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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Adrienne Toner, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Adrienne Toner
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: March 29, 2013 [EBook #42428]
-
-Language: English
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADRIENNE TONER ***
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42428 ***
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42428 ***
diff --git a/42428-8.txt b/42428-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
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--- a/42428-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,11078 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Adrienne Toner, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Adrienne Toner
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: March 29, 2013 [EBook #42428]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADRIENNE TONER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-_A Novel_
-
-BY
-ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK
-(Mrs. Basil de Sélincourt)
-
-AUTHOR OF "CHRISTMAS ROSES, AND OTHER STORIES," "TANTE"
-"FRANKLIN KANE," "THE ENCOUNTER," ETC.
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-BOSTON AND NEW YORK
-HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
-The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY ANNE DOUGLAS DE SÉLINCOURT
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-THIRD IMPRESSION, MAY, 1922
-
-The Riverside Press
-CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS
-PRINTED IN THE U . S . A.
-
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-
-
-
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-"Come down to Coldbrooks next week-end, will you, Roger?" said Barney
-Chadwick. He had been wandering around the room, pausing once to glance
-at the César Franck on the piano and once at the window to look down at
-the Thames, and his voice now, though desultory in intention, betrayed
-to his friend preoccupation and even anxiety. "There is going to be an
-interesting girl with us: American; very original and charming."
-
-Roger Oldmeadow sat at his writing-bureau in the window, and his high
-dark head was silhouetted against the sky. It had power and even beauty,
-with moments of brooding melancholy; but the type to which it most
-conformed was that of the clever, cantankerous London bachelor; and if
-he sometimes looked what he was, the scholar who had taken a double
-first at Balliol and gave brain and sinew to an eminent review, he
-looked more often what he was not, a caustic, cautious solicitor,
-clean-shaved and meticulously neat, with the crisp bow at his collar,
-single eyeglass, and thin, wry smile.
-
-There was a cogitative kindness in his eyes and a latent irony on his
-lips as he now scrutinized Barney Chadwick, who had come finally to lean
-against the mantelpiece, and it was difficult before Roger Oldmeadow's
-gaze at such moments not to feel that you were giving yourself away.
-This was evidently what Barney was trying not to feel, or, at all
-events, not to show. He tapped his cigarette-end, fixing his eyes upon
-it and frowning a little. He had ruffled his brown hair with the nervous
-hand passed through it during his ramble, but ruffled or sleek Barney
-could never look anything but perfection, just as, whether he smiled or
-frowned, he could never look anything but charming. In his spring-tide
-grey, with a streak of white inside his waistcoat and a tie of petunia
-silk that matched his socks, he was a pleasant figure of fashion; and he
-was more than that; more than the mere London youth of 1913, who danced
-the tango and cultivated Post-Impressionism and the Russian ballet. He
-was perhaps not much more; but his difference, if slight, made him
-noticeable. It came back, no doubt, to the fact of charm. He was radiant
-yet reserved; confident yet shy. He had a slight stammer, and his smile
-seemed to ask you to help him out. His boyhood, at twenty-nine, still
-survived in his narrow face, clumsy in feature and delicate in contour,
-with long jaw, high temples and brown eyes, half sweet, half sleepy. The
-red came easily to his brown cheek, and he had the sensitive, stubborn
-lips of the little boy at the preparatory school whom Oldmeadow had met
-and befriended now many years ago.
-
-In Oldmeadow's eyes he had always remained the "little Barney" he had
-then christened him--even Barney's mother had almost forgotten that his
-real name was Eustace--and he could not but know that Barney depended
-upon him more than upon anyone in the world. To Barney his negations
-were more potent than other people's affirmations, and though he had
-sometimes said indignantly, "You leave one nothing to agree about,
-Roger, except Plato and Church-music," he was never really happy or
-secure in his rebellions from what he felt or suspected to be
-Oldmeadow's tastes and judgments. Oldmeadow had seen him through many
-admirations, not only for books and pictures, but for original girls.
-Barney thought that he liked the unusual. He was a devotee of the
-ballet, and had in his rooms cushions and curtains from the Omega shop
-and a drawing by Wyndham Lewis. But Oldmeadow knew that he really
-preferred the photograph of a Burne-Jones, a survival from Oxford days,
-that still bravely, and irrelevantly, hung opposite it, and he waited to
-see the Wyndham Lewis replaced by a later portent. Barney could remain
-stubbornly faithful to old devotions, but he was easily drawn into new
-orbits; and it was a new star, evidently, that he had come to describe
-and justify.
-
-"What have I to do with charming American girls?" Oldmeadow inquired,
-turning his eyes on the blurred prospect of factory-chimneys and
-warehouses that the farther waterside of Chelsea affords. One had to go
-to the window and look out to see the grey and silver river flowing, in
-the placidity that revealed so little power. Oldmeadow lived in a flat
-on the Embankment; but he was not an admirer of Chelsea, just as he was
-not an admirer of Whistler nor--and Barney had always suspected it--of
-Burne-Jones. His flat gave him, at a reasonable cost, fresh air,
-boiling-hot water and a walk in Battersea Park; these, with his piano,
-were his fundamental needs; though he owned, for the mean little stream
-it was, that the Thames could look pretty enough by morning sunlight
-and--like any river--magical under stars. After Plato and Bach,
-Oldmeadow's passions were the rivers of France.
-
-"She'll have something to do with you," said Barney, and he seemed
-pleased with the retort. "I met her at the Lumleys. They think her the
-marvel of the age."
-
-"Well, that doesn't endear her to me," said Oldmeadow. "And I don't like
-Americans."
-
-"Come, you're not quite so hide-bound as all that," said Barney, vexed.
-"What about Mrs. Aldesey? I've heard you say she's the most charming
-woman you know."
-
-"Except Nancy," Oldmeadow amended.
-
-"No one could call Nancy a charming woman," said Barney, looking a
-little more vexed. "She's a dear, of course; but she's a mere girl. What
-do you know about Americans, anyway--except Mrs. Aldesey?"
-
-"What she tells me about them--the ones she doesn't know," said
-Oldmeadow, leaning back in his chair with a laugh. "But I own that I'm
-merely prejudiced. Tell me about your young lady, and why you want her
-to have something to do with me. Is she a reformer of some sort?"
-
-"She's a wonderful person, really," said Barney, availing himself with
-eagerness of his opportunity. "Not a reformer. Only a sort of mixture of
-saint and fairy-princess. She cured Charlie Lumley of insomnia, three
-years ago, at Saint Moritz. Nothing psychic or theatrical, you know.
-Just sat by him and smiled--she's a most extraordinary smile--and laid
-her hand on his head. He'd not slept for nights and went off like a
-lamb. Lady Lumley almost cries when she tells about it. They thought
-Charlie might lose his mind if he went on not sleeping."
-
-"My word! She's a Christian Science lady? A medium? What?"
-
-"Call her what you like. You'll see. She does believe in spiritual
-forces. It's not only that. She's quite lovely. In every way. Nancy and
-Meg will worship her. The Lumley girls do."
-
-Oldmeadow's thoughts were already dwelling in rueful surmise on Nancy.
-He had always thought her the nicest young creature he had ever known,
-nicer even than Barney; and he had always wanted them to marry. She was
-Barney's second cousin, and she and her mother lived near the Chadwicks
-in Gloucestershire.
-
-"Oh, Nancy will worship her, will she? She must be all right, then.
-What's her name?" he asked.
-
-Barney had given up trying to be desultory, and his conscious firmness
-was now not lost upon his friend as he answered, stammering a little,
-"Adrienne. Adrienne Toner."
-
-"Why Adrienne?" Oldmeadow mildly inquired. "Has she French blood?"
-
-"Not that I know of. It's a pretty name, I think, Adrienne. One hears
-more inane names given to girls every day. Her mother loved France--just
-as you do, Roger. Adrienne was born in Paris, I think."
-
-"Oh, a very pretty name," said Oldmeadow, noting Barney's already
-familiar use of it. "Though it sounds more like an actress's than a
-saint's."
-
-"There was something dramatic about the mother, I fancy," said Barney,
-sustained, evidently, by his own detachment. "A romantic, rather absurd,
-but very loveable person. Adrienne worshipped her and, naturally, can't
-see the absurdity. She died out in California. On a boat," said Barney
-stammering again, over the _b_.
-
-"On a boat?"
-
-"Yes. Awfully funny. But touching, too. That's what she wanted, when she
-died: the sea and sky about her. They carried her on her yacht--doctors,
-nurses, all the retinue--and sailed far out from shore. It's beautiful,
-too, in a way you know, to be able to do that sort of thing quite simply
-and unself-consciously. Adrienne sat beside her, and they smiled at each
-other and held hands until the end."
-
-Oldmeadow played with his penholder. He was disconcerted; and most of
-all by the derivative emotion in Barney's voice. They had gone far,
-then, already, the young people. Nancy could have not the ghost of a
-chance. And the nature of what touched Barney left him singularly dry.
-He was unable to credit so much simplicity or unself-consciousness. He
-coughed shortly, and after a decently respectful interval inquired: "Is
-Miss Toner very wealthy?"
-
-"Yes, very," said Barney, relapsing now into a slight sulkiness. "At
-least, perhaps not very, as rich Americans go. She gave away a lot of
-her fortune, I know, when her mother died. She founded a place for
-children--a convalescent home, or crèche--out in California. And she did
-something in Chicago, too."
-
-And Miss Toner had evidently done something in London at the Lumleys'.
-It couldn't be helped about Nancy, and if the American girl was pretty
-and, for all her nonsense, well-bred, it might not be a bad thing, since
-there was so much money. The Chadwicks were not at all well off, and
-Coldbrooks was only kept going by Mrs. Chadwick's economies and Barney's
-labours at his uncle's stock-broking firm in the city. Oldmeadow could
-see Eleanor Chadwick's so ingenuous yet so practical eye fixed on Miss
-Toner's gold, and he, too, could fix his. Miss Toner sounded benevolent,
-and it was probable that her presence as mistress of Coldbrooks would be
-of benefit to all Barney's relatives. All the same, she sounded as
-irrelevant in his life as the Wyndham Lewis.
-
-"Adrienne Toner," he heard himself repeating aloud, for he had a trick,
-caught, no doubt, from his long loneliness, of relapsing into
-absent-minded and audible meditations. The cadence of it worried him. It
-was an absurd name. "You know each other pretty well already, it seems,"
-he said.
-
-"Yes; it's extraordinary how one seems to know her. One doesn't have any
-formalities to get through with her, as it were," said Barney. "Either
-you are there, or you are not there."
-
-"Either on the yacht, or not on the yacht, eh?" Oldmeadow reached out
-for his pipe.
-
-"Put it like that if you choose. It's awfully jolly to be on the yacht,
-I can tell you. It _is_ like a voyage, a great adventure, to know her."
-
-"And what's it like to be off the yacht? Suppose I'm not there? Suppose
-she doesn't like me?" Oldmeadow suggested. "What am I to talk to her
-about--of course I'll come, if you really want me. But she frightens me
-a little, I confess. I'm not an adventurous person."
-
-"But neither am I, you know!" Barney exclaimed, "and that's just what
-she does to you: makes you adventurous. She'll be immensely interested
-in you, of course. You can talk to her about anything. It was down at a
-week-end at the Lumleys' I first met her, and there were some tremendous
-big-wigs there, political, you know, and literary, and all that sort of
-thing; and she had them all around her. She'd have frightened me, too,
-if I hadn't seen at once that she took to me and wouldn't mind my being
-just ordinary. She likes everybody; that's just it. She takes to
-everybody, big and little. She's just like sunshine," Barney stammered a
-little over his _s_'s. "That's what she makes one think of straight off;
-shining on everything."
-
-"On the clean and the unclean. I see," said Oldmeadow. "I feel it in my
-bones that I shall come into the unclean category with her. But it'll do
-me the more good to have her shine on me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-Roger Oldmeadow went to have tea with Mrs. Aldesey next afternoon. She
-was, after the Chadwicks, his nearest friend, and his relation to the
-Chadwicks was one of affection rather than affinity. They had been
-extraordinarily kind to him since the time that he had befriended Barney
-at the preparatory school, hiding, under his grim jocularities, the
-bewilderment of a boy's first great bereavement. His love for his mother
-had been an idolatry, and his childhood had been haunted by her
-ill-health. She died when he was thirteen, and in some ways he knew
-that, even now, he had never got over it. His unfortunate and frustrated
-love-affair in early manhood had been, when all was said and done, a
-trivial grief compared to it. Coldbrooks had become, after that, his
-only home, for he had lost his father as a very little boy, and the
-whole family had left the country parsonage and been thrown on the
-mercies of an uncle and aunt who lived in a grim provincial town.
-Oldmeadow's most vivid impression of home was the high back bedroom
-where the worn carpet was cold to the feet and the fire a sulky spot of
-red, and the windows looked out over smoky chimney-pots. Here his
-stricken mother lay in bed with her cherished cat beside her and read
-aloud to him. There was always a difficulty about feeding poor Effie,
-Aunt Aggie declaring that cats should live below stairs and on mice; and
-Roger, at midday dinner, became adroit at slipping bits of meat from
-his plate into a paper held in his lap and carried triumphantly to his
-mother's room afterwards. "Oh, darling, you _oughtn't_ to," she would
-say with her loving, girlish smile, and he would reply, "But I went
-without, Mummy; so it's quite all right." His two little sisters were
-kept in the nursery, as they were noisy, high-spirited children, and
-tired their mother too much. Roger was her companion, her comrade; her
-only comrade in the world, really, beside Effie. It had been Mrs.
-Chadwick who had saved Effie from the lethal chamber after her
-mistress's death. Roger never spoke about his mother, but he did speak
-about Effie when she was thus threatened, and he had never forgotten,
-never, never, Mrs. Chadwick's eager cry of, "But bring her here, my dear
-Roger. I _like_ idle cats! Bring her here, and I promise you that we'll
-make her happy. Animals are _so_ happy at Coldbrooks." To see Effie
-cherished, petted, occupying the best chairs during all the years that
-followed, had been to see his mother, in this flickering little ghost,
-remembered in the only way he could have borne to see her explicitly
-remembered, and it was because of Effie that he had most deeply loved
-Coldbrooks. It remained always his refuge during a cheerless and
-harassed youth, when, with his two forceful, black-browed sisters to
-settle in life, he had felt himself pant and strain under the harness.
-He was fonder of them than they of him, for they were hard, cheerful
-young women, inheriting harshness of feature and manner from their
-father, with their father's black eyes. It was from his mother that
-Oldmeadow had his melancholy blue ones, and he had never again met his
-mother's tenderness.
-
-Both sisters were now settled, one in India and one, very prosperously,
-in London; but he seldom turned for tea into Cadogan Gardens and
-Trixie's brisk Chippendale drawing-room; though Cadogan Gardens was
-obviously more convenient than Somer's Place, where, on the other side
-of the park, Mrs. Aldesey lived. He had whims, and did not know whether
-it was because he more disliked her husband or her butler that he went
-so seldom to see Trixie. Her husband was jovial and familiar, and the
-butler had a face like a rancid ham and a surreptitious manner. One had
-always to be encountered at the door, and the other was too often in the
-drawing-room, and Trixie was vexatiously satisfied with both; Trixie
-also had four turbulent, intelligent children, in whom complacent
-parental theories of uncontrol manifested themselves unpleasantly, and
-altogether she was too much hedged in by obstacles to be tempting; even
-had she been tempting in herself. Intercourse with Trixie, when it did
-take place, consisted usually of hard-hearted banter. She bantered him a
-great deal about Mrs. Aldesey, who, she averred, snubbed her. Not that
-Trixie minded being snubbed by anybody.
-
-It was a pleasant walk across the park on this spring day when the
-crocuses were fully out in the grass, white, purple and gold, and the
-trees just scantly stitched with green, and, as always, it was with a
-slight elation that he approached his friend. However dull or jaded
-oneself or the day, the thought of her cheered one as did the thought of
-tea. She made him think of her own China tea. She suggested delicate
-ceremoniousness. Though familiar, there was always an aroma of
-unexpectedness about her; a slight, sweet shock of oddity and surprise.
-
-Mrs. Aldesey was unlike the traditional London American. She was neither
-rich nor beautiful nor noticeably well-dressed. One became gradually
-aware, after some time spent in her company, that her clothes,
-soft-tinted and silken, were pleasing, as were her other appurtenances;
-the narrow front of her little house, painted freshly in white and green
-and barred by boxes of yellow wallflower; the serenely unfashionable
-water-colours of Italy, painted by her mother, on the staircase; and her
-drawing-room, grey-green and primrose-yellow, with eighteenth-century
-fans, of which she had a collection, displayed in cabinets, and good old
-glass.
-
-Mrs. Aldesey herself, behind her tea-table, very faded, very thin, with
-what the French term a _souffreteux_ little face--an air of just not
-having taken drugs to make her sleep, but of having certainly taken
-tabloids to make her digest--seemed already to belong to a passing order
-of things; an order still sustained, if lightly, by stays, and keeping a
-prayer-book as punctually in use as a card-case.
-
-Oldmeadow owed her, if indirectly, to the Chadwicks, as he owed so much,
-even if it was entirely on his own merits that he had won her regard.
-They had met, years ago, in France; an entirely chance encounter, and
-probably a futureless one, had it not been for the presence in the hotel
-at Amboise of the Lumleys. They both slightly knew the Lumleys, and the
-Lumleys and the Chadwicks were old friends. So it had come about; and if
-he associated Mrs. Aldesey with tea, he associated her also with perfect
-omelettes and the Loire. He had liked her at once so much, that, had it
-not been for an always unseen yet never-repudiated husband in New York,
-he would certainly, at the beginning, have fallen in love with her. But
-the unrepudiated husband made as much a part of Mrs. Aldesey's
-environment as her stays and her prayer-book. The barrier was so evident
-that one did not even reflect on what one might have done had it not
-been there; and indeed, Mrs. Aldesey, he now seemed, after many pleasant
-years of friendship, to recognize, for all the sense of sweetness and
-exhilaration she gave him, had not enough substance to rouse or sustain
-his heart. She was, like the tea again, all savour.
-
-She lifted to-day her attentive blue eyes--with age they would become
-shrewd--and gave him her fine little hand, blue-veined and ornamented
-with pearls and diamonds in old settings. She wore long earrings and a
-high, transparent collar of net and lace. Her earrings and her
-elaborately dressed hair, fair and faded, seemed as much a part of her
-personality as her eyes, her delicate nose and her small, slightly
-puckered mouth that dragged provocatively and prettily at one corner
-when she smiled. Oldmeadow sometimes wondered if she were happy; but
-never because of anything she said or did.
-
-"I want to hear about some people called Toner," he said, dropping into
-the easy-chair on the opposite side of the tea-table. It was almost
-always thus that he and Mrs. Aldesey met. He rarely dined out. "I'm
-rather perturbed. I think that Barney--you remember young Chadwick--is
-going to marry a Miss Toner--a Miss Adrienne Toner. And I hope you'll
-have something to her advantage to tell me. As you know, I'm devoted to
-Barney and his family."
-
-"I know. The Lumleys' Chadwicks. I remember perfectly. The dear boy with
-the innocent eyes and sulky mouth. Why don't you bring him to see me?
-He's dancing the tango in all his spare moments, I suppose, and doesn't
-care about old ladies." Mrs. Aldesey was not much over forty, but always
-thus alluded to herself. "Toner," she took up, pouring out his tea. "Why
-perturbed? Do you know anything against them? Americans, you mean. We
-poor expatriates are always seen as keepers to so many curious
-brethren.--Toner. _Celà ne me dit rien_."
-
-"I know nothing against them except that Mrs. Toner, the girl's mother,
-died, by arrangement, out at sea, on her yacht--in sunlight. Does that
-say anything? People don't do that in America, do they, as a rule? A
-very opulent lady, I inferred."
-
-"Oh, dear!" Mrs. Aldesey now ejaculated, as if enlightened. "Can it be?
-Do you mean, I wonder, the preposterous Mrs. Toner, of whom, fifteen
-years ago, I had a glimpse, and used to hear vague rumours? She wandered
-about the world. She dressed in the Empire period: Queen Louise of
-Prussia, white gauze bound beneath her chin. She had a harp, and warbled
-to monarchs. She had an astral body, and a Yogi and a yacht and
-everything handsome about her. The typical spiritual _cabotine_ of our
-epoch--though I'm sure they must always have existed. Of course it must
-be she. No one else could have died like that. Has she died, poor woman?
-On a yacht. Out at sea. In sunlight. How uncomfortable!"
-
-"Yes, she's dead," said Oldmeadow resignedly. "Yes; it's she, evidently.
-And her daughter is coming down to Coldbrooks this week-end. I'm afraid
-that unless Barney has too many rivals, he'll certainly marry her. But
-what you say leads me to infer that he will have rivals and to hope they
-may be successful. She will, no doubt, marry a prince."
-
-"Something Italian, perhaps. Quite a small fortune will do that.
-Certainly your nice Barney wouldn't have been at all Mrs. Toner's
-_affaire_. The girl on her own may think differently, for your Barney
-is, I remember, very engaging, and has a way with him. I don't know
-anything about the girl. I didn't know there was one. There's no reason
-why she may not be charming. Our wonderful people have the gift of
-picking up experience in a generation and make excellent princesses."
-
-"But she's that sort, you think. The sort that marries princes and has
-no traditions. Where did they come from? Do you know that?"
-
-"I haven't an idea. Yet, stay. Was it not tooth-paste?--Toner's Peerless
-Tooth-Paste. Obsolete; yet I seem to see, reminiscently, in far-away
-nursery days, the picture of a respectable old gentleman with
-side-whiskers, on a tube. A pretty pink glazed tube with a gilt top to
-it. Perhaps it's that. Since it was Toner's it would be the father's
-side; not the warbling mother's. Well, many of us might wish for as
-unambiguous an origin nowadays. And, in America, we did all sorts of
-useful things when we first, all of us, came over in the Mayflower!"
-said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile.
-
-Oldmeadow gazed upon his friend with an ironically receptive eye. "Have
-they ever known anyone decent? Anyone like yourself? I don't mean over
-here. I mean in America."
-
-"No one like me, I imagine; if I'm decent. Mrs. Toner essayed a season
-in New York one winter, and it was then I had my glimpse of her, at the
-opera, in the Queen Louise dress. A pretty woman, dark, with a sort of
-soulful and eminently respectable coquetry about her; surrounded by
-swarms of devotees--all male, to me unknown; and with something in a
-turban that I took to be a Yogi in the background. She only tried the
-one winter. She knew what she wanted and where she couldn't get it. We
-are very dry in New York--such of us as survive. Very little moved by
-warblings or astral bodies or millions. As you intimate, she'll have
-done much better over here. You _are_ a strange mixture of materialism
-and ingenuousness, you know."
-
-"It's only that we have fewer Mrs. Toners to amuse us and more to do
-with millions than you have," said Oldmeadow; but Mrs. Aldesey, shaking
-her head with a certain sadness, said that it wasn't as simple as all
-that.
-
-"Have you seen her? Have you seen Adrienne?" she took up presently,
-making him his second cup of tea. "Is she pretty? Is he very much in
-love?"
-
-"I'm going down to Coldbrooks on Saturday to see her," said Oldmeadow,
-"and I gather that it's not to subject her to any test that Barney wants
-me; it's to subject me, rather. He's quite sure of her. He thinks she's
-irresistible. He merely wants to make assurance doubly sure by seeing me
-bowled over. I don't know whether she's pretty. She has powers,
-apparently, that make her independent of physical attractions. She lays
-her hands on people's heads and cures them. She cured Charlie Lumley of
-insomnia at Saint Moritz three years ago."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey, at this, looked at him for some moments in silence.
-"Yes," she assented, and in her pause she seemed to have recognized and
-placed a familiar object. "Yes. She would. That's just what Mrs. Toner's
-daughter would do. I hope she doesn't warble, too. Laying on hands is
-better than warbling."
-
-"I see you think it hopeless," said Oldmeadow, pushing back his chair
-and yielding, as he thrust his hands into his pockets and stretched out
-his legs, to an avowed chagrin. "What a pity it is! A thousand pities.
-They are such dear, good, simple people, and Barney, though he doesn't
-know it, is as simple as any of them. What will become of them with this
-overwhelming cuckoo in their nest."
-
-At this Mrs. Aldesey became serious. "I don't think it hopeless at all.
-You misunderstand me. Isn't the fact that he's in love with her
-reassuring in itself? He may be simple, but he's a delicate, discerning
-creature, and he couldn't fall in love with some one merely pretentious
-and absurd. She may be charming. I can perfectly imagine her as
-charming, and there's no harm in laying on hands; there may be good.
-Don't be narrow, Roger. Don't go down there feeling dry."
-
-"I am narrow, and I do feel dry; horribly dry," said Oldmeadow. "How
-could the child of such a mother, and of tooth-paste, be charming? Don't
-try specious consolation, now, after having more than justified all my
-suspicions."
-
-"I'm malicious, not specious; and I can't resist having my fling. But
-you mustn't be narrow and take me _au pied de la lettre_. I assert that
-she may be charming. I assert that I can see it all working out most
-happily. She'll lay her hands on them and they'll love her. What I
-really want to say is this: don't try to set Barney against her. He'll
-marry her all the same and never forgive you."
-
-"Ah; there we have the truth of it. But Barney would always forgive me,"
-said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Well then, she won't. And you'd lose him just as surely. And she'll
-know. Let me warn you of that. She'll know perfectly."
-
-"I'll keep my hands off her," said Oldmeadow, "if she doesn't try to lay
-hers on me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-The Chadwicks all had a certain sulkiness in their charming looks, and
-where in Barney it mingled with sweetness, in Palgrave, his younger
-brother, it mingled with brilliancy. It was Palgrave who, at the
-station, met the family friend and counsellor in the shabby, inexpensive
-family car. He was still a mere boy, home from Marlborough for the
-Easter holidays; fond of Oldmeadow, as all the Chadwicks were; but more
-resentful of his predominance than Barney and more indifferent to his
-brotherly solicitude. He had Barney's long, narrow face and Barney's
-eyes and lips; but the former were proud and the latter petulant.
-To-day, as he sat beside him in the car, Oldmeadow was aware of
-something at once fixed and vibrating in his bearing. He wanted to say
-something, and he had resolved to be silent. During their last encounter
-at Coldbrooks, he and Oldmeadow had had a long, antagonistic political
-discussion, and Palgrave's resentment still, no doubt, survived.
-
-Coldbrooks lay among the lower Cotswolds, three miles from the station,
-and near the station was the village of Chelford where Nancy Averil and
-her mother lived. Nancy was at Coldbrooks; Aunt Monica--she was called
-aunt by the Chadwick children, though she and Mrs. Chadwick were first
-cousins--was away. So Palgrave informed him. But he did not speak again
-until the chill, green curve of arable hill-side was climbed and a
-stretch of wind-swept country lay before them. Then suddenly he
-volunteered: "The American girl is at Coldbrooks."
-
-"Oh! Is she? When did she come?" Somehow Oldmeadow had expected the
-later train for Miss Toner.
-
-"Yesterday. She and Barney came down together in her car."
-
-"So you've welcomed her already," said Oldmeadow, curious of the
-expression on the boy's face. "How does she fit into Coldbrooks? Does
-she like you all and do you like her?"
-
-For a moment Palgrave was silent. "You mean it makes a difference
-whether we do or not?" he then inquired.
-
-"I don't know that I meant that. Though if people come into your life it
-does make a difference."
-
-"And is she going to come into our lives?" Palgrave asked, and Oldmeadow
-felt pressure of some sort behind the question. "That's what I mean. Has
-Barney told you? He's said nothing to us. Not even to Mother."
-
-"Has Barney told me he's going to marry her? No; he hasn't. But it's
-evident he hopes to. Perhaps it depends on whether she likes Coldbrooks
-and Coldbrooks likes her."
-
-"Oh, no, it doesn't. It doesn't depend on anything at all except whether
-she likes Barney," said Palgrave. "She's the sort of person who doesn't
-depend on anything or anybody except herself. She cuts through
-circumstance like a knife through cheese. And if she's not going to take
-him I wish she'd never come," he added, frowning and turning, under the
-peak of his cap, his jewel-like eyes upon his companion. "It's a case of
-all or nothing with a person like that. It's too disturbing--just for a
-glimpse."
-
-Oldmeadow felt himself disconcerted. Oddly enough, for the boy was
-capricious and extravagant, Palgrave's opinion had more weight with him
-than Barney's. Barney, for one thing, was sexually susceptible and
-Palgrave was not. Though so young, Oldmeadow felt him already of a
-poetic temperament, passionate in mind and cold in blood.
-
-"She's so charming? You can't bear to lose her now you've seen her?" he
-asked.
-
-"I don't know about charming. No; I don't think her charming. At least
-not if you mean something little by the word. She's disturbing. She
-changes everything."
-
-"But if she stays she'll be more disturbing. She'll change more."
-
-"Oh, I shan't mind that! I shan't mind change," Palgrave declared. "If
-it's her change and she's there to see it through." And, relapsing to
-muteness, he bent to his brakes and they slid down among the woods of
-Coldbrooks.
-
-For the life of him and with the best will in the world, he couldn't
-make it out. That was Oldmeadow's first impression as, among the
-familiar group gathered in the hall about the tea-table, Miss Toner was
-at last made manifest to him. She was, he felt sure, in his first shrewd
-glance at her, merely what Lydia Aldesey would have placed as a
-third-rate American girl, and her origins in commercial enterprise were
-eminently appropriate.
-
-She got up to meet him, as if recognizing in him some special
-significance or, indeed, as it might be her ingenuous habit to do in
-meeting any older person. But he was not so much older if it came to
-that; for, after he had met the direct and dwelling gaze of her large,
-light eyes, the second impression was that she was by no means so young
-as Barney had led him to expect. She was certainly as old as Barney.
-
-There were none of the obvious marks of wealth upon her. She wore a
-dark-blue dress tying on the breast over white. She was small in stature
-and, in manner, composed beyond anything he had ever encountered. With
-an irony, kindly enough, yet big, he knew, with unfavourable inferences,
-he even recognized, reconstructing the moment in the light of those that
-followed, that in rising to meet him as he was named to her, it had
-been, rather than in shyness or girlishness, in the wish to welcome him
-and draw him the more happily into a group she had already made her own.
-
-They were all sitting round the plentiful table, set with home-made
-loaves and cakes, jams and butter, and a Leeds bowl of primroses; Miss
-Toner just across from him, Barney on one side of her--his was an air of
-tranquil ecstasy--and little Barbara on the other, and they all seemed
-to emanate a new radiance; almost, thought Oldmeadow, with an
-irritability that was still genial, like innocent savages on a remote
-seashore gathered with intent eyes and parted lips round the newly
-disembarked Christopher Columbus. Mrs. Chadwick, confused, as usual,
-among her tea-cups, sending hasty relays of sugar after the unsugared or
-recalling those sugared in error, specially suggested the simile. She
-could, indeed, hardly think of her tea. Her wide, startled gaze turned
-incessantly on the new-comer and to Oldmeadow, for all his nearly filial
-affection, the eyes of Eleanor Chadwick looked like nothing in the
-world so much as those of the March Hare in Tenniel's evocation of the
-endearing creature. Unlike her children, she was fair, with a thin,
-high, ridiculously distinguished nose; but her mouth and chin had
-Barney's irresolution and sweetness, and her untidy locks Meg's beauty.
-Meg was a beauty in every way, rose, pearl and russet, a Romney touched
-with pride and daring, and the most sophisticated of all the Chadwicks;
-yet she, too, brooded, half merrily, half sombrely, on Miss Toner, her
-elbows on the table for the better contemplation. Palgrave's absorption
-was manifest; but he did not brood. He held his head high, frowned and,
-for the most part, looked out of the window.
-
-Oldmeadow sat between Palgrave and Nancy and it was with Nancy that the
-magic ended. Nancy did not share in the radiance. She smiled and was
-very busy cutting the bread and butter; but she was pale; not puzzled,
-but preoccupied. Poor darling Nancy; always his special pet; to him
-always the dearest and most loveable of girls. Not at all a Romney. With
-her pale, fresh face, dark hair and beautiful hands she suggested,
-rather, a country lady of the seventeenth century painted by Vandyck. A
-rural Vandyck who might have kept a devout and merry journal, surprising
-later generations by its mixture of ingenuousness and wisdom. Her lips
-were meditative, and her grey eyes nearly closed when she smiled in a
-way that gave to her gaiety and extraordinary sweetness and intimacy.
-Nancy always looked as if she loved you when she smiled at you; and
-indeed she did love you. She had spent her life among people she loved
-and if she could not be intimate she was remote and silent.
-
-But there was no hope for Nancy. He saw that finally, as he drank his
-tea in silence and looked across the primroses at the marvel of the age.
-
-Miss Toner's was an insignificant little head, if indeed it could be
-called little, since it was too large for her body, and her way of
-dressing her hair in wide braids, pinned round it and projecting over
-the ears, added to the top-heavy effect. The hair was her only
-indubitable beauty, fine and fair and sparkling like the palest, purest
-metal. It was cut in a light fringe across a projecting forehead and her
-mouth and chin projected, too; so that, as he termed it to himself, it
-was a squashed-in face, ugly in structure, the small nose, from its
-depressed bridge, jutting forward in profile, the lips, in profile, flat
-yet prominent. Nevertheless he owned, studying her over his tea-cup,
-that the features, ugly, even trivial in detail, had in their assemblage
-something of unexpected force. Her tranquil smile had potency and he
-suddenly became aware of her flat, gentle voice, infrequent, yet oddly
-dominating. Sensitive as he was to voices, he saw it as a bland, blue
-ribbon rolled out among broken counters of colour, and listened to its
-sound before he listened to what it said. All the other voices went up
-and down; all the others half said things and let them drop or trail.
-She said things to the end: when the ribbon began it was unrolled; and
-it seemed, always, to make a silence in which it could be watched.
-
-"We went up high into the sunlight," she said, "and one saw nothing but
-snow and sky. The bells were ringing on the mountains beneath; one heard
-no other sound. I have never forgotten the moment. It seemed an
-inspiration of joy and peace and strength."
-
-"You've walked so much in the Alps, haven't you, Roger?" said Mrs.
-Chadwick. "Miss Toner has motored over every pass."
-
-"In the French Alps. I don't like Switzerland," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"I think I love the mountains everywhere," said Miss Toner, "when they
-go so high into the sky and have the sun and snow on their summits. But
-I love the mountains of Savoy and Jura best."
-
-It vexed him that she should. She was a person to stay in and prefer
-Switzerland. "Joy and peace and strength," echoed in his ears and with
-the words, rudely, and irrelevantly, the image of the pink glazed tube
-with the gilt stopper. Miss Toner's teeth were as white as they were
-benignant.
-
-"I wish I could see those flowers," said Mrs. Chadwick. "I've only been
-to Vevey in the summer; oh, years and years ago. So dull. Fields of
-flowers. You've seen them, too, of course, Roger. All the things we grow
-with such pains. My Saint Brigid anemones never really do--though what I
-put in of leaf-mould!"
-
-"You'll see anemones, fields of them, in the Alpine meadows; and violets
-and lilies; the little lilies of Saint Bruno that look like freesias. I
-love them best of all," the bland, blue ribbon unrolled. "You shall go
-with me some day, Mrs. Chadwick. We'll go together." And, smiling at her
-as if they had, already, a happy secret between them, Miss Toner
-continued: "We'll go this very summer, if you will. We'll motor all the
-way. I'll come and get you here. For a whole month you shall forget that
-you've ever had a family to bring up or a house to take care of or
-anemones that won't grow properly--even in leaf-mould."
-
-Her eyes, as they rested on her hostess, seemed to impart more than her
-words. They imparted something to Oldmeadow. He had not before
-conjectured that Eleanor Chadwick might be bored or tired, nor realized
-that since Barbara's birth, fourteen years ago, she had not left
-Coldbrooks except to go to London for a week's shopping, or to stay with
-friends in the English country. He had taken Eleanor Chadwick's life for
-granted. It seemed Miss Toner's function not to take things that could
-be changed for granted. It was easy to do that of course, when you had a
-large banking account behind you; and yet he felt that Miss Toner would
-have had the faculty of altering accepted standards, even had she been
-materially unequipped. She and Mrs. Chadwick continued to look at each
-other for a moment and the older woman, half bashfully, seemed, with
-what softness, compelled to a tacit confession. She'd never known before
-that she was tired. Springs of adventure and girlishness within her were
-perhaps unsealed by Miss Toner's gaze.
-
-"And where do the rest of us come in!" Barney ejaculated. He was so
-happy in the triumph of his beloved that his eyes, their sleepiness
-banished, were almost as brilliant as Palgrave's.
-
-"But you're always coming in with Mrs. Chadwick," said Miss Toner. She
-looked at him, if with a touch of tender humour, exactly as she looked
-at his mother; but then she looked at them both as if they were precious
-to her. "I don't want you to come in at all for that month. I want her
-to forget you ever existed. There ought to be waters of Lethe for
-everyone every now and then, even in this life. We come out, after the
-plunge into forgetfulness, far brighter and stronger and with a
-renovated self to love the better with. Afterwards--after she's had her
-dip--you'll all come in, if you want to, with me. I'll get a car big
-enough. You, too, Miss Averil; and Mr. Oldmeadow; though he and Barney
-and Palgrave may have to take turns sitting on the portmanteaus."
-
-"Barney" and "Palgrave" already. Her unpretentious mastery alarmed
-almost as much as it amused him. He thanked her, with his dry smile,
-saying that he really preferred to see the Alps on his legs and asked,
-to temper the possible acerbity, "Do you drive yourself?" for it seemed
-in keeping with his picture of her as an invading providence that she
-should with her own hand conduct the car of fate. He could see her,
-somehow, taking the hairpin curves on the Galibier.
-
-But Miss Toner said she did not drive. "One can't see flowers if one
-drives oneself; and it would hurt dear Macfarlane's feelings so.
-Macfarlane is my chauffeur and he's been with me for years; from the
-time we first began to have motors, my mother and I, out in California.
-Apart from that, I should like it, I think, with the sense of risk and
-venture it must give. I like the sense of high adventure--of 'Childe
-Roland to the dark tower came'; don't you, Palgrave? It's life, isn't
-it? The pulse of life. Danger and venture and conquest. And then
-resting, on the heights, while one hears the bells beneath one."
-
-This, thought Oldmeadow, as he adjusted his glass the better to examine
-Miss Toner, must prove itself too much, even for Palgrave to swallow.
-But Palgrave swallowed it without a tremor. His eyes on hers he
-answered: "Yes, I feel life like that, too."
-
-"Oh, dear!" sighed Mrs. Chadwick, and Oldmeadow blessed her antidote to
-the suffocating sweetness: "I'm afraid I don't! I don't think I know
-anything about risks and dangers; or about conquest either. I'm sure
-I've never conquered anything; though I have been dreadfully afraid of
-ill-tempered servants--if that counts, and never let them see it.
-Barbara had such an odious nurse. She tried, simply, to keep me out of
-the nursery; but she didn't succeed. And there was a Scotch cook once,
-with red hair--that so often goes with a bad temper, doesn't it? Do you
-remember, Barney?--your dear father had to go down to the kitchen when
-she was found lying quite, quite drunk under the table. But cooks and
-nurses can't be called risks--and I've never cared for hunting."
-
-Miss Toner was quietly laughing, and indeed everybody laughed.
-
-"Dear Mrs. Chadwick," she said. And then she added: "How can a mother
-say she has not known risks and dangers? I think you've thought only of
-other people for all your life and never seen yourself at all. Alpine
-passes aren't needed to prove people's courage and endurance."
-
-Oldmeadow now saw, from the sudden alarm and perplexity of Mrs.
-Chadwick's expression, that she was wondering if the marvellous guest
-alluded to the perils of child-birth. Perhaps she did. She was ready, he
-imagined, to allude to anything.
-
-"You're right about her never having seen herself," said Palgrave,
-nodding across at Miss Toner. "She never has. She's incapable of
-self-analysis."
-
-"But she's precious sharp when it comes to analysing other people,
-aren't you, Mummy dear!" said Barney.
-
-"I don't think she is," said Meg. "I think Mummy sees people rather as
-she sees flowers; things to be fed and staked and protected."
-
-"You're always crabbing Mummy, Meg. It's a shame!--Isn't it a shame,
-Mummy dear!" Barbara protested, and Barney tempered the apparent
-criticism--peacemaker as he usually was--with: "But you have to
-understand flowers jolly well to make them grow. And we do her credit,
-don't we!"
-
-Miss Toner looked from one to the other as they spoke, with her clear,
-benignant, comprehending gaze, and Mrs. Chadwick stared with her March
-Hare ingenuousness that had its full share, too, of March Hare
-shrewdness. She undertook no self-justification, commenting merely, in
-the pause that followed Barney's contribution: "I don't know what you
-mean by self-analysis unless it's thinking about yourself and mothers
-certainly haven't much time for that. You're quite right there, my
-dear," she nodded at Miss Toner, adding in a tone intended specially for
-her: "But young people often exaggerate things that are quite, quite
-simple when they come."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-"Come out and have a stroll," said Oldmeadow to Nancy. Tea was over and
-a primrose-coloured sunset filled the sky. They walked up and down the
-gravelled terrace before the house.
-
-Coldbrooks stood high, yet encircled by still higher stretches of bare
-or wooded upland. Its walled garden, where vegetable beds and lines of
-cordon apple-trees were pleasingly diversified by the herbaceous borders
-that ran beneath the walls, lay behind it; most of the bedroom windows
-looked down into the garden. Before it, to the south, lawns and meadows
-dropped to a lake fed by the brooks that gave the place its name. Beyond
-the lake were lower copses, tinkling now with the musical run of water
-and climbing softly on either side, so that from the terrace one had a
-vast curved space of sky before one. The sun was setting over the woods.
-
-It was Barney's grandfather, enriched by large shipping enterprises in
-Liverpool, who had bought the pleasant old house, half farm, half manor,
-and Barney's father had married the daughter of a local squire. But the
-family fortunes were much dwindled, and though Barney still nursed the
-project of returning one day to farm his own land there was little
-prospect of such a happy restoration. In spite of the Russian ballet and
-London portents, he was fonder, far, of Coldbrooks than of all of them
-put together. But he could afford neither time nor money for hunting,
-and his home was his only for week-ends and holidays. It was the most
-loveable of homes, more stately without than within, built of grey-gold
-Cotswold stone with beautiful stone chimneys and mullioned windows and
-three gables facing the southern sky. Within, everything was rather bare
-and shabby. There was no central heating, and no bathrooms. The
-tiger-skin that lay on the stone flags of the hall had lost all its
-hair. The piano rattled and wheezed in many of its notes. The patterns
-of the drawing-room chintzes were faded to a mere dim rosy riot, and
-stuffing protruded from the angles of the leather arm-chairs in the
-smoking-room. But it was, all the same, a delightful house to stay in.
-Eleanor Chadwick's shrewdness showed itself in her housekeeping. She
-knew what were the essentials. There was always a blazing fire in one's
-bedroom in the evening and the hottest of water with one's bath in the
-morning. Under the faded chintz, every chair in the drawing-room was
-comfortable. The toast was always crisp; the tea always made with
-boiling water; the servants cheerful. Mrs. Chadwick had a great gift
-with servants. She could reprove with extreme plaintiveness, yet never
-wound a susceptibility, and the servants' hall, as she often remarked
-with justice, was smarter and prettier than the drawing-room. Johnson,
-the old butler, had been at Coldbrooks since before her marriage, and
-the grey-haired parlourmaid had come with her when she had come as a
-bride. These familiar faces added depth to the sense of intimacy that
-was the gift of Coldbrooks. Oldmeadow loved the place as much as any of
-the Chadwicks did, and was as much at home in it.
-
-"There is a blackcap," said Nancy, "down in the copse. I felt sure I
-heard one this morning."
-
-"So it is," said Oldmeadow. They paused to listen.
-
-"It's the happiest of all," said Nancy.
-
-He had been wondering about Nancy ever since he had come. It was not her
-voice, gentle and meditative, that told him now she was unhappy. It was
-rather in contrast to the bird's clear ecstasy that he felt the
-heaviness of her heart.
-
-"It's wilder than the thrush and blackbird, isn't it?" he said. "Less
-conscious. The thrush is always listening to himself, I feel. Do you
-want to go to the Alps with Miss Toner, Nancy?"
-
-Nancy would not see Miss Toner as an angelic being and he wanted to know
-how she did see her. The others, it was evident, thought her angelic by
-a sort of group suggestion. She thought herself so, to begin with; snow,
-flowers, bells and all the rest of it; and they, ingenuous creatures,
-saw the mango-tree rising to heaven as the calm-eyed Yogi willed they
-should. But Nancy did not see the mango-tree. She was outside the group
-consciousness--with him.
-
-"Oh, no!" she now said quickly; and she added: "I don't mean that I
-don't like her. It's only that I don't know her. How can she want us?
-She came only yesterday."
-
-"But, you see, she means you to know her. And when she's known she
-couldn't imagine that anyone wouldn't like her."
-
-"I don't think she's conceited, if you mean that, Roger."
-
-"Conceit," he rejoined, "may be of an order so monstrous that it loses
-all pettiness. You've seen more of her than I have, of course."
-
-"I think she's good. She wants to do good. She wants to make people
-happy; and she does," said Nancy.
-
-"By taking them about in motors, you mean."
-
-"In every way. She's always thinking about pleasing them. In big and
-little ways. Aunt Eleanor loves her already. They had a long talk last
-night in Aunt Eleanor's room. She's given Meg the most beautiful little
-pendant--pearl and amethyst, an old Italian setting. She had it on last
-night and Meg said how lovely it was and she simply lifted it off her
-own neck and put it around Meg's. Meg had to keep it. She gave it in
-such a way that one would have to keep it."
-
-"Rather useful, mustn't it be, to have pendants so plentifully about you
-that you can hand them out to the first young lady who takes a fancy to
-them? Has she given you anything, Nancy?"
-
-"I'm sure she would. But I shall be more careful than Meg was."
-
-"Perhaps Meg will practise carelessness, since it's so remunerative.
-What has she given Palgrave? He seems absorbed."
-
-"Isn't it wonderful," said Nancy. "It's wonderful for Palgrave, you
-know, Roger, because he is rather sad and bitter, really, just now; and
-I think she will make him much happier. They went off to the woods
-together directly after breakfast."
-
-"What's he sad and bitter about? You mean his socialism and all the rest
-of it?"
-
-"Yes; and religion. You remember; when you were here at Christmas."
-
-"I remember that he was very foolish and made me lose my temper. Is
-there a chance of Miss Toner turning him into a good capitalist and
-churchman?"
-
-Nancy smiled, but very faintly. "It's serious, you know, Roger."
-
-"What she's done to them already, you mean?"
-
-"Yes. What she's done already. She had Meg, after lunch, in her room.
-Meg looked quite different when she came out. It's very strange, Roger.
-It's as if she'd changed them all. I almost feel," Nancy looked round at
-the happy house and up at the tranquil elms where the rooks were noisily
-preparing for bed, "as if nothing could be the same again, since she's
-come." Her clear profile revealed little of the trouble in her heart.
-They had not named Barney; but he must be named.
-
-"It's white magic," said Oldmeadow. "You and I will keep our heads, my
-dear. We don't want to be changed, do we? What has she done to Barney?
-He is in love with her, of course."
-
-"Of course," said Nancy.
-
-He had never been sure before that she was in love with Barney. She was
-nine years younger and had been a child during years of his manhood.
-Oldmeadow had thought it in his own fond imagination only that the link
-between them was so close. But now he knew what Nancy herself, perhaps,
-had hardly known till then. The colour did not rise in her cheek, but
-through her voice, through her bearing, went a subtle steadying of
-herself. "Of course he is in love with her," she repeated and he felt
-that she forced herself to face the truth.
-
-They stopped at the end of the terrace. A little path turned aside
-towards the copse and the grass beneath the trees was scattered with the
-pale radiance of primroses. Nancy seemed to look at the flowers, but she
-sought no refuge in comment on them; and as they looked in silence,
-while the rooks, circling and cawing above, settled on their nests, a
-sense of arrested time came to Oldmeadow, and a phrase of music,
-blissful in its sadness, where gentle German words went to a gentle
-German strain, passed through his mind. Something of Schubert's--Young
-Love--First Grief. It seemed to pierce to him from the young girl's
-heart and he knew that he would never forget and that Nancy would never
-forget the moment; the rooks; the primroses; the limpid sky. The
-blackcap's flitting melody had ceased.
-
-"Do you think she may make him happy?" he asked. It was sweet to him to
-know that she had no need of a refuge from him. She could take counsel
-with him as candidly as if there had been no tacit avowal between them.
-She looked round at him as they went on walking and he saw pain and
-perplexity in her eyes.
-
-"What do you think, Roger?" she said. "Can she?"
-
-"Well, might she, if Barney is stupid enough?"
-
-"I don't feel he would have to be stupid to be happy with her, Roger.
-You are not fair to her. What I wonder is whether he will be strong
-enough not to be quite swept away."
-
-"You think she'll overpower him? Leave him with no mind of his own?"
-
-"Something like that perhaps. Because she's very strong. And she is so
-different. Everything in her is different. She has nothing--nothing with
-us, or we with her. We haven't done the same things or seen the same
-sights or thought the same thoughts. I hardly feel as if the trees could
-look the same to her as they do to us or the birds sound the same. And
-she'll want such different things."
-
-"Perhaps she'll want his things," Oldmeadow mused. "She seems to like
-them quite immensely already."
-
-"Ah, but only because she's going to do something to them," said Nancy.
-"Only because she's going to change them. I don't think she'd like
-anything she could do nothing for."
-
-Nancy had quite grown up. She had seen further than he had. He felt her
-quiet comment big with intuitive wisdom.
-
-"You see deep, my dear," he said. "There's something portentous in your
-picture, you know."
-
-"There is something portentous about her, Roger. That is just what I
-feel. That is just what troubles me."
-
-"She may be portentous, in relation to us, and what she may do to us,"
-said Oldmeadow, "but I'm convinced, for all her marvels, that she's a
-very ordinary young person. Don't let us magnify her. If she's not
-magnified she won't work so many marvels. They're largely an affair, I'm
-sure of it, of motors and pendants. She's ordinary. That's what I take
-my stand on."
-
-"If she's ordinary, why do you feel, too, that she'll sweep Barney
-away?" Nancy was not at all convinced by his demonstration.
-
-"Why, because he's in love with her. That's all. Her only menace is in
-her difference; her complacency. What it comes to, I suppose, is that we
-must hope, if they're to be happy, that he'll like her things."
-
-"Yes; but what it comes to then, Roger, is that we shall lose Barney,"
-Nancy said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Miss Toner did not come down to breakfast next morning and Oldmeadow was
-conscious of a feeling of disproportionate relief at not finding her in
-the big, bare, panelled dining-room where a portrait of Mrs. Chadwick in
-court dress presided over one wall and Meg and Barney played with
-rabbits, against an imitation Gainsborough background, on another. Both
-pictures were an affliction to Barney; but to Mrs. Chadwick's eye they
-left nothing to be desired in beauty, and, when Barney was not there to
-protest, she would still fondly point out the length of eyelash that the
-artist had so faithfully captured in the two children.
-
-The sense of change and foreboding that he and Nancy, with differences,
-had recognized in their talk, must have haunted Oldmeadow's slumbers,
-for he had dreamed of Miss Toner, coming towards him along the terrace,
-in white, as she had been at dinner, with the beautiful pearls she had
-worn, lifting her hand and saying as the rooks cawed overhead--for the
-rooks cawed though the moon was brightly shining: "I can hear them,
-too."
-
-There had been nothing to suggest such a dream in her demeanour at
-dinner; nothing portentous, that is. Simple for all her competence,
-girlish for all the splendour of her white array, she had spoken little,
-looking at them all, and listening, gravely sometimes, but with a
-pervading gentleness; and once or twice he had found her eyes on his;
-those large, light eyes, dispassionately and impersonally benignant,
-giving him, with their suggestion of seeing around but also very far
-beyond you, a curious sense of space. Once or twice he had felt himself
-a little at a loss as he met their gaze--it had endeared her to him the
-less that she should almost discompose him--and he had felt anew the
-presence of power in her ugly little face and even of beauty in her
-colourless skin, her colourless yet so living eyes, and her crown of
-wondrous gold. It had been, no doubt, this element of aesthetic
-significance, merging with Nancy's words, that had built up the figure
-of his dream; for so he had seen her, grey and white and gold in the
-unearthly light, while the rooks cawed overhead.
-
-His friends this morning, though they were all talking of her, possessed
-in their gaiety and lightness of heart an exorcising quality. So much
-gaiety and lightness couldn't be quenched or quelled--if that was what
-Miss Toner's influence menaced. Between them all they would manage to
-quench and quell Miss Toner, rather, and he recovered his sense of her
-fundamental absurdity as he felt anew their instinctive and
-unself-conscious wisdom.
-
-"Isn't it odd, Roger, she hardly knows England at all," said Mrs.
-Chadwick, as he finished his porridge, made his tea at the side-table,
-and took his place beside her. "She's been so little here, although she
-seems to have travelled everywhere and lived everywhere."
-
-"Except in her own country," Oldmeadow ventured the surmise, but
-urbanely, for Barney sat opposite him.
-
-"Oh, but she's travelled there, too, immensely," said Barney. "She's
-really spent most of her life in America, I think, Mother. She has a
-little sort of bungalow on the coast in California, orange-trees and
-roses and all the rest of it; a fairy-tale place; and a house in the
-mountains in New England, high up among the pine-woods."
-
-"And a private train, I suppose, to carry her from one to the other.
-What splendid pearls," said Oldmeadow, buttering his toast. "Haven't you
-asked for them yet, Meg?"
-
-Meg was not easily embarrassed. "Not yet," she said. "I'm waiting for
-them, though. Meanwhile this is pretty, isn't it?" The pendant hung on
-her breast.
-
-"I believe she would give Meg her pearls, or any of us. I believe she'd
-give _anything_ to _anyone_," sighed Mrs. Chadwick. "She doesn't seem to
-think about money or things of that sort, material things you know, at
-all. I do wish I could get the map of America straight. All being in
-those uneven squares, like Turkish Delight, makes it so difficult. One
-can't remember which lump is which--though Texas, in my geography, was
-pale green. The nice tinned things come from California, don't they? And
-New England is near Boston--the hub of the universe, that dear, droll
-Oliver Wendell Holmes used to call it. I suppose they _are_ very clever
-there. She has been wonderfully educated. There's nothing she doesn't
-seem to have learned. And her maid adores her, Roger. I was talking to
-her just now. Such a nice French woman with quite beautiful dark eyes,
-but very melancholy; we make a mistake, I believe, in imagining that the
-French are a gay people. I always think that's such a good sign. So kind
-about my dreadful accent."
-
-"A good sign to have your maid like you, Mummy, or to have melancholy
-eyes?" Meg inquired. "I think she's a rather ill-tempered looking woman.
-But of course anybody would adore Adrienne. She's an angel of patience,
-I'm sure. I never met such an angel. We don't grow them here," said Meg,
-while Barney's triumphant eyes said: "I told you so," to Oldmeadow
-across the table.
-
-After breakfast, in the sunlight on the terrace, Mrs. Chadwick confided
-her hopes to him. "She really is an angel, Roger. I never met anyone in
-the least like her. So good, and gifted, too, and all that money. Only
-think what it would mean for dear Barney. He could take back the farm;
-the lease falls in next year, and come back here to live."
-
-"You think she cares for him?"
-
-"Yes; indeed I do. She cares for us all, already, as you can see. But I
-believe it's because she's adopting us all, as her family. And she said
-to me yesterday that she disapproved so much of our English way of
-turning out mothers and thought families ought to love each other and
-live together, young and old. That's from being so much in France,
-perhaps. I told her _I_ shouldn't have liked it at all if old Mrs.
-Chadwick had wanted to come and live with Francis and me. She was such a
-masterful old lady, Roger, very Low Church, and quite dreadfully jealous
-of Francis. And eldest sons should inherit, of course, or what would
-become of estates? My dear father used always to say that the greatness
-of England was founded on landed estates. I told her that. But she
-looked at me quite gravely as if she hardly understood when I tried to
-explain--it all goes in with Waterloo being won on the fields of Eton,
-doesn't it? It's quite curious the feeling of restfulness she gives me,
-about Barney--a sort of Nunc Dimittis feeling, you know."
-
-"Only she doesn't want you to depart. Well, that's certainly all to the
-good and let's hope England's greatness won't suffer from the
-irregularity. Has she told you much about her life? her people?"
-Oldmeadow asked. He could not find it in his heart to shadow such
-ingenuous contentment. And after all what was there to say against Miss
-Toner, except that she would change things?
-
-"Oh, a great deal. Everything I asked; for I thought it best, quite
-casually you know, to find out what I could. Not people of any position,
-you know, Roger, though I think her mother was better in that way than
-her father; for _his_ father made tooth-paste. It's from the tooth-paste
-all the money comes. But it's always puzzling about Americans, isn't it?
-And it doesn't really make any difference, once they're over here, does
-it?"
-
-"Not if they've got the money," he could not suppress; it was for his
-own personal enjoyment and Mrs. Chadwick cloudlessly concurred: "No, not
-if they have the money. And she has, you see. And besides that she's
-good and gifted and has had such a wonderful education. Her mother died
-five years ago. She showed me two pictures of her. A beautiful woman;
-very artistic-looking. Rather one's idea of Corinne, though Corinne was
-really Madame de Staël, I believe; and she was very plain."
-
-"Was she dressed like Queen Louise of Prussia; coming down the steps,
-you know, in the Empire dress with white bound round her head?"
-
-"Yes; she was. How did you know, Roger? Extremely picturesque; but quite
-a lady, too. At least"--Mrs. Chadwick hesitated, perplexed between
-kindliness and candour--"almost."
-
-"I heard about her from Mrs. Aldesey. You remember my American friend.
-She didn't know her, but had seen her years ago in New York in that
-romantic costume."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick felt perhaps the slight irony in his voice, for she
-rejoined, though not at all provocatively: "Why shouldn't people look
-romantic if they can? I should think Mrs. Toner had a much more romantic
-life than Mrs. Aldesey. _She's_ gone on just as we have, hasn't she,
-seeing always the same people; and being conventional. Whereas Adrienne
-and her mother seem to have known everyone strange and interesting
-wherever they went; great scientists and thinkers, you know; and poets
-and pianists. Adrienne told me that her mother always seemed to her to
-have great wings and that's just what I felt about her when I looked at
-her. She'd flown everywhere." As she spoke Miss Toner appeared upon the
-doorstep.
-
-Although it was Sunday she had not varied her dress, which was still the
-simple dress of dim, dark-blue; but over it she wore a silk jacket, and
-a straw hat trimmed with a lighter shade of blue was tied, in
-summer-like fashion, beneath her chin. She carried a sunshade and a
-small basket filled with letters.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick, both hands outstretched, went to meet her. Oldmeadow had
-never before seen her kiss an acquaintance of two days' standing. "I do
-hope you slept well, my dear," she said.
-
-"Very well," said Miss Toner, including Oldmeadow in her smile. "Except
-for a little while when I woke up and lay awake and couldn't get the
-cawing of your rooks out of my mind. I seemed to hear them going on and
-on."
-
-"Oh, dear! How unfortunate! But surely they weren't cawing in the
-night!" cried Mrs. Chadwick, and Miss Toner, laughing and holding her
-still by the hands, turned to tell Barney, who closely followed her,
-that his mother was really afraid, because she had thought of rooks in
-the night, that their Coldbrooks birds had actually been inhospitable
-enough to keep her awake with their cawings. Meg and Barbara and Nancy
-had all now emerged and there was much laughter and explanation.
-
-"You see, Mummy thinks you might work miracles--even among the rooks,"
-said Barney, while Oldmeadow testily meditated on his own discomfort. It
-might have been mere coincidence, or it might--he must admit it--have
-been Miss Toner's thoughts travelling into his dream or his dream
-troubling her thoughts; of the two last alternatives he didn't know
-which he disliked the more.
-
-"It's time to get ready for church, children," said Mrs. Chadwick, when,
-after much merriment at her expense, the rooks and their occult
-misdemeanours were disposed of. "Where is Palgrave? I do hope he won't
-miss again. It does so hurt dear Mr. Bodman's feelings. Are you coming
-with us, my dear?" she asked Miss Toner.
-
-Miss Toner, smiling upon them all, her sunshade open on her shoulder,
-said that if they did not mind she did not think she would come. "I only
-go to church when friends get married or their babies christened," she
-said, "or something of that sort. I was never brought up to it, you see.
-Mother never went."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's March Hare eyes dwelt on her. "You aren't a
-Churchwoman?"
-
-"Oh, dear, no!" said Miss Toner, and the very suggestion seemed to amuse
-her.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick hesitated: "A Dissenter?" she ventured. "There are so many
-sects in America I've heard. Though I met a very charming American
-bishop once."
-
-"No--not a Dissenter; if you mean by that a Presbyterian or a Methodist
-or a Swedenborgian," said Miss Toner, shaking her head.
-
-Palgrave had now joined them and stood on the step above her. She smiled
-round and up at him.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick, her distress alleviated yet her perplexity deepened,
-ventured further: "You are a Christian, I hope, dear?"
-
-"Oh, not at all," said Miss Toner gravely now and very kindly. "Not in
-any orthodox way, I mean. Not in any way that an American bishop or your
-Mr. Bodman would acknowledge. I recognize Christ as a great teacher, as
-a great human soul; one of the very greatest; gone on before. But I
-don't divide the human from the divine in the way the churches do;
-creeds mean nothing to me, and I'd rather say my prayers out of doors on
-a day like this, in the sunlight, than in any church. I feel nearer God
-alone in His great world, than in any church built with human hands. But
-we must all follow our own light." She spoke in her flat, soft voice,
-gravely but very simply; and she looked affectionately at her hostess as
-she added: "You wouldn't want me to come with you from mere conformity."
-
-Poor Mrs. Chadwick, standing, her brood about her, in the sweet Sabbath
-sunlight, had to Oldmeadow's eye an almost comically arrested air. How
-was a creedless, churchless mistress of Coldbrooks to be fitted in to
-her happy vision of Barney's future? What would the village say to a
-squiress who never went to church and who said her prayers in the
-sunlight alone? "But, of course, better alone," he seemed to hear her
-cogitate, "than that anyone should see her doing such a very curious
-thing." And aloud she did murmur: "Of course not; of course not, dear.
-And if you go into the little arbour down by the lake no one will
-disturb you, I'm sure. Must it be quite in the open? Mere conformity is
-such a shallow thing. But all the same I should like the rector to come
-and talk things over with you. He's such a good man and very, very
-broad-minded. He brings science so often into his sermons--sometimes I
-think the people don't quite follow it all; and only the other day he
-said to me, about modern unrest and scepticism:
-
- 'There is more faith in honest doubt,
- Believe me, than in half the creeds.'
-
-Mamma met Lord Tennyson once and felt him to be a deeply religious
-man--though rather ill-tempered; he was really very rude to her, I
-always thought, and I do so dislike rudeness.--And travelling about so
-much, dear, you probably had so little teaching."
-
-Miss Toner's eyes were incapable of irony and they only deepened now in
-benevolence as they rested on her hostess. "But I haven't any doubts,"
-she said, shaking her head and smiling: "No doubts at all. You reach the
-truth through your church and I reach it through nature and love and
-life. And the beautiful thing is that it's the same truth, really; the
-same beautiful truth that God loves us all, and that we are all the
-children of God. I should be very pleased to meet your rector, of
-course, because I like meeting anyone who is good and true. But I was
-taught. My mother taught me always. And she was the freest, wisest soul
-I have ever known."
-
-"I'll stay with you," said Palgrave suddenly from his place on the step
-above her. His eyes, over her shoulder, had met Oldmeadow's and perhaps
-what he saw in the old friend's face determined his testimony. "Church
-means nothing to me, either; and less than nothing. I'm not so
-charitable as you are, and don't think all roads lead to truth. Some
-lead away, I think. You know perfectly well, Mummy, that the dear old
-rector is a regular duffer and you slept all through the sermon the last
-time I went; you did, really! I was too amused to sleep. He was trying
-to explain original sin without mentioning Adam or Eve or the Garden of
-Eden. It was most endearing! Like some one trying to avoid the eye of an
-old acquaintance whom they'd come to the conclusion they really must
-cut! I do so like the idea of Adam and Eve becoming unsuitable
-acquaintances for the enlightened clergy!"
-
-"There is no sin," said Miss Toner. Barney was not quite comfortable;
-Oldmeadow saw that. He kicked about in the gravel, a little flushed,
-and when, once or twice, the old family friend met his eye, it was
-quickly averted. "God is Good; and everything else is mortal
-mind--mistake--illusion."
-
-"You are a sound Platonist, Miss Toner," Oldmeadow observed, and his
-kindness hardly cloaked his irony.
-
-"Am I?" she said. When she looked at one she never averted her eyes.
-She looked until she had seen all that she wished to see. "I am not fond
-of metaphysics."
-
-"Socrates defined sin as ignorance, you know, and in a sense it may be.
-All the same," said Oldmeadow, and he felt that they were all listening
-and that in the eyes of his old friends it was more than unlikely that
-he would get the better of Miss Toner--"there's mortal mind to be
-accounted for, isn't there, and why it gets us continually into such a
-mess. Whatever name you call it by, there is something that does get us
-into a mess and mightn't it be a wholesome discipline to hear it
-denounced once a week?"
-
-"Not by some one more ignorant than I am!" said Miss Toner, laughing
-gently. "I'll go to church for love of Mrs. Chadwick, but not for the
-sake of the discipline!"
-
-"Mr. Bodman never denounces. Roger is giving you quite a wrong idea,"
-said Mrs. Chadwick. She had stood looking from one to the other,
-distressed and bewildered, and she now prepared to leave them. "And
-Palgrave is very, very unjust. Of course you must not come, dear. It
-would make me quite unhappy. But Mr. Bodman is not a duffer. If Palgrave
-feels like that he must certainly stay away. Perhaps you can teach him
-to be more charitable. It's easy to see the mote in our neighbour's
-eye." Mrs. Chadwick's voice slightly trembled. She had been much moved
-by her son's defection.
-
-"Come, Mummy, you're not going to say _I'm_ a duffer!" Palgrave passed
-an affectionately bantering arm round her shoulders. "Dufferism isn't
-_my_ beam!"
-
-But very sadly Mrs. Chadwick drew away, saying as she turned into the
-house: "No; that isn't your beam. But pride may be, Palgrave. Spiritual
-pride."
-
-Oldmeadow remained standing in the sunlight with Miss Toner and the two
-young men. The girls had followed Mrs. Chadwick, Meg casting a laughing
-glance of appreciation at him as she went. Religious scruples would
-never keep Meg from church if she had a pretty spring dress to wear.
-
-"After all," he carried on, mildly, the altercation--if that was what it
-was between him and Miss Toner--"good Platonists as we may be, we
-haven't reached the stage of Divine Contemplation yet and things do
-happen that are difficult to account for, if sin is nothing more
-positive than illusion and mistake. All the forms of _ôte-toi que je m'y
-mette_. All the forms of jealousy and malice. Deliberate cruelties.
-History is full of horrors, isn't it? There's a jealousy of goodness in
-the human heart, as well as a love. The betrayal of Christ by Judas is
-symbolic."
-
-He had screwed his eyeglass into his eye the better to see Miss Toner
-and looked very much like a solicitor trying to coax dry facts out of a
-romantic client. And in the transparent shadow of her hat Miss Toner,
-with her incomparable composure, gave him all her attention.
-
-"I don't account. I don't account for anything. Do you?" she said. "I
-only feel and know. But even the dreadful things, the things that seem
-to us so dreadful--isn't it always ignorance? Ignorance of what is
-really good and happy--and the illusion of a separate self? When we are
-all, really, one. All, really, together." She held out her arms, her
-little basket hanging from her wrist. "And if we feel that at last, and
-know it, those dreadful things can't happen any more."
-
-"Your 'if' is the standing problem of metaphysics and ethics. Why don't
-we feel and know it? That's the question? And since we most of us, for
-most of the time, don't feel and know it, don't we keep closer to the
-truth if we accept the traditional phraseology and admit that there's
-something in the texture of life, something in ourselves, that tempts
-us, or impedes us, or crushes us, and call it sin--evil?"
-
-He was looking at her, still with his latent irony though kindly enough
-indeed, and he had, as he looked, an intuition about her. She had never
-been tempted, she had never been impeded, she had never been crushed.
-That was her power. She was, in a fashion, sinless. It was as if she had
-been hypnotized in infancy to be good. And while the fact made her in
-one sense so savourless, it made her in another so significant. She
-would go much further than most people in any direction she wanted to go
-simply because she was not aware of obstacles and had no inhibitions.
-
-"Call it what you like," said Miss Toner. She still smiled--but more
-gravely. Barney had ceased to stroll and kick. He had come to a
-standstill beside them, and, his hands in his pockets, his eyes fixed on
-his beloved, showed himself as completely reassured. Palgrave still
-stood on the step above her and seemed to watch the snowy, piled-up
-clouds that adorned the tranquil sky. "I feel it a mistake to make
-unreal things seem real by giving them big names. We become afraid of
-them and fear is what impedes us most of all in life. For so many
-generations humanity has seen ghosts in the evening mists and taken its
-indigestion for the promptings of a demon. We've got away from all that
-now, Mr. Oldmeadow. We see that mists are mists and indigestion
-indigestion, and that there aren't such things as ghosts and demons.
-We've come out, all together, hand in hand, on the Open Road and we
-don't want, ever any more, to be reminded, even, of the Dark Ages."
-
-Before her fluency, Oldmeadow felt himself grow less kindly. "You grant
-there have been dark ages, then? I count that a concession. Things may
-not be evil now, but they were once."
-
-"Not a concession at all," said Miss Toner. "Only an explanation of what
-has happened--an explanation of what you call the mess, Mr. Oldmeadow."
-
-"So that when we find ourselves misbehaving to one another as we march
-along the Open Road, we may know it's only indigestion and take a pill."
-
-She didn't like badinage. That, at all events, was evident to him, even
-in her imperturbability. She took it calmly--not lightly; and if she was
-not already beginning to dislike him, it was because disliking people
-was a reality she didn't recognize. "We don't misbehave if we are on the
-Open Road," she said.
-
-"Oh, but you're falling back now on good old-fashioned theology,"
-Oldmeadow retorted. "The sheep, saved and well-behaved, keeping to the
-road, and the goats--all those who misbehave and stray--classed with the
-evening mists."
-
-"No," said Miss Toner eyeing him, "I don't class them with the evening
-mists; I class them with the sick, whom we must be kind to and take care
-of."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick was now emerging in her new spring hat, which was not very
-successful and gave emphasis to her general air of strain. Meg's hat was
-very successful, as Meg's hats always were; and if Nancy's did not shine
-beside it, it was, at all events, exceedingly becoming to her. Nancy's
-eyes went to Barney. Barney, in the past, had been very appreciative of
-becoming hats. But he had no eyes for Nancy now. He had drawn Miss Toner
-aside and Oldmeadow heard their colloquy:
-
-"Would you rather I didn't go?"
-
-"I'd rather, always, you followed your light, dear friend."
-
-"I do like going here, you know. It seems to belong with it all--and
-Mummy can't bear our not going."
-
-"It makes your dear mother happy. It all means love to you."
-
-"Not only that"--Oldmeadow imagined that Barney blushed, and he heard
-his stammer: "I don't know what I believe about everything; but the
-service goes much deeper than anything I could think for myself." Their
-voices dropped. All that came further to Oldmeadow was from Miss Toner:
-"It makes you nearer than if you stayed."
-
-"Confound her ineffability!" he thought. "It rests with her, then,
-whether he should go or stay."
-
-It certainly did. Barney moved away with them all, leaving Palgrave to
-the more evident form of proximity.
