
-
- The impulse was strong enough to carry him to the window; but
- there a reaction of defiance set in. What had he done, after all,
- to need defence and explanation? Both Dresham and Flamel had, in
- his hearing, declared the publication of the letters to be not
- only justifiable but obligatory; and if the disinterestedness of
- Flamel's verdict might be questioned, Dresham's at least
- represented the impartial view of the man of letters. As to
- Alexa's words, they were simply the conventional utterance of the
- "nice" woman on a question already decided for her by other "nice"
- women. She had said the proper thing as mechanically as she would
- have put on the appropriate gown or written the correct form of
- dinner-invitation. Glennard had small faith in the abstract
- judgments of the other sex; he knew that half the women who were
- horrified by the publication of Mrs. Aubyn's letters would have
- betrayed her secrets without a scruple.
-
- The sudden lowering of his emotional pitch brought a proportionate
- relief. He told himself that now the worst was over and things
- would fall into perspective again. His wife and Flamel had turned
- to other topics, and coming out on the veranda, he handed the
- cigars to Flamel, saying, cheerfully--and yet he could have sworn
- they were the last words he meant to utter!--"Look here, old man,
- before you go down to Newport you must come out and spend a few
- days with us--mustn't he, Alexa?"
-
-
-
- VIII
-
-
- Glennard had, perhaps unconsciously, counted on the continuance of
- this easier mood. He had always taken pride in a certain
- robustness of fibre that enabled him to harden himself against the
- inevitable, to convert his failures into the building materials of
- success. Though it did not even now occur to him that what he
- called the inevitable had hitherto been the alternative he
- happened to prefer, he was yet obscurely aware that his present
- difficulty was one not to be conjured by any affectation of
- indifference. Some griefs build the soul a spacious house--but in
- this misery of Glennard's he could not stand upright. It pressed
- against him at every turn. He told himself that this was because
- there was no escape from the visible evidences of his act. The
- "Letters" confronted him everywhere. People who had never opened
- a book discussed them with critical reservations; to have read
- them had become a social obligation in circles to which literature
- never penetrates except in a personal guise.
-
- Glennard did himself injustice. it was from the unexpected
- discovery of his own pettiness that he chiefly suffered. Our
- self-esteem is apt to be based on the hypothetical great act we
- have never had occasion to perform; and even the most self-
- scrutinizing modesty credits itself negatively with a high
- standard of conduct. Glennard had never thought himself a hero;
- but he had been certain that he was incapable of baseness. We all
- like our wrong-doings to have a becoming cut, to be made to order,
- as it were; and Glennard found himself suddenly thrust into a garb
- of dishonor surely meant for a meaner figure.
-
- The immediate result of his first weeks of wretchedness was the
- resolve to go to town for the winter. He knew that such a course
- was just beyond the limit of prudence; but it was easy to allay
- the fears of Alexa who, scrupulously vigilant in the management of
- the household, preserved the American wife's usual aloofness from
- her husband's business cares. Glennard felt that he could not
- trust himself to a winter's solitude with her. He had an
- unspeakable dread of her learning the truth about the letters, yet
- could not be sure of steeling himself against the suicidal impulse
- of avowal. His very soul was parched for sympathy; he thirsted
- for a voice of pity and comprehension. But would his wife pity?
- Would she understand? Again he found himself brought up abruptly
- against his incredible ignorance of her nature. The fact that he
- knew well enough how she would behave in the ordinary emergencies
- of life, that he could count, in such contingencies, on the kind
- of high courage and directness he had always divined in her, made
- him the more hopeless of her entering into the torturous
- psychology of an act that he himself could no longer explain or
- understand. It would have been easier had she been more complex,
- more feminine--if he could have counted on her imaginative
- sympathy or her moral obtuseness--but he was sure of neither. He
- was sure of nothing but that, for a time, he must avoid her.
- Glennard could not rid himself of the delusion that by and by his
- action would cease to make its consequences felt. He would not
- have cared to own to himself that he counted on the dulling of his
- sensibilities: he preferred to indulge the vague hypothesis that
- extraneous circumstances would somehow efface the blot upon his
- conscience. In his worst moments of self-abasement he tried to
- find solace in the thought that Flamel had sanctioned his course.
- Flamel, at the outset, must have guessed to whom the letters were
- addressed; yet neither then nor afterward had he hesitated to
- advise their publication. This thought drew Glennard to him in
- fitful impulses of friendliness, from each of which there was a
- sharper reaction of distrust and aversion. When Flamel was not at
- the house, he missed the support of his tacit connivance; when he
- was there, his presence seemed the assertion of an intolerable
- claim.
-
- Early in the winter the Glennards took possession of the little
- house that was to cost them almost nothing. The change brought
- Glennard the immediate relief of seeing less of his wife, and of
- being protected, in her presence, by the multiplied preoccupations
- of town life. Alexa, who could never appear hurried, showed the
- smiling abstraction of a pretty woman to whom the social side of
- married life has not lost its novelty. Glennard, with the
- recklessness of a man fresh from his first financial imprudence,
- encouraged her in such little extravagances as her good sense at
- first resisted. Since they had come to town, he argued, they
- might as well enjoy themselves. He took a sympathetic view of the
- necessity of new gowns, he gave her a set of furs at Christmas,
- and before the New Year they had agreed on the obligation of
- adding a parlour-maid to their small establishment.
-
- Providence the very next day hastened to justify this measure by
- placing on Glennard's breakfast-plate an envelope bearing the name
- of the publishers to whom he had sold Mrs. Aubyn's letters. It
- happened to be the only letter the early post had brought, and he
- glanced across the table at his wife, who had come down before him
- and had probably laid the envelope on his plate. She was not the
- woman to ask awkward questions, but he felt the conjecture of her
- glance, and he was debating whether to affect surprise at the
- receipt of the letter, or to pass it off as a business
- communication that had strayed to his house, when a check fell
- from the envelope. It was the royalty on the first edition of the
- letters. His first feeling was one of simple satisfaction. The
- money had come with such infernal opportuneness that he could not
- help welcoming it. Before long, too, there would be more; he knew
- the book was still selling far beyond the publisher's previsions.
- He put the check in his pocket and left the room without looking
- at his wife.
-
- On the way to his office the habitual reaction set in. The money
- he had received was the first tangible reminder that he was living
- on the sale of his self-esteem. The thought of material benefit
- had been overshadowed by his sense of the intrinsic baseness of
- making the letters known; now he saw what an element of sordidness
- it added to the situation and how the fact that he needed the
- money, and must use it, pledged him more irrevocably than ever to
- the consequences of his act. It seemed to him, in that first hour
- of misery, that he had betrayed his friend anew.
-
- When, that afternoon, he reached home earlier than usual, Alexa's
- drawing-room was full of a gayety that overflowed to the stairs.
- Flamel, for a wonder, was not there; but Dresham and young Hartly,
- grouped about the tea-table, were receiving with resonant mirth a
- narrative delivered in the fluttered staccato that made Mrs.
- Armiger's conversation like the ejaculations of a startled aviary.
-
- She paused as Glennard entered, and he had time to notice that his
- wife, who was busied about the tea-tray, had not joined in the
- laughter of the men.
-
- "Oh, go on, go on," young Hartly rapturously groaned; and Mrs.
- Armiger met Glennard's inquiry with the deprecating cry that
- really she didn't see what there was to laugh at. "I'm sure I
- feel more like crying. I don't know what I should have done if
- Alexa hadn't been home to give me a cup of tea. My nerves are in
- shreds--yes, another, dear, please--" and as Glennard looked his
- perplexity, she went on, after pondering on the selection of a
- second lump of sugar, "Why, I've just come from the reading, you
- know--the reading at the Waldorf."