-
-"You know," Mrs. Chadwick murmured to Oldmeadow as they went, between
-the primroses, down the little path and through a wicket-gate that led
-to the village--"you know, Roger, it's _quite_ possible that they may
-say their prayers together. It's like Quakers, isn't it--or Moravians;
-or whoever those curious people are who are buried standing up--so
-dismal and uncomfortable, I always think. But it's better that Palgrave
-should say his prayers with some one, and somewhere, isn't it, than that
-he shouldn't say them at all?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-"Mother's got the most poisonous headache," said Meg. "I don't think
-she'll be able to come down to tea."
-
-She had joined Oldmeadow on the rickety old bench where he sat reading
-and smoking in a sunny corner of the garden. A band of golden
-wallflowers behind them exhaled the deep fragrance that he always
-associated with spring and Sunday and Coldbrooks, and the old stone wall
-behind the flowers exhaled a warmth that was like a fragrance.
-
-"Adrienne is with her," Meg added. She had seated herself and put her
-elbows on her knees and her chin in her hands as though she intended a
-solid talk.
-
-"Will that be likely to help her head?" Oldmeadow inquired. "I should
-say not, if she's going to continue the discourse of this morning."
-
-"Did you think all that rather silly?" Meg inquired, tapping her smart
-toes on the ground and watching them. "You looked as if you did. But
-then you usually do look as though you thought most things and people
-silly. I didn't--I mean, not in her. I quite saw what you did; at least
-I think so. But she can say things that would be silly in other people.
-Now Palgrave is silly. There's just the difference. Is it because he
-always feels he's scoring off somebody and she doesn't?" Meg was
-evidently capable, for all her devotion, of dispassionate inquiry.
-
-"She's certainly more secure than Palgrave," said Oldmeadow. "But I
-feel that's only because she's less intelligent. Palgrave is aware,
-keenly, of a critical and probably hostile world; and Miss Toner is
-unaware of everything except her own benevolence, and the need for it."
-
-Meg meditated. Then she laughed. "You _are_ spiteful, Roger. Oh--I don't
-mean about Adrienne in particular. But you always see the weak spots in
-people, first go. It's rather jolly, all the same, if you come to think
-it over, to be like that. Perhaps that's all she is aware of; but it
-takes you a good way--wanting to help people and seeing how they can be
-helped."
-
-"Yes; it does take you a good way. I don't deny that Miss Toner will go
-far."
-
-"And make us go too far, perhaps?" Meg mused. "Well, I'm quite ready for
-a move. I think we're all rather stodgy, really, down here. And up in
-London, too, if it comes to that. I'm rather disappointed in London, you
-know, Roger, and what it does for one. Just a different kind of sheep,
-it seems to me, from the kind we are in the country; noisy skipping
-sheep instead of silent, slow ones. But they all follow each other about
-in just the same way. And what one likes is to see someone who isn't
-following."
-
-"Yes; that's true, certainly," Oldmeadow conceded. "Miss Toner isn't a
-sheep. She's the sort of person who sets the sheep moving. I'm not so
-sure that she knows where she is going, all the same."
-
-"You mean--Be careful; don't you?" said Meg, looking up at him sideways
-with her handsome eyes. "I'm not such a sheep myself, when it comes to
-that, you know, Roger. I look before I leap--even after Adrienne," she
-laughed; and Oldmeadow, looking back at her, laughed too--pleased with
-her, yet a little disconcerted by what she revealed of experience.
-
-"The reason I like her so awfully," Meg went on--while he reflected
-that, after all, she was now twenty-five--"and it's a good thing I do,
-isn't it, since it's evident she's going to take Barney; but the reason
-is that she's so interested in one. More than anyone I ever knew--far
-and far away. Of course Mother's interested; but it's _for_ one; _about_
-one; not _in_ one, as it were. And then darling old Mummy isn't exactly
-intelligent, is she; or only in such unexpected spots that it's never
-much good to one; one can never count on it beforehand. Whereas Adrienne
-is so interested in you that she makes you feel more interested in
-yourself than you ever dreamed you could feel. Do you know what I mean?
-Is it because she's American, do you think? English people aren't
-interested in themselves, off their own bat, perhaps; or in other people
-either! I don't mean we're not selfish all right!" Meg laughed.
-
-"Selfish and yet impersonal," Oldmeadow mused. "With less of our social
-consciousness in use, with more of it locked up in automatism,
-possibly."
-
-"There's nothing locked up in Adrienne; absolutely nothing," Meg
-declared. "It's all there--out in the shop-window. And it's a big window
-too, even though some of the hats and scarves, so to speak, may strike
-us as funny. But, seriously, what is it about her, do you think? How can
-she care so much?--about everybody?"
-
-He remembered Nancy's diagnosis. "Not about everybody. Only about people
-she can do something for. You'll find she won't care about me."
-
-"Why should she? You don't care for her. Why should she waste herself on
-people who don't need her?" Meg's friendliness of glance did not
-preclude a certain hardness.
-
-"Why indeed? It could never occur to her, of course, that she might need
-somebody. I don't mean that spitefully. She is strong. She doesn't
-need."
-
-"Exactly. Like you," said Meg. "She's quite right to pay no attention to
-the other strong people. For of course you are very strong, Roger, and
-frightfully clever; and good, too. Only one has to be cleverer, no
-doubt, than we are to see your goodness as easily as Adrienne's. It's
-the shop-window again. She shows her goodness all the time; and you
-don't."'
-
-Oldmeadow knocked the ashes out of his pipe and felt for his
-tobacco-pouch. "I show my spite. No; you mustn't count me among the
-good. I suppose your mother's headache came on this morning after she
-found out that Miss Toner doesn't go to church."
-
-"Of course it was that. You saw that she was thinking about it all
-through the service, didn't you?" said Meg. "And once, poor lamb, she
-said, 'Have mercy upon us, miserable sinners' instead of Amen. Did you
-notice? It will bother her frightfully, of course. But after all it's
-not so bad as if Adrienne were a Dissenter and wanted to go to chapel!
-Mummy in her heart of hearts would much rather you were a pagan than a
-Dissenter. I don't think it will make a bit of difference really. So
-long as she gives money to the church, and is nice to the village
-people. Mother will get over it," said Meg.
-
-He thought so too. His own jocose phrase returned to him. As long as the
-money was there it didn't make any difference. But Meg's security on
-that score interested him. With all her devotion to the new friend she
-struck him, fundamentally, as less kind than Nancy, who had none. But
-that, no doubt, was because Meg, fundamentally, was hard and Nancy
-loving. It was because of Miss Toner's interest in herself that Meg was
-devoted. "You're so sure, then, that she's going to take Barney?" he
-asked.
-
-"Quite sure," said Meg. "Surer than he is. Surer than she is. She's in
-love with him all right; more than she knows herself, poor dear. No
-doubt she thinks she's making up her mind and choosing. Weighing Barney
-in the balance and counting up his virtues. But it's all decided
-already; and not by his virtues; it never is," said Meg, again with her
-air of unexpected experience. "It's something much more important than
-virtues; it's the thickness of his eyelashes and the way his teeth show
-when he smiles, and all his pretty ways and habits. Things like that.
-She loves looking at him and more than that, even, she loves having him
-look at her. I have an idea that she's not had people very much in love
-with her before; not people with eyelashes and teeth like Barney. In
-spite of all her money. And she's getting on, too. She's as old as
-Barney, you know. It's the one, real romance that's ever come to her,
-poor dear. Funny you don't see it. Men don't see that sort of thing I
-suppose. But she _couldn't_ give Barney up now, simply. It's because of
-that, you know"--Meg glanced behind them and lowered her voice--"that
-she doesn't like Nancy."
-
-"Doesn't like Nancy!" Oldmeadow's instant indignation was in his voice.
-"What has Nancy to do with it?"
-
-"She might have had a great deal, poor darling little Nancy; and it's
-that Adrienne feels. She felt it at once. I saw she did; that Nancy and
-Barney had been very near each other; that there was an affinity, a
-sympathy, call it what you like, that would have led to something more.
-It wouldn't have done at all, of course; at least I suppose not. They
-knew each other too well; and, until the last year or two, she's been
-too young for him. And then, above all, she's hardly any money. But all
-the same, if he hadn't come across Adrienne and been bowled over like
-this, Barney would have fallen in love with Nancy. She's getting to be
-so lovely looking, for one thing, isn't she? And Barney's so susceptible
-to looks. He was falling in love with her last winter and she knew it as
-well as I did. It's rather rotten luck for Nancy because I'm afraid she
-cares; but then women do have rotten luck about love affairs," said Meg,
-now sombrely. "The dice are loaded against them every time."
-
-Oldmeadow sat smoking in silence for some moments, making no effort to
-master his strong resentment; taking, rather, full possession of its
-implications. "Somewhat of a flaw in your angel you must admit," he said
-presently. "She doesn't like people who are as strong as she is and she
-doesn't like people who might have been loved instead of herself. It
-narrows the scale of her benevolence, you know. It makes her look
-perilously like a jealous prig, and a prig without any excuse for
-jealousy into the bargain."
-
-"Temper, Roger," Meg observed, casting her hard, friendly glance round
-at him; "I know you think there's no one quite to match Nancy; and I
-think you're not far wrong. She's the straightest, sweetest-tempered
-girl who ever stepped on two feet. But all the same Adrienne isn't a
-prig, and if she's jealous she can't help herself. She _wants_ to love
-Nancy; she thinks she does love her; she'll always be heavenly to her.
-She can do a lot for Nancy, you know. She will do a lot for her, even if
-Nancy holds her off. But she wishes frightfully that she was old and
-ugly. She wishes that Barney weren't so fond of her without thinking
-about her. She's jealous and she can't help herself--like all the rest
-of us!" Meg laughed grimly. "When it comes to that we're none of us
-angels."
-
-It was tea-time and the dear old gong sounded balmily from the house. As
-they went along the path the rooks again were cawing overhead and dimly,
-like the hint of evening in the air, he remembered his dream and the
-sense of menace. "You know, it's not like all the rest of you," he said.
-"It's not like Nancy, for instance. Nancy wouldn't dislike a person
-because she was jealous of them. In fact I don't believe Nancy could be
-jealous. She'd only be hurt."
-
-"It's rather a question of degree, that, isn't it?" said Meg. "In one
-form of it you're poisoned and in the other you're cut with a knife; and
-the latter is the prettier way of suffering; doesn't make you come out
-in a rash and feel sick. Nancy is cut with the knife; and if she's not
-jealous in the ugly sense, she dislikes Adrienne all right."
-
-"Why should she like her?" Oldmeadow retorted, and Meg's simile seemed
-to cut into him, too. "She doesn't need her money or her interest or her
-love. She doesn't dislike her. She merely wishes she were somewhere
-else--as I do."
-
-The garden path led straight into the house. One entered a sort of
-lobby, where coats and hats and rackets and gardening baskets were kept,
-and from the lobby went into the hall. Tea was, as always, laid there
-and Mrs. Chadwick, as Meg and Oldmeadow came in, was descending the
-staircase at the further end, leaning on Adrienne Toner's arm.
-
-"You see. She's done it!" Meg murmured. She seemed to bear him no
-ill-will for his expressed aversion. "I never knew one of Mother's
-headaches go so quickly."
-
-"I expect she'd rather have stayed quietly upstairs," said Oldmeadow;
-"she looks puzzled. As if she didn't know what had happened to her."
-
-"Like a rabbit when it comes out of the conjuror's hat," said the
-irreverent daughter.
-
-That was precisely what poor Eleanor Chadwick did look like and for the
-moment his mind was diverted by amusement at her appearance from its
-bitter preoccupation. Mrs. Chadwick was the rabbit and Miss Toner was
-the conjuror indeed; bland and secure and holding her trophy in a firm
-but gentle grasp. Not until they were all seated did Barney and Nancy
-appear and then it was evident to him that if Miss Toner were jealous of
-Nancy she did not fear her, for it was she who had arranged the walk
-from which the young couple had just returned.
-
-"Was it lovely?" she asked Barney, as he took the place beside her. "Oh,
-I do wish I could have come; but I knew your Mother needed me."
-
-"The primroses are simply ripping in the wood," said Barney.
-
-Nancy carried a large bunch of primroses.
-
-"Ripping," said Miss Toner, laughing gently.
-
-"How absurd of you, Barney. Could anything be less ripping than
-primroses? How beautiful they are and what a lovely bunch. One sees that
-Miss Averil loves them from the way she has picked them." If she did not
-call Nancy by her Christian name it was, Oldmeadow knew, not her but
-Nancy's fault.
-
-Nancy still stood beside the table and from the fact of standing, while
-all the rest of them were seated, from the fact of being called Miss
-Averil, she seemed, for the moment, oddly an outsider; as if she hardly
-belonged to the circle of which Miss Toner was the centre. "Do come and
-sit near us," said Miss Toner. "For I had to miss you, too, you see, as
-well as the primroses."
-
-"I'd crowd you there," said Nancy, smiling. "I'll sit here near Aunt
-Eleanor." From something in her eyes Oldmeadow felt suddenly sure that
-not till now had she realized that it had not, really, been her and
-Barney's walk. She offered the primroses to Mrs. Chadwick as she took
-the chair beside her, saying, "They'll fill your white bowl in the
-morning-room, Aunt Eleanor."
-
-"Oh, I say; but I meant those for Adrienne, Nancy!" Barney exclaimed,
-and as he did so Meg's eyes met Oldmeadow's over the household loaf.
-"She didn't see them in the wood, so she ought to have them. Mummy is
-suffocated with primroses already."
-
-But Nancy showed no rash and only an acute Meg could have guessed a cut
-as she answered: "I'll pick another bunch to-morrow for Miss Toner,
-Barney. They'll be fresher to take to London. These are really Aunt
-Eleanor's. I always fill that bowl for her."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-"I do so want a talk with you, Roger," Mrs. Chadwick murmured to him
-when tea was over. The dining-room opened at one end of the hall and the
-drawing-room at the other and the morning-room, Mrs. Chadwick's special
-retreat, into which she now drew him, was tucked in behind the
-dining-room and looked out at an angle of the garden wall and at the
-dove-cot that stood there. Mrs. Chadwick's doves were usually fluttering
-about the window and even, when it was open, entering the room, where
-she sometimes fondly fed them, causing thereby much distress of mind to
-Turner, the good old parlourmaid. A pleasant little fire was burning
-there and, after placing her primroses in the white bowl, Mrs. Chadwick
-drew her chair to it, casting a glance, as she did so, up at the large
-portrait of her husband in hunting dress that hung above the
-mantelpiece. It was painted with the same glib unintelligence as the
-dining-room portraits, but the painter had been unable to miss entirely
-the whimsical daring of the eyes or to bring into conformity with his
-own standard of good looks the charm of the irregular and narrow face.
-Francis Chadwick had been an impulsive, idle, endearing man, and,
-remaining always in love with his wife, had fondly cherished all her
-absurdities. Since his death poor Mrs. Chadwick had been perplexed by
-her effort to associate with gravity and inspiration one who had always
-been a laughing incentive to inconsequence. Oldmeadow reflected, as he,
-too, looked up at him, that Francis Chadwick would neither have needed
-nor have liked Miss Toner.
-
-"It's so very, very strange, Roger, I really must tell you," Mrs.
-Chadwick said. Her hair, still bright and abundant, was very untidy. She
-had evidently not brushed it since rising from her sofa. "I had one of
-my dreadful headaches, you know. It came on at church this morning and I
-really couldn't attend to Mr. Bodman at all. Perhaps you saw."
-
-"I heard. Yes. Miss Toner had disturbed you a good deal."
-
-"I did feel so bewildered and unhappy about it all," said Mrs. Chadwick,
-fixing her blue eyes upon the family friend. Eleanor Chadwick's eyes
-could show the uncanny ingenuousness and the uncanny wisdom of a baby's.
-"Nothing so innocent or so sharp was ever seen outside a perambulator,"
-her husband had once said of them. "About her, you know, Roger," she
-continued, "and Barney and Palgrave. The influence. I could not bear
-them to lose their faith in the church of their fathers."
-
-"No," said Oldmeadow. "But you must be prepared to see it shift a good
-deal. Faiths have to shift nowadays if they're to stand."
-
-"Well. Yes. I know what you mean, Roger. But it isn't a question of
-shifting, is it? I'm very broad. I've always been all for breadth. And
-the broader you are the firmer you ought to be, oughtn't you?"
-
-"Well, Miss Toner's broad and firm," Oldmeadow suggested. "I never saw
-anyone more so."
-
-"But in such a queer way, Roger. Like saying one's prayers out of doors
-and thinking oneself as good as Christ. Oh, it all made me perfectly
-wretched and after lunch my head was so bad that I went and lay down in
-the dark; and it raged, simply. Oh, dear, I thought; this means a day
-and night of misery. They go on like that once they begin. Mamma used
-to have them in precisely the same way. Absolutely incapacitating. I can
-never see how anybody can deny heredity. That's another point, Roger.
-I've always accepted evolution. I gave up Adam and Eve long ago; gave
-them up as white and good-looking, I mean; because we must have begun
-_somewhere_, mustn't we? And Darwin was such a good man; though you
-remember he came not to care anything at all about music. That may mean
-a great deal, if one could think it all out; it's the most religious of
-the arts, isn't it? But there's no end to thinking things out!" Mrs.
-Chadwick pressed her hand against her forehead, closing her eyes for a
-moment. "And Adrienne is very musical."
-
-"You were at your headache," Oldmeadow reminded her. It was customary in
-the family circle thus to shepherd Mrs. Chadwick's straying thoughts.
-
-"Yes, I know. But it all hangs together. Heredity and Mamma and my
-headaches; and Adrienne's mother, who was musical, too, and played on a
-harp. Well, it was raging and I was lying there, when there came a
-little rap at the door. I knew at once who it was and she asked in such
-a gentle voice if she might come in. It's a very soothing voice, isn't
-it? But do you know I felt for a moment quite frightened, as if I simply
-couldn't see her. But I had to say yes, and she came in so softly and
-sat down beside me and said: 'I used to help Mother, sometimes, with her
-headaches. May I help you?' She didn't want to talk about things, as I'd
-feared. Such a relief it was. So I said: 'Oh, do my dear,' and she laid
-her hand on my forehead and said: 'You will soon feel better. It will
-soon quite pass away.' And then not another word. Only sitting there in
-the dark, with her hand on my forehead. And do you know, Roger, almost
-at once the pain began to melt away. You know how a dish of junket melts
-after you cut into it. It was like that. 'Junket, junket,' I seemed to
-hear myself saying; and such a feeling of peace and contentment. And
-before I knew anything more I fell into the most delicious sleep and
-slept till now, just before tea. She was sitting there still, in the
-dark beside me and I said: 'Oh, my dear, to think of your having stayed
-in on this lovely afternoon!' But she went to pull up the blinds and
-said that she loved sitting quietly in the dark with some one she cared
-for, sleeping. 'I think souls come very close together, then,' she said.
-Wasn't it beautiful of her, Roger? Like astral bodies, you know, and
-auras and things of that sort. She _is_ beautiful. I made up my mind to
-that, then. She gives me such a feeling of trust. How can one help it?
-It's like what one reads of Roman Catholic saints and people in the
-Bible. The gift of healing. The laying on of hands. We don't seem to
-have any of them and we can't count _her_, since she doesn't believe in
-the church. But if only they'd give up the Pope, I don't see why we
-shouldn't accept their saints; such dear, good people, most of them. And
-the Pope is quite an excellent man just now, I believe. But isn't it
-very strange, Roger? For a person who can do that to one can't be
-irreligious, can they?"
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's eye was now fixed upon him, less wistfully and more
-intently, and he knew that something was expected of him.
-
-"Hypnotic doctors can do it, you know. You needn't be a saint to do it,"
-he said. "Though I suppose you must have some power of concentration
-that implies faith. However," he had to say all his thought, though most
-of it would be wasted upon poor Eleanor Chadwick, "Miss Toner is
-anything but irreligious. You may be sure of that."
-
-"You feel it, too, Roger. I'm so, so glad."
-
-"But her religion is not as your religion," he had to warn her, "nor her
-ways your ways. You must be prepared to have the children unsettled;
-everyone of them; because she has great power and is far more religious
-than most people. She believes in her creed and acts on it. You must
-give the children their heads. It's no good trying to circumvent or
-oppose them."
-
-"But they mustn't do wrong things, Roger. How can I give them their
-heads if it's to do wrong things? I don't know what Mamma would have
-said to their not going to church--especially in the country. She would
-have thought it very wrong, simply. Sinful and dangerous."
-
-"Hardly that," Oldmeadow smiled. "Even in the country. You don't think
-Miss Toner does wrong things. If they take up Miss Toner's creed instead
-of going to church, they won't come to much harm. The principal thing is
-that there should be something to take up. After all," he was reassuring
-himself as well as Mrs. Chadwick, "it hasn't hurt her. It's made her a
-little foolish; but it hasn't hurt her. And your children will never be
-foolish. They'll get all the good of it and, perhaps, be able to combine
-it with going to church.
-
-"Foolish, Roger?" Mrs. Chadwick, relieved of her headache, but not of
-her perplexity, gazed wanly at him. "You think Adrienne foolish?"
-
-"A little. Now and then. You mustn't accept anything she says to you
-just because she can cure you of a headache."
-
-"But how can you say foolish, Roger? She's had a most wonderful
-education?"
-
-"Everything that makes her surer of herself and makes other people surer
-of her puts her in more danger of being foolish. One can be too sure of
-oneself. Unless one is a saint--and even then. And though I don't think
-she's irreligious I don't think she's a saint. Not by any means."
-
-"I don't see how anyone can be more of one, nowadays, Roger. She heals
-people and she says prayers, and she is always good and gentle and never
-thinks of herself. I'm sure I can't think what you want more."
-
-A touch of plaintiveness and even of protest had come into Mrs.
-Chadwick's voice.
-
-"Perhaps what I want is less," he laughed. "Perhaps she's too much of a
-saint for my taste. I think she's a little too much of one for your
-taste, really--if you were to be quite candid with yourself. Has she
-spoken to you at all about Barney? Are you quite sure you'll have to
-reckon with her for yourself and the children?"
-
-At this Mrs. Chadwick showed a frank alarm. "Oh, quite, quite sure!" she
-said. "She couldn't be so lovely to us all if she didn't mean to take
-him! Why do you ask, Roger? You haven't any reason for thinking she
-won't?"
-
-"None whatever. Quite the contrary." He didn't want to put poor Mrs.
-Chadwick to the cruel test of declaring whether she would rather have
-the children go to church and lose Miss Toner and all her money or have
-them stay away and keep Miss Toner. After all such a test was not to be
-asked of her. Miss Toner wanted people to follow their own light. "I
-only wondered if she talked to you about him. Asked any girlish leading
-questions."
-
-"None, none whatever," said Mrs. Chadwick. "But I feel that's because
-she thinks she knows him far better than I do and that he's told her
-everything already. It's rather hard to be a mother, Roger. For of
-course, though she is so much better and cleverer than I am, I feel sure
-that no one understands Barney as I do."
-
-"She'd be a little cleverer still if she could see that, wouldn't she?"
-
-"Well, I don't know. Girls never do. I was just the same when I was
-engaged to Francis. Even now I can't think that old Mrs. Chadwick really
-understood him as I did. It's very puzzling, isn't it? Very difficult to
-see things from other people's point of view. When she pulled up the
-blind this afternoon, she told me that Nancy and Barney were down in the
-copse and she seemed pleased."
-
-"Oh, did she?"
-
-"I told her that they'd always been like brother and sister, for I was
-just a little afraid, you know, that she might imagine Barney had ever
-cared about Nancy."
-
-"I see. You think she wouldn't like that?"
-
-"What woman would, Roger?" And he imagined that Mrs. Chadwick, for all
-her folly, was cleverer than Miss Toner guessed, as she added: "And then
-she told me that she'd made Barney go without her. She wanted me to see,
-you know, that it depended on her. That's another reason why I feel sure
-she is going to take him."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-He sat, for the first time, next Miss Toner that night at dinner and
-Nancy sat across from them next Barney. Nancy was pale, and now that he
-could scrutinize her he imagined that the walk had been more of an
-ordeal than a pleasure. Barney, no doubt, with the merciless blindness
-of his state, had talked to her all the time of Adrienne. But Nancy
-would not have minded that. She was of the type that hides its cut for
-ever and may become aunt and guardian-angel to the other woman's
-children. It had not been Barney's preoccupation that had so drained her
-of warmth and colour, but its character, its object. Her grey eyes had
-the considering look with which they might have measured the height of a
-difficult hedge in hunting, and, resting on Oldmeadow once or twice,
-seemed to tell him that the walk had shown her more clearly than ever
-that, if Barney married Miss Toner, they must lose him. He felt sure
-that she had lain down since tea with a headache to which had come no
-ministering angel.
-
-She and Barney did not talk to each other now, for he had eyes and ears
-only for Miss Toner. At any former time they would have kept up the
-happiest interchange, and Oldmeadow would have seen Nancy's eyelashes
-close together as she smiled her loving smile. There was a dim family
-likeness between her face and Barney's, for both were long and narrow,
-and both had the singular sweetness in the very structure of the smile.
-But where Barney was clumsy, Nancy was clear, and her skin was as fair
-as his was brown. To the fond onlooker at both, they were destined mates
-and only an insufferable accident had parted them.
-
-Nancy was as much a part of the Coldbrooks country as the primroses and
-the blackcaps in the woods. Her life had risen from the familiar soil to
-the familiar sky, as preordained to fitness, as ordered by instinct and
-condition as theirs, and from her security of type she had gained not
-lost in savour. The time that unfinished types must give to growing
-conscious roots and building conscious nests, Nancy had all free for
-spontaneities of flight and song. Beside her, to his hostile eye, Miss
-Toner was as a wide-spread water-weed, floating, rootless and scentless,
-upon chance currents: A creature of surfaces, of caprice and hazard. If
-the multiplicity of her information constituted mental wealth, its
-impersonality constituted mental poverty. She was as well furnished and
-as deadening as a catalogue, and as he listened to her, receiving an
-impression of continual, considered movings-on, earnest pursuits, across
-half the globe, of further experience, he saw her small, questing figure
-on a background of railways, giant lines stretching forth across plain
-and mountain, climbing, tunnelling, curving; stopping at great capitals,
-and passing on again to glitter on their endless way under the sun and
-moon. That was what he seemed to see as Miss Toner talked: and
-sleeping-berths and wardrobe-boxes and luxurious suites in vast hotels.
-
-She wore again her white dress, contrasting in its richness of texture
-with the simplicity of her daytime blue, and, rather stupidly, an
-artificial white rose had been placed, in her braids, over each ear.
-Her pearls were her only other ornament, and her pearls, he supposed,
-were surprising.
-
-Oldmeadow was aware, in his close proximity to her, while she ate beside
-him with a meticulous nicety that made the manners of the rest of them,
-by contrast, seem a little casual and slovenly, of the discomfort that
-had visited him in his dream. Yet the feeling she evoked was not all
-discomfort. It was as if from her mere physical presence he were
-subjected to some force that had in its compulsion a dim, conjectural
-charm. It was for this reason no doubt that he seemed to be aware of
-everything about her. Her hands were small and white, but had no beauty
-of form or gesture. She moved them slowly and without grace, rather like
-a young child handling unfamiliar objects in a kindergarten, and this in
-spite of the singular perfection of her table manners. She could have
-made little use of them, ever, in games of skill or in any art requiring
-swift accuracy and firmness. It was as if her mind, overtrained in
-receptivity and retentiveness, had only dull tentacles to spare for her
-finger-tips. He was aware of these hands beside him all through dinner
-and their fumbling deliberation brought to him, again and again, a
-mingled annoyance, and satisfaction. There was something positive and
-characteristic about her scentlessness, for if she smelt of anything it
-was of Fuller's Earth--a funny, chalky smell--and beside Meg, who
-foolishly washed liquid powder over her silvery skin, Miss Toner's
-colourlessness was sallow. She had hardly talked at all the night
-before, but to-night she talked continuously. It was Meg who questioned
-her, and Mrs. Chadwick, and Oldmeadow guessed that his ingenuous
-friend, still perplexed by his use of the word foolish, was drawing out
-and displaying her future daughter-in-law for his benefit.
-
-Miss Toner and her mother had been to Russia, to India, to China and
-Japan. They had visited Stevenson's grave at Vailima and in describing
-it she quoted "Under the wide and starry sky." They had studied every
-temple in Greece and Sicily and talked of the higher education with
-ladies in Turkish harems. "But it was always Paris we came back to," she
-said, "when we were not at home. Home was, and is, a great many places:
-California and Chicago--where my father's people live, and New England.
-But Paris was, after it, closest to our hearts. Yes, we knew a great
-many French people; but it was for study rather than friendship we went
-there. It is such a treasure-house of culture. Mother worked very hard
-at French diction for several winters. She had lessons from Mademoiselle
-Jouffert--you know perhaps--though she has not acted for so many years
-now. Our friendship with her was a great privilege, for she was a rare
-and noble woman and had a glorious gift. Phèdre was her favourite rôle
-and I shall never forget her rendering of it:
-
- Ariane ma soeur! de quel amour blessée
- Vous mourûtes aux bords où vous fûtes laissée!
-
-She taught Mother to recite Phèdre's great speeches with such fire and
-passion. There could hardly be a better training for French," said Miss
-Toner, repeating the lines with a curious placidity and perfection. "I
-preferred Mademoiselle Jouffert's rendering to Bernhardt's. Her Phèdre
-was, with all the fire, more tender and womanly."
-
-"Do you care about Racine?" Oldmeadow asked her, while the lines rang in
-his ears--rather as in his dream the rooks' cawing had done--with an
-evocative sadness that hung, irrelevantly, about their speaker. "It's
-not easy for our English ears to hear the fire and passion, is it; but
-they are there."
-
-"He is very perfect and accomplished," said Miss Toner. "But I always
-feel him small beside our Shakespeare. He lacks heart, doesn't he?"
-
-"There's heart in those lines you've just recited."
-
-"Yes," said Miss Toner. "Those lines are certainly very beautiful. It's
-the mere music of them, I think. They make me feel--" she paused. It was
-unlike her to pause and he wondered what she made of Ariane, off her own
-bat, without Mademoiselle Jouffert to help her.
-
-"They make you feel?" he questioned.
-
-"They are so sad--so terribly melancholy. The sound of them. They make
-me want to cry when I hear them. But I think it's the sound; for their
-meaning makes me indignant. There is such weakness in them; such
-acceptance of destiny. I want to revolt and protest, too--for women. She
-should not have died."
-
-Oldmeadow involuntarily glanced across at Nancy. She was looking at Miss
-Toner and if she had been pale before, she was paler now. Nancy would
-never think of herself in connection with Ariane and tragic grief; yet
-something in the lines, something in Miss Toner's disavowal of their
-applicability, had touched the hidden cut. And, once again, it was Meg's
-eyes that met his, showing him that what he saw she saw, too. Barney saw
-nothing. All his solicitude was for Miss Toner in her imaginary plight.
-"I'm sure you never would!" he exclaimed. "Never die, I mean!"
-
-"You think Miss Toner would have come to terms with Bacchus," Oldmeadow
-suggested. He didn't want to take it out of Barney, though he was vexed
-with him, nor to take it out of Miss Toner, either. He only wanted to
-toss and twist the theme and make it gay where Miss Toner made it
-solemn.
-
-"Come to terms with Bacchus!" Barney quite stared, taken aback by the
-irreverence. "Why should she! She'd have found somebody more worth while
-than either of the ruffians."
-
-Miss Toner smiled over at him.
-
-"I'm sure that if Bacchus had been fortunate enough to meet Miss Toner
-she'd have converted him to total abstinence in a jiffy and made a model
-husband of him. He was a fine, exhilarating fellow; no ruffian at all;
-quite worth reforming." Oldmeadow, as he thus embroidered his theme, was
-indulging in his own peculiar form of mirth.
-
-He saw Miss Toner laying her hand on the head of Bacchus; Miss Toner
-very picturesque on the rugged sea-shore in her white and pearls and
-roses, and Bacchus dazed and penitent, his very leopards tamed to a
-cat-like docility. His laugh was visible rather than audible and that
-Miss Toner had never before been the subject of such mirth was evident
-to him.
-
-She met whatever she saw or guessed of irreverence, however, as
-composedly as she would have met Bacchus; perhaps already, he reflected,
-she was beginning to think of him in the light of an undesirable
-wine-bibber. Perhaps even, she was beginning to think of him as a
-ruffian. He didn't mind in the least, so long as he succeeded in keeping
-off her solemnity.
-
-"I should have been quite willing to try and reform him," she said;
-"though it takes much longer than a jiffy to reform people, Mr.
-Oldmeadow; but I shouldn't have been willing to marry him. There are
-other things in life, aren't there, than love-stories--even for women."
-
-"Bravo!" said Oldmeadow. He felt as well as uttered it. She wasn't being
-solemn, and she had returned his shuttlecock smartly. "But are there?"
-he went on. He had adjusted his eyeglass for a clearer confrontation of
-her.
-
-Miss Toner's large eyes, enlarged still further by the glass, met his,
-not solemnly, but with a considering gravity.
-
-"You are a sceptic, Mr. Oldmeadow," she observed. "A satirist. Do you
-find that satire and scepticism take you very far in reading human
-hearts?"
-
-"There's one for you, Roger!" cried Barney.
-
-Oldmeadow kept his gaze fixed on Miss Toner. "You think that Ariane
-might prefer Infant Welfare work or Charity Organization to a
-love-story?"
-
-"Not those necessarily." She returned his gaze. "Though I have known
-very fine big people who did prefer them. But they are not the only
-alternatives to love-stories."
-
-"I am sceptical," said Oldmeadow. "I am, if you like, satirical. I don't
-believe there are any alternatives to love-stories; only palliatives to
-disappointment."
-
-Barney leaned forward: "Adrienne, you see, doesn't accept that
-old-fashioned, sentimentalizing division of the sexes. She doesn't
-accept the merely love-story, hearth-side rôle for women."
-
-"Oh, well," Oldmeadow played with his fork, smiling with the wryness
-that accompanied his reluctant sincerities, "I don't divide the sexes as
-far as love-stories are concerned. We are all in the same boat. For us,
-too, Barney, it's love-story or palliative. You don't agree? If you were
-disappointed in love? Hunting? Farming? Politics? Post-Impressionism?
-Would any of them fill the gap?"
-
-It wasn't at all the line he had intended the talk to take. He knew that
-as he glanced across at Nancy. Saying nothing, as if its subject could
-not concern her, and with a dim little smile, she listened, and he knew
-that for her, though she wouldn't die of it, there would be only
-palliatives. If only Barney, confound him, hadn't been so charming.
-
-Barney did not know how to answer the last assault, and, boyishly,
-looked across at his beloved for succour. She gave it instantly.
-
-"Sadness, sorrow, tragedy, even, isn't despair," she said. "Barney, I
-believe, if sorrow overtook him, would mould the rough clay of his
-occupation to some higher beauty than the beauty he'd lost. To lie down
-and die; to resign oneself to palliatives. Oh, no. That's not the
-destiny of the human soul."
-
-"Roger's pulling your leg, Barney, as usual," Palgrave put in
-scornfully. He had been listening with his elbows on the table, his eyes
-on the table-cloth. "He knows as well as I do that there's only one
-love. The sort you're all talking about--the Theseus and Ariane
-affair--is merely an ebullition of youth and as soon as nature has
-perpetuated the species by means of it, it settles down, if there's any
-reality under the ebullition, to grow into the other--the divine love;
-the love of the soul for the Good, the True and the Beautiful," Palgrave
-declared, growing very red as he said it.
-
-"Really--my dear child!" Mrs. Chadwick murmured. She had never heard
-such themes broached at her table and glanced nervously up at old
-Johnson to see if he had followed. "That is a very, very materialistic
-view!"
-
-Oldmeadow at this began to laugh, audibly as well as visibly, and
-Palgrave, as their eyes met in a glance of communicated comedy, could
-not withhold an answering smile. But Barney's face showed that he
-preferred to see Palgrave's interpretation as materialistic and even
-Miss Toner looked thoughtfully at her champion.
-
-"But we need the symbol of youth and nature," she suggested. "The divine
-love, yes, Palgrave, is the only real one; but then all love is divine
-and human love sometimes brings the deepest revelation of all. Browning
-saw that so wonderfully."
-
-"Browning, my dear!" Palgrave returned with a curious mingling of
-devotion, intimacy and aloofness, "Browning never got nearer God than a
-woman's breast!"
-
-At this, almost desperately, Mrs. Chadwick broke in: "Did you ever see
-our Ellen Terry act, Adrienne? I liked her much better than Madame
-Bernhardt who had such a very artificial face, I think. I can't imagine
-her as Rosalind, can you? While Miss Terry was a perfect Rosalind. I met
-her once with Henry Irving at a garden-party in London and she was as
-charming off as on the stage and I'm sure I can't see why anybody
-should wish to act Phèdre--poor, uncontrolled creature. Rhubarb-tart,
-dear, and custard? or wine-jelly and cream? How beautifully you speak
-French. How many languages do you speak?" Mrs. Chadwick earnestly
-inquired, still turning the helm firmly away from the unbecoming topic.
-
-Miss Toner kept her head very creditably and, very tactfully, at once
-accepted her hostess's hint. "Rhubarb-tart, please, dear Mrs. Chadwick.
-Not so very many, really. My German has never been good; though French
-and Italian I do know well, and enough Spanish for Don Quixote. But,"
-she went on, while Mrs. Chadwick looked gratefully at her, "Mother and I
-were always working. We never wasted any of our precious hours together.
-She couldn't bear the thought of _missing_ anything in life; and she
-missed very little, I think. Music, poetry, painting--all the
-treasure-houses of the human spirit--were open to her. And what she won
-and made her own, she gave out again with greater radiance. How I wish
-you could all have known her!" said Miss Toner, looking round at them
-with an unaccustomed touch of wistfulness. "She was radiance
-personified. She never let unhappiness _rest_ on her. I remember once,
-when she had had a cruel blow from a person she loved and trusted--in
-the middle of her sadness she looked at me and saw how sad she was
-making me; and she sprang up and seized my hands and cried: 'Let's
-dance! Let's dance and dance and dance!' And we did, up and down the
-terrace--it was at San Remo--she in her white dress, with the blue sky
-and sea and the orange-trees all in bloom. I can see her now. And then
-she rushed to get music, her harp, and flowers and fruit, to take to an
-invalid friend, and we spent the afternoon with her, mother surpassing
-herself in charm and witchery. She was always like that. She would have
-found something, oh, very beautiful, to make from her sorrow if Theseus
-had abandoned her! But no one," said Miss Toner, looking round at
-Oldmeadow, now with a mild playfulness, "could ever have abandoned
-Mother."
-
-There was something to Oldmeadow appealing in her playfulness; her
-confidence, when it took on this final grace, was really touching. For
-Mrs. Toner the light-giver he knew that he had conceived a rooted
-aversion. And he wondered if she would go on, over the rhubarb-tart, to
-tell, after the dancing on the terrace, of the death at sea. But he was
-spared that.
-
-"And your father died when you were very young, didn't he, dear?" said
-Mrs. Chadwick, fearful of the reference to Theseus. "I think your mother
-must often have been so very lonely; away from home for such a great
-part of the time and with so few relatives."
-
-Miss Toner shook her head. "We were always together, she and I, so we
-could never, either of us, be lonely. And wherever we went she made
-friends. People were always so much more than mere people to her. She
-saw them always, at once, high and low, prince and peasant, as souls,
-and they felt it always, and opened to her. Then, until I was quite big,
-we had my lovely grandmother. Mother came from Maine and it was such a
-joy to go and stay there with Grandma. It was a very simple little home.
-It was always high thinking and plain living, with Grandma; and though,
-when she married and became rich, Mother showered beautiful things upon
-her, Grandma stayed always in the little house, doing for her poor
-neighbours, as she had always done, and dusting her parlour--a real New
-England parlour--and making her own griddle cakes--such wonderful cakes
-she made! I was fifteen when she died; but the tie was so close and
-spiritual that she did not seem gone away from us."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-"Rather nice to think that there are so many good and innocent people in
-the world, isn't it," Barney remarked, when he, Palgrave and Oldmeadow
-were left to their wine and cigars. It was evident that he would have
-preferred to omit the masculine interlude, but Oldmeadow was resolved on
-the respite. She had touched him because she was so unaware; but he was
-weary and disconcerted. How could Barney be unaware? And was he?
-Altogether? His comment seemed to suggest a suspicion that Miss Toner's
-flow might have aroused irony or require justification.
-
-"Miss Toner and her mother seem to have found the noble and the gifted
-under every bush," he remarked, and he was not sure that he wished to
-avoid irony though he knew that he did wish to conceal it from Barney.
-"It's very good and innocent to be able to do that; but one may keep
-one's goodness at the risk of one's discrimination. Not that Miss Toner
-is at all stupid."
-
-Palgrave neither smoked nor drank. He had again leaned his elbows on the
-table and his head on his fists, but, while Oldmeadow spoke, he lifted
-and kept his gaze on him. "You don't like her," he said suddenly. He and
-Oldmeadow had, irrepressibly, over Mrs. Chadwick's conception of
-materialism, interchanged their smile at dinner; but since the morning
-Oldmeadow had known that Palgrave suspected him of indifference, perhaps
-even hostility, towards the new-comer. "Why don't you like her?" the
-boy went on and with a growing resentment as his suspicions found voice.
-"She _isn't_ stupid; that's just it. She's good and noble and innocent;
-and gifted, too. Why should we pretend to be too sophisticated to
-recognize such beauty when we meet it? Why should we be ashamed of
-beauty--afraid of it?"
-
-Barney, flushing deeply, looked down into his wine-glass.
-
-"My dear Palgrave, I don't understand you," said Oldmeadow. But he did.
-He seemed to hear the loud beating of Palgrave's heart. "I don't dislike
-Miss Toner. How should I? I don't know her."
-
-"You do know her. That's an evasion. It's all there. She can't be seen
-without being known. It's all there; at once. I don't know why you don't
-like her. It's what I want to know."
-
-"Drop it, Palgrave," Barney muttered. "Let Roger alone. He and Adrienne
-get on very well together. It's no good forcing things."
-
-"I'm not forcing anything. It's Roger who forces his scepticism and his
-satire on us," Palgrave declared.
-
-"I'm sorry to have displeased you," said Oldmeadow with a slight
-severity. "I am unaware of having displayed my disagreeable qualities
-more than is usual with me."
-
-"Of course not. What rot, Palgrave! Roger is always disagreeable, bless
-him!" Barney declared with a forced laugh. "Adrienne understands him
-perfectly. As he says: she isn't stupid."
-
-"Oh, all right. I'm sorry," Palgrave rose, thrusting his hands in his
-pockets and looking down at the two as he stood above them. He hesitated
-and then went on: "All I know is that for the first time in my
-life--the very first time, mind you--all the things we are told about in
-religion, all the things we read about in poetry, the things we're
-supposed to care for and live by, have been made real to me--outside of
-books and churches. What do we ever see of them at home here, with dear
-Mummy and the girls? What do we ever talk of, all of us--but the
-everlasting round--hunting, gardening, cricket, hay; village treats and
-village charities. A lot of chatter about people--What a rotter
-So-and-so is; and How perfectly sweet somebody else: and a little about
-politics--Why doesn't somebody shoot Lloyd George?--and How wicked Home
-Rulers are. That's about all it amounts to. Oh, I know we're not as
-stupid as we sound. _She_ sees that. We can feel things and see things
-though we express ourselves like savages. But we're too comfortable to
-think; that's what's the trouble with us. We don't want to change; and
-thought means change. And we're shy; idiotically shy; afraid to express
-anything as it really comes to us; so that I sometimes wonder if things
-will go on coming; if we shan't become like the Chinese--a sort of
-_objet d'art_ set of people, living by rote, in a rut. Well. That's all
-I mean. With her one isn't ashamed or afraid to know and say what one
-feels. With her one wants to feel more. And I, for one, reverence her
-and am grateful to her for having made beauty and goodness real to me."
-Having so delivered himself, Palgrave, who had, after his deep flush,
-become pale, turned away and marched out of the room.
-
-The older men sat silent for a moment, Oldmeadow continuing to smoke and
-Barney turning the stem of his wine-glass in his fingers. "I'm awfully
-sorry," he said at last. "I can't think what's got into the boy. He's in
-rather a moil just now, I fancy."
-
-"He's a dear boy," said Oldmeadow. "There's any amount of truth in what
-he says. He's at an age when one sees these things, if one is ever going
-to see them. I hope he'll run straight. He ought to amount to
-something."
-
-"That's what Adrienne says," said Barney. "She says he's a poet. You
-think, too, then, that we're all in such a rut; living Chinese lives;
-automata?"
-
-"It's the problem of civilization, isn't it, to combine automatism with
-freedom. Without a rut to walk in you reach nowhere--if we're to walk
-together. And yet we must manage to ramble, too; individuals must;
-that's what it comes to, I suppose. Individuals must take the risk of
-rambling and alter the line of the rut for the others. Palgrave may be a
-rambler. But I hope he won't go too far afield."
-
-"You do like her, Roger, don't you?" said Barney suddenly.
-
-It had had to come. Oldmeadow knew that, as the depth of silence fell
-about them. It was inevitable between them, of course. Yet he wished it
-might have been avoided, since now it must be too late. He pressed out
-the glow of his cigar and leaned his arms on the table, not looking at
-his friend while he meditated, and he said finally--and it might seem,
-he knew, another evasion--"Look here, Barney, I must tell you something.
-You know how much I care about Nancy. Well, that's the trouble. It's
-Nancy I wanted you to marry."
-
-Barney had held himself ready and a deep, involuntary sigh of relief, or
-of postponed suspense, now escaped him. "I see. I didn't realize that,"
-he said. And how he hoped, poor Barney! it was all there was to realize!
-"Of course I'm very fond of Nancy."
-
-"You realize, of course, how fond she is of you."
-
-"Well; yes; of course. We're both awfully good pals," said Barney,
-confused.
-
-"That's what Palgrave would call speaking like a savage, Barney. Own to
-it that if Miss Toner hadn't appeared upon the scene you could have
-hoped to make Nancy your wife. I don't say you made love to her or
-misled her in any way. I'm sure you never meant to at any rate. But the
-fact remains that you were both so fond of each other that you would
-certainly have married. So you'll understand that when I come down here
-and find Miss Toner installed as tutelary goddess over you all, what I'm
-mainly conscious of is grief for my dear little relegated nymph."
-
-Still deeply flushed, but still feeling his relief, Barney turned his
-wine-glass and murmured: "I see. I quite understand. Yes; I should have
-been in love with her, I own. I nearly was, last winter. As to her being
-in love with me, that's a different matter. I've no reason to think she
-was in love. It would just be a difference of degree, with Nancy,
-wouldn't it; she loves us all so much, and she's really such a child,
-still. Of course that's what she seems to me now, since Adrienne's come;
-just a darling child."
-
-"I suppose so. But you understand what I feel, too. I feel her much more
-than a darling child, and it's difficult for me to like anybody who has
-dispossessed her. I perfectly recognize Miss Toner's remarkable
-qualities and hope to count myself among her friends one day; but, being
-a satirist and a sceptic, I rebel instinctively against goddesses of
-whatever brand. Nymphs are good enough for me; and I can't help wishing,
-irrepressibly, that nymphs had remained good enough for you, my dear
-boy."
-
-"It isn't a question of nymphs; it isn't a question of goddesses,"
-Barney said, glancing up now at his friend. "I'm awfully sorry about
-Nancy; but of course she'll find some one far better than I am; she's
-such a dear. You're not quite straight with me, Roger. I don't see
-Adrienne as a goddess at all; I'm not like Palgrave, a silly boy, bowled
-over. It's something quite different she does to me. She makes me feel
-safe; safe and happy in a way I never imagined possible. It's like
-having the sunlight fall about one; it's like life, new life, to be with
-her. She's not a goddess; but she's the woman it would break my heart to
-part with. I never met such loveliness."
-
-"My dear boy," Oldmeadow murmured. He still leaned on the table and he
-still looked down. "I do wish you every happiness, as you know." He was
-deeply touched and Barney's quiet words troubled him as he had not
-before been troubled.
-
-"Thanks. I know you do. I know you care for my happiness. And I can't
-imagine anything coming into my life that would make a difference to us.
-That's just it." Barney paused. "It won't, will it, Roger?"
-
-The crisis was again upon them. Oldmeadow did not look up as he said:
-"That depends on her, doesn't it?"
-
-"No; it depends on you," Barney quickly replied.
-
-"She likes you, quite immensely, already. She says you make her think of
-one of Meredith's dry, deep-hearted heroes," Barney gave a slightly
-awkward laugh, deprecating the homage as he offered it. "She says you
-are the soul of truth. There's no reason, none whatever, why you
-shouldn't be the best of friends, as far as she is concerned. It's all
-she asks."
-
-"It's all I ask, of course."
-
-"Yes, I know. But if you don't meet her half-way? Sometimes I do see
-what Palgrave means. Sometimes you misunderstand her."
-
-"Very likely. It takes time really to understand people, doesn't it."
-
-But poor Barney was embarked and could not but push on. "As just now,
-you know, about finding nobility behind every bush and paying for one's
-goodness by losing one's discrimination. There are deep realities and
-superficial realities, aren't there, and she sees the deep ones first.
-It's more than that. Palgrave says she makes reality. He didn't say it
-to me, because I don't think he feels me to be worthy of her. He said it
-to Mother, and puzzled her by it. But I know what he means. It's because
-of that he feels her to be a sort of saint. Do be straight with me,
-Roger. Say what you really think. I'd rather know; much. You've never
-kept things from me before," Barney added in a sudden burst of boyish
-distress.
-
-"My dear Barney," Oldmeadow murmured.
-
-It had to come, then. He pushed back his chair and turned in it, resting
-an arm on the table; and he passed his hand over his head and kept it
-there while he stared for a moment hard at the ceiling.
-
-"I think you've made a mistake," he then said.
-
-"A mistake?" Barney faltered blushing. It was not anger; it was pain,
-simple, boyish pain that thus confessed itself.
-
-"Yes; a mistake," Oldmeadow repeated, not looking at him, "and since I
-fear it's gone too far to be mended, I think it would have been better
-if you'd not pressed me, my dear boy."
-
-"How do you mean? I'd rather know, you see," Barney murmured, after a
-moment.
-
-"I don't mean about the goodness, or the power," said Oldmeadow. "She is
-good, and she has power; but that's in part, I feel, because she has no
-inhibitions--no doubts. To know reality we must do more than blow
-soap-bubbles with it. It must break us to be known. She's never been
-broken. Perhaps she never will be. And in that case she'll go on blind."
-
-Barney was silent for a moment, and that it was not as bad as he had
-feared it might be was apparent from the attempted calm with which he
-asked, presently: "Why shouldn't you be blind to evil and absurdity if
-you can see much further than most people into goodness? Perhaps one
-must be one-sided to go far."
-
-"Perhaps. But it's dangerous to be one-sided--to oneself and others. And
-does she see further? That's the question. Doesn't she tend, rather, to
-accept as first-rate what you incline to find second? You're less strong
-than she is, Barney, and less good, no doubt. But you can't deny that
-you're less blind. So what you must ask yourself is whether you can be
-sure of being happy with a wife who'll never doubt herself and who'll
-not see absurdity where you see it. Put it at that. Will you be happy
-with her?"
-
-He was, he knew, justified of Miss Toner's commendation, for truth
-between friends could go no further and, in the silence, while he
-sickened for his friend, he felt it searching Barney's heart. How it
-searched, how many echoes it found awaiting it, was proved by the
-prolongation of the silence.
-
-"I think you exaggerate," said Barney at length, and in the words
-Oldmeadow read his refusal to examine further the truths revealed to
-him. "You see all the defects and none of the beauty. It can't be a
-mistake if I can see both. She'll learn a little from me, that's what it
-comes to, for all the lot I'll have to learn from her. I'll be happy
-with her if I'm worthy of her. What it comes to, you see, as I said at
-the beginning, is that I can't be happy without her." He rose and
-Oldmeadow, rising also, knew that they closed upon an unresolved
-discord. Yet these final words of Barney's pleased him so much that he
-could not leave it quite at that.
-
-"Mine may be the mistake, after all," he said. "Only you must give me
-time to find it out. I began by telling you I couldn't be really
-dispassionate; and I feel much better for our talk, if that's any
-satisfaction to you. If you can learn from each other and see the truth
-together, you'll be happy. You're right there, Barney. That is what it
-comes to." They moved towards the door. "Try not to dislike me for my
-truth too much," he added.
-
-"My dear old fellow," Barney muttered. He laid his hand for a moment on
-his friend's shoulder, standing back for him to pass first. "Nothing can
-ever alter things between you and me."
-
-But things were altered already.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-
-Palgrave had not gone to the drawing-room, and that, at all events, was
-a comfort. A wood fire burned on the hearth and near it Nancy was
-holding wool for Mrs. Chadwick to wind. Barbara had been sent to bed and
-Meg and Miss Toner sat on the sofa hand in hand. Even in the pressure of
-his distress and anxiety Oldmeadow could but be aware of amusement at
-seeing Meg thus. It had, of course, been Miss Toner who had taken her
-hand. But no one else could have taken it. No one else could have been
-allowed to go on holding it placidly before on-lookers of whose mirthful
-impressions Meg must be well aware. She didn't mind in the least. That
-was what Miss Toner had done to her. She enjoyed having her hand held by
-anyone so much interested in her.
-
-Barney walked to the fireplace and stood before it. He had no faculty
-for concealing his emotions and the painful ones through which he had
-just passed were visible on his sensitive face.
-
-"Give us a song, Meg," Oldmeadow suggested. He did not care for Meg's
-singing, which conveyed, in a rich, sweet medium, a mingled fervour and
-shallowness of feeling. But to hear her sing would be better than to see
-her holding Miss Toner's hand.
-
-Barney crossed at once to the seat Meg vacated and dropped down into it,
-no doubt thanking his friend for what he imagined to be a display of
-tact, and Oldmeadow saw the quiet, firm look that flowed over and took
-possession of him. Miss Toner knew, of course, that Barney had been
-having painful emotions; and she probably knew that they had been caused
-by the dry, deep-hearted Meredithian hero. But after the long look she
-did not speak to him. She sat in her pearls and whiteness and gave
-careful attention to the music.
-
-Oldmeadow accompanied Meg, tolerantly, and a trifle humorously, throwing
-a touch of mockery into his part. Meg's preference to-night seemed to be
-for gardens; Gardens of Sleep; Gardens of Love; God's Gardens. "What a
-wretch you are, Roger," she said, when she had finished. "You despise
-feeling."
-
-"I thought I was wallowing in it," Oldmeadow returned. "Did I stint
-you?"
-
-"No; you helped me to wallow. That's why you're such a wretch. Always
-showing one that one is wallowing when one thinks one's soaring. It's
-your turn, now, Adrienne. Let's see if he'll manage to make fun of you."
-
-"Does Miss Toner sing, too? Now do you know, Meg," said Oldmeadow,
-keeping up the friendly banter, "I'm sure she doesn't sing the sort of
-rubbish you do."
-
-"I think they're beautiful songs," Mrs. Chadwick murmured from her wool,
-"and I think Roger played them most beautifully. Why should you say he
-is making fun of you, Meg?"
-
-"Because he makes you think something's beautiful that he thinks
-rubbish, Mummy. Come along, Adrienne. You will, won't you? I expect my
-voice sounds all wrong to you. I've had no proper training."
-
-"It's a very lovely voice, Meg, used in a poor cause," said Miss Toner
-smiling. "And it is badly placed. I think I could help you there. I've
-no voice at all, but I have been taught how to sing. It would be more to
-the point, though, if Mr. Oldmeadow were to play to us, for I hear that
-he is an accomplished musician."
-
-"I'm really anything but accomplished," said Oldmeadow; "but I can play
-accompaniments cleverly. Do sing to us. I know you'll give us something
-worth accompanying."
-
-Miss Toner rose and came to the piano with her complete and unassuming
-confidence. She turned the pages of the music piled there and asked him
-if he cared for Schubert's songs. Yes; she was a watch wound to go
-accurately and she could rely on herself, always, to the last tick. Even
-if she knew--and he was sure she knew--that he had been undermining her,
-she would never show a shadow or a tremor; and she would always know
-what was the best music. Only, as she selected "Litanei" and placed it
-before him, he felt that over him, also, flowed the quiet, firm look.
-
-"Litanei" was one of his favourites in a composer he loved, and, as she
-sang there above him, he found the song emerging unharmed from her
-interpretation. It was as she had said--no voice to speak of; the
-dryest, flattest little thread of sound; and no feeling, either (what a
-relief after Meg!), except the feeling for scrupulous accuracy. Yet her
-singing was what he found in her to like best. It was disciplined; it
-accepted its own limits; it fulfilled an order. There was no desecration
-of the heavenly song, for, intelligently after all, she made no attempt
-upon its heart.
-
-When she had finished, she looked down at him. They were removed by half
-the length of the room from the fireside group. The lamps were behind
-them. Only the candles set in the piano-rack illumined Miss Toner; and
-while the white roses over her ears struck him anew as foolish, her eyes
-anew struck him as powerful.
-
-"Thank you. That was a pleasure," he said.
-
-It was a pleasure. It was almost a link. He had found a ground to meet
-her on. He saw himself in the future accompanying Barney's wife. He
-need, then, so seldom talk to her. But, alas! she stepped at once from
-the safe frame of art.
-
-"If we can rise from loss to feel like that, if we can lift our sorrows
-like that, we need never turn to palliatives, need we, Mr. Oldmeadow?"
-she said.
-
-Stupidity, complacency, or power, whatever it was, it completely
-disenchanted him. It left him also bereft of repartee. What he fell back
-upon, as he looked up at her and then down at the keys again, was a mere
-schoolboy mutter of "Come now!"
-
-After all a schoolboy mutter best expressed what he felt. She was not
-accustomed to having her ministrations met with such mutters and she did
-not like it. That was apparent to him as she turned away and went back
-to the sofa and Barney. She had again tried him and again found him
-wanting.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Barney and Miss Toner left in her motor next morning shortly after
-breakfast, and though with his friend Oldmeadow had no further exchange,
-he had, with Miss Toner, a curious encounter that was, he felt sure, a
-direct result of her impressions of the night before. They met in the
-dining-room a few moments before breakfast, and as she entered, wearing
-already her motoring hat, closely bound round her face with a veil, he
-was aware that she looked, if that were possible, more composed than he
-had ever seen her. He felt sure that she had waited for her opportunity,
-and had followed him downstairs, knowing that she would find him alone;
-and he realized then that she was more composed, because she had an
-intention or, rather, since it was more definite, a determination.
-Determination in her involved no effort: it imparted, merely, the added
-calm of an assured aim.
-
-She gave him her hand and said good morning with the same air of
-scrupulous accuracy that she had given to the rendering of "Litanei" and
-then, standing before the fire, her hands clasped behind her, her eyes
-raised to his, she said: "Mr. Oldmeadow, I want to say something to
-you."
-
-It was the gentle little voice, unaltered, yet he knew that he was in
-for something he would very much rather have avoided; something with
-anybody else unimaginable, but with her, he saw it now, quite
-inevitable. Yet he tried, even at this last moment, to avoid it and
-said, adjusting his eyeglass and moving to the sideboard: "But not
-before we've had our tea, surely. Can't I get you some? Will you trust
-me to pour it out?"
-
-"Thanks; I take coffee--not tea," said Miss Toner from her place at the
-fire, "and neither has been brought in yet."
-
-He had just perceived, to his discomfiture, that they had not. There was
-nothing for it but to turn from the ungarnished sideboard and face her
-again.
-
-"It's about Barney, Mr. Oldmeadow," Miss Toner said, unmoved by his
-patent evasion. "It's because I know you love Barney and care for his
-happiness. And it's because I hope that you and I are to be friends, and
-friendship can only be built on truth. Try to trust more; will you?
-That's all I want to say. Try to trust. You will be happier if you do
-and make other people happier."
-
-Oldmeadow had never experienced such an assault upon his personality,
-and he met it gagged and bound, for, assuredly, this was to be Barney's
-wife. A slow flush mounted to his face.
-
-"I'm afraid I seem very strange and unconventional to you," Adrienne
-Toner went on. "You've lived in a world where people don't care enough
-for each other to say the real things. They must be felt if they've to
-be said, mustn't they? Yet you do care for people. I have seen that,
-watching you here; and you care for real things. It's a crust of caution
-and convention that is about you. You are afraid of expression. You are
-afraid of feeling. You are afraid of being taken in and of wasting
-yourself. Don't be afraid, Mr. Oldmeadow. We never lose ourselves by
-trusting. We never lose ourselves by giving. It's a realer self that
-comes. And with you, I see it clearly, if you let the crust grow
-thicker, it will shut life and light and joy away from you; and when
-light cannot visit our hearts, they wither within us. That is your
-danger. I want to be your friend, so I must say the truth to you."
-
-He knew, though he had to struggle not to laugh, that he was very angry
-and that he must not show anger; though it would really be better to
-show that than his intense amusement; and it took him a moment, during
-which they confronted each other, to find words; dry, donnish words;
-words of caution and convention. They were the only ones he had
-available for the situation. "My dear young lady," he said, "you take
-too much upon yourself."
-
-She was not in the least disconcerted. She met his eyes steadily. "You
-mean that I am presumptuous, Mr. Oldmeadow?"
-
-"You take too much upon yourself," he repeated. "As you say, I hope we
-may be friends."
-
-"Is that really all, Mr. Oldmeadow?" she said, looking at him with such
-a depth of thoughtfulness that he could not for the life of him make out
-whether she found him odious or merely pitiful.
-
-"Yes; that's really all," he returned.
-
-The dining-room was very bright and the little blue figure before the
-fire was very still. The moment fixed itself deep in his consciousness
-with that impression of stillness and brightness. It was an
-uncomfortable impression. Her little face, uplifted to his, absurd, yet
-not uncharming, was, in its still force, almost ominous.
-
-"I'm sorry," was all she said, and she turned and went forward to greet
-Mrs. Chadwick.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-
-It was a soft June day and Oldmeadow was strolling about Mrs. Averil's
-garden admiring her herbaceous borders. It was a day that smelt of
-ripening strawberries, of warm grass and roses, and the air was full of
-a medley of bird voices, thrushes and blackbirds, sweet as grass and
-strawberries, and the bubbling rattle of the chaffinch as happy as the
-sunlight.
-
-Adrienne Toner was Mrs. Chadwick now, and she and Eleanor Chadwick and
-Barney were motoring together in the French Alps. Coldbrooks was empty,
-and he had come to stay with Nancy and her mother.
-
-They lived in a small stone house with a Jacobean front that looked,
-over a stone wall, at Chelford Green, and had behind it a delightfully
-unexpected length of lawn and orchard and kitchen-garden, all enclosed
-by higher walls and presided over by a noble cedar. Seen from the garden
-The Little House was merely mid-Victorian, but the modern additions were
-masked by climbing roses and a great magnolia-tree opened its
-lemon-scented cups at the highest bedroom windows. The morning-room was
-in the modern part, and from one of its windows, presently, Mrs. Averil
-emerged, opening her sunshade as she crossed the grass to join her
-guest. She wore a white straw garden hat, tipping over her eyes and
-tying, behind, over her thick knot of hair, in a manner that always
-recalled to Oldmeadow a lady out of Trollope. Her face was pale, like
-Nancy's, and her eyes grey; but rather than blackcaps and primroses she
-suggested lace tippets and porcelain tea-sets, and though it was from
-her Nancy had her pretty trick of closing her eyes when she smiled, Mrs.
-Averil's smile was cogitative and impersonal, and in her always
-temperate mirth there was an edge of grimness.
-
-"Well, Roger, I want to hear what you thought about the wedding," she
-said. She had not gone to church that morning with Nancy and it was, he
-knew, because she wanted an interchange of frank impressions. She had
-been prevented from attending Miss Toner's London nuptials by a touch of
-influenza and, as she now went on to say, she had got little from Nancy,
-who had no eye for pageants and performances. "Eleanor was so absorbed,"
-she went on, "in the fact that the Bishop had indigestion and had, at
-her suggestion, taken magnesia with his breakfast, that I could not get
-much else out of her. She seemed to have seen the Bishop's symptoms
-rather than Adrienne and Barney. Now from you I expect all the relevant
-details."
-
-"Well, if you call it a detail, Nancy was lovely," said Oldmeadow. "She
-looked like a silver-birch in her white and green."
-
-"And pearls," said Mrs. Averil. "You noticed, of course, the necklaces
-Adrienne gave them; quite the gift of a princess, yet so innocent and
-unobtrusive looking, too. She has great taste in such matters. Did she
-look well? Eleanor did say that she, like the Bishop, was very pale."
-
-"She was pale; but not a bit nervous. She rather looked as if she had
-been married every day of her life. Nothing ever puts her out, you know.
-She was very grave and benign; but she wasn't an imposing bride and the
-wreath of orange-blossoms aged her. Nancy and Meg and Barbara and the
-Lumley girl aged her, too. She must be older than Barney."
-
-"Yes; she is. A year older. But she's the sort of woman who will wear,"
-said Mrs. Averil, pausing before a bed of rose-trees to snip off a
-fading flower. "She'll not look very differently at fifty, you know; and
-her hair is the sort that may never turn grey. I can see her at seventy
-with those big golden braids and all her teeth. There's something very
-indestructible about her. Like a doll made of white leather compared to
-one made of porcelain. She'll last and last," said Mrs. Averil. "She'll
-outlast us all. Barney was radiant, of course."
-
-"Yes. But he _was_ nervous; like a little boy frightened by the
-splendour of his Christmas-tree. He looked as though he were arm in arm
-with the Christmas-tree itself as he came down the nave. A rather dumpy
-little Christmas-tree, but exquisitely lighted and garnished."
-
-"Well, he ought to be radiant," Mrs. Averil observed. "With all that
-money, it's an extremely good match for him. The fact of her being
-nobody in particular makes no difference, really, since she's an
-American. And she has, I gather, no tiresome relations to come
-bothering."
-
-"She's very unencumbered, certainly. There's something altogether very
-solitary about her," Oldmeadow agreed, watching Mrs. Averil snip off the
-withered roses. "I felt that even as she came down the nave on Barney's
-arm. It's not a bit about the money he's radiant," he added.
-
-"Oh, I know. Of course not. That was only my own gross satisfaction
-expressing itself. He's as in love as it's possible to be. And with
-every good reason."
-
-"You took to her as much as they all did, then?"
-
-"That would be rather difficult, wouldn't it? And Barney's reasons would
-hardly be those of a dry old aunt. She was very nice and kind to Nancy
-and me and she's evidently going to do everything for them. Barbara's
-already, you know, been sent to that admirable school that was too
-expensive for Eleanor; riding and singing and all the rest of it. And
-Meg's been given a perfect trousseau of fine clothes for her London
-season. Naturally I don't feel very critically towards her."
-
-"Don't you? Well, if she weren't a princess distributing largess,
-wouldn't you? After all, she's not given Nancy a trousseau. So why be
-mute with an old friend?"
-
-"Ah, but she's given her the pearls," said Mrs. Averil. "Nancy couldn't
-but accept a bridesmaid's gift. And she would give her a trousseau if
-she wanted it and would take it. However, I'll own, though decency
-should keep me mute, that I should find myself a little bored if I had
-to see too much of her. I'm an everyday person and I like to talk about
-everyday things."
-
-"I can hear her asking you, in answer to that, if there is anything more
-everyday than the human soul. I wish I could have seen you _aux prises_
-with her," Oldmeadow remarked. "Did she come down here? Did she like
-your drawing-room and garden?"
-
-Mrs. Averil's drawing-room and garden lay very near her heart. Eleanor
-Chadwick sometimes accused her of caring more about her china and her
-roses than about anything else in the world except Nancy.
-
-"I don't think she saw them; not what I call see," Mrs. Averil now said.
-"Oh, yes; she came several times and recognized, very appreciatively,
-the periods of my Queen Anne furniture and my Lowestoft. Beyond their
-period I don't think she went. She said the garden was old-world," Mrs.
-Averil added, looking about her and twirling her parasol on her
-shoulder.
-
-"She would," Oldmeadow agreed. "That's just what she would call it. And
-she'd call you a true, deep-hearted woman and Nancy a gifted girl. How
-do she and Nancy hit it off? It's that I want most of all to hear
-about."
-
-"They haven't much in common, have they?" said Mrs. Averil. "She's never
-hunted and doesn't, I imagine, know a wren from a hedge-sparrow. She
-_does_ know a skylark when she hears one, for she said 'Hail to thee,
-blithe spirit' while one was singing. But I felt, somehow, it was like
-the Queen Anne and the Lowestoft--a question of the label."
-
-Oldmeadow at this began to laugh with an open and indulged mirth. He and
-Mrs. Averil, at all events, saw eye to eye. "If you'd tie the correct
-label to the hedge-sparrow she'd know that, too," he said. "Poor girl.
-The trouble with her isn't that she doesn't know the birds, but that she
-wouldn't know the poets, either, without their labels. It's a mind made
-up of labels. No; I don't think it likely that Nancy, who hasn't a label
-about her, will get much out of her--beyond necklaces."
-
-"I wish Nancy _had_ a few labels," said Mrs. Averil. "I wish she could
-have travelled and studied as Miss Toner--Adrienne that is--has done.
-She is such a little ignoramus. Adrienne may bore you and me, but Nancy
-will never interest anyone--except you and me."
-
-It was always amusing to Oldmeadow, if a little sardonically so, to note
-that any conception of himself as a possible suitor for Nancy had never
-entered Mrs. Averil's mind. As a friend he was everything a mother could
-desire; as a match for Nancy almost unimaginable. Well, he could not
-give a wife even one hunter and he never had had any intention of
-falling in love with his dear nymph; yet that other people might not do
-so was a suggestion he repudiated with warmth.
-
-"Oh; in love, yes," Mrs. Averil agreed. "I don't deny that she's very
-loveable and I hope she may marry well. But that's not the same thing as
-being interesting, is it? A man may be in love with a woman who doesn't
-interest him."
-
-"I dispute that statement."
-
-"I'm sure dear Eleanor never interested her husband--devoted to the day
-of his death as he was. There's something in my idea. To be interesting
-one must offer something new. If Nancy had been interesting to Barney
-she would now, I think, have been in Adrienne's place. Not that it would
-have been a marriage to be desired for either of them."
-
-So he and Mrs. Averil had been thinking the same thoughts.
-
-"And you contend that if Nancy had been to China and read Goethe and
-Dante in the originals he'd have been interested? I think he was quite
-sufficiently interested and that if Miss Toner hadn't come barging into
-our lives he'd have known he was in love."
-
-"Going to China is a figure of speech and stands for all the things she
-hasn't got and doesn't know. My poor little Nancy. All the same, _she_
-isn't a bore!" said Mrs. Averil with as near an approach to acerbity as
-she could show.
-
-"No; she isn't a bore. The things she knows have to be found out, by
-degrees, through living with her. Barney hasn't been to China, either,
-so, according to your theory, Nancy didn't find him interesting."
-
-At this Mrs. Averil's eyes met his and, after a moment of contemplation,
-they yielded up to him the secret they saw to be shared. "If only it
-were the same for women! But they don't need the new. She's young.
-She'll get over it. I don't believe in broken hearts. All the same,"
-Mrs. Averil stopped in their walk, ostensibly to examine the growth of a
-fine pink lupin, "it hasn't endeared Adrienne to me. I'm too
-_terre-à-terre_, about that, too, not to feel vexation, on Nancy's
-account. And what I'm afraid of is that she knows she's not endeared to
-me. That she guesses. She's a bore; but she's not a bit stupid, you
-know."
-
-"You don't think she's spiteful?" Oldmeadow suggested after a moment,
-while Mrs. Averil still examined her lupin.
-
-"Dear me, no! I wish she could be! It's that smooth surface of hers
-that's so tiresome. She's not spiteful. But she's human. She'll want to
-keep Barney away and Nancy will be hurt."
-
-"Want to keep him away when she's got him so completely?"
-
-"Something of that sort. I felt it once or twice."
-
-"My first instinct about her was right, then," said Oldmeadow. "She's a
-bore and an interloper, and she'll spoil things."
-
-"Oh, perhaps not. She'll mend some things. Have you heard about Captain
-Hayward?"
-
-"Do you mean that stupid, big, tawny fellow? What about him?"
-
-"You may well ask. I've been spoken to about him and Meg by more than
-one person. They are making themselves conspicuous, and it's been going
-on for some time."
-
-"You don't mean that Meg's in love with him?"
-
-"He's in love with her, at all events, and, as you know, he's a married
-man. I questioned Nancy, who was with Meg for a few weeks in London, and
-she owns that Meg's unhappy."
-
-"And they're seeing each other in London now?" Oldmeadow was deeply
-discomposed.
-
-"No. He's away just now. And Meg is going to meet the bridal party in
-Paris at the end of July. Nancy feels that when Meg gets back under
-Adrienne's influence there'll be nothing to fear."
-
-"We depend on her, then, so much, already," he murmured. He was
-reviewing, hastily, his last impressions of Meg and they were not
-reassuring. The only thing that was reassuring was to reflect on his
-impressions of Adrienne. "Grandma's parlour" returned to him with its
-assurance of deep security. Above everything else Adrienne was
-respectable.
-
-"Yes. That's just it," Mrs. Averil agreed. "We depend on her. And I feel
-we're going to depend more and more. She's the sort of person who mends
-things. So we mustn't think of what she spoils."
-
-What Adrienne Toner had spoiled was, however, to be made very plain next
-morning both to Nancy's old friend and to her mother. Beside her plate
-at breakfast was a letter addressed in Barney's evident hand, a letter
-in a narrow envelope stamped with the name of a French hotel and
-showing, over the address, an engraving of peaks against the sky. Nancy
-met the occasion with perfect readiness, saying as she looked at the
-letter, waiting to open it till she had made the tea--Nancy always made
-the tea in the morning while her mother sat behind the bacon and eggs at
-the other end of the table--"How nice; from Barney. Now we shall have
-news of them."
-
-Nothing less like an Ariane could be imagined than Nancy as she stood
-there in her pink dress above the pink, white and gold tea-cups. One
-might have supposed from her demeanour that a letter from Barney was but
-a happy incident in a happy day. But, when she dropped into her chair
-and read, it was evident that she was not prepared for what she found.
-She read steadily, in silence, while Oldmeadow cut bread at the
-sideboard and Mrs. Averil distributed her viands, and, when the last
-page was reached, they both could not fail to see that Nancy was
-blushing, blushing so deeply that, as she thus felt herself betray her
-emotion, tears came thickly into her downcast eyes.
-
-"I'll have my tea now, dear," said Mrs. Averil. "Will you wait a little
-longer, Roger?" She tided Nancy over.
-
-But Nancy was soon afloat. "The letter is for us all," she said. "Do
-read it aloud, Roger, while I have my breakfast."
-
-Barney's letters, in the past, had, probably, always been shared and
-Nancy was evidently determined that her own discomposure was not to
-introduce a new precedent. Oldmeadow took up the sheets and read.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"DEAREST NANCY,--How I wish you were with us up here. It's the most
-fantastically lovely place. One feels as if one could sail off into it.
-I dug up some roots of saxifrage for your wall yesterday, such pretty
-pink stuff. It's gone off in a box wrapped in damp moss and I hope will
-reach you safely. A horrid, vandal thing to do; but for you and Aunt
-Monica I felt it justified, and there are such masses of it. I saw a
-snow-bunting yesterday, much higher up than the saxifrage; such a jolly,
-composed little fellow on a field of snow. The birds would drive you
-absolutely mad, except that you're such a sensible young person you'd no
-doubt keep your head even when you saw a pair of golden eagles, as we
-did, floating over a ravine. I walked around the Lac d'Annecy this
-morning, before breakfast, and did wish you were with me. I thought of
-our bird-walks at dawn last summer. There were two or three darling
-warblers singing, kinds we haven't got at home; and black redstarts and
-a peregrine falcon high in the air. I could write all day if I'd the
-time, about the birds and flowers. You remember Adrienne telling us that
-afternoon when she first came to Coldbrooks about the flowers. But I
-mustn't go on now. We're stopping for tea in a little valley among the
-mountains with flowers thick all around us and I've only time to give
-our news to you and Aunt Monica and to send our love. Mother is
-extremely fit and jolly, though rather scared at the hairpin curves;
-Adrienne has to hold her hand. I'm too happy for words and feel as if
-I'd grown wings. How is Chummie's foot? Did the liniment help? Those
-traps are beastly things. I feel just as you do about the rabbits.
-Adrienne reads aloud to us in the evenings; a man called Claudel;
-awfully stiff French to follow but rather beautiful. I think you'd like
-him. Not a bit like Racine! Best love to you and Aunt Monica. Here's
-Adrienne, who wants to have her say."
-
-Had it been written in compunction for _Ariane aux bords laissée_? or,
-rather, in a happy reversion to sheer spontaneity, a turning, without
-any self-consciousness, to the comrade of the bird-walks who would,
-after all, best feel with him about snow-buntings and redstarts?
-Oldmeadow paused for the surmise, not looking up, before he went on from
-Barney's neat, firm script to his wife's large, clear clumsy hand.
-
- "DEAREST NANCY," ran the postscript, and it had been at the
- postscript, Oldmeadow now could gauge, that Nancy had first found
- herself unprepared. "I, too, am thinking of you, with Barney. It is
- a great joy to feel that where, he says, I've given him golden
- eagles and snow-buntings he's given me--among so many other dear,
- wonderful people--a Nancy. I get the best of the bargain, don't I?
- I can't see much of the birds for looking at the peaks--_my_ peaks,
- so familiar yet, always, so new again. 'Stern daughters of the
- voice of God' that they are. Radiantly white against a cloudless
- sky we find them to-day. Barney's profile is beautiful against
- them--but his nose is badly sun-burned! _All_ our noses are
- sun-burned! That's what one pays for flying among the Alps.
-
- "Mother Nell--we've decided that that's what I'm to call
- her--looks ten years younger all the same, as I knew she would. We
- talk of you all so often--of you and Meg and Palgrave and Barbara,
- and half a dozen times a day Barney wishes that one or the other of
- you were with us to see this or that. It's specially you for the
- birds I notice. You must take me for some bird-walks at dawn some
- day and teach me to know all your lovely English songsters.... Dear
- little Cousin-Sister, I send you my love with his and, with him,
- hold you warmly in my heart. Will 'Aunt Monica' accept my
- affectionate and admiring homages?
-
- "Yours ever
-
- "ADRIENNE"
-
-
-
-Oldmeadow had not expected that she could write such a human letter; yet
-it explained Nancy's blush. Barney's spontaneous affection she could
-have faced, but she had not been able to face his wife's determined
-tenderness. Adrienne had meant it well, no doubt--Oldmeadow gazed on
-after he had finished, but she had no business to mean so well, no
-business to thrust herself, in this community of intimacy, into what was
-Barney's place alone. There was more in it, he knew, with Meg and Mrs.
-Averil to help him, than the quite successful playfulness. She was to be
-more intimate than Barney, that was what it came to; more, much more
-tender if Barney was to be allowed intimacy and tenderness. That was
-really what she intended Nancy to see, and that Barney had no place at
-all where she, Adrienne, did not also belong.
-
-"Very sweet; very sweet and pretty," Mrs. Averil's voice broke in, and
-he realized that he had allowed himself to drop into a grim and
-tactless reverie; "I didn't know she had such a sense of humour.
-Sun-burned noses and 'Stern daughters of the voice of God.' Well done. I
-didn't think Adrienne would ever look as low as noses. They must be
-having a delightful tour. I know black redstarts. There was one that
-used to wake me every morning at four, one summer, in Normandy, with the
-most foolish, creaking song; just outside my window. Give Barney my love
-when you write and return my niece's affectionate and admiring homages.
-Mother Nell. I shouldn't care to be called Mother Nell somehow."
-
-So Mrs. Averil's vexation expressed itself and so she floated Nancy
-along. But Nancy, long since, had pulled herself together and was able
-to look at Oldmeadow, while her lashes closed together in her own smile,
-and to say that she'd almost be willing to lose her nose for the sake of
-hearing the new warblers. Mrs. Averil opened her "Times" and over
-marmalade Nancy and Oldmeadow planned the trip that they would take some
-day, when their ship came in, the three of them, a bird-trip to the
-French Alps.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat beside Adrienne Chadwick and knew that from the other end
-of the room, where he talked to Mrs. Aldesey, Barney's eyes were on
-them, though he tried to keep them off. It was the first dinner-party
-the young couple had given since they had come up to town, for though
-they were established at Coldbrooks in the communal family life Adrienne
-seemed to find to her taste, and though Barney had at once immersed
-himself in country pursuits, they had taken and furnished this large
-house in Connaught Square and it was, apparently, settled that the
-winter months were to be spent in London. How that was to be combined
-with farming at Coldbrooks, or whether Barney intended to take a header
-into politics and felt a London house, big enough for entertaining, part
-of the programme, Oldmeadow hadn't an idea, and for the rather sinister
-reason that he had hardly laid his eyes on Barney since his return from
-his wedding-journey. Even though asked to tea once or twice, while,
-established in an hotel, they were finding and furnishing the house, he
-had never found them alone and either Barney had made no opportunity, or
-his wife had seen to it that none should be made, for having a
-_tête-à-tête_ with his old friend.
-
-Oldmeadow could not associate Barney with ambitions, either social or
-political, nor, he was bound to say, as he looked round the
-dinner-table, where Adrienne sat at one end with Lord Lumley and Barney
-at the other with Lady Lumley, could one infer from its disparate and
-irrelevant elements any such ambitions in Adrienne. He had taken Mrs.
-Aldesey down and had felt her at moments to be almost too resourceful,
-her air of graceful skill in keeping the ball rolling seeming too much
-to emphasize its tendency to drop. Without Mrs. Aldesey, without
-Meg--vividly engaged at one corner with a fair young American--without
-himself, for he had aided and abetted Lydia to the best of his ability,
-the dinner would have been a dull one and he was not sure that even
-their enterprise had redeemed it. Adrienne had not any air of fearing
-dullness or of being in need of assistance. Oldmeadow saw that the blue
-ribbon was frequently unrolled and that, as always, it made a silence in
-which it could be watched. Lord Lumley, his handsome, official head bent
-in an attitude of chivalrous devotion, watched earnestly, and the fair
-young American paused in the midst of whatever he might be saying to Meg
-to take almost reverent note; but Oldmeadow fancied more than once that
-he caught startled eyes fixed upon it, especially when there emerged a
-lustrous loop of quotation:--
-
- "One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
- Never doubted clouds would break,--"
-
-The silence for that had been so general that even Barney, far away, and
-protected by Mrs. Aldesey, was aware of it.
-
-"How wonderfully he _wears_, doesn't he, dear old Browning," said Mrs.
-Aldesey, and in the glance that Barney cast upon her was an oddly
-mingled gratitude and worry. The fair young American, he was very fair
-and had clear, charming eyes, finished the verse in a low voice to Meg
-and Meg looked at him affectionately the while. He was evidently one of
-Adrienne's appurtenances.
-
-It was a dull dinner. Pretty, festive Mrs. Pope and young Mr. Haviland,
-reputed to be a wit and one of Meg's young men as Mrs. Pope was one of
-Barney's young women, would not with any eagerness again attend a board
-where the hostess quoted Browning and didn't know better than to send
-you down, the first with a stern young socialist who sat silent for the
-most part and frowned when addressed, and the second with a jocular,
-middle-aged lady from California, the mother, Oldmeadow gathered, of the
-clear-eyed youth, from whose ample bosom Mr. Haviland's subtle arrows
-glanced aside leaving him helplessly exposed to the stout bludgeonings
-of her humour. Adrienne paused once or twice in her conversation to
-smile approval upon her compatriot and to draw Lord Lumley's attention
-to her special brand of merriment, good Lord Lumley adjusting his
-glasses obediently to take it in.
-
-And now they were all assembled in the drawing-room. Like everything
-about Adrienne, it was simple and rather splendid. Barney had wisely
-kept his modernities for his own study and it was a pity, Oldmeadow
-reflected, that Adrienne had not kept for her own boudoir the large
-portrait of herself that hung over the mantelpiece, since it was a note
-more irrelevant than any Post Impressionist could have been and cast a
-shade of surmise over the taste displayed in the Chippendale furniture
-and the Chinese screens.
-
-"Rather sweet, isn't it; pastoral and girlish, you know," Barney had
-suggested tentatively as Mrs. Aldesey had placed herself before it.
-"Done in Paris a good many years ago; the man was very much the fashion
-then. Adrienne was only sixteen. It's an extraordinarily perfect
-likeness still, isn't it?"
-
-To which Mrs. Aldesey, all old lace and exquisite evasion, had murmured,
-her lorgnette uplifted: "Quite dear and ingenuous. Such a relief after
-your arid Cubists. What would they make of Mrs. Barney _en bergère_, I'd
-like to know? A jumble of packing-cases with something twisted in a
-corner to signify a bleat."
-
-For the picture, painted with glib assurance and abounding in pink and
-azure, portrayed Adrienne dressed as a shepherdess and carrying a
-flower-wreathed crook.
-
-Adrienne, to-night at all events, was looking very unlike the
-shepherdess, but that might be because of the approaches of her
-maternity. Mrs. Chadwick, when he had last been at Coldbrooks, had told
-him that the baby was expected in May and that Adrienne was wonderful
-about it, dedicating herself to its perfection in thought and deed with
-every conscious hour.
-
-"If only I'd thought about my babies before they came like that, who
-knows what they might have turned out!" she had surmised. "But I was
-very silly, I'm afraid, and the only thing I really did think of was how
-I should dress them. I've always loved butcher's-blue linen for children
-and I must say that mine did look very nice in it. For everyday, you
-know."
-
-Oldmeadow found it extremely difficult to think of Adrienne as a mother;
-it was much easier to think of her as a shepherdess. Such solidities of
-experience gave her even a certain pathos in his eyes, though he was in
-no whit dislodged from his hostility to her. She was as mild, as
-satisfied, apparently, with herself and with existence, as ever, yet her
-eyes and lips expressed fatigue and a purely physical sadness that was
-uncharacteristic, and it was uncharacteristic that she should be rather
-thickly powdered.
-
-They had not really met since the morning of her adjuration to him at
-Coldbrooks and he wondered if she remembered that little scene as
-vividly as he did. She would be very magnanimous did she not remember it
-unpleasantly; and he could imagine her as very magnanimous; yet from the
-fact that she had kept Barney from him he could not believe that she was
-feeling magnanimously.
-
-She watched Barney and Mrs. Aldesey now, as they stood before her
-portrait, and he fancied that the sadness in her eyes, whatever might be
-its cause, deepened a little. When she turned them on him it was with an
-effect of being patiently ready for him. Perhaps, really, she had been
-more patient than pleased all evening.
-
-"So you are settled here for the winter?" he said. "Have you and Barney
-any plans? I've hardly seen anything of him of late."
-
-"We have been so very, very busy, you know," said Adrienne, as if quite
-accepting his right to an explanation.
-
-She was dressed in pale blue and wore, with her pearl necklace, a little
-wreath of pearls in her hair. In her hands she turned, as they talked, a
-small eighteenth-century fan painted in pink and grey and blue, and he
-was aware, as he had been at Coldbrooks, of those slow and rather
-fumbling movements.
-
-"We couldn't well ask friends," she went on, "even the dearest, to come
-and sit on rolls of carpet with us while we drank our tea, could we?
-We've kept our squalor for the family circle. Meg's been with us; so
-dear and helpful; but only Meg and a flying visit once or twice from
-Mother Nell. Nancy couldn't come. But nothing, it seems, will tear Nancy
-from hunting. I feel that strange and rather sad; the absorption of a
-fine young life in such primitiveness."
-
-"Oh, well; it's not her only interest, you know," said Oldmeadow, very
-determined not to allow himself vexation. "Nancy is a creature of such
-deep country roots. Not the kind that grow in London."
-
-"I know," said Adrienne. "And it is just those roots that I want to
-prevent my Barney's growing. Roots like that tie people to routine;
-convention; acceptance. I want Barney to find a wider, freer life. I
-hope he will go into politics. If we have left Coldbrooks and the dear
-people there for these winter months it's because I feel he will be
-better able to form opinions here than in the country. I saw quite well,
-there, that people didn't form opinions; only accepted traditions. I
-want Barney to be free of tradition and to form opinions for himself. He
-has none now," she smiled.
-
-She had been clear before, and secure; but he felt now the added weight
-of her matronly authority. He felt, too, that, while ready for him and,
-perhaps, benevolently disposed, she was far more indifferent to his
-impressions than she had been at Coldbrooks. She had possessed Barney
-before; but how much more deeply she possessed him now and how much
-more definitely she saw what she intended to do with him.
-
-"You must equip him with your opinions," said Oldmeadow, and his voice
-was a good match for hers in benevolence. "I know that you have so many
-well-formed ones."
-
-"Oh, no; never that," said Adrienne. "That's how country vegetables are
-grown; first in frames and then in plots; all guided and controlled. He
-must find his own opinions; quite for himself; quite freely of
-influence. That is the rock upon which Democracy is founded. Nothing is
-more arresting to development than living by other people's opinions."
-
-"But we must get our opinions from somebody and somewhere. The danger of
-democracy is that we don't grow them at all; merely catch them, like
-influenza, from a mob. Not that I disbelieve in democracy."
-
-"Don't you, Mr. Oldmeadow?" She turned her little fan and smiled on him.
-"You believe in liberty, equality, fraternity? That surprises me."
-
-"Democracy isn't incompatible with recognizing that other people are
-wiser than oneself and letting them guide us; quite the contrary. Why
-surprised? Have I seemed so autocratic?"
-
-"It would surprise me very much to learn that you believed in equality,
-to start with that alone"; Adrienne smiled on.
-
-"Well, I own that I don't believe in people who have no capacity for
-opinions being impowered to act as if they had. That's the fallacy
-that's playing the mischief with us, all over the world."
-
-"They never will have opinions worth having unless they are given the
-liberty to look for them. You don't believe in liberty, either, when you
-say that."
-
-"No; not for everybody. Some of our brothers are too young and others
-too stupid to be trusted with it."
-
-"They'll take it for themselves if you don't trust them with it," said
-Adrienne, and he was again aware that though she might be absurd she, at
-all events, was not stupid. "All that we can do in life is to trust, and
-help, and open doors. Only experience teaches. People must follow their
-own lights."
-
-He moved forward another pawn, and though he did not find her stupid he
-was not taking her seriously. "Most people have no lights to follow.
-It's a choice for them between following other people's or resenting and
-trampling on them. That, again, is what we can see happening all over
-the world."
-
-"So it is, you must own, just as I thought; you don't even believe in
-fraternity," said Adrienne, and she continued to smile her weary,
-tranquil smile upon him; "for we cannot feel towards men as towards
-brothers, and trust them, unless we believe that the light shines into
-each human soul."
-
-He saw now that unless they went much deeper, deeper than he could be
-willing, ever, to go with Adrienne Toner, he must submit to letting
-himself appear as worsted. He knew where he believed the roots of trust
-to grow and he did not intend, no never, to say to Adrienne Toner that
-only through the love of God could one at once distrust and love the
-species to which one belonged. He could have shuddered at the thought of
-what she would certainly have found to say about God.
-
-"You've got all sorts of brothers here to-night, haven't you," he
-remarked, putting aside the abstract theme and adjusting his glass.
-"Some of them look as though they didn't recognize the relationship.
-Where did you find our young socialist over there in the corner? He
-looks very menacing. Most of the socialists I've known have been the
-mildest of men."
-
-"He is a friend of Palgrave's. Palgrave brought him to see me. Oh, I'm
-so glad--Gertrude is going to take care of him. She always sees at once
-if anyone looks lonely. That's all right, then."
-
-Oldmeadow was not so sure it was as he observed the eye with which Mr.
-Besley measured the beaming advance of the lady from California.
-
-"I wonder if you would like my dear old friend, Mrs. Prentiss," Adrienne
-continued, watching her method with Mr. Besley. "The Laughing
-Philosopher, Mother used to call her. She is a very rare, strong soul.
-That is her son, talking to Lady Lumley. He's been studying architecture
-in Paris for the past three years. A radiant person. Mrs. Prentiss runs
-a settlement in San Francisco and has a brilliant literary and artistic
-salon. She is a real force in the life of our country."
-
-"Why should you question my appreciation of rarity and strength? I can
-see that she is very kind and that if anybody can melt Mr. Besley she
-will."
-
-"Gertrude would have melted Diogenes," said Adrienne with a fond
-assurance that, though it took the form of playfulness, lacked its
-substance. "I hope they will find each other, for he is rare and strong,
-too. What he needs is warmth and happiness. He makes me think of Shelley
-when he talks."
-
-"He's too well up in statistics to make me think of Shelley," Oldmeadow
-commented. Barney, he saw, from his place beside Mrs. Aldesey at the
-other end of the room, was still watching them, pleased now, it was
-evident, by the appearance of friendly, drifting converse they
-presented. "He's not altogether unknown to me for we often, in our
-review, get our windows broken by his stones; well-thrown, too. He's
-very able. So you thought it might do the British Empire good to face
-him? Well, I suppose it may."
-
-"Which are the British Empire?" asked Adrienne. "You. To begin with."
-
-"Oh, no. Count me out. I'm only a snappy, snuffy scribbler. Good old
-Lord Lumley, of course, with all his vast, well-governed provinces
-shimmering in the Indian sun behind him. And Sir Archibald, who talks so
-loudly in the House. Palgrave didn't bring him, I'll be bound."
-
-"No. Lady Lumley brought him. He and Lord Lumley are certainly more than
-odds and ends." She had an air of making no attempt to meet his
-badinage, if it was that, but of mildly walking past it. "They are, both
-of them, rather splendid people, in spite of their limitations. They've
-accepted tradition, you see, instead of growing opinion. That is their
-only trouble. I was afraid you were going to say Mr. Haviland. He is
-certainly an odd and end."
-
-Mr. Haviland and Mrs. Pope had found each other and were indulging in
-mirthful repartee in the back drawing-room. "I feel safe with Lord
-Lumley and Sir Archibald," Adrienne added.
-
-"I'd certainly rather trust myself in their hands than in Mr. Besley's.
-I'd almost rather trust myself in the hands of Mr. Haviland."
-
-"You mean that they would, at least, keep you comfortable and that Mr.
-Besley wouldn't." She, too, had her forms of repartee.
-
-"I expect it's just what I do mean," he assented. "If Mr. Besley and his
-friends had their way, I for instance, and workers of my type, would
-soon, I suspect, have to forego our tobacco and our chamber-music. We're
-only marketable in a comfortable world. And there are more comfortable
-people, I maintain, under Lord Lumley, than there would be under Mr.
-Besley."
-
-"'Heartily know, when half-gods go, the gods arrive,'" said Adrienne.
-"All revolutions must begin by burning away the evil and the refuse. Not
-that I am a revolutionist, or even a socialist."
-
-"You can't separate good from evil by burning," he said. "You burn them
-both. That's what the French did in their lamentable bonfire, for which
-they've been paying in poorer brains and poorer blood ever since. We
-don't want revolutions. All we want is slow, good-tempered reform.
-Revolutions are always ill-tempered, aren't they, and nothing worth
-doing was ever done in an ill-temper. You are making me very didactic."
-
-"Oh, but I prefer that so much to persiflage," said Adrienne, with her
-tranquillity. "And I am glad to hear what you really believe. But it is
-sad to me that you should see no ardour or glory in anything. With all
-its excesses and errors, I have always felt the French Revolution to be
-a sublime expression of the human spirit."
-
-"It might have been; if they could only have kept their
-heads--metaphorically as well as literally. But the glory and ardour
-were too mixed with hatred and ignorance. I'm afraid I do tend to
-distrust those states of feeling. They tend so easily to
-self-deception."
-
-She was looking at him, quietly and attentively, and he was, for the
-first time since their initial meeting, perhaps, feeling quite
-benevolently towards her; quite as the British Empire might feel towards
-a subject race. It was, therefore, the more difficult to feel anything
-but exasperation when she said, having, evidently, summed up her
-impressions and found her verdict: "Yes. You distrust them. We always
-come back to that, don't we? You distrust yourself, too. So that, when
-you tell me what you believe, you can only do it in the form of making
-fun of my beliefs. I feel about you, Mr. Oldmeadow, what I felt that
-morning when I tried to come near you and you wouldn't let me. I feel it
-more the more I see you; and it makes me sad. It isn't only that you
-distrust ardour and glory, all the sunlight and splendour of life; but
-you are afraid of them; afraid to open your heart to trust. You shut
-your door upon the sunlight and take up your caustic pen; and you don't
-see how the shadows fall about you."
-
-It was indeed a dusty tumble from the quite civilized pavement of their
-interchange, and it was unfortunate that upon his moment of
-discomfiture, when he saw himself as trying to clap the dust off his
-knees and shoulders in time to be presentable, Barney and Mrs. Aldesey
-should have chosen to approach them. Barney, no doubt, imagined it a
-propitious moment in which to display to Mrs. Aldesey his wife's and his
-friend's amity.
-
-Adrienne was perfectly composed. She had borne her testimony and, again,
-done her best for him, pointing out to him that the first step towards
-enfranchisement was to open his door to the sunlight that she could so
-bountifully supply. She turned a clear, competent eye upon her husband
-and his companion.
-
-"Well, dear, and what have you and Roger been so deep in?" Barney
-inquired, looking down at her with a fondness in which, all the same,
-Oldmeadow detected the anxiety that had hovered in his eye all evening.
-"You've seemed frightfully deep."
-
-"We have been," said Adrienne, looking up at him. "In liberty, equality
-and fraternity; all the things I believe in and that Mr. Oldmeadow
-doesn't. I can't imagine how he gets on at all, he believes in so few
-things. It must be such a sad, dim, groping world to live in when there
-are no stars above to look at and no hands below to hold."
-
-"Oh, well, you see," said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile, "his
-ancestors didn't sign the Declaration of Independence."
-
-"We don't need ancestors to do that," Adrienne smiled back. "All of us
-sign it for ourselves--all of us who have accepted our birthright and
-taken the gifts that our great, modern, deep-hearted world hold out to
-us. You are an American, Mrs. Aldesey, so you find it easy to believe in
-freedom, don't you?"
-
-"Very easy; for myself; but not for other people," Mrs. Aldesey replied
-and Oldmeadow saw at once, with an added discomfort, that she
-underestimated, because of Adrienne's absurdity, Adrienne's
-intelligence. "But then the very name of any abstraction--freedom,
-humanity, what you will--has always made me feel, at once, dreadfully
-sleepy. It's not ever having had my mind trained, Mrs. Barney. Now
-yours was, beautifully, I can see."
-
-Adrienne looked up at her, for Mrs. Aldesey, her lace about her
-shoulders, her lorgnette in her hands, had not seated herself, and it
-was further evident to Oldmeadow that she weighed Mrs. Aldesey more
-correctly than Mrs. Aldesey weighed her. "Very carefully, if not
-beautifully," she said. "Have I made you sleepy already? But I don't
-want to go on talking about abstractions. I want to talk about Mr.
-Oldmeadow. The truth is, Barney," and her voice, as she again turned her
-eyes on her husband, had again the form but not the substance of gaiety,
-"the truth is that he's a lonely, lonely bachelor and that we ought to
-arrange a marriage for him, you and I. Since he doesn't believe in
-freedom, he won't mind having a marriage arranged, will he?--if we can
-find a rare, sweet, gifted girl."
-
-Barney had become red. "Roger's been teasing you, darling. Nobody
-believes in freedom more. Don't let him take you in. He's an awful old
-humbug with his Socratic method. He upsets you before you know where you
-are. He's always been like that."
-
-"Yes; hasn't he," Mrs. Aldesey murmured.
-
-"But he hasn't upset me at all," said Adrienne. "I grant that he was
-trying to, that he was doing his very best to give me a tumble; but I
-quite see through him and he doesn't conceal himself from me in the very
-least. He doesn't really believe in freedom, however much he may have
-taken _you_ in, Barney; he'd think it wholesome, of course, that you
-should believe in it. That's his idea, you see; to give people what he
-thinks wholesome; to choose for them. It's the lack of faith all
-through. But the reason is that he's lonely; dreadfully lonely, and
-because of that he's grown to be, as he says, snappy and snuffy; so that
-we must borrow a page from his book and find what is wholesome for him.
-I know all the symptoms so well. I've had friends just like that. It's a
-starved heart and having nobody to be fonder of than anyone else; no one
-near at all. He must be happily married as soon as possible. A happy
-marriage is the best gift of life, isn't it, Mrs. Aldesey? If we haven't
-known that we haven't known our best selves, have we?"
-
-"It may be; we mayn't have," said Mrs. Aldesey, cheerfully; but she was
-not liking it. "I can't say. Am I to have a hand in choosing his bride?
-I know his tastes, I think. We're quite old friends, you see."
-
-"No one who doesn't believe in freedom for other people may help to
-choose her," said Adrienne, with a curious blitheness. "That's why he
-mayn't choose her himself. We must go quite away to find her; away from
-ceilings and conventions and out into the sunlight. I don't believe
-happiness is found under ceilings. And it's what we all need more than
-anything else. Even tobacco and chamber-music don't make you a bit
-happy, do they, Mr. Oldmeadow? and if one isn't happy one can't know
-anything about anything. Not really."
-
-"Alas!" sighed Mrs. Aldesey, keeping up her end, but not very
-successfully, while Barney fixed his eyes upon his wife. "And I thought
-I'd found it this evening, under this ceiling. Well, I shall cherish my
-illusion, since you tell me it's only that, and thank you for it, Mrs.
-Barney. The Lumleys are going to give me a lift and I see that their car
-has been announced."
-
-"Stay on a bit, Roger," Barney murmured, as the Lumleys approached.
-"I've seen nothing of you for ages."
-
-Adrienne rose to greet her parting guests.
-
-"Darling Adrienne, good-night. It's been perfectly delightful, your
-little party," said Lady Lumley, who was large, light and easily
-pleased; an English equivalent of the lady from California, but without
-the sprightliness. "Your dear young Mr. Prentiss is a treasure. He's
-been telling me about Sicilian temples. We _must_ get there one day.
-Mrs. Prentiss says they will come to us for a week-end before they go.
-How extraordinarily interesting she is. Don't forget that you are coming
-on the fifteenth."
-
-"I shall get up a headache, first thing!" Lord Lumley stated in a loud,
-jocular whisper, reverting to a favourite jest on Adrienne's powers.
-"That's the thing to go in for, eh? I won't let Charlie cut me out this
-time. Not a night's sleep till you come!"
-
-"Go in for as many as you like, dear Lord Lumley," said Adrienne,
-smiling her assurance of being able to deal with a series.
-
-"Good-night, Mrs. Barney," said Mrs. Aldesey. "Leave me a little
-standing-room under the stars, won't you."
-
-"There's always standing-room under the stars," said Adrienne. "We don't
-exclude each other there."
-
-The party showed no other signs of breaking up. The Laughing Philosopher
-had melted, or, at all events, mastered Mr. Besley, and talked to him
-with, now and again, a maternal hand laid on his knee. Mr. Haviland and
-Mrs. Pope still laughed in the back drawing-room, Meg and Mr. Prentiss
-had come together again and Sir Archibald was engaged with a pretty
-girl. After looking around upon them all, Adrienne, with the appearance
-of a deeper fatigue, sank back upon her sofa.
-
-"You know, darling," Barney smiled candidly upon his wife, "you rather
-put your foot in it just now. Mrs. Aldesey's marriage isn't happy. I
-ought to have warned you."
-
-"How do you mean not happy, Barney?" Adrienne looked up at him. "Isn't
-Mr. Aldesey dead?"
-
-"Not at all dead. She left him some years ago, didn't she, Roger? He
-lives in New York. It's altogether a failure."
-
-Adrienne looked down at her fan. "I didn't know. But one can't avoid
-speaking of success sometimes, even to failures."
-
-"Of course not. Another time you will know."
-
-Adrienne seemed to meditate, but without compunction. "That was what she
-meant, then, by saying she believed in freedom for herself but not for
-other people."
-
-"Meant? How do you mean? She was joking."
-
-"If she left him. It was she who left him?"
-
-"I don't know anything about it," Barney spoke now with definite
-vexation and Oldmeadow, in his corner of the sofa, his arms folded, his
-eyes on the cornice, gave him no help. "Except that, yes, certainly;
-it's she who left him. She's not a deserted wife. Anything but."
-
-"It's only Mr. Aldesey who is the deserted husband," Adrienne turned her
-fan and kept her eyes on it. "It's only he who can't be free. Forgive me
-if she's a special friend of yours, Mr. Oldmeadow; but it explains. I
-felt something so brittle, so unreal in her, charming and gracious as
-she is. It is so very wrong for a woman to do that, I think."
-
-"Wrong?" Barney echoed, staring at Oldmeadow while this firm hand was
-laid upon his Egeria. "What the dickens do you mean, darling? She is a
-special friend of Roger's. You don't surely mean to say a woman must,
-under all circumstances, stick to a man she doesn't love?"
-
-"Anything but that, Barney. I think that she should leave him and set
-him free. It's quite plain to me that if a wife will not live with her
-husband it is her duty to divorce him. Then, at any rate, he can try for
-happiness again."
-
-"Divorce him, my dear child!" Barney was trying to keep up appearances
-but the note of marital severity came through and as it sounded Adrienne
-raised her eyes to his: "It's not so easy as all that! Aldesey, whatever
-his faults, may have given her no cause to divorce him, and I take it
-you'll not suggest that Mrs. Aldesey should give him cause to divorce
-her."
-
-On her sofa, more pallid under her powder, more sunken than before, and
-with the queer squashed-in look emphasized, Adrienne kept steady eyes
-uplifted to her husband. "Not at all, dear Barney," she returned and
-Oldmeadow, though hardened against the pathos of her physical
-disability, saw that she spoke with difficulty, "but I think that you
-confuse the real with the conventional wrong. Mrs. Aldesey would not
-care to face any unconventionality; that is quite apparent. She would
-draw her skirts aside from any conventional wrong-doing. But the real
-wrong she would be blind to; the wrong of keeping anyone bound in the
-emptiness you have made for them. Setting free is not so strange and
-terrible a matter as you seem to imagine. It's quite easy for brave,
-unshackled people."
-
-"Well, I must really be off," Oldmeadow now seized the occasion to
-declare. "I believe, as a matter of fact, that Mr. Aldesey lives very
-contentedly in New York, collecting French prints and giving excellent
-dinners. Anything open and scandalous would be as distasteful to him as
-to his wife. They are, both of them, happier apart; that's all it comes
-to. So you must read your lessons, even by proxy, to more authentic
-misdemeanants, Mrs. Barney. All right, Barney. Don't come down. I'll
-hope to see you both again quite soon."
-
-So he got away, concealing as best he might, his sense of tingling
-anger. But it died away to a sense of chill as he walked down Park Lane.
-Was not Barney unhappy, already? What did she say to him when she got
-him to herself? He felt sure that she had never bargained for a husband
-who could look at her with ill-temper.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-"Roger, see here, I've only come to say one word--about the absurd
-little-matter of last night. Only one; and then we'll never speak of it
-again," said poor Barney.
-
-He had come as soon as the very next day--to exonerate, not to
-apologize; that was evident at once. Oldmeadow had not long to wait
-before learning what she had said to him when she got him to herself,
-nor long to wait before realizing that if Barney had been unhappy last
-night he thought himself happy to-day.
-
-"Really, my dear boy," he said, "it's not worth talking about."
-
-"Oh, but we must talk about it," said Barney. He was red and spoke
-quickly. "It upset her frightfully; it made her perfectly miserable. She
-cried for hours, Roger," Barney's voice dropped to a haggard note. "You
-know, though she bears up so marvellously, she's ill. She doesn't admit
-illness and that makes it harder for her, because it simply bewilders
-her when she finds herself on edge like this and her body refusing to
-obey her. The baby is coming in May, you know."
-
-"I know, my dear Barney. The evening was very fatiguing for her. I saw
-it all I think. I noticed from the beginning how tired she looked."
-
-"Horribly tired. Horribly fatiguing. I'm glad you saw it. For that's
-really what I came to explain. She was tired to begin with and Mrs.
-Aldesey put her on edge. I think I saw that myself at dinner--and, oh,
-before that; on the day we had tea with her, when we first came up, in
-November--Adrienne felt then that Mrs. Aldesey didn't understand or care
-for her. You know she is so full of love and sympathy for everybody
-herself that she is literally sickened when she is treated in that
-artificial, worldly way. And you know, Roger, Mrs. Aldesey _is_
-artificial and worldly."
-
-That was how she had put it to Barney, of course. But Oldmeadow saw
-further than Mrs. Aldesey and her artificiality. He saw a dishevelled
-and weeping Adrienne stricken to the heart by the sense of threatened
-foundations, aghast by what she had seen in her husband's eyes; and he
-was aware, even while he resented having it put upon Lydia, of a
-curious, reluctant pity for the pale, weeping figure. Lydia had,
-obviously, displeased her; but Lydia had been the mere occasion; she
-could have dealt easily enough with Lydia. It had been the revelation
-that Barney could oppose her, could almost, for a moment, dislike her,
-that had set her universe rocking. Her first taste of reality, then. The
-thought came rather grimly, with the pity. After all it was their best
-chance of happiness; that she should learn to accept herself as a person
-who could be opposed, even disliked, in flashes, while still loved. He
-had sat silent while he thought, one of his silences which, when he
-emerged from them, he often recognized as over-long. Barney must have
-felt the weight of all he did not say when all that he found to say was:
-"What it comes to, doesn't it, is that they neither of them take much to
-each other. Lydia is certainly conventional."
-
-"Ah, but Lady Lumley is conventional, too," said Barney with an
-irrepressible air of checkmate. "Hordes of conventional people adore
-Adrienne. It's a question of the heart. There are people who are
-conventional without being worldly. It's worldliness that stifles
-Adrienne. It's what she was saying last night: 'They have only ceilings;
-I must have the sky.' Not that she thinks _you_ worldly, dear old boy."
-
-"I hope you try to interpret me to her kindly," said Oldmeadow, smiling.
-Even at the moment when Barney, all innocently, was revealing to him
-Adrienne's tactics, the fragments of her vocabulary imbedded in his
-speech were affording him amusement. "You must try and persuade her that
-I've quite a fondness for the sky myself, and even published a volume of
-verse in my youth."
-
-"I do. Of course I do," said Barney eagerly. "And I gave her your poems,
-long ago. She loved them. It's your sardonic pessimism she doesn't
-understand--in anyone who could have written like that when they were
-young. She never met anything like it before in her life. And the way
-you never seem to take anything seriously. It makes her dreadfully sorry
-for you, even while she finds it so hard to accept in anyone she cares
-for--because she really does so care for you, Roger"--there was a note
-of appeal in Barney's voice--"and does so long to find a way out for
-you. It was a joke, of course; but all the same we've often wished you
-could find the right woman to marry."
-
-Barney, as he had done last night, grew very red again, so that it was
-apparent to Oldmeadow that not only the marriage but the woman--the
-rare, gifted girl--had been discussed between him and his wife.
-
-"Adrienne thinks everyone ought to be married, you see," he tried to
-pass it off. "Since we are so happy ourselves."
-
-"I see," said Oldmeadow. "There's another thing you must try to persuade
-her of: that I'm not at all _un jeune homme à marier_, and that if I
-ever seek a companion it will probably be some one like myself, some one
-sardonic and pessimistic. If I fixed my affections on the lovely girl,
-you see, it isn't likely they'd be reciprocated."
-
-"Oh, but"--Barney's eagerness again out-stepped his
-discretion--"wouldn't the question of money count there, Roger? If she
-had plenty of money, you know, or you had; enough for both; and a place
-in the country? Of course, it's all fairy-tale; but Adrienne is a
-fairy-tale person; material things don't count with her at all. She
-waves them away and wants other people to wave them away, too. What she
-always says is: 'What does my money _mean_ unless it's to open doors for
-people I love?' She's starting that young Besley, you know, just because
-of Palgrave; setting him up as editor of a little review--rotten it is,
-I think--but Adrienne says people must follow their own lights. And it's
-just that; she'd love to open doors for you, if it could make you
-happy."
-
-Oldmeadow at this, after a moment of receptivity, began to laugh softly;
-but the humour of the situation grew upon him until he at last threw
-back his head and indulged in open and prolonged mirth. Barney watched
-him bashfully. "You're not angry, I see," he ventured. "You don't think
-it most awful cheek, I mean?"
-
-"I think it is most awful cheek; but I'm not angry; not a bit," said
-Oldmeadow. "Fairy-godmothers are nothing if not cheeky; are they? Oh, I
-know you meant your, not her, cheek. But it's the fault of the
-fairy-godmother, all the same, and you must convince her that I'm not in
-love with anybody, and that if ever I am she'll have to content herself
-with my small earnings and a flat in Chelsea."
-
-So he jested; but, when his friend was gone, he realized that he was a
-little angry all the same and he feared that his mirth had not been able
-to conceal from Barney that what he really found it was confounded
-impudence. Barney's face had worn, as he departed, the look of mingled
-gratitude and worry and Barney must feel, as well as he felt, that their
-interview hadn't really cleared up anything--except his own readiness to
-overlook the absurdities of Barney's wife. What became more and more
-clear to himself was that unless he could enable Adrienne to enroll his
-name on her banner she would part him from Barney and that her very
-benevolence was a method. The more he thought of it the more
-uncomfortable he felt, and his inner restlessness became at length an
-impulse urging him out to take counsel or, rather, seek solace, with the
-friend from whom Adrienne could never part him. He would go and have tea
-with Lydia Aldesey and with the more eagerness from the fact that he was
-aware of a slight dissatisfaction in regard to Lydia. She had not
-altogether pleased him last night. She had put herself in the wrong; she
-had blundered; she hadn't behaved with the skill and tact requisite; and
-to elicit from her a confession of ineptitude would make his sense of
-solace the more secure.
-
-The day was a very different day from the one in April when he had
-first gone to ask Mrs. Aldesey for information about people called
-Toner. It was early February, dull and cold and damp. No rain was
-falling, but the trees were thick with moisture and Oldmeadow had his
-hands deep in his pockets and the collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears. As he crossed the Serpentine, an electric brougham passed him,
-going slowly, and he had a glimpse within it, short but very vivid, of
-Adrienne, Meg, and Captain Hayward.
-
-Adrienne, wearing a small arrangement of black velvet that came down
-over her brows, was holding Meg's hand and, while she spoke, was looking
-steadily at her, her face as white as that of a Pierrot. Meg listened,
-gloomily it seemed, and Captain Hayward's handsome countenance, turned
-for refuge towards the window, showed an extreme embarrassment.
-
-They passed and Oldmeadow pursued his way, filled with a disagreeable
-astonishment though, absurdly, his mind was at first occupied only in an
-attempt to recover a submerged memory that Captain Hayward's demeanour
-suggested. It came at last in an emancipating flash and he saw again,
-after how many years, the golden-brown head of his rather silly setter,
-John, turned aside in shy yet dignified repudiation, that still, by a
-dim, sick smile, attempted to conceal distress and to enter into the
-spirit of the game--as a kitten was held up for his contemplation. A
-kitten was a very inadequate analogy, no doubt, for the theme of
-Adrienne's discourse; yet Captain Hayward's reaction to a situation for
-which he found himself entirely unprepared was markedly like John's. And
-he, like John, had known that the game was meant to be at his expense.
-John and Captain Hayward got Oldmeadow out of the park before he had
-taken full possession of his astonishment and could ask himself why, if
-Adrienne were engaged in rescuing Meg from her illicit attachment, she
-should do it in the company of the young man. Yet, strangely enough, he
-felt, as he walked, a growing sense of reassurance. For an emergency
-like this, after all, given amenable subjects, Adrienne was the right
-person. He hadn't dreamed it to be such an emergency; but since it was,
-Adrienne would pull them through. As she would have laid her hand on the
-head of Bacchus and reformed him, so she would lay it on the head of
-Captain Hayward.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-The incident put Mrs. Aldesey quite out of his mind, and it was not till
-he stood on her doorstep and rang her bell that he remembered his
-grievance against her and realized that it had been made more definite
-by this glimpse of Adrienne's significance. That his friend was prepared
-for him was evident at his first glance; she had even, he saw, been
-expecting him, for she broke out at once with: "Oh, my dear Roger--what
-_are_ you going to do with her?"
-
-He was actually pleased to find himself putting her, with some grimness,
-in her place. "What is she going to do with us? you mean. You underrate
-Mrs. Barney's capacity, let me tell you, my dear friend."
-
-But Mrs. Aldesey was not easily quelled. "Underrate her! Not I! She's a
-Juggernaut if ever there was one. Her capacity is immense. She'll roll
-on and she'll crush flat. That poor Barney! She is as blind as a
-Juggernaut, but _he_ will come to see--alas! he is seeing
-already--though you and I danced round him with veils and cymbals--that
-people won't stand being pelted with platitudes from soup to dessert.
-The Lumleys will, of course; it's their natural diet; though even they
-like their platitudes served with a touch of _sauce piquante_; but
-Rosamund Pope told me that she felt black and blue all over and Cuthbert
-Haviland--malicious toad--imitates her already to perfection: dreadful
-little voice, dreadful little smile, dreadful little quotations and all.
-It will be one of his London gags. That shepherdess! My dear Roger,
-don't pretend to me that _you_ don't see it!"
-
-Oldmeadow, sunken in the chair opposite her, surveyed her over his
-clasped hands with an air of discouragement.
-
-"What I'm most seeing at the moment is that she's made you angry," he
-remarked. "If what you say were all the truth, why should she make you
-angry? She's not as blind as a Juggernaut. That's where you made your
-mistake. She'll only crush the people who don't lie down before her. She
-knows perfectly well where she is going--and over whom. So be careful,
-that is my advice, and keep out of her way; unless you want to lose a
-toe or a finger."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey showed, at this, that he had arrested her. In spite of the
-element of truth in Adrienne's verdict upon her he knew her to be, when
-veils and cymbals were cast aside, a sincere and gallant creature. She
-did not attempt to hide from him now and, after a moment of mutual
-contemplation, she laughed a little, with not unreal mirth and said: "I
-suppose I am angry. I suppose I'm even spiteful. It's her patronage, you
-know. Her suffocating superiority. To have to stand there, for his sake,
-and _take_ it! You overrate her, Roger. No woman not abysmally stupid
-could say the things she says."
-
-"Your mistake again. She's able to say them because she's never met
-irony or criticism. She's not stupid," he found his old verdict. "Only
-absurd. You know, you gave yourself away to her. You showed her what you
-thought of her. You patronized _her_."
-
-"Is _no_ retaliation permitted?" Mrs. Aldesey moaned. "Must one accept
-it all? Be scourged with the stars and Browning and then bow one's head
-to her caresses? After all, Barney is your friend, not mine, and it's
-as your friend that I've tried to be decent to his wife. But she hates
-me like poison. She gave herself away, too, you know. I liked the way
-she excluded me from her prospects for your welfare. And of course she
-knew my marriage wasn't a happy one."
-
-"I don't think that she did. No; I don't think so. You _are_ poison to
-her--cold poison," said Oldmeadow. "Don't imagine for a moment she
-didn't see that you were dancing about him with veils and cymbals. She
-didn't give herself away, for she had nothing to conceal. She was candid
-and you weren't. She didn't pretend that you were under the stars with
-her; while you kept up appearances."
-
-"But what's to become of your Barney if we don't keep them up!" Mrs.
-Aldesey cried. "Is he to be allowed to see that nobody can stand
-her--except people he can't stand? He'll have to live, then, with Mrs.
-and Mr. Prentiss. Did you try to talk to Mrs. Prentiss? Do you know that
-she told me that death was 'perfectly sublime'?"
-
-"Perhaps it is. Perhaps she'll find it so. They all seem to think well
-of death, out in California"--Oldmeadow allowed himself to relax from
-his admonitory severity. "Mrs. Prentiss isn't as silly as she seems, I
-expect. And you exaggerate Barney's sensitiveness. He'd get on very well
-with Mrs. Prentiss if you weren't there to show him you found her a
-bore. He has a very simple side and we must hope it may become simpler.
-The only chance for Barney, I see it more and more, is that we should
-efface ourselves as much as possible. The people who find the Prentisses
-a bore, I mean. And it won't be difficult for us to do that. She will
-see to it that we are effaced. Only, of course, it's a grief. I'm so
-fond of him"; and as Oldmeadow stretched forth his legs and put his
-hands in his pockets there drifted across his mind, in a thin, sharp,
-knife-like stroke, the memory of Barney--tall eighteen-year-old
-Barney--with dear old Effie, luxuriously upturned in his arms, being
-softly scratched--Barney's hand with a cat was that of an expert--and
-told that she was the best and most beautiful of cats.
-
-"It's a great shame," said Mrs. Aldesey; "I've been thinking my spiteful
-thoughts, too, instead of sympathizing with you. Of course, if it's any
-consolation to you, one usually does lose one's friends when they marry.
-But it needn't have been as bad as this. What a thousand pities he
-couldn't have fallen in love with a nice girl of his own kind. You
-couldn't do anything about it when you went down in the spring?"
-
-Oldmeadow had never said anything to Mrs. Aldesey about his hopes for
-Nancy. He had a secretive instinct for keeping his friendships in
-compartments and discussed only those portions that overflowed.
-"Nothing," he said. "And the mischief was that I went down hostile, as
-you warned me against doing. Barney saw at once that I didn't care for
-her; and she saw it at once. He even forced a sort of expression of
-opinion from me and I know now that it's always glooming there at the
-back of his mind when he sees me. It was quite useless. Once he'd fallen
-under her spell it was all up with him. She has her singular power and,
-for a man in love with her, her singular charm. Even I, you know,
-understand that."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey contemplated him. "I confess I can't," she said. "She is so
-desperately usual. I've seen her everywhere, ever since I can remember.
-Attending lectures at the Sorbonne; listening to Wagner at Bayreuth;
-having dresses tried on at Worth's; sitting in the halls of a hundred
-European hotels. She is the most unescapable form of the American woman;
-only not _du peuple_ because of the money and opportunity that has also
-extirpated everything racy, provincial and individual."
-
-"I don't know," said Oldmeadow. He mused, his hands clasped behind his
-head. "She's given me all sorts of new insights." His eyes, after his
-wont, were on the cornice and his friend's contemplation, relaxed a
-little from its alert responsiveness, allowed itself a certain
-conjectural softness as she watched him. "I feel," he went on, "since
-knowing her, that I understand America, her America, better than you do.
-You're engaged in avoiding rather than in understanding it, aren't you?
-What you underrate, what Americans of your type don't see--because, as
-you say, it's so oppressively usual--is the power of her type. If it is
-a type; if she is as ordinary as you say. It's something bred into them
-by the American assumption of the fundamental rightness of life; a
-confidence unknown before in the history of the world. An individual,
-not an institutional or social, confidence. They do, actually, seem to
-take their stand on the very universe itself. Whereas the rest of us
-have always had churches or classes to uphold us. They have all the
-absurdities and crudities of mere individualism. They have all the
-illusions of their ignorance. Yet I sometimes imagine, after I've seen
-her, that it's a power we haven't in the least taken into our
-reckoning. Isn't it the only racial thing that America has produced--the
-only thing that makes them a race? It makes them independent of us, when
-we've always imagined, in our complacency, that they were dependent. It
-enables them to take what we have to give, but to do with it what they,
-not we, think best. And by Jove, who knows how far it will carry them!
-Not you, my dear Lydia. You'll stay where you are--with us."
-
-His eyes had come back and down to her, and her gaze resumed its
-alertness and showed him that she found the picture he drew disquieting.
-"You mean it's a new kind of civilization that will menace ours?"
-
-"It's not a civilization; that's just what it's not. It's a state of
-mind. Perhaps it will menace us. Perhaps it does. We've underrated it;
-of that I'm sure; and underrated power is always dangerous. It will be
-faith without experience against experience without faith. What we must
-try for, if we're not to be worsted, is to have both--to keep experience
-and to keep faith, too. Only so shall we be able to hold our own against
-Mrs. Barney. And even so we shan't be able to prevent her doing things
-to us--and for us. She'll do things for us that we can't do for
-ourselves." His mind reverted to the faces of the brougham. "In that way
-she's bound to worst us. We'll have to accept things from her."
-
-Oldmeadow's eyes had gone back to the cornice and, in the silence that
-followed, Mrs. Aldesey, as she sat with folded arms, played absently
-with the lace ruffle at her wrist. The lace was an heirloom, like her
-rings, and the contemplation of them may have afforded her some
-sustainment. "She's made you feel all that, then," she remarked. "With
-her crook and her hat and her rose-wreathed lamb. If such a sardonic
-old lion as you does really grow bodeful before the rose-wreathed lamb
-there is, I own, reason to fear for the future. I'm glad I'm growing
-old. It would hurt me to see her cutting your claws."
-
-"Oh, she won't hurt us!" Oldmeadow smiled at her. "It's rather we who
-will hurt her--by refusing to lie down with her lamb. If that's any
-comfort to you."
-
-"Not in the least. I'm not being malicious. You don't call it hurt,
-then, to be effaced?"
-
-"Smothered in rose-leaves, eh?" he suggested. "It would be suffocating
-rather than suffering. She does give me that feeling. But you'll make
-her suffer--you have, you know--rather than she you."
-
-"I really don't know about that," said Mrs. Aldesey. "You make me quite
-uncomfortable, Roger. You make me superstitious. She's done that to me
-already. I refuse to take her seriously, but I shall avoid her. That's
-what it comes to. Like not giving the new moon a chance to look at you
-over your left shoulder."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-
-On a morning in early March Oldmeadow found, among the letters waiting
-for him on his breakfast-table, one from Nancy. Nancy and he, with all
-their fondness, seldom wrote to each other and he was aware, on seeing
-her writing, of the presage of something disagreeable that the
-unexpected often brings.
-
- "Dear Roger," he read, and in his first glance he saw his presage
- fulfilled. "We are in great trouble. Aunt Eleanor has asked me to
- write because she is too ill and it is to me as well as to her that
- Meg has written and she wants you to see Barney at once. Here are
- Meg's letters. She has gone away with Captain Hayward. Aunt Eleanor
- and Mother think that Barney may be able to persuade Adrienne to
- bring her back. No one else, we feel convinced, will have any
- influence with her. Do anything, anything you can, dear Roger.
- Mother and I are almost frightened for Aunt Eleanor. She walks
- about wringing her hands and crying, and she goes up to Meg's room
- and opens the door and looks in--as if she could not believe she
- would not find her there. It is heart-breaking to see her. We
- depend on you, dear Roger.
-
- "Yours ever
-
- "NANCY."
-
-
-
-"Good Lord!" Oldmeadow muttered while, in lightning flashes, there
-passed across his mind the face of John the setter and a Pierrot's face,
-white under a low line of black velvet. He took up Meg's letters,
-written from a Paris hotel.
-
- "DARLING MOTHER, I know it will make you frightfully miserable and
- I can't forgive myself for that; but it had to be. Eric and I cared
- too much and it wasn't life at all, going on as we were apart. Try,
- darling Mother, to see it as we do see things nowadays. Adrienne
- will explain it all--and you must believe her. You know what a
- saint she is and she has been with us in it all, understanding
- everything and helping us to be straight. Everything will come
- right. Iris Hayward will set Eric free, of course; she doesn't care
- one bit for him and has made him frightfully unhappy ever since
- they married, and she wants to marry some one else herself--only of
- course she'd never be brave enough to do it this way. When Eric is
- free, we will marry at once and come home, and, you will see, there
- are so many sensible people nowadays; we shall not have a bad time
- at all. Everything will come right, I'm sure; and even if it
- didn't, in that conventional way--I could not give him up. No one
- will ever love me as he does.
-
- "Your devoted child
-
- "MEG."
-
-
-
-That was the first: the second ran:
-
- "DEAREST NANCY,--I know you'll think it frightfully wrong; you are
- such an old-fashioned little dear and you told me often enough that
- I oughtn't to see so much of Eric. Only of course that couldn't
- have prepared you for this and I expect Aunt Monica won't let you
- come and stay with us for ages. Never mind; when you marry, you'll
- see, I'm sure. Love is the _only_ thing, really. But I should hate
- to feel I'd lost you and I'm sure I haven't. I want to ask you,
- Nancy dear, to do all you can to make Mother _take_ it. I feel,
- just because you will think it so wrong, that you may be more good
- to her than Adrienne--who doesn't think it wrong at all--at least
- not in Mother's way. It would be frightfully unfair if Mother
- blamed Adrienne. She did all she could to show us where we stood
- and to make us play the game, and it would be pretty hard luck if
- people were to be down on her now because we _have_ played it. We
- might have been really rotters if it hadn't been for Adrienne;
- cheats and hypocrites, I mean; stealing our happiness. I know
- Adrienne can bring Barney round. It's only Mother who troubles me,
- just because she is such a child that it's almost impossible to
- make her see reason. She doesn't recognize right and wrong unless
- they're in the boxes she's accustomed to. Everything is in a box
- for poor, darling old Mummy. But I mustn't go on. Be the dear old
- pal you always have and help me out as well as you can.
-
- "Your loving
-
- "MEG."
-
-
-
-"Good Lord," Oldmeadow muttered once more. He pushed back his chair and
-rose from the table in the bright spring sunlight. He had the feeling,
-almost paternal, of disgrace and a public stripping. He saw Eleanor
-Chadwick stopping at Meg's door to look in at the forsaken room,
-distraught in her grief and incomprehension. He saw Nancy's pale,
-troubled face and Monica Averil's, pinched and dry in its sober dismay.
-And then again, lighted by a flare at once tawdry and menacing, the
-face of Adrienne Toner, the intruder, the insufferable meddler and
-destroyer, a Pierrot among fire-works that had, at last, set fire to the
-house. He found a taxi on the Embankment and drove to Connaught Square.
-Freshly decorated with window-boxes, the pleasant, spacious house had a
-specially smiling air of welcome, but the butler's demeanour told him
-that something of the calamity had already penetrated. Adrienne, if she
-had not heard before, would have had her letters; Barney, who had been
-kept in the dark, would have been enlightened, and the irrepressible
-exclamations that must have passed between them seemed dimly reflected
-on the man's formal countenance. Mrs. Chadwick, he told Oldmeadow, was
-breakfasting upstairs with Mr. Chadwick, and he ushered him into
-Barney's study.
-
-Oldmeadow waited for some time among the Post Impressionist pictures,
-one of which remained for ever afterwards vividly fixed in his memory of
-the moment; a chaotic yet determined picture; featureless yet, as it
-were, conveying through its unrecognizable elements the meaning of a
-grin. And, as he stood in the centre of the room and looked away from
-the derisive canvas, he saw on Barney's desk photographs of Adrienne,
-three photographs of her; one as a child, a sickly looking but beaming
-child; one in early girlhood, singularly childlike still; and one in her
-bridal dress of only the other day, it seemed, mild and radiant in her
-unbecoming veil and wreath.
-
-It was Barney who came to him. Poor Barney. He was more piteously boyish
-than ever before to his friend's eye; so beautifully arrayed, all in
-readiness for a happy London day with his angel, so pale, so haggard
-and perplexed. "Look here, Roger," were his first words, "do you mind
-coming upstairs to Adrienne's room? She's not dressed yet; not very
-well, you know. You've heard, then, too?"
-
-"I've just heard from Nancy. Why upstairs? I'd rather not. We'd better
-talk this over alone, Barney. All the more if your wife isn't well."
-
-"Yes; yes; I know. I told her it would be better. But she insists."
-
-The effect of a general misery Barney gave was heightened now by his
-unhappy flush. "She doesn't want us to talk it over without her, you
-see. She comes into it all too much. From Nancy, did you say? What's
-Nancy got to do with this odious affair?"
-
-"Only what Meg has put upon her--to interpret her as kindly as she can
-to your mother. Here are the letters. I'd really rather not go
-upstairs."
-
-"I know you'll hold Adrienne responsible--partly at least. She expects
-that. She knows that I do, too; she's quite prepared. I only heard half
-an hour ago and of course it knocked me up frightfully. Meg! My little
-sister! Why she's hardly more than a child!"
-
-"I'm afraid she's a good deal more than a child. I'm afraid we can't
-hold Meg to be not responsible, though, obviously, she'd never have
-taken such a step unaided and unabetted. Just read these letters,
-Barney; it won't take a moment to decide what's best to be done. I'll go
-down to your mother and you must be off, at once, to Paris, and see if
-you can fetch Meg back."
-
-But after Barney, with a hesitating hand and an uncertain glance, had
-taken the letters and begun to read them, the door was opened with
-decorous deliberation and Adrienne's French maid appeared, the tall,
-sallow, capable-looking woman whom Oldmeadow remembered having seen at
-Coldbrooks a year ago.
-
-"Madame requests that _ces Messieurs_ should come up at once; she awaits
-them," Joséphine announced in unemphatic but curiously potent accents.
-Adrienne's potency, indeed, was of a sort that flowed through all her
-agents and Oldmeadow thought that he detected, in the melancholy gaze
-bent upon Barney, reprobation for his failure to attain the standard set
-for him by a devotion wholehearted and reverential. Mrs. Chadwick, he
-remembered, had said that Adrienne's maid adored her.
-
-"Yes, yes. We're coming at once, Joséphine," said Barney. Reading the
-letters as he went, he moved to the door and Oldmeadow found himself,
-perforce, following.
-
-He had not yet visited the morning-room and even before his eyes rested
-on Adrienne they saw, hanging above her head where she sat on a little
-sofa, a full-length portrait of Mrs. Toner; in white, standing against a
-stone balustrade and holding lilies; seagulls above her and a background
-of blue sea.
-
-Adrienne was also in white, but she wore over her long, loose dress a
-little jacket of pink silk edged with swan's down and the lace cap
-falling about her neck was rosetted with pink ribbon. It was curious to
-see her in this almost frivolous array, recalling the shepherdess, when
-her face expressed, for the first time in his experience of her, an
-anger and an agitation all the more apparent for its control. She was
-pale yet flushed, odd streaks of colour running up from her throat and
-dying in the pallor of her cheeks. Her condition had evidently much
-affected her complexion and her nose, through its layer of powder,
-showed a pinched and reddened tint. It made Oldmeadow uncomfortable to
-look at her; her mask of calm was held at such a cost; she was at once
-so determinedly herself and so helplessly altered; and it was not with
-an automatic courtesy only that he went up to her and held out his hand.
-An impulse of irrelevant yet irrepressible pity stirred him.
-
-She had fixed her eyes on him as he entered, but now looking at her
-husband and not moving, she said: "I do not think you want to take my
-hand, Mr. Oldmeadow. You will think me a criminal too, as Barney does."
-
-"Darling! Don't talk such nonsense!" Barney cried. "I haven't blamed
-you, not by a word. I know you've done what you think right. Look,
-darling; Roger has had these letters. Just read them. You see what Meg
-writes--there--to Nancy--about your having done all you could to keep
-them straight. You haven't been fair to yourself in talking to me just
-now."
-
-Adrienne, without speaking, took the letters and Oldmeadow moved away to
-the window and stood looking down at the little garden at the back of
-the house where a tall almond-tree delicately and vividly bloomed
-against the pale spring sky. He heard behind him the flicker of the fire
-in the grate, the pacing of Barney's footsteps as he walked up and
-down, and the even turning of the pages in Adrienne's hands. Then he
-heard her say: "Meg contradicts nothing that I have said to you, Barney.
-She writes bravely and truly; as I knew that she would write."
-
-Barney stopped in his pacing. "But darling; what she says about
-straightness?" It was feeble of Barney and he must know it. Feeble of
-him even to think that Adrienne might wish to avail herself of the
-loophole or that she considered herself in any need of a shield.
-
-"You can't misunderstand so much as that, Barney," she said. "Meg and I
-mean but one thing by straightness; and that is truth. That was the way
-I tried to help them; it is the only way in which I can ever help
-people. I showed them the truth and kept it before their eyes when they
-were in danger of forgetting it. I said to them that if they were to be
-worthy of their love they must be brave enough to make sacrifices for
-it. I did not hide from them that there would be sacrifices--if that is
-what you mean."
-
-"It's not what I mean, darling! Of course it's not!" broke from poor
-Barney almost in a wail. "Didn't you try at all to dissuade them? Didn't
-you show them that it was desperate, and ruinous, and wrong? Didn't you
-tell Meg that it would break Mother's heart!"
-
-The blue ribbon was again unrolled and Oldmeadow, listening with rising
-exasperation, heard that the sound of her own solemn cadences sustained
-her. "I don't think anything in life is desperate or ruinous or wrong,
-Barney, except turning away from one's own light. Meg met a reality and
-was brave enough to face it. I regret, deeply, that it came to her
-tragically, not happily; but happiness can grow from tragedy if we are
-brave and true and Meg is brave and true in her love. It won't break
-your mother's heart. Hers is a small, but not such a feeble, heart as
-that. I believe that the experience may strengthen and ennoble her. She
-has led too sheltered a life."
-
-Oldmeadow at this turned from the window and met Barney's miserable
-eyes. "There's really no reason for my staying on, Barney," he said, and
-his voice as well as his look excluded Adrienne from their interchange.
-"I'll take the 1.45 to Coldbrooks. What shall I tell your mother? That
-you've gone to Paris this morning?"
-
-"Yes, that I've gone to Paris. That I'll do my best, you know. That I
-hope to bring Meg back. Tell her to keep up her courage. It'll only be a
-day or two after all, and we may be able to hush it up."
-
-"Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne in a grave, commanding tone. It was
-impossible before it to march out of the room and shut the door, though
-that was what his forcibly arrested attitude showed that he wished to
-do. "You as well as Barney must hear my protest," said Adrienne, and she
-fixed her sombre eyes upon him. "Meg is with the man she loves. In the
-eyes of heaven he is her husband. It would be real as contrasted with
-conventional disgrace were she to leave him now. She will not leave him.
-I know her better than you do. I ask you"--her gaze now turned on
-Barney--"I desire you, not to go to her on such an unworthy errand."
-
-"But, Adrienne," Barney, flushed and hesitating, pleaded, "it's for
-Mother's sake. Mother's too old to be enlarged like that--that's really
-nonsense, you know, darling. You see what Nancy says. They are
-frightened about her. It's not only convention. It's a terrible mistake
-Meg's made and she may be feeling it now and only too glad to have the
-way made easy for her to come back. I promise you to be as gentle as
-possible. I won't reproach her in any way. I'll tell her that we're all
-only waiting to forgive her and take her back."
-
-"Forgive her, Barney? For what? It is only in the eyes of the world that
-she has done wrong and I have lifted her above that fear. Convention
-does not weigh for a moment with me beside the realities of the human
-heart; nor would it with you, Barney, if it were not for the influence
-of Mr. Oldmeadow. I have warned you before; it is easy to be
-worldly-wise and cynical and to keep to the broad road; it is easy to be
-safe. But withering lies that way: withering and imprisonment, and--"
-
-"Come, come, Mrs. Barney," Oldmeadow interposed, addressing her for the
-first time and acidly laughing. "Really we haven't time for sermons. You
-oughtn't to have obliged me to come up if you wanted to influence Barney
-all by yourself. He sees quite clearly for himself the rights and the
-wrongs of this affair, as it happens. If I were to preach for a moment
-in my turn I might ask you how it was that you didn't see that it was
-your duty to tell Meg's mother and brother how things were going and let
-them judge. You're not as wise as you imagine--far from it. Some things
-you can't judge at all. Meg and Hayward aren't people of enough
-importance to have a right to break laws; that's all that it comes to;
-there's nothing to be gained by their breaking laws; not only for other
-people, but for themselves. They're neither of them capable of being
-happy in the ambiguous sort of life they'd have to lead. There's a
-reality you didn't see at all in your haste to flout convention. Barney
-could have dealt with Hayward, and Meg could have been packed off to the
-country and kept there till she'd learned to think a little more about
-other people's hearts and a little less about her own. What business had
-you, after all, to have secrets from your husband and to plot with the
-two young fools behind his back? Isn't Meg his sister rather than
-yours?" His bitterness betrayed him and conscious hostility rose in him,
-answering the menace that measured him in her eyes. "What business had
-you, a new-comer among us, to think yourself capable of managing all
-their lives and to set yourself up above them all in wisdom? You take
-too much upon yourself"; his lips found the old phrase: "Really you do.
-It's been your mistake from the beginning."
-
-He could not have believed that a face so framed for gentleness could
-show itself at once so calm and so convulsed. He knew that something had
-happened to her that had never happened to her before in her life. She
-kept her eyes steadily on him and he wondered if she were not reciting
-some incantation, some exorcism, derived from the seagulled lady above
-her: Power in Repose--Power in Love--Power in Light. Her mouth and eyes
-and nostrils were dark on her pallor and he felt that she held back all
-the natural currents of her being in order to face and quell him with
-the supernatural.
-
-"Never mind all that, Roger," Barney was sickly murmuring. "I don't
-feel like that. I know Adrienne didn't for a moment mean to deceive me."
-
-"We will mind it, Barney," said Adrienne, breathing with difficulty. "I
-had, Mr. Oldmeadow, the business, first, of loyalty to another human
-soul who, in the crisis of its destiny, confided in me. I have been
-nearer Meg than any of you have guessed, from my first meeting with her.
-You were all blind. I saw at once that she was tossed and tormented. I
-am nearer, far nearer her, than her brother and mother. In them she
-would never have dreamed of confiding and she came to me because she
-felt that in me she would find reality and in them mere formulas. I do
-not look upon women as chattels to be handed about by their male
-relatives and locked up if they do not love according to rule and
-precedent. I look upon them as the equals of men in every respect, as
-free as men to shape their lives and to direct their destinies. You
-speak a mediæval language, Mr. Oldmeadow. The world, our great, modern,
-deep-hearted world, has outstripped you."
-
-"Darling," Barney forestalled, breathlessly, as she paused, any reply
-that Oldmeadow might have been tempted to make, "don't mind if Roger
-speaks harshly. He's like that and no one cares for us more. He doesn't
-mean conventionality at all, or anything mediæval. You don't understand
-him. He puts his finger on the spot about Meg and Hayward. It's exactly
-as he says; they're not of enough importance to have a right to break
-laws. If you could have confided in me, it would have been better; you
-must own that. We'd have given Meg a chance to pull herself together.
-We'd have sent Hayward about his business. It's a question, as Roger
-says, of your wisdom; of your knowledge of the world. You didn't
-understand them. They're neither of them idealists like you. They can't
-be happy doing what you might be big enough to do. Just because they're
-not big. Try to take it in, darling. And we really needn't go on talking
-about it any longer, need we? It isn't a question of influence. All we
-have to decide on is what's to be done. Roger must go to Mother and tell
-her I'm starting this morning to try and fetch Meg back. Imagine Mother
-with a divorce case on! It would kill her, simply. That's all. Isn't it,
-Roger?"
-
-"Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne, again. She rose as she spoke. As
-he saw her stand before them, her approaching maternity dominated for a
-moment all his impressions of her. Veiled and masked adroitly as it was,
-its very uncouthness curiously became her. Her head, for once, looked
-small. Like an archaic statue, straight and short and thick, her altered
-form had dignity and amplitude and her face, heavy with its menace, hard
-with its control, might have been that of some austere and threatening
-priestess of fruitfulness.
-
-"Barney, wait," she said. Her arms hung straight beside her, but she
-slightly lifted a hand as she spoke and Oldmeadow noted that it was
-tightly clenched. "It is I, not your friend, whom you must question as
-to what it is right that you should do. I do not consent to his reading
-of my unwisdom and unworthiness. I ask you not to consent to it. I ask
-you again not to go. I ask you again to respect my judgment rather than
-his."