-
- "I haven't been in town long enough to know anything," said
- Glennard, taking the cup his wife handed him. "Who has been
- reading what?"
-
- "That lovely girl from the South--Georgie--Georgie what's her
- name--Mrs. Dresham's protegee--unless she's YOURS, Mr. Dresham!
- Why, the big ball-room was PACKED, and all the women were crying
- like idiots--it was the most harrowing thing I ever heard--"
-
- "What DID you hear?" Glennard asked; and his wife interposed:
- "Won't you have another bit of cake, Julia? Or, Stephen, ring for
- some hot toast, please." Her tone betrayed a polite satiety of
- the topic under discussion. Glennard turned to the bell, but Mrs.
- Armiger pursued him with her lovely amazement.
-
- "Why, the "Aubyn Letters"--didn't you know about it? The girl
- read them so beautifully that it was quite horrible--I should have
- fainted if there'd been a man near enough to carry me out."
-
- Hartly's glee redoubled, and Dresham said, jovially, "How like you
- women to raise a shriek over the book and then do all you can to
- encourage the blatant publicity of the readings!"
-
- Mrs. Armiger met him more than half-way on a torrent of self-
- accusal. "It WAS horrid; it was disgraceful. I told your wife we
- ought all to be ashamed of ourselves for going, and I think Alexa
- was quite right to refuse to take any tickets--even if it was for
- a charity."
-
- "Oh," her hostess murmured, indifferently, "with me charity begins
- at home. I can't afford emotional luxuries."
-
- "A charity? A charity?" Hartly exulted. "I hadn't seized the
- full beauty of it. Reading poor Margaret Aubyn's love-letters at
- the Waldorf before five hundred people for a charity! WHAT
- charity, dear Mrs. Armiger?"
-
- "Why, the Home for Friendless Women--"
-
- "It was well chosen," Dresham commented; and Hartly buried his
- mirth in the sofa-cushions.
-
- When they were alone Glennard, still holding his untouched cup of
- tea, turned to his wife, who sat silently behind the kettle. "Who
- asked you to take a ticket for that reading?"
-
- "I don't know, really--Kate Dresham, I fancy. It was she who got
- it up."
-
- "It's just the sort of damnable vulgarity she's capable of! It's
- loathsome--it's monstrous--"
-
- His wife, without looking up, answered gravely, "I thought so too.
- It was for that reason I didn't go. But you must remember that
- very few people feel about Mrs. Aubyn as you do--"
-
- Glennard managed to set down his cup with a steady hand, but the
- room swung round with him and he dropped into the nearest chair.
- "As I do?" he repeated.
-
- "I mean that very few people knew her when she lived in New York.
- To most of the women who went to the reading she was a mere name,
- too remote to have any personality. With me, of course, it was
- different--"
-
- Glennard gave her a startled look. "Different? Why different?"
-
- "Since you were her friend--"
-
- "Her friend!" He stood up impatiently. "You speak as if she had
- had only one--the most famous woman of her day!" He moved vaguely
- about the room, bending down to look at some books on the table.
- "I hope," he added, "you didn't give that as a reason, by the
- way?"
-
- "A reason?"
-
- "For not going. A woman who gives reasons for getting out of
- social obligations is sure to make herself unpopular or
- ridiculous.
-
- The words were uncalculated; but in an instant he saw that they
- had strangely bridged the distance between his wife and himself.
- He felt her close on him, like a panting foe; and her answer was a
- flash that showed the hand on the trigger.
-
- "I seem," she said from the threshold, "to have done both in
- giving my reason to you."
-
-
- The fact that they were dining out that evening made it easy for
- him to avoid Alexa till she came downstairs in her opera-cloak.
- Mrs. Touchett, who was going to the same dinner, had offered to
- call for her, and Glennard, refusing a precarious seat between the
- ladies' draperies, followed on foot. The evening was
- interminable. The reading at the Waldorf, at which all the women
- had been present, had revived the discussion of the "Aubyn
- Letters" and Glennard, hearing his wife questioned as to her
- absence, felt himself miserably wishing that she had gone, rather
- than that her staying away should have been remarked. He was
- rapidly losing all sense of proportion where the "Letters" were
- concerned. He could no longer hear them mentioned without
- suspecting a purpose in the allusion; he even yielded himself for
- a moment to the extravagance of imagining that Mrs. Dresham, whom
- he disliked, had organized the reading in the hope of making him
- betray himself--for he was already sure that Dresham had divined
- his share in the transaction.
-
- The attempt to keep a smooth surface on this inner tumult was as
- endless and unavailing as efforts made in a nightmare. He lost
- all sense of what he was saying to his neighbors and once when he
- looked up his wife's glance struck him cold.
-
- She sat nearly opposite him, at Flamel's side, and it appeared to
- Glennard that they had built about themselves one of those airy
- barriers of talk behind which two people can say what they please.
- While the reading was discussed they were silent. Their silence
- seemed to Glennard almost cynical--it stripped the last disguise
- from their complicity. A throb of anger rose in him, but suddenly
- it fell, and he felt, with a curious sense of relief, that at
- bottom he no longer cared whether Flamel had told his wife or not.
- The assumption that Flamel knew about the letters had become a
- fact to Glennard; and it now seemed to him better that Alexa
- should know too.
-
- He was frightened at first by the discovery of his own
- indifference. The last barriers of his will seemed to be breaking
- down before a flood of moral lassitude. How could he continue to
- play his part, to keep his front to the enemy, with this poison of
- indifference stealing through his veins? He tried to brace
- himself with the remembrance of his wife's scorn. He had not
- forgotten the note on which their conversation had closed. If he
- had ever wondered how she would receive the truth he wondered no
- longer--she would despise him. But this lent a new insidiousness
- to his temptation, since her contempt would be a refuge from his
- own. He said to himself that, since he no longer cared for the
- consequences, he could at least acquit himself of speaking in
- self-defence. What he wanted now was not immunity but
- castigation: his wife's indignation might still reconcile him to
- himself. Therein lay his one hope of regeneration; her scorn was
- the moral antiseptic that he needed, her comprehension the one
- balm that could heal him. . . .
-
- When they left the dinner he was so afraid of speaking that he let
- her drive home alone, and went to the club with Flamel.
-
-
-
- IX
-
-
- HE rose next morning with the resolve to know what Alexa thought
- of him. It was not anchoring in a haven, but lying to in a storm--
- he felt the need of a temporary lull in the turmoil of his
- sensations.
-
- He came home late, for they were dining alone and he knew that
- they would have the evening together. When he followed her to the
- drawing-room after dinner he thought himself on the point of
- speaking; but as she handed him his coffee he said, involuntarily:
- "I shall have to carry this off to the study, I've got a lot of
- work to-night."
-
- Alone in the study he cursed his cowardice. What was it that had
- withheld him? A certain bright unapproachableness seemed to keep
- him at arm's length. She was not the kind of woman whose
- compassion could be circumvented; there was no chance of slipping
- past the outposts; he would never take her by surprise. Well--why
- not face her, then? What he shrank from could be no worse than
- what he was enduring. He had pushed back his chair and turned to
- go upstairs when a new expedient presented itself. What if,
- instead of telling her, he were to let her find out for herself
- and watch the effect of the discovery before speaking? In this
- way he made over to chance the burden of the revelation.