-
-"Darling," the unfortunate husband supplicated; "it's not because it's
-Roger's judgment. You know it's what I felt right myself--from the
-moment you told me what had happened. You say people must follow their
-own light. It _is_ my light. I must do what Mother asks and try to bring
-Meg back."
-
-"It is not your light, Barney. It is craft and caution and fear. More
-than that, do you not see, must I make plain to you what it is you do to
-me in going? You insult me. You treat what I have believed right for Meg
-to do as a crime from which she must be rescued. You drag me in the dust
-with her. Understand me, Barney"--the streaks of colour deepened on her
-neck, her breath came thickly--"if you go, you drag me in the dust."
-
-"How can it drag you in the dust, Mrs. Barney, if Meg wants to come
-back?" Oldmeadow interposed in the tone of a caustic doctor addressing a
-malingering patient. "We're not talking of crimes; only of follies.
-Come; be reasonable. Don't make it so painful for Barney to do what's
-his plain duty. You're not a child. You have, I hope, courage enough and
-humour enough to own that you can make mistakes--like other people."
-
-"Yes, yes, Adrienne, that's just it," broke painfully from Barney, and,
-as he seized the clue thus presented to him, Adrienne turned her head
-slowly, with an ominous stillness, and again rested her eyes upon him.
-"It's childish, you know, darling. It's not like you. And of course I
-understand why; and Roger does. You're not yourself; you're
-over-strained and off-balance and I'm so frightfully sorry all this has
-fallen upon you at such a time. I don't want to oppose you in anything,
-darling--do try to believe me. Only you must give me the credit for my
-own convictions. I do feel I must go. I do feel Roger must take that
-message to Mother. After all, darling," and now in no need of helping
-clues he found his own and the irrepressible note of grief vibrated in
-his voice, "you do owe me something, don't you? You do owe us all
-something--to make up, I mean. Because, without you, Meg would never
-have behaved like this and disgraced us all. Oh--I don't mean to
-reproach you!"
-
-"Good-bye then, I'm off," said Oldmeadow. "I'm very sorry you made me
-come up. Good-bye, Mrs. Barney." She had not spoken, nor moved, nor
-turned her eyes from Barney's face.
-
-"Good-bye. Thanks so much, Roger." Barney followed him, with a quickness
-to match his own, to the door. But Adrienne, this time, did not call him
-back. She remained standing stock-still in front of her sofa.
-
-"Tell Mother I'm off," said Barney, grasping his hand. "Tell her she'll
-hear at once, as soon as I know anything. Thanks so awfully," he
-repeated. "You've been a great help."
-
-It was unfortunate, perhaps, that Barney should say that, Oldmeadow
-reflected as he sped down the stairs. "But she's met reality at last,"
-he muttered, wondering how she and Barney faced each other above and
-hearing again the words that must echo so strangely in her ears:
-"Disgraced us all." And, mingled with his grim satisfaction, was, again,
-the sense of irrelevant and reluctant pity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-It was Saturday and he had to wire to Mrs. Aldesey that he could not go
-with her next day to the Queen's Hall concert they had planned to hear
-together.
-
-Nancy was waiting for him at the station in her own little pony-cart and
-as he got in she said: "Is Barney gone?"
-
-"Yes; he'll have gone by now," said Oldmeadow and, as he said it, he
-felt a sudden sense of relief and clarity. The essential thing, he saw
-it as he answered Nancy's question, was that he should be able to say
-that Barney had gone. And he knew that if he hadn't been there to back
-him up, he wouldn't have gone. So that was all right, wasn't it?
-
-As he had sped past the sun-swept country the reluctant pity had
-struggled in him, striving, unsuccessfully, to free itself from the
-implications of that horrid word: "Disgraced." It was Adrienne who had
-disgraced them; that was what Barney's phrase had really meant, though
-he hadn't intended it to mean it. She, the stranger, the new-comer, had
-disgraced them. And it was true. Yet he wished Barney hadn't stumbled on
-the phrase--just because she was a stranger and a new-comer. And Barney
-would never have found it had he not been there. But now came the sense
-of relief. If he hadn't been there, Barney wouldn't have gone.
-
-"Aunt Eleanor is longing to see you," said Nancy. "Her one hope, you
-know, is that he may bring Meg back." Nancy's eyes had a strained look,
-as though she had lain awake all night.
-
-"You think she may come back?"
-
-He felt, himself, unable to form any conjectures as to what Meg was
-likely to do. What she had done was so strangely unlike her.
-
-"Not if it means leaving Captain Hayward for good," said Nancy. "But
-Aunt Eleanor and Mother both think that she may be willing to come till
-they can marry."
-
-"That's better than nothing, isn't it," said Oldmeadow, and Nancy then
-surprised him by saying, as she looked round at him: "I don't want her
-to come back."
-
-"Don't want her to come back? But you wanted Barney to go?"
-
-"Yes. He had to go. Just so that everything might be done. So that it
-might be put before her. And to satisfy Aunt Eleanor. But, don't you
-see, Roger, it would really make it far more difficult for Aunt Eleanor
-to have her here. What would she do with her?--since she won't give up
-Captain Hayward? She can love Meg and grieve and yearn over her now. But
-if she were here she couldn't. It would be all grief and bitterness."
-
-Nancy had evidently been thinking to some purpose during her sleepless
-night and he owned that her conclusion was the sound one. What
-disconcerted him was her assurance that Meg would not leave her lover.
-After Adrienne, Nancy was likely to have the most authentic impressions
-of Meg's attitude; and, as they drove towards Chelford, he was further
-disconcerted by hearing her murmur, half to herself: "It would be silly
-to leave him now, wouldn't it."
-
-"Not if she's sorry and frightened at what she's done," he protested.
-"After all the man's got a wife who may be glad to have him back."
-
-But Nancy said: "I don't think she would. I think she'll be glad not to
-have him back. Meg may be frightened; but I don't believe she'll be
-sorry; yet."
-
-He meditated, somewhat gloomily, as they drove, on the unexpectedness of
-the younger generation. He had never thought of Nancy as belonging, in
-any but the chronological sense, to that category; yet here she was,
-accepting, if not condoning, the rebellion against law and morality.
-
-Mrs. Averil had driven down to the Little House where she was to be
-picked up and, as they turned the corner to the Green, they saw her
-waiting at the gate, her furs turned up around her ears, her neat little
-face pinched and dry, as he had known that he would find it, and showing
-a secure if controlled indignation, rather than Nancy's sad perplexity.
-
-"Well, Roger, you find us in a pleasant predicament," she observed as
-Oldmeadow settled the rug around her knees. "Somehow one never thinks of
-things like this happening in one's own family. Village girls misbehave
-and people in the next county run away sometimes with other people's
-wives; but one never expects such adventures to come walking in to one's
-own breakfast-table."
-
-"Disagreeable things do have a way of happening at breakfast-time, don't
-they," Oldmeadow assented. The comfort of Mrs. Averil was that even on
-her death-bed she would treat her own funeral lightly: "I wonder it
-remains such a comfortable meal, all the same."
-
-"I suppose you've had lunch on the train," said Mrs. Averil. "Will you
-believe it? Poor Eleanor was worrying about that this morning. She's
-got some coffee and sandwiches waiting for you, in case you haven't. I'm
-so thankful you've come. It will help her. Poor dear. She's begun to
-think of all the other things now. Of what people will say and how they
-will hear. Lady Cockerell is very much on her mind. You know what a
-meddlesome gossip she is, and only the other day Eleanor snubbed her
-when she was criticizing Barbara's new school. The thought of her is
-disturbing her dreadfully now."
-
-"I suppose these leech-bites do help to alleviate the pain of the real
-wound," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Not in the least. They envenom it," Mrs. Averil replied. "I'd like to
-strangle Lady Cockerell myself before the news reaches her."
-
-Nancy drove on, her eyes fixed on the pony's ears. "I don't believe
-people will talk nearly as much as you and Aunt Eleanor imagine," she
-now remarked. "I've told her so; and so must you, Mother."
-
-"You are admirable with her, Nancy. Far better than I am. I sit grimly
-swallowing my curses, or wringing my hands. Neither wringing nor cursing
-is much good, I suppose."
-
-"Not a bit of good. It's better she should think of what people say than
-of Meg; but when it comes to agonizing over them I believe the truth is
-that people nowadays _do_ get over it; far more than they used to;
-especially if Aunt Eleanor can show them that _she_ gets over it."
-
-"But she can't get over it, my dear child!" said Mrs. Averil, gazing at
-her daughter in a certain alarm. "How can one get over disgrace like
-that or lift one's head again--unless one is an Adrienne Toner! Oh, when
-I think of that woman and of what she's done! For she is responsible
-for it all! Every bit of it. Meg was a good girl, at heart; always. In
-spite of that silly liquid powder. And so I tell Eleanor. Adrienne is
-responsible for it all."
-
-"I don't, Mother; that's not my line at all," said Nancy. "I tell her
-that what Meg says is true." Nancy touched the pony with the whip. "If
-it hadn't been for Adrienne she might have done much worse."
-
-"Really, my dear!" Mrs. Averil murmured.
-
-"Come, Nancy," Oldmeadow protested; "that was a retrospective threat of
-Meg's. Without Adrienne she'd never have considered such an
-adventure--or its worse alternative. Encourage your aunt to curse
-Adrienne. Your Mother's instinct is sound there."
-
-But Nancy shook her head. "I don't know, Roger," she said. "Perhaps Meg
-would have considered the alternative. Girls do consider all sorts of
-things nowadays that Mother and Aunt Eleanor, in their girlhood, would
-have thought simply wicked. They _are_ wicked; but not simply. That's
-the difference between now and then. And don't you think that it's
-better for Meg and Captain Hayward to go away so that they can be
-married than to be, as she says, really rotters; than to be, as she
-says, cheats and hypocrites and steal their happiness?"
-
-"My dear child!" Mrs. Averil again murmured, while Oldmeadow, finding
-it, after all, a comfort to have a grown-up Nancy to discuss it with,
-said, "My contention is that, left to herself, Meg would have thought
-them both wicked."
-
-"Perhaps," Nancy said again; "but even old-fashioned girls did things
-they knew to be wicked sometimes. The difference Adrienne has made is
-that Meg doesn't think herself wicked at all. She thinks herself rather
-noble. And that's what I mean about Aunt Eleanor. It will comfort her if
-she can feel a little as Adrienne feels--that Meg isn't one bit the
-worse, morally, for what she's done."
-
-"Are you trying to persuade us that Meg isn't guilty, my dear?" Mrs.
-Averil inquired dryly. "Are you trying to persuade us that Adrienne has
-done us all a service? You surely can't deny that she's behaved
-atrociously, and first and foremost, to Barney. Barney could have known
-nothing about it, and can you conceive a woman keeping such a thing from
-her husband?"
-
-But Nancy was feeling the pressure of her own realizations and was not
-to be scolded out of them. "If Meg is guilty, and doesn't know it, she
-will suffer dreadfully when she finds out, won't she? It all depends on
-whether she has deceived herself or not, doesn't it? I'm not justifying
-her or Adrienne, Mother; only trying to see the truth about them. How
-could Adrienne tell Barney when it was Meg's secret? We may feel it
-wrong; but she thought she was justified." The colour rose in Nancy's
-cheek as she named Barney, but she kept her tired eyes on her mother and
-added, "I don't believe it was easy for her to keep it from him."
-
-"My dear, anything is easy for her that flatters her self-importance!"
-cried Mrs. Averil impatiently. "I'll own, if you like, that she's more
-fool than knave--as Meg may be; though Meg never struck me as a fool.
-Things haven't changed so much since my young days as all that; it's
-mainly a matter of names. If girls who behave like Meg find it
-pleasanter to be called fools than knaves, they are welcome to the
-alternative. Noble they never were nor will be, whatever the fashion."
-
-Oldmeadow did not want the sandwiches, so, as soon as they reached
-Coldbrooks, he was led upstairs to Mrs. Chadwick's room. He found his
-poor friend lying on the sofa, the blinds drawn down and a wet
-handkerchief on her forehead. She burst out crying as he entered.
-Oldmeadow sat down beside her and took her hand and, as he listened to
-her sobs, felt that he need not trouble to pity Adrienne.
-
-"What I cannot, cannot understand, Roger," she was at last able to say,
-and he realized that it was of Adrienne, not Meg, that she was speaking,
-"is how she can bear to treat us so. We all loved and trusted her. You
-know how I loved her, Roger. I felt Meg as safe in her hands as in my
-own. Oh, that wicked, wicked man! I hardly know him by sight. That makes
-it all so much more dreadful. All I do know is that his wife is a
-daughter of poor Evelyn Madderley, who broke her back out hunting."
-
-"I don't believe there's much harm in him, you know," Oldmeadow
-suggested. "And I believe that he is sincerely devoted to Meg."
-
-"Harm, Roger!" poor Mrs. Chadwick wailed, "when he is a married man and
-Meg only a girl! Oh, if there is harm in anything there is in that!
-Running away with a girl and ruining her life! Barney will make him feel
-what he has done. Barney _has_ gone?"
-
-"Yes, he's gone, and I am sure we can rely on him to speak his mind to
-Hayward."
-
-"And don't you think he may bring Meg back, Roger? Nancy says I must not
-set my mind on it; but don't you think she may be repenting already? My
-poor little Meg! She was hot-tempered and could speak very crossly if
-she was thwarted; but I think of her incessantly as she was when she was
-a tiny child. Self-willed; but so sweet and coaxing in her ways, with
-beautiful golden hair and those dark eyes. I always thought of Meg, with
-her beauty, as sure to marry happily; near us, I hoped"--Mrs. Chadwick
-began to sob again. "And now!--Will he find them in Paris? Will they not
-have moved on?"
-
-"In any case he'll be able to follow them up. I don't imagine they'll
-think of hiding."
-
-"No; I'm afraid they won't. That is the worst of it! They won't hide and
-every one will come to know and then what good will there be in her
-coming back! If only I'd had her presented last year, Roger! She can
-never go to court now," Mrs. Chadwick wept, none the less piteously for
-her triviality. "To think that Francis's daughter cannot go to court!
-She would have looked so beautiful, with my pearls and the feathers. The
-feathers are becoming to so few girls. Nancy could not wear them nearly
-so well. Nancy can go and my daughter can't!"
-
-"I don't think the lack of feathers will weigh seriously upon Meg's
-future, my dear friend."
-
-"Oh, but it's what they stand for, Roger, that will weigh!" Mrs.
-Chadwick, even in her grief, retained her shrewdness. "It's easy to
-laugh at the feathers, but you might really as well laugh at
-wedding-rings! To think that Francis's daughter is travelling about with
-a man and without a wedding-ring! Or do you suppose they'll have thought
-of it and bought one? It would be a lie, of course; but don't you think
-that a lie would be justifiable under the circumstances?"
-
-"I don't think it really makes any difference, until they can come home
-and be married."
-
-"I suppose she must marry him now--if they won't hide--and will be proud
-of what they've done; she seems quite proud of it!--everyone will hear,
-so that they will have to marry. Oh--I don't know what to hope or what
-to fear! How can you expect me to have tea, Nancy!" she wept, as Nancy
-entered carrying the little tray. "It's so good of you, my dear, but how
-can I eat?--I can hardly face the servants, Roger. They will all hear.
-And Meg was always such a pet of Johnson's; his favourite of all my
-children. He used to give her very rich, unwholesome things in the
-pantry and once, when her father punished her for disobeying him and put
-her in the corner, in the drawing-room, one day, after lunch, Johnson
-nearly dropped the coffee, when he came in. It upset him dreadfully and
-he would hardly speak to Francis for a week afterwards. I know he will
-think it all our fault, when he hears, now. And so it is, for having
-trusted to a stranger. I can't drink tea, Nancy."
-
-"Yes, you can, for Meg's sake, Aunt Eleanor, and eat some tea-cake,
-too," said Nancy. "If you aren't brave for her, who will be. And you
-can't be brave unless you eat. I remember so well, when I was little,
-Uncle Francis saying that when it came to the pinch you were the bravest
-woman he knew. You'll see, darling; it will all come out better than you
-fear. Johnson and all of us will help you to make it come out better."
-
-"She is such a comfort to me, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick with a summoned
-smile. "Somehow, when I see her, I feel that things _will_ come out
-better. _You_ will have to go to court, dear, next spring. We can't
-have none of our girls going. And you shall wear my pearls." Mrs.
-Chadwick's tears fell, but she took up the tea-cup.
-
-Nancy more and more was striking Oldmeadow as the wisest person in the
-house. He walked with her on the terrace after tea; it was an old custom
-of his and Nancy's to step outside then, whatever the weather, and have
-a few turns. This was a clear, chill evening and Nancy had wrapped a
-woollen scarf closely round her neck and shoulders. Her chin was sunken
-in its folds as she held it together on her breast, and with her dropped
-profile, her sad, meditative eyes, it was as if she saw a clue and, far
-more clearly than he did, knew where they all stood.
-
-"Adrienne was bitterly opposed to Barney's going," he said. "She seemed
-unable to grasp the fact that she herself had been in error."
-
-Nancy turned her eyes on him. "Did Barney tell you she was bitterly
-opposed?"
-
-"He didn't tell me. I was with them. It was most unfortunate. She
-insisted on my coming up."
-
-"Oh, dear," said Nancy. She even stopped for a moment to face him with
-her dismay. "Yes, I see," she then said, walking on, "she would."
-
-"Why would she? Unless she was sure of getting her own way? The only
-point in having me up was to show me that she could always get her own
-way with Barney."
-
-"Of course. And to make it quite clear to herself, too. She's not afraid
-of you, Roger. She's not afraid of anything but Barney."
-
-"I don't think she had any reason to be afraid of him this morning. He
-was badly upset, of course. But if I hadn't gone up, I imagine she'd
-have kept him from going. And you own that that would have been a pity,
-don't you?"
-
-"Yes. Oh, yes. He had to go," said Nancy, absently. And she added. "Were
-you very rough and scornful?"
-
-"Rough and scornful? I don't think so. I think I kept my temper very
-well, considering all things. I showed her pretty clearly, I suppose,
-that I considered her a meddling ass. I don't suppose she'll forgive me
-easily for that."
-
-"Well, you can't wonder at it, can you?" said Nancy. "Especially if she
-suspects that you made Barney consider her one, too."
-
-"But it's necessary, isn't it, that she should be made to suspect it
-herself? I don't wonder at her not forgiving me for showing her up
-before Barney, and upholding him against her, but I do wonder that one
-can never make her see she's wrong. It's that that's so really monstrous
-about her."
-
-"Do you think that anyone can ever make us see we are wrong unless they
-love us?" Nancy asked.
-
-"Well, Barney loves her," said Oldmeadow after a moment.
-
-"Yes; but he's afraid of her, too, isn't he? He'd never have quite the
-courage to try and make her see, would he?--off his own bat I mean. He'd
-never really have quite the courage to see, himself, how wrong she was,
-unless he were angry. And to have anyone who is angry with you trying to
-make you see, only pushes you further and further back into yourself,
-doesn't it, and away from seeing?"
-
-"You've grown very wise in the secrets of the human heart, my dear,"
-Oldmeadow observed. "It's true. He hasn't courage with her--unless some
-one is there to give it to him. But, you know, I don't think she'd
-forgive him if he had. I don't think she'd forgive anyone who made her
-see."
-
-"I don't know," Nancy pondered. "I don't love her, yet I feel as if I
-understood her; better, perhaps, than you do. I think she's good, you
-know. I mean, I think she might be good, if she could ever see."
-
-"She's too stupid ever, really, to see," said Oldmeadow, and it was with
-impatience. "She's encased in self-love like a rhinoceros in its hide.
-One can't penetrate anywhere. You say she's afraid of Barney and I can't
-imagine what you mean by that. It's true, when I'm by, she's afraid of
-losing his admiration. But that's not being afraid of him."
-
-Nancy still pondered; but not, now, in any perplexity. "She's afraid
-because she cares so much. She's afraid because she _can_ care so much.
-It's difficult to explain; but I feel as if I understood her. She's
-never cared so much before for just one other person. It's always been
-for people altogether; and because she was doing something for them. But
-Barney does something for her. He makes her happy. Perhaps she never
-knew before what it was to be really happy. You know, she didn't give me
-the feeling of a really happy person. It's something quite, quite new
-for her. It makes her feel uncertain of herself and almost bewildered
-sometimes. Oh, I'm sure of it the more I think of it. And you know,
-sometimes," Nancy turned her deep, sweet eyes on him, "I feel very sorry
-for her, Roger. I can't help it; although I don't love her at all."
-
-Yes. It must be true. Though he had seen Adrienne's vanity rather than
-her love. Nancy and Meg were united in their assurance and that must be,
-he saw, because they both, in their so different ways, knew what it was
-to care; to care so much that you were frightened. It was strange that
-the pang of pity that came with his new perception should be for
-Adrienne rather than for his dear little Nancy herself. Nancy had
-suffered, he knew, and her life was perhaps permanently scarred; yet,
-clear-eyed and unduped, he saw her as mistress of the very fate that had
-maimed her. Whereas Adrienne was blindfolded; a creature swayed and
-surrounded by forces of which she was unaware.
-
-Nancy had deepened his sense of perplexity, his sense of taking refuge
-from something, and what it was came fully upon him that night when he
-was at last alone. Meg and her misdemeanour sank into a mere background
-for the image of the cold, convulsed face that he had seen that morning.
-Almost angrily he felt himself pushing it back, pushing it down, as if
-he pushed it down to drown, and again and again it re-emerged to look at
-him.
-
-He fell asleep at last; but as, a year ago, on the first night of his
-meeting with her, he had dreamed of her, so to-night he dreamed again.
-
-He did not see her, but she was in some dreadful plight and the sense of
-her panic and bewilderment broke upon him in shocks of suffering. He
-could not see her, but he was aware of her, horribly aware. All remained
-a broken, baffled confusion, but it was as though, unable to shape and
-assert itself, he yet felt her very being wrestling with extinction.
-
-The sharpness had gone out of the sunlight next day and Mrs. Chadwick
-consented to come and sit with them in the warmest corner of the garden,
-the corner where, a year ago, Oldmeadow remembered, Meg had sat with him
-and explained to him the secret of Adrienne's power. Pitifully, with
-swollen eyes and trembling fingers, Mrs. Chadwick resumed her
-interrupted stocking while Oldmeadow read aloud from a Sunday paper the
-leading article on the critical situation in Ireland. "I suppose every
-one in London will be talking about Ulster and Sir Edward Carson, won't
-they?" said Mrs. Chadwick, and it was evident that she derived a dim
-comfort from the thought. The situation in Ireland, Oldmeadow reflected,
-had, at all events, been of so much service.
-
-Upon this quiet scene there broke suddenly the sound of a motor's horn
-and a motor's wheels turned into the front entrance.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick dropped her stocking and laid her hand on Nancy's arm.
-"Dear Aunt Eleanor--you know he couldn't possibly be back yet," said
-Nancy. "And if it's anyone to call, Johnson knows you're not at home."
-
-"Lady Cockerell is capable of anything. She might sit down in the hall
-and wait. She must have heard by now," poor Mrs. Chadwick murmured.
-"That married girl of hers in London must have written. With the
-projecting teeth."
-
-"I'll soon get rid of her, if it's really she," said Mrs. Averil; but
-she had hardly risen when the door at the back of the house opened and
-they saw Johnson usher forth a hurrying female figure, obviously not
-Lady Cockerell's; a figure so encumbered by its motoring wraps, so
-swathed in veils, that only Mrs. Chadwick's ejaculation enlightened
-Oldmeadow as to its identity.
-
-"Joséphine!" cried Mrs. Chadwick and then, between the narrow framing of
-purple gauze, he recognized the dramatic, melancholy eyes and pale,
-pinched lips of Adrienne's maid.
-
-"Oh, Madame! Madame!" Joséphine was exclaiming as she came towards them
-down the path. Her face wore the terrible intensity of expression so
-alien to the British countenance. "Oh, Madame! Madame!" she repeated.
-They had all risen and stood to await her. "He is dead! The little child
-is dead! And she is alone. Monsieur left her yesterday. Quite, quite
-alone, and her child born dead."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick faced her in pallid stupefaction.
-
-"The baby, Aunt Eleanor," said Nancy, for she looked indeed as if she
-had not understood. "Barney's baby. It has been born and it is dead.
-Oh--poor Barney. And poor, poor Adrienne."
-
-"Yes, dead!" Joséphine, regardless of all but her exhaustion and her
-grief, dropped down into one of the garden-chairs and put her hands
-before her face. "Born dead last night. A beautiful little boy. The
-doctors could not save it and fear for her life. They will not let me
-stay with her. Only the doctors and the nurses--strangers--are with
-her." Joséphine was sobbing. "Ah, it was not right to leave her so.
-Already she was ill. It could be seen that already she was very ill when
-Monsieur left her. I came to her when he was gone. She did not say a
-word to me. She tried to smile. _Mais j'ai bien vu qu'elle avait la mort
-dans l'âme._"
-
-"Good heavens," Mrs. Chadwick murmured, while Joséphine, now, let her
-tears flow unchecked. "She is alone and Barney has left her! Oh, this
-is terrible! At such a time!"
-
-"He had to go, Aunt Eleanor. You know he had to go. We will send for him
-at once," said Nancy, and Joséphine, catching the words, sobbed on in
-her woe and her resentment: "But where to send for him? No one knows
-where to send. The doctors sent a wire yesterday, at once, when she was
-taken ill; to the Paris hotel. But no answer came. He must have left
-Paris. That is why I have come. No telegrams for Sunday. No trains in
-time. I took the car. The doctor said, Yes, it was well that I should
-come. Some one who cares for Madame should return with me. If she is to
-die she must not die alone."
-
-"But she shall not die!" cried Mrs. Chadwick with sudden and surprising
-energy. "Oh, the poor baby! It might have lived had I been there. No
-doctor, no nurse, can understand like a mother. And I shall be able to
-help with Adrienne. I must go. I must go at once. Mademoiselle will see
-that you have something to eat and drink, my poor Joséphine, and then
-you and I will return together. It will not take me a moment to get
-ready."
-
-"It will be the best thing for them all," Oldmeadow murmured to Mrs.
-Averil, as, taking Joséphine's arm, Mrs. Chadwick hurried her along the
-path. "And I'll go with them."
-
-A little later, while Mrs. Chadwick made ready above and Joséphine, in
-the hall, ate the meal that Johnson had brought for her, Oldmeadow and
-Nancy stood outside near the empty waiting car.
-
-"I'll wire to you at once, of course, how she is," he said. Adrienne had
-put Meg out of all their thoughts. "But it's rather grotesque," he
-added, "if poor Barney is to be blamed."
-
-Nancy stood and looked before her, wrapped, as she had been the day
-before, in her woollen scarf. "Roger," she said after a moment, "no one
-can be blamed; yet, if she dies, I shall feel that we have killed her."
-
-"Killed her! What nonsense, my dear! What do you mean?" He spoke angrily
-because something in his heart, shaken by his dream, echoed her. The
-dreaming had now revealed itself as definitely uncanny. What had he to
-do with Adrienne Toner that his sub-consciousness should be aware of her
-extremity?
-
-"I can't explain," said Nancy. "We couldn't help it. It's even all her
-fault. But she never asked to come to us. She never sought us out. She
-had her life and we had ours. It was we who sought her and drew her in
-and worshipped her. She never hid what she was; never in the least
-little way. It was for what she was, because she was so different and
-believed so in herself, that Barney loved her. And now because she has
-gone on believing in herself, we have struck her down."
-
-The rooks were cawing overhead and Oldmeadow was remembering his dream
-of a year ago, how Adrienne had come to him along the terrace saying, as
-she lifted her hand: "I can hear them, too." They had drawn her in. Yet
-she had loved their life. She had wanted to understand it and to be part
-of it. He wished he could get the pale, streaked, drowning face out of
-his mind. "It's generous of you, my dear child," he said, "to say 'we.'
-You mean 'you.' If anyone struck her down it was I."
-
-"You spoke for us all, Roger. And you only spoke for us. You were always
-outside. I count myself with them. I can't separate myself from them. I
-received her love--with them all."
-
-"Did you?" he looked at her. "I don't think so, Nancy."
-
-Nancy did not pretend not to understand. "I know," she said. "But I'm
-part of it. And she tried to love me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat in Barney's study, Mrs. Chadwick beside him. It was
-Tuesday and the only news of Barney had been a letter to his mother,
-from Paris, where he had not found Meg, and two wires from the South of
-France, one to Oldmeadow and one to his wife, saying that he had found
-Meg and was returning alone. He had not, it was evident, received the
-doctor's messages.
-
-Oldmeadow had not seen his old friend since the Sunday night when he had
-left her and Joséphine in Connaught Square, and in his first glance at
-her this morning he saw that for her, too, Adrienne's peril had actually
-effaced Meg's predicament. It had done more. Faint and feeble as she
-must be, scarcely able to take possession of her returning life and, as
-Mrs. Chadwick told him, not yet out of danger, Adrienne had already
-drawn her mother-in-law back into the circle of her influence.
-
-"You see, Roger," she said, sitting there on the absurdly incongruous
-background of the Post Impressionist pictures and tightly squeezing her
-handkerchief first in one hand and then in the other, "You see, when one
-is with her one _has_ to trust her. I don't know why it is, but almost
-at once I felt all my bitterness against her die quite away. I knew,
-whatever she had done, that she believed it to be right; to be really
-_best_ for Meg, you know. And oh, Roger, Barney has hurt her so
-terribly! She can't speak of him without crying. I never saw her cry
-before. I never imagined Adrienne crying. She feels, she can't help
-feeling, that it is because of that they have lost their baby."
-
-Oldmeadow ordered with difficulty his astonished and indignant thoughts.
-"That is absolutely unfair to Barney," he said. "I was with them. No one
-could have been gentler or more patient."
-
-"I know you were with them. It would seem like that to you, Roger,
-because you are a man and men still think of women as a sort of chattel.
-That's how it looks to Adrienne. So much more independence, you know,
-than we ever had.--Oh, I don't say it's a good thing! I feel that we are
-weaker and need guidance."
-
-"Chattels? Where do chattels come in here? She said that to you. Barney
-merely pleaded with her so that he could do what you wanted him to do."
-
-"I know--I know, Roger. Don't get angry. But if I had been here and seen
-her I should have known that he must not go. I should have seen that she
-was in danger. A woman would have understood. No; you didn't treat
-Adrienne like a chattel; no one could treat Adrienne like one. It was
-poor little Meg I meant. I see now how wrong it was to think of taking
-her from the man she loves; when she _has_ gone, you know, so that
-everyone must know and there can be no good in it. And they probably
-_have_ bought a wedding-ring. Oh, Roger, she does comfort me about Meg.
-She makes me feel the deeper things, the things conventions blind us to.
-She makes me feel that the great thing, the only thing, is to follow
-one's own light and that Meg did do that. And after all, you know,
-Roger, Jowett had George Eliot and Lewes to breakfast and they were
-never married."
-
-"Ha! ha! ha!" Oldmeadow laughed. He could not repress his bitter mirth.
-"Follow your light if there's breakfast with a clergyman at the end of
-it!" he cruelly suggested. Yet he was too much amused, while so
-incensed, for there to be much cruelty, and Mrs. Chadwick, gazing at him
-as if from under her twisted straw, murmured: "He _was_ a sort of
-clergyman, Roger; and if people do what _seems_ to them right, why
-should they be punished?"
-
-He saw it all. He heard it all, in her echoes. The potent influence had
-been poured through her, all the more irresistible for the appeal of
-Adrienne's peril. Adrienne, bereaved and dying; yet magnanimous, gentle
-and assured; always assured. How could Mrs. Chadwick's feathers and
-wedding-rings stand a chance against her? They had been swept away, or
-nearly away, and what Nancy had seen as a possible hope was now an
-accomplished fact. Mrs. Chadwick had been brought to feel about Meg as
-Adrienne felt about her, and Oldmeadow, for his part, was not sure that
-the game was worth the candle. There was something more than absurd in
-his poor friend's attempts to adjust herself to the new standards. They
-were pitiable and even a little unseemly. She began presently softly to
-weep. "Such a pretty baby it was, Roger. A lovely little creature--that
-was the first thing she said to me--'Oh, Mother Nell, it was such a
-pretty baby.' And all that she said this morning--when it was taken
-away--was: 'I wish Barney could have been in time to see our baby.' Oh,
-it is terrible, terrible, Roger, that he is not here! Her heart is
-broken by it. How can she ever forget that he left her alone at such a
-time. And she begged him not to go. She told me that she almost knelt to
-him."
-
-The tears, irrepressibly, had risen to Oldmeadow's eyes; but as Mrs.
-Chadwick's sentence meandered on, his thoughts were roughly jolted from
-their pity. "But I tell you that that is absolutely unfair!" he
-repeated, fixing his glass to look his protest the more firmly at her.
-"I tell you that I was there and saw it all. It wasn't for the baby. She
-was thinking of the baby as little as Barney was; less than he was. What
-she was thinking of was her power over Barney. She was determined that
-she should not seem to be put in the wrong by his going."
-
-Like the March Hare Mrs. Chadwick was wild yet imperturbable. "Of course
-she was determined. How could she be anything else? It did put her in
-the wrong. And it put Meg in the wrong. That's where we were so blind.
-Oh, I blame myself as much as anybody. But Barney is her husband; and he
-was with her and should have seen and felt. How could she beg him to
-stay for her danger when he would not stay for her love?"
-
-Yes; Adrienne had her very firmly. She had even imparted to her, when it
-came to the issue, something of coherency. She was building up, in
-Barney's absence, strange ramparts against him. Barney had dragged her
-in the dust and there she intended to drag him. Wasn't that it?
-Oldmeadow asked himself as he eyed his altered friend, muttering
-finally: "I'm every bit as responsible as Barney, if it comes to that. I
-upheld him, completely, in his decision. I do still. Adrienne may turn
-you all upside down; but she won't turn me; and I hope she won't turn
-Barney."
-
-"I think, Roger, that you might at all events remember that she's not
-out of danger," said Mrs. Chadwick. "She may die yet and give you no
-more trouble. You have never cared for her; I know that, and so does
-she; and I do think it's unfeeling of you to speak as you do when she's
-lying there above us. And she looks so lovely in bed," Mrs. Chadwick
-began to weep again. "I never saw such thick braids; like Marguerite in
-Faust. Her hands on the sheets so thin and white and her eyes enormous.
-I don't think even you could have the heart to jibe and laugh if you saw
-her."
-
-"I didn't laugh at Adrienne, you know," Oldmeadow reminded her, rising
-and buttoning his overcoat. "I laughed at you and Jowett. No; Adrienne
-is no laughing matter. But she won't die. I can assure you of that now.
-She's too much life in her to die. And though I'm very sorry for
-her--difficult as you may find it to believe--I shall reserve my pity
-for Barney."
-
-Barney needed all his pity and the sight of him on the following Sunday
-evening, as he appeared on his threshold, would have exorcised for
-Oldmeadow, if Mrs. Chadwick had not already done so, the memory of the
-pale, drowning face. He looked like a dog that has been beaten for a
-fault it cannot recognize. There was bewilderment in his eyes and
-acceptance, and a watchful humility. To see them there made Oldmeadow
-angry.
-
-Barney had sent a line to say that he was back; but his friend had been
-prepared not to see him. Once engulfed in the house of mourning it was
-but too likely that he would not emerge for many days. And besides, what
-would Barney have to say to him now? But here he was, with his hollow
-eyes and faded cheeks, and it was with an echo of his old boyish manner
-of dropping in when beset by some perplexity that, without speaking, he
-crossed the room and sank on the sofa by the fireplace. But he had not
-come to seek counsel or sustainment. Oldmeadow saw that, as, after he
-had offered cigarettes, which Barney refused, and lighted his own pipe,
-he walked to and fro and watched him while Barney watched the flames. He
-had not come with a purpose at all. It was, again, precisely like the
-unhappy dog who wanders forth aimlessly, guided merely by a dim yearning
-towards warmth and kindliness. Barney had come where he would be
-understood. But it was not because he believed himself to be
-misunderstood that he came.
-
-"I went to Coldbrooks, first, you know," he said presently, and with an
-effect of irrelevance. "I thought I'd find Mother there. So it was only
-on that Thursday night I got back here. None of the wires caught me."
-
-"I know," said Oldmeadow. "It was most unfortunate. But you couldn't
-have got back sooner, could you, once you'd gone on from Paris."
-
-"Not possibly. I went on from Paris that very night, you see. I caught
-the night express to the Riviera. They'd left Cannes as an address, but
-when I got there I found they'd moved on to San Remo. It was Tuesday
-before I found them. My one idea was to find them as soon as possible,
-of course. No; I suppose it couldn't be helped; once I'd gone."
-
-"And it was quite useless? You'd no chance with Meg at all?"
-
-"None whatever. Quite useless. Never was such a wild-goose chase. It was
-exactly as Adrienne had said."
-
-"Still it couldn't have been foreseen so securely by anyone but
-Adrienne. Many girls would have jumped at the chance."
-
-"Not if they'd had Adrienne to help them. We might have realized that.
-That's what armed Meg. I heard Adrienne in everything she said. Even
-Mother thinks Adrienne was right, now, you know, Roger. And it was all
-for Mother, wasn't it? that I went. That makes it all so particularly
-ironic. Only dear Mummy was never very strong at logic. She takes the
-line now that we're narrow-minded conventionalists, you and I, for
-thinking that a girl oughtn't to go off with a married man. I can't feel
-that, you know, Roger," said Barney in his listless tone. "I can't help
-feeling that Meg has done something shameful. You ought to have seen
-her! Positively smug! sitting there with that ass of a fellow in that
-damned Riviera hotel! I had the horridest feeling, too, that Meg had
-brought him rather than he her. I don't mean he doesn't care for her--he
-does; I'll say that for him. He's a stupid fellow, but honest; and he
-came outside and tried to tell me what he felt and how it would be all
-right and that he was going to devote his life to her. But I think he
-feels pretty sick, really. While Meg treated me as if I were a silly
-little boy. If anyone can carry the thing through, Meg will."
-
-"It won't prove her right because she carries it through, you know,"
-Oldmeadow observed.
-
-"No," said Barney, "but it will make us seem more wrong. Not that you
-have any responsibility in it, dear old boy. I did what I felt I must do
-and mine was the mistake. It's not only Mother who thinks I've wronged
-Adrienne," he went on after a moment, lifting his arms as though he
-felt a weight upon them and clasping them behind his head. "Even Nancy,
-though she was so sorry for me, made me feel that I'd done something
-very dreadful."
-
-"Nancy? How did you come to see Nancy?"
-
-"Why, at Coldbrooks. She's still there with Aunt Monica. That was just
-it. It was my going there first, seeing her first, that upset her so.
-She couldn't understand, till I could explain, how it came about. She
-was thinking of Adrienne, you see. And I, knowing nothing, had been
-thinking of Mother all the time. It was too late, then, to go back at
-once. The next train wasn't for three hours. So I had to stay."
-
-"And it was Nancy who had to tell you everything?"
-
-"Yes; Nancy," said Barney, staring at the ceiling. There was a note,
-now, of control in his voice and Oldmeadow knew that if he had said no
-word of what must be foremost in both their thoughts it was because he
-could not trust himself to speak of it. And he went on quickly, taking
-refuge from his invading emotion, "Aunt Monica wasn't there. I didn't
-even see Johnson. I went right through the house and into the garden and
-there was Nancy, planting something in the border. Everything looked so
-natural. I just went up to her and said 'Hello, Nancy,' and then, when
-she looked up at me, I thought she was going to faint. Poor little
-Nancy. I knew something terrible had happened from the way she looked at
-me."
-
-"Poor little Nancy. But I'm glad it was she who told you, Barney."
-
-"No one could have been sweeter," said Barney, talking on quickly. "She
-kept saying, 'Oh, you oughtn't to be here, Barney. You oughtn't to be
-here.' But no one could have been sweeter. We sat down on the old bench,
-you know, and she told me. That Adrienne had nearly died. That the baby
-was dead. I could hardly believe her, at first. I stared at her, I know,
-and I kept saying, 'What do you mean, Nancy?--what do you mean?' And she
-began to cry and I cried, too. Men do feel, Roger, all the same, even
-though they haven't the mother's claim to feel. I thought about our baby
-so much. I loved it, too. And now--to think it's dead; and that I never
-saw it; and that it's my fault"--his voice had shaken more and more; he
-had put his hand before his eyes, and, then, suddenly, he leaned forward
-and buried his head on the arm of the sofa.
-
-"My poor Barney! My dear boy!" Oldmeadow muttered. He came and sat down
-beside him; he laid his arm around his shoulders. "It's not your fault,"
-he said.
-
-"Oh, don't say that, Roger!" sobbed Barney. "It's no good trying to
-comfort me. I've broken her heart. She doesn't say so. She's too angelic
-to say it; but she lies there and looks it. My poor darling! My poor,
-courageous darling; what she has been through! It can't be helped. I
-must face it. I'm her husband. I ought to have understood. She
-supplicated me, and I rejected her, and the child is dead."
-
-"The child's death is a calamity for which no one can be held
-responsible unless it is Adrienne herself," said Oldmeadow. While Barney
-sobbed he was thinking intently, for this was a turning-point in
-Barney's destiny. He would remain in subjugation to Adrienne's
-conception of the wrong done her or he must be enabled to regain the
-sense of innocence to which he had every right. "She forced the
-situation on you. She chose to break rather than bend," he said. "Listen
-to me, Barney. I don't speak in any enmity to your wife; but listen to
-me and try to think it out. Don't you remember how you once said that
-your marriage couldn't be a mistake if you were able to see the defects
-as well as the beauty of the woman you love. Don't you remember that you
-said she'd have to learn a little from you for the much you'd have to
-learn from her. Nothing more reassured me than what you said that night.
-And I was reassured the other day by your firmness. It implies no
-disloyalty in you to see the defects now. It was power over you she
-wanted the other day and to see herself put in the right, before me; and
-to see me worsted, before you. You know it, Barney; you know it in your
-heart. And she knows it too. There was no failure of love in what you
-said. There was only failure of homage. You were right in opposing her.
-She was wrong in the issue she made. She was wrong from the first of the
-miserable affair in having concealed it from you. If you'd stayed behind
-as she wanted you to do, you'd have shown yourself a weakling and she'd
-have been further than ever from knowing herself in error. There is the
-truth; and the sooner you see it, the sooner she will."
-
-For some time after his friend had ended, Barney lay silent, his face
-still hidden. But his sobs had ceased. And his silence, at last, grew
-too long for any disclaimer to be possible to him. He had been brought,
-Oldmeadow knew it from the very rhythm of his breathing, to the
-passionless contemplation where alone truth is visible. And what he said
-at last was: "She'll never see it like that."
-
-"Oh, yes, she will," said Oldmeadow. And he remembered Nancy's wisdom.
-"If you hold to it firmly and tenderly and make her feel you love her
-while you make her feel you think her wrong."
-
-"She'll never see it," Barney repeated, and Oldmeadow now suspected, and
-with a deep uneasiness, that Barney might be seeing further than
-himself. "She can't."
-
-"You mean that she's incapable of thinking herself wrong?"
-
-"Yes, incapable," said Barney. "Because all she's conscious of is the
-wish to do right. And she is right so often, she is so good and
-beautiful, that it must be like that with her. She can break; but she
-can't bend."
-
-Oldmeadow was silent for a moment and Barney, on the arm of the sofa,
-was silent. "Of course," Oldmeadow then said, "the less you say about it
-the better. Things will take their place gradually."
-
-"I've not said anything about it," said Barney. "I've only thought of
-comforting and cherishing her. But it's not enough. I'll never say
-anything; but she'll know I'm keeping something back. She knows it
-already. I see that now. And I didn't know it till you put it to me."
-
-"She'll have to accept it; or to live with it unaccepted, then. You
-can't consider yourself a criminal to give her moral ease."
-
-"No," said Barney after a pause. "No; I can't do that. Though that's
-what Mummy wants me to do. But I can be horribly sorry."
-
-"Horribly sorry. Let the rest sink into the unspoken. When people love
-each other they can, I'm sure, live over any amount of unspoken things."
-
-"It hasn't been unspoken between you and me, though, has it, Roger?"
-said Barney, and he raised himself and got upon his feet as he said it.
-"There's the trouble. There's where I _am_ wrong. For she'd feel it an
-intolerable wrong if she knew that it hadn't been unspoken between you
-and me. And she'd be right. When people love each other such reticences
-and exclusions wrong their love."
-
-"But since you say she knows," Oldmeadow suggested after another moment.
-
-Barney stood staring out of the twilight window.
-
-"She doesn't know that I tell you," he said.
-
-"You've told me nothing," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Well, she doesn't know what I listen to, then," said Barney.
-
-Oldmeadow was again conscious of the deep uneasiness. "It's quite true
-I've no call to meddle in your affairs," he said. "The essential thing
-is that you love each other. Let rights and wrongs go hang."
-
-"You haven't meddled, Roger." Barney moved towards the door. "You've
-been in my affairs, and haven't been allowed to keep out. Yes. We love
-each other. But rights and wrongs never go hang with Adrienne."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-Oldmeadow did not see Barney again for some months. He met Eleanor
-Chadwick towards the end of April, in the park, he on his way to Mrs.
-Aldesey's, she, apparently, satisfying her country appetite for
-exercise, since she seemed to be walking fast and at random. He almost
-thought for a moment that she was going to pretend not to see him and
-hurry down a path that led away from his; but his resolute eye perhaps
-checked the impulse. She faltered and then came forward, holding out her
-hand and looking rather wildly about her, and she said that London was
-really suffocating, wasn't it?
-
-"You've been here for so long, haven't you," said Oldmeadow. "Or have
-you been here all this time? I've had no news of any of you, you see."
-
-"It's all been such a troubled, busy time, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick.
-"Yes, I've been here ever since. But, thank goodness, the doctors say
-she may be moved now, and she and I and Barney are going down to
-Devonshire next week. To Torquay. Such a dismal place, I think; but
-perhaps that's because so many of my relations have died there. I never
-have liked that red Devonshire soil. But the primroses will be out. That
-makes up a little."
-
-"I'm glad that Mrs. Barney is better. When will you all be back at
-Coldbrooks?"
-
-"In June, I hope. Yes; she is better. But so feeble, still; so frail.
-And quite, quite changed from her old bright self. It's all very
-depressing, Roger. Very depressing and wearing," said Mrs. Chadwick,
-opening her eyes very wide and staring before her in a way
-characteristic of her when she repressed tears. "Sometimes I hardly know
-how to keep up at all. For nothing cheers her. And Barney isn't really
-much help. He has very little power of fighting against depression."
-
-"You've all been too much shut up with each other, I'm afraid."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick still held her eyes widely opened. "I don't think it's
-that, Roger. Being alone wouldn't have helped us to be happier, after
-what's happened."
-
-"Being with other people might. You must get back to Coldbrooks as soon
-as possible and see Nancy and Mrs. Averil and your neighbours. That will
-help to change the current of your thoughts."
-
-"People don't forget so easily as that, Roger," Mrs. Chadwick murmured,
-and it was now with severity, as though she suspected him of triviality.
-"When something terrible has happened to people they are _in_ the
-current and Nancy and the neighbours are not going to change it. Poor
-Nancy; she feels it all as much as we do, I'm sure."
-
-And that Mrs. Chadwick thought of him as unfeeling he saw. She thought
-of him, too, with Barney, as criminal; as responsible for the
-catastrophe. The old phrase of presage floated back into his mind:
-"She'll spoil things." She had spoiled, for ever perhaps, this deepest,
-dearest relation of his life. What was Coldbrooks to become to him with
-Adrienne Toner in possession? He said, and he was unable to keep a
-certain dryness that must sound like lightness, from his voice: "You are
-in it but you needn't keep your heads under it, you know. That's what
-people tend to do when they shut themselves up with their misfortunes.
-You and Barney and Mrs. Barney, I suspect, are engaged in drowning each
-other. If one of you puts their head up the others pull it down."
-
-"I suppose you mean Adrienne does," said Mrs. Chadwick. He had not meant
-it at all; but now he felt sure that so, exactly, did it happen. Poor
-Mrs. Chadwick left to herself would have drifted to the shore by this
-time and Barney, at all events, would be swimming with his head up; it
-was Adrienne, of course, that kept them suffocating under the surface.
-"Well, I think it a pity you three should go off to Torquay alone," he
-evaded. "What's happening to the farm all this time?"
-
-"Nancy is seeing to it for Barney," said Mrs. Chadwick. "She understands
-those things so well. Barney would not dream of letting the farm come
-between him and Adrienne at a time like this. He wants to be with her of
-course."
-
-"Of course. All I mean is that I wish he could be with her at
-Coldbrooks. I suppose the doctor knows what's best, however."
-
-"I'm glad to hear you own that anybody can know what's best, Roger,
-except yourself," said Mrs. Chadwick with her singularly unprovocative
-severity. "Of course she must go to the sea and of course Barney and I
-must be with her. She has two excellent nurses; but I would never trust
-the best nurse for certain things. I remember so well when I was ill
-myself once and saw the nurse behind a screen, eating raspberry jam out
-of the pot with her finger. You can't trust anybody, really." And that
-was all he got out of Eleanor Chadwick. Adrienne had spoiled things.
-
-It was in June that he heard from Mrs. Averil that she and Nancy were in
-London for a few days staying with an old aunt in Eccleston Square. Mrs.
-Averil asked him to come to tea and he asked her and Nancy to do a play
-with him; but before these meetings took place he saw them both. It was
-at a Queen's Hall concert on Sunday afternoon that Mrs. Aldesey called
-his attention to his friends and, to his surprise, Oldmeadow saw that
-Barney was with them. They sat across the gangway at some little
-distance and his first impression of the three was that they were not
-happy.
-
-"Did you know he was in town?" asked Mrs. Aldesey. "How ill he looks. I
-suppose he was frightfully upset about the baby, poor fellow."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey knew nothing of the catastrophes that had followed the
-baby's death. He had instinctively avoided any reference to the latest
-progress of the Juggernaut.
-
-"She's much better now, you know," he said, and he wasn't aware that he
-was exonerating Barney. "And they're all back at Coldbrooks."
-
-"She's not at Coldbrooks," said Mrs. Aldesey. "She's well enough to pay
-visits and Lady Lumley told me she was coming down to them for this
-week-end. I wonder he hasn't gone with her."
-
-Oldmeadow was wondering too. There was something about Barney's attitude
-as he sat there beside his cousin, silent and absent-minded it seemed,
-listening as little to the music as he looked little at her, that he
-would rather Lydia Aldesey had not been there to observe. They had a
-curiously marital appearance, the young couple, or, rather, Barney had;
-the air of being safe with some one with whom no explanations were
-needed and for whom no appearances must be kept up; some one, even, with
-whom he was so identified that he was hardly conscious of her. Nancy was
-not so unconscious. Once, when Barney leaned over to look at the
-programme, she drew away a little; and Oldmeadow even fancied a slight
-constraint in her glance when, now and then, he spoke to her. Had
-Adrienne spoiled things there, too? Mrs. Averil next day, in Eccleston
-Square, enlightened him as to Barney's presence. "It's been most
-unfortunate. He had planned to come up to this concert for a long time.
-He wanted Nancy to hear the César Franck with him. And then it appeared
-that Adrienne had made an engagement for them with the Lumleys. He
-refused to go, I'm afraid, and she made an issue of it and, from what
-poor Eleanor told me, there was rather a row. So Adrienne has gone off
-alone and Barney is here till this evening. He's gone out now with Nancy
-to show her some pictures by a friend of his. It had all been arranged.
-So what were we to do about it, Roger?"
-
-"Do about it? Why just what you have done. Why shouldn't she go with
-him?"
-
-"Why indeed? Except that Adrienne has made the issue. It's awkward, of
-course, when you know there's been a row, to go on as if nothing had
-happened."
-
-Oldmeadow meditated. His friend's little face had been pinched by the
-family's distress when he had last seen it; it was clouded now by a
-closer, a more personal perplexity. "I suppose she made the issue on
-purpose so that Barney shouldn't come up," he said at length.
-
-"I really don't know. Perhaps it had been arranged first with the
-Lumleys. If it was to keep him from coming, that didn't come out. She
-wouldn't let it come out; not into the open; of course."
-
-"So things are going very badly. I'd imagined, with all Barney's
-contrition, that they might have worked out well."
-
-"They've worked out as badly, I'm afraid, as they could. He was full of
-contrition. He was as devoted as possible, when they came back in May.
-But nothing altered her unflagging melancholy. And I suppose what
-happened was that he got tired. Barney was always like that, from the
-time he was in the nursery. He'd go on being patient and good-tempered
-until, suddenly, everything would break down and he would sulk for days.
-It's when he's pushed too far. And she has pushed him too far. She's set
-them all against him."
-
-"Who is them?" Oldmeadow asked. "I saw, when we met in London, that Mrs.
-Chadwick actually had been brought to look upon Barney as a sort of
-miscreant and Adrienne as a martyr. Who else is there?"
-
-"Well, no one else except Palgrave and Barbara. Palgrave can be very
-exasperating, as you know, and he takes the attitude now that Barney has
-done Adrienne an irreparable injury. As you may imagine it isn't a
-pleasant life Barney leads among them all."
-
-"I see," said Oldmeadow. "I think I see it all. What happens now is that
-Barney more and more takes refuge with you and Nancy, and Adrienne more
-and more can't bear it."
-
-"That is precisely it, Roger," said Mrs. Averil. "And what are we to do?
-How can I shut my door against Barney? Yet it is troubling me more than
-I can say. We are forced to seem on his side and against her. And
-Adrienne has her eye upon them."
-
-"Let her keep it on them," said Oldmeadow in strong indignation. "And
-much good may it do her!"
-
-"Oh, it won't do her any good--nor us!" said Mrs. Averil. "She's sick
-with jealousy, Roger. Sick. I'm almost sorry for her when I see it and
-see her trying to hide it, and see it always, coming in by the back door
-when she shuts the front door on it--as it always does, you know. And
-Nancy sees it, of course; and is quite as sick as she is; and Barney, of
-course, remains as blind as a bat."
-
-"Well, as long as he remains blind--"
-
-"Yes. As long as he does. But Adrienne will make him see. She'll pick
-and pull at their friendship until Nancy will be forced into drawing
-back, and if she draws back Barney will see. What it's already come to
-is that she has to stand still, and smile, while Adrienne scratches her,
-lest Barney should see she's scratched; and once or twice of late I've
-had a suspicion that he has seen. It doesn't endear Nancy to Adrienne
-that Barney should scowl at her when he's caught her scratching."
-
-"What kind of scratches?" Oldmeadow asked, but Mrs. Averil had only time
-to say, "Oh, all kinds; she's wonderful at scratches," when the
-door-bell rang and Nancy, a moment after, came in.
-
-Nancy, if anything so fresh and neat could be so called, was looking
-rather dowdy, and he suspected that some self-effacing motive lay behind
-her choice of clothes.
-
-"Oh, Roger, Barney was so sorry to have to miss you," she said. And, at
-all events, whatever else Adrienne had spoiled, she had not spoiled
-Nancy's loving smile for him. "He had to catch the 4.45 to Coldbrooks,
-you know. There's a prize heifer arriving this evening and he must be
-there to welcome it. You must see his herd of Holsteins, Roger."
-Friesians were, at that date, still Holsteins.
-
-"I'd like to," said Oldmeadow. "But I don't know when I shall, for, to
-tell you the truth, I've not been asked to Coldbrooks this summer. The
-first time since I've known them."
-
-Nancy looked at him in silence.
-
-"You'll come to us, of course," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"Do you really think I'd better, all things considered?" Oldmeadow
-asked.
-
-"Why, of course you'd better. What possible reasons could there be for
-your not coming, except ones we don't accept?"
-
-"It won't seem to range us too much in a hostile camp?"
-
-"Not more than we're ranged already. Nancy and I are not going to give
-you up, my dear Roger, because Adrienne considers herself a martyr."
-
-"I hope not, indeed. But it makes my exclusion from Coldbrooks more
-marked, perhaps, if I go to you. I imagine, though I am so much in her
-black books, that poor Mrs. Chadwick doesn't want my exclusion to be
-marked."
-
-"You're quite right there. You are in her black books; but she doesn't
-want it marked; she'd like to have you, really, if Adrienne weren't
-there and if she didn't feel shy. And I really think it will make it
-easier for her if you come to us instead. It will tide it over a
-little. She'll be almost able to feel you are with them. After all, you
-do come to us, often."
-
-"And I'll go up with you to Coldbrooks as if nothing had happened? I
-confess I have a curiosity to see how Mrs. Barney takes me."
-
-"She's very good at taking things, you know," said Nancy.
-
-Mrs. Averil cast a glance upon him. "It may be really something of a
-relief to their minds, Roger," she said, "if you turn up as if nothing
-had happened. They are in need of distractions. They are all dreadfully
-on edge, though they won't own to it, about Meg. The case is coming on
-quite soon now. Mrs. Hayward has lost no time, and poor Eleanor only
-keeps up because Adrienne is there to hold her up."
-
-"Where is Meg? Do they hear from her?"
-
-"They hear from her constantly. She's still on the Continent. She writes
-very easily and confidently. I can't help imagining, all the same, that
-Adrienne is holding her up, too. She's written to Nancy and Nancy hasn't
-shown me her letters."
-
-"There is nothing to hide, Mother," said Nancy, and Oldmeadow had never
-seen her look so dejected. "Nothing at all, except that she's not as
-easy and confident as she wants to appear. Adrienne does hold her up.
-Poor Meg."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-The picture of Adrienne holding them up was spread before Oldmeadow's
-eyes on the hot July day when Mrs. Averil drove him up from the Little
-House to Coldbrooks. The shade of the great lime-tree on the lawn was
-like a canvas, only old Johnson, as he moved to and fro with tea-table,
-silver and strawberries, stepping from its cool green atmosphere into
-the framing sunshine. The Chadwick family, seated or lying in the shade,
-were all nearly as still as in a picture, and Adrienne was its centre.
-She sat in a high-backed wicker chair, her hands lying listlessly in her
-lap, a scarf about her shoulders, and in her black-veiled white, her
-wide, transparent hat, she was like a clouded moon. There was something
-even of daring, to Oldmeadow's imagination, in their approach across the
-sunny spaces. Her eyes had so rested upon them from the moment that they
-had driven up, that they might have been bold wayfarers challenging the
-magic of a Circe in her web. Palgrave, in his white flannels, lay
-stretched at her feet, and he had been reading aloud to her; Barbara and
-Mrs. Chadwick sat listening while they worked on either hand. Only
-Barney was removed, sitting at some little distance, his back half
-turned, a pipe between his teeth and his eyes on a magazine that lay
-upon his knee. But the influence, the magic, was upon him too. He was
-consciously removed.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick sprang up to greet them. "This is nice!" she cried, and
-her knitting trailed behind her as she came so that Barbara, laughing,
-stooped to catch and pick it up as she followed her; "I was expecting
-you! How nice and dear of you! On this hot day! I always think the very
-fishes must feel warm on a day like this! Or could they, do you
-think?--Dear Roger!" There was an evident altering in Mrs. Chadwick's
-manner towards him since the meeting in the Park. She was, with all her
-fluster, manifestly glad to see him.
-
-Palgrave had hoisted himself to his feet and now stood beside Adrienne,
-eyeing them as a faithful hound eyes suspicious visitors.
-
-"Isn't it lovely in the shade," Mrs. Chadwick continued, drawing them
-into it. "Adrienne darling, Aunt Monica after all. And we were afraid
-the heat might keep you away. I suppose the hill was very hot, Monica?"
-Adrienne was still, apparently, something of an invalid, for she did not
-rise to greet them. Neither did she speak as she held out her hand to
-each of them in turn, and while an enveloping smile dwelt fondly on Mrs.
-Averil, she made no attempt to smile at Oldmeadow.
-
-He found himself observing her with a sort of wonder. All the flaws and
-deformities of her maternity had fallen from her and she had the
-appearance almost of beauty. Yet he had never so little liked her face.
-Her dimly patterned features made him think of a Chinese picture he had
-once seen where, on a moth-wing background, pale chrysanthemums,
-mauvy-pink, a disk of carved jade with cord and tassel and a narrow
-ivory box softly spotted with darkness, conveyed in their seeming
-triviality an impression almost sinister of impersonality and magic.
-There was as little feeling in her face. It was like a mask.
-
-"Where's Nancy?" Barney asked. He had got up and joined them, giving
-Oldmeadow's hand, as they met, a curiously lifeless shake.
-
-"She had letters to write," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"Why, I thought we'd arranged she was to come up and walk round the farm
-after tea with me," said Barney and as he spoke Oldmeadow noted that
-Adrienne turned her head slowly, somewhat as she had done on the ominous
-morning in March, and rested her eyes upon him.
-
-"Oh, I'm so sorry," said Mrs. Averil cheerfully. "She must have
-misunderstood. She had these letters to finish for the post."
-
-Barbara was reconnoitring at the tea-table. "Strawberries!" she
-announced. "Who said they'd be over? Oh, what a shame of Nancy not to
-come! Roger, why aren't you staying here rather than with Aunt Monica,
-I'd like to know? Aren't we grand enough for you since she's had that
-bathroom put in!" Barbara had advanced to a lively flapperdom.
-
-"You see, by this plan, I get the bath with her and get you when she
-brings me up," Oldmeadow retorted.
-
-"And leave Nancy behind! I call it a shame when we're having the last
-strawberries--and you may have a bathroom with Aunt Monica, but her
-strawberries are over. Letters! Who ever heard of Nancy writing
-letters--except to you, Barney. She was always writing to you when you
-were living in London--before you married. And what screeds you used to
-send her--all about art!" said Barbara, and that her liveliness cast a
-spell of silence was apparent to everyone but herself.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick took Oldmeadow's arm and drew him aside. "You'll be able
-to come later and be quite with us, won't you, Roger?" she said
-"September is really a lovelier month, don't you think? Adrienne is
-going to take Palgrave and Barbara for a motor-trip in September. Won't
-it be lovely for them?" Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a swiftness that did
-not veil a sense of insecurity. "Barbara's never seen the Alps. They are
-going to the Tyrol."
-
-"If we don't have a European war by then," Oldmeadow suggested. "What is
-Barney going to do?"
-
-"Oh, Barney is going to the Barclay's in Scotland, to shoot. He loves
-that. A war, Roger? What do you mean? All those tiresome Serbians? Why,
-they won't go into the Tyrol, will they?"
-
-"Perhaps not the Tyrol; but they may make it difficult for other people
-to go there."
-
-"Do you hear what Roger is saying?" Mrs. Chadwick turned to her family.
-"That the Serbians may make war by September and that it might interfere
-with the trip. But I'm sure Sir Edward will quiet them. He always does.
-Though he is a Liberal, I've always felt him to be such a good man,"
-said Mrs. Chadwick, "and really patriotic. Simply sitting round a table
-with him cools their heads more than one would believe possible.
-Dreadfully violent people, I believe, killing their kings and queens and
-throwing them out of the window. I always think there's nothing in the
-world for controlling people's tempers like getting them to sit together
-round a table. I wonder why it is. Something to do with having your legs
-out of the way, perhaps. People don't look nearly so threatening if
-their legs are hidden, do they? My poor cousin, Fanny Jocelyn, used
-always to say that if any of the clergymen in Fred's diocese got very
-troublesome her one recipe was to ask them to lunch, or, if they were
-very bad, to dinner. But she had wonderful tact--that gift, you know,
-for seeming to care simply _immensely_ for the person she was talking
-to. Francis used to tell her that when she looked at you as if you were
-the only person in the world she loved she was really working out her
-next menu."
-
-"I'm afraid if war comes it won't be restricted to people, like Serbians
-and clergymen, who can be quieted by being asked to dinner," said
-Oldmeadow laughing. "We'll be fighting, too."
-
-"And who will we fight?" Palgrave inquired. After passing tea, he had
-resumed his place at Adrienne's feet. "Who has been getting in our way
-now?"
-
-"Don't you read the papers?" Oldmeadow asked him.
-
-"Not when I can avoid it," said Palgrave. "They'll be bellowing out the
-same old Jingo stuff on the slightest provocation, of course. As far as
-I can make out the Serbians are the most awful brutes and Russia is
-egging them on. But when it comes to a crime against humanity like war,
-every one is responsible."
-
-"Are you ready for strawberries, Aunt Monica," Barbara interposed. "If
-there is a war, I hope we may be in it so that I can do some of my first
-aid on real people at last."
-
-She was carrying strawberries now to Adrienne who, as she leaned down,
-took her gently by the wrist, and said some low-toned words to her. "I
-know, my angel. Horrid of me!" said Barbara. "But one can't take war
-seriously, can one!"
-
-"I can," said Mrs. Averil. "Too many of my friends had their sons and
-husbands killed in South Africa."
-
-"And it's human nature," said Mrs. Chadwick, eating her strawberries
-mournfully. "Like the poor: whom you have always with you, you know."
-
-"Human nature is altered already a good deal more than governments
-imagine," said Palgrave, "and they'll find themselves pretty well dished
-if they try to bring on a capitalist war now. The workers all over the
-world are beginning to see whose the hands are that pull the strings and
-they'll refuse to dance to their piping. They'll down weapons just as
-they've learned, at last, to down tools; and without them you can do
-nothing. That's the way human nature will end war."
-
-"A spirited plan, no doubt," said Oldmeadow, "and effective if all the
-workers came to be of the same mind simultaneously. But if those of one
-country downed weapons and those of another didn't, the first would get
-their throats cut for their pains."
-
-"It's easy to sneer," Palgrave retorted. "As a matter of principle, I'd
-rather have my throat cut by a hired ruffian than kill an innocent
-man--even if he did belong to a nation that happened to be cleverer and
-more efficient than my own. That's a crime, of course, that we can't
-forgive."
-
-"Don't talk such rot, Palgrave," Barney now remarked in a tone of
-apathetic disgust.
-
-"I beg your pardon," Palgrave sat up instantly, flushing all over his
-face. "I think it's truth and sanity."
-
-"It's not truth and sanity. It's rot and stupid rot," said Barney. "Some
-more tea, please, Barbara."
-
-"Calling names isn't argument," said Palgrave. "I could call names, too,
-if it came to that. It's calling names that is stupid. I merely happen
-to believe in what Christ said."
-
-"Oh, but, dear--Christ drove the money-lenders out of the Temple very,
-very roughly," Mrs. Chadwick interposed with the head-long irrelevance
-characteristic of her in such crises. "Thongs must hurt so much, mustn't
-they? He surely believed in punishing people who did wrong."
-
-"Which nation doesn't do wrong, Mummy? Which nation is a Christ with a
-right to punish another? It's farcical. And punishing isn't killing.
-Christ didn't kill malefactors."
-
-"The Gadarene swine," Mrs. Chadwick murmured. "They were killed. So
-painfully, too, poor things. I never could understand about that. I hope
-the Higher Criticism will manage to get rid of it, for it doesn't really
-seem kind. They had done no wrong at all and I've always been specially
-fond of pigs myself."
-
-"Ah, but you never saw a pig with a devil in it," Oldmeadow suggested,
-to which Mrs. Chadwick murmured, "I'm sure they seem to have devils in
-them, sometimes, poor dears, when they won't let themselves be caught.
-Do get some more cream, Barbara. It's really too hot for arguments,
-isn't it," and Mrs. Chadwick sighed with the relief of having rounded
-that dangerous corner.
-
-Barbara went away with the cream-jug and Johnson emerged bearing the
-afternoon post.
-
-"Ah. Letters. Good." Palgrave sat up to take his and Adrienne's share.
-"One for you, Adrienne; from Meg. Now we shall see what she says about
-meeting us in the Tyrol." His cheeks were still flushed and his eyes
-brilliant with anger. Though his words were for Adrienne his voice was
-for Barney, at whom he did not glance.
-
-Adrienne unfolded the foreign sheets, and held them so that Palgrave,
-leaning against her knee, could read with her.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick had grown crimson. She looked at Oldmeadow. "Dear Meg is
-having such an interesting time," she told him. "She and Eric are seeing
-all manner of delightful places and picking up some lovely bits of old
-furniture." Oldmeadow bowed assent. He had his eyes on Adrienne and he
-was wondering about Barbara.
-
-"What news is there, dear?" Mrs. Chadwick continued in the same badly
-controlled voice. Palgrave's face had clouded.
-
-"I'm afraid it may be bad news, Mother Nell," said Adrienne looking up.
-
-It was the first time Oldmeadow had heard her voice that afternoon and
-he could hardly have believed it the voice that had once reminded him of
-a blue ribbon. It was still slow, still deliberate and soft; but it had
-now the steely thrust and intention of a dagger.
-
-"It's this accursed war talk!" Palgrave exclaimed. "Eric evidently
-thinks it serious and he has to come home at once. What rotten luck."
-
-Adrienne handed the sheets to Mrs. Chadwick. "It will all have blown
-over by September," she said. "As Mother Nell says, we can trust Sir
-Edward to keep us out of anything so wicked as a war. I am so completely
-with you in all you say about the wickedness of war, Paladin, although I
-do not see its causes quite so simply, perhaps."
-
-It was the first time that Oldmeadow had heard the new name for her
-knight.
-
-"For my part," said Barney, casting a glance at the house, Barbara not
-having yet reappeared, "I shall be grateful to the war if it dishes your
-trip to the Tyrol. It's most unsuitable for Barbara."
-
-He did not look at his wife as he spoke. His hat brim pulled down over
-his eyes, he sat with folded arms and stared in front of him.
-
-"You find it unsuitable for one sister to meet another?" Adrienne
-inquired. Her eyes were on Barney, but Oldmeadow could not interpret
-their gaze.
-
-"Most unsuitable, to use no stronger word," said Barney, "while one
-sister is living with a man whose name she doesn't bear."
-
-"You mean to say," said Palgrave, sitting cross-legged at Adrienne's
-feet and grasping his ankles with both hands, "that Meg, until she's
-legally married, isn't fit for her little sister to associate with?"
-
-"Just what I do mean, Palgrave. Precisely what I do mean," said Barney,
-and his face, reddening, took on its rare but characteristic expression
-of sullen anger. "And I'll thank you--in my house, after all--to keep
-out of an argument that doesn't concern you."
-
-"Barney; Palgrave," murmured Mrs. Chadwick supplicatingly. Adrienne,
-not moving her eyes from her husband's face, laid her hand on Palgrave's
-shoulder.
-
-"It does concern me," said Palgrave, and he put up his hand and grasped
-Adrienne's. "Barbara's well-being concerns me as much as it does you;
-and your wife's happiness concerns me a good deal more. I can promise
-you that I wouldn't trouble your hospitality for another day if it
-weren't for her--and Mother. It's perfectly open to you, of course, to
-turn me out of my home whenever you like to make use of your legal
-privilege. But until I'm turned out I stay--for their sakes."
-
-"You young ass! You unmitigated young ass!" Barney snarled, springing to
-his feet. "All right, Mother. Don't bother. I'll leave you to your
-protector for the present. I only wish he were young enough to be given
-what he needs--a thorough good hiding. I'll go down and see Nancy. Don't
-expect me back to dinner."
-
-"Nancy is busy, my dear," poor Mrs. Averil, deeply flushing, interposed,
-while Palgrave, under his breath, yet audibly, murmured: "Truly
-Kiplingesque! Home and Hidings! Our Colonial history summed up!"
-
-"She would be here if she weren't busy," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"I won't bother her," said Barney. "I'll sit in the garden and read.
-It's more peaceful than being here."
-
-"Please tell dear Nancy that it's ten days at least since _I've_ seen
-her," said Adrienne, "and that I miss her and beg that she'll give me,
-sometime, a few of her spare moments."
-
-At that Barney stopped short, and looked at his wife. "No, Adrienne, I
-won't," he said with a startling directness. "I'll take no messages
-whatever from you to Nancy. Let Nancy alone--do you see? That's all I've
-got to ask of you. Let her alone. She and Aunt Monica are the only
-people you haven't set against me and I don't intend to quarrel with
-Nancy to please you, I promise you."
-
-Sitting motionless and upright, her hand laid on Palgrave's shoulder,
-her face as unalterable as a little mask, Adrienne received these
-well-aimed darts as a Saint Sebastian might have received the arrows.
-Barney stared hard at her for a moment, then turned his back and marched
-out into the sunlight and Oldmeadow, as he saw him go, felt that he
-witnessed the end, as he had, little more than a year ago, witnessed the
-beginning, of an epoch. What was there left to build on after such a
-scene? And what must have passed between husband and wife during their
-hours of intimacy to make it credible? Barney was not a brute.
-
-When Barney had turned through the entrance gates and
-disappeared--Adrienne's eyes dropped to Palgrave's. "I think I'll go in,
-Paladin," she said, and it was either with faintness or with the mere
-stillness of her rage. "I think I'll lie down for a little while."
-
-Palgrave had leaped to his feet and, as she rose, drew her hand within
-his arm, and Mrs. Chadwick, her eyes staring wide, hastened to her: but
-Adrienne gently put her away. "No, no, dearest Mother Nell. Paladin will
-help me. You must stay with Aunt Monica and Mr. Oldmeadow." Her hand
-rested for a moment on Mrs. Chadwick's shoulder and she looked into her
-eyes. "I'm so sorry, Mother Nell. I meant no harm."
-
-"Oh, my darling child! As if I did not know that!" Mrs. Chadwick moaned
-and, as Adrienne moved away, she turned as if half distraught to her two
-friends. "Oh, it's dreadful! dreadful!" she nearly wept. "Oh, how can he
-treat her so--before you all! It's breaking my heart!"
-
-Barbara came running out with the cream. "Great Scott!" she exclaimed,
-stopping short. "What's become of everybody?"
-
-"They've all gone, dear. Yes, we've all finished. No one wants any more
-strawberries. Take yours away, will you, dear, we want to have a little
-talk, Aunt Monica, Roger and I."
-
-"I suppose it's Barney again," said Barbara, standing still and gazing
-indignantly around her. "Where's Adrienne?"
-
-"She has gone to lie down, dear. Yes. Barney has been very unkind."
-
-"About my trip, I suppose? He's been too odious about my trip and it's
-only the other day he made Adrienne cry. What possible business is it of
-Barney's, I'd like to know? One would think he imagined that wives and
-sisters were a sort of chattel. Why mayn't I stay, Mother--if you're
-going to talk about my trip? Adrienne has explained everything to me and
-I think Meg was quite right and I'd do the same myself if I were in her
-place. So I'm perfectly able to understand."
-
-"I know, dear; I know; Adrienne is so wonderful. But don't say things
-like that, I beg of you, for it makes me very, very unhappy. And please
-run away for a little while, for we have other things to talk of. I'm
-afraid there may be no trip at all, Barbara; Meg may be coming home at
-once. The letters had news about it, and Eric has to go to the war--if
-there is a war, you see." Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a supplicatory note
-very unlike her usual placid if complaining authority.
-
-"But I'd like to hear about the letters, then. Do we really have to give
-up the trip? I'm sure it's Barney at the bottom of it. He's been trying
-to dish it from the first and I simply won't stand it from him."
-
-"It's not Barney at all, Barbara. You shall hear all that there is to
-hear. And you mustn't, really, forget that Barney is your elder brother
-and has some right to say what you should do--even though we mayn't
-agree with him."
-
-"No, he hasn't. Not an atom," Barbara declared. "If anyone has any
-right, except you, it's Adrienne, because she's a bigger, wiser person
-than any of us."
-
-"And since you've borne your testimony, Barbara," Oldmeadow suggested,
-"you might obey your mother and give us the benefit of your experience
-on an occasion when it's invited."
-
-"Oh, I know you're against Adrienne, Roger," said Barbara, but with a
-sulkiness that showed surrender. "I shan't force myself on you, I assure
-you, and girls of fifteen aren't quite the infants in arms you may
-imagine. If Adrienne weren't here to stand up for me I don't know where
-I'd be. Because, you know, you _are_ weak, Mother. Yes you are. You've
-been really wobbling like anything about my trip and trying to wriggle
-out of it whenever you had a loop-hole, and Adrienne thinks you're weak,
-I know, for she told me so, and said we must help you to be brave and
-strong and that you belonged to a generation that had its eyes tightly
-bandaged from birth. So there!" And delivering this effective shot,
-Barbara marched away, not forgetting to pick up her plate of
-strawberries as she passed the table.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick attempted to conceal her confusion by following her
-child's retreating figure with grave disapprobation and Oldmeadow seized
-the propitious moment to remark: "I can't help feeling that there's
-something to be said for Barney, all the same. His wife _has_ set you
-all against him, hasn't she? I suspect Barbara's right, too, my dear
-friend, and that in your heart of hearts you dislike this trip of hers
-as much as he does. Certainly Barbara isn't a very pleasing example of
-Adrienne's influence."
-
-"She is very naughty, very naughty and rebellious," poor Mrs. Chadwick
-murmured, twisting and untwisting her handkerchief. "I know I've not a
-strong character, but I never spoiled my children and dear Adrienne
-does, I feel, spoil Barbara by taking her so seriously and talking to
-her as if she were grown up, you know. I had an aunt who married at
-sixteen; but it didn't turn out at all happily. They quarrelled
-constantly and she had two sets of twins, poor thing--almost like a
-judgment, dear Mamma used to say. But of course Barbara is really too
-young to understand; and so I've told dear Adrienne. Not that she isn't
-perfectly frank about it. She's told me over and over again that
-weakness was my besetting danger and that I must stand up straight and
-let the winds of freedom blow away my cobwebs. So dear and original,
-always, you know. And of course I see her point of view and Barbara
-will, no doubt, be a bigger, finer person"--Mrs. Chadwick's voice
-trailed off in its echo. "But I don't agree with you, Roger; I don't
-agree with you at all!" she took up with sudden vehemence, "about the
-trip. I don't agree that my poor Meg is a leper to be avoided until a
-legal ceremony has been performed. I think that a cruel
-convention--cruel, base and cowardly. She must have suffered so much
-already. Nothing will give her so much courage as for us to be seen
-standing by her. Adrienne has explained all that most beautifully to
-Barbara. And how true love is the most sacred thing in life."
-
-"My dear friend, Meg isn't a leper, of course, and we all intend to
-stand by her. But it is certainly best that a young girl like Barbara
-shouldn't be asked to meet, or understand, or exonerate such difficult
-situations."
-
-"That's what I've tried to say to Eleanor," Mrs. Averil murmured.
-
-"And why not, Roger! Why not!" Mrs. Chadwick cried, surprisingly yet not
-convincingly aroused. "Nothing develops the character so much as facing
-and understanding difficulty. And as for exoneration--I don't agree with
-you, and Adrienne doesn't agree. You and Monica are conventionalists and
-we must live on a higher plane than convention. I'm sure I try to,
-though it's very hard sometimes, but the noblest things are hardest.
-There is nothing to exonerate. Meg was following her own light in doing
-what she did."
-
-"It's not a question of Meg, but of her situation," Oldmeadow returned.
-
-"And because of her situation, because she is so in need of help and
-loyalty, you ask that Barbara should draw back her skirts from her! Oh!
-I knew it!" cried Mrs. Chadwick, "I knew that you would feel like that!
-That is why I felt it would be happier if you were not here with
-Adrienne."
-
-"You need hardly tell me that," said Oldmeadow smiling. "But it's not a
-question of convention, except in so far as convention means right
-feeling and good taste. Meg, whatever her lights--and personally I don't
-believe that she followed them--has done something that involves pain
-and humiliation for all concerned with her, and whether she was or was
-not justified in doing it is a moral problem that a child shouldn't be
-asked to meet. Such problems should be kept from her until she is old
-enough to understand them."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's vehemence had only fictitiously sustained her. It
-dropped from her now and for a little while she sat silent, and the
-confusion of her heart was piteously revealed to her friend as she said
-at last, "If there _is_ a war, it will all settle itself, won't it, for
-then Barbara couldn't go. I don't try to wriggle out of it. That's most
-unfair and untrue. I've promised Adrienne and I agree with Adrienne
-about it. I can't explain it clearly, as she does; it's all quite, quite
-different when Adrienne explains it. She seems to hold me up and you and
-Monica pull me down--oh, yes, you do, Roger. Of course it would kill
-me--I know that I should die, if Barbara were to do what Meg has done;
-you mustn't think Adrienne _wants_ her to behave like that, you know.
-Adrienne only wants people to be brave and follow their light; but your
-light needn't be a married man, need it? And sometimes I think it isn't
-_really_ so serious--falling in love, you know. I'm sure I thought _I_
-was in love half a dozen times before Francis proposed. It's a question
-of seeing what's best for you all round, isn't it, and it can't be best
-if it's a married man, can it? Oh! I know I'm saying what Adrienne
-wouldn't like, now; because it sounds so worldly and as if I believed in
-the French way. But I don't at all. I think love's everything, too. Only
-it always seemed to me when I was a girl that love meant white satin and
-orange-blossoms; and my poor, poor Meg can never wear those now. I
-should feel miserable, quite miserable about her, of course, if Adrienne
-weren't here to make me see the big, real things instead of the little
-ones. And Barney has been so unkind. Sneering and scoffing at
-everything"--her voice quivered. "However, if there's a war, that will
-settle it. Barbara couldn't go if there was a war."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-
-The war thus had its uses to Mrs. Chadwick. Barbara did not go to the
-Tyrol. By the end of September Oldmeadow and Barney were in training,
-one on the Berkshire and one on the Wiltshire downs, and Meg was
-ambiguously restored to her family at Coldbrooks.
-
-Oldmeadow had not seen Barney for many days, when they met one afternoon
-at Paddington and travelled together as far as Didcot. They had the
-carriage to themselves and though Barney's demeanour was reticent there
-were many things about which, it was evident, he found it a relief to be
-communicative. It was from him that Oldmeadow learned of Meg's return.
-
-"She'll be in a pretty box, won't she, if Hayward is killed," he said,
-smoking his cigarette and not looking at his friend. "He's over there,
-you know, and for my part I think there's very little chance of any of
-them coming back alive."
-
-They both smoked in silence for a little while after this, contemplating
-the ordeal in which their country was involved rather than their own
-relation to it; but Oldmeadow's mind returned presently to Barney's
-difficulties and he asked him if it had been to see Hayward off that
-he'd just been up to London.
-
-Barney, at this, had a quiet sardonic laugh. "Good heavens, no," he
-said. "Hayward went in the first week and Adrienne and Palgrave went up
-with Meg to see him off. Even if I'd wanted to, I'd have been allowed to
-have no hand in that. Adrienne is seeing to it all. Lawyers, money, I
-don't know what. No; I went up to spend my leave with old Boyd at his
-place in Chelsea. I didn't want to go home. Home is the last place I
-want to be just now."
-
-Oldmeadow at this maintained a silence that could not pretend surprise
-and Barney continued in a moment. "Palgrave isn't coming in, you know."
-
-"You mean he's carrying out his pacifist ideas?"
-
-"If they are his," said Barney in his colourless yet sardonic voice.
-"Any ideas of Palgrave's are likely to be Adrienne's, you know. She got
-hold of him from the first."
-
-"Well, after all," Oldmeadow after another moment felt impelled to say,
-"She got hold of you, too. In the same way; by believing in herself and
-by understanding you. She thinks she's right."
-
-"Ha! ha!" laughed Barney and for a moment, an acutely uncomfortable one
-for Oldmeadow, he turned his eyes on his friend. "Thinks she's right!
-You needn't tell me that, Roger!"
-
-It had indeed, Oldmeadow felt, hardly been decent of him.
-
-"I know. Of course she would. But, all the same, people must be allowed
-to hold their own opinions."
-
-"Must they?" said Barney. "At a time like this? Adrienne must, of
-course; as a woman she doesn't come into it; she brings other people in,
-that is to say, and keeps out herself. Besides she's an American. But
-Palgrave shouldn't be allowed the choice. He's dishonouring us all--as
-Meg has done. Poor, foolish, wretched Mother! She's seeing it at last,
-though she won't allow herself to say it, or, rather, Adrienne won't
-allow her--" He checked himself.
-
-"Dishonour is a strong word, Barney. Palgrave is hardly more than a
-boy."
-
-"Jim Errington is a year younger than Palgrave, and Peter Layard six
-months. They're both in. I don't think nineteen is too young to
-dishonour your family. If Palgrave committed a murder, he'd be hanged.
-But it will no doubt come to conscription and then we'll see where he'll
-find himself. Herded in as a Tommy. All this talk of a few months is
-folly."
-
-"I know. Yes. Folly," said Oldmeadow absently. "Have you tried to have
-it out with Palgrave, Barney? If he only hears Adrienne's side what can
-you expect of him? If you leave them all to sink or swim without you,
-you mustn't blame Adrienne for steering as best she can."
-
-"Sink or swim without me!" Barney echoed. "Why they'd none of them
-listen to me. You saw well enough how it was with them that day in July
-when you came up. Adrienne is twice as strong as I am when it comes to
-anything like a struggle and she has them all firmly under her thumb.
-She steers because she intends to steer and intends I shan't. I've tried
-nothing with Palgrave, except to keep my hands off him. Mother's talked
-to him, and Meg's talked to him; but nothing does any good. Oh, yes; Meg
-hangs on Adrienne because she's got nothing else to hang to; but she's
-frightfully down on Palgrave all the same. They're all united against
-me, but they're not united among themselves by any means. It's not a
-peaceful family party at Coldbrooks, I promise you. Poor Mother spends
-most of her time shut up in her room crying."
-
-Barney offered no further information on this occasion and Oldmeadow
-asked for no more. It was from Mrs. Aldesey, some weeks later, that he
-heard that Eric Hayward had been killed. Mrs. Aldesey was his most
-punctual correspondent and her letters, full of pungent, apposite
-accounts of how the war was affecting London, the pleasantest
-experiences that came to him on the Berkshire downs, where, indeed, he
-did not find life unpleasant. Mrs. Aldesey made time for these long
-letters after tiring days spent among Belgian refugees and his sense of
-comradeship had been immensely deepened by the vast, new experience they
-were, from their different angles, sharing. It was difficult, on the
-soft October day, to dissociate the mere pleasure of reading her letter
-from the miserable news she gave. Yet he knew, stretched at ease after
-strenuous exercise, the canvas of his tent idly flapping above him and
-the sunlight falling across his feet, that it was very miserable news
-indeed and must miserably affect his friends at Coldbrooks. What was to
-become of poor Meg now? And after his mind had paused on poor Meg a pang
-of memory brought back the face of his setter John. Poor Hayward.
-
-"She must, of course, find some work at once," Mrs. Aldesey wrote. "The
-war does help to solve problems of this sort as nothing else before ever
-could. She must nurse, or drive an ambulance and perhaps by the time
-it's all over we'll have forgotten irrelevancies that happened so long
-ago. Sometimes it feels like that to me and I know I'm much too old to
-face the world that will have grown up out of the wreckage of the world
-I knew." Mrs. Aldesey, still, always spoke of herself as antique,
-relegated and on the shelf. Rather absurd of her, as her friend pointed
-out in his reply, when she was obviously one of the people who were
-going to make the new world. She was organizing the Belgians in the most
-remarkable manner.
-
-As to Coldbrooks he hesitated. He could hardly see himself writing to
-Mrs. Chadwick or to Meg. Of Nancy he felt a little shy. There would be
-too much to say to Nancy if he said anything and he allowed the
-anonymous calamity that had overtaken his friends to pass without
-comment or condolence. But after an interval of some weeks it was from
-Nancy herself that he heard. Nancy seemed always to be selected as the
-vehicle for other people's emergencies.
-
-"Dear Roger," she wrote. "You have heard how very unhappy we all are. It
-is dreadful to see poor Meg, and Aunt Eleanor makes it really worse for
-her. Meg wears mourning, like a widow, and she is terribly bitter about
-Palgrave, and about Adrienne, too. Doesn't that seem to you very strange
-and unjust? Adrienne is doing for Palgrave what she did for
-Meg--standing by him. It is all more unhappy than you can imagine.
-Palgrave is at New College, now, you know, and I'm writing, because Aunt
-Eleanor's one hope is that you may be able to talk to him. Kindly, you
-know, Roger; and not as if you thought him a criminal or a coward; that
-is worse than useless, naturally. Palgrave is very arrogant; but you
-know what a tender heart he really has and I am sure that he is very
-lonely and unhappy. So be kind and understanding, won't you? He really
-cares for you and trusts you more than he likes to show; and of course
-he would expect you to be against him."
-
-Oldmeadow was going into Oxford in a week's time and he wrote to
-Palgrave and asked him to give him tea. "I've got to talk to you, if
-you'll let me," he said, "but I shan't make myself a nuisance, I promise
-you. I only want to satisfy myself that you have thought everything out,
-and if you have I'll be able to tell your people that they must give up
-tormenting themselves and you about it. I shall like talking over your
-work with you, too, if I may, and renewing my own Oxford memories." So
-conciliatory, so affectionate (and he found it easy to be affectionate
-to poor Palgrave) was the tone of the letter that he had a swift reply.
-Palgrave would be very glad to see him.
-
-It was a melancholy, deserted Oxford into which Oldmeadow drove his
-little car on a late October afternoon. Most of the youths he saw were
-of a nondescript variety, a type to whom Oxford means scholastic
-opportunity and nothing more. There were dark-skinned lads from distant
-parts of the Empire looking, to Oldmeadow's eye, rather pitiful and
-doomed to disappointment, and a hurrying, absorbed little Jap had an
-almost empty Broad as a setting for his alien figure.
-
-Palgrave's name was freshly painted at the bottom of a staircase in the
-Garden Quad and Oldmeadow mounted to rooms that most delightfully
-overlooked the garden and its catalpa-tree.
-
-Palgrave was ready for him. The tea was laid and he stood at the table
-cutting a cake as Oldmeadow entered. But some one else, too, was ready,
-for there, in the window-seat, her gaze fixed on the waning golds and
-russets beneath, sat Adrienne Toner. Oldmeadow, very much and very
-disagreeably affected, paused at the door.
-
-"Come in, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne, and there was a strange, jaded
-eagerness in the gaze she fixed on him. "I've only come for tea. I have
-to go directly afterwards. I am staying in Oxford, now, you know. To be
-near Palgrave."
-
-"Meg's turned her out of Coldbrooks," Palgrave announced, standing
-still, over the tea-tray, his hands in his pockets while, with bent
-head, he looked from under his brows at Oldmeadow. "Meg, you understand;
-for whose sake she's gone through everything. We're pariahs together,
-now; she and I."
-
-"It's not quite true or fair to say that, Palgrave," said Adrienne,
-whose eyes had returned to the garden. "Meg hasn't turned me out. I felt
-it would be happier for her if I weren't there; and for your
-Mother--since they feel as they do about what has happened; and happier
-for you and me to be together. You can't be surprised at Meg. She is
-nearly beside herself with grief."
-
-Adrienne was very much altered. The magic of the lime-tree scene no
-longer lay about her. Her skin was sallow, her eyes sunken, her
-projecting mouth was at once stubborn, weary and relaxed. She had been
-almost beautiful on that July day and to-day she was definitely ugly.
-Oldmeadow saw that some intent inner preoccupation held her thoughts.
-
-"I _am_ surprised at her; very much surprised," said Palgrave, "though I
-might have warned you that Meg wasn't a person worth risking a great
-deal for. Oh, yes, she's nearly beside herself all right. She's lost the
-man she cared for and she can't, now, ever be made 'respectable.' Oh, I
-see further into Meg's grief than you do, my poor Adrienne. She's just
-as conventional and unheroic at heart as Mother; and that's what _she_
-minds--more than anything."
-
-Oldmeadow, sunken in the deep chair Palgrave had drawn for him to the
-table, watched the curious interchange, and after a pause, in her jaded
-voice, Adrienne from the window-seat commented: "I understand her rage
-and misery. It's because her grief is divided and spoiled and tainted
-like that that she is distracted."
-
-"Will you pour out tea?" Palgrave asked her gloomily. "You'll see
-anyone's side, always, except your own."
-
-To this Adrienne, rising and coming forward to the table, made no reply.
-She wore a dark dress that recalled to Oldmeadow the one in which he had
-first seen her; the short jacket tying across white in front and white
-ruffles falling about her neck and hands. A small, dark hat was bent
-down about her face.
-
-Strange, brooding face. What was she thinking of, Oldmeadow wondered, as
-he watched her hands, impeded by the falling ruffles, moving with the
-old, fumbling gestures among the tea-things; she had constantly to throw
-back the ruffles, and the tea-pot, after all, was too heavy for her. It
-slipped on one side as she lifted it and the hot tea poured over her
-hand. She kept her hold bravely and Oldmeadow rescued her.
-
-"How stupid I am!" she said, biting her lip.
-
-"You've scalded your hand," said Palgrave, eyeing her with his air no
-longer of rapturous but of gloomy devotion.
-
-They made Oldmeadow think of comrade political prisoners moving off
-together in a convoy to Siberia. There was something as bleak, as
-heavy, as uninspired in their aspect. He could not think that Palgrave
-could now catch much light or flame from such a companion. They would
-trudge through the snow; condemned, but together; to be together was the
-best thing, now, that life offered them.
-
-She said that the scald was nothing and asked to be trusted to go on
-with the tea, grasping the handle with resolution. Oldmeadow, however,
-standing beside her, insisted on filling the cups for her.
-
-"You can be allowed to put in the milk and sugar, you see," he said. He
-was aware, as he thus succoured and rallied her, of an influx of feeling
-like the feeling that came with the uncanny dreams. Here she was, and
-reality had caught her. She deserved to be caught, of course; tragic,
-meddling Pierrot. But his heart was heavy and gentle; as in his dreams.
-
-They sat round the table together. On the mantelpiece was a large,
-framed photograph of Adrienne; on the walls photographs of a Botticelli
-Madonna, a Mantegna from Padua and the da Vinci drawing for the Christ
-of the Last Supper. Seeing Oldmeadow's eyes on them Palgrave said:
-"Adrienne gave me those. And lots of the books."
-
-"And don't forget the beautiful cushions, Palgrave," said Adrienne, with
-a flicker of her old, contented playfulness. "I'm sure good cushions are
-the foundation of a successful study of philosophy."
-
-The cushions were certainly very good; and very beautiful, as Oldmeadow
-commented. "That gorgeous chair, too," said Palgrave. "It ought to make
-a Plato of me."
-
-It was curious, the sense they gave him of trusting him. Were they
-aware, if only sub-consciously, that he was feeling Adrienne, her
-follies and misdeeds thick upon her, ill-used? Or was it only that they
-had come down to such fundamental securities as were left to them and
-felt that with him, at all events, they were in the hands of an
-impartial judge?
-
-"It's a happy life Meg and Mother lead at Coldbrooks, as you may
-imagine," Palgrave took up the theme that preoccupied him. "They only
-see Nancy and Aunt Monica, of course. Barbara is at school and Barney,
-as you are probably aware, never comes near his disgraced sister. Would
-you believe it, Roger," Palgrave went on, while Oldmeadow saw that a
-dull colour crept up to Adrienne's face and neck as her husband was thus
-mentioned, "Meg blames Adrienne now for the whole affair! About Eric and
-herself! Actually! On the one hand Eric is her hero for whom she'll
-mourn for ever and on the other Adrienne is responsible for the fact
-that she's not 'respectable' and can't claim to be his widow. Oh, don't
-ask me how she contrives to work it out! Women like Meg don't need logic
-when they've a thong in their hands and want to use it. And Adrienne's
-shoulders are bared for the lash! God! It makes me fairly mad to think
-of it!"
-
-"Please, Palgrave!" Adrienne supplicated in a low voice. She did not
-eat. She had drunk her tea and sat looking down at her plate. "Don't
-think of it any more. Meg is very, very unhappy. We can hardly imagine
-what the misery and confusion of Meg's heart must be."
-
-"Oh, you'll make excuses for anyone, Adrienne! You're not a shining
-example of happiness either, if it comes to that. It's atrocious of Meg
-to treat you as she does. Atrocious of her to hold you responsible."
-
-"But I am responsible," said Adrienne, while the dull flush still dyed
-her face. "I've always said that I was responsible. It was I who
-persuaded them to go."
-
-"Yes. To go. Instead of staying and being lovers secretly. I know all
-about it. And no doubt Meg would rather it had been so now. And so would
-Mother!" Palgrave ground his teeth on a laugh. "That's where morality
-lands them! Pretty, isn't it!"
-
-A silence fell and then Adrienne rose and said that Mr. Jackson would be
-waiting for her. "He's coming at half-past five," she said, and, with
-his gloomy tenderness, Palgrave informed Oldmeadow that she was reading
-logic and Plato; "to keep up with me, you know."
-
-Adrienne, smiling faintly, laid her hand for a moment on his shoulder as
-she went past his chair. "Come in to-night, after dinner, and tell me
-what you decide," she said.
-
-"I'll have no news for you," Palgrave replied.
-
-Oldmeadow had gone to hold the door open for her and, as she paused
-there to give him her hand, he heard her murmur: "Will you come down
-with me?"
-
-"Let me see you to the bottom of the stair," he seized the intimation,
-and, as she went before him, she said, still in the low, purposeful
-voice, and he felt sure now that this had been her intention in coming
-to tea: "It's only so that you shan't think I'll oppose you. If you can
-persuade him, I shall not oppose it. I think he's right. But it's too
-hard. I mean, I hope you can persuade him that it's right to go."
-
-She had stepped out on to the threshold at the foot of the stairs and he
-paused behind her, astonished. "You want me to persuade him of what you
-think wrong?"
-
-She stood still looking out at the sunny quadrangle. "People must think
-for themselves. I don't know who is right or who is wrong. Perhaps I've
-influenced Palgrave. Perhaps he wouldn't have felt like this if it
-hadn't been for me. I don't know. But if you can make him feel it right
-to go, I shall be glad." She stepped out into the quadrangle.
-
-"You mean," said Oldmeadow, following her, and strangely moved, "that
-you'd rather have him killed than stay behind like this?"
-
-"It would be much happier for him, wouldn't it," she said. "If he could
-feel it right to go."
-
-They were under the arch of the Library, she still going slowly, before
-him, and Oldmeadow stopped her there. "Mrs. Barney, forgive me--may I
-ask you something?" He had put his hand on her shoulder and she paused
-and faced him. "It's something personal, and I've no right to be
-personal with you, as I know. But--have you been to see Barney at
-Tidworth?"
-
-As Oldmeadow spoke these Words, Adrienne turned away vehemently, and
-then stood still, as though arrested in her impulse of flight by an
-irresistible desire to listen. "Barney does not want to see me," she
-said, speaking with difficulty.
-
-"You think so," said Oldmeadow. "And he may think so. But you ought to
-see each other at a time like this. He may be ordered to France at any
-time now." He could not see her face.
-
-"Do you mean," she said, after a moment, keeping the rigidity of her
-listening poise, "that he won't come to say good-bye?"
-
-"I know nothing at all," said Oldmeadow. "I can only infer how far the
-mischief between you has gone. And I'm most frightfully sorry for it.
-I've been sorry for Barney; but now I'm sorry for you, too. I think
-you're being unfairly treated. But yours have been the mistakes, Mrs.
-Barney, and it's for you to take the first step."
-
-"Barney doesn't want to see me," she repeated, and she went on, while he
-heard, growing in her voice, the note of the old conviction: "He has
-made mistakes, too. He has treated me unfairly, too. I can't take the
-first step."
-
-"Don't you love him, then?" said Oldmeadow, and in his voice was the
-note of the old harshness.
-
-"Does he love me?" she retorted, turning now, with sudden fire, and
-fixing her eyes upon him. "Why should he think I want to see him if he
-doesn't want to see me? Why should I love, if he doesn't? Why should I
-sue to Barney?"
-
-"Oh," Oldmeadow almost groaned. "Don't take that line; don't, I beg of
-you. You're both young. And you've hurt him so. You've meant to hurt
-him; I've seen it! I've seen it, Mrs. Barney. If you'll put by your
-pride everything can grow again."
-
-"No! no! no!" she cried almost violently, and he saw that she was
-trembling. "Some things don't grow again! It's not like plants, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Some things are like living creatures; and they can die. They
-can die," she repeated, now walking rapidly away from him out into the
-large quadrangle with its grass plot cut across by the late sunshine. He
-followed her for a moment and he heard her say, as she went: "It's
-worse, far worse, not to mean to hurt. It's worse to care so little that
-you don't know when you are hurting."
-
-"No, it's not," said Oldmeadow. "That's only being stupid; not cruel."
-
-"It's not thinking that is cruel; it's not caring that is cruel," she
-repeated, passionately, half muttering the words, and whether with tears
-of fury he could not say.
-
-He stood still at the doorway. "Good-bye, then," he said. And not
-looking behind her, as she went out swiftly into New College Lane, she
-answered, still on the same note of passionate protest: "Good-bye, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Good-bye." He watched her small, dark figure hurry along in
-the shadow of the wall until the turning hid it from view.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-Palgrave, apparently, had formed no conjectures as to their conversation
-and was thinking still of Adrienne's wrongs rather than of his own
-situation. "Did you take her home?" he said. "I see you're sorry for
-her, Roger. It's really too abominable, you know. I really can't say
-before her what I think, I really can't say before you what I think of
-Barney's treatment of her; because I know you agree with him."
-
-Oldmeadow felt all the more able, shaken though he was by the interview
-below, to remember, because of it, what he thought. "If you mean that I
-don't consider Barney in the very least responsible for the death of the
-baby, I do agree with him," he said.
-
-"Apart from that, apart from the baby," said Palgrave, controlling his
-temper, it was evident, in his wish to keep the ear of the impartial
-judge, "though what the loss of a child means to a woman like Adrienne I
-don't believe you can guess; apart from whose was the responsibility, he
-ought to have seen, towards the end, at all events, if he'd eyes in his
-head and a heart in his breast, that all she asked was to forgive him
-and take him back. She was proud, of course. What woman of her power and
-significance wouldn't have been? She couldn't be the first to move. But
-Barney must have seen that her heart was breaking."
-
-"Well," said Oldmeadow, taking in, with some perplexity, this new
-presentation of Adrienne Toner; "what about his heart? She'd led it a
-pretty dance. And you forget that I don't consider she had anything to
-forgive him."
-
-"His heart!" Palgrave echoed scornfully, yet with a sorrowful scorn; "He
-mended his heart quick enough. Went and fell in love with Nancy, who
-only asks to be let alone."
-
-"He's always loved Nancy. She's always been like a sister to him.
-Adrienne has infected you with her groundless jealousy."
-
-"Groundless indeed!" Palgrave reached for his pipe and began to stuff it
-vindictively. "Nancy sees well enough, poor dear! She's had to keep him
-off by any device she could contrive. She's a good deal more than a
-sister to him, now. She's the only person in the world for him. You can
-call it jealousy if you like. That's only another name for a broken
-heart."
-
-"I don't know what Barney's feeling may be, Palgrave, but I do know, it
-was quite plain to me, that Adrienne was jealous long before she had any
-ground for jealousy. If Nancy's all Barney's got left now, it's simply
-because Adrienne has taken everything else from him. You don't seem to
-realize that Adrienne drove him from her with her airs of martyrdom.
-Took vengeance on him, too; what else was the plan for Barbara going
-abroad with you? I don't want to speak unkindly of her. It's quite true;
-I'm sorry for her. I've never liked her so well. But the reason is that
-she's beginning, I really believe, to find out that her own feet are of
-clay, while her mistake all along has been to imagine herself above
-ordinary humanity. All our feet are of clay, and we never get very far
-unless we are aware of the weakness in our structure and look out for a
-continual tendency to crumble. You don't get over it by pretending you
-don't need to walk and imagining you have wings instead of feet."
-
-Palgrave, drawing stiffly at his pipe during this little homily,
-listened, gloomily yet without resentment. "You see, where you make
-_your_ mistake--if you'll allow the youthful ass you consider me to say
-so--is that you've always imagined Adrienne to be a self-righteous prig
-who sets herself up above others. She doesn't; she doesn't," Palgrave
-repeated with conviction. "She'd accept the feet of clay if you'll grant
-her the heart of flame--for everybody; the wings--for everybody. There's
-your mistake, Roger. Adrienne believes that everybody has wings as well
-as herself; and the only difference she sees in people is that some have
-learned and some haven't how to use them. She may be mortal woman--bless
-her--and have made mistakes; but they're the mistakes of flame; not of
-earthiness."
-
-"You are not an ass, Palgrave," said Oldmeadow, after a moment. "You are
-wise in everything but experience; and you see deep. Suppose we come to
-a compromise. You've owned that Adrienne may make mistakes and I own
-that I may misjudge her. I see what you believe about her and I see why
-you believe it. I've seen her at her worst, no doubt, and to you she's
-been able to show only her best. So let it rest at that. What I came to
-talk about, you know, was you."
-
-"I know," said Palgrave, and he gave a deep sigh.
-
-"Be patient with me," said Oldmeadow. "After all, we belong to the same
-generation. You can't pretend that I'm an old fogey who's lost the
-inspirations of his youth and has marched so far down towards the grave
-that the new torches coming up over the horizon are hidden from him."
-
-"That's rather nice, you know, Roger," Palgrave smiled faintly. "No;
-you're not an old fogey. But all the same there's not much torch about
-you."
-
-"It's rather sad, isn't it," Oldmeadow mused, "that we should always
-seem to begin with torches and then to spend the rest of our lives in
-quenching them. It may be, you know, that we're only trying to hold them
-straight, so that the wind shan't blow them out. However!--you'll let me
-talk. That's the point."
-
-"Of course you may. You've been awfully decent," Palgrave murmured.
-
-"Well, then, it seems to me you're not seeing straight," said Oldmeadow.
-"It's not crude animal patriotism--as you'd put it--that's asked of you.
-It's a very delicate discrimination between ideals."
-
-"I know! I know!" said Palgrave. The traces of mental anguish were on
-his worn young face. He knocked the ashes out of his pipe and rose to
-lean against the mantelpiece." I don't suppose I can explain," he said,
-staring out at the sky. "I suppose that with me the crude animal thing
-is the personal inhibition. I can't do it. I'd rather, far, be killed
-than have to kill other men. That's the unreasoning part, the
-instinctive part, but it's a part of one's nature that I don't believe
-one can violate without violating one's very spirit. I've always been
-different, I know, from most fellows of my age and class. I've always
-hated sport--shooting and hunting. The fox, the stag, the partridge,
-have always spoiled it for me. Oh, I know they have to be killed--poor
-brutes! I know that; but I can't myself be the butcher."
-
-"You'll own, though, that there must be butchers," said Oldmeadow, after
-a little meditation. He felt himself in the presence of something
-delicate, distorted and beautiful. "And you'll own, won't you, when it
-comes to a war like this, when not only our national honour but our
-national existence is at stake, that some men must kill others. Isn't it
-then, baldly, that you profit, personally, by other people doing what
-you won't do? You'll eat spring lamb as long as there are butchers to
-kill the lamb for you, and you'll be an Englishman and take from England
-all that she has to give you--including Oxford and Coldbrooks--and let
-other men do the nasty work that makes the survival of England and
-Oxford and Coldbrooks possible. That's what it comes to, you know.
-That's all I ask you to look at squarely."
-
-"I know, I know," Palgrave repeated. He had looked at little else, poor
-boy. Oldmeadow saw that. "But that's where the delicate discrimination
-between ideals comes in, Roger. That's where I have to leave intuition,
-which says 'No,' and turn to reason. And the trouble is that for me
-reason says 'No,' too. Because humanity--all of it that counts--has
-outgrown war. That's what it comes to. It's a conflict between a
-national and an humanitarian ideal. There are enough of us in the world
-to stop war, if we all act together; and why, because others don't,
-should I not do what I feel right? Others may follow if only a few of us
-stand out. If no one stands out, no one will ever follow. And you can't
-kill England like that. England is more than men and institutions,"
-Palgrave still gazed at the sky. "It's an idea that will survive;
-perhaps the more truly in the spirit for perishing in the flesh, if it
-really came to that. Look at Greece. She's dead, if you like; yet what
-existing nation lives as truly? It is Grecian minds we think with and
-Grecian eyes we see with. It's Plato's conception of the just man being
-the truly happy man--even if the whole world's against him--that is the
-very meaning of our refusal to go with the world."
-
-"You'll never stop war by refusal so long as the majority of men still
-believe in it," said Oldmeadow. "There are not enough of you to stop it
-now. The time to stop it is before it comes; not while it's on. It's
-before it begins that you must bring the rest of humanity not to behave
-in ways that make it inevitable. I'm inclined to think that ideas can
-perish," he went on, as Palgrave, to this, made no reply, "as far as
-their earthly manifestation goes, that is, if enough men and
-institutions are destroyed. If Germany could conquer and administer
-England, I'm inclined to think the English idea would perish. And war
-need not be unspiritual. Killing our fellow-men need not mean hating
-them. There's less hatred in war, I imagine, than in some of the
-contests of peaceful civilian life. Put it fairly on the ground of
-humanitarianism, then, Palgrave; not of nationality. It's the whole
-world that is threatened by a hateful idea, by the triumph of all you
-most fear and detest, and unless we strive against it with all we are
-and have it seems to me that we fall short of our duty not only as
-Englishmen, but as humanitarians. Put it at that, Palgrave: would you
-really have had England stand by and not lift a finger when Belgium was
-invaded and France menaced?"
-
-Palgrave was not ready with his reply and he turned away while he looked
-for it and shuffled the papers on his desk with a nervous hand. "Yes, I
-would," he said at last. "Hateful as it is to have to say it--I would
-have stood by." He came back to his place at the mantelpiece and looked
-down at Oldmeadow as he spoke. "The choice, of course, is hateful; but I
-think we should have stood by and helped the sufferers and let France
-and Germany fight it out. It always comes back to them, doesn't it?
-They're always fighting it out; they always will, till they find it's no
-good and that they can't annihilate each other; which is what they both
-want to do. Oh, I've read too many of the young French neo-Catholics to
-be able to believe that the hateful idea was all on one side. Their
-ideals don't differ much, once you strip them of their theological
-tinsel, from those of the Germans. Germany happens to be the aggressor
-now; but if the militarist party in France had had the chance, they'd
-have struck as quickly."
-
-"The difference--and it's an immense one--is that the militarist party
-in France wouldn't have had the chance. The difference is that it
-doesn't govern and mould public opinion. It's not a menace to the world.
-It's only a sort of splendid pet, kept in a Zoo, for the delectation of
-a certain class and party. Whereas Germany's the _bona fide_ hungry
-tigress at large. What you really ask of England, Palgrave, is that she
-should be a Buddha and lie down and let the tigress, after finishing
-France, devour her, too. It really comes to that. Buddhism is the only
-logical basis for your position, and I don't believe, however sorry one
-may be for hungry tigresses, that the right way to deal with them is to
-let them eat you. The Christian philosophy of the incarnation is the
-true one. Matter does make a spiritual difference. It does make a
-difference, a real difference, that the ideal should be made flesh. It's
-important to the world, spiritually, that the man rather than the
-tigress should survive."
-
-"Christ gave his life," said Palgrave, after a moment.
-
-"I'm not speaking of historical personages; but of eternal truths," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-But he knew already that he spoke in vain. Palgrave had turned away his
-eyes again and on his sad young face he read the fixity of a fanatic
-idealism. He had not moved him, though he had troubled him. No one would
-move Palgrave. He doubted, now, whether Adrienne herself had had much
-influence over him. It was with the sense of pleading a lost cause that
-he said, presently, "Adrienne hopes you'll feel it right to go."
-
-Palgrave at this turned a profound gaze upon him. "I know it," he said.
-"Though she's never told me so. It's the weakness of her love, its
-yearning and tenderness, not its strength, that makes her want it.
-Because she knows it would be so much easier. But she can't go back on
-what she's meant to me. It's because of that, in part at all events,
-that I've been able to see steadily what I mean to myself. That's what
-she helps one to do, you know. Hold to yourself; your true, deep self.
-It's owing to her that I can only choose in one way--even if I can't
-defend it properly. It seems to come back to metaphysics, doesn't it?"
-
-"Like everything else," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Yes. Like everything else. It would take a four-years' course in Greats
-to argue it out, Roger. Come back to me--if you're here and I'm here
-then--and we'll see what we can make of it."
-
-"I will," said Oldmeadow, rising, for the room was growing dark. "And
-before that, I hope."
-
-"After all, you know," Palgrave observed, "England isn't in any danger
-of becoming Buddhistic; there's not much nihilism about her, is there,
-but hardly much Christianity, either. England has evolved all sorts of
-things besides Oxford and Coldbrooks. She's evolved industrialism and
-factory-towns."
-
-"I don't consider industrialism and factory-towns incompatible with
-Christianity, you know," Oldmeadow observed. "Good-bye, my dear boy."
-
-"Good-bye, Roger," Palgrave grasped his hand. "You've been most awfully
-kind."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-"Isn't it becoming to him, Mother? And how tall he looks!" said Nancy,
-holding Oldmeadow off in his khaki for displayal.
-
-He had only written a line of his failure and that he would come as soon
-as he could and see them all and tell in full of his interview with
-Palgrave. And he had motored over to The Little House this afternoon in
-early November.
-
-Nancy was showing an unexpected gaiety. "What a nice grilled-salmon
-colour you are, too," she said.
-
-He divined the self-protective instinct under the gaiety. Most of the
-women in England were being gayer and more talkative at this time, in
-order to keep up. Nancy was thin and white; but she was keeping up. And
-she had put on a charming dress to receive him in.
-
-"I've been grilled all right; out on the downs," he said. "But it's more
-like cold storage just now, with these frosts at night. Yes; the big
-cup, please. I'm famished for tea. Ah! that's something like! It smells
-like your rose outside. I sniffed it as I waited at the door. Wonderful
-for such a late blooming."
-
-"Isn't it," said Mrs. Averil. "And I only put it in last autumn. It's
-doing beautifully; but I've cherished it. And now tell us about
-Palgrave."
-
-He felt reluctant to tell about Palgrave. The impression that remained
-with him of Palgrave was that impression of beauty and distortion and he
-did not want to have to disentangle his feelings or to seem to put
-Palgrave in the wrong. It was so sweet, too, after the long, chilly
-drive over the empty uplands, to sit here and forget the war, although
-it was for scenes like this, for girls like Nancy, women like Mrs.
-Averil--with so much else--that the war was so worth fighting. He turned
-his thoughts back to the realities that underlay the happy appearances
-and was aware, as he forced himself to tell, of what must seem a note of
-advocacy in his voice. "He can't think differently, I'm afraid," he
-said. "It's self-sacrifice, not selfishness, that is moving him."
-
-"He can't think differently while Adrienne is living there," said Mrs.
-Averil. "He didn't tell you, I suppose, that she has now taken up her
-abode in Oxford in order to study philosophy with him?"
-
-He was rather uncomfortably aware of the disingenuousness that must now
-be made apparent in his avoidance of all mention of Adrienne.
-
-"I saw her," he said, and he knew that it was lamely. "She was there
-when I got there."
-
-"You saw her!" Mrs. Averil exclaimed. "But then, of course you didn't
-convince him. I might have known it. Of course she would not let you see
-him alone."
-
-"But she did let me see him alone. That was what she wanted. And she was
-there only in order to tell me what she wanted. She wants him to go."
-
-Mrs. Averil was eyeing him with such astonishment that he turned to
-Nancy with his explanations. But Mrs. Averil would not leave him to
-Nancy's sympathy. "It's rather late in the day for her to want him to
-go," she said. "She may be sorry for what she's done; but it's her
-work."
-
-"Well, she's sorry for her work. That's what it comes to. And I'm sorry
-for her," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Good heavens! The cleverness of that woman!" Mrs. Averil exclaimed. "If
-she can't be powerful, she'll be pitiful! She's worked on your feelings;
-I can see that, Roger. And I thought you, at least, were immune. Well;
-she does not work on mine. I am not in the least sorry for her."
-
-"She's being unfairly treated," said Oldmeadow. "It's grotesque that Meg
-should have turned upon her."
-
-"And Eleanor has, too, you know," said Mrs. Averil. "It's grotesque, if
-you like; but I see a grim justice in it. She made them do things and
-believe things that weren't natural to them and now she's lost her power
-and they see things as they are."
-
-"It's because she's failed that they've turned against her," said Nancy.
-"If she'd succeeded they would have gone on accepting what she told them
-and making her their idol."
-
-"Adrienne mustn't fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only justification
-for Adrienne is to be in the right. If the blood of Saint Januarius
-doesn't liquefy, why should you keep it in a shrine? She's a woman who
-has quarrelled with her husband and disgraced her sister and
-brother-in-law, and broken her mother-in-law's heart. You can't go on
-making an idol of a saint who behaves like that."
-
-"She never claimed worldly success," said Nancy. "She never told Meg to
-go so that she could get married afterwards; she never told Palgrave
-that war was wrong because it was easier not to fight."
-
-"Oh, yes, she did claim worldly success, really," said Mrs. Averil,
-while her eyes rested on her daughter with a tenderness that contrasted
-with her tone. "Her whole point was that if you were right
-spiritually--'poised' she called it, you remember--all those other
-things would be added unto you. I've heard her claim that if you were
-poised you could get anything you really wanted. I asked her once if I
-should find a ten-pound note under the sofa-cushion every morning after
-breakfast if I could get poised sufficiently!" Mrs. Averil laughed,
-still more dryly while she still maintained her tender gaze and Nancy
-said, smiling a little: "She might have put it there for you if she'd
-been sure you were poised."
-
-"Well, let us bury Adrienne for the present," said Mrs. Averil. "Tell
-Roger about your nursing plans. She may go to London, Roger, this
-winter, and I'm to be left alone."
-
-"You're to be left to take care of Aunt Eleanor, if I do go," said
-Nancy; and Mrs. Averil said that there must certainly be some one left
-to take care of poor Eleanor.
-
-Oldmeadow went up to Coldbrooks next morning. The first person he saw
-was old Johnson at the door and he remembered Eleanor Chadwick's griefs
-on his account. Nothing, now, could have been kept from Johnson and his
-face bore the marks of the family calamities. He was aged and whitened
-and his voice had armed itself, since the downfall of his grave,
-vicarious complacency, with solemn cadences.
-
-"Yes, sir. The ladies will be very glad to see you, sir. These are sad
-days for them--the family dispersed as it is."
-
-Johnson defined the situation as he felt that it could be most fittingly
-defined and Oldmeadow inwardly applauded his "dispersed."
-
-The drawing-room, into which Johnson ushered him, had, for the first
-time in his memory of it, a mournful air. It had always been shabby, and
-these were the same faded chintzes, the same worn rugs; but now,
-fireless and flowerless, it neither spoke nor smiled and, with the sense
-it gave of an outlived epoch, it was almost spectral. The photographs
-all looked like the photographs of dead people and the only similitude
-of life was the loud, silly ticking of the French clock on the
-mantelpiece; Mrs. Chadwick's cherished clock; one of her
-wedding-presents.
-
-"I'm afraid it's rather chilly, sir," said Johnson. "No one has sat here
-of an evening now for a long time." He put a match to the ranged logs,
-drew the blinds up farther so that the autumnal sunlight might more
-freely enter, and left him.
-
-Oldmeadow went to the window and turned over the magazines, a month old,
-that lay on a table there.
-
-He was standing so when Meg entered, and she had half the length of the
-room to traverse before they met. She was in black, in deep black; but
-more beautiful than he had ever seen her; her tossed auburn locks bound
-low on her forehead with a black ribbon, her white throat upright, her
-eyes hard with their readiness, their resource. Beautiful and
-distressing. It distressed him terribly to see that hardness in her
-eyes.
-
-"How do you do, Roger," she said, giving him her hand. "It's good to see
-you. Mother will be glad."
-
-They seated themselves on one of the capacious sofas and she questioned
-him quickly, competently, while the hard eyes seemed to measure him lest
-he measure her. It was almost the look of the _déclassée_ woman who
-forestalls withdrawal in an interlocutor. But, as he answered her
-quietly, his fond regard upon her, her defences began to fall. "It's the
-only life, a soldier's, isn't it?" she said. "At all times, really. But,
-at a time like this, anything else seems despicable, doesn't it;
-contemptibly smug and safe. The uniform is so becoming to you. You look
-a soldier already. One feels that men will trust and follow you. Didn't
-you burn with rage and shame, too, when, for those four days, it seemed
-we might not come in?"
-
-"I felt too sure we should come in, to burn with rage and shame," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-"Ah! but it was not so sure, I'm afraid," said Meg, and in her eyes, no
-longer hard, wild lights seemed to pass and repass. "I'm afraid that
-there are nearly enough fools and knaves in England to wreck us. Not
-quite enough, thank heaven! But, for those four days, Eric was terribly
-afraid. He was killed, you know, Roger, very splendidly, leading his
-men."
-
-"I know, Meg. My dear Meg," Oldmeadow murmured.
-
-"Oh! I don't regret it! I don't regret it!" Meg cried, while her colour
-rose and her young breast lifted. "It's the soldier's death! The
-consecrating, heroic death! He was ready. And deaths like that
-atone--for the others. He was not killed instantaneously, Roger."
-
-"I didn't know," said Oldmeadow, looking at her with a pitying, troubled
-gaze.
-
-"He lived for a day and night afterwards," said Meg, looking back,
-tearless. "They carried him to a barn. Only his man was with him. There
-was no one to dress his dreadful wound; no food. The man got him some
-water, at the risk of his own life. He was conscious until the end and
-he suffered terribly."
-
-Oldmeadow dropped his eyes before her fierce stare while, strangely,
-dimly, there passed through his mind the memory of the embarrassed,
-empty, handsome young face in the brougham and, again, the memory of his
-dog John. He had seen John die and his eyes of wistful appeal. So Eric
-Hayward's eyes might have looked as he lay in the barn dying.
-
-"Oh, Roger!" Meg said suddenly, seizing his hand. "Kill them! Kill them!
-Oh, revenge him! I was not with him! Think of it! I would have had no
-right to have been with him--had it been possible. I did not know till a
-week later. He was buried there. His man buried him."
-
-"My poor, poor child," said Oldmeadow, clasping her hands.
-
-But, at once, taking refuge from his pity and from her own desperate
-pain: "So you've seen Palgrave," she said. "And he isn't going. I knew
-it was useless. I told Mother it was useless--with that stranger--that
-American, with him. She has disgraced us all.--Wretched boy! Hateful
-woman!"
-
-"Meg, Meg; be soldierly. He wouldn't have spoken like that."
-
-"He never liked her! Never!" she cried. "I knew he didn't, even at the
-time she was flattering and cajoling us. I saw that she bewildered him
-and that he accepted her only because she was mine. How I loathe myself
-for having listened to her! How I loathe her! All that she ever wanted
-was power! Power over other people's lives! She'd commit any crime for
-that!"
-
-"You seem to me cruelly unfair," he said.
-
-"No! no! I'm not unfair! You know I'm not!" she cried. "You always saw
-the truth about her--from the very beginning. You never fell down and
-worshipped her, like the rest of us. And she knew that you were her
-enemy and warned us against you. Oh--why did Barney marry her!"
-
-"I never worshipped her; but I never thought her base and hateful."
-
-"You never knew her as I did; that was all. And I never knew her until I
-came back and found her doing to Palgrave what she had done to us.
-Paladin! Did you hear her call him Paladin? Always flattery! Always to
-make one think one was wonderful, important, mysterious! She forced us
-to go away, Roger. Sometimes I think it was hypnotism; that she uses her
-will-power consciously. We did not want to go. We did not want the
-divorce and the scandal."
-
-"What did you want, then, Meg?"
-
-She felt the gravity of his tone but, like a fierce Maenad, she snatched
-at the torch, not caring how it revealed her. "What of it! What if we
-had been secret lovers! Who would have known! Who would have been
-harmed! Some people go on for years and years. His wife loved another
-man. He had no one. Why should we have been pushed--such pitiful fools
-we were--into displaying our love to the world and being crushed by it!
-Oh, he was so loyal, so brave; but it made him very, very unhappy. Oh, I
-was cruel to him sometimes! I used to reproach him sometimes! Oh, Roger!
-Roger!--" She broke into wild tears and stumbled to her feet.
-
-As she reached the door, covering her face with her hands, her mother
-opened it and, meeting her on the threshold, Meg, with almost the effect
-of beating her aside with the other impediments to her rage and grief,
-pushed past her so that the knitting Mrs. Chadwick held was flung to the
-floor, the ball of khaki wool running rapidly away under a sofa and the
-socks and needles dangling at her feet.
-
-She stood looking down at them with a curious apathy and, as Oldmeadow
-went to help and greet her, he saw that as much as Meg was wild she was
-dulled and quiet.
-
-"Meg is so very, very violent," she said, as he disentangled the wool
-and restored her sock and ball to her. She spoke with listlessness
-rather than sympathy.
-
-"Poor child," said Oldmeadow. "One can hardly wonder at it. But it makes
-a wretched existence for you, I'm afraid. You and she oughtn't to be
-alone together."
-
-He drew her to a chair and, seating herself, her faded face and eyes
-that had lost their old look of surprise turned to the light, Mrs.
-Chadwick assented, "It's very fatiguing to live with, certainly.
-Sometimes I really think I must go away for a little while and have a
-change. Nancy would come and stay with Meg, you know. But I can't miss
-Barney's last weeks. He comes to us, now, again. And it might not be
-right to leave Meg. One must not think of oneself at a time like this,
-must one?" The knitting lay in her lap and she was twisting and
-untwisting her handkerchief after her old fashion; but her fingers
-moved slowly and without agitation and Oldmeadow saw that some spring of
-life in her had been broken.
-
-"The best plan would be that Meg should, as soon as possible, take up
-some work," he said, "and that you and Nancy should go away. Work is the
-only thing for Meg now. She'll dash herself to pieces down here; and you
-with her. There'll soon be plenty to do. Nursing and driving
-ambulances."
-
-"Nancy is going to nurse, you know," said Mrs. Chadwick. "But she won't
-go as long as we need her here. She has promised me that. I don't know
-what I should do without Nancy. I shouldn't care to be nursed by Meg
-myself, if I were a wounded soldier. She is so very restless and would
-probably forget quite simple things like giving one a handkerchief or
-seeing that hot-water-bottles were wrapped up before she put them to
-one's feet. A friend of mine--Amy Hatchard--such a pretty woman, though
-her hair was bright, bright red--and I never cared for that--had the
-soles of her feet nearly scorched off once by a careless nurse. Dear
-Nancy. I often think of Nancy now, Roger. I believe, you know, that if
-Adrienne had not come Nancy and Barney might have married. How happy we
-should all have been; though she has so little money."
-
-"I wish you could all think a little more kindly of Adrienne," said
-Oldmeadow after a silence. Mrs. Chadwick had begun to knit. "I must tell
-you that I myself feel differently about her."
-
-"Do you, Roger?" said Mrs. Chadwick, without surprise. "You have a very
-judicious and balanced mind, I know; even when you were hardly more
-than a boy Francis noticed it and said that he'd rather go by your
-opinion than by that of most of the men he knew. I always remembered
-that, afterwards. Till she came. And then I believed in her rather than
-in you. You thought us all far too fond of her from the very first. And
-now we have certainly changed. Meg is certainly very violent; much more
-violent than I could ever be.... I am sorry for Adrienne. I don't think
-she meant to do us any harm--as Meg believes."
-
-"She only meant to do you good, I am sure of it. I saw her in Oxford,
-let me tell you about it, when I went in to see Palgrave. She is very
-unhappy. She wants Palgrave to go. She wants him to feel it right to go.
-It's not she, really, who is keeping him back now."
-
-"My poor Palgrave. Meg is very unkind about him; very bitter and unkind;
-her own brother. But it was very wrong of Adrienne to go and set up
-housekeeping in Oxford near him. You must own that, Roger. She may not
-be keeping him back; but she is aiding and abetting him always. It made
-Barney even more miserable and disgusted than he was before. And it
-looks so very odd. Though I don't think that anyone could ever gossip
-about Adrienne. There is something about her that makes that
-impossible."
-
-"There certainly is. I am glad she is with Palgrave, poor boy."
-
-"I am glad you are sorry for him, Roger"--Mrs. Chadwick dropped a
-needle. "How clumsy I am. My fingers seem all to have turned to thumbs.
-Thank you so much. I try to make as many socks as I can for our poor
-men; fingering wool; not wheeling, which is so much rougher to the
-feet. I'm sure I'd rather march, and, if it came to that, die in
-fingering than in wheeling. Just as I've always felt, foolish as it may
-sound, that if I had to be drowned I'd rather it were in warm, soapy
-water than in cold salt. Not that one is very likely, ever, to drown in
-one's bath. But tell me about Adrienne and Palgrave, Roger, and what
-they said."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's discourse seemed, beforehand, to make anything he might
-have to tell irrelevant and, even while he tried to make her see what he
-had seen, he felt it to be a fruitless effort.
-
-There was indeed no enmity to plead against. Only a deep exhaustion.
-Adrienne had pressed too heavily on the spring and it was broken.
-
-"I'm sure she is very sorry to have made so much mischief, but she isn't
-what I thought her, Roger," she said, shaking her head, when he had
-finished. "I'm sorry for her, but I used to believe her to be a sort of
-saint and now I know that she is very far indeed from being one."
-
-"The mere fact of failure doesn't deprive you of sainthood," said
-Oldmeadow, remembering Nancy's plea. "You haven't less reason now than
-you had then for believing her one."
-
-But even with her broken spring Mrs. Chadwick had not lost all her
-shrewdness. It flickered in the sad eyes she lifted from the khaki sock.
-"Some kinds of failure do, Roger. That gift of healing, you remember;
-all she could do for people in that way; she has quite, quite lost it.
-That is a reason. It's that more than anything that has made me feel
-differently about her."
-
-"Lost it?" He felt strangely discomposed, little as the gift of healing
-had ever impressed him.
-
-"Quite," Mrs. Chadwick repeated. "I think it distressed her dreadfully
-herself. I think she counted upon it more than upon anything, perhaps
-without knowing she did. It must have made her seem so sure to herself,
-mustn't it? The first time was before the war, just a little after you
-were here that day in the summer--dear me, how long ago it seems; and I
-had one of my headaches, one of the worst I ever had. I was so
-dreadfully troubled, you know, about Barbara and Meg. And Adrienne came
-and sat by me as she used to and put her hand on my forehead; and I know
-it wasn't my lack of faith, for I quite believed it would get well; but
-instead of the peaceful feeling, it grew much worse; oh, _much_. As if
-red hot needles were darting through my eyes and an iron weight pressing
-down on my head. And such tumult and distress. I had to tell her. I had
-to ask her to take away her hand. Oh, she felt it very much, poor thing,
-and grew very white and said it must be because she was still not
-strong; not quite herself. But I knew then that it was because she was
-not _right_; not what I had thought her. I began to suspect, from that
-very moment, that I had been mistaken; because hypnotizing people isn't
-the same as being a saint, is it, Roger? and--I think you said so once,
-long ago; and that was all that she had done; hypnotized us all to think
-her good and wonderful. Later on, after Meg had come, I let her try once
-more, though it quite frightened me; she looked so strange. And!--oh,
-dear--it was dreadful. It distressed me dreadfully. She suddenly put her
-hands before her face and sat quite still and then she burst into tears
-and got up and ran out of the room, crying. It made me feel quite ill.
-And of course I knew there could be nothing saintly about a person who
-made you feel like that--who could feel like that themselves, and break
-down."
-
-"Even saints have their times of darkness and dryness," Oldmeadow found
-after a little time had passed. The picture she put before him hurt him.
-"It was an error of judgment to have believed her a saint because she
-could hypnotize you--if that was what it was; but the fact that she
-can't hypnotize you any longer--that she's too unhappy to have any power
-of that sort--doesn't prove she's not a saint. Of course she's not. Why
-should she be?"
-
-"I'm sure I don't know why she should be; but she used to behave as if
-she were one, didn't she? And when I saw that she wasn't one in that way
-I began to see that she wasn't in other ways, too. It was she who made
-me so unjust, so unkind to poor Barney. _She_ was so unjust and so
-unkind; and I never saw it till then. I was blind till then; though you
-saw very well, that day you came to Connaught Square, that it was a sort
-of spell she cast. It was a spell, Roger. The moment I saw her, after
-the baby's death, I forgot everything she'd done and felt I loved her
-again. She willed me to. So as to get power over me. Everything, always,
-with her, was to get power over other people's lives," said Mrs.
-Chadwick, and as he had, in the past, heard echoes of Adrienne in all
-she said, now he heard echoes of Meg, "It's by willing it, you know.
-Some people practise it like five-finger exercises. You have to sit
-quite still and shut your eyes and concentrate. Meg has heard how it's
-done. I don't pretend to understand; but that must have been her way.
-And she made poor Barney miserable and set me against him at once; you
-said so yourself, Roger, and blinded me to all the cruel things she did.
-It was to punish him, you know. To make him feel he was dreadfully wrong
-and she quite right; about Meg, and everything else; for you came in,
-too. It used to be so dreadful at Torquay. I knew it would be sad there;
-but I never guessed how sad it would be--with that horrid blue, blue
-sea. She used to sit, day after day, on the terrace of the house, and
-gaze and gaze at the sea and if Barney would come, so lovingly, and ask
-her what he could do for her and take her hand, oh, it was more and more
-mournful, the way she would look at him; that dreadful, loving look that
-didn't mean love at all, but only trying to break him down and make him
-_say_ that he was down. I begged Barney's pardon, Roger, for having
-treated him as I did. We treated him dreadfully, all of us; because she
-put him, always, in the wrong. Oh, no, Roger, I'm sorry for her, but
-she's a dangerous woman; or _was_ dangerous. For now she has lost it all
-and has become like everybody else; quite ordinary and unhappy."
-
-He felt, in the little silence that, again, followed, that he could
-hardly better this summing-up. That was precisely what poor Adrienne
-Toner had become; ordinary and unhappy. The two things she would have
-believed herself least capable of becoming. There was nothing to be
-gained in urging extenuating circumstances, especially since he was not
-sure that there were any. Mrs. Chadwick, at bottom, saw as clearly as he
-did. He asked her presently, leaving the theme of Adrienne, whether she
-would not seriously consider going away for a little while with Nancy.
-"Meg could go down to The Little House," he said.
-
-"Oh, no, she couldn't, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick, "she won't go
-anywhere. She'll hardly speak to Monica. She just sits out-of-doors, all
-day, wrapped in a cloak, in the corner of the garden, staring in front
-of her, and she pays not the slightest attention to anything I say. And
-at night, in her room, I hear her sobbing, sobbing, as if her heart
-would break. I can't think hardly of Eric any longer, Roger. Isn't it
-strange; but it's almost as if he were my son that had been killed. And
-Barney may be killed," the poor mother's lip and chin began to tremble.
-"And you, too, Roger. I don't know how we shall live through all that we
-must bear and I keep thinking of the foolish little things, like your
-having cold feet and wearing the same clothes day after day in those
-horrible trenches. He suffered it all, poor Eric. No, I can't think
-hardly of him. All the same," she sobbed, "my heart is broken when I
-remember that they can never be married now."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-"That's the way Mummy surprises one," said Barney as he and Oldmeadow
-went together through the Coldbrooks woods. "One feels her, usually,
-such a darling goose and then, suddenly, she shows one that she can be a
-heroine."
-
-Barney was going to France in two days' time and Oldmeadow within the
-fortnight, and the Coldbrooks good-byes had just been said. It had been
-poor Meg who had broken down and clung and cried. Mrs. Chadwick had, to
-the very last, talked with grave cheerfulness of Barney's next leave and
-given wise advice as if he had been merely leaving them for a rather
-perilous mountain-climbing feat. Oldmeadow could hardly believe her the
-same woman that he had seen ten days before.
-
-He was staying at The Little House and had come up on this afternoon of
-Barney's departure to join him at Coldbrooks and walk down with him.
-Barney had not yet seen or said good-bye to Nancy and her mother, and
-Oldmeadow had seized this, his only chance, of a talk with him. But, as
-they left the woods and began to climb the bare hill-side, Barney went
-on:
-
-"I've wanted a talk, too, Roger. I'm glad you managed this."
-
-"It doesn't rob anyone of you, does it," said Oldmeadow. "We'll get to
-Chelford in time to give you a good half-hour with them before your car
-comes for you."
-
-"That will be enough for Nancy," said Barney. "The less she sees of me,
-the better she's pleased. I've lots of things I want to say, Roger. Of
-course you understand that in every way it's a relief to be going out."
-
-"It settles things; or seems to settle them," said Oldmeadow. "They take
-another place at all events."
-
-"Yes; just that. They take another place. What difference does it make,
-after all, if a fellow has made a mess of his personal life when his
-personal life has ceased to count. I'm not talking mawkish sentiment
-when I say I hope I'll be killed--if I can be of some use first. I see
-no other way out of it. I'm sorry for Adrienne, after a fashion, for
-she's dished herself, too. We made a hopeless mistake in getting married
-and she knows it as well as I do; and when a man and woman don't love
-each other any longer it's the man's place to get out if he can."
-
-"It was about Adrienne I wanted to talk to you, Barney." For the first
-time in their long friendship Oldmeadow felt that he spoke to an equal.
-Barney had at last ceased to be a boy. "I've seen her, since seeing you
-that last time in the train."
-
-"Well?" Barney inquired, as Oldmeadow paused. "What have you got to say
-to me about Adrienne, Roger? You've not said very much, from the
-beginning; but everything you have said has been true and I've forgotten
-none of it. I'm the more inclined," and he smiled with a slight
-bitterness, "to listen to you now."
-
-"That's just the trouble," Oldmeadow muttered. "You've forgotten
-nothing. That's what I feel, with remorse. That it was I who helped to
-spoil things for you both, from the beginning. You'd not have seen her
-defects as you did if I hadn't shown them to you; and if you hadn't seen
-them you'd have adjusted yourselves to each other and have found them
-out together. She'd not have resented your finding them out in the
-normal course of your shared lives. It's been my opinion of her, in the
-background of both your minds, that has envenomed everything."
-
-Barney listened quietly. "Yes," he assented. "That's all true enough. As
-far as it goes. I mightn't have seen if you hadn't shown me. But I can't
-regret you did show me, for anything else would have been to have gone
-through life blind; as blind as Adrienne is herself. And it's because
-she can't stand being seen through that she revealed so much more; so
-much that you didn't see and that I had to find out for myself. What you
-saw was absurdity and inexperience; they're rather loveable defects; I
-think I accepted them from the beginning, because of all the other
-things I believed in her. You said, too, you remember, that she'd never
-know she was wrong. Well, it's worse than that. She'll never know she's
-wrong and she won't bear it that you should think her anything but
-right. She's rapacious. She's insatiable. Nothing but everything will
-satisfy her. You must be down on your knees, straight down, before her;
-and if you're not, she has no use for you. She turns to stone and you
-break your head and your heart against her. It's hatred Adrienne has
-felt for me, Roger, and I'm afraid I've felt it for her, too. She's done
-things and said things that I couldn't have believed her capable of;
-mean things; clever things; cruelly clever that get you right on the
-raw; things I can't forget. There's much more in her than you saw at the
-beginning. I was right rather than you about that; only they weren't
-the things I thought."
-
-Oldmeadow walked, cutting at the withered way-side grasses with his
-cane. Barney's short, slow sentences seemed to sting him as they came.
-He had to adjust himself to their smart; to adjust himself to the
-thought of this malignant Adrienne. Yet what he felt was not all
-surprise; he had foreseen, suspected, even this. "I know," he said at
-last; "I mean, I can see that it would happen just like that."
-
-"It did happen just like that," said Barney. "I don't claim to have been
-an angel or anything like one. I gave her as good as I got, or nearly,
-sometimes, no doubt. But I know that it wasn't my fault. I know it was
-Adrienne who spoiled everything."
-
-They had come out now on the upland road. The country dropped away
-beneath them wrapped in the dull mole-colour, the distant, dull
-ultramarines of the November afternoon. The smell of burning weeds was
-in the air and, in the west, a long, melancholy sheet of advancing
-rain-cloud hid the sun. Oldmeadow wondered if he and Barney would ever
-walk there together again, and his mind plunged deep into the past, the
-many years of friendship to which this loved country had been a
-background.
-
-"Barney," he said, "what I wanted to say is this: All that you feel is
-true; I'm sure of it. But other things are true, too. I've seen her and
-I've changed about her. If I was right before, I'm right now. She's been
-blind because she didn't know she could be broken. Well, she's beginning
-to break."
-
-"Is she?" said Barney, and his quiet was implacable. "I can quite
-imagine that, you know. Everyone, except poor Palgrave--all the rest of
-us, have found out that she's not the beautiful benignant being she
-thought she was, and that bewilders her and makes her pretty wretched,
-no doubt."
-
-Oldmeadow waited a moment. "I want you to see her," he said. "Don't be
-cruel. You are a little cruel, you know. It's because you are thinking
-of her abstractly; remembering only how she has hurt you. If you could
-see her, see how unhappy she is, you'd feel differently. That's what I
-want you to do. That's what I beg you to do, Barney."
-
-"I can't," said Barney after a moment. "That I can't do, Roger. It's
-over. She might want me back if she could get me back adoring her. It's
-only so she'd want me. But it's over. It's more than over. There's
-something else." Barney's face showed no change from its sad fixity.
-"You were right about that, too. It's Nancy I ought to have married.
-It's Nancy I love. And Adrienne knows it."
-
-At this there passed before Oldmeadow's mind the memory of the small,
-dark, hurrying figure, the memory of the words she had spoken: "Some
-things are like living creatures; and they can die. They can die."
-
-He felt rather sick. "In that case, how can you blame your wife?" he
-muttered. "Doesn't that explain it all?"
-
-"No, it doesn't explain it all." There was no fire of self-justification
-in Barney's voice. It was as fixed and sad as his face. "It was only
-after Adrienne made me so wretched I began to find it out. She was
-jealous of Nancy from the beginning, of course. But then she was jealous
-of everything that wasn't, every bit of it, hers. She had no reason for
-jealousy. No man was ever more in love than I was with Adrienne. Even
-now I don't feel for Nancy what I felt for her. It's something, I
-believe, one only feels once and if it burns out it burns out for ever.
-With Nancy, it's as if I had come home; and Adrienne and I were parted
-before I knew that I was turning to her."
-
-They had begun the final descent into Chelford and the wind now brought
-a fine rain against their faces. Neither spoke again until the grey
-roofs of the village came into sight at a turning of the road. "About
-money matters, Roger," Barney said. "Mother and Meg and Barbara. If you
-get through, and I don't, will you see to them for me? I've appointed
-you my trustee. I told Adrienne last summer that I couldn't take any of
-her money any longer, so that, of course, with my having thrown up the
-city job and taken on the farms, my affairs are in a bit of a mess. But
-I hope they'll be able to go on at Coldbrooks all right. Palgrave will
-have Coldbrooks if I don't come back, and perhaps you'll be able to
-prevent him handing it over to his Socialist friends."
-
-"Palgrave would be safely human if it came to taking care of his mother
-and sisters," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Would he?" said Barney. "I don't know."
-
-Across the village green the lights of The Little House shone at them.
-The curtains were still undrawn and, as they waited at the door, they
-could see Nancy in the drawing-room, sitting by the fire alone.
-
-"I want you to come in with me, please, Roger," said Barney. "Nancy
-hasn't felt it right to be very kind to me of late and she'll be able
-to be kinder if you are there. You'll know, you'll see if a chance comes
-for me to say what I want to say to her. You might leave us for a moment
-then."
-
-"You have hardly more than a half-hour, you know," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"One can say a good deal in a half-hour," Barney replied.
-
-Nancy had risen and, as they entered, she came forward, trying to smile
-and holding out her hand to each. But Oldmeadow was staying there. He
-was not going in half an hour. There was no reason why Nancy should give
-him her hand and Barney, quietly, took both her hands in his. "It's
-good-bye, then, Nancy, isn't it?" he said.