-
- The idea had been suggested by the sight of the formula enclosing
- the publisher's check. He had deposited the money, but the notice
- accompanying it dropped from his note-case as he cleared his table
- for work. It was the formula usual in such cases and revealed
- clearly enough that he was the recipient of a royalty on Margaret
- Aubyn's letters. It would be impossible for Alexa to read it
- without understanding at once that the letters had been written to
- him and that he had sold them. . . .
-
- He sat downstairs till he heard her ring for the parlor-maid to
- put out the lights; then he went up to the drawing-room with a
- bundle of papers in his hand. Alexa was just rising from her seat
- and the lamplight fell on the deep roll of hair that overhung her
- brow like the eaves of a temple. Her face had often the high
- secluded look of a shrine; and it was this touch of awe in her
- beauty that now made him feel himself on the brink of sacrilege.
-
- Lest the feeling should dominate him, he spoke at once. "I've
- brought you a piece of work--a lot of old bills and things that I
- want you to sort for me. Some are not worth keeping--but you'll
- be able to judge of that. There may be a letter or two among
- them--nothing of much account, but I don't like to throw away the
- whole lot without having them looked over and I haven't time to do
- it myself."
-
- He held out the papers and she took them with a smile that seemed
- to recognize in the service he asked the tacit intention of making
- amends for the incident of the previous day.
-
- "Are you sure I shall know which to keep?"
-
- "Oh, quite sure," he answered, easily--"and besides, none are of
- much importance."
-
- The next morning he invented an excuse for leaving the house
- without seeing her, and when he returned, just before dinner, he
- found a visitor's hat and stick in the hall. The visitor was
- Flamel, who was in the act of taking leave.
-
- He had risen, but Alexa remained seated; and their attitude gave
- the impression of a colloquy that had prolonged itself beyond the
- limits of speech. Both turned a surprised eye on Glennard and he
- had the sense of walking into a room grown suddenly empty, as
- though their thoughts were conspirators dispersed by his approach.
- He felt the clutch of his old fear. What if his wife had already
- sorted the papers and had told Flamel of her discovery? Well, it
- was no news to Flamel that Glennard was in receipt of a royalty on
- the "Aubyn Letters." . . .
-
- A sudden resolve to know the worst made him lift his eyes to his
- wife as the door closed on Flamel. But Alexa had risen also, and
- bending over her writing-table, with her back to Glennard, was
- beginning to speak precipitately.
-
- "I'm dining out to-night--you don't mind my deserting you? Julia
- Armiger sent me word just now that she had an extra ticket for the
- last Ambrose concert. She told me to say how sorry she was that
- she hadn't two--but I knew YOU wouldn't be sorry!" She ended with
- a laugh that had the effect of being a strayed echo of Mrs.
- Armiger's; and before Glennard could speak she had added, with her
- hand on the door, "Mr. Flamel stayed so late that I've hardly time
- to dress. The concert begins ridiculously early, and Julia dines
- at half-past seven--"
-
- Glennard stood alone in the empty room that seemed somehow full of
- an ironical consciousness of what was happening. "She hates me,"
- he murmured. "She hates me. . . ."
-
-
- The next day was Sunday, and Glennard purposely lingered late in
- his room. When he came downstairs his wife was already seated at
- the breakfast-table. She lifted her usual smile to his entrance
- and they took shelter in the nearest topic, like wayfarers
- overtaken by a storm. While he listened to her account of the
- concert he began to think that, after all, she had not yet sorted
- the papers, and that her agitation of the previous day must be
- ascribed to another cause, in which perhaps he had but an indirect
- concern. He wondered it had never before occurred to him that
- Flamel was the kind of man who might very well please a woman at
- his own expense, without need of fortuitous assistance. If this
- possibility cleared the outlook it did not brighten it. Glennard
- merely felt himself left alone with his baseness.
-
- Alexa left the breakfast-table before him and when he went up to
- the drawing-room he found her dressed to go out.
-
- "Aren't you a little early for church?" he asked.
-
- She replied that, on the way there, she meant to stop a moment at
- her mother's; and while she drew on her gloves, he fumbled among
- the knick-knacks on the mantel-piece for a match to light his
- cigarette.
-
- "Well, good-by," she said, turning to go; and from the threshold
- she added: "By the way, I've sorted the papers you gave me. Those
- that I thought you would like to keep are on your study-table."
- She went downstairs and he heard the door close behind her.
-
- She had sorted the papers--she knew, then--she MUST know--and she
- had made no sign!
-
- Glennard, he hardly knew how, found himself once more in the
- study. On the table lay the packet he had given her. It was much
- smaller--she had evidently gone over the papers with care,
- destroying the greater number. He loosened the elastic band and
- spread the remaining envelopes on his desk. The publisher's
- notice was among them.
-
-
-
- X
-
-
- His wife knew and she made no sign. Glennard found himself in the
- case of the seafarer who, closing his eyes at nightfall on a scene
- he thinks to put leagues behind him before day, wakes to a port-
- hole framing the same patch of shore. From the kind of exaltation
- to which his resolve had lifted him he dropped to an unreasoning
- apathy. His impulse of confession had acted as a drug to self-
- reproach. He had tried to shift a portion of his burden to his
- wife's shoulders and now that she had tacitly refused to carry it,
- he felt the load too heavy to be taken up again.
-
- A fortunate interval of hard work brought respite from this phase
- of sterile misery. He went West to argue an important case, won
- it, and came back to fresh preoccupations. His own affairs were
- thriving enough to engross him in the pauses of his professional
- work, and for over two months he had little time to look himself
- in the face. Not unnaturally--for he was as yet unskilled in the
- subtleties of introspection--he mistook his temporary
- insensibility for a gradual revival of moral health.
-
- He told himself that he was recovering his sense of proportion,
- getting to see things in their true light; and if he now thought
- of his rash appeal to his wife's sympathy it was as an act of
- folly from the consequences of which he had been saved by the
- providence that watches over madmen. He had little leisure to
- observe Alexa; but he concluded that the common-sense momentarily
- denied him had counselled her uncritical acceptance of the
- inevitable. If such a quality was a poor substitute for the
- passionate justness that had once seemed to characterize her, he
- accepted the alternative as a part of that general lowering of the
- key that seems needful to the maintenance of the matrimonial duet.
- What woman ever retained her abstract sense of justice where
- another woman was concerned? Possibly the thought that he had
- profited by Mrs. Aubyn's tenderness was not wholly disagreeable to
- his wife.
-
- When the pressure of work began to lessen, and he found himself,
- in the lengthening afternoons, able to reach home somewhat
- earlier, he noticed that the little drawing-room was always full
- and that he and his wife seldom had an evening alone together.
- When he was tired, as often happened, she went out alone; the idea
- of giving up an engagement to remain with him seemed not to occur
- to her. She had shown, as a girl, little fondness for society,
- nor had she seemed to regret it during the year they had spent in
- the country. He reflected, however, that he was sharing the
- common lot of husbands, who proverbially mistake the early ardors
- of housekeeping for a sign of settled domesticity. Alexa, at any
- rate, was refuting his theory as inconsiderately as a seedling
- defeats the gardener's expectations. An undefinable change had
- come over her. In one sense it was a happy one, since she had
- grown, if not handsomer, at least more vivid and expressive; her
- beauty had become more communicable: it was as though she had
- learned the conscious exercise of intuitive attributes and now
- used her effects with the discrimination of an artist skilled in
- values. To a dispassionate critic (as Glennard now rated himself)
- the art may at times have been a little too obvious. Her attempts
- at lightness lacked spontaneity, and she sometimes rasped him by
- laughing like Julia Armiger; but he had enough imagination to
- perceive that, in respect of the wife's social arts, a husband
- necessarily sees the wrong side of the tapestry.