-
-They stood there in the firelight together, his dear young people, both
-so pale, both so fixedly looking at each other, and Nancy still tried to
-smile as she said, "It's dear of you to have come." But her face
-betrayed her. It was sick with the fear that, in conquering her own
-heart, she should hurt Barney's; Barney's, whom she might never see
-again. Oldmeadow went on to the fire and stood, his back to them,
-looking down at it.
-
-"Oh, no, it's not; not dear at all," Barney returned. "You knew I'd come
-to say good-bye, of course. Why haven't you been over to see me, you and
-Aunt Monica? I've asked you often enough."
-
-"You mustn't scold me to-day, Barney, since it's good-bye. We couldn't
-come," said Nancy.
-
-"It's never I who scold you. It's you who scold me. Not openly, I know,"
-said Barney, "but by implication; punish me, by implication. I quite
-understood why you haven't come. Well, I want things to be clear now.
-Roger's here, and I want to say them before him, because he's been in it
-all since the beginning. It's because of Adrienne you've never come; and
-changed so much in every way towards me."
-
-He had kept her hands till then, but Oldmeadow heard now that she drew
-away from him. For a moment she did not speak; and then it was not to
-answer him. "Have you said good-bye to her, Barney?"
-
-"No; I haven't," Barney answered. "I'm not going to say good-bye to
-Adrienne, Nancy. It must be plain to you by this time that Adrienne and
-I have parted. What did it all mean but that?"
-
-"It didn't mean that to her. She never dreamed it was meaning that,"
-said Nancy.
-
-"Well, she said it, often enough," Barney retorted.
-
-"Barney, please listen to me," said Nancy. "You must let me speak. She
-never dreamed it was meaning that. If she was unkind to you it was
-because she could not believe it would ever mean parting. She had
-started wrong; by holding you to blame; after the baby; when you and
-Roger so hurt her pride. And then she wasn't able to go back. She wasn't
-able to see it all so differently--just to get you back. It would have
-seemed wrong to her; a weakness, just because she longed so. And then,
-most of all, she believed you loved her enough to come of yourself."
-
-"I tried to," said Barney, in the sad, bitter voice of the hill-side
-talk with Oldmeadow. "You see, you don't know everything, Nancy, though
-you know so much. I tried to again and again."
-
-"Yes. I know you did. But only on your own terms. And by then I had come
-in. Oh, yes, I had, Barney. You didn't know it. It was long, long before
-you knew. But I knew it; and so did she and it was more than she could
-bear. What woman could bear it? I couldn't have, in her place." Tears
-were in Nancy's voice.
-
-"It's queer, Nancy," said Barney, "that--barring Palgrave, who doesn't
-count--you and Roger are the only two people she has left to stick up
-for her. Roger's just been saying all that to me, you know. The two she
-tried to crab whenever she got a chance. Well, say it's my fault, then.
-Say that I've been faithless to my wife and fallen in love with another
-woman. The fact is there, and you've said it now yourself. I don't love
-her any longer. I shall never love her again. And I love you. I love
-you, Nancy, and it's you I ought to have married; would have married, I
-believe, if I hadn't been a blinded fool. I love you, and I can say it
-now because this may be the end of everything. Don't let her spoil this,
-too. Nancy darling, look at me. Can't you consent to forget Adrienne for
-this one time, when we may never see each other again?"
-
-"I can't forget her! I can't forget her!" Nancy sobbed. "I mustn't.
-She's miserable. She hasn't stopped loving you. And she's your wife."
-
-"Do you want to make me hate her?"
-
-"Oh, Barney--that is cruel of you."
-
-There was a silence and in it Oldmeadow heard Barney's car draw up at
-the gate. He took out his watch. There were only a few more moments left
-them. Not turning to them he said. "It does her no good, you know, Nancy
-dear."
-
-"No. It does her no good," Barney repeated. "But forgive me. I was
-cruel. I don't hate her. I'm sorry for her. It's simply that we ought
-never to have married. Forget it, Nancy, and forget her. Don't let it
-be, then, that I love you and don't love my wife. Let it be in the old
-way. As if she'd never come. As if I'd come to say good-bye to my
-cousin; to my dearest friend on earth. Look at me. Give me your hands.
-It's your face I want to take with me."
-
-"Five minutes, Barney," Oldmeadow whispered, as he went past them. Nancy
-had given him her hands; she had lifted her face to his, and Barney's
-arms had closed around her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-Mrs. Averil was in the hall. "Give them another moment," he said. "I'm
-going outside."
-
-Tears were in his own eyes. He stepped out on to the flagged path of the
-little plot in front of the house where strips of turf and rose-beds ran
-between the house and the high wall. Between the clipped holly-trees at
-the gate he saw Barney's car, and its lights, the wall between, cast a
-deep shadow over the garden.
-
-The rain was falling thickly now and he stood, feeling it on his face,
-filled with a sense of appeasement, of accomplishment. They were
-together at last. It was not too late. At such a time, when all the
-world hung on the edge of an abyss, to be together for a moment might
-sum up more of real living than many happy years. They knew each other's
-hearts and what more could life give its creatures than that
-recognition.
-
-Suddenly, how he did not know, for there was no apparent movement and
-his eyes were fixed on the pallid sky, he became aware that a figure was
-leaning against the house in the shadow beside him. His eyes found it
-and it was familiar. Yet he could not believe his eyes.
-
-She was leaning back, her hands against the wall on either side, and he
-saw, with the upper layer of perception that so often blunts a violent
-emotion, that her feet were sunken in the mould of Mrs. Averil's
-rose-bed and that the cherished shoots of the new climbing rose were
-tangled in her clothes. The open window was but a step away.
-
-She had come since they had come. She had crept up. She had looked
-in--for how long?--and had fallen back, casting out her arms so that it
-might not be to the ground. Her eyes were closed; but she had heard and
-seen him. As he stood before her, aghast, unable to find a word, he
-heard her mutter: "Take me away, please."
-
-Barney's car blocked the egress of the gate and Barney might emerge at
-any moment. He leaned towards her and found that she was intricately
-caught in the rose. Her hat with its veil, her sleeve, her hair, were
-all entangled.
-
-Dumbly, patiently, she stood, while, with fumbling fingers and terror
-lest they should be heard within--Mrs. Averil's voice now reached him
-from the drawing-room--Oldmeadow released her and, his fingers deeply
-torn by the thorns, he was aware, in all the tumult of his thought, more
-than of the pain, of the wet fragrance of the roses that surrounded her.
-He shared what he felt to be her panic.
-
-She had come hoping to see Barney; she had come to say good-bye to
-Barney, who would not come to her; and his heart sickened for her at the
-shameful seeming of her plight. She knew now that it must be her hope
-never to see Barney again.
-
-There was a narrow passage, leading to the lawn and garden, between the
-house and the stable walls. Thickly grown with ivy, showing only a
-narrow opening above, where chimneys and gables cut against the sky, it
-was nearly as dark as a tunnel, and into this place of hiding he half
-led, half carried the unfortunate woman.
-
-With the darkness, the pungent smell of the wet ivy closed thickly,
-ominously about them. It was as if he and Adrienne Toner were buried
-there together. He heard a maid laugh far away and a boy passed on the
-green stridently whistling "Tipperary." It was like hearing, in the
-grave, the sounds of the upper world.
-
-Adrienne leaned against the wall. The ivy closing round her, nearly
-obliterated her, but he could dimly see the grey disk of her face,
-showing the unexpectedness of contour that reveals itself in the faces
-of the dead. The trivial features were erased and only a shape of grief
-remained, strangely august and emotionless.
-
-An eternity seemed to pass before the front door opened and Mrs.
-Averil's voice, steadied to a galvanized cheerfulness, came, half
-obliterated to a wordless rhythm. Barney's voice answered her, and his
-steps echoed on the flagged path. "Say good-bye to Roger for me if I
-don't see him on the road!" he called out from the gate. Then the car
-coughed, panted; the horn croaked out its cry and, above them, a shaft
-of light across the ivy, of which he had till then been unaware, flitted
-suddenly away, leaving the darkness more visible.
-
-He heard then that she was weeping.
-
-Putting his arm behind her, for the rain fell heavily and the ivy was
-drenched with it, he drew her forward and for a little while it was
-almost against his breast that she lay while her very heart dissolved
-itself in tears.
-
-She had come, he knew it all, with a breakdown of her pride, with a last
-wild hope and, perhaps, a longing to atone, believing that she might
-snatch a word somewhere with her husband, and find her way, at this
-last moment, back to the heart she had so alienated. She had seen all.
-She had heard all. He was sure of it. It had been as an outcast that he
-had found her leaning there. He understood her through and through and
-the tender heaviness that had already so often visited his heart flooded
-it to suffocation.
-
-Among her sobs, he heard her, at last, speaking to him. "Even Palgrave
-doesn't know. He told me--only this afternoon--that Barney was here. I
-thought I might find him. I was going to wait in the road. And when I
-got here there was no car and I was afraid that there was a mistake.
-That I had missed him. And I went up to the house; to the open window;
-and looked in; to see if he was there. It was not jealousy: not now. I
-did not mean to be an eavesdropper. But, when I saw them, I stayed and
-listened. It was not jealousy," she repeated. "It was because I had to
-know that there was no more hope."
-
-"Yes," said Oldmeadow gently, while, with long pauses, she spoke on and
-on; to the impartial judge, to the one sure refuge; and he said "Yes"
-again, gently, after she had finished; a long time after. She still half
-lay against his breast. He had never felt such an infinite tenderness
-towards any creature; not since his boyhood and his mother's death.
-
-She drew away from him at last. "Take me," she said. "There is a train;
-back to Oxford." She had ceased to weep. Her voice was hoarse and faint.
-
-"Did you walk up from the station? You're not fit to walk back. I can
-get a trap. There's a man just across the green."
-
-"No. Walking, please. I would be recognized. They might know me. I can
-walk. If you will help me."
-
-He drew her arm through his. "Lean on me," he said. "We'll go slowly."
-
-They went past the drawing-room windows and, softly opening, softly
-shutting, through the gate. The road, when it turned the corner, left
-the village behind; between its rarely placed trees, vague silhouettes
-against the sky that seemed of one texture with them, it showed its
-mournful pallor for only a little space before them; there was not
-enough light left in the sky to glimmer on its pools. The fields, on
-either side, vanished into obscurity. Pale cattle, once, over a hedge,
-put disconsolate heads and lowed and a garrulous dog, as they passed by,
-ran out from a way-side farm-yard, smelt at their heels, growled
-perfunctorily and, having satisfied his sense of duty, went back to his
-post. The sense of dumb emptiness was so complete that it was only after
-they had gone a long way that he knew that she was weeping and the soft,
-stifling sounds seemed only a part of nature's desolation.
-
-Her head bent down, she stumbled on, leaning on his arm, and from time
-to time she raised her handkerchief and pressed it to her mouth and
-nose. He did not say a word; nor did she.
-
-As he led her along, submissive to her doom, it was another feeling of
-accomplishment that overwhelmed him; the dark after the radiant; after
-Nancy and Barney, he and Adrienne. It was this, from their first
-meeting, that he had been destined to mean to her. She was his appointed
-victim. He had killed, as really as if with a knife, the girl whom he
-had seen at Coldbrooks, in the sunlight, on that Sunday morning in
-spring, knowing no doubts. She had then held the world in her hands and
-a guileless, untried heaven had filled her heart. Between her and this
-crushed and weeping woman there seemed no longer any bond; unless it was
-the strange aching that, in his heart, held them both together.
-
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat in Mrs. Aldesey's drawing-room and, the tea-table between
-them, Mrs. Aldesey poured out his tea. So it was, after three years,
-that they found each other. So it was, all over the world, Oldmeadow
-said to himself, that the tea-table, or its equivalent, reasserted
-itself in any interval where the kindly amenities of human intercourse
-could root themselves; though the world rocked and flames of anarchy
-rimmed its horizons.
-
-It was more real, he felt that now, to sit and look at Lydia over her
-tea than to parch on Eastern sands and shiver in Western trenches; from
-the mere fact that the one experience became a nightmare while the other
-was as natural as waking at dawn. Horrors became the dropped stitches of
-life; and though if there were too many of them they would destroy the
-stocking, the stocking itself was made up of tea-table talks and walks
-in the woods with Nancy. He had just come from Coldbrooks.
-
-So he put it, trivially, to himself, and he felt the need of clinging to
-triviality. The dropped stitches had been almost too much for him and
-the nightmare, at times, had seemed the only reality. At times he had
-known a final despair of life and even now he remembered that the worst
-might still come. One might be called upon to face the death of the
-whole order of civilization. Faith required one, perhaps, to recognize
-that the human spirit was bound up, finally, with no world order and
-unless one could face its destruction as one had to face the death of a
-loved individual, one was not secure of the spiritual order that
-transcended all mundane calamity. He believed, or hoped, that during
-these last three years, in Gallipoli, Egypt and Palestine, when, to the
-last fibre, he had felt his faiths tested, he had learned to be ready
-for the great relinquishment, should it be required of him; and it was
-therefore the easier to doff that consciousness, as he might have doffed
-a sword, and think of Lydia and of the order that still survived and
-that she still stood for.
-
-Lydia did not look the worse for the war; indeed she looked the better.
-She looked as if, in spite of long days in the hospital, she digested
-better and, in spite of air-raids, slept better, and as they talked,
-finding their way back to intimacy by the comparing of such
-superficialities, she told him that for years she hadn't been so strong
-or well. "Nothing is so good for you, I've found out, as to feel that
-you are being used; being used by something worth while. People like
-myself must keep still about our experiences, for we've had none that
-bear talking of. But even the others, even the people bereaved
-unspeakably, are strangely lifted up. And I believe that the populace
-enjoys the air-raids rather than the reverse; they give them a chance of
-feeling that they are enduring something, too; with good-humour and
-pluck. If anyone is pessimistic about the effect of war on average human
-nature, I should only ask them to come and talk to our men at the
-hospital. Of course, under it all, there's the ominous roar in one's
-ears all the time."
-
-"Do you mean the air-raids?" he asked her and, shaking her head,
-showing him that she, too, had seen with him and, he believed, with him
-accepted: "No; I mean the roar of nation after nation collapsing into
-the abyss. A sort of tumbril roar of civilization, Roger. And, for that,
-there's always the last resource of going gallantly to the guillotine.
-But all the same, I believe we shall pull through."
-
-It was the spring of 1918 and one needed faith to believe it. She asked
-him presently about his friends at Coldbrooks. He had gone to Coldbrooks
-for three days of his one week's leave. After this he went to France.
-
-"What changes for you there, poor Roger," said Mrs. Aldesey.
-
-"Yes. Terrible changes. Palgrave dead and Barney broken. Yet, do you
-know, it's not as sad as it was. Something's come back to it. Nancy sits
-by him and holds his hand and is his joy and comfort."
-
-"Will he recover?"
-
-"Not in the sense of being really mended. He'll go on crutches, always,
-if he gets up. But the doctors now hope that the injury to the back
-isn't permanent."
-
-"And Meg's married," said Mrs. Aldesey after a little pause. "Have you
-seen her?"
-
-"No. She runs a hospital in the country, at her husband's place, Nancy
-tells me; and is very happy."
-
-"Very. Has a fine boy, and is completely reinstated. It's a remarkable
-ending to the story, isn't it? She met him at the front, you know,
-driving her ambulance; and he has twice as much in him as poor Eric
-Hayward."
-
-"Remarkable. Yet Meg's a person who only needs her chance. She's the
-sort that always comes out on top."
-
-"Does it comfort her mother a little for all she's suffered to see her
-on top?"
-
-"It almost comically comforts her. All the same, Eleanor Chadwick has
-her depths. Nothing will ever comfort her for Palgrave's death."
-
-"I understand that," said Mrs. Aldesey. "Nothing could. How she must
-envy the happy mothers whose boys were killed at the front. To have
-one's boy die in prison as a conscientious objector must be the
-bitterest thing the war has given any mother to bear."
-
-"He was a dear boy," said Oldmeadow. "Heroically wrong-minded." He could
-hardly bear to think of Palgrave.
-
-"He wasn't alone, you know," said Mrs. Aldesey after a moment. Something
-was approaching that he would rather not have to speak of; a name he
-would so much rather not name. And, evading it, feebly, he said, "His
-mother got to him in time, I know."
-
-"Yes. But all the time. She went and lived near the prison. Adrienne
-Toner I mean."
-
-Her eyes were on him and he hoped that no readjustment of his features
-was visible. "Oh, yes. Nancy told me that," he said.
-
-"What's become of her, Roger?" Mrs. Aldesey asked. "Since Charlie was
-killed the Lumleys have lived in the country and I hardly see them. I
-haven't heard a word of her for years."
-
-He was keeping his eyes on her and he knew from her expression that he
-showed some strain or some distress.
-
-"Nor have I. Nancy said that they hadn't either. She went away, after
-Palgrave's death. Disappeared completely."
-
-"Nancy told you, of course, about the money; the little fortune she gave
-Palgrave, so that he could leave it to his mother?"
-
-"Oh, yes. Nancy wrote to me of that."
-
-"It was cleverly contrived, wasn't it. They are quite tied up to it,
-aren't they; whatever they may feel. No one could object to her giving a
-fortune to the boy she'd ruined. I admired that in her, I must confess;
-the way she managed it. And then her disappearance."
-
-"Very clever indeed," said Oldmeadow. "All that remains for her to do
-now is to manage to get killed. And that's easily managed. Perhaps she
-is killed."
-
-He did not intend that his voice should be emptier or dryer, yet Lydia
-looked at him with a closer attention.
-
-"Barney and Nancy could get married then," she said.
-
-"Yes. Exactly. They could get married."
-
-"That's what you want, isn't it, Roger?"
-
-"Want her to be killed, or them to be married?"
-
-"Well, as you say, so many people _are_ being killed. One more or less,
-if it's in such a good cause as their marriage--"
-
-"It's certainly a good cause. But I don't like the dilemma," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-He knew from the way she looked at him, discreet and disguised as her
-recognition was, that he was hiding something from her. Casting about
-his mind, in the distress that took the form of confusion, he could
-himself find nothing that he hid, or wished to hide, unless it was the
-end of Adrienne's story as Barney's wife. That wasn't for him to show;
-ever; to anyone.
-
-"Perhaps she's gone back to America," said Mrs. Aldesey presently,
-"California, you know. Or Chicago. She may very well be engaged in great
-enterprises out there that we never hear of. They'd be sure to be great,
-wouldn't they."
-
-"I suppose they would."
-
-"You saw her once more, didn't you, at the time you saw Palgrave," Mrs.
-Aldesey went on. "Lady Lumley told me of that. And how kind you had
-been. Adrienne had spoken of it. You were sorry for them both, I
-suppose; for her as well as for him, in spite of everything. Or did she
-merely take it for granted that the kindness to him extended to her?"
-
-"Not at all. It was for her too," said Oldmeadow, staring a little and
-gathering together, after this lapse of time that seemed so immense, his
-memories of that other tea-table set up in the chaos: Palgrave's
-tea-table on that distant day in Oxford. What was so confusing him was
-his consciousness that it hadn't been the last time he had seen
-Adrienne. "I was as sorry for her as for him," he went on. "Sorrier.
-There was so much more in her than I'd supposed. She was capable of
-intense suffering."
-
-"In losing her husband's affections, you mean? You never suspected her
-of being inhuman, surely? Lady Lumley blamed poor Barney for all that
-sad story. But, even from her account, I could see his side very
-plainly."
-
-"Perhaps I did think her inhuman. At all events I thought her
-invulnerable."
-
-"Yes. I remember. With all her absurdity you thought she had great
-power." Mrs. Aldesey looked at him thoughtfully. "And it was when you
-found she hadn't that you could be sorry for her."
-
-"Not at all," said Oldmeadow again. "I still think she has great power.
-People can have power and go to pieces."
-
-"Did she go to pieces? That day in Oxford? I can't imagine her in
-pieces, you know."
-
-He had a feeling of drawing back; or of drawing Adrienne back. "In the
-sense of being so unhappy, so obviously unhappy, over Palgrave," he
-said.
-
-He saw that Lydia would have liked to go on questioning, as, of course,
-it would have been perfectly natural for her to do. Was not Adrienne
-Toner and her absurdity one of their pet themes? Yet she desisted. She
-desisted and it was because she felt some change in him; some shrinking
-and some pain. "Well, let's hope that she is happy, now, or as happy as
-she can be, poor thing, doing great deeds in America," she said. And she
-turned the talk back to civilization and its danger.
-
-They talked a good deal about civilization during their last three days
-together. He wanted things, during these three days of mingled recovery
-and farewell, to be as happy as possible between him and his friend, for
-he knew that Lydia's heart was heavy, for him and not for civilization.
-The front to which he was going was more real to her, because it was
-much nearer, and his peril was more real than during his absence in
-distant climes. He felt himself that the French front, at this special
-time, would probably make an end of him and, for the first time since
-their early friendship, he knew conjecture as to his relation with
-Lydia; wondered, if it had not been for Mr. Aldesey in New York, whether
-Lydia might have been in love with him, and realized, with a curious
-sense of anxiety and responsibility, that her friendship for him now was
-the closest tie in her life. The war might to her, too, mean irreparable
-loss. And he was sorry that it was so; sorry to think that the easy,
-happy intercourse had this hidden depth of latent suffering.
-
-Lydia's feeling, and its implications, became the clearer to him when,
-on their last evening together, she said to him suddenly: "Perhaps
-you'll see her over there."
-
-He could not pretend not to know whom she meant, nor could he pretend to
-himself not to see that if it troubled Lydia that he should be sorry for
-Adrienne that could only be because she cared far more for him than he
-had ever guessed.
-
-He said, as easily as he could manage it, for the pressure of his
-realizations made him feel a little queer: "Not if she's in America."
-
-"Ah, but perhaps she's come back from America," said Mrs. Aldesey.
-"She's a great traveller. What will you do with her if you do find her?
-Bring her back to Barney?"
-
-"Hardly that," he said. "There'd be no point in bringing her back to
-Barney, would there?"
-
-"Well, then, what would you do with her?" Mrs. Aldesey smiled, as if
-with a return to their old light dealing with the theme, while, still in
-her nurse's coiffe and dress, she leaned back against her chair.
-
-"What would she do with me, rather, isn't it?" he asked. And he, too,
-tried to be light.
-
-"She'll be mended then, you think? Able to do things to people again?"
-
-"I'm not at all afraid of her, you know. She never did me any harm," he
-said.
-
-"Because you were as strong as she, you mean. She did other people harm,
-surely. You warned me once to keep away from her unless I wanted to lose
-my toes and fingers," Mrs. Aldesey still smiled. "She does make people
-lose things, doesn't she?"
-
-"Well, she makes them gain things, too. Fortunes for instance. Perhaps
-if I find her, she'll give me a fortune."
-
-"But that's only when she's ruined you," she reminded him.
-
-"And it's she who's ruined now," he felt bound to remind her; no longer
-lightly.
-
-Leaning back in her chair, her faded little face framed in white, Mrs.
-Aldesey looked at once younger yet more tired than he had ever seen her
-look and she sat for a little while silent; as if she had forgotten
-Adrienne Toner and were thinking only of their parting. But all her
-gaiety had fallen from her as she said at last: "I can be sorry for her,
-too; if she's really ruined. If she still loves him when he has ceased
-to care for her. Does she, do you think?"
-
-With the question he seemed to see a fire-lit room and lovers who had
-found each other and to smell wet roses. Lydia was coming too near; too
-near the other figure, outside the window, fallen back with outstretched
-arms against the roses. And again he felt himself softly, cautiously,
-disentangle the sleeve, the hair, felt himself draw Adrienne away into
-the darkness where the smell was now of wet ivy and where he could see
-only the shape of an accepting grief.
-
-"How could I know?" he said. "She was very unhappy when I last saw her.
-But three years have passed and people can mend in three years."
-
-"Especially in America," Mrs. Aldesey suggested. "It's a wonderful place
-for mending. Let's hope she's there. Let's hope that we shall never, any
-of us, ever hear of her again. That would be much the happiest thing,
-wouldn't it?"
-
-He was obliged to say that it would certainly be much the happiest
-thing; and he was too unhappy about Lydia to be able to feel angry with
-her. He knew how tired she must be when, for the first time in their
-long friendship, she must know that she was not pleasing him, yet not be
-able to help herself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-"Good Lord!" Oldmeadow heard himself groaning.
-
-Even as he took possession of his physical suffering he knew that there
-was satisfaction in suffering, at last, himself. Until now the worst
-part of war had been to see the sufferings of others. This was at last
-the real thing; but it was so mingled with acquiescence that it ceased
-to be the mere raw fact. "We're all together, now," he thought, and he
-felt himself, even as he groaned, lifted on a wave of beatitude.
-
-Until now he had not, as a consciousness, known anything. There was a
-shape in his memory, a mere immense black blot shot with fiery lights.
-It must symbolize the moment when the shell struck him, bending, in the
-trench, over his watch and his calculations. And after that there were
-detached visions, the ceiling of a train where he had swung in a hammock
-bed, looking up; clean sheets, miraculously clean and the face of a
-black-browed nurse who reminded him of Trixie. The smell of chloroform
-was over everything. It bound everything together so that days might
-have passed since the black blot and since he lay here, again in clean
-sheets, the sweet, thick smell closing round him and a raging thirst in
-his throat. He knew that he had just been carried in from the operating
-room and he groaned again "Good Lord," feeling the pain snatch as if
-with fangs and claws at his thigh and belly, and muttered, "Water!"
-
-Something sweet, but differently sweet from the smell, sharp, too, and
-insidious, touched his lips and opening them obediently, as a young bird
-opens its bill to the parent bird, he felt a swab passed round his
-parched mouth and saw the black-browed nurse. "Not water, yet, you
-know," she said. "This is lemon and glycerine and will help you
-wonderfully."
-
-He wanted to ask something about Paris and the long-distance gun firing
-on it every day and he seemed to see it over the edge of the trench, far
-away on the horizon of No-man's-land, a tiny city flaming far into the
-sky. But other words bubbled up and he heard himself crying: "Mother!
-Mother!" and remembered, stopping himself with an act of will, that they
-all said that when they were dying. But as he closed his eyes he felt
-her very near and knew that it would be sweet to die and find her.
-
-A long time must have passed. Was it days or only the time of daylight?
-It was night now and a shaded light shone from a recess behind him and
-thoughts, visions, memories raced through his mind. Nancy; Barney; he
-would never see them again, then: poor Lydia and civilization.
-"Civilization will see me out," he thought and he wondered if they had
-taken off the wings of the Flying Victory when they packed her.
-
-A rhythm was beating in his brain. Music was it? Something of Bach's? It
-gathered words to itself and shaped itself sentence by sentence into
-something he had heard? or read? Ah, he was glad to have found it.
-"Under the orders of your devoted officers you will march against the
-enemy or fall where you stand, facing the foe. To those who die I say:
-You will not die: you will enter living into immortality, and God will
-receive you into his bosom." He seemed to listen to the words as he
-lay, quietly smiling. But it was music after all for, as he listened,
-they merged into the "St. Matthew Passion." He had heard it, of course,
-with Lydia, at the Temple. But Lydia did not really care very much for
-Bach. She might care more for "Litanei." She had sung it standing beside
-him with foolish white roses over her ears. How unlike Lydia to wear
-those roses. And was it Lydia who stood there? A mental perplexity
-mingled with the physical pain and spoiled his peace. It was not
-Lydia's, that white face in the coffin with wet ivy behind it. What
-suffering was this that beat upon his heart? The music had faded all
-away and he saw faces everywhere, dying faces; and blood and terrible
-mutilations. All the suffering of the war, worse, far worse than the
-mere claws and fangs that tore at him. Dying boys choked out their
-breaths in agonies of conscious loneliness, yearning for faces they
-would never see again. Oh, how many he had seen die like that!
-Intolerable to watch them. And could one do nothing? "Cigarettes. Give
-them cigarettes," he tried to tell somebody. "And marmalade for
-breakfast; and phonographs, and then they will enter living into
-immortality"--No: he did not mean that. What did he mean? He could catch
-at nothing now. Thoughts were tossed and tumbled like the rubbish of
-wreckage from an inundated town on the deep currents of his anguish. A
-current that raced and seethed and carried him away. He saw it. Its
-breathless speed was like the fever in his blood. If it went faster he
-would lose his breath. Church-bells ringing on the banks lost theirs as
-he sped past so swiftly and made a trail of whining sound.--Effie!
-Effie! It was poor little Effie, drowning. He saw her wild, small face,
-battling. Bubbles boiled up about his cry.
-
-Suddenly the torrent was stilled. Without commotion, without tumult, it
-was stilled. There was a dam somewhere; it had stopped racing; he could
-get his breath. Still and slow; oh! it was delicious to feel that quiet
-hand on his forehead; his mother's hand, and to know that Effie was
-safe. He lay with closed eyes and saw a smooth waterfall sliding and
-curving with green grey depths into the lower currents of the stream. He
-remembered the stream well, now; one of his beloved French rivers; one
-of the smaller, sylvan rivers, too small for majesty; with silver
-poplars spaced against the sky on either bank and a small town, white
-and pink and pearly-grey, clear on the horizon. Tranquil sails were
-above him and the bells from the distant church-tower floated to him
-across the fields. Soundlessly, slowly, he felt himself borne into
-oblivion.
-
-The black-browed nurse was tending him next morning. "You are better,"
-she said, smiling at him. "You slept all night. No; it's a shame, but
-you mayn't have water yet." She put the lemon and glycerine to his lips.
-"The pain is easier, isn't it?"
-
-He said it was. He felt that he must not stir an inch so as to keep it
-easier, but he could not have stirred had he wanted to, for he was all
-tightly swathed and bandaged. He remembered something he wanted
-specially to ask: "Paris? They haven't got it yet?"
-
-"They'll never get it!" she smiled proudly. "Everything is going
-splendidly."
-
-The English surgeon was such a nice fellow. He had spectacles on a
-square-tipped nose and a square, chubby face; yet his hair was nearly
-white. Oldmeadow remembered, as if of days before the flood, that his
-name was a distinguished one. Perhaps it was morphia they gave him,
-after his wound was dressed, or perhaps he fainted. The day passed in a
-hot and broken stupor and at night the tides of fever rose again and
-carried him away. But, again, before he had lost his breath, before he
-had quite gone down into delirium, the quiet hand came and sent him,
-under sails, to sleep.
-
-Next day Oldmeadow knew, from the way the surgeon looked at him, that
-his case was grave. His face was grim as he bent over the dressing and
-he hurt horribly. They told him, when it was over, that he had been very
-brave, and, like a child, he was pleased that they should tell him so.
-But the pain was worse all day and the sense of the submerging fever
-imminent, and he lay with closed eyes and longed for the night that
-brought the hand. Hours, long hours passed before it came. Hours of
-sunlight when, behind his eyelids, he saw red, and hours of twilight
-when he saw mauve. Then, for a little while, it was a soft, dense grey
-he saw, like a bat's wing, and then the small light shone across his
-bed; he knew that the night had come, and felt, at last, the hand fall
-softly on his head.
-
-He lay for some time feeling the desired peace flow into him and then,
-through its satisfaction, another desire pushed up into his
-consciousness and he remembered that, more than about Paris, he had
-wanted to speak to the nurse about what she did for him and thank her.
-
-"It's you who make me sleep, isn't it," he said, lying with closed eyes
-under the soft yet insistent pressure. "I've never thanked you."
-
-She did not reply. She did not want him to talk. But he still wanted to.
-
-"I couldn't thank you last night," he said, "I can't keep hold of my
-thoughts. And when morning comes I seem to have forgotten everything
-about the night. You are the nurse who takes care of me in the daytime,
-too, aren't you?"
-
-Again, for a moment, there was no reply; and then a voice came. "No; I
-am the night nurse. Go to sleep now."
-
-It was a voice gentle, cold and soft, like snow. It was not an English
-voice and he had heard it before. Where had he heard it? Rooks were
-cawing and he saw a blue ribbon rolling, rolling out across a
-spring-tide landscape. This voice was not like a blue ribbon; it was
-like snow. Yet, when he turned his head under her hand, he looked round
-at Adrienne Toner.
-
-The first feeling that came uppermost in the medley that filled him at
-the sight of her was one of amused vexation. It was as if he went back
-to his beginnings with her, back to the rooks and the blue ribbon. "At
-it again!" was what he said to himself, and what he said aloud,
-absurdly, was: "Oh, come, now!"
-
-She did not lift her hand, but there was trouble on her face as she
-looked back at him. "I hoped you wouldn't see me, Mr. Oldmeadow," she
-said.
-
-He was reminded of Bacchus and the laying on of hands; but a classical
-analogy, even more ridiculous, came to him with her words. "Like Cupid
-and Psyche," he said. "The other way round. It's I who mustn't look."
-
-The trouble on her face became more marked and he saw that she imagined
-him to be delirious. He was not quite himself, certainly, or he would
-not have greeted Adrienne Toner thus, and he made an effort to be more
-decorous and rational as he said, "I'm very glad to see you again. Safe
-and sound: you know."
-
-She had always had a singular little face, but it had never looked so
-singular as now, seen from below with shadows from the light behind cast
-so oddly over it. The end of her nose jutted from a blue shadow and her
-eyes lay in deep hollows of blue. All that he was sure of in her
-expression was the gravity with which she made up her mind to humour
-him. "We want you to be safe and sound, too. Please shut your eyes and
-go to sleep."
-
-"All right; all right, Psyche," he murmured, and he knew it wasn't quite
-what he intended to say, yet in his flippancy he was taking refuge from
-something; from the flood of suffering that had broken over him the
-other night after he had seen that dead face with white roses over its
-ears. This queer face, half dissolved in blue and yellow, was not dead
-and the white coiffe came closely down about it. If he obeyed her he
-knew that she would keep the other faces away and he closed his eyes
-obediently and lay very still, seeing himself again as the good little
-boy being praised. This was Psyche; not Ariane. "Ariane ma soeur," he
-murmured. It was Ariane who had the white roses--or was it wet ivy? and
-after her face pressed all the other dying faces. "You'll keep them
-away, won't you?" he murmured, and he heard her say: "Yes; I'll keep
-them quite away," and, softly, a curtain of sleep fell before his eyes
-crossed by a thin drift of mythological figures.
-
-"I thought it was you who sent me to sleep," he said to the English
-nurse next day. He could hardly, in the morning light, believe it was
-not a dream.
-
-She smiled with an air of vicarious pride. "No indeed. I can't send
-people to sleep. It's our wonderful Mrs. Chadwick. She does a good deal
-more than put people to sleep. She cures people--oh, I wouldn't have
-believed it myself, till I saw it--who are at death's door. It's lucky
-for you and the others that we've got her here for a little while."
-
-"Where's here?" he asked after a moment.
-
-"Here's Boulogne. Didn't you know?"
-
-"I thought I heard the sea sometimes. It's for cases too bad, then, to
-be taken home. Get her here from where?"
-
-"From her hospital in the firing-line. Now that we're advancing at the
-front everything there is changed and she could come away for a little.
-Sir Kenneth's been begging her to come ever since he saw her. He knew
-she would work marvels here, too." The nice young nurse was exuberant in
-her darkness and rosiness with a Jewish streak of fervour in her lips
-and eyes. "It's a sort of rest for her," she added. "She's been badly
-wounded once. You can just see the scar, under her cap, on her forehead.
-And she nearly died of fever out in Salonika. She had a travelling
-ambulance there before she came to France."
-
-"It must be very restful for her," Oldmeadow remarked with a touch of
-his grim mirth, "if she has to sit up putting all your bad cases to
-sleep. Why haven't I heard of her and her hospital?"
-
-"It's not run in her name. It's an American hospital--she is
-American--called after her mother, I believe. The Pearl Ambulance is
-what it's called and everybody here knows about it; all of us nurses and
-doctors, I mean. Her organizing power is as wonderful as her cures; her
-influence over her staff. They all worship the ground she walks on."
-
-"Pearl, Pearl Toner," Oldmeadow was saying to himself. How complete, how
-perfect it was. And the nurse went on, delighted, evidently, to talk of
-an idol, and rather as if she were speaking of a special cure they had
-installed, a sort of Carrel treatment not to be found anywhere else:
-"Everything's been different since she came. It's almost miraculous to
-see what the mere touch of her hand can do. Matron says she wouldn't be
-surprised if it turned out she was a sort of nun and wore a hair shirt
-under her dress. Whatever she is, it makes one feel better and stronger
-just to see her and one would do anything for her just to have her smile
-at one. She has the most heavenly smile."
-
-It was all very familiar.
-
-"Ah, you haven't abandoned me after all, though I have found you out,"
-he said to Adrienne Toner that night.
-
-He was able at last to see her clearly as she came in, so softly that it
-was like a dream sliding into one's sleep. She was like a dream in her
-nurse's dress which, though so familiar on other women, seemed to
-isolate and make her strange. Her face was smaller than he had
-remembered it and had the curious look, docile yet stubborn, that one
-sees on the faces of dumb-mutes. She might have looked like that had
-she been deafened by the sound of so many bursting shells and lost the
-faculty of speech through doing much and saying nothing among scenes of
-horror. But she spoke to him, after all, as naturally as he spoke to
-her, saying, though with no touch of his lightness: "You mustn't talk,
-you know, if I come to make you sleep. Sir Kenneth wants sleep for you
-more than anything else."
-
-"I promise you to be good," said Oldmeadow. "But I'm really better,
-aren't I? and can talk a little first."
-
-"You are really better. But it will take a long time. A great deal of
-sleeping."
-
-"No one knew what had become of you," said Oldmeadow, and he remembered
-that he ought to be sorry that Adrienne Toner had not been killed.
-
-She hesitated, and then sat down beside him. He thought that she had
-been going to ask him something and then checked herself. "I can't let
-you talk," she said, and in her voice he heard the new authority; an
-authority gained by long submission to discipline.
-
-"Another night, then. We must talk another night," he murmured, closing
-his eyes, for he knew that he must not disobey her. All the same it was
-absurd that Adrienne Toner should be doing this for him; absurd but
-heavenly to feel her hand fall softly, like a warm, light bird, and
-brood upon his forehead.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-They never spoke of Coldbrooks, nor of Barney, nor of Palgrave; not
-once. Not once during all those nights that she sat beside him and made
-him sleep.
-
-He had heard from Coldbrooks, of course; letters came often now. And the
-dark young nurse had written for him since he could not yet write for
-himself. He had said no word of seeing Adrienne. Nor had he let them
-know how near to death he had been and, perhaps, still was. He would
-have liked to have seen Lydia and Nancy if he were to die; but most of
-all he wanted to be sure of not losing Adrienne. And he knew that were
-he to tell them, were they to come, Adrienne would go.
-
-She never spoke to him at all, he remembered--as getting stronger with
-every day, he pieced his memories of these nights together--unless he
-spoke to her; and she never smiled. And it came upon him one morning
-after he had read letters that brought so near the world from which she
-was now shut out, that she had, perhaps, never forgiven him. After all,
-though he could not see that he had been wrong, she had everything to
-forgive him and the thought made him restless. That night, for the first
-time, she volunteered a remark. His temperature had gone up a little. He
-must be very quiet and go to sleep directly.
-
-"Yes; I know," he said. "It's because of you. Things I want to say. I'm
-really so much better. We can't go on like this, can we," he said,
-looking up at her as she sat beside him. "Why, you might slip out of my
-life any day, and I might never hear of you again."
-
-She sat looking down at him, a little askance, though gentle still, if
-gentle was the word for her changed face. "That's what I mean to do,"
-she said.
-
-"Oh, but--" Oldmeadow actually, in his alarm and resentment, struggled
-up on an elbow--"that won't do. I want to see you, really see you, now
-that I'm myself again. I want to talk with you--now that I can talk
-coherently. I want to ask you; well, I won't ask it now." She had put
-out her hand, her small, potent hand, and quietly pressed him back, and
-down upon his pillow while her face took on its look of almost stern
-authority. "I'll be good. But promise me you'll not go without telling
-me. And haven't you questions to ask, too?"
-
-Her face kept its severity, but, as he found this last appeal, her eyes
-widened, darkened, looked, for a moment, almost frightened.
-
-"I know that Barney is safe," she said. "I have nothing to ask."
-
-"Well; no; I see." He felt that he had been guilty of a blunder and it
-made him fretful. "For me, then. Not for you. Promise me. I won't be
-good unless you promise me. You can't go off and leave me like that."
-
-With eyes still dilated, she contemplated this rebellion.
-
-"You must promise me something, then," she said after a moment.
-
-He felt proud, delighted, as if he had gained a victory over her.
-
-"Done. If it's not too hard. What is it?"
-
-"You won't write to anybody. You won't tell anybody that you've seen me.
-Only Lady Lumley knows that I am here. And she has promised not to tell.
-Probably, soon, I shall have left France for ever."
-
-"I won't tell. I won't write. I can keep secrets as well as Lady Lumley.
-She does keep them, you know. So it's a compact."
-
-"Yes. It's a compact. You'll never tell them; and I won't go without
-letting you know. I promise. Now go to sleep."
-
-She laid her hand on his forehead, but, for a little while, he heard her
-breathing deeply and quickly and the sense of his blundering stayed with
-him so that sleep was longer in coming.
-
-All the same he was much better next day. He was able to sit up and had
-the glory and excitement of a chop for his midday dinner. And when the
-pleasant hour of tea arrived it was Adrienne herself who came in
-carrying the little tray.
-
-He had not seen her in daylight before and his first feeling was one of
-alarm, for, if she were afoot like this, in daylight, must it not mean
-that she was soon to leave the hospital? He felt shy of her, too, for,
-altered as she was by night, the day showed her as far more altered.
-Whether she seemed much older or much younger he could not have said.
-The coiffe, covering her forehead, and bound under her chin in a way
-peculiar to her, left only, as it were, the means of expression visible.
-
-She sat down by the window and looked out, glancing round from time to
-time as he drank his tea and it was she who found the calm little
-sentences, about the latest news from the front, the crashing of
-Bulgaria, that carried them on until he had finished. When he had pushed
-down his tray she turned her chair and faced him, folding her hands
-together on her white apron, and she said, and he knew that she had come
-to say it, "What was it you wanted to ask me?"
-
-He had had, while she sat at the window, her profile with the jutting
-nose, and her face, as it turned upon him now, made him think suddenly
-of a seagull. Questing, lonely, with vigilant eyes, it seemed to have
-great spaces before it; to be flying forth into empty spaces and to an
-unseen goal.
-
-"Are you going away, then?" He had not dared, somehow, to ask her
-before. He felt now that he could not talk until he knew.
-
-"Not yet," she said. "But I shall be going soon. The hospital is
-emptying and my nights on duty are very short. I have, really, only you
-and two others to take care of. That's why I am up so early to-day. And
-you are so much better that we can have a little talk; if you have
-anything to ask me."
-
-"It's this, of course," said Oldmeadow. "It seems to me you ought to
-dislike me. I misunderstood you in many ways. And now I owe you my life.
-Before we part I want to thank you and to ask you to forgive me."
-
-Her eyes, seen in daylight, were of the colour of distance, of arctic
-distances. That had always been their colour, though he had never before
-identified it.
-
-"But there is nothing to thank me for," she said. "I am here to take
-care of people."
-
-"Even people who misunderstood you. Even people you dislike. I know."
-He flushed, feeling that he had been duly snubbed. "But though you take
-care of everyone, anyone may thank you, too, mayn't they?"
-
-"I don't dislike you, Mr. Oldmeadow," she said after a moment. "And you
-didn't misunderstand me."
-
-"Oh," he murmured, more abashed than before. "I think so. Not, perhaps,
-what you did; but what you were. I didn't see you as you really were.
-That's what I mean."
-
-The perplexity, which had grown, even, to amazement, had left her eyes
-and she was intently looking at him. "There is nothing for you to be
-sorry for," she said. "Nothing for me to forgive. You were always
-right."
-
-"Always right? I can't take that, you know," said Oldmeadow, deeply
-discomposed. "You were blind, of course, and more sure of yourself than
-any of us can safely afford to be; but I wasn't always right."
-
-"Always. Always," she repeated. "I was blinder than you knew. I was more
-sure of myself."
-
-He lay looking at her and she looked back at him, but with a look that
-invited neither argument not protest. It remained remote and vigilant.
-She might have been the seagull looking down and noting, as she flew
-onward, that the small figure on the beach so far below had ceased to be
-that of an assailant in its attitude. How remote she was, white strange,
-fleeting creature! How near she had been once! The memory of how near
-rushed over his mind. He had, despite the delirious visions of her
-stricken face, hardly thought at all, since really seeing her again, of
-that last time. Everything had fitted itself on, rather, to his earliest
-memories of her, tinged all of them, it was true, with a deeper meaning,
-but not till this moment consciously admitting it. It rushed in now,
-poignant with the recovered smell of wet, dark ivy, the recovered sound
-of her stifled sobs as she had stumbled, broken, beside him in the rain.
-And with the memory came the desire that she should again be near.
-
-"Tell me," he said, "what are you going to do? You said you might be
-leaving France for ever. Shall you go back to America?"
-
-"I don't think so. Not for a long time," she answered. "There will be
-things to do over here, out of France, for a great many years I
-imagine."
-
-He hesitated, then took a roundabout way. "And when I get home, if,
-owing to you, I ever get there, may I not tell them that you're safe and
-sound? It would be happier for them to know that, wouldn't it?"
-
-Her vigilance still dwelt upon him as though she suspected in this
-sudden change of subject some craft of approach, but she answered
-quietly:
-
-"No; I think it will be happier for them to forget me. They will be told
-if I die. I have arranged for that."
-
-"They can't very well forget you," said Oldmeadow after a moment. "They
-must always wonder."
-
-"I know." She glanced away and trouble came into her face. "I know. But
-as much as possible. You must not make me real again by telling them.
-You have promised. You care for them. You know what I mean."
-
-"Yes; I've promised. And I see what you mean. But," said Oldmeadow
-suddenly, and this, of course, was what he had been coming to. "I don't
-want to forget. I want you to stay real. You must let me know what
-becomes of you, always, please."
-
-Astonishment, now, effaced her trouble. "You? Why?" she asked.
-
-He smiled a little. "Well, because, if you'll let me say it, I'm fond of
-you. I feel responsible for you. I've been too deeply in your life,
-you've been too deeply in mine, for us to disappear from each other.
-Don't you remember," he said, and he found it with a sense of
-achievement, ridiculous as it might sound, "how I held the tea-pot for
-you? That's what I mean. You must let me go on holding it."
-
-But she could feel no amusement. She was pressing her hands tightly
-together in her lap, her eyes were wide and her astonishment, he seemed
-to see, almost brought tears to them. "Fond? You?" she said. "Of me? Oh,
-no, Mr. Oldmeadow, I can't believe that. You are sorry, I know. You are
-very sorry. But you can't be fond."
-
-"And why not?" said Oldmeadow, and he raised himself on his elbow the
-more directly to challenge her. "Why shouldn't I be fond of you, pray?
-You must swallow it, for it's the truth and I've a right to my own
-feelings, I hope."
-
-She put aside the playfulness in which his grim earnest veiled itself.
-"Because you saw. Because you know. All about me. From the first."
-
-"Well?" he questioned after a moment, still raised on his elbow but now
-with the grimness unalloyed. "What of it?"
-
-"You remember what I was. You remember what you saw. You would have
-saved them from me if you could; and you couldn't. How can you be fond
-of a person who has ruined all their lives?"
-
-"Upon my soul," said Oldmeadow laughing, his eyes on hers, "you talk as
-though you'd been a Lucrezia Borgia! What were you worse than an
-exalted, stubborn, rather conceited girl? Things went wrong, I know, and
-partly because of me. But it wasn't all your fault, I'll swear it. And
-if it was, it was your mistake; not your crime."
-
-"Oh, no, no, no," said Adrienne, and the compulsion of his feeling had
-brought a note of anguish to her voice. "It wasn't that. It was worse
-than that. Don't forget. Don't think you are fond of me because I can
-make you sleep. It's always been so; I see it now--the power I've had
-over people; the horrible power. For power is horrible unless one is
-good; unless one is using it for goodness."
-
-"Well, so you were," Oldmeadow muttered, falling back on his pillow, her
-vehemence, her strange passion, almost daunting him. "It's not because
-you make me go to sleep that I'm fond of you. What utter rubbish!"
-
-"It is! it is!" she repeated. "I've seen it happen too often. It always
-happens. It binds people to me. It makes them cling to me as if I could
-give them life. It makes them believe me to be a sort of saint!"
-
-"Well, if you can help them with it? You have helped them. The war's
-your great chance in that, you'll admit. No one can accuse you of trying
-to get power over people now."
-
-"Perhaps not. I'm not thinking of what I may be accused of, but of what
-happens."
-
-"It doesn't happen with me. I was fond of you--well, we won't go back to
-that. And you did use it for goodness. Power came by the way and you
-took it. Of course."
-
-"I thought I was using it for goodness. I thought I was good. That was
-the foundation of everything. We must go back, Mr. Oldmeadow. You don't
-see as I thought you did. You don't understand. I didn't mean to set
-myself up above other people. I thought they were good, too. I was happy
-in my goodness, and when they weren't happy it seemed to me they missed
-something I had and that it was a mistake that I could set right for
-them. I'm going back to the very beginning. Long before you ever knew
-me. Everything fell into my hand. I loved people, or thought I did, and
-if they didn't love me I thought it their mistake. That was the way it
-looked to me, for my whole life long, until you came. I couldn't
-understand at first, when you came. I couldn't see what you thought. I
-believed that I could make you love me, too, and when I saw, for you
-made it plain, that you disliked me, it seemed to me worse than mistake.
-I thought that you must be against goodness; dangerous; the way you
-pushed me back--back--and showed me always something I had not thought I
-meant at the bottom of everything I did. I felt that I wanted to turn
-away from you and to turn people who loved me away from you, lest you
-should infect them. And all the while, all the while I was trying to
-escape--the truth that you saw and that I didn't." She stopped for a
-moment while, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow stared at her. Her breath
-seemed to fail her, and she leaned forward and put her elbows on her
-knees and bent her forehead on her joined hands. "It came at last. You
-remember how it came," she said, and the passion of protest had fallen
-from her voice. She spoke with difficulty. "Partly through you, and,
-partly, through my failure; I had never failed before. My failure with
-Barney. My failure to keep him and to get him back. I couldn't believe
-it at first. I struggled and struggled. You saw me. Everything turned
-against me. It was as if the world had changed its shape and colour when
-I struggled against it. Everything went down. And when I felt I wasn't
-loved, when I felt myself going down, with all the rest, I became bad.
-Bad, bad," she repeated, and her voice, heavy with its slow reiteration,
-was like a clenched hand of penitence beating on a breast: "really bad
-at last, for I had not known before what I was and the truth was there,
-staring me in the face. I did dreadful things, then. Mean things; cruel,
-hateful things, shutting my eyes, stopping my ears, so that I should not
-see what I was doing. I ran about and crouched and hid--from myself; do
-you follow my meaning?--from God. And then at last, when I was stripped
-bare, I had to look at Him."
-
-She raised herself and leaned back in her chair. Her voice had trembled
-more and more with the intensity of the feeling that upheld her and she
-put her handkerchief to her lips and pressed it to them, looking across
-at him. And, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow looked back at her,
-motionless and silent.
-
-Was it sympathy, pity or tenderness that almost overwhelmed him as he
-gazed at her? He could not have said, though knowing that the unity that
-was in them both, the share of the eternal that upheld their lives,
-flowed out from his eyes into hers as he looked and from hers to his.
-They were near at last; near as it is rarely given to human beings to
-experience nearness, and the awe of such a partaking was perhaps the
-ground of all he felt.
-
-"You see," he said, and a long time had passed, "I was mistaken."
-
-She did not answer him. Perhaps she did not understand.
-
-"I never knew you were a person who could come to the truth like that,"
-he said.
-
-Still holding her handkerchief to her lips, she slightly shook her head.
-
-"Even you never thought that I was bad."
-
-"I thought everybody was bad," said Oldmeadow, "until they came to know
-that goodness doesn't lie in themselves. The reason you angered me so
-was that you didn't see you were like the rest of us. And only people
-capable of great goodness can know such an agony of self-recognition."
-
-"No," she repeated. "Everyone is not bad like me. You know that's not
-true. You know that some people, people you love--are not like that.
-They need no agony of recognition, for nothing could ever make them mean
-and cruel."
-
-He thought for a moment. "That's because you expected so much more of
-yourself; because you'd believed so much more, and were, of course, more
-wrong. Your crash was so much greater because your spiritual pride was
-so great. And I thought you were a person a crash would do for; that
-there'd be nothing left of you if you came a crash. That was my mistake;
-for see what there is left."
-
-She rose to her feet. His words seemed to press her too far. "You are
-kind," she said in a hurried voice. "I understand. You are so sorry.
-I've talked and talked. It's very thoughtless of me. I must go now."
-
-She came and took the tray, but he put his hand on her arm, detaining
-her. "You'll own you're not bad now? You'll own there's something real
-for me to be fond of? Wait. I want you to acknowledge it, to accept
-it--my fondness. Don't try to run away."
-
-She stood above him, holding the tray, while he kept his hold on her
-arm. "All I need to know," she said, after a moment, and she did not
-look at him, "is that no one is ever safe--unless they always remember."
-
-"That's it, of course," said Oldmeadow gravely, "and that you must die
-to live; and you did die. But you live now, really, and life comes
-through you again. Your gift, you know, of which you were so much afraid
-just now, lest it had enveigled me. Don't you see it? How can I put it
-for you? You had a sort of wholeness before. There must be wholeness of
-a sort if life is to come through; harmony of a sort, and faith. It
-wasn't an illusion even then. When you were shattered you lost your
-gift. The light can't shine through shattered things; and that was when
-you recognized that without God we are a nothingness; a nothingness and
-a restlessness mingled. You know. There are no words for it, though so
-many people have found it and tried to say it. I know, too, after a
-fashion. I've had crashes, too. But now your gift has come back, for you
-are whole again; built up on an entirely new principle. You see, it's
-another you I am fond of. You must believe in her, too. You do believe
-in her. If you didn't you could not have found your gift."
-
-She had stood quite still while he spoke, looking down, not at him but
-at the little tray between her hands, and he saw that she was near
-tears. Her voice was scarcely audible as she said: "Thank you." And she
-made an effort over herself to add: "What you say is true."
-
-"We must talk," said Oldmeadow. He felt extraordinarily happy. "There
-are so many things I want to ask you about." And he went on, his hand
-still on her arm, seeing that she struggled not to cry and helping her
-to recover: "You're not going away for some time, yet, I hope. Please
-don't. There'll soon be no need of hospitals of this sort, anywhere,
-will there? and you must manage to stay on here a little longer. I
-shan't get on if you go. You won't leave me just as you've saved me,
-will you, Mrs. Barney?"
-
-At the name, over-taxed as she was already, a pitiful colour flooded her
-face and before his blunder made visible his own blood answered hers,
-mounting hotly to his forehead. "Oh, I'm so sorry," he murmured,
-helpless and hating himself, while his hand dropped. She stood over him,
-holding herself there so as not to hurt him by the aspect of flight. She
-even, in a moment, forced herself to smile. It was the first smile he
-had seen on her face. "You've nothing to be sorry for, Mr. Oldmeadow,"
-she said, as she had said before. "You're very kind to me. I wish I
-could tell you how kind I feel you are." And as she turned away,
-carrying the tray, she added: "No; I won't go yet."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-He did not see her again for two days; and she did not even come at
-night. But he now kept possession of his new strength and slept without
-her help. The sense of happiness brooded upon him. He did not remember
-ever having felt so happy. His life was irradiated and enhanced as if by
-some supreme experience.
-
-It was already late afternoon when, on the second day, she appeared; but
-in this month of August his room was still filled with the reflection of
-the sunlight and the warm colour bathed her as she entered. She wore a
-blue cloak over her white linen dress and she had perhaps been walking,
-for there was a slight flush on her cheeks and a look almost of
-excitement in her eyes.
-
-She unfastened her cloak and put it aside and then, taking the chair
-near the window, clasping her hands, as before, in her lap, she said,
-without preamble and with a peculiar vehemence: "You hear often from
-Barney, don't you?"
-
-Oldmeadow felt himself colouring. "Only once, directly. It rather tires
-him to sit up, you know. But he's getting on wonderfully and the doctors
-think he'll soon be able to walk a little--with a crutch, of course."
-
-"But you do hear, constantly, from Nancy, don't you," said Adrienne,
-clasping and unclasping her hands but speaking with a steadiness he felt
-to be rehearsed. "He is at Coldbrooks, I know, and Nancy is with him,
-and his mother and Mrs. Averil. It all seems almost happy, doesn't it?
-as happy as it can be, now, with Palgrave dead and Barney shackled."
-
-Startled as he was by her directness Oldmeadow managed to meet it.
-
-"Yes; almost happy," he said. "I was with them before I came out this
-last time and felt that about them. Poor Mrs. Chadwick is a good deal
-changed; but even she is reviving."
-
-"She has had too much to bear," said Adrienne. "I saw her again, too, at
-the end, when she came to Palgrave. She can never forgive me. Meg is
-happy now, but she will never forgive me either. I wrought havoc in
-their lives, didn't I?"
-
-"Well, you or fate. I don't blame you for any of that, you know," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-"I don't say that I blame myself for it," said Adrienne. "I may have
-been right or I may have been wrong. I don't know. It is not in things
-like that that I was bad. But what we must face is that I wrought havoc;
-that if it hadn't been for me they might all, now, be really happy.
-Completely happy. If I had not been there Palgrave would not have been
-so sure of himself. And if I had not been there Nancy and Barney would
-have married."
-
-"I don't know," said Oldmeadow. "If Barney hadn't fallen in love with
-you he might very probably have fallen in love with some one else, not
-Nancy."
-
-"Perhaps, not probably," said Adrienne. "And if he had he would have
-stayed in love with her, for Barney is a faithful person. And it may
-have been because I was so completely the wrong person for him that he
-came to know so quickly that Nancy was completely the right one. What I
-feel is that anybody but Nancy would always have been, really, wrong.
-And now that he loves her but is shackled, there's only one thing more
-that can be done. I have often thought of it; I needn't tell you that.
-But, till now, I could never see my way. It's you who have shown it to
-me. In what you said the other day. It's wonderful the way you come into
-my life, Mr. Oldmeadow. You made me feel that I had a friend in you; a
-true, true friend. And I know what a friend Nancy and Barney have. So
-the way opens. We must set Barney free, Mr. Oldmeadow. He and Nancy must
-be free to marry. You and I can do it for them and only you and I."
-
-"What do you mean?" Oldmeadow murmured as, after her words, the silence
-had grown deep between them. He repeated, using now the name inevitably
-and forgetting the other day. "What do you mean, Mrs. Barney?"
-
-To-day she did not flush, but to-day there was a reason for her
-acceptance. It was, he saw in her next words, only as Barney's wife that
-she could help him.
-
-"He must divorce me," she said. "You and I could go away together and he
-could divorce me. Oh, I know, it's a dreadful thing to ask of you, his
-friend. I've thought of all that. Wait. Let me finish. I've thought of
-nothing else since the other day. It came to me in the night after you
-had been so wonderful to me; after that wonderful thing had happened to
-us. You felt it, too, I know. It was as if we had taken a sacrament
-together. I'm not a Christian. You know what I mean. We felt the deepest
-things together, didn't we. And it's because of that that I can ask
-this of you. No one else would understand. No one else would care for me
-enough, or for him. And then, you could explain it all to him and no one
-else could do that. You could explain that it had been to set him free.
-To set _me_ free. Because they'd have to think and believe it was for my
-sake, too, that you did it, wouldn't they? so as to have it really happy
-for them; so that it shouldn't hurt. When it was all over you could go
-and explain why you had done it. All we have to do, you know, is to stay
-in a hotel together; I bearing your name. It's very simple, really."
-
-He lay staring at her, overwhelmed. The tears had risen to his eyes as
-her beauty and her absurdity were thus revealed to him, and as she spoke
-of their sacrament; but amazement blurred all his faculties. He had
-never in his life been so amazed. And when he began to emerge, to take
-possession of himself again, it was only of her he could think; not of
-himself or Nancy and Barney. Only of her and of her beauty and
-absurdity.
-
-"Dear Mrs. Barney," he said at last, and he did not know what to say;
-"it's you who are wonderful, you alone. I'd do anything, anything for
-you that I could. Anything but this. Because, truly, this is
-impossible."
-
-"Why impossible?" she asked, and her voice was almost stern.
-
-"You can't smirch yourself like that." It was only one reason; but it
-was the first that came to him.
-
-"I?" she stared. "I don't think it is to be smirched. I shall know why I
-do it."
-
-"Other people won't know. Other people will think you smirched."
-
-"No one I care for. Everyone I care for will understand."
-
-"But to the world at large? Your name? Your reputation?" Oldmeadow
-protested. "Do they mean nothing to you?"
-
-A faintly bitter humour touched her lips. "You've always taken the side
-of the world in all our controversies, haven't you, Mr. Oldmeadow? and
-you were probably right and I was probably wrong; but not because of
-what the world would think. I know I'm right now, and those words: name:
-reputation--mean nothing to me. The world and I haven't much to do with
-each other. A divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and fever hospitals
-just as well as the most unsmirched woman of the world. I'm not likely
-to want to be presented at courts, am I? Don't think of me, please. It's
-not a question of me. Only of you. Will you do it?"
-
-"I couldn't possibly do it," said Oldmeadow, and he was still hardly
-taking her monstrous proposal seriously.
-
-"Why not?" she asked, scrutinizing him. "It's not that you mind about
-your name and reputation, is it?"
-
-"Not much. Perhaps not much," said Oldmeadow; "but about theirs. That's
-what you don't see. That it would be impossible for them. You don't see
-how unique you are; how unlike other people. Nancy and Barney couldn't
-marry on a fake. The only way out," said Oldmeadow, looking at her with
-an edge of ironic grimness in his contemplation, "if one were really to
-consider it, would be for you to marry me afterwards and for us to
-disappear."
-
-She gazed at him and he saw that she weighed the idea. "But you'd be
-shackled then," she said, and her thoughts were evidently clear. "It
-would mean, besides, that you would lose them."
-
-"As to being shackled," Oldmeadow, still grimly, met the difficulty,
-"that's of no moment. I'm the snuffy, snappy bachelor type, you
-remember, and I don't suppose I'd ever have married. As to losing them,
-I certainly should."
-
-"We mustn't think of it then," said Adrienne. "You and Barney and Nancy
-mustn't lose each other."
-
-"But we should in either way. I could hardly take up my friendship with
-them again after Barney had divorced you on account of me, even if you
-and I didn't marry. It would give the whole thing away, if it were
-possible for them to meet me again. As I say, they'd feel they had no
-right to their freedom on such a fake as that."
-
-"They couldn't feel really free unless some one had really committed
-adultery for their sakes?" Again Adrienne smiled with her faint
-bitterness and he wondered if a man and woman had ever before had a more
-astonishing conversation. "That seems to me to be asking for a little
-too much icing on your cake. Of course it couldn't be a nice, new, snowy
-wedding-cake; poor Mrs. Chadwick wouldn't like it at all, nor Mrs.
-Averil; but it would be the best we could do for them; and I should
-think that when people love each other and are the right people for each
-other they'd be thankful for any kind of cake. Even if it were a good
-deal burned around the edges," Adrienne finished, her slight bitterness
-evidently finding satisfaction in the simile.
-
-"But they wouldn't see it at all like that," said Oldmeadow, now with
-unalloyed gravity. "They'd see it as a cake they had stolen; a cake they
-had no right to. It's a question of the laws we live under. Not of
-personal, but of public integrity. They couldn't profit by a hoodwinked
-law. It's that that would spoil things for them. According to the law
-they'd have no right to their freedom. And, now that I am speaking
-seriously, it's that I feel, too. What you are asking of me, my dear
-friend, is no more nor less than a felony."
-
-She meditated, unmoved, still almost sternly, turning her eyes from him
-and leaning her elbow on the window-sill, her head upon her hand. "I
-see," she said at last. "For people who mind about the law, I see that
-it would spoil it. I don't mind. I think the law's there to force us to
-be kind and just to each other if we won't be by ourselves. If the law
-gets tied up in such a foolish knot as to say that people may sin to set
-other people free, but mayn't pretend to sin, I think we have a right to
-help it out and to make it do good against its own will. I don't mind
-the law; luckily for them. Because I won't go back from it now. I won't
-leave them there, loving each other but never knowing the fullness of
-love. I won't give up a thing I feel right because other people feel it
-wrong. So I must find somebody else."
-
-Oldmeadow looked at her in a culminated and wholly unpleasant
-astonishment. "Somebody else? Who could there be?"
-
-"You may well ask," Adrienne remarked, glancing round at him with a
-touch of mild asperity. "You are the only completely right person,
-because only you and I feel enough for them to do it for them. What I
-must do now is to find some one who would feel enough, just for me, to
-do it for me. It makes it more unfair for him, doesn't it. He'll have
-only the one friend to help. But on the other hand it will leave them
-without a scruple. They'd know from the beginning that with you and me
-it was a fake; but with him it might seem quite probable. Yes; it's
-strange; I had a letter from him only yesterday. I shouldn't have
-thought of him otherwise. I might have had to give up. But the more I
-think," Adrienne meditated intently, her head on her hand, her eyes
-turned on the prospect outside, "the more I seem to see that Hamilton
-Prentiss is the only other chance."
-
-"Hamilton Prentiss?" Oldmeadow echoed faintly.
-
-"You met him once," said Adrienne, looking round at him again. "But
-you've probably forgotten. At the dinner we gave, Barney and I, in
-London, so long ago. Tall, fair, distinguished looking. The son of my
-Californian friend; the one you and Mrs. Aldesey thought so tiresome."
-
-He felt himself colouring, but he could give little thought to the minor
-discomfiture, so deeply was his mind engaged with the major one.
-
-"Did we?" he said.
-
-"And you thought I didn't see it," said Adrienne. "It made me dreadfully
-angry with you both, though I didn't know I was angry; I thought I was
-only grieved. I behaved spitefully to Mrs. Aldesey that night, you will
-remember, though I didn't know I was spiteful. I did know, however, that
-she was separated from her husband"--again Adrienne looked, calmly,
-round at him--"and it was a lie I told Barney when I said I didn't.
-Sometimes I think that lie was the beginning of everything; that it was
-when I told it that I began to hide from myself. However--" She passed
-from the personal theme. "Yes; Hamilton is, I believe, big enough and
-beautiful and generous enough to do it."
-
-"Oh, he is, is he?" said Oldmeadow. "And I'm not, I take it. You're
-horribly unkind. But I don't want to talk about myself. What I want to
-talk about is you. You must drop this preposterous idea of yours. Really
-you must. You've had ideas like it before. Remember Meg; what a mess you
-made there. I told you then that you were wrong and I tell you you're
-wrong now. You must give it up. Do you see? We're always quarrelling,
-aren't we?"
-
-"But I don't at all know that I was wrong about Meg, Mr. Oldmeadow,"
-said Adrienne. "And if I was, it was because I didn't understand her. I
-do understand myself, and I don't agree that I'm wrong or that my plan
-is preposterous. You won't call it preposterous, I suppose, if it
-succeeds and makes Barney and Nancy happy. No; I'm not going to drop it.
-Nothing you could say could make me drop it. As for Hamilton, I don't
-set him above you; not in any way. It's only that you and he have
-different lights. I know why you can't do this. You've shown me why. And
-I wouldn't for anything not have you follow your own light."
-
-"And you seriously mean," cried Oldmeadow, "that you'd ask this young
-fellow--I remember him perfectly and I'm sure he's capable of any degree
-of ingenuousness--you'd ask him to go about with you as though he were
-your husband? Why, for one thing, he'd be sure to fall head over heels
-in love with you, and where would you be then?"
-
-Adrienne examined him. "But from the point of view of hoodwinking, that
-would be all to the good, wouldn't it?" she inquired; "though
-unfortunate for Hamilton. He won't, however," she went on, her dreadful
-lucidity revealing to him the hopelessness of any protest he might still
-have found to make. "There's a very lovely girl out in California he's
-devoted to; a young poetess. He'll have to write to her about it first,
-of course; Hamilton's at the front now, you see; and I must write to his
-mother. She and Carola Brown are very near each other and will talk it
-out together and I feel sure they will see it as I do. They'll see it as
-something big I'm asking them to do for me--to set me free. I'm sure I
-can count on Gertrude and I'm sure Hamilton can count on Carola. She's a
-very rare, strong spirit."
-
-Oldmeadow, suddenly, was feeling exhausted, and a clutch of hysterical
-laughter, as she spoke these last words, held his throat for a moment.
-He laid his head back on his pillow and closed his eyes, while he saw
-Adrienne and Hamilton Prentiss wandering by the banks of a French river
-where poplars stood against a silver sky. He knew that he had accepted
-nothing when he said at last: "Shall we talk about it another time?
-To-morrow? I mean, don't take any steps, will you, until we've talked.
-Don't write to your beautiful, big friend."
-
-"You always make fun of me a little, don't you," said Adrienne
-tranquilly. She seemed aware of some further deep discomposure in him
-and willing, though not comprehending it, to meet it with friendly
-tolerance. "If he is big and beautiful, why shouldn't I say it? But I
-won't write until we've talked again. It can't be, anyway, until the war
-is over. And I've had already to wait for four years."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-She might feel that he had cruelly failed her; but when she came at the
-same hour next day it was evident to him from her demeanour that she
-imagined him resigned, if not converted, to her alternative plan. She
-carried a bunch of late roses and said that she had been having a lovely
-drive with a dear old friend from Denver, who had managed to get to
-Boulogne to see her.
-
-"Your friends all come from such distant places," said Oldmeadow with a
-pretended fretfulness that veiled an indescribable restlessness.
-"California, Denver, Chicago. They have, all of them, an implacably
-remote sound, as if they were carrying you, already, off to other
-planets."
-
-"Well, it doesn't take so long, really, to get to any of them," said
-Adrienne, placing the roses in a glass of water by his side, a close,
-funny little bunch, red roses in the middle and white ones all round.
-She had taken off her cloak and laid a newspaper down on the little
-table, seating herself, then, in the window and keeping in her hands a
-pocket-book that, in its flatness and length and the way she held it,
-reminded him of the little blue and grey fan of the dinner-party where
-she had told her first lie. His mind was emptied of thought. Only
-pictures crossed it, pictures of Adrienne and the tall, fair youth with
-the ingenuous eyes, wandering by the French river; and, again, Adrienne
-on that night, now as distant as California, when, with her fan and
-pearl-wreathed hair, she had met his persiflage with her rebuking
-imperturbability. But under the pictures a sense of violent tension made
-his breathing shallow. He fixed his eyes on the pocket-book and wondered
-how she had nursed people with those ineffectual-looking hands.
-
-"Where were you trained for nursing?" he asked her suddenly. "Out here?
-or in England?"
-
-"In England. In Oxford. Before Palgrave was taken," said Adrienne. "I
-gave up my philosophy very soon for that. I worked in a hospital there."
-
-"And how came you to go out to Salonika? Tell me about it. And about
-your hospital here," he went on with a growing sense of keeping
-something off. "It's your own hospital I hear, and wonderfully run. Sir
-Kenneth was talking to me about you this morning."
-
-"What a fine person he is," said Adrienne. "Yes, he came to see us and
-liked the way it was done." She was pleased, he saw, to tell him
-anything he chose to ask about. She told him about her hospital and of
-all its adventures--they had been under fire so often that it had become
-an everyday event; and about how admirable a staff she had
-organized--"rare, devoted people"--and about their wounded, their
-desperately wounded _poilus_ and how they came to love them all. He
-remembered, as she talked, that she was rich; even richer than he had
-thought, since she could leave a fortune to Palgrave and yet equip
-hospitals in France and in Salonika. She told him about Salonika, too.
-It had been a fever hospital there and the misery and suffering had
-seemed worse than the suffering here in France. Yes; she had caught the
-fever herself and had nearly died.