-
- In this ironical estimate of their relation Glennard found himself
- strangely relieved of all concern as to his wife's feelings for
- Flamel. From an Olympian pinnacle of indifference he calmly
- surveyed their inoffensive antics. It was surprising how his
- cheapening of his wife put him at ease with himself. Far as he
- and she were from each other they yet had, in a sense, the tacit
- nearness of complicity. Yes, they were accomplices; he could no
- more be jealous of her than she could despise him. The jealousy
- that would once have seemed a blur on her whiteness now appeared
- like a tribute to ideals in which he no longer believed. . . .
-
-
- Glennard was little given to exploring the outskirts of
- literature. He always skipped the "literary notices" in the
- papers and he had small leisure for the intermittent pleasures of
- the periodical. He had therefore no notion of the prolonged
- reverberations which the "Aubyn Letters" had awakened in the
- precincts of criticism. When the book ceased to be talked about
- he supposed it had ceased to be read; and this apparent subsidence
- of the agitation about it brought the reassuring sense that he had
- exaggerated its vitality. The conviction, if it did not ease his
- conscience, at least offered him the relative relief of obscurity:
- he felt like an offender taken down from the pillory and thrust
- into the soothing darkness of a cell.
-
- But one evening, when Alexa had left him to go to a dance, he
- chanced to turn over the magazines on her table, and the copy of
- the Horoscope, to which he settled down with his cigar, confronted
- him, on its first page, with a portrait of Margaret Aubyn. It was
- a reproduction of the photograph that had stood so long on his
- desk. The desiccating air of memory had turned her into the mere
- abstraction of a woman, and this unexpected evocation seemed to
- bring her nearer than she had ever been in life. Was it because
- he understood her better? He looked long into her eyes; little
- personal traits reached out to him like caresses--the tired droop
- of her lids, her quick way of leaning forward as she spoke, the
- movements of her long expressive hands. All that was feminine in
- her, the quality he had always missed, stole toward him from her
- unreproachful gaze; and now that it was too late life had
- developed in him the subtler perceptions which could detect it in
- even this poor semblance of herself. For a moment he found
- consolation in the thought that, at any cost, they had thus been
- brought together; then a flood of shame rushed over him. Face to
- face with her, he felt himself laid bare to the inmost fold of
- consciousness. The shame was deep, but it was a renovating
- anguish; he was like a man whom intolerable pain has roused from
- the creeping lethargy of death. . . .
-
- He rose next morning to as fresh a sense of life as though his
- hour of mute communion with Margaret Aubyn had been a more
- exquisite renewal of their earlier meetings. His waking thought
- was that he must see her again; and as consciousness affirmed
- itself he felt an intense fear of losing the sense of her
- nearness. But she was still close to him; her presence remained
- the sole reality in a world of shadows. All through his working
- hours he was re-living with incredible minuteness every incident
- of their obliterated past; as a man who has mastered the spirit of
- a foreign tongue turns with renewed wonder to the pages his youth
- has plodded over. In this lucidity of retrospection the most
- trivial detail had its significance, and the rapture of recovery
- was embittered to Glennard by the perception of all that he had
- missed. He had been pitiably, grotesquely stupid; and there was
- irony in the thought that, but for the crisis through which he was
- passing, he might have lived on in complacent ignorance of his
- loss. It was as though she had bought him with her blood. . . .
-
- That evening he and Alexa dined alone. After dinner he followed
- her to the drawing-room. He no longer felt the need of avoiding
- her; he was hardly conscious of her presence. After a few words
- they lapsed into silence and he sat smoking with his eyes on the
- fire. It was not that he was unwilling to talk to her; he felt a
- curious desire to be as kind as possible; but he was always
- forgetting that she was there. Her full bright presence, through
- which the currents of life flowed so warmly, had grown as tenuous
- as a shadow, and he saw so far beyond her--
-
- Presently she rose and began to move about the room. She seemed
- to be looking for something and he roused himself to ask what she
- wanted.
-
- "Only the last number of the Horoscope. I thought I'd left it on
- this table." He said nothing, and she went on: "You haven't seen
- it?"
-
- "No," he returned coldly. The magazine was locked in his desk.
-
- His wife had moved to the mantel-piece. She stood facing him and
- as he looked up he met her tentative gaze. "I was reading an
- article in it--a review of Mrs. Aubyn's letters," she added,
- slowly, with her deep, deliberate blush.
-
- Glennard stooped to toss his cigar into the fire. He felt a
- savage wish that she would not speak the other woman's name;
- nothing else seemed to matter. "You seem to do a lot of reading,"
- he said.
-
- She still earnestly confronted him. "I was keeping this for you--
- I thought it might interest you," she said, with an air of gentle
- insistence.
-
- He stood up and turned away. He was sure she knew that he had
- taken the review and he felt that he was beginning to hate her
- again.
-
- "I haven't time for such things," he said, indifferently. As he
- moved to the door he heard her take a precipitate step forward;
- then she paused and sank without speaking into the chair from
- which he had risen.
-
-
-
- XI
-
-
- As Glennard, in the raw February sunlight, mounted the road to the
- cemetery, he felt the beatitude that comes with an abrupt
- cessation of physical pain. He had reached the point where self-
- analysis ceases; the impulse that moved him was purely intuitive.
- He did not even seek a reason for it, beyond the obvious one that
- his desire to stand by Margaret Aubyn's grave was prompted by no
- attempt at a sentimental reparation, but rather by the vague need
- to affirm in some way the reality of the tie between them.
-
- The ironical promiscuity of death had brought Mrs. Aubyn back to
- share the narrow hospitality of her husband's last lodging; but
- though Glennard knew she had been buried near New York he had
- never visited her grave. He was oppressed, as he now threaded the
- long avenues, by a chilling vision of her return. There was no
- family to follow her hearse; she had died alone, as she had lived;
- and the "distinguished mourners" who had formed the escort of the
- famous writer knew nothing of the woman they were committing to
- the grave. Glennard could not even remember at what season she
- had been buried; but his mood indulged the fancy that it must have
- been on some such day of harsh sunlight, the incisive February
- brightness that gives perspicuity without warmth. The white
- avenues stretched before him interminably, lined with stereotyped
- emblems of affliction, as though all the platitudes ever uttered
- had been turned to marble and set up over the unresisting dead.
- Here and there, no doubt, a frigid urn or an insipid angel
- imprisoned some fine-fibred grief, as the most hackneyed words may
- become the vehicle of rare meanings; but for the most part the
- endless alignment of monuments seemed to embody those easy
- generalizations about death that do not disturb the repose of the
- living. Glennard's eye, as he followed the way indicated to him,
- had instinctively sought some low mound with a quiet headstone.
- He had forgotten that the dead seldom plan their own houses, and
- with a pang he discovered the name he sought on the cyclopean base
- of a granite shaft rearing its aggressive height at the angle of
- two avenues.
-
- "How she would have hated it!" he murmured.
-
- A bench stood near and he seated himself. The monument rose
- before him like some pretentious uninhabited dwelling; he could
- not believe that Margaret Aubyn lay there. It was a Sunday
- morning and black figures moved among the paths, placing flowers
- on the frost-bound hillocks. Glennard noticed that the
- neighboring graves had been thus newly dressed; and he fancied a
- blind stir of expectancy through the sod, as though the bare
- mounds spread a parched surface to that commemorative rain. He
- rose presently and walked back to the entrance of the cemetery.
- Several greenhouses stood near the gates, and turning in at the
- first he asked for some flowers.
-
- "Anything in the emblematic line?" asked the anaemic man behind
- the dripping counter.
-
- Glennard shook his head.
-
- "Just cut flowers? This way, then." The florist unlocked a glass
- door and led him down a moist green aisle. The hot air was choked
- with the scent of white azaleas, white lilies, white lilacs; all
- the flowers were white; they were like a prolongation, a mystical
- efflorescence, of the long rows of marble tombstones, and their
- perfume seemed to cover an odor of decay. The rich atmosphere
- made Glennard dizzy. As he leaned in the doorpost, waiting for
- the flowers, he had a penetrating sense of Margaret Aubyn's
- nearness--not the imponderable presence of his inner vision, but a
- life that beat warm in his arms. . . .
-
- The sharp air caught him as he stepped out into it again. He
- walked back and scattered the flowers over the grave. The edges
- of the white petals shrivelled like burnt paper in the cold; and
- as he watched them the illusion of her nearness faded, shrank back
- frozen.
-
-
-
- XII
-
-
- The motive of his visit to the cemetery remained undefined save as
- a final effort of escape from his wife's inexpressive acceptance
- of his shame. It seemed to him that as long as he could keep
- himself alive to that shame he would not wholly have succumbed to
- its consequences. His chief fear was that he should become the
- creature of his act. His wife's indifference degraded him; it
- seemed to put him on a level with his dishonor. Margaret Aubyn
- would have abhorred the deed in proportion to her pity for the
- man. The sense of her potential pity drew him back to her. The
- one woman knew but did not understand; the other, it sometimes
- seemed, understood without knowing.
-
- In its last disguise of retrospective remorse, his self-pity
- affected a desire for solitude and meditation. He lost himself in
- morbid musings, in futile visions of what life with Margaret Aubyn
- might have been. There were moments when, in the strange
- dislocation of his view, the wrong he had done her seemed a tie
- between them.
-
- To indulge these emotions he fell into the habit, on Sunday
- afternoons, of solitary walks prolonged till after dusk. The days
- were lengthening, there was a touch of spring in the air, and his
- wanderings now usually led him to the Park and its outlying
- regions.
-
- One Sunday, tired of aimless locomotion, he took a cab at the Park
- gates and let it carry him out to the Riverside Drive. It was a
- gray afternoon streaked with east wind. Glennard's cab advanced
- slowly, and as he leaned back, gazing with absent intentness at
- the deserted paths that wound under bare boughs between grass
- banks of premature vividness, his attention was arrested by two
- figures walking ahead of him. This couple, who had the path to
- themselves,moved at an uneven pace, as though adapting their gait
- to a conversation marked by meditative intervals. Now and then
- they paused, and in one of these pauses the lady, turning toward
- her companion, showed Glennard the outline of his wife's profile.
- The man was Flamel.
-
- The blood rushed to Glennard's forehead. He sat up with a jerk
- and pushed back the lid in the roof of the hansom; but when the
- cabman bent down he dropped into his seat without speaking. Then,
- becoming conscious of the prolonged interrogation of the lifted
- lid, he called out--"Turn--drive back--anywhere--I'm in a hurry--"
-
- As the cab swung round he caught a last glimpse of the two
- figures. They had not moved; Alexa, with bent head, stood
- listening.
-
- "My God, my God--" he groaned.
-
- It was hideous--it was abominable--he could not understand it.
- The woman was nothing to him--less than nothing--yet the blood
- hummed in his ears and hung a cloud before him. He knew it was
- only the stirring of the primal instinct, that it had no more to
- do with his reasoning self than any reflex impulse of the body;
- but that merely lowered anguish to disgust. Yes, it was disgust
- he felt--almost a physical nausea. The poisonous fumes of life
- were in his lungs. He was sick, unutterably sick. . . .
-
- He drove home and went to his room. They were giving a little
- dinner that night, and when he came down the guests were arriving.
- He looked at his wife: her beauty was extraordinary, but it seemed
- to him the beauty of a smooth sea along an unlit coast. She
- frightened him.
-
- He sat late that night in his study. He heard the parlor-maid
- lock the front door; then his wife went upstairs and the lights
- were put out. His brain was like some great empty hall with an
- echo in it; one thought reverberated endlessly. . . . At length
- he drew his chair to the table and began to write. He addressed
- an envelope and then slowly re-read what he had written.
-
-
- "MY DEAR FLAMEL"
-
- "Many apologies for not sending you sooner the enclosed check,
- which represents the customary percentage on the sale of the
- Letters."
-
- "Trusting you will excuse the oversight,
- "Yours truly,
- "STEPHEN GLENNARD."
-
-
- He let himself out of the darkened house and dropped the letter in
- the post-box at the corner.
-
-
- The next afternoon he was detained late at his office, and as he
- was preparing to leave he heard someone asking for him in the
- outer room. He seated himself again and Flamel was shown in.
-
- The two men, as Glennard pushed aside an obstructive chair, had a
- moment to measure each other; then Flamel advanced, and drawing
- out his note-case, laid a slip of paper on the desk.
-
- "My dear fellow, what on earth does this mean?" Glennard
- recognized his check.
-
- "That I was remiss, simply. It ought to have gone to you before."
-
- Flamel's tone had been that of unaffected surprise, but at this
- his accent changed and he asked, quickly: "On what ground?"
-
- Glennard had moved away from the desk and stood leaning against
- the calf-backed volumes of the bookcase. "On the ground that you
- sold Mrs. Aubyn's letters for me, and that I find the intermediary
- in such cases is entitled to a percentage on the sale."
-
- Flamel paused before answering. "You find, you say. It's a
- recent discovery?"
-
- "Obviously, from my not sending the check sooner. You see I'm new
- to the business."
-
- "And since when have you discovered that there was any question of
- business, as far as I was concerned?"
-
- Glennard flushed and his voice rose slightly. "Are you
- reproaching me for not having remembered it sooner?"
-
- Flamel, who had spoken in the rapid repressed tone of a man on the
- verge of anger, stared a moment at this and then, in his natural
- voice, rejoined, good-humoredly, "Upon my soul, I don't understand
- you!"
-
- The change of key seemed to disconcert Glennard. "It's simple
- enough--" he muttered.
-
- "Simple enough--your offering me money in return for a friendly
- service? I don't know what your other friends expect!"
-
- "Some of my friends wouldn't have undertaken the job. Those who
- would have done so would probably have expected to be paid."
-
- He lifted his eyes to Flamel and the two men looked at each other.
- Flamel had turned white and his lips stirred, but he held his
- temperate note. "If you mean to imply that the job was not a nice
- one, you lay yourself open to the retort that you proposed it.
- But for my part I've never seen, I never shall see, any reason for
- not publishing the letters."
-
- "That's just it!"
-
- "What--?"
-
- "The certainty of your not seeing was what made me go to you.
- When a man's got stolen goods to pawn he doesn't take them to the
- police-station."
-
- "Stolen?" Flamel echoed. "The letters were stolen?"
-
- Glennard burst into a coarse laugh. "How much longer to you
- expect me to keep up that pretence about the letters? You knew
- well enough they were written to me."
-
- Flamel looked at him in silence. "Were they?" he said at length.
- "I didn't know it."
-
- "And didn't suspect it, I suppose," Glennard sneered.