-
-She had no gift for the apt or vivid word. Her nature had been revealed
-to him as barbarous, or sublime, in its unconventionality, yet it
-expressed itself only in the medium of trite convention. But his time of
-jibbing at her platitudes was long since passed. He listened, rather,
-with a tender, if superficial interest, seeing her heroic little figure
-moving, unconcerned, among pestilences and bombardments. "It's not only
-what you tell me," he said, when she had brought her recital up to date.
-"I heard so much from Sir Kenneth. You are one of the great people of
-the war."
-
-"Am I?" she said. That, too, unfeignedly, left her unconcerned.
-
-"You've the gift of leadership. The gift for big things generally."
-
-She nodded. "I'm only fit for big things."
-
-"Only? How do you mean?"
-
-"Little ones are more difficult, aren't they. My feet get tangled in
-them. To be fit for daily life and all the tangles; that's the real
-test, isn't it? That's just the kind of thing you see so clearly, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Big things and the people who do them are just the kind of
-things you see through."
-
-"Oh, but you misunderstood me--or misunderstand," said Oldmeadow. "Big
-things are the condition of life; the little things can only be built up
-on them. One must fight wars and save the world before one can set up
-one's tea-tables." He remembered having thought of something like this
-at Lydia's tea-table. "Tea-tables are important, I know, and the things
-that happen round them. But if one can nurse a ward of typhus patients
-single-handed one must be forgiven for letting the tea-pot slip. Really
-I never imagined you capable of all you've done."
-
-"I always thought I was capable of anything," said Adrienne smiling
-slightly, her eyes meeting his in a tranquil partaking of the jest, that
-must be at her expense. "You helped me to find that out about
-myself--with all the rest. And I was right enough in thinking that I
-could face things and lead people. But I wasn't capable of the most
-important things. I wasn't capable of being a wise and happy wife. I
-wasn't even capable of being truthful in drawing-rooms when other women
-made me angry. But I can go on battle-fields and found hospitals and
-tend the sick and dying. Shells and pestilences"--her smile was
-gone--"if people knew how trivial they are--compared to seeing your
-husband look at you with hatred."
-
-She had turned her eyes away as she was thus betrayed into revealing the
-old bitternesses of her heart and he dropped his to the little
-pocket-book that now lay still between her hands. The feeling in her
-voice, the suffering it revealed to him, with the bitterness, woke an
-unendurable feeling in himself. He did not clearly see what the test was
-to which he put himself; but he knew that what he must say to her was
-the most difficult thing he had ever had to say; and he found it only
-after the silence had grown long.
-
-"Mrs. Barney--everything has changed, hasn't it; you've changed; I've
-changed; Barney may have changed. It was only, after all, a moment of
-miserable misunderstanding between you. He never really knew what you
-were feeling. He thought you didn't care for him any longer, when,
-really, you were finding out how much you cared. Don't you think,
-before you take final decisions, that you ought to see Barney again?
-Don't you think you ought to give him another chance? I could arrange it
-all for you, when I got home."
-
-The flood of colour, deep and sick, had mounted to her face, masking it
-strangely, painfully, to where the white linen cut across her brow and
-bound her chin. And, almost supplicatingly, since he saw that she could
-not speak, he murmured: "You can be a wise and happy wife now; and he
-loved you so dearly."
-
-She did not lift her eyes. She sat there, looking down, tightly holding
-the pocket-book in her lap.
-
-"Let me tell him, when I get home, that I've seen you again," he
-supplicated. "Let me arrange a meeting."
-
-Slowly, not lifting her eyes, she shook her head and he heard her, just
-heard her say: "It's not pride. Don't think that."
-
-"No; no; I know it's not. Good heavens, I couldn't think it that. You
-feel it's no good. You feel that his heart is occupied. It is. I can't
-pretend to hide from you that it is. But your place in it was supreme.
-There would be no unfairness if you took it again. Nancy would be the
-first person to want you to take it. You know that that is true of
-Nancy."
-
-"I know. I heard her plead for me," said Adrienne.
-
-The sentence fell, soft and trenchant; and he remembered, in the silence
-that followed, what she had heard. He drew a long breath, feeling half
-suffocated. But he had met his test. It was inevitable, he knew it now,
-that she should say "Barney and I are parted for ever."
-
-Silence dropped again between them. He did not know what was passing
-behind its curtain and whether bitterness or only grief was in her
-heart.
-
-He lay, drawing the slow, careful breaths of his recovery, and saw her
-presently put out her hand and take up her _New York Herald_ and unfold
-it. She looked down the columns unseeingly; but the little feint of
-interest helped her.
-
-Slowly the colour faded from her face and it was as if the curtain
-lifted when, laying the paper down, she said, and he knew that she was
-finding words to comfort him: "Really everything is quite clear before
-me now. I shall write at once to Hamilton, and to his mother. If he
-agrees, if they all agree, he and I can go away very soon I think.
-Afterwards, I shall stay over here. I've quite made up my mind to that.
-There'll be so much to do; for years and years; for all one's lifetime.
-Ways will open. When one is big," she smiled the smile at once so gentle
-and so bitter, "and has plenty of money, ways always do. I'm a
-_déracinée_ creature; I never had any roots, you know; and I can't do
-better, I'm sure, than to make soil for the uprooted people to grow in
-again. That's what's most needed now, isn't it? Soil. It's the
-fundamental things of life, its bare possibilities, that have been so
-terribly destroyed over here. America has, still, more soil than she can
-use, and since I'm an American, and a rich one, my best plan is to use
-America, in my fortune and my person, for Europe. Because I love them
-both and because they both need each other."
-
-She had quite recovered herself Her face had found again its pale, fawn
-tints and she was looking at him with her quietest contemplation while
-he, in silence, lay looking at her.
-
-"It's not about the things I shall do that I'm perplexed, ever," she
-went on. "But I'm sometimes perplexed about myself. I sometimes wish I
-were a Roman Catholic. In an order of some kind. Under direction. To put
-oneself in the hands of a wise director, it must be so peaceful. Like
-French friends I have; such wise, fine women; so poised and so secure. I
-often envy them. But that can't be for me."
-
-She must feel in his silence now the quality of some extreme emotion,
-and that she believed it to be pity was evident to him as she went on,
-seeking to comfort him; and troubled by his trouble: "You mustn't be
-sorry. I am not unhappy. I am a happy person. Do you remember that
-Sunday morning at Coldbrooks, long ago? How I said to Mother--to Mrs.
-Chadwick--that I had no doubts? You thought me fatuous. I dimly saw that
-you thought me fatuous. But it's still true of me. I must tell you, so
-that you shan't think I'm unhappy. I've been, it seems to me, through
-everything since then. I've had doubts--every doubt: of myself; of life;
-of all the things I trusted. Doubt at last, when the dreadful darknesses
-came--Barney's hatred, Palgrave's death--of God. We've never spoken of
-Palgrave, have we? I was with him, you had heard, and at the very end it
-was he who helped me rather than I him. He held me up. When he was dying
-he held me up. He made me promise him that I would not kill myself--for
-he guessed what I was thinking; he made me promise to go on. And he
-saved me. The light began to come back to me while I sat beside him
-after he had died."
-
-She had not looked at him while she spoke, but down at her hands that,
-trembling, turned and returned the little pocket-book. And controlling
-her voice as she sought to control the trembling of her hands, she said:
-"Perhaps it is always like that. When one confesses one's sin and hates
-it in oneself, even if it is still there, tempting one, the light begins
-to come back. After that it came more and more. What you call my gift is
-part of it. Isn't it strange that I should have had that gift when I was
-so blind? But what you said was true. I had a sort of wholeness then,
-because I was blind. And now that I see, it's a better wholeness and a
-safer gift. That is what I wanted to say, really. To explain, so that
-you shan't be sorry. No one who can find that light can be unhappy. It
-comes to me now, always, when I need it. I can make it shine in other
-people--as Palgrave made it shine in me. Love does it. Isn't it
-wonderful that it should be so? Nothing else is real beside it. Nothing
-is real without it. And when it happens, when one feels it come through
-and shine further, it is more, far more, than happiness."
-
-All the while that she had spoken, pale, and with her trembling hands,
-he had lain looking at her in silence, a silence that was dividing him,
-as if by a vast chasm, from all his former life.
-
-He and Adrienne stood on one side of this chasm, and, while it seemed to
-widen with a dizzying rapidity, he saw that on the other stood Barney,
-Nancy, Coldbrooks, and Lydia--poor Lydia--and that they were being borne
-away from him for ever. He saw nothing before him but Adrienne; and for
-how long was he to keep her? That was his supreme risk; but he could
-not allay it or step back to the further brink. It was his very life
-that had fallen in two while she had spoken and without the sense of
-choice; though he dimly saw that, in the restlessness and urgency of the
-hours since he had seen her last, the choice had been preparing.
-
-He was taking the only step possible for him to take on the narrow
-foothold of the present when he said, in a voice so quiet that she might
-even be unaware of his seeming gross irrelevance, "Do you know, about
-your plan--for Barney and Nancy--I've been thinking it over and I've
-decided that it must be I, not Hamilton."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Her eyes met his for a long time before he realized that she might find
-not only irrelevance but even irreverence. She had shown him her very
-soul and he had answered with this announcement. Of course it had been
-because of what she told him that he had seen at last his own necessity;
-but he could not tell her that.
-
-"I'm not sorry for you," he said. "I envy you. You are one of the few
-really happy people in the world."
-
-"But I'd quite given that idea up, Mr. Oldmeadow," she said. "What has
-made you change?"
-
-He saw the trouble in her face, the suspicion of her power and its
-compulsion over the lives of others. He took the bull by the horns.
-
-"You, of course. I can't pretend that it's anything else. I want to do
-it for you and with you."
-
-"But it's for Barney and Nancy that it's to be done," she said, and her
-gravity had deepened. "It's just the same for them--and you explained
-yesterday that it would spoil it for them."
-
-"It may spoil it somewhat," said Oldmeadow, contemplating her with a
-curious tranquillity; she was now all that was left him in life to
-contemplate; and she was all he needed. "But it won't prevent it. I
-still think it a wrong thing to do. I still think it a felony. But,
-since I can't turn you from it, what I've come to see is that it's, as
-you said, for you and me, who care for them, to do. It's not right, not
-decent or becoming, that anyone who doesn't even know them should be
-asked to do such a thing."
-
-"But Hamilton wouldn't do it for them," she said. "It would be for me he
-would do it. And he wouldn't think it a felony."
-
-"All the more reason that his innocence shouldn't be taken advantage of.
-I can't stand by and see it done. It's for my friends the felony will be
-committed and it's I who will bear the burden for them. As to his doing
-it for you, I know you better than he possibly can know you, and care
-for you more than he possibly can. If you're determined on committing a
-crime, I'll share the responsibility with you."
-
-"I know you care more. You are a wonderful friend. You are my best
-friend in the world." She gazed at him and he saw that for once he had
-troubled and perplexed her. "And it's wonderful of you to say you'll do
-it. But Hamilton won't feel it a burden; not as you will; and for him to
-do it won't spoil it for them. If you do it, it will spoil it for them.
-You said so. And how can I let you do a thing you feel so wrong for my
-sake?"
-
-"You'll have to. I won't have Hamilton sacrificed in order that their
-cake shall have no burnt edges. They'll have to pay something for it in
-social and moral discomfort. It would be nothing to the discomfort of
-Miss Brown, would it? I shall be able to put it clearly to Barney when I
-write and tell him that it's for your sake as well as his and that he
-and Nancy, who have never sought anything or hoped for anything, are in
-no way involved by our misdemeanour. I won't emphasize to Barney what I
-feel about that side of it. He's pretty ingenuous, too. It will be a
-less tidy happiness they'll have to put up with. That's all it comes to,
-as far as they are concerned."
-
-She was looking at him with the trouble and perplexity and she said:
-
-"They'll have to pay in far more than social and moral discomfort."
-
-"Well? In what way? How?" he challenged her.
-
-"You said they'd lose you."
-
-"Only, if you married me," he reminded her.
-
-But she remembered more accurately. "No. They'd lose you anyway. You
-said so. You said that if they could ever see you again it would make it
-too blatantly a fake. And it's true. I see it now. How could you turn up
-quietly, as if nothing had happened, after Barney had divorced me with
-you as co-respondent? There's Lady Cockerell," said Adrienne, and,
-though she was so grave, so troubled, it was with a touch of mild
-malice. "There's Mr. Bodman and Johnson, to say nothing of Mrs. Chadwick
-and Nancy's mother. No, I really don't see you facing them all at
-Coldbrooks after we'd come out in the 'Daily Mail' with head-lines and
-pictures."
-
-Her lucidity could indeed disconcert him when it sharpened itself like
-this with the apt use of his vocabulary. He had to stop to think.
-
-"There won't, at all events, be pictures," he paused by the triviality
-to remark. "We shan't appear. It will be an hotel over here and the case
-will be undefended. We needn't, really, consider all that too closely.
-At the worst, if they do lose me, it's not a devastating loss. They'll
-have each other."
-
-"Ah, but who will you have?" Adrienne inquired. "Hamilton will have
-Carola and they will have each other. But who will you have?"
-
-He lay and looked at her. There was only one answer to that question
-and he could not make it. He was aware of the insufficiency of his
-substitute. "I'd have your friendship," he said.
-
-"You have that now," said Adrienne. "And though I'm so your friend, I'll
-be leaving you, soon, probably for ever. We'll probably never meet
-again, Mr. Oldmeadow. Our paths lie so apart, don't they? My friendship
-will do you very little good."
-
-Her words cut into him, but he kept a brave countenance. "I'd have the
-joy of knowing I'd done something worth while for you. How easily I
-might have died here, if it hadn't been for you. My life is yours in a
-sense and I want you to use it rather than Hamilton's. I have my work,
-you know; lots of things I'm interested in to go back to some day. As
-you remarked, a divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and in the same way
-a co-respondent can write articles and go to concerts."
-
-"I know. I know what a fine, big life you have," she murmured, and the
-trouble on her face had deepened. "But how can I take it from you? A
-felony? How can I let you do, for my sake, something you feel to be so
-wrong?"
-
-"Give it up then," said Oldmeadow. And if he had found it difficult to
-make his plea for Barney a little while before, how much more difficult
-he found it to say this, and to mean it, now. "Give it up. That's your
-choice, and your only choice. You owe that to me. Indeed you do. To give
-it up or to accept me as your companion in iniquity. I'm not going to
-pretend I don't think it iniquity to give you ease. You're not a person
-who needs ease. And I can do without it, too. For your sake. So there
-you have it."
-
-"Not quite. Not quite," she really almost pleaded. "I couldn't ask it of
-Hamilton if he felt about it in the least little way as you do. And
-Carola doesn't care a bit about the law either. She's an Imagist, you
-know."--Adrienne offered this fact as if it would help to elucidate
-Carola's complaisances. "She's written some very original poetry. If it
-were Hamilton no one would lose anything, and Barney and Nancy would be
-free. Indeed, indeed I can't give it up when it's all there, before me,
-with everything to gain and nothing to lose for anybody, if it's
-Hamilton."
-
-"Then it must be me, you see," said Oldmeadow. "And I shan't talk to you
-about the iniquity again, I promise you. I've made my protest and
-civilization must get on as best it can. You're a terrible person, you
-know"--he smiled a little at her, finding the banter so that she should
-not guess at the commotion of his heart. "But I like you just as you
-are. Now where shall we go?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-He could not have believed that it would be so delicious to live with
-Adrienne Toner.
-
-Even at the moment when he had known that he loved her, he had been,
-though filled with the sense of a present heaven, as aware as ever of
-the discrepancies between them, and during the three months that
-separated them, he at Cannes, she nursing in Paris, he knew many doubts;
-never of his love, but of what it was making him do and of where it was
-going to lead them. He couldn't for the life of him imagine what was to
-become of them if his hopes were fulfilled, for he hardly saw himself
-following her off to Central Europe--it was to Serbia, her letters
-informed him, that her thoughts were turning--nor saw them established
-in London under the astonished gaze of Lydia Aldesey.
-
-She had selected Lyons as their place of meeting, because of the work
-for the _rapatriés_ that she wished to inspect there, and from the
-moment that he saw her descend from the Paris express, dressed in dark
-civilian clothes and carrying, with such an air of competence, her rug
-and dressing-case, all doubts were allayed and all restlessness
-dispelled.
-
-He had arrived the day before and had found an old-fashioned hotel with
-spacious rooms overlooking the Saône, and, as they drove to it on that
-November evening, she expressed herself, scrutinizing him with a
-professional eye, as dissatisfied with his recovery.
-
-It was because of the restlessness, of course, that he had not got as
-well as he should have, and he knew that he must, in the stress of
-feeling that now beset him, look strangely, and he promised her, feeling
-that he spoke the truth, that now that he had his nurse again complete
-recovery would be only a matter of days.
-
-"I want you to see our view," he said to her when the porter had carried
-up her little box and they were left alone in the brocaded and gilded
-salon that separated their rooms; "I chose this place for the view; it's
-the loveliest in Lyons, I think."
-
-There was still a little twilight, and standing at the window they
-looked down at the lighted quai with its double row of lofty plane-trees
-and across the jade-green Saône at St. Jean, the grey cathedral, and at
-the beautiful white _archevêché_ glimmering in a soft, dimmed atmosphere
-that made him think of London.
-
-"There's a horrible modern cathedral up on the hill," he said; "but we
-don't need to see it. We need only see the river and the _archevêché_
-and St. Jean. And in the mornings there's a market below, a mile of it,
-all under huge mushroom-coloured umbrellas; flowers and cheeses and
-every kind of country produce. I think you'll like it here."
-
-"I like it very much. I think it's beautiful," said Adrienne. "I like
-our room, too," and she turned and looked up at the painted ceiling and
-round at the consoles and mirrors, inlaid tables and richly curved,
-brocaded chairs. "Isn't it splendid."
-
-"Madame Récamier is said to have lived here," Oldmeadow told her. "And
-this is said to have been her room."
-
-"And now it's mine," said Adrienne, smiling slightly as though she
-found the juxtaposition amusing.
-
-Already the stealing sense of deliciousness was breathing over him. The
-very way in which she said, "our room," was part of it. Even the way in
-which she said that made him feel the peace, comfort, and charm of a
-shared life as he had never before felt it. And the sense grew and grew
-on that first evening.
-
-It was delicious to hear the waiters address her as Madame, and to know
-that it was his madame they imagined her to be, when he sat opposite to
-her at their little table in the dining-room. She wore a grey dress now
-and, with her quiet, her calm glances cast about her, might indeed have
-been the veritable Madame Oldmeadow inscribed at the _bureau_. If they
-had the aspect of a devoted, long-mated couple, it was because of her
-calm. But she would have been as unperturbed, he felt sure, had she been
-stopping there under her own name instead of his and looked upon as his
-well-established mistress. Situations would never embarrass her as long
-as she knew what she was doing with them. That night when she gave him
-her hand at bedtime she said, looking at him with the affectionate,
-professional eyes: "I'll come and put you to sleep if you need me; be
-sure to let me know."
-
-But he had no need to call her. He slept as soundly as though she sat
-beside him with her hand upon his brow.
-
-So the mirage of conjugal felicity was evoked about him.
-
-She poured out his coffee for him in the morning wearing a silk
-_négligé_ edged with fur, and said, as they buttered their rolls, that
-they must buy some honey for their breakfasts. She said, too, that they
-must do a great deal of sight-seeing in the afternoons. "There is so
-much to be seen in Lyons. And I shall finish with my _rapatrié_ work in
-the mornings." He asked if he might not come with her to the _rapatrié_
-work, but was told that he was not yet strong enough for more than one
-walk in the day. "In our evenings, after tea," she went on, "I thought
-perhaps you'd like to study Dante a little with me. My Dante is getting
-so rusty and I've brought a very fine edition. Are you good at Italian?"
-
-He said he wasn't, but would love to read Dante with her.
-
-"And we must get a piano," she finished, "and have music after dinner.
-It will be a wonderful holiday for me."
-
-So the days fell at once into a series of rituals. He saw that she had
-always mapped them out conscientiously, as Mrs. Toner had doubtlessly
-taught her to do, careful of the treasure of time--as Mrs. Toner would
-have said--entrusted to each soul by life. So, no doubt, Adrienne would
-put it still. And what he would, in first knowing her, have found part
-of her absurdity, he found now part of her charm.
-
-That was what it all came back to. He saw, reconstructing their past,
-that from the beginning she had had her deep charm for him.
-
-It was the trivial word for the great fact; the compulsion of
-personality; the overflow of vitality; the secret at once of the saint
-and of the successful music-hall singer. Her own absorption in life was
-so intense that it communicated itself. Her confidence was so secure
-that it begot confidence. Her power was implicit in all she did. It was
-not only the _rapatriés_ she dealt with, as, at the first, she had dealt
-with the wounded. She dealt as successfully and as accurately with the
-little things of life. Honey was on their breakfast-table; flowers on
-the consoles; music on the piano. The gilded hotel salon became a home.
-
-She was still, in demeanour, the cultured, travelled American, equipped
-always, for their walks, with a guide-book or history, from which she
-often read to him as they paused to lean on the parapets of the splendid
-quais. There were few salient facts in the history of the potent city
-that were not imparted to him; and with anyone else what a bore it would
-have been to have to listen! But he was more than content that she
-should tell him about the Romans or Richelieu. It was everything to him
-to feel that they shared it all, from the honey to Richelieu.
-
-And with all the intimacy went the extreme reserve.
-
-She had showed him, when it was necessary for their understanding as
-friends, the centre of her life; yet she remained, while so gentle, so
-absorbed, and even loving, as remote, as inaccessible, as he had felt
-her to be on those first days in the hospital. She never referred to her
-own personal situation not to any emotion connected with it. She never
-referred to herself or expressed a taste or an opinion touched with
-personal ardour. He did not know what she was really feeling, ever.
-Though, when he looked at her, sitting opposite him in her grey and
-addressed by the assiduities of the waiters, he could imagine that he
-was living with a wife, he could imagine more often that he was living
-with a nun. Her control and her selflessness were cloistral. He could
-not think her in any need of a director.
-
-They walked one afternoon along the Quai des Brotteaux, returning from
-the park of the Tête d'Or, where they had wandered on the gravel under
-the tall, melancholy trees and fed the deer. The ugly yet magnificent
-city was spread before them in one of its most splendid aspects,
-climbing steeply, on the further banks of the Rhône, to the cliff-like
-heights of the Croix Rousse and marching, as it followed the grandiose
-curve of the river, into a sunset sky where the cupola of the Hospice
-hung like a dark bubble against the gold and the Alps, not visible from
-the river level, seemed yet to manifest themselves in the illumined
-clouds ranged high above the horizon.
-
-Ten days of their appointed fortnight had now passed and while Oldmeadow
-kept a half unseeing yet appraising eye upon the turbulent glories of
-the river, he was wondering when and how he should make his revelation
-and his appeal. If her reserve made it more difficult to imagine, her
-intimacy did not make it more easy. It was because she was so intimate
-that she had remained so unaware. For all his self-command he felt sure
-that in any other circumstances she could not, for these ten days, have
-remained so blind.
-
-Here she walked beside him, the Madame Oldmeadow of the hotel, looking
-before her as she walked and thinking, he would have wagered, not of him
-but of Serbia.
-
-She wore a beautifully adjusted little costume, conveying in its sober
-darkness the impression of richness and simplicity that her clothes had
-always given him. Fur was turned up about her ears and a small hat of
-fur and velvet was turned down over her eyes as she had always worn her
-hats. The straight fringe of gold showed under its brim and under the
-gold were those calm, those questing, melancholy eyes.
-
-Or perhaps--he carried further his rueful reverie--she was thinking
-about the date of the Hospice. He had the guide-book in his pocket.
-
-"Isn't it jolly?" he suggested, as she looked up at him, indicating the
-prospect spread before them and adding, since he knew that his English
-instinct for boyish understatement still puzzled her: "Like a great,
-grim queen in shabby clothes; raised on such a throne and crowned with
-such jewels that one feels her glorious rather than ugly."
-
-Adrienne studied the shabby queen attentively and then looked back at
-him. Perhaps something dwelling in his eyes, something for her only and
-not at all for Lyons, caught her more special attention, for she said
-suddenly, and so unexpectedly that, with a sort of terror, he felt that
-his crisis might be coming: "You've been very dear to me, Mr. Oldmeadow,
-in all our time here. I feel it to have been a great privilege, you
-know; a great opportunity."
-
-"Really? In what way?" He could at all events keep his voice quiet and
-light. "I thought it had been you who made all the opportunities."
-
-"Oh, no. I never make any of the opportunities I am thinking of," said
-Adrienne. "I only know how to take them. It isn't only that you are more
-widely and deeply cultured than I am--though your Italian accent isn't
-good!"--she smiled; "but I always feel that you see far more in
-everything than I do, even when you seem to be seeing less. I have to go
-carefully and pick up fact by fact, while you see things in a sort of
-vision and they are all related as they enter your mind. That's where my
-privilege comes in. You make me share your vision sometimes. You have
-the artistic mind, and I am not really artistic at all--though Mother
-always wanted that for me more than anything; with all that goes with
-it."
-
-She was speaking of herself--though it was only in order to express more
-exactly her gratitude, and, as he walked beside her, he was filled with
-the mingled hope and terror. After all he had still four more days of
-her. It would be terrible to spoil them.
-
-"No; you aren't artistic," he agreed. "And I don't know that I am,
-either. Whether I am or not, I feel mine to have been the opportunity
-and the privilege."
-
-"I can't understand that at all," she said, with her patent candour.
-
-"It may be part of the artistic temperament to feel things one can't
-understand. Though I do understand why I feel it," he added.
-
-"And it's part of the artistic temperament not to try"--Adrienne turned
-their theme to its more impersonal aspect. "Never to try to enjoy
-anything that you don't enjoy naturally. I don't believe I ever enjoy
-any of the artistic things quite naturally. I've always been trained to
-enjoy and I've always tried to enjoy; because I thought it was right to
-try. But since I've been here with you I've come to feel that what I've
-enjoyed has been my own effort and my mastery of the mere study, and I
-seem to feel that it might be as well to give up trying and training and
-fall back on the things that come naturally; scenery artists would think
-sentimental, and babies; and patriotic songs." She smiled a little as
-she found her list. But she was grave, too, thinking it out and adding
-another to her discovered futilities.
-
-"It may be as well to limit your attention to the sentimental scenery
-and the babies, since you've so many other things to do with it," he
-acquiesced. "We come back to big people again, you see; they haven't
-time to be artistic; don't need to be."
-
-"Ah, but it's not a question of time at all," said Adrienne, and he
-remembered that long ago, from the very first, he had said that she
-wasn't stupid. "It's a question of how you're born. That's a thing I
-would never have admitted in my old days, you know. I would never have
-admitted that any human soul was really shut out from anything. Perhaps
-we're not, any of us, if we are to have all eternity to grow in. But as
-far as this life is concerned I see quite clearly now that some people
-are shut out from all sorts of things, and that the sort of mistake I
-made in my old time was in thinking that anyone who had the will could
-force eternity into any given fragment of our temporal life. I did do a
-little philosophy, you see! That's what I mean and you understand, I
-know. All the same I wish I weren't one of the shut-out people. I wish I
-were artistic. I'd have liked to have that side of life to meet people
-with. I sometimes think that one doesn't get far with people, really, if
-all that one has to give are the fundamental things like the care of
-their minds and bodies. One goes deep, of course; but one doesn't go
-far. You can do something for them; but there's nothing, afterwards,
-that they can do _with_ you; and it makes it rather lonely in a
-way--when one has time to be lonely."
-
-He did not know, indeed, whether she saw the beauty of the scene spread
-before them as they walked, and he was remembering, with a sort of
-tranced tenderness, the flower-wreathed shepherdess and her crook; and
-Mrs. Toner with her lilies and seagulls. But why should she see beauty
-when she made it? It was all that he could see in her now.
-
-"What you can do for them afterwards is to pour out their coffee for
-them in the most enhancing way," he suggested, "and make sight-seeing a
-pleasure, and arrange flowers and place chairs and tables so that a
-hotel salon becomes loveable. If you find the person to whom you can
-give the fundamental things and do all sorts of homely things with
-afterwards, why be lonely? We are very happy together, aren't we? We get
-a great deal out of each other. I can speak for myself, at all events;
-and you've just told me that I give something, too. So why should you go
-off to Central Europe next week? Why not go back with me to the South,"
-he finished, "and wander about together enjoying, quite naturally, the
-sentimental scenery?"
-
-He held his breath after he had thus spoken, wondering with intensity,
-while he felt his heartbeats, what she would make of it. He knew what he
-could make of it, seizing his opportunity on the instant, if only she
-would recognize the meaning that underlay the easy words. And framed in
-the little hat on the background of transfigured Lyons, Adrienne's face
-was turned towards him and, after he had made his suggestion, she
-studied him in silence for what seemed to him a long lapse of time. Then
-she said, overwhelmingly:
-
-"That's perfectly lovely of you, Mr. Oldmeadow."
-
-"Not at all; not perfectly lovely at all," he stammered as he
-contradicted her and he heard that his voice sounded angry. "It's what I
-want. I want it very much."
-
-"Yes. I know you do. And that's what's so lovely," said Adrienne. "I
-know you want it. You are sorry for me all the time. And you want to
-cheer me up. Because you feel I've lost so much. But, you know; you
-remember; I told you the truth that time. I don't need cheering. I'm not
-unhappy. One can be lonely without being unhappy."
-
-"I'm not sorry for you," poor Oldmeadow rejoined, still in the angry
-voice. "I'm not thinking of you at all. I'm thinking of myself. I'm
-lonely, too, and I am unhappy, even if you aren't."
-
-She stopped short in her walk. He saw in her eyes the swift, almost
-diagnosing solicitude that measured his need and her own capacity. It
-was as though his temperature had gone up alarmingly.
-
-"Dear Mr. Oldmeadow," she said; and then she faltered; she paused. She
-no longer found her remedies easily. "It's because you are separated
-from your own life," she did find. "It's because all this is so bitter
-to you; what you are doing now--how could I not understand?--and the
-war, that has torn us all. But when it's over, when you can go home
-again and take up your own big life-work and find your own roots,
-happiness will come back; I'm sure of it. We are all unhappy sometimes,
-aren't we? We must be; with our minds and hearts. Our troubled minds;
-our lonely hearts. But you know as well as I do, dear Mr. Oldmeadow,
-that our souls can find the way out."
-
-Her nature expressed itself in platitudes; yet sometimes she had
-phrases, rising from her heart as if from a fountain fed by unseen
-altitudes, that shook him in their very wording. "Our troubled minds.
-Our lonely hearts," echoed in his ears while, bending his head
-downwards, he muttered stubbornly: "My soul can't, without you."
-
-She still stood, not moving forward, her eyes raised to his. "Please
-don't say that," she murmured, and he heard the trouble in her voice.
-"It can't be so, except for this time that you are away from everybody.
-You have so many things to live for. So many people near you. You are
-such a big, rare person. It's what I was afraid of, you know. It happens
-so often with me; that people feel that. But you can't really need me
-any longer."
-
-He said nothing, still not raising his eyes to hers, and she went on
-after a moment. "And I have so many things to live for, too. You've
-never really thought about that side of my life, I know. Why should you?
-You think of any woman's life--isn't it true?--as not seriously
-important except on its domestic side. And you know how important I
-think that. But it isn't so with me, you see. I have no hearth and I
-have no home; I have only my big, big life and it's more important than
-you could believe unless you could see it all. When I'm in it it takes
-all my mind and all my strength and I'm bound to it, yes, just as
-finally, just as irrevocably as a wife who loves is bound by her
-marriage vows; because I love it. Do you see? They are waiting for me
-now. They need me now. There are starving people, dying people; and
-confusion; terrible confusion. I have a gift for all that. I can deal
-with it. Those are just the things I can deal with. And I mustn't put it
-off any longer--when our time is up. I must leave you, my dear, dear
-friend, however much I'd love to stay."
-
-She was speaking at last with ardour, and about herself. And what she
-said was true. He had never thought about her work except in the sense
-that he thought her a saint and knew that saints did good deeds. That
-she was needed, sorely needed, by the starving and dying, was a fact,
-now that it was put before him, silencing and even shaming him. It gave
-him, too, a new fear. If she had her blindness, he had his. His hopes
-and fears, after all, were all that he had to think of; she had the
-destinies of thousands. He remembered Sir Kenneth's tone in speaking of
-her; its deep respect. Not the respect of the man for the
-tender-hearted, merciful woman; but the respect of a professional expert
-for another expert; respect for the proved organizer and leader of men.
-
-"I have been stupid," he said after a moment. "It's true that I've been
-thinking about you solely in relation to myself. Would you really love
-to stay? If it wasn't for your work? It would be some comfort to believe
-that."
-
-"Of course I'd love to stay," she said, eagerly scanning his face. "I'd
-love to travel with you--to pour out your coffee in Avignon, Nîmes,
-Cannes--anywhere you liked. I'd love our happy time here to go on and
-on. If life could be like that; if I didn't want other things more. You
-remember how Blake saw it all:
-
- 'He who bends to himself a joy
- Doth the winged life destroy.'
-
-I mustn't try to bend and keep this lovely time. I must let it fly--and
-bless it as it goes. And so it will bless me."
-
-She seldom made quotations nowadays. For this one he felt a gratitude
-such as his life had rarely known.
-
-"It's been a joy to you, too, then?"
-
-"Of course it has," said Adrienne smiling at him and turning at last
-towards the bridge that they must cross. "It's been one of the most
-beautiful things that has ever happened to me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat at the inlaid table in the gilded salon on the afternoon
-of the last day. He had two letters to write, for, as he had put off
-speaking to Adrienne till their last evening, so he had put off writing
-to Barney and to Lydia Aldesey till this last afternoon, and he saw now
-how difficult it would be to write coherently while his thoughts
-stretched themselves forward to those few hours of the night when his
-fate would be decided.
-
-Adrienne had gone out. She had written her short communication to Barney
-and brought it in with its envelope and laid it before him, asking him
-in the voice that, again, made him think of snow: "Is that quite right?"
-
-It was, quite, he told her, after glancing through it swiftly. It
-stated, in the most colourless terms, the facts that Barney was to take
-to his solicitor. "Quite right," he repeated, looking up at her. "Are
-you going out? Will you post it?--or shall I?"
-
-"Will you post it with yours? Yes. I must go out. But I'll try to be
-back by tea-time. It's very disappointing; our last afternoon. But that
-poor woman from Roubaix--the one with consumption up at the Croix
-Rousse--is dying. They've sent for me. All the little children, you
-remember I told you. I'm going to wire to Joséphine and ask her if she
-can come down and look after them for a little while."
-
-"Joséphine?" he questioned. He had, till now, entirely forgotten
-Joséphine. Adrienne told him that she was with her parents in a
-provincial town. "They lost their only son and are very sad. Fine, brave
-old people. He is a baker, the old father, and makes the most wonderful
-bread. I went to see them last summer."
-
-Their packing was done and the room denuded; the men had taken away the
-piano that morning. He had his letters to write; so there was really no
-reason why she should not go. And there was, besides, nothing that they
-had to say to each other, except the one thing he had to say.
-
-The silence that overtakes parting friends on a station platform had
-overtaken them since the morning, though, at lunch, Adrienne had talked
-with some persistence of her immediate plans and prospects and about the
-unit of doctors and nurses who were to meet her in Italy. There was no
-reason why she should not go, and he would even rather she did. He would
-rather see no more of her until evening when everything but the one
-thing would be over and done with. And so he was left with his letters,
-leaning his elbows on the table over the hotel paper and staring out at
-the Saône and the white _archevêché_.
-
-Both letters were difficult to write; but beside the one to Lydia, the
-one to Barney was easy. Barney, after all, was to gain everything from
-what he had to tell him, and Lydia was to lose; how much was Lydia to
-lose? He recalled their last evening together and its revelations and
-saw that the old laughing presage was now more than fulfilled. Lydia was
-to lose more than her toes and fingers; in any case. Even if he returned
-to her alone, she cared for him too much not to feel, always, the shadow
-of his crippled heart; his heart not only crippled, but occupied, so
-occupied that friendships, however near, became, in a sense,
-irrelevancies. And if he returned with Adrienne--but could he return
-with Adrienne? What kind of a life could he and Adrienne lead in
-London?--even if Lydia's door, generously, was opened to them, as he
-believed it would be--knowing her generous.
-
-He laid down his pen and fixed his eyes on the river and he tried to see
-Lydia and Adrienne together. But it was a useless effort. From this
-strange haven of the Lyons hotel where he had spent the happiest
-fortnight of his life, he could not see himself into any future with
-familiar features. He could only see himself and Adrienne, alone, at
-hotels. To attempt to place her in Lydia's generous drawing-room was to
-measure more accurately than he had yet measured it the abyss that
-separated him from his former life. If it could be spanned; if Adrienne
-could be placed there, on the background of eighteenth-century fans and
-old glass, she became a clipped and tethered seagull in a garden,
-awkward, irrelevant, melancholy. Lydia might cease to find her
-third-rate and absurd; but she wouldn't know what to do with her any
-more than she would have known what to do with the seagull. So what, if
-Adrienne became his wife, remained of his friendship with Lydia?
-
-He put aside the unresolved perplexity and took Barney first.
-
-"My dear Barney," he wrote,--"I don't think that the letter Adrienne has
-written to you will surprise you as much as this letter of mine. You
-will understand from hers that she wishes to free herself and to free
-you. You will understand that that is my wish, too. She only tells you
-that she has been staying here with me, for a fortnight, as my wife;
-that's for your solicitor; you will read between the lines and know that
-it seemed worth while to both of us to make the necessary sacrifice in
-order to gain so much for you and for her. I hope that you and my dear
-Nancy will feel that we are justified, and that you will take your
-happiness as bravely as we secure it for you. You'll know that our step
-hasn't been taken lightly.
-
-"But, now, dear Barney, comes my absolutely personal contribution. It is
-a contribution, for it will make you and Nancy happier to know that I
-have as much to gain as you and she. I have fallen in love with Adrienne
-and I hope that I may win her consent to be my wife. Yes, dear Barney,
-unbelievable as it will look to you, there it is; and she dreams of it
-as little as you could have dreamed of it. I met her again, as her
-letter informs you, at the Boulogne hospital. She asked me to say
-nothing about our meeting. She wanted to disappear out of your lives.
-She saved my life, I think, and I saw a great deal of her. What I found
-in her that I had not seen before I need not say.
-
-"My great difficulty, my burden and perplexity now, lie in the fact that
-she has no trace of feeling for me that might give me hope. We became,
-at Boulogne, the best of friends; such friends that this plan suggested
-itself to her; and we remain, after our fortnight here, the best of
-friends; and that is all. Yet I have hope, unjustified and groundless
-though it may be, and had I not had it from the beginning I couldn't
-have entered upon the enterprise; not even for you and Nancy. From one
-point of view it's possible that you may feel that I've entered upon it
-in spite of you and Nancy. You may feel inclined to repudiate and disown
-the whole affair and to remain unaware of it. In that case it would come
-down to an appeal from me to you to carry it through for my sake. But
-from another point of view it makes it easier for you; easier for you to
-accept, since my hope gives integrity to the situation. That's another
-thing that decided me. If it had been mere sham I don't think I could
-have undertaken it. Adrienne felt none of my scruples on this score. She
-walked over legal and conventional commandments like a saint over hot
-ploughshares. But I haven't her immunities. I should have felt myself
-badly scorched, and felt that I'd scorched you and Nancy, if my hope
-hadn't given everything its character of _bona fides_.
-
-"Dear Barney, dear Nancy, please forgive me if I've been selfish. It
-hasn't all been selfishness, that I promise you; it was in hopes for
-you, too; and I have to face sacrifices. The worst of them will be that
-if Adrienne takes me I'll have to lose you. You can measure the depth of
-my feeling for her from the fact that I can make such sacrifices.
-Perhaps you'll feel that even if she doesn't take me I'll have to lose
-you. I hope not. I hope, in that case, that mitigations and refuges will
-be found for me and that some day you'll perhaps be able to make a
-corner in your lives where I may creep and feel my wounds less aching.
-In any case, after Adrienne, you are the creatures dearest to me in the
-world and I am always and for ever your devoted friend,
-
- ROGER."
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now Lydia. There was no use in thinking about it. The plunge must be
-taken.
-
-"My dear Lydia," he wrote,--"I have fallen in love with Adrienne Toner.
-I feel that with such a friend as you it's better to begin with the
-bomb-shell. She doesn't know it, and if we are here in this Lyons hotel
-together, it's only, she imagines, because she wishes to set Barney free
-and that I've undertaken, for her sake and for Barney's, a repugnant
-task. It is a repugnant task, in spite of what it may mean to me of
-happiness. I hate it for her, and for Barney and for myself. But since
-she was determined on it and since, if it wasn't I it was to be another
-friend, and since I have fallen in love with her, I saw that it was only
-decent that the co-respondent in the case should be the man who married
-her afterwards. For I hope to become her husband, and I haven't one jot
-of ground for my hope. We are studying Dante together, and she shows me
-the sights of Lyons. She is just the same. Yet completely altered.
-
-"I don't know whether you'll feel you can ever see me again, with or
-without her. I don't want to cast myself too heavily on your compassion,
-so I'll only remind you that even if I return to England alone I shall
-probably have to lose Nancy and Barney and that you will be my only
-refuge. It will be the culmination of my misfortunes if I have to lose
-you.
-
-"Dear Lydia, I am always your devoted
-
- "ROGER"
-
- * * * * *
-
-But he hadn't lost her. He knew he hadn't lost her; in any case. And the
-taste of what he did was sharp and bitter to him, for she was generous
-and loyal and he had cut off her very limbs. When he had addressed and
-stamped the letters he went downstairs, and, for the sense of greater
-finality, carried them to the post instead of dropping them into the
-hotel-box.
-
-He had almost the sense of disembodiment as he returned to the empty and
-dismantled room. He seemed to have become a mere consciousness suspended
-between two states of being. The past was gone. He had dropped it into
-the post-box. And he saw no future. He felt, for the moment, no hopes.
-At the moment it seemed absurd to think that Adrienne could ever love
-him. He tried to picture Coldbrooks and Somer's Place when the
-bomb-shell struck them. Would Barney show Nancy the letter? Nancy would
-be pale, aghast, silent. Barney would have to wait for days, perhaps,
-before saying to her: "But, after all, it's for their sakes, too, Nancy
-dear. See what Roger says." Mrs. Averil would cast up her hands and cry
-"That woman!"--but, perhaps, with as much admiration as repudiation, and
-Meg, if she were summoned to the scene of confusion, would say, "So
-she's got hold of Roger, too." Funnily enough it was the dear March
-Hare, he felt sure, who would be the first one to stretch out a hand
-towards the tarnished freedom. "After all, you know," he could hear her
-murmuring, "it would be much _nicer_ for Barney and Nancy to be married,
-wouldn't it? And Adrienne wasn't a Christian, you know, so probably the
-first marriage doesn't _really_ count. We mustn't be conventional,
-Monica." Yes, perhaps it would go like that at Coldbrooks. But at
-Somer's Place Lydia would sit among her fans and glass and wish that
-they had never seen Adrienne Toner.
-
-He paced up and down before the windows and he had never been so lonely
-in his life. He was so lonely that he became aware at last that his mere
-negative state was passing into a positive and that grief at the
-severance of old ties had become fear of losing Adrienne. The fear and
-the loneliness seemed actualized when, at five, the waiter appeared
-bearing the tea-tray on his shoulder. He had never had tea alone before
-in this strange, foreign room. Adrienne always made a complicated and
-charming ritual of the occasion, boiling the water on their own little
-spirit-kettle and measuring the tea from her own caddy--the very same
-kettle and caddy, she told him, that had accompanied herself and her
-mother on all their travels. And to see the cups and bread and butter
-and not to have her there, added a poignant taste of abandonment to his
-loneliness.
-
-She kept the kettle in her room and when the boy was gone he softly
-opened the door and went in. It would keep his heart up to have the
-water boiling in readiness for her arrival. He recognized, as he stood,
-then, and looked about him, that his instinct had also been that of
-taking refuge. In her room he could more closely recover the sense of
-her presence.
-
-She had finished all the essentials of her packing and her box stood
-with its lid open ready for the last disposals. Yet the room seemed
-still full of her personality. He noted it all gazing around him with
-eyes almost those of a solemn little boy permitted to glance in at a
-Christmas-tree.
-
-Her dressing-table, improvised from the mantelpiece, was neatly laid out
-with small, worn, costly, and immaculate appurtenances. He moved forward
-and looked at them, not touching. The initials intertwined on the backs
-of the ivory brushes were her girlish ones: A. T. She had discarded,
-long since, no doubt, her wedding toilet set.
-
-If he became her husband, the thought crossed his mind and quickened his
-heart, he might brush her hair for her, that wonderful golden hair,
-before many months were over.
-
-Near the ivory hand-glass stood two photographs in a folding frame of
-faded blue leather. He stooped to look and saw that one was of Mrs. and
-the other certainly of Mr. Toner, in their early days. Remote,
-mysterious and alien, their formally directed eyes looked back at him
-and in the father's ingenuous young countenance, surmounted by a roll of
-hair that was provincial without being exactly rural, the chin resting
-upon a large, peculiar collar, he could strangely retrace Adrienne's
-wide brow and steadfast light-filled eyes. Mrs. Toner wore a ruffled
-dress and of her face little remained distinct but the dark
-gaze--forceful and ambiguously gentle.
-
-The room was full of the fragrance that was not a fragrance and that
-had, long ago, reminded him of Fuller's earth. A pair of small blue
-satin _mules_ stood under a chair near the bed.
-
-Only after he had withdrawn, gently closing the door behind him, did he
-realize that he had forgotten the kettle and then he felt that he could
-not go back again. A moment after the boy returned with a note, sent, by
-hand, he was informed, from the Croix Rousse.
-
-"I am so dreadfully sorry, so disappointed," he read. "Our last
-afternoon, but I can't get away yet. Don't wait dinner for me, if I
-should be late, even for that. I won't be very late, I promise, and we
-will have our evening."
-
-The note had no address. He rushed forth and down to find the messenger
-gone. Had he only known where to seek her in the vast, high, melancholy
-district of the Croix Rousse he would have gone to join her. His sense
-of loneliness was almost a panic.
-
-Of course, he tried to fix his mind on that realization, as he went back
-to the salon, her rapatriés had no doubt preoccupied her mind, from the
-first, quite as much as their own situation. She had spoken to him in
-especial of this family and of their sorrows. One child they had left
-dead at Evian and the mother, on the eve of their return to their
-Northern home, had become too desperately ill to travel. "Such dear,
-good, _gentle_ people," he recalled her saying. No; he must not repine.
-After all he had only the one thing to say to her; and the evening would
-be long enough for that.
-
-It was nearly seven when he heard her quick footstep outside. When she
-entered, the brim of her little hat, in the electric light, cast a sharp
-shadow over her eyes, but he saw at once that she had been crying.
-
-She came in so quickly that he had not time to rise and, going to him,
-behind his chair, she put her hands on his shoulders and pressed him
-down, saying: "I'm so sorry to have left you all alone."
-
-It was astonishingly comforting to have her put these fraternal hands
-upon him like this. She had never done it before. Yet there was a salty
-smart in her words to him. What else did she intend to do but leave him
-all alone for always?
-
-"I'm dreadfully lonely, I confess," he said, "and I see that you're
-dreadfully tired."
-
-She went round to the other side of the table and sat down, not looking
-at him and said, in a low voice: "Oh--the seas--the seas of misery."
-
-"You are completely worn out," he said. He was not thinking so much of
-the seas of misery as of his few remaining hours. Were they to be
-spoiled by her fatigue?
-
-"No; not worn out. Not at all worn out," said Adrienne, stretching her
-arms along the table in front of her as she sat, and though she had wept
-he could see something of ardour, of a strength renewed, in the lines of
-her pallid lips. "I've sat quite still all afternoon. I've been with
-him. She died soon after I got there. At the end she was talking about
-the little girl's grave at Evian. I was able to comfort her about that.
-She was so afraid it would not be tended. That it would have no flowers.
-Joséphine will go to Evian afterwards and see about it. There are always
-dear nuns to do those things. There was a nun with her to-day. That was
-the greatest comfort of all; and the priest who came. But I was with the
-father and the five poor little children; so frightened and miserable. I
-could not leave them, you see. He talked and talked and talked. It
-helped him to talk and tell me about their home and how they had had
-everything so nice and bright. Linen, a garden, a goat and fowls. Oh, if
-only she could have seen her home again! That was what he kept saying
-and saying. They were full of hope when they got to Evian. He told me
-how the children sang at dawn when the train panted up the mountain
-among the golden trees. Like birds, he said, and _Vive la France_! They
-all believed they were to be safe and happy. _Et, Madame, c'était notre
-calvaire qui commencait alors seulement._"
-
-She spoke, not really thinking of him, he saw, absorbed still in the
-suffering she had just left, measuring her power against such problems
-and the worse ones to which she was travelling to-morrow.
-
-"Joséphine will be with them, I hope," she went on presently, "in three
-or four days. She will help them to get home and then she will come back
-and go to see about the grave at Evian. Joséphine is a tower of strength
-for me."
-
-Her eyes were raised to him now, and, as they rested, he saw the
-compunction, the solicitude, with which they had met him on her
-entrance, return to them. "I'm not so very late, am I?" she said,
-rising. "I'll take off my hat and be ready in a moment."
-
-"Don't hurry," said Oldmeadow.
-
-She was tired, more tired than she knew. During dinner she hardly spoke,
-and, finding the resolve suddenly, he said, as they came back to their
-salon: "Do you know what you must do now. Go and lie down and rest for
-an hour. Until nine. It's not unselfishness. I'd rather have half of you
-to talk to for our last talk, than none of you at all."
-
-"How dear of you," she said. She looked at him with gratitude and,
-still, with the compunction. "It would be a great rest. It would be
-better for our talk. I can go to sleep at once, you know. Like
-Napoleon," she added with a flicker of her playfulness.
-
-When she had gone into her room Oldmeadow went out and walked along the
-quai. The night was dark and dimmed with fog, but there was a moon and
-as he walked he watched it glimmer on the windows of St. Jean. He seemed
-to see the august form of the cathedral through a watery element and the
-grey and silver patterns of the glass were like the scales of some vast
-fish. A sort of whale waiting to swallow up the Jonah that was himself,
-he reflected, and, leaning his elbows on the parapet of the quai, the
-analogy carried him further and he saw the cathedral like a symbol of
-Adrienne's life--her "big, big" life--looming there before him,
-becoming, as the moon rose higher, more and more visible in its austere
-and menacing majesty. What was his love to measure itself against such a
-vocation?--for that was what it came to, as she had said. She was as
-involved, as harnessed, as passionately preoccupied as a Saint Theresa.
-How could he be fitted in with Serbia and all the hordes of human need
-and wretchedness that he saw her sailing forward to succour? He knew a
-discouragement deeper than any he had felt, for he was not a doctor and
-his physical strength was crippled by his wounds; and, shaking his
-shoulders in the chilly November air, he turned his back on the
-cathedral and leaned against the parapet to look up through leafless
-branches where the plane tassels still hung, at the lighted windows of
-the hotel; their hotel, where the room, still theirs, waited for them.
-He felt himself take refuge in the banal lights. After all, she wasn't
-really a Saint Theresa. There was human misery everywhere to succour.
-Couldn't she, after a winter in Serbia, found crêches and visit slums in
-London? The masculine scepticism she had detected in him had its
-justification. Women weren't meant to go on, once the world's crisis
-past, doing feats of heroism; they weren't meant for austere careers
-that gave no leisure and no home. The trivial yet radiant vision of
-intimacy rose again before him. She slept there above him and he was
-guarding her slumber. He would always watch over her and guard her. He
-would follow her round the world, if need be, and brush her hair for her
-in Serbia or California.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-The gilt clock on the mantelpiece pointed to nine, but when he went to
-Adrienne's door and listened there was no sound within her room, and his
-heart sank as he wondered if she might not sleep on, in her fatigue,
-sleep past all possible hour for their colloquy. Yet he did not feel
-that he could go in and wake her. The analogy of the cathedral loomed
-before him. It would be like waking Saint Theresa.
-
-He walked up and down the empty, glittering salon; walked and walked
-until the clock struck ten. Desperation nerved him then and he went
-again to her door and knocked.
-
-With hardly a pause her voice answered him; yet he knew that he had
-awakened her and it echoed for him with the pathos of so many past
-scenes of emergency when it must so have answered a summons from
-oblivion: "Coming, coming." Among bombings, he reflected; and sudden
-terrible influxes of dying men from the front.
-
-"Coming," he heard her repeat, on a note of dismay. She had sprung up,
-turned on her light and seen the hour.
-
-He was reminded vividly, as he saw her enter--and it was as if a great
-interval of time had separated them--of his first meeting with her. She
-was so changed; but now as then she was more composed than anyone he had
-ever met.
-
-But it was of much more than the first meeting that the pale, still face
-reminded him. His dreams were in it; the dream where she had come to
-him along the terrace, lifting her hand in the moonlight; and the dream
-of horror when he had again and again pushed it down to drown.
-
-"I'm so ashamed," she said, and he saw that it was with an effort she
-smiled. The traces of her weeping were now, after her sleep, far more
-visible, ageing her, yet making her, too, look younger; like a child
-with swollen lids and lips. "I didn't know I was so tired. I slept and
-slept. I didn't stir until I heard your knock. Never mind. We'll talk
-till midnight."
-
-She was very sorry for him.
-
-She sat down at the table and under the electric chandelier her braided
-hair showed itself all ruffled and disarranged. She had on her dark
-travelling dress and she had thrust her feet into the pale blue satin
-_mules_. The disparity of costume in one so accurate, her air of
-readiness for the morrow, made him feel her transitoriness almost more
-than her presence, though his sense of that pressed upon him with a
-stifling imminence. Even though she sat there the room kept its look of
-desolate, glittering emptiness and more than their shared life in it he
-remembered the far places from which she had come and to which she was
-going. It was as if she had just arrived and were pausing for the night
-_en route_.
-
-As he had seen them years ago, so he saw again the monster engines
-crossing the prairies at night and flying illumined pennons of smoke
-against the sky as they bore her away from blue seas, golden sands, a
-land where the good and gifted lurked behind every bush; and before her
-stretched the shining rails, miles and miles of them, running through
-ruin and desolation, that were to bear her ever onwards into the
-darkness. This was what life had brought her to. She had been only a
-sojourner among them at Coldbrooks. The linked life of order and family
-affection had cast her forth and he saw her, for ever now, unless he
-could rescue her, with only hotels to live in and only the chaos she was
-to mould, to live for. She seemed already, as she sat there under the
-light with her ruffled hair, to be sitting in the train that was to bear
-her from him.
-
-"I think you owe me till midnight, at least," he said. He had not sat
-down. He stood at some little distance from her leaning, his arms
-folded, against a gilded and inlaid console. "We've lots of things to
-talk about."
-
-"Have we?" Adrienne asked, smiling gently, but as if she humoured an
-extravagance. "We'll be together, certainly, even if we don't talk much.
-But I have some things to say, too."
-
-She had dropped her eyes to her hands which lay, lightly crossed, on the
-table before her, and she seemed to reflect how best to begin. "It's
-about Nancy and Barney," she said. "I wanted, before we part, to talk to
-you a little about them. There are things that trouble me and you are
-the only person with whom I can keep in touch. You will know how I shall
-be longing to hear, everything. You'll let me know at once, won't you?"
-
-"At once," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"There might be delays and difficulties," Adrienne went on. "I shall be
-very troubled until all that is clear. And then the money. You know
-about the money? Barney isn't well off and he was worse off after I'd
-come and gone. I tried to arrange that as best I could. Palgrave
-understood and entered into all my feelings."
-
-"Yes; I'd heard. You arranged it all very cleverly," said Oldmeadow.
-
-He moved away now and, at the other end of the room, his back to her,
-came to a standstill, while his eyes dwelt on a large gilt-framed
-engraving that hung there; some former Salon triumph; a festive,
-spring-tide scene where young women in bustles and bonnets offered sugar
-to race-horses in a meadow, admired by young men in silk hats.
-
-"Do you think this may make a difficulty?" Adrienne asked. "Make him
-more reluctant to take what is to come to him? It's Mrs. Chadwick's now,
-you know."
-
-"You've arranged it all so well," said Oldmeadow, noting the gardenias
-in the young men's button-holes, "that I don't think they can get away
-from it."
-
-"But will they hate it dreadfully?" she insisted, and he felt that her
-voice in its added urgency protested, though unconsciously, against his
-distance; "I seem to see that they might. If they can't take it as a
-sign of accepted love, won't they hate it?"
-
-"Well," said Oldmeadow, trying to reflect, though his mind was far from
-Barney and Nancy, "dear Eleanor Chadwick doesn't mind taking it,
-whatever it's a sign of. And since it will come to Barney through her, I
-don't think there'll be enough personality left hanging about it to hurt
-much."
-
-"I wish they could take it as a sign of accepted love," Adrienne
-murmured.
-
-"Perhaps they will," he said. "I'll do my best that they shall, I
-promise you."
-
-It was one thing to promise it and another to know his hope that it
-might be a promise never to be redeemed. The cross-currents in his own
-thought made him light-headed as he stood there, his back to her, and
-examined the glossy creatures in the meadow. "Do you think it will all
-take a long time?" Adrienne added, after a little pause. "Will they be
-able to marry in six or eight months, say?"
-
-"It depends on how soon Barney takes action. Say about a year," he
-suggested. "They'd wait a little first, wouldn't they?"
-
-"I hope not. They've waited so long already. I hope it will be as soon
-as possible. I shall feel so much more peaceful when I hear they're
-married. Could you, perhaps, make them see that, too?"
-
-And again he promised. "I'll make them see everything I can."
-
-He turned to her at last. She sat, her face still downcast in its
-shadow, while the light glittered on her wreaths of hair. Her hands
-still lay before her on the table, and the light fell on her
-wedding-ring. Perhaps she was looking at the ring.
-
-"It all depends on something else," he heard himself say suddenly.
-
-She turned her head and looked round at him. His attitude, his distance
-from her, drew her attention rather than his words, for she repeated
-mildly: "On something else?"
-
-"Whether I can keep those promises, you know," said Oldmeadow. "Yes, it
-all depends on something else. That's what I want to talk to you about."
-
-He hardly knew what he was saying as he approached the table and pushed
-the brocaded chair, companion to the one in which she sat, a little
-from its place. He leaned on its back and looked down at her hands and
-Adrienne kept her eyes on him, attentive rather than perplexed.
-
-"May I talk to you about it now?" he asked. "It's something quite
-different."
-
-"Oh, do," said Adrienne. She drew her hands into her lap and sat
-upright, in readiness. And, suddenly, as he was silent, she added:
-"About yourself? I've been forgetting that, haven't I? I've only been
-thinking of my side. You have quite other plans, perhaps. Perhaps you're
-not going back to England for ever so long. Is it an appointment?"
-
-"No; not an appointment," he muttered, still looking down, at the table
-now, since her hands were no longer there. "But perhaps I shan't be
-going back for a long time. I hope not."
-
-"Oh," she murmured. And now he had perplexed her. After what he had just
-promised her, his hope must perplex and even trouble her. "Do tell me,"
-she said.
-
-"It's something I want to ask you," said Oldmeadow--"And it will
-astonish you. You may find it hard to forgive; because I've meant to ask
-it from the beginning; from our deciding to go away together. As far
-back as the time in the hospital."
-
-"But you may ask anything. Anything at all," she almost urged upon him.
-"After what I've asked you--you have every right. If there's anything I
-can do in the wide, wide world for you--oh! you know how glad and proud
-I should be. As for forgiveness"--he heard the smile in her voice, she
-was troubled, yet tranquil, too--"you're forgiven in advance."
-
-"Am I? Wait and see." He, too, tried to smile, as he used the tag; but
-it was a mechanical smile and he felt his heart knocking against the
-chair-back as he went on: "Because I haven't done what you asked me to
-do as you asked me to do it. I haven't done it from the motive you
-supposed. It's been for Barney and for Nancy and for you; but it's been
-most of all for myself." He screwed his glass into his eye as he spoke
-with a gesture as mechanical as the smile had been and he looked at her
-at last, thus brought nearer. "I want you not to go on to-morrow." It
-was the first, the evident, the most palpable desire that rose to his
-lips. "I want you never to go on again, alone. If you can't stay with
-me, I want you to let me follow you. When the time comes I want you to
-marry me. I love you."
-
-The light as it fell on her seemed suddenly strange, almost portentous
-in its brilliancy. Or was it her stillness, as she sat and gazed at him
-after he had spoken the words, that was strange and portentous? It was
-as if they arrested the currents of her being and she sat tranced,
-frozen into the fixed shape of an astonishment too deep for emotion. Her
-eyes did not alter in their gentleness; but the gentleness became tragic
-and pitiful, like the inappropriate calm on the mask of a dead face at
-Pompeii, fixed in an eternal unreadiness by the engulfing lava.
-
-She put up her hand at last and pushed back her hair. With her forehead
-bared she became more like the photograph of her father. When she spoke
-her voice was slow and feeble, like the voice of a person dangerously
-ill. "I don't understand you."
-
-"Try to," said Oldmeadow. "You must begin far back."
-
-She still kept her hand pressed upon her hair. "You don't mean that it's
-the conventionally honourable thing to do? Oh, no; you don't mean that?"
-Her face in its effort to understand was appalled.
-
-"No; I don't mean anything conventional," he returned. "I'm thinking
-only of you. Of my love. I'll come with you to Serbia to-morrow--if
-you'll let me. I could kneel and worship you as you sit there."
-
-"Oh," she more feebly murmured. She sank back in her chair.
-
-"My darling, my saint," said Oldmeadow, gazing at her; "if you must
-leave me, you'll take that with you; that the man who destroyed you is
-your lover; that you are dearer to him than anything on earth."
-
-"Oh," she murmured again, and she put her hands before her face. Her
-eyes were hidden; she had spoken no word of reproach and he could not
-keep himself from her. He knelt beside her, grasping the chair across,
-behind her. She was so near that he could have laid his head upon her
-breast. "Don't leave me," he heard his pleading voice, but she seemed so
-much nearer than his own voice; "or let me come. Everything shall be as
-you wish and when you wish. Tell me that you care, too; or that you can
-come to care. Tell me that you can think of me as your husband."
-
-She was there, with her hidden eyes, within his arms, and inevitably
-they closed around her, and though he heard her murmur, "Please, please,
-please," he could not relinquish her. She was free and he was free.
-They had cut themselves off from the world. They were alone in the
-strange city; in the strange, bright, hallucinated room; and he knew
-from the ache and rapture of her nearness how he had craved it.
-
-But, gently, he heard her say again, "Please," and gently she put him
-from her and he saw her face, and her eyes full of grief and gentleness.
-"Forgive me," she said.
-
-"My darling. For what?" he almost groaned. "Don't say you're going to
-break my heart."
-
-She kept her hand on his breast, holding him from her while she looked
-into his eyes. "It is so beautiful to be loved," she said, and her voice
-was still the slow, feeble voice of exhaustion. "Even when one has no
-right to be. Don't misunderstand. Even when one may not love back; not
-in that way. Forgive me; not in that way; my dearest friend."
-
-"Why mayn't you love back? Why not in that way? If it's beautiful, why
-mayn't you?"
-
-"Sit there, will you? Yes; keep my hand. How weak I've been, and cruel.
-It can't be. Don't you know? Haven't you seen? It has always been for
-him. He must be free; but I can never be free."
-
-"Oh, no. No. That's impossible," Oldmeadow said, leaning towards her
-across the table and keeping her hand in both of his. "I can't stand
-that. I could stand your work, your vocation, better. But not Barney,
-who loves another woman. That's impossible."
-
-"But it is so," she said, softly, looking at him. "Really it is so."
-
-"No, no," Oldmeadow repeated, and he raised her hand to his lips and
-kept it there, a talisman against the menace of her words. "He lost
-you. He's gone. I've found you and you care for me. You can't hide from
-me that you care for me. Just now. For those moments. You were mine."
-
-"No," she repeated. "I was weak and cruel, but I was not yours."
-
-She had been incredibly near so short a time ago before. Now, looking at
-him, with her difficult breaths and gentle, inflexible eyes, she was
-incredibly remote. "I am his, only his," she said. "I love him and I
-shall always love him. It makes no difference. He loves Nancy, but it
-makes no difference. He is my husband. The father of my baby."
-
-She tried to speak on steadily while she thus gave him the truth that
-ended all his hope; but the desperate emotion with which he received it
-made real and overpowering to her her outlived yet living sorrow. With
-all that she must relinquish laid bare to her in the passion of his eyes
-she could measure all that she had lost, as she had, perhaps, till then,
-never measured it. "Don't you know?" she said. "Don't you see? My heart
-is broken, broken, broken."
-
-She put her head down on her arms as she said the words and he heard her
-bitter weeping.
-
-He knew, as he listened, that it was all over with him. Dimly, in the
-terrible suffering that wrenched at him, he received his further
-revelation of the nature already nearer him than any in the world. Her
-strength would be in all she did and felt. She had loved Barney and she
-would always love him. Her marriage had been to her an ultimate and
-indissoluble experience. That was why she had been so blind. She could
-not have thought of herself as a woman to be again loved and wooed.
-
-Her hair lay against his hands, still holding hers, and he found himself
-stroking it, without tenderness or solicitude it seemed. It seemed to be
-only automatically that his fingers passed across it, while he noted its
-warmth and fineness and bright, lovely colour, remembering that he had
-thought it at the first her one indubitable beauty.
-
-They sat there thus for a long time. The gilt clock paused, choked, then
-in a voice of hurrying, hoarsened silver rang out eleven strokes.
-Footsteps passed and faded up the corridor; doors closed. A tramway on
-the quai clashed and clanged, came to a noisy standstill, and moved on
-again with a rattling of cables and raucous blasts from a horn; and in
-the profound silence that followed he seemed to hear the deep old river
-flowing.
-
-"Really, you see, it's broken," said Adrienne. She had ceased to weep,
-but she still leaned forward, her head upon her folded arms. "You saw it
-happen," she said. "That night when you found me in the rain."
-
-"I've seen everything happen to you, haven't I?" said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Yes," she assented. "Everything. And I've made you suffer, too. Isn't
-that strange; everybody who comes near me I make suffer."
-
-"Well, in different ways," he said. "Some because you are near and
-others because you won't be."
-
-His voice was colourless. His hand still passed across her hair.
-
-"Don't you see," she said, after a moment, "that it couldn't have been.
-Try to see that and to accept it. Not you and me. Not Barney's friend
-and Barney's wife. In every way it couldn't have done, really. It makes
-no difference for me. I'm a _déracinée_, as I said. A wanderer. But what
-would have become of you, all full of roots as you are? You can live it
-down without me. You never could have with. And how could you have
-wandered with me? For that must be my life."
-
-"You know, it's no good trying to comfort me," said Oldmeadow. "What I
-feel is that any roots I have are in you."
-
-"They will grow again. The others will grow again."
-
-"I don't want others, darling," said Oldmeadow. "You see, my heart is
-broken, too."
-
-She lifted her head at last and he saw her marred and ravaged face.
-
-"It can't be helped," he tried to smile at her. "You weren't there to be
-recognized when I first met you and now that you are there, I've come
-too late. I believe that if I'd come before Barney, you'd have loved me.
-It's my only comfort."
-
-"Who can say," said Adrienne. Her gaze, as she looked at him, was deep
-with the mystery of her acceptance. "Perhaps. It seems to me all this
-was needed to bring us where we are--enmity and bitterness and grief.
-And my love for Barney, too. Let me tell you. It's in the past that I
-think of him. As if he were dead. It's something over; done with for
-ever; yet something always there. How can one be a mother and forget?
-Even when he is Nancy's husband and when she is a mother, I shall not
-cease to feel myself his wife. Perhaps you think that strange, after Meg
-and what I believed right for her. But it is quite clear to me, and
-simple. It isn't a thing of laws and commandments; only of our own
-hearts. If we can love again, we may. But for me it would be impossible.
-With me everything was involved. I couldn't, ever, be twice a wife."
-
-Silence fell between them.
-
-"I'll see about the little girl's grave," said Oldmeadow suddenly. He
-did not know what had made him think of it. Perhaps something that had
-gone on echoing in him after she had spoken of her maternity. "I'll go
-to Evian to-morrow. It will spare Joséphine the journey and give me
-something to do. You'll tell me the name and give me the directions
-before you go."
-
-Tears filled her eyes as she looked at him; but they did not fall. They
-could need no controlling. The springs of weeping must be nearly
-drained. "Thank you," she said, and she looked away, seeming to think
-intently.
-
-It was now too late for the tramways. They had ceased to crash and
-rattle by, but a sound of belated singing passed along the quais,
-melancholy in its induced and extravagant mirth.
-
-The horrible sense of human suffering that had beaten in upon him at the
-hospital, pressed again upon his heart. He saw himself departing next
-day to find the abandoned grave and he saw himself standing beside her
-train and measuring along the shining rails the vast distances that were
-to bear her away for ever.
-
-"That's the worst," he said. "You're suffering too. I must see you go
-away and know that you are unhappy. I must think of you as unhappy. With
-a broken heart."
-
-Her eyes, after she had thanked him, had been fixed in the intent
-reverie. She, too, perhaps, had been seeing those tides of misery, the
-sea of which she had spoken, breaking in tragic waves for ever; so
-unchanged by all the alleviations that love or mercy could bring; and it
-was perhaps with despair that she saw herself as one with it. Her eyes
-as she turned them on him were full of distance and of depth and, with
-sickening grief, he felt that a woman with a broken heart could do
-nothing more for herself or for him.
-
-But her thought, whatever the voids of darkness it had visited, drew
-nearer and nearer to his need as she looked at him. Something of her own
-strong vigilance was in the look, bringing the seagull to his mind. The
-seagull caught and battered by the waves, with sodden wings, half
-dragged down, yet summoning its strength to rise from the submerging
-sea.
-
-"But you can be happy with a broken heart," she said. Their hands had
-fallen apart long since. She stretched out hers now and took his in her
-small, firm grasp.
-
-"Can you?" he asked.
-
-"You mustn't think of me like this," she said, and it was as if she read
-his thoughts and their imagery. "I went down, I know; like drowning.
-Sometimes the waves break over you and pull you down, and there seems
-nothing else in all the world but yourself and what you've suffered. But
-it doesn't last. Something brings you up again."
-
-Something had brought her up again now. His darkness. His misery. It was
-as if he saw her spread her wings and saw her eyes measuring, for them
-both, the spaces of sea and sky.
-
-He remembered a picture in a book he had loved as a little boy: little
-Diamond held to the breast of the North Wind as she flies forth in her
-streaming hair against a sky of stars. So he felt himself lying on her
-breast and lifted with her.
-
-"I've told you how happy I can be. It's all true," she said. "It's all
-there. The light, the peace, the strength. I shall find them. And so
-will you."
-
-"Shall I?" he questioned gently. "Without you?"
-
-"Yes. Without me. You will find them. But you won't be without me," said
-Adrienne.
-
-Already she was finding them. He knew that, for, as she looked at him,
-he felt an influence passing from her to him like the laying of her hand
-upon his brow. But it was closer than that. It was to her breast that
-her eyes held him while, in a long silence, the compulsion of her faith
-flowed into him. First quietness; then peace; then a lifting radiance.
-
-"Promise me," he heard her say.
-
-He did not know what it was he must promise, but he seemed to feel it
-all without knowing and he said: "I promise."
-
-She rose and stood above him. "You mustn't regret. You mustn't want."
-
-She laid her hands upon his shoulders as she spoke and looked down at
-him, so austere, so radiant. "Anything else would have spoiled it. We
-were only meant to find each other like this and then to part."
-
-"I'll be good," said Oldmeadow. It was like saying one's prayers at
-one's mother's knees and his lips found the child-like formula.