-
- The other was again silent; then he said, "I may remind you that,
- supposing I had felt any curiosity about the matter, I had no way
- of finding out that the letters were written to you. You never
- showed me the originals."
-
- "What does that prove? There were fifty ways of finding out.
- It's the kind of thing one can easily do."
-
- Flamel glanced at him with contempt. "Our ideas probably differ
- as to what a man can easily do. It would not have been easy for
- me."
-
- Glennard's anger vented itself in the words uppermost in his
- thought. "It may, then, interest you to hear that my wife DOES
- know about the letters--has known for some months. . . ."
-
- "Ah," said the other, slowly. Glennard saw that, in his blind
- clutch at a weapon, he had seized the one most apt to wound.
- Flamel's muscles were under control, but his face showed the
- undefinable change produced by the slow infiltration of poison.
- Every implication that the words contained had reached its mark;
- but Glennard felt that their obvious intention was lost in the
- anguish of what they suggested. He was sure now that Flamel would
- never have betrayed him; but the inference only made a wider
- outlet for his anger. He paused breathlessly for Flamel to speak.
-
- "If she knows, it's not through me." It was what Glennard had
- waited for.
-
- "Through you, by God? Who said it was through you? Do you
- suppose I leave it to you, or to anybody else, for that matter, to
- keep my wife informed of my actions? I didn't suppose even such
- egregious conceit as yours could delude a man to that degree!"
- Struggling for a foothold in the small landslide of his dignity,
- he added, in a steadier tone, "My wife learned the facts from me."
-
- Flamel received this in silence. The other's outbreak seemed to
- have reinforced his self-control, and when he spoke it was with a
- deliberation implying that his course was chosen. "In that case I
- understand still less--"
-
- "Still less--?"
-
- "The meaning of this." He pointed to the check. "When you began
- to speak I supposed you had meant it as a bribe; now I can only
- infer it was intended as a random insult. In either case, here's
- my answer."
-
- He tore the slip of paper in two and tossed the fragments across
- the desk to Glennard. Then he turned and walked out of the
- office.
-
- Glennard dropped his head on his hands. If he had hoped to
- restore his self-respect by the simple expedient of assailing
- Flamel's, the result had not justified his expectation. The blow
- he had struck had blunted the edge of his anger, and the
- unforeseen extent of the hurt inflicted did not alter the fact
- that his weapon had broken in his hands. He saw now that his rage
- against Flamel was only the last projection of a passionate self-
- disgust. This consciousness did not dull his dislike of the man;
- it simply made reprisals ineffectual. Flamel's unwillingness to
- quarrel with him was the last stage of his abasement.
-
- In the light of this final humiliation his assumption of his
- wife's indifference struck him as hardly so fatuous as the
- sentimental resuscitation of his past. He had been living in a
- factitious world wherein his emotions were the sycophants of his
- vanity, and it was with instinctive relief that he felt its ruins
- crash about his head.
-
- It was nearly dark when he left his office, and he walked slowly
- homeward in the complete mental abeyance that follows on such a
- crisis. He was not aware that he was thinking of his wife; yet
- when he reached his own door he found that, in the involuntary
- readjustment of his vision, she had once more become the central
- point of consciousness.
-
-
-
- XIII
-
-
- It had never before occurred to him that she might, after all,
- have missed the purport of the document he had put in her way.
- What if, in her hurried inspection of the papers, she had passed
- it over as related to the private business of some client? What,
- for instance, was to prevent her concluding that Glennard was the
- counsel of the unknown person who had sold the "Aubyn Letters."
- The subject was one not likely to fix her attention--she was not a
- curious woman.
-
- Glennard at this point laid down his fork and glanced at her
- between the candle-shades. The alternative explanation of her
- indifference was not slow in presenting itself. Her head had the
- same listening droop as when he had caught sight of her the day
- before in Flamel's company; the attitude revived the vividness of
- his impression. It was simple enough, after all. She had ceased
- to care for him because she cared for someone else.
-
- As he followed her upstairs he felt a sudden stirring of his
- dormant anger. His sentiments had lost all their factitious
- complexity. He had already acquitted her of any connivance in his
- baseness, and he felt only that he loved her and that she had
- escaped him. This was now, strangely enough, his dominating
- thought: the consciousness that he and she had passed through the
- fusion of love and had emerged from it as incommunicably apart as
- though the transmutation had never taken place. Every other
- passion, he mused, left some mark upon the nature; but love passed
- like the flight of a ship across the waters.
-
- She sank into her usual seat near the lamp, and he leaned against
- the chimney, moving about with an inattentive hand the knick-
- knacks on the mantel.
-
- Suddenly he caught sight of her reflection in the mirror. She was
- looking at him. He turned and their eyes met.
-
- He moved across the room and stood before her.
-
- "There's something that I want to say to you," he began in a low
- tone.
-
- She held his gaze, but her color deepened. He noticed again, with
- a jealous pang, how her beauty had gained in warmth and meaning.
- It was as though a transparent cup had been filled with wine. He
- looked at her ironically.
-
- "I've never prevented your seeing your friends here," he broke
- out. "Why do you meet Flamel in out-of-the-way places? Nothing
- makes a woman so cheap--"
-
- She rose abruptly and they faced each other a few feet apart.
-
- "What do you mean?" she asked.
-
- "I saw you with him last Sunday on the Riverside Drive," he went
- on, the utterance of the charge reviving his anger.
-
- "Ah," she murmured. She sank into her chair again and began to
- play with a paper-knife that lay on the table at her elbow.
-
- Her silence exasperated him.
-
- "Well?" he burst out. "Is that all you have to say?"
-
- "Do you wish me to explain?" she asked, proudly.
-
- "Do you imply I haven't the right to?"
-
- "I imply nothing. I will tell you whatever you wish to know. I
- went for a walk with Mr. Flamel because he asked me to."
-
- "I didn't suppose you went uninvited. But there are certain
- things a sensible woman doesn't do. She doesn't slink about in
- out-of-the-way streets with men. Why couldn't you have seen him
- here?"
-
- She hesitated. "Because he wanted to see me alone."
-
- "Did he, indeed? And may I ask if you gratify all his wishes with
- equal alacrity?"
-
- "I don't know that he has any others where I am concerned." She
- paused again and then continued, in a lower voice that somehow had
- an under-note of warning. "He wished to bid me good-by. He's
- going away."
-
- Glennard turned on her a startled glance. "Going away?"
-
- "He's going to Europe to-morrow. He goes for a long time. I
- supposed you knew."
-
- The last phrase revived his irritation. "You forget that I depend
- on you for my information about Flamel. He's your friend and not
- mine. In fact, I've sometimes wondered at your going out of your
- way to be so civil to him when you must see plainly enough that I
- don't like him."
-
- Her answer to this was not immediate. She seemed to be choosing
- her words with care, not so much for her own sake as for his, and
- his exasperation was increased by the suspicion that she was
- trying to spare him.
-
- "He was your friend before he was mine. I never knew him till I
- was married. It was you who brought him to the house and who
- seemed to wish me to like him."
-
- Glennard gave a short laugh. The defence was feebler than he had
- expected: she was certainly not a clever woman.
-
- "Your deference to my wishes is really beautiful; but it's not the
- first time in history that a man has made a mistake in introducing
- his friends to his wife. You must, at any rate, have seen since
- then that my enthusiasm had cooled; but so, perhaps, has your
- eagerness to oblige me."
-
- She met this with a silence that seemed to rob the taunt of half
- its efficacy.
-
- "Is that what you imply?" he pressed her.
-
- "No," she answered with sudden directness. "I noticed some time
- ago that you seemed to dislike him, but since then--"
-
- "Well--since then?"
-
- "I've imagined that you had reasons for still wishing me to be
- civil to him, as you call it."
-
- "Ah," said Glennard, with an effort at lightness; but his irony
- dropped, for something in her voice made him feel that he and she
- stood at last in that naked desert of apprehension where meaning
- skulks vainly behind speech.
-
- "And why did you imagine this?" The blood mounted to his
- forehead. "Because he told you that I was under obligations to
- him?"
-
- She turned pale. "Under obligations?"
-
- "Oh, don't let's beat about the bush. Didn't he tell you it was I
- who published Mrs. Aubyn's letters? Answer me that."
-
- "No," she said; and after a moment which seemed given to the
- weighing of alternatives, she added: "No one told me."
-
- "You didn't know then?"
-
- She seemed to speak with an effort. "Not until--not until--"
-
- "Till I gave you those papers to sort?"
-
- Her head sank.
-
- "You understood then?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- He looked at her immovable face. "Had you suspected--before?" was
- slowly wrung from him.
-
- "At times--yes--" Her voice dropped to a whisper.
-
- "Why? From anything that was said--?"
-
- There was a shade of pity in her glance. "No one said anything--
- no one told me anything." She looked away from him. "It was your
- manner--"
-
- "My manner?"
-
- "Whenever the book was mentioned. Things you said--once or twice--
- your irritation--I can't explain--"
-
- Glennard, unconsciously, had moved nearer. He breathed like a man
- who has been running. "You knew, then, you knew"--he stammered.
- The avowal of her love for Flamel would have hurt him less, would
- have rendered her less remote. "You knew--you knew--" he
- repeated; and suddenly his anguish gathered voice. "My God!" he
- cried, "you suspected it first, you say--and then you knew it--
- this damnable, this accursed thing; you knew it months ago--it's
- months since I put that paper in your way--and yet you've done
- nothing, you've said nothing, you've made no sign, you've lived
- alongside of me as if it had made no difference--no difference in
- either of our lives. What are you made of, I wonder? Don't you
- see the hideous ignominy of it? Don't you see how you've shared
- in my disgrace? Or haven't you any sense of shame?"
-
- He preserved sufficient lucidity, as the words poured from him, to
- see how fatally they invited her derision; but something told him
- they had both passed beyond the phase of obvious retaliations, and
- that if any chord in her responded it would not be that of scorn.
-
- He was right. She rose slowly and moved toward him.
-
- "Haven't you had enough--without that?" she said, in a strange
- voice of pity.
-
- He stared at her. "Enough--?"
-
- "Of misery. . . ."
-
- An iron band seemed loosened from his temples. "You saw then . . .?"
- he whispered.
-
- "Oh, God----oh, God----" she sobbed. She dropped beside him and
- hid her anguish against his knees. They clung thus in silence, a
- long time, driven together down the same fierce blast of shame.
-
- When at length she lifted her face he averted his. Her scorn
- would have hurt him less than the tears on his hands.
-
- She spoke languidly, like a child emerging from a passion of
- weeping. "It was for the money--?"
-
- His lips shaped an assent.
-
- "That was the inheritance--that we married on?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- She drew back and rose to her feet. He sat watching her as she
- wandered away from him.
-
- "You hate me," broke from him.
-
- She made no answer.
-
- "Say you hate me!" he persisted.
-
- "That would have been so simple," she answered with a strange
- smile. She dropped into a chair near the writing-table and rested
- a bowed forehead on her hand.
-
- "Was it much--?" she began at length.
-
- "Much--?" he returned, vaguely.
-
- "The money."
-
- "The money?" That part of it seemed to count so little that for a
- moment he did not follow her thought.
-
- "It must be paid back," she insisted. "Can you do it?"
-
- "Oh, yes," he returned, listlessly. "I can do it."
-
- "I would make any sacrifice for that!" she urged.
-
- He nodded. "Of course." He sat staring at her in dry-eyed self-
- contempt. "Do you count on its making much difference?"
-
- "Much difference?"
-
- "In the way I feel--or you feel about me?"
-
- She shook her head.
-
- "It's the least part of it," he groaned.
-
- "It's the only part we can repair."
-
- "Good heavens! If there were any reparation--" He rose quickly
- and crossed the space that divided them. "Why did you never
- speak?" he asked.
-
- "Haven't you answered that yourself?"
-
- "Answered it?"
-
- "Just now--when you told me you did it for me." She paused a
- moment and then went on with a deepening note--"I would have
- spoken if I could have helped you."
-
- "But you must have despised me."
-
- "I've told you that would have been simpler."
-
- "But how could you go on like this--hating the money?"
-
- "I knew you would speak in time. I wanted you, first, to hate it
- as I did."
-
- He gazed at her with a kind of awe. "You're wonderful," he
- murmured. "But you don't yet know the depths I've reached."
-
- She raised an entreating hand. "I don't want to!"
-
- "You're afraid, then, that you'll hate me?"
-
- "No--but that you'll hate ME. Let me understand without your
- telling me."
-
- "You can't. It's too base. I thought you didn't care because you
- loved Flamel."
-
- She blushed deeply. "Don't--don't--" she warned him.
-
- "I haven't the right to, you mean?"
-
- "I mean that you'll be sorry."
-
- He stood imploringly before her. "I want to say something worse--
- something more outrageous. If you don't understand THIS you'll be
- perfectly justified in ordering me out of the house."
-
- She answered him with a glance of divination. "I shall
- understand--but you'll be sorry."
-
- "I must take my chance of that." He moved away and tossed the
- books about the table. Then he swung round and faced her. "Does
- Flamel care for you?" he asked.
-
- Her flush deepened, but she still looked at him without anger.
- "What would be the use?" she said with a note of sadness.
-
- "Ah, I didn't ask THAT," he penitently murmured.
-
- "Well, then--"
-
- To this adjuration he made no response beyond that of gazing at
- her with an eye which seemed now to view her as a mere factor in
- an immense redistribution of meanings.
-
- "I insulted Flamel to-day. I let him see that I suspected him of
- having told you. I hated him because he knew about the letters."
-
- He caught the spreading horror of her eyes, and for an instant he
- had to grapple with the new temptation they lit up. Then he said,
- with an effort--"Don't blame him--he's impeccable. He helped me
- to get them published; but I lied to him too; I pretended they
- were written to another man . . . a man who was dead. . . ."
-
- She raised her arms in a gesture that seemed to ward off his
- blows.
-
- "You DO despise me!" he insisted.
-
- "Ah, that poor woman--that poor woman--" he heard her murmur.
-
- "I spare no one, you see!" he triumphed over her. She kept her
- face hidden.
-
- "You do hate me, you do despise me!" he strangely exulted.
-
- "Be silent!" she commanded him; but he seemed no longer conscious
- of any check on his gathering purpose.
-
- "He cared for you--he cared for you," he repeated, "and he never
- told you of the letters--"
-
- She sprang to her feet. "How can you?" she flamed. "How dare
- you? THAT--!"
-
- Glennard was ashy pale. "It's a weapon . . . like another. . . ."
-
- "A scoundrel's!"
-
- He smiled wretchedly. "I should have used it in his place."
-
- "Stephen! Stephen!" she cried, as though to drown the blasphemy
- on his lips. She swept to him with a rescuing gesture. "Don't
- say such things. I forbid you! It degrades us both."