-
-"We must part," said Adrienne. "I have my life and you have yours and
-they take different ways. But you won't be without me, I won't be
-without you. How can we be, when we will never, never forget each other
-and our love?"
-
-He looked up at her. He had put out his hands and they grasped her dress
-as a donor in a votive altarpiece grasps the Madonna's healing garment.
-It was not, he knew, to keep her. It was rather in an accepting
-relinquishment that he held her thus for their last communion, receiving
-through touch and sight and hearing her final benison.
-
-"I will think of you every day, until I die," she said. "I will pray for
-you every day. Dear friend--dearest friend--God bless and keep you."
-
-She had stooped to him and for a transcending moment he was taken into
-her strong, life-giving embrace. The climax of his life was come as he
-felt her arms close round him and her kiss upon his forehead. And as she
-held him thus he believed all that she had said and all for which she
-could have found no words. That he should find the light and more and
-more feel their unity in it: that the thought of her would be strength
-to him always; as the thought of him and of his love would be strength
-to her.
-
-After she had gone, he sat for a long time bathed in the sense of her
-life, and tasting, for that span of time, her own security of eternal
-goodness.
-
-THE END
-
-
-Typographical error was corrected by the etext transcriber:
-
-"Adriennes mustn't fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only
-justification for Adriennes is to be in the right. => "Adrienne mustn't
-fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only justification for Adrienne is
-to be in the right. {pg 241}
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Adrienne Toner, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Adrienne Toner
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: March 29, 2013 [EBook #42428]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADRIENNE TONER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
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-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-_A Novel_
-
-BY
-ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK
-(Mrs. Basil de Selincourt)
-
-AUTHOR OF "CHRISTMAS ROSES, AND OTHER STORIES," "TANTE"
-"FRANKLIN KANE," "THE ENCOUNTER," ETC.
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-BOSTON AND NEW YORK
-HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
-The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY ANNE DOUGLAS DE SELINCOURT
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-THIRD IMPRESSION, MAY, 1922
-
-The Riverside Press
-CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS
-PRINTED IN THE U . S . A.
-
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-
-
-
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-"Come down to Coldbrooks next week-end, will you, Roger?" said Barney
-Chadwick. He had been wandering around the room, pausing once to glance
-at the Cesar Franck on the piano and once at the window to look down at
-the Thames, and his voice now, though desultory in intention, betrayed
-to his friend preoccupation and even anxiety. "There is going to be an
-interesting girl with us: American; very original and charming."
-
-Roger Oldmeadow sat at his writing-bureau in the window, and his high
-dark head was silhouetted against the sky. It had power and even beauty,
-with moments of brooding melancholy; but the type to which it most
-conformed was that of the clever, cantankerous London bachelor; and if
-he sometimes looked what he was, the scholar who had taken a double
-first at Balliol and gave brain and sinew to an eminent review, he
-looked more often what he was not, a caustic, cautious solicitor,
-clean-shaved and meticulously neat, with the crisp bow at his collar,
-single eyeglass, and thin, wry smile.
-
-There was a cogitative kindness in his eyes and a latent irony on his
-lips as he now scrutinized Barney Chadwick, who had come finally to lean
-against the mantelpiece, and it was difficult before Roger Oldmeadow's
-gaze at such moments not to feel that you were giving yourself away.
-This was evidently what Barney was trying not to feel, or, at all
-events, not to show. He tapped his cigarette-end, fixing his eyes upon
-it and frowning a little. He had ruffled his brown hair with the nervous
-hand passed through it during his ramble, but ruffled or sleek Barney
-could never look anything but perfection, just as, whether he smiled or
-frowned, he could never look anything but charming. In his spring-tide
-grey, with a streak of white inside his waistcoat and a tie of petunia
-silk that matched his socks, he was a pleasant figure of fashion; and he
-was more than that; more than the mere London youth of 1913, who danced
-the tango and cultivated Post-Impressionism and the Russian ballet. He
-was perhaps not much more; but his difference, if slight, made him
-noticeable. It came back, no doubt, to the fact of charm. He was radiant
-yet reserved; confident yet shy. He had a slight stammer, and his smile
-seemed to ask you to help him out. His boyhood, at twenty-nine, still
-survived in his narrow face, clumsy in feature and delicate in contour,
-with long jaw, high temples and brown eyes, half sweet, half sleepy. The
-red came easily to his brown cheek, and he had the sensitive, stubborn
-lips of the little boy at the preparatory school whom Oldmeadow had met
-and befriended now many years ago.
-
-In Oldmeadow's eyes he had always remained the "little Barney" he had
-then christened him--even Barney's mother had almost forgotten that his
-real name was Eustace--and he could not but know that Barney depended
-upon him more than upon anyone in the world. To Barney his negations
-were more potent than other people's affirmations, and though he had
-sometimes said indignantly, "You leave one nothing to agree about,
-Roger, except Plato and Church-music," he was never really happy or
-secure in his rebellions from what he felt or suspected to be
-Oldmeadow's tastes and judgments. Oldmeadow had seen him through many
-admirations, not only for books and pictures, but for original girls.
-Barney thought that he liked the unusual. He was a devotee of the
-ballet, and had in his rooms cushions and curtains from the Omega shop
-and a drawing by Wyndham Lewis. But Oldmeadow knew that he really
-preferred the photograph of a Burne-Jones, a survival from Oxford days,
-that still bravely, and irrelevantly, hung opposite it, and he waited to
-see the Wyndham Lewis replaced by a later portent. Barney could remain
-stubbornly faithful to old devotions, but he was easily drawn into new
-orbits; and it was a new star, evidently, that he had come to describe
-and justify.
-
-"What have I to do with charming American girls?" Oldmeadow inquired,
-turning his eyes on the blurred prospect of factory-chimneys and
-warehouses that the farther waterside of Chelsea affords. One had to go
-to the window and look out to see the grey and silver river flowing, in
-the placidity that revealed so little power. Oldmeadow lived in a flat
-on the Embankment; but he was not an admirer of Chelsea, just as he was
-not an admirer of Whistler nor--and Barney had always suspected it--of
-Burne-Jones. His flat gave him, at a reasonable cost, fresh air,
-boiling-hot water and a walk in Battersea Park; these, with his piano,
-were his fundamental needs; though he owned, for the mean little stream
-it was, that the Thames could look pretty enough by morning sunlight
-and--like any river--magical under stars. After Plato and Bach,
-Oldmeadow's passions were the rivers of France.
-
-"She'll have something to do with you," said Barney, and he seemed
-pleased with the retort. "I met her at the Lumleys. They think her the
-marvel of the age."
-
-"Well, that doesn't endear her to me," said Oldmeadow. "And I don't like
-Americans."
-
-"Come, you're not quite so hide-bound as all that," said Barney, vexed.
-"What about Mrs. Aldesey? I've heard you say she's the most charming
-woman you know."
-
-"Except Nancy," Oldmeadow amended.
-
-"No one could call Nancy a charming woman," said Barney, looking a
-little more vexed. "She's a dear, of course; but she's a mere girl. What
-do you know about Americans, anyway--except Mrs. Aldesey?"
-
-"What she tells me about them--the ones she doesn't know," said
-Oldmeadow, leaning back in his chair with a laugh. "But I own that I'm
-merely prejudiced. Tell me about your young lady, and why you want her
-to have something to do with me. Is she a reformer of some sort?"
-
-"She's a wonderful person, really," said Barney, availing himself with
-eagerness of his opportunity. "Not a reformer. Only a sort of mixture of
-saint and fairy-princess. She cured Charlie Lumley of insomnia, three
-years ago, at Saint Moritz. Nothing psychic or theatrical, you know.
-Just sat by him and smiled--she's a most extraordinary smile--and laid
-her hand on his head. He'd not slept for nights and went off like a
-lamb. Lady Lumley almost cries when she tells about it. They thought
-Charlie might lose his mind if he went on not sleeping."
-
-"My word! She's a Christian Science lady? A medium? What?"
-
-"Call her what you like. You'll see. She does believe in spiritual
-forces. It's not only that. She's quite lovely. In every way. Nancy and
-Meg will worship her. The Lumley girls do."
-
-Oldmeadow's thoughts were already dwelling in rueful surmise on Nancy.
-He had always thought her the nicest young creature he had ever known,
-nicer even than Barney; and he had always wanted them to marry. She was
-Barney's second cousin, and she and her mother lived near the Chadwicks
-in Gloucestershire.
-
-"Oh, Nancy will worship her, will she? She must be all right, then.
-What's her name?" he asked.
-
-Barney had given up trying to be desultory, and his conscious firmness
-was now not lost upon his friend as he answered, stammering a little,
-"Adrienne. Adrienne Toner."
-
-"Why Adrienne?" Oldmeadow mildly inquired. "Has she French blood?"
-
-"Not that I know of. It's a pretty name, I think, Adrienne. One hears
-more inane names given to girls every day. Her mother loved France--just
-as you do, Roger. Adrienne was born in Paris, I think."
-
-"Oh, a very pretty name," said Oldmeadow, noting Barney's already
-familiar use of it. "Though it sounds more like an actress's than a
-saint's."
-
-"There was something dramatic about the mother, I fancy," said Barney,
-sustained, evidently, by his own detachment. "A romantic, rather absurd,
-but very loveable person. Adrienne worshipped her and, naturally, can't
-see the absurdity. She died out in California. On a boat," said Barney
-stammering again, over the _b_.
-
-"On a boat?"
-
-"Yes. Awfully funny. But touching, too. That's what she wanted, when she
-died: the sea and sky about her. They carried her on her yacht--doctors,
-nurses, all the retinue--and sailed far out from shore. It's beautiful,
-too, in a way you know, to be able to do that sort of thing quite simply
-and unself-consciously. Adrienne sat beside her, and they smiled at each
-other and held hands until the end."
-
-Oldmeadow played with his penholder. He was disconcerted; and most of
-all by the derivative emotion in Barney's voice. They had gone far,
-then, already, the young people. Nancy could have not the ghost of a
-chance. And the nature of what touched Barney left him singularly dry.
-He was unable to credit so much simplicity or unself-consciousness. He
-coughed shortly, and after a decently respectful interval inquired: "Is
-Miss Toner very wealthy?"
-
-"Yes, very," said Barney, relapsing now into a slight sulkiness. "At
-least, perhaps not very, as rich Americans go. She gave away a lot of
-her fortune, I know, when her mother died. She founded a place for
-children--a convalescent home, or creche--out in California. And she did
-something in Chicago, too."
-
-And Miss Toner had evidently done something in London at the Lumleys'.
-It couldn't be helped about Nancy, and if the American girl was pretty
-and, for all her nonsense, well-bred, it might not be a bad thing, since
-there was so much money. The Chadwicks were not at all well off, and
-Coldbrooks was only kept going by Mrs. Chadwick's economies and Barney's
-labours at his uncle's stock-broking firm in the city. Oldmeadow could
-see Eleanor Chadwick's so ingenuous yet so practical eye fixed on Miss
-Toner's gold, and he, too, could fix his. Miss Toner sounded benevolent,
-and it was probable that her presence as mistress of Coldbrooks would be
-of benefit to all Barney's relatives. All the same, she sounded as
-irrelevant in his life as the Wyndham Lewis.
-
-"Adrienne Toner," he heard himself repeating aloud, for he had a trick,
-caught, no doubt, from his long loneliness, of relapsing into
-absent-minded and audible meditations. The cadence of it worried him. It
-was an absurd name. "You know each other pretty well already, it seems,"
-he said.
-
-"Yes; it's extraordinary how one seems to know her. One doesn't have any
-formalities to get through with her, as it were," said Barney. "Either
-you are there, or you are not there."
-
-"Either on the yacht, or not on the yacht, eh?" Oldmeadow reached out
-for his pipe.
-
-"Put it like that if you choose. It's awfully jolly to be on the yacht,
-I can tell you. It _is_ like a voyage, a great adventure, to know her."
-
-"And what's it like to be off the yacht? Suppose I'm not there? Suppose
-she doesn't like me?" Oldmeadow suggested. "What am I to talk to her
-about--of course I'll come, if you really want me. But she frightens me
-a little, I confess. I'm not an adventurous person."
-
-"But neither am I, you know!" Barney exclaimed, "and that's just what
-she does to you: makes you adventurous. She'll be immensely interested
-in you, of course. You can talk to her about anything. It was down at a
-week-end at the Lumleys' I first met her, and there were some tremendous
-big-wigs there, political, you know, and literary, and all that sort of
-thing; and she had them all around her. She'd have frightened me, too,
-if I hadn't seen at once that she took to me and wouldn't mind my being
-just ordinary. She likes everybody; that's just it. She takes to
-everybody, big and little. She's just like sunshine," Barney stammered a
-little over his _s_'s. "That's what she makes one think of straight off;
-shining on everything."
-
-"On the clean and the unclean. I see," said Oldmeadow. "I feel it in my
-bones that I shall come into the unclean category with her. But it'll do
-me the more good to have her shine on me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-Roger Oldmeadow went to have tea with Mrs. Aldesey next afternoon. She
-was, after the Chadwicks, his nearest friend, and his relation to the
-Chadwicks was one of affection rather than affinity. They had been
-extraordinarily kind to him since the time that he had befriended Barney
-at the preparatory school, hiding, under his grim jocularities, the
-bewilderment of a boy's first great bereavement. His love for his mother
-had been an idolatry, and his childhood had been haunted by her
-ill-health. She died when he was thirteen, and in some ways he knew
-that, even now, he had never got over it. His unfortunate and frustrated
-love-affair in early manhood had been, when all was said and done, a
-trivial grief compared to it. Coldbrooks had become, after that, his
-only home, for he had lost his father as a very little boy, and the
-whole family had left the country parsonage and been thrown on the
-mercies of an uncle and aunt who lived in a grim provincial town.
-Oldmeadow's most vivid impression of home was the high back bedroom
-where the worn carpet was cold to the feet and the fire a sulky spot of
-red, and the windows looked out over smoky chimney-pots. Here his
-stricken mother lay in bed with her cherished cat beside her and read
-aloud to him. There was always a difficulty about feeding poor Effie,
-Aunt Aggie declaring that cats should live below stairs and on mice; and
-Roger, at midday dinner, became adroit at slipping bits of meat from
-his plate into a paper held in his lap and carried triumphantly to his
-mother's room afterwards. "Oh, darling, you _oughtn't_ to," she would
-say with her loving, girlish smile, and he would reply, "But I went
-without, Mummy; so it's quite all right." His two little sisters were
-kept in the nursery, as they were noisy, high-spirited children, and
-tired their mother too much. Roger was her companion, her comrade; her
-only comrade in the world, really, beside Effie. It had been Mrs.
-Chadwick who had saved Effie from the lethal chamber after her
-mistress's death. Roger never spoke about his mother, but he did speak
-about Effie when she was thus threatened, and he had never forgotten,
-never, never, Mrs. Chadwick's eager cry of, "But bring her here, my dear
-Roger. I _like_ idle cats! Bring her here, and I promise you that we'll
-make her happy. Animals are _so_ happy at Coldbrooks." To see Effie
-cherished, petted, occupying the best chairs during all the years that
-followed, had been to see his mother, in this flickering little ghost,
-remembered in the only way he could have borne to see her explicitly
-remembered, and it was because of Effie that he had most deeply loved
-Coldbrooks. It remained always his refuge during a cheerless and
-harassed youth, when, with his two forceful, black-browed sisters to
-settle in life, he had felt himself pant and strain under the harness.
-He was fonder of them than they of him, for they were hard, cheerful
-young women, inheriting harshness of feature and manner from their
-father, with their father's black eyes. It was from his mother that
-Oldmeadow had his melancholy blue ones, and he had never again met his
-mother's tenderness.
-
-Both sisters were now settled, one in India and one, very prosperously,
-in London; but he seldom turned for tea into Cadogan Gardens and
-Trixie's brisk Chippendale drawing-room; though Cadogan Gardens was
-obviously more convenient than Somer's Place, where, on the other side
-of the park, Mrs. Aldesey lived. He had whims, and did not know whether
-it was because he more disliked her husband or her butler that he went
-so seldom to see Trixie. Her husband was jovial and familiar, and the
-butler had a face like a rancid ham and a surreptitious manner. One had
-always to be encountered at the door, and the other was too often in the
-drawing-room, and Trixie was vexatiously satisfied with both; Trixie
-also had four turbulent, intelligent children, in whom complacent
-parental theories of uncontrol manifested themselves unpleasantly, and
-altogether she was too much hedged in by obstacles to be tempting; even
-had she been tempting in herself. Intercourse with Trixie, when it did
-take place, consisted usually of hard-hearted banter. She bantered him a
-great deal about Mrs. Aldesey, who, she averred, snubbed her. Not that
-Trixie minded being snubbed by anybody.
-
-It was a pleasant walk across the park on this spring day when the
-crocuses were fully out in the grass, white, purple and gold, and the
-trees just scantly stitched with green, and, as always, it was with a
-slight elation that he approached his friend. However dull or jaded
-oneself or the day, the thought of her cheered one as did the thought of
-tea. She made him think of her own China tea. She suggested delicate
-ceremoniousness. Though familiar, there was always an aroma of
-unexpectedness about her; a slight, sweet shock of oddity and surprise.
-
-Mrs. Aldesey was unlike the traditional London American. She was neither
-rich nor beautiful nor noticeably well-dressed. One became gradually
-aware, after some time spent in her company, that her clothes,
-soft-tinted and silken, were pleasing, as were her other appurtenances;
-the narrow front of her little house, painted freshly in white and green
-and barred by boxes of yellow wallflower; the serenely unfashionable
-water-colours of Italy, painted by her mother, on the staircase; and her
-drawing-room, grey-green and primrose-yellow, with eighteenth-century
-fans, of which she had a collection, displayed in cabinets, and good old
-glass.
-
-Mrs. Aldesey herself, behind her tea-table, very faded, very thin, with
-what the French term a _souffreteux_ little face--an air of just not
-having taken drugs to make her sleep, but of having certainly taken
-tabloids to make her digest--seemed already to belong to a passing order
-of things; an order still sustained, if lightly, by stays, and keeping a
-prayer-book as punctually in use as a card-case.
-
-Oldmeadow owed her, if indirectly, to the Chadwicks, as he owed so much,
-even if it was entirely on his own merits that he had won her regard.
-They had met, years ago, in France; an entirely chance encounter, and
-probably a futureless one, had it not been for the presence in the hotel
-at Amboise of the Lumleys. They both slightly knew the Lumleys, and the
-Lumleys and the Chadwicks were old friends. So it had come about; and if
-he associated Mrs. Aldesey with tea, he associated her also with perfect
-omelettes and the Loire. He had liked her at once so much, that, had it
-not been for an always unseen yet never-repudiated husband in New York,
-he would certainly, at the beginning, have fallen in love with her. But
-the unrepudiated husband made as much a part of Mrs. Aldesey's
-environment as her stays and her prayer-book. The barrier was so evident
-that one did not even reflect on what one might have done had it not
-been there; and indeed, Mrs. Aldesey, he now seemed, after many pleasant
-years of friendship, to recognize, for all the sense of sweetness and
-exhilaration she gave him, had not enough substance to rouse or sustain
-his heart. She was, like the tea again, all savour.
-
-She lifted to-day her attentive blue eyes--with age they would become
-shrewd--and gave him her fine little hand, blue-veined and ornamented
-with pearls and diamonds in old settings. She wore long earrings and a
-high, transparent collar of net and lace. Her earrings and her
-elaborately dressed hair, fair and faded, seemed as much a part of her
-personality as her eyes, her delicate nose and her small, slightly
-puckered mouth that dragged provocatively and prettily at one corner
-when she smiled. Oldmeadow sometimes wondered if she were happy; but
-never because of anything she said or did.
-
-"I want to hear about some people called Toner," he said, dropping into
-the easy-chair on the opposite side of the tea-table. It was almost
-always thus that he and Mrs. Aldesey met. He rarely dined out. "I'm
-rather perturbed. I think that Barney--you remember young Chadwick--is
-going to marry a Miss Toner--a Miss Adrienne Toner. And I hope you'll
-have something to her advantage to tell me. As you know, I'm devoted to
-Barney and his family."
-
-"I know. The Lumleys' Chadwicks. I remember perfectly. The dear boy with
-the innocent eyes and sulky mouth. Why don't you bring him to see me?
-He's dancing the tango in all his spare moments, I suppose, and doesn't
-care about old ladies." Mrs. Aldesey was not much over forty, but always
-thus alluded to herself. "Toner," she took up, pouring out his tea. "Why
-perturbed? Do you know anything against them? Americans, you mean. We
-poor expatriates are always seen as keepers to so many curious
-brethren.--Toner. _Cela ne me dit rien_."
-
-"I know nothing against them except that Mrs. Toner, the girl's mother,
-died, by arrangement, out at sea, on her yacht--in sunlight. Does that
-say anything? People don't do that in America, do they, as a rule? A
-very opulent lady, I inferred."
-
-"Oh, dear!" Mrs. Aldesey now ejaculated, as if enlightened. "Can it be?
-Do you mean, I wonder, the preposterous Mrs. Toner, of whom, fifteen
-years ago, I had a glimpse, and used to hear vague rumours? She wandered
-about the world. She dressed in the Empire period: Queen Louise of
-Prussia, white gauze bound beneath her chin. She had a harp, and warbled
-to monarchs. She had an astral body, and a Yogi and a yacht and
-everything handsome about her. The typical spiritual _cabotine_ of our
-epoch--though I'm sure they must always have existed. Of course it must
-be she. No one else could have died like that. Has she died, poor woman?
-On a yacht. Out at sea. In sunlight. How uncomfortable!"
-
-"Yes, she's dead," said Oldmeadow resignedly. "Yes; it's she, evidently.
-And her daughter is coming down to Coldbrooks this week-end. I'm afraid
-that unless Barney has too many rivals, he'll certainly marry her. But
-what you say leads me to infer that he will have rivals and to hope they
-may be successful. She will, no doubt, marry a prince."
-
-"Something Italian, perhaps. Quite a small fortune will do that.
-Certainly your nice Barney wouldn't have been at all Mrs. Toner's
-_affaire_. The girl on her own may think differently, for your Barney
-is, I remember, very engaging, and has a way with him. I don't know
-anything about the girl. I didn't know there was one. There's no reason
-why she may not be charming. Our wonderful people have the gift of
-picking up experience in a generation and make excellent princesses."
-
-"But she's that sort, you think. The sort that marries princes and has
-no traditions. Where did they come from? Do you know that?"
-
-"I haven't an idea. Yet, stay. Was it not tooth-paste?--Toner's Peerless
-Tooth-Paste. Obsolete; yet I seem to see, reminiscently, in far-away
-nursery days, the picture of a respectable old gentleman with
-side-whiskers, on a tube. A pretty pink glazed tube with a gilt top to
-it. Perhaps it's that. Since it was Toner's it would be the father's
-side; not the warbling mother's. Well, many of us might wish for as
-unambiguous an origin nowadays. And, in America, we did all sorts of
-useful things when we first, all of us, came over in the Mayflower!"
-said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile.
-
-Oldmeadow gazed upon his friend with an ironically receptive eye. "Have
-they ever known anyone decent? Anyone like yourself? I don't mean over
-here. I mean in America."
-
-"No one like me, I imagine; if I'm decent. Mrs. Toner essayed a season
-in New York one winter, and it was then I had my glimpse of her, at the
-opera, in the Queen Louise dress. A pretty woman, dark, with a sort of
-soulful and eminently respectable coquetry about her; surrounded by
-swarms of devotees--all male, to me unknown; and with something in a
-turban that I took to be a Yogi in the background. She only tried the
-one winter. She knew what she wanted and where she couldn't get it. We
-are very dry in New York--such of us as survive. Very little moved by
-warblings or astral bodies or millions. As you intimate, she'll have
-done much better over here. You _are_ a strange mixture of materialism
-and ingenuousness, you know."
-
-"It's only that we have fewer Mrs. Toners to amuse us and more to do
-with millions than you have," said Oldmeadow; but Mrs. Aldesey, shaking
-her head with a certain sadness, said that it wasn't as simple as all
-that.
-
-"Have you seen her? Have you seen Adrienne?" she took up presently,
-making him his second cup of tea. "Is she pretty? Is he very much in
-love?"
-
-"I'm going down to Coldbrooks on Saturday to see her," said Oldmeadow,
-"and I gather that it's not to subject her to any test that Barney wants
-me; it's to subject me, rather. He's quite sure of her. He thinks she's
-irresistible. He merely wants to make assurance doubly sure by seeing me
-bowled over. I don't know whether she's pretty. She has powers,
-apparently, that make her independent of physical attractions. She lays
-her hands on people's heads and cures them. She cured Charlie Lumley of
-insomnia at Saint Moritz three years ago."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey, at this, looked at him for some moments in silence.
-"Yes," she assented, and in her pause she seemed to have recognized and
-placed a familiar object. "Yes. She would. That's just what Mrs. Toner's
-daughter would do. I hope she doesn't warble, too. Laying on hands is
-better than warbling."
-
-"I see you think it hopeless," said Oldmeadow, pushing back his chair
-and yielding, as he thrust his hands into his pockets and stretched out
-his legs, to an avowed chagrin. "What a pity it is! A thousand pities.
-They are such dear, good, simple people, and Barney, though he doesn't
-know it, is as simple as any of them. What will become of them with this
-overwhelming cuckoo in their nest."
-
-At this Mrs. Aldesey became serious. "I don't think it hopeless at all.
-You misunderstand me. Isn't the fact that he's in love with her
-reassuring in itself? He may be simple, but he's a delicate, discerning
-creature, and he couldn't fall in love with some one merely pretentious
-and absurd. She may be charming. I can perfectly imagine her as
-charming, and there's no harm in laying on hands; there may be good.
-Don't be narrow, Roger. Don't go down there feeling dry."
-
-"I am narrow, and I do feel dry; horribly dry," said Oldmeadow. "How
-could the child of such a mother, and of tooth-paste, be charming? Don't
-try specious consolation, now, after having more than justified all my
-suspicions."
-
-"I'm malicious, not specious; and I can't resist having my fling. But
-you mustn't be narrow and take me _au pied de la lettre_. I assert that
-she may be charming. I assert that I can see it all working out most
-happily. She'll lay her hands on them and they'll love her. What I
-really want to say is this: don't try to set Barney against her. He'll
-marry her all the same and never forgive you."
-
-"Ah; there we have the truth of it. But Barney would always forgive me,"
-said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Well then, she won't. And you'd lose him just as surely. And she'll
-know. Let me warn you of that. She'll know perfectly."
-
-"I'll keep my hands off her," said Oldmeadow, "if she doesn't try to lay
-hers on me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-The Chadwicks all had a certain sulkiness in their charming looks, and
-where in Barney it mingled with sweetness, in Palgrave, his younger
-brother, it mingled with brilliancy. It was Palgrave who, at the
-station, met the family friend and counsellor in the shabby, inexpensive
-family car. He was still a mere boy, home from Marlborough for the
-Easter holidays; fond of Oldmeadow, as all the Chadwicks were; but more
-resentful of his predominance than Barney and more indifferent to his
-brotherly solicitude. He had Barney's long, narrow face and Barney's
-eyes and lips; but the former were proud and the latter petulant.
-To-day, as he sat beside him in the car, Oldmeadow was aware of
-something at once fixed and vibrating in his bearing. He wanted to say
-something, and he had resolved to be silent. During their last encounter
-at Coldbrooks, he and Oldmeadow had had a long, antagonistic political
-discussion, and Palgrave's resentment still, no doubt, survived.
-
-Coldbrooks lay among the lower Cotswolds, three miles from the station,
-and near the station was the village of Chelford where Nancy Averil and
-her mother lived. Nancy was at Coldbrooks; Aunt Monica--she was called
-aunt by the Chadwick children, though she and Mrs. Chadwick were first
-cousins--was away. So Palgrave informed him. But he did not speak again
-until the chill, green curve of arable hill-side was climbed and a
-stretch of wind-swept country lay before them. Then suddenly he
-volunteered: "The American girl is at Coldbrooks."
-
-"Oh! Is she? When did she come?" Somehow Oldmeadow had expected the
-later train for Miss Toner.
-
-"Yesterday. She and Barney came down together in her car."
-
-"So you've welcomed her already," said Oldmeadow, curious of the
-expression on the boy's face. "How does she fit into Coldbrooks? Does
-she like you all and do you like her?"
-
-For a moment Palgrave was silent. "You mean it makes a difference
-whether we do or not?" he then inquired.
-
-"I don't know that I meant that. Though if people come into your life it
-does make a difference."
-
-"And is she going to come into our lives?" Palgrave asked, and Oldmeadow
-felt pressure of some sort behind the question. "That's what I mean. Has
-Barney told you? He's said nothing to us. Not even to Mother."
-
-"Has Barney told me he's going to marry her? No; he hasn't. But it's
-evident he hopes to. Perhaps it depends on whether she likes Coldbrooks
-and Coldbrooks likes her."
-
-"Oh, no, it doesn't. It doesn't depend on anything at all except whether
-she likes Barney," said Palgrave. "She's the sort of person who doesn't
-depend on anything or anybody except herself. She cuts through
-circumstance like a knife through cheese. And if she's not going to take
-him I wish she'd never come," he added, frowning and turning, under the
-peak of his cap, his jewel-like eyes upon his companion. "It's a case of
-all or nothing with a person like that. It's too disturbing--just for a
-glimpse."
-
-Oldmeadow felt himself disconcerted. Oddly enough, for the boy was
-capricious and extravagant, Palgrave's opinion had more weight with him
-than Barney's. Barney, for one thing, was sexually susceptible and
-Palgrave was not. Though so young, Oldmeadow felt him already of a
-poetic temperament, passionate in mind and cold in blood.
-
-"She's so charming? You can't bear to lose her now you've seen her?" he
-asked.
-
-"I don't know about charming. No; I don't think her charming. At least
-not if you mean something little by the word. She's disturbing. She
-changes everything."
-
-"But if she stays she'll be more disturbing. She'll change more."
-
-"Oh, I shan't mind that! I shan't mind change," Palgrave declared. "If
-it's her change and she's there to see it through." And, relapsing to
-muteness, he bent to his brakes and they slid down among the woods of
-Coldbrooks.
-
-For the life of him and with the best will in the world, he couldn't
-make it out. That was Oldmeadow's first impression as, among the
-familiar group gathered in the hall about the tea-table, Miss Toner was
-at last made manifest to him. She was, he felt sure, in his first shrewd
-glance at her, merely what Lydia Aldesey would have placed as a
-third-rate American girl, and her origins in commercial enterprise were
-eminently appropriate.
-
-She got up to meet him, as if recognizing in him some special
-significance or, indeed, as it might be her ingenuous habit to do in
-meeting any older person. But he was not so much older if it came to
-that; for, after he had met the direct and dwelling gaze of her large,
-light eyes, the second impression was that she was by no means so young
-as Barney had led him to expect. She was certainly as old as Barney.
-
-There were none of the obvious marks of wealth upon her. She wore a
-dark-blue dress tying on the breast over white. She was small in stature
-and, in manner, composed beyond anything he had ever encountered. With
-an irony, kindly enough, yet big, he knew, with unfavourable inferences,
-he even recognized, reconstructing the moment in the light of those that
-followed, that in rising to meet him as he was named to her, it had
-been, rather than in shyness or girlishness, in the wish to welcome him
-and draw him the more happily into a group she had already made her own.
-
-They were all sitting round the plentiful table, set with home-made
-loaves and cakes, jams and butter, and a Leeds bowl of primroses; Miss
-Toner just across from him, Barney on one side of her--his was an air of
-tranquil ecstasy--and little Barbara on the other, and they all seemed
-to emanate a new radiance; almost, thought Oldmeadow, with an
-irritability that was still genial, like innocent savages on a remote
-seashore gathered with intent eyes and parted lips round the newly
-disembarked Christopher Columbus. Mrs. Chadwick, confused, as usual,
-among her tea-cups, sending hasty relays of sugar after the unsugared or
-recalling those sugared in error, specially suggested the simile. She
-could, indeed, hardly think of her tea. Her wide, startled gaze turned
-incessantly on the new-comer and to Oldmeadow, for all his nearly filial
-affection, the eyes of Eleanor Chadwick looked like nothing in the
-world so much as those of the March Hare in Tenniel's evocation of the
-endearing creature. Unlike her children, she was fair, with a thin,
-high, ridiculously distinguished nose; but her mouth and chin had
-Barney's irresolution and sweetness, and her untidy locks Meg's beauty.
-Meg was a beauty in every way, rose, pearl and russet, a Romney touched
-with pride and daring, and the most sophisticated of all the Chadwicks;
-yet she, too, brooded, half merrily, half sombrely, on Miss Toner, her
-elbows on the table for the better contemplation. Palgrave's absorption
-was manifest; but he did not brood. He held his head high, frowned and,
-for the most part, looked out of the window.
-
-Oldmeadow sat between Palgrave and Nancy and it was with Nancy that the
-magic ended. Nancy did not share in the radiance. She smiled and was
-very busy cutting the bread and butter; but she was pale; not puzzled,
-but preoccupied. Poor darling Nancy; always his special pet; to him
-always the dearest and most loveable of girls. Not at all a Romney. With
-her pale, fresh face, dark hair and beautiful hands she suggested,
-rather, a country lady of the seventeenth century painted by Vandyck. A
-rural Vandyck who might have kept a devout and merry journal, surprising
-later generations by its mixture of ingenuousness and wisdom. Her lips
-were meditative, and her grey eyes nearly closed when she smiled in a
-way that gave to her gaiety and extraordinary sweetness and intimacy.
-Nancy always looked as if she loved you when she smiled at you; and
-indeed she did love you. She had spent her life among people she loved
-and if she could not be intimate she was remote and silent.
-
-But there was no hope for Nancy. He saw that finally, as he drank his
-tea in silence and looked across the primroses at the marvel of the age.
-
-Miss Toner's was an insignificant little head, if indeed it could be
-called little, since it was too large for her body, and her way of
-dressing her hair in wide braids, pinned round it and projecting over
-the ears, added to the top-heavy effect. The hair was her only
-indubitable beauty, fine and fair and sparkling like the palest, purest
-metal. It was cut in a light fringe across a projecting forehead and her
-mouth and chin projected, too; so that, as he termed it to himself, it
-was a squashed-in face, ugly in structure, the small nose, from its
-depressed bridge, jutting forward in profile, the lips, in profile, flat
-yet prominent. Nevertheless he owned, studying her over his tea-cup,
-that the features, ugly, even trivial in detail, had in their assemblage
-something of unexpected force. Her tranquil smile had potency and he
-suddenly became aware of her flat, gentle voice, infrequent, yet oddly
-dominating. Sensitive as he was to voices, he saw it as a bland, blue
-ribbon rolled out among broken counters of colour, and listened to its
-sound before he listened to what it said. All the other voices went up
-and down; all the others half said things and let them drop or trail.
-She said things to the end: when the ribbon began it was unrolled; and
-it seemed, always, to make a silence in which it could be watched.
-
-"We went up high into the sunlight," she said, "and one saw nothing but
-snow and sky. The bells were ringing on the mountains beneath; one heard
-no other sound. I have never forgotten the moment. It seemed an
-inspiration of joy and peace and strength."
-
-"You've walked so much in the Alps, haven't you, Roger?" said Mrs.
-Chadwick. "Miss Toner has motored over every pass."
-
-"In the French Alps. I don't like Switzerland," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"I think I love the mountains everywhere," said Miss Toner, "when they
-go so high into the sky and have the sun and snow on their summits. But
-I love the mountains of Savoy and Jura best."
-
-It vexed him that she should. She was a person to stay in and prefer
-Switzerland. "Joy and peace and strength," echoed in his ears and with
-the words, rudely, and irrelevantly, the image of the pink glazed tube
-with the gilt stopper. Miss Toner's teeth were as white as they were
-benignant.
-
-"I wish I could see those flowers," said Mrs. Chadwick. "I've only been
-to Vevey in the summer; oh, years and years ago. So dull. Fields of
-flowers. You've seen them, too, of course, Roger. All the things we grow
-with such pains. My Saint Brigid anemones never really do--though what I
-put in of leaf-mould!"
-
-"You'll see anemones, fields of them, in the Alpine meadows; and violets
-and lilies; the little lilies of Saint Bruno that look like freesias. I
-love them best of all," the bland, blue ribbon unrolled. "You shall go
-with me some day, Mrs. Chadwick. We'll go together." And, smiling at her
-as if they had, already, a happy secret between them, Miss Toner
-continued: "We'll go this very summer, if you will. We'll motor all the
-way. I'll come and get you here. For a whole month you shall forget that
-you've ever had a family to bring up or a house to take care of or
-anemones that won't grow properly--even in leaf-mould."
-
-Her eyes, as they rested on her hostess, seemed to impart more than her
-words. They imparted something to Oldmeadow. He had not before
-conjectured that Eleanor Chadwick might be bored or tired, nor realized
-that since Barbara's birth, fourteen years ago, she had not left
-Coldbrooks except to go to London for a week's shopping, or to stay with
-friends in the English country. He had taken Eleanor Chadwick's life for
-granted. It seemed Miss Toner's function not to take things that could
-be changed for granted. It was easy to do that of course, when you had a
-large banking account behind you; and yet he felt that Miss Toner would
-have had the faculty of altering accepted standards, even had she been
-materially unequipped. She and Mrs. Chadwick continued to look at each
-other for a moment and the older woman, half bashfully, seemed, with
-what softness, compelled to a tacit confession. She'd never known before
-that she was tired. Springs of adventure and girlishness within her were
-perhaps unsealed by Miss Toner's gaze.
-
-"And where do the rest of us come in!" Barney ejaculated. He was so
-happy in the triumph of his beloved that his eyes, their sleepiness
-banished, were almost as brilliant as Palgrave's.
-
-"But you're always coming in with Mrs. Chadwick," said Miss Toner. She
-looked at him, if with a touch of tender humour, exactly as she looked
-at his mother; but then she looked at them both as if they were precious
-to her. "I don't want you to come in at all for that month. I want her
-to forget you ever existed. There ought to be waters of Lethe for
-everyone every now and then, even in this life. We come out, after the
-plunge into forgetfulness, far brighter and stronger and with a
-renovated self to love the better with. Afterwards--after she's had her
-dip--you'll all come in, if you want to, with me. I'll get a car big
-enough. You, too, Miss Averil; and Mr. Oldmeadow; though he and Barney
-and Palgrave may have to take turns sitting on the portmanteaus."
-
-"Barney" and "Palgrave" already. Her unpretentious mastery alarmed
-almost as much as it amused him. He thanked her, with his dry smile,
-saying that he really preferred to see the Alps on his legs and asked,
-to temper the possible acerbity, "Do you drive yourself?" for it seemed
-in keeping with his picture of her as an invading providence that she
-should with her own hand conduct the car of fate. He could see her,
-somehow, taking the hairpin curves on the Galibier.
-
-But Miss Toner said she did not drive. "One can't see flowers if one
-drives oneself; and it would hurt dear Macfarlane's feelings so.
-Macfarlane is my chauffeur and he's been with me for years; from the
-time we first began to have motors, my mother and I, out in California.
-Apart from that, I should like it, I think, with the sense of risk and
-venture it must give. I like the sense of high adventure--of 'Childe
-Roland to the dark tower came'; don't you, Palgrave? It's life, isn't
-it? The pulse of life. Danger and venture and conquest. And then
-resting, on the heights, while one hears the bells beneath one."
-
-This, thought Oldmeadow, as he adjusted his glass the better to examine
-Miss Toner, must prove itself too much, even for Palgrave to swallow.
-But Palgrave swallowed it without a tremor. His eyes on hers he
-answered: "Yes, I feel life like that, too."
-
-"Oh, dear!" sighed Mrs. Chadwick, and Oldmeadow blessed her antidote to
-the suffocating sweetness: "I'm afraid I don't! I don't think I know
-anything about risks and dangers; or about conquest either. I'm sure
-I've never conquered anything; though I have been dreadfully afraid of
-ill-tempered servants--if that counts, and never let them see it.
-Barbara had such an odious nurse. She tried, simply, to keep me out of
-the nursery; but she didn't succeed. And there was a Scotch cook once,
-with red hair--that so often goes with a bad temper, doesn't it? Do you
-remember, Barney?--your dear father had to go down to the kitchen when
-she was found lying quite, quite drunk under the table. But cooks and
-nurses can't be called risks--and I've never cared for hunting."
-
-Miss Toner was quietly laughing, and indeed everybody laughed.
-
-"Dear Mrs. Chadwick," she said. And then she added: "How can a mother
-say she has not known risks and dangers? I think you've thought only of
-other people for all your life and never seen yourself at all. Alpine
-passes aren't needed to prove people's courage and endurance."
-
-Oldmeadow now saw, from the sudden alarm and perplexity of Mrs.
-Chadwick's expression, that she was wondering if the marvellous guest
-alluded to the perils of child-birth. Perhaps she did. She was ready, he
-imagined, to allude to anything.
-
-"You're right about her never having seen herself," said Palgrave,
-nodding across at Miss Toner. "She never has. She's incapable of
-self-analysis."
-
-"But she's precious sharp when it comes to analysing other people,
-aren't you, Mummy dear!" said Barney.
-
-"I don't think she is," said Meg. "I think Mummy sees people rather as
-she sees flowers; things to be fed and staked and protected."
-
-"You're always crabbing Mummy, Meg. It's a shame!--Isn't it a shame,
-Mummy dear!" Barbara protested, and Barney tempered the apparent
-criticism--peacemaker as he usually was--with: "But you have to
-understand flowers jolly well to make them grow. And we do her credit,
-don't we!"
-
-Miss Toner looked from one to the other as they spoke, with her clear,
-benignant, comprehending gaze, and Mrs. Chadwick stared with her March
-Hare ingenuousness that had its full share, too, of March Hare
-shrewdness. She undertook no self-justification, commenting merely, in
-the pause that followed Barney's contribution: "I don't know what you
-mean by self-analysis unless it's thinking about yourself and mothers
-certainly haven't much time for that. You're quite right there, my
-dear," she nodded at Miss Toner, adding in a tone intended specially for
-her: "But young people often exaggerate things that are quite, quite
-simple when they come."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-"Come out and have a stroll," said Oldmeadow to Nancy. Tea was over and
-a primrose-coloured sunset filled the sky. They walked up and down the
-gravelled terrace before the house.
-
-Coldbrooks stood high, yet encircled by still higher stretches of bare
-or wooded upland. Its walled garden, where vegetable beds and lines of
-cordon apple-trees were pleasingly diversified by the herbaceous borders
-that ran beneath the walls, lay behind it; most of the bedroom windows
-looked down into the garden. Before it, to the south, lawns and meadows
-dropped to a lake fed by the brooks that gave the place its name. Beyond
-the lake were lower copses, tinkling now with the musical run of water
-and climbing softly on either side, so that from the terrace one had a
-vast curved space of sky before one. The sun was setting over the woods.
-
-It was Barney's grandfather, enriched by large shipping enterprises in
-Liverpool, who had bought the pleasant old house, half farm, half manor,
-and Barney's father had married the daughter of a local squire. But the
-family fortunes were much dwindled, and though Barney still nursed the
-project of returning one day to farm his own land there was little
-prospect of such a happy restoration. In spite of the Russian ballet and
-London portents, he was fonder, far, of Coldbrooks than of all of them
-put together. But he could afford neither time nor money for hunting,
-and his home was his only for week-ends and holidays. It was the most
-loveable of homes, more stately without than within, built of grey-gold
-Cotswold stone with beautiful stone chimneys and mullioned windows and
-three gables facing the southern sky. Within, everything was rather bare
-and shabby. There was no central heating, and no bathrooms. The
-tiger-skin that lay on the stone flags of the hall had lost all its
-hair. The piano rattled and wheezed in many of its notes. The patterns
-of the drawing-room chintzes were faded to a mere dim rosy riot, and
-stuffing protruded from the angles of the leather arm-chairs in the
-smoking-room. But it was, all the same, a delightful house to stay in.
-Eleanor Chadwick's shrewdness showed itself in her housekeeping. She
-knew what were the essentials. There was always a blazing fire in one's
-bedroom in the evening and the hottest of water with one's bath in the
-morning. Under the faded chintz, every chair in the drawing-room was
-comfortable. The toast was always crisp; the tea always made with
-boiling water; the servants cheerful. Mrs. Chadwick had a great gift
-with servants. She could reprove with extreme plaintiveness, yet never
-wound a susceptibility, and the servants' hall, as she often remarked
-with justice, was smarter and prettier than the drawing-room. Johnson,
-the old butler, had been at Coldbrooks since before her marriage, and
-the grey-haired parlourmaid had come with her when she had come as a
-bride. These familiar faces added depth to the sense of intimacy that
-was the gift of Coldbrooks. Oldmeadow loved the place as much as any of
-the Chadwicks did, and was as much at home in it.
-
-"There is a blackcap," said Nancy, "down in the copse. I felt sure I
-heard one this morning."
-
-"So it is," said Oldmeadow. They paused to listen.
-
-"It's the happiest of all," said Nancy.
-
-He had been wondering about Nancy ever since he had come. It was not her
-voice, gentle and meditative, that told him now she was unhappy. It was
-rather in contrast to the bird's clear ecstasy that he felt the
-heaviness of her heart.
-
-"It's wilder than the thrush and blackbird, isn't it?" he said. "Less
-conscious. The thrush is always listening to himself, I feel. Do you
-want to go to the Alps with Miss Toner, Nancy?"
-
-Nancy would not see Miss Toner as an angelic being and he wanted to know
-how she did see her. The others, it was evident, thought her angelic by
-a sort of group suggestion. She thought herself so, to begin with; snow,
-flowers, bells and all the rest of it; and they, ingenuous creatures,
-saw the mango-tree rising to heaven as the calm-eyed Yogi willed they
-should. But Nancy did not see the mango-tree. She was outside the group
-consciousness--with him.
-
-"Oh, no!" she now said quickly; and she added: "I don't mean that I
-don't like her. It's only that I don't know her. How can she want us?
-She came only yesterday."
-
-"But, you see, she means you to know her. And when she's known she
-couldn't imagine that anyone wouldn't like her."
-
-"I don't think she's conceited, if you mean that, Roger."
-
-"Conceit," he rejoined, "may be of an order so monstrous that it loses
-all pettiness. You've seen more of her than I have, of course."
-
-"I think she's good. She wants to do good. She wants to make people
-happy; and she does," said Nancy.
-
-"By taking them about in motors, you mean."
-
-"In every way. She's always thinking about pleasing them. In big and
-little ways. Aunt Eleanor loves her already. They had a long talk last
-night in Aunt Eleanor's room. She's given Meg the most beautiful little
-pendant--pearl and amethyst, an old Italian setting. She had it on last
-night and Meg said how lovely it was and she simply lifted it off her
-own neck and put it around Meg's. Meg had to keep it. She gave it in
-such a way that one would have to keep it."
-
-"Rather useful, mustn't it be, to have pendants so plentifully about you
-that you can hand them out to the first young lady who takes a fancy to
-them? Has she given you anything, Nancy?"
-
-"I'm sure she would. But I shall be more careful than Meg was."
-
-"Perhaps Meg will practise carelessness, since it's so remunerative.
-What has she given Palgrave? He seems absorbed."
-
-"Isn't it wonderful," said Nancy. "It's wonderful for Palgrave, you
-know, Roger, because he is rather sad and bitter, really, just now; and
-I think she will make him much happier. They went off to the woods
-together directly after breakfast."
-
-"What's he sad and bitter about? You mean his socialism and all the rest
-of it?"
-
-"Yes; and religion. You remember; when you were here at Christmas."
-
-"I remember that he was very foolish and made me lose my temper. Is
-there a chance of Miss Toner turning him into a good capitalist and
-churchman?"
-
-Nancy smiled, but very faintly. "It's serious, you know, Roger."
-
-"What she's done to them already, you mean?"
-
-"Yes. What she's done already. She had Meg, after lunch, in her room.
-Meg looked quite different when she came out. It's very strange, Roger.
-It's as if she'd changed them all. I almost feel," Nancy looked round at
-the happy house and up at the tranquil elms where the rooks were noisily
-preparing for bed, "as if nothing could be the same again, since she's
-come." Her clear profile revealed little of the trouble in her heart.
-They had not named Barney; but he must be named.
-
-"It's white magic," said Oldmeadow. "You and I will keep our heads, my
-dear. We don't want to be changed, do we? What has she done to Barney?
-He is in love with her, of course."
-
-"Of course," said Nancy.
-
-He had never been sure before that she was in love with Barney. She was
-nine years younger and had been a child during years of his manhood.
-Oldmeadow had thought it in his own fond imagination only that the link
-between them was so close. But now he knew what Nancy herself, perhaps,
-had hardly known till then. The colour did not rise in her cheek, but
-through her voice, through her bearing, went a subtle steadying of
-herself. "Of course he is in love with her," she repeated and he felt
-that she forced herself to face the truth.
-
-They stopped at the end of the terrace. A little path turned aside
-towards the copse and the grass beneath the trees was scattered with the
-pale radiance of primroses. Nancy seemed to look at the flowers, but she
-sought no refuge in comment on them; and as they looked in silence,
-while the rooks, circling and cawing above, settled on their nests, a
-sense of arrested time came to Oldmeadow, and a phrase of music,
-blissful in its sadness, where gentle German words went to a gentle
-German strain, passed through his mind. Something of Schubert's--Young
-Love--First Grief. It seemed to pierce to him from the young girl's
-heart and he knew that he would never forget and that Nancy would never
-forget the moment; the rooks; the primroses; the limpid sky. The
-blackcap's flitting melody had ceased.
-
-"Do you think she may make him happy?" he asked. It was sweet to him to
-know that she had no need of a refuge from him. She could take counsel
-with him as candidly as if there had been no tacit avowal between them.
-She looked round at him as they went on walking and he saw pain and
-perplexity in her eyes.
-
-"What do you think, Roger?" she said. "Can she?"
-
-"Well, might she, if Barney is stupid enough?"
-
-"I don't feel he would have to be stupid to be happy with her, Roger.
-You are not fair to her. What I wonder is whether he will be strong
-enough not to be quite swept away."
-
-"You think she'll overpower him? Leave him with no mind of his own?"
-
-"Something like that perhaps. Because she's very strong. And she is so
-different. Everything in her is different. She has nothing--nothing with
-us, or we with her. We haven't done the same things or seen the same
-sights or thought the same thoughts. I hardly feel as if the trees could
-look the same to her as they do to us or the birds sound the same. And
-she'll want such different things."
-
-"Perhaps she'll want his things," Oldmeadow mused. "She seems to like
-them quite immensely already."
-
-"Ah, but only because she's going to do something to them," said Nancy.
-"Only because she's going to change them. I don't think she'd like
-anything she could do nothing for."
-
-Nancy had quite grown up. She had seen further than he had. He felt her
-quiet comment big with intuitive wisdom.
-
-"You see deep, my dear," he said. "There's something portentous in your
-picture, you know."
-
-"There is something portentous about her, Roger. That is just what I
-feel. That is just what troubles me."
-
-"She may be portentous, in relation to us, and what she may do to us,"
-said Oldmeadow, "but I'm convinced, for all her marvels, that she's a
-very ordinary young person. Don't let us magnify her. If she's not
-magnified she won't work so many marvels. They're largely an affair, I'm
-sure of it, of motors and pendants. She's ordinary. That's what I take
-my stand on."
-
-"If she's ordinary, why do you feel, too, that she'll sweep Barney
-away?" Nancy was not at all convinced by his demonstration.
-
-"Why, because he's in love with her. That's all. Her only menace is in
-her difference; her complacency. What it comes to, I suppose, is that we
-must hope, if they're to be happy, that he'll like her things."
-
-"Yes; but what it comes to then, Roger, is that we shall lose Barney,"
-Nancy said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Miss Toner did not come down to breakfast next morning and Oldmeadow was
-conscious of a feeling of disproportionate relief at not finding her in
-the big, bare, panelled dining-room where a portrait of Mrs. Chadwick in
-court dress presided over one wall and Meg and Barney played with
-rabbits, against an imitation Gainsborough background, on another. Both
-pictures were an affliction to Barney; but to Mrs. Chadwick's eye they
-left nothing to be desired in beauty, and, when Barney was not there to
-protest, she would still fondly point out the length of eyelash that the
-artist had so faithfully captured in the two children.
-
-The sense of change and foreboding that he and Nancy, with differences,
-had recognized in their talk, must have haunted Oldmeadow's slumbers,
-for he had dreamed of Miss Toner, coming towards him along the terrace,
-in white, as she had been at dinner, with the beautiful pearls she had
-worn, lifting her hand and saying as the rooks cawed overhead--for the
-rooks cawed though the moon was brightly shining: "I can hear them,
-too."
-
-There had been nothing to suggest such a dream in her demeanour at
-dinner; nothing portentous, that is. Simple for all her competence,
-girlish for all the splendour of her white array, she had spoken little,
-looking at them all, and listening, gravely sometimes, but with a
-pervading gentleness; and once or twice he had found her eyes on his;
-those large, light eyes, dispassionately and impersonally benignant,
-giving him, with their suggestion of seeing around but also very far
-beyond you, a curious sense of space. Once or twice he had felt himself
-a little at a loss as he met their gaze--it had endeared her to him the
-less that she should almost discompose him--and he had felt anew the
-presence of power in her ugly little face and even of beauty in her
-colourless skin, her colourless yet so living eyes, and her crown of
-wondrous gold. It had been, no doubt, this element of aesthetic
-significance, merging with Nancy's words, that had built up the figure
-of his dream; for so he had seen her, grey and white and gold in the
-unearthly light, while the rooks cawed overhead.
-
-His friends this morning, though they were all talking of her, possessed
-in their gaiety and lightness of heart an exorcising quality. So much
-gaiety and lightness couldn't be quenched or quelled--if that was what
-Miss Toner's influence menaced. Between them all they would manage to
-quench and quell Miss Toner, rather, and he recovered his sense of her
-fundamental absurdity as he felt anew their instinctive and
-unself-conscious wisdom.
-
-"Isn't it odd, Roger, she hardly knows England at all," said Mrs.
-Chadwick, as he finished his porridge, made his tea at the side-table,
-and took his place beside her. "She's been so little here, although she
-seems to have travelled everywhere and lived everywhere."
-
-"Except in her own country," Oldmeadow ventured the surmise, but
-urbanely, for Barney sat opposite him.
-
-"Oh, but she's travelled there, too, immensely," said Barney. "She's
-really spent most of her life in America, I think, Mother. She has a
-little sort of bungalow on the coast in California, orange-trees and
-roses and all the rest of it; a fairy-tale place; and a house in the
-mountains in New England, high up among the pine-woods."
-
-"And a private train, I suppose, to carry her from one to the other.
-What splendid pearls," said Oldmeadow, buttering his toast. "Haven't you
-asked for them yet, Meg?"
-
-Meg was not easily embarrassed. "Not yet," she said. "I'm waiting for
-them, though. Meanwhile this is pretty, isn't it?" The pendant hung on
-her breast.
-
-"I believe she would give Meg her pearls, or any of us. I believe she'd
-give _anything_ to _anyone_," sighed Mrs. Chadwick. "She doesn't seem to
-think about money or things of that sort, material things you know, at
-all. I do wish I could get the map of America straight. All being in
-those uneven squares, like Turkish Delight, makes it so difficult. One
-can't remember which lump is which--though Texas, in my geography, was
-pale green. The nice tinned things come from California, don't they? And
-New England is near Boston--the hub of the universe, that dear, droll
-Oliver Wendell Holmes used to call it. I suppose they _are_ very clever
-there. She has been wonderfully educated. There's nothing she doesn't
-seem to have learned. And her maid adores her, Roger. I was talking to
-her just now. Such a nice French woman with quite beautiful dark eyes,
-but very melancholy; we make a mistake, I believe, in imagining that the
-French are a gay people. I always think that's such a good sign. So kind
-about my dreadful accent."
-
-"A good sign to have your maid like you, Mummy, or to have melancholy
-eyes?" Meg inquired. "I think she's a rather ill-tempered looking woman.
-But of course anybody would adore Adrienne. She's an angel of patience,
-I'm sure. I never met such an angel. We don't grow them here," said Meg,
-while Barney's triumphant eyes said: "I told you so," to Oldmeadow
-across the table.
-
-After breakfast, in the sunlight on the terrace, Mrs. Chadwick confided
-her hopes to him. "She really is an angel, Roger. I never met anyone in
-the least like her. So good, and gifted, too, and all that money. Only
-think what it would mean for dear Barney. He could take back the farm;
-the lease falls in next year, and come back here to live."
-
-"You think she cares for him?"
-
-"Yes; indeed I do. She cares for us all, already, as you can see. But I
-believe it's because she's adopting us all, as her family. And she said
-to me yesterday that she disapproved so much of our English way of
-turning out mothers and thought families ought to love each other and
-live together, young and old. That's from being so much in France,
-perhaps. I told her _I_ shouldn't have liked it at all if old Mrs.
-Chadwick had wanted to come and live with Francis and me. She was such a
-masterful old lady, Roger, very Low Church, and quite dreadfully jealous
-of Francis. And eldest sons should inherit, of course, or what would
-become of estates? My dear father used always to say that the greatness
-of England was founded on landed estates. I told her that. But she
-looked at me quite gravely as if she hardly understood when I tried to
-explain--it all goes in with Waterloo being won on the fields of Eton,
-doesn't it? It's quite curious the feeling of restfulness she gives me,
-about Barney--a sort of Nunc Dimittis feeling, you know."
-
-"Only she doesn't want you to depart. Well, that's certainly all to the
-good and let's hope England's greatness won't suffer from the
-irregularity. Has she told you much about her life? her people?"
-Oldmeadow asked. He could not find it in his heart to shadow such
-ingenuous contentment. And after all what was there to say against Miss
-Toner, except that she would change things?
-
-"Oh, a great deal. Everything I asked; for I thought it best, quite
-casually you know, to find out what I could. Not people of any position,
-you know, Roger, though I think her mother was better in that way than
-her father; for _his_ father made tooth-paste. It's from the tooth-paste
-all the money comes. But it's always puzzling about Americans, isn't it?
-And it doesn't really make any difference, once they're over here, does
-it?"
-
-"Not if they've got the money," he could not suppress; it was for his
-own personal enjoyment and Mrs. Chadwick cloudlessly concurred: "No, not
-if they have the money. And she has, you see. And besides that she's
-good and gifted and has had such a wonderful education. Her mother died
-five years ago. She showed me two pictures of her. A beautiful woman;
-very artistic-looking. Rather one's idea of Corinne, though Corinne was
-really Madame de Stael, I believe; and she was very plain."
-
-"Was she dressed like Queen Louise of Prussia; coming down the steps,
-you know, in the Empire dress with white bound round her head?"
-
-"Yes; she was. How did you know, Roger? Extremely picturesque; but quite
-a lady, too. At least"--Mrs. Chadwick hesitated, perplexed between
-kindliness and candour--"almost."
-
-"I heard about her from Mrs. Aldesey. You remember my American friend.
-She didn't know her, but had seen her years ago in New York in that
-romantic costume."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick felt perhaps the slight irony in his voice, for she
-rejoined, though not at all provocatively: "Why shouldn't people look
-romantic if they can? I should think Mrs. Toner had a much more romantic
-life than Mrs. Aldesey. _She's_ gone on just as we have, hasn't she,
-seeing always the same people; and being conventional. Whereas Adrienne
-and her mother seem to have known everyone strange and interesting
-wherever they went; great scientists and thinkers, you know; and poets
-and pianists. Adrienne told me that her mother always seemed to her to
-have great wings and that's just what I felt about her when I looked at
-her. She'd flown everywhere." As she spoke Miss Toner appeared upon the
-doorstep.
-
-Although it was Sunday she had not varied her dress, which was still the
-simple dress of dim, dark-blue; but over it she wore a silk jacket, and
-a straw hat trimmed with a lighter shade of blue was tied, in
-summer-like fashion, beneath her chin. She carried a sunshade and a
-small basket filled with letters.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick, both hands outstretched, went to meet her. Oldmeadow had
-never before seen her kiss an acquaintance of two days' standing. "I do
-hope you slept well, my dear," she said.
-
-"Very well," said Miss Toner, including Oldmeadow in her smile. "Except
-for a little while when I woke up and lay awake and couldn't get the
-cawing of your rooks out of my mind. I seemed to hear them going on and
-on."
-
-"Oh, dear! How unfortunate! But surely they weren't cawing in the
-night!" cried Mrs. Chadwick, and Miss Toner, laughing and holding her
-still by the hands, turned to tell Barney, who closely followed her,
-that his mother was really afraid, because she had thought of rooks in
-the night, that their Coldbrooks birds had actually been inhospitable
-enough to keep her awake with their cawings. Meg and Barbara and Nancy
-had all now emerged and there was much laughter and explanation.
-
-"You see, Mummy thinks you might work miracles--even among the rooks,"
-said Barney, while Oldmeadow testily meditated on his own discomfort. It
-might have been mere coincidence, or it might--he must admit it--have
-been Miss Toner's thoughts travelling into his dream or his dream
-troubling her thoughts; of the two last alternatives he didn't know
-which he disliked the more.
-
-"It's time to get ready for church, children," said Mrs. Chadwick, when,
-after much merriment at her expense, the rooks and their occult
-misdemeanours were disposed of. "Where is Palgrave? I do hope he won't
-miss again. It does so hurt dear Mr. Bodman's feelings. Are you coming
-with us, my dear?" she asked Miss Toner.
-
-Miss Toner, smiling upon them all, her sunshade open on her shoulder,
-said that if they did not mind she did not think she would come. "I only
-go to church when friends get married or their babies christened," she
-said, "or something of that sort. I was never brought up to it, you see.
-Mother never went."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's March Hare eyes dwelt on her. "You aren't a
-Churchwoman?"
-
-"Oh, dear, no!" said Miss Toner, and the very suggestion seemed to amuse
-her.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick hesitated: "A Dissenter?" she ventured. "There are so many
-sects in America I've heard. Though I met a very charming American
-bishop once."
-
-"No--not a Dissenter; if you mean by that a Presbyterian or a Methodist
-or a Swedenborgian," said Miss Toner, shaking her head.
-
-Palgrave had now joined them and stood on the step above her. She smiled
-round and up at him.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick, her distress alleviated yet her perplexity deepened,
-ventured further: "You are a Christian, I hope, dear?"
-
-"Oh, not at all," said Miss Toner gravely now and very kindly. "Not in
-any orthodox way, I mean. Not in any way that an American bishop or your
-Mr. Bodman would acknowledge. I recognize Christ as a great teacher, as
-a great human soul; one of the very greatest; gone on before. But I
-don't divide the human from the divine in the way the churches do;
-creeds mean nothing to me, and I'd rather say my prayers out of doors on
-a day like this, in the sunlight, than in any church. I feel nearer God
-alone in His great world, than in any church built with human hands. But
-we must all follow our own light." She spoke in her flat, soft voice,
-gravely but very simply; and she looked affectionately at her hostess as
-she added: "You wouldn't want me to come with you from mere conformity."
-
-Poor Mrs. Chadwick, standing, her brood about her, in the sweet Sabbath
-sunlight, had to Oldmeadow's eye an almost comically arrested air. How
-was a creedless, churchless mistress of Coldbrooks to be fitted in to
-her happy vision of Barney's future? What would the village say to a
-squiress who never went to church and who said her prayers in the
-sunlight alone? "But, of course, better alone," he seemed to hear her
-cogitate, "than that anyone should see her doing such a very curious
-thing." And aloud she did murmur: "Of course not; of course not, dear.
-And if you go into the little arbour down by the lake no one will
-disturb you, I'm sure. Must it be quite in the open? Mere conformity is
-such a shallow thing. But all the same I should like the rector to come
-and talk things over with you. He's such a good man and very, very
-broad-minded. He brings science so often into his sermons--sometimes I
-think the people don't quite follow it all; and only the other day he
-said to me, about modern unrest and scepticism:
-
- 'There is more faith in honest doubt,
- Believe me, than in half the creeds.'
-
-Mamma met Lord Tennyson once and felt him to be a deeply religious
-man--though rather ill-tempered; he was really very rude to her, I
-always thought, and I do so dislike rudeness.--And travelling about so
-much, dear, you probably had so little teaching."
-
-Miss Toner's eyes were incapable of irony and they only deepened now in
-benevolence as they rested on her hostess. "But I haven't any doubts,"
-she said, shaking her head and smiling: "No doubts at all. You reach the
-truth through your church and I reach it through nature and love and
-life. And the beautiful thing is that it's the same truth, really; the
-same beautiful truth that God loves us all, and that we are all the
-children of God. I should be very pleased to meet your rector, of
-course, because I like meeting anyone who is good and true. But I was
-taught. My mother taught me always. And she was the freest, wisest soul
-I have ever known."
-
-"I'll stay with you," said Palgrave suddenly from his place on the step
-above her. His eyes, over her shoulder, had met Oldmeadow's and perhaps
-what he saw in the old friend's face determined his testimony. "Church
-means nothing to me, either; and less than nothing. I'm not so
-charitable as you are, and don't think all roads lead to truth. Some
-lead away, I think. You know perfectly well, Mummy, that the dear old
-rector is a regular duffer and you slept all through the sermon the last
-time I went; you did, really! I was too amused to sleep. He was trying
-to explain original sin without mentioning Adam or Eve or the Garden of
-Eden. It was most endearing! Like some one trying to avoid the eye of an
-old acquaintance whom they'd come to the conclusion they really must
-cut! I do so like the idea of Adam and Eve becoming unsuitable
-acquaintances for the enlightened clergy!"
-
-"There is no sin," said Miss Toner. Barney was not quite comfortable;
-Oldmeadow saw that. He kicked about in the gravel, a little flushed,
-and when, once or twice, the old family friend met his eye, it was
-quickly averted. "God is Good; and everything else is mortal
-mind--mistake--illusion."
-
-"You are a sound Platonist, Miss Toner," Oldmeadow observed, and his
-kindness hardly cloaked his irony.
-
-"Am I?" she said. When she looked at one she never averted her eyes.
-She looked until she had seen all that she wished to see. "I am not fond
-of metaphysics."
-
-"Socrates defined sin as ignorance, you know, and in a sense it may be.
-All the same," said Oldmeadow, and he felt that they were all listening
-and that in the eyes of his old friends it was more than unlikely that
-he would get the better of Miss Toner--"there's mortal mind to be
-accounted for, isn't there, and why it gets us continually into such a
-mess. Whatever name you call it by, there is something that does get us
-into a mess and mightn't it be a wholesome discipline to hear it
-denounced once a week?"
-
-"Not by some one more ignorant than I am!" said Miss Toner, laughing
-gently. "I'll go to church for love of Mrs. Chadwick, but not for the
-sake of the discipline!"
-
-"Mr. Bodman never denounces. Roger is giving you quite a wrong idea,"
-said Mrs. Chadwick. She had stood looking from one to the other,
-distressed and bewildered, and she now prepared to leave them. "And
-Palgrave is very, very unjust. Of course you must not come, dear. It
-would make me quite unhappy. But Mr. Bodman is not a duffer. If Palgrave
-feels like that he must certainly stay away. Perhaps you can teach him
-to be more charitable. It's easy to see the mote in our neighbour's
-eye." Mrs. Chadwick's voice slightly trembled. She had been much moved
-by her son's defection.
-
-"Come, Mummy, you're not going to say _I'm_ a duffer!" Palgrave passed
-an affectionately bantering arm round her shoulders. "Dufferism isn't
-_my_ beam!"
-
-But very sadly Mrs. Chadwick drew away, saying as she turned into the
-house: "No; that isn't your beam. But pride may be, Palgrave. Spiritual
-pride."
-
-Oldmeadow remained standing in the sunlight with Miss Toner and the two
-young men. The girls had followed Mrs. Chadwick, Meg casting a laughing
-glance of appreciation at him as she went. Religious scruples would
-never keep Meg from church if she had a pretty spring dress to wear.
-
-"After all," he carried on, mildly, the altercation--if that was what it
-was between him and Miss Toner--"good Platonists as we may be, we
-haven't reached the stage of Divine Contemplation yet and things do
-happen that are difficult to account for, if sin is nothing more
-positive than illusion and mistake. All the forms of _ote-toi que je m'y
-mette_. All the forms of jealousy and malice. Deliberate cruelties.
-History is full of horrors, isn't it? There's a jealousy of goodness in
-the human heart, as well as a love. The betrayal of Christ by Judas is
-symbolic."
-
-He had screwed his eyeglass into his eye the better to see Miss Toner
-and looked very much like a solicitor trying to coax dry facts out of a
-romantic client. And in the transparent shadow of her hat Miss Toner,
-with her incomparable composure, gave him all her attention.
-
-"I don't account. I don't account for anything. Do you?" she said. "I
-only feel and know. But even the dreadful things, the things that seem
-to us so dreadful--isn't it always ignorance? Ignorance of what is
-really good and happy--and the illusion of a separate self? When we are
-all, really, one. All, really, together." She held out her arms, her
-little basket hanging from her wrist. "And if we feel that at last, and
-know it, those dreadful things can't happen any more."
-
-"Your 'if' is the standing problem of metaphysics and ethics. Why don't
-we feel and know it? That's the question? And since we most of us, for
-most of the time, don't feel and know it, don't we keep closer to the
-truth if we accept the traditional phraseology and admit that there's
-something in the texture of life, something in ourselves, that tempts
-us, or impedes us, or crushes us, and call it sin--evil?"
-
-He was looking at her, still with his latent irony though kindly enough
-indeed, and he had, as he looked, an intuition about her. She had never
-been tempted, she had never been impeded, she had never been crushed.
-That was her power. She was, in a fashion, sinless. It was as if she had
-been hypnotized in infancy to be good. And while the fact made her in
-one sense so savourless, it made her in another so significant. She
-would go much further than most people in any direction she wanted to go
-simply because she was not aware of obstacles and had no inhibitions.
-
-"Call it what you like," said Miss Toner. She still smiled--but more
-gravely. Barney had ceased to stroll and kick. He had come to a
-standstill beside them, and, his hands in his pockets, his eyes fixed on
-his beloved, showed himself as completely reassured. Palgrave still
-stood on the step above her and seemed to watch the snowy, piled-up
-clouds that adorned the tranquil sky. "I feel it a mistake to make
-unreal things seem real by giving them big names. We become afraid of
-them and fear is what impedes us most of all in life. For so many
-generations humanity has seen ghosts in the evening mists and taken its
-indigestion for the promptings of a demon. We've got away from all that
-now, Mr. Oldmeadow. We see that mists are mists and indigestion
-indigestion, and that there aren't such things as ghosts and demons.
-We've come out, all together, hand in hand, on the Open Road and we
-don't want, ever any more, to be reminded, even, of the Dark Ages."
-
-Before her fluency, Oldmeadow felt himself grow less kindly. "You grant
-there have been dark ages, then? I count that a concession. Things may
-not be evil now, but they were once."
-
-"Not a concession at all," said Miss Toner. "Only an explanation of what
-has happened--an explanation of what you call the mess, Mr. Oldmeadow."
-
-"So that when we find ourselves misbehaving to one another as we march
-along the Open Road, we may know it's only indigestion and take a pill."
-
-She didn't like badinage. That, at all events, was evident to him, even
-in her imperturbability. She took it calmly--not lightly; and if she was
-not already beginning to dislike him, it was because disliking people
-was a reality she didn't recognize. "We don't misbehave if we are on the
-Open Road," she said.
-
-"Oh, but you're falling back now on good old-fashioned theology,"
-Oldmeadow retorted. "The sheep, saved and well-behaved, keeping to the
-road, and the goats--all those who misbehave and stray--classed with the
-evening mists."
-
-"No," said Miss Toner eyeing him, "I don't class them with the evening
-mists; I class them with the sick, whom we must be kind to and take care
-of."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick was now emerging in her new spring hat, which was not very
-successful and gave emphasis to her general air of strain. Meg's hat was
-very successful, as Meg's hats always were; and if Nancy's did not shine
-beside it, it was, at all events, exceedingly becoming to her. Nancy