-
- He put her back with trembling hands. "Nothing that I say of
- myself can degrade you. We're on different levels."
-
- "I'm on yours, whatever it is!"
-
- He lifted his head and their gaze flowed together.
-
-
-
- XIV
-
-
- The great renewals take effect as imperceptibly as the first
- workings of spring. Glennard, though he felt himself brought
- nearer to his wife, was still, as it were, hardly within speaking
- distance. He was but laboriously acquiring the rudiments of their
- new medium of communication; and he had to grope for her through
- the dense fog of his humiliation, the distorting vapor against
- which his personality loomed grotesque and mean.
-
- Only the fact that we are unaware how well our nearest know us
- enables us to live with them. Love is the most impregnable refuge
- of self-esteem, and we hate the eye that reaches to our nakedness.
- If Glennard did not hate his wife it was slowly, sufferingly, that
- there was born in him that profounder passion which made his
- earlier feeling seem a mere commotion of the blood. He was like a
- child coming back to the sense of an enveloping presence: her
- nearness was a breast on which he leaned.
-
- They did not, at first, talk much together, and each beat a
- devious track about the outskirts of the subject that lay between
- them like a haunted wood. But every word, every action, seemed to
- glance at it, to draw toward it, as though a fount of healing
- sprang in its poisoned shade. If only they might cut away through
- the thicket to that restoring spring!
-
- Glennard, watching his wife with the intentness of a wanderer to
- whom no natural sign is negligible, saw that she had taken
- temporary refuge in the purpose of renouncing the money. If both,
- theoretically, owned the inefficacy of such amends, the woman's
- instinctive subjectiveness made her find relief in this crude form
- of penance. Glennard saw that she meant to live as frugally as
- possible till what she deemed their debt was discharged; and he
- prayed she might not discover how far-reaching, in its merely
- material sense, was the obligation she thus hoped to acquit. Her
- mind was fixed on the sum originally paid for the letters, and
- this he knew he could lay aside in a year or two. He was touched,
- meanwhile, by the spirit that made her discard the petty luxuries
- which she regarded as the signs of their bondage. Their shared
- renunciations drew her nearer to him, helped, in their evidence of
- her helplessness, to restore the full protecting stature of his
- love. And still they did not speak.
-
- It was several weeks later that, one afternoon by the drawing-room
- fire, she handed him a letter that she had been reading when he
- entered.
-
- "I've heard from Mr. Flamel," she said.
-
- Glennard turned pale. It was as though a latent presence had
- suddenly become visible to both. He took the letter mechanically.
-
- "It's from Smyrna," she said. "Won't you read it?"
-
- He handed it back. "You can tell me about it--his hand's so
- illegible." He wandered to the other end of the room and then
- turned and stood before her. "I've been thinking of writing to
- Flamel," he said.
-
- She looked up.
-
- "There's one point," he continued, slowly, "that I ought to clear
- up. I told him you'd known about the letters all along; for a
- long time, at least; and I saw it hurt him horribly. It was just
- what I meant to do, of course; but I can't leave him to that false
- impression; I must write him."
-
- She received this without outward movement, but he saw that the
- depths were stirred. At length she returned, in a hesitating
- tone, "Why do you call it a false impression? I did know."
-
- "Yes, but I implied you didn't care."
-
- "Ah!"
-
- He still stood looking down on her. "Don't you want me to set
- that right?" he tentatively pursued.
-
- She lifted her head and fixed him bravely. "It isn't necessary,"
- she said.
-
- Glennard flushed with the shock of the retort; then, with a
- gesture of comprehension, "No," he said, "with you it couldn't be;
- but I might still set myself right."
-
- She looked at him gently. "Don't I," she murmured, "do that?"
-
- "In being yourself merely? Alas, the rehabilitation's too
- complete! You make me seem--to myself even--what I'm not; what I
- can never be. I can't, at times, defend myself from the delusion;
- but I can at least enlighten others."
-
- The flood was loosened, and kneeling by her he caught her hands.
- "Don't you see that it's become an obsession with me? That if I
- could strip myself down to the last lie--only there'd always be
- another one left under it!--and do penance naked in the market-
- place, I should at least have the relief of easing one anguish by
- another? Don't you see that the worst of my torture is the
- impossibility of such amends?"
-
- Her hands lay in his without returning pressure. "Ah, poor woman,
- poor woman," he heard her sigh.
-
- "Don't pity her, pity me! What have I done to her or to you,
- after all? You're both inaccessible! It was myself I sold."
-
- He took an abrupt turn away from her; then halted before her
- again. "How much longer," he burst out, "do you suppose you can
- stand it? You've been magnificent, you've been inspired, but
- what's the use? You can't wipe out the ignominy of it. It's
- miserable for you and it does HER no good!"
-
- She lifted a vivid face. "That's the thought I can't bear!" she
- cried.
-
- "What thought?"
-
- "That it does her no good--all you're feeling, all you're
- suffering. Can it be that it makes no difference?"
-
- He avoided her challenging glance. "What's done is done," he
- muttered.
-
- "Is it ever, quite, I wonder?" she mused. He made no answer and
- they lapsed into one of the pauses that are a subterranean channel
- of communication.
-
- It was she who, after awhile, began to speak with a new suffusing
- diffidence that made him turn a roused eye on her.
-
- "Don't they say," she asked, feeling her way as in a kind of
- tender apprehensiveness, "that the early Christians, instead of
- pulling down the heathen temples--the temples of the unclean gods--
- purified them by turning them to their own uses? I've always
- thought one might do that with one's actions--the actions one
- loathes but can't undo. One can make, I mean, a wrong the door to
- other wrongs or an impassable wall against them. . . ." Her voice
- wavered on the word. "We can't always tear down the temples we've
- built to the unclean gods, but we can put good spirits in the
- house of evil--the spirits of mercy and shame and understanding,
- that might never have come to us if we hadn't been in such great
- need. . . ."
-
- She moved over to him and laid a hesitating hand on his. His head
- was bent and he did not change his attitude. She sat down beside
- him without speaking; but their silences now were fertile as rain-
- clouds--they quickened the seeds of understanding.
-
- At length he looked up. "I don't know," he said, "what spirits
- have come to live in the house of evil that I built--but you're
- there and that's enough for me. It's strange," he went on after
- another pause, "she wished the best for me so often, and now, at
- last, it's through her that it's come to me. But for her I
- shouldn't have known you--it's through her that I've found you.
- Sometimes, do you know?--that makes it hardest--makes me most
- intolerable to myself. Can't you see that it's the worst thing
- I've got to face? I sometimes think I could have borne it better
- if you hadn't understood! I took everything from her--everything--
- even to the poor shelter of loyalty she'd trusted in--the only
- thing I could have left her!--I took everything from her, I
- deceived her, I despoiled her, I destroyed her--and she's given me
- YOU in return!"
-
- His wife's cry caught him up. "It isn't that she's given ME to
- you--it is that she's given you to yourself." She leaned to him
- as though swept forward on a wave of pity. "Don't you see," she
- went on, as his eyes hung on her, "that that's the gift you can't
- escape from, the debt you're pledged to acquit? Don't you see
- that you've never before been what she thought you, and that now,
- so wonderfully, she's made you into the man she loved? THAT'S
- worth suffering for, worth dying for, to a woman--that's the gift
- she would have wished to give!"
-
- "Ah," he cried, "but woe to him by whom it cometh. What did I
- ever give her?"
-
- "The happiness of giving," she said.
-
-
-
-
- End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Touchstone by Edith Wharton
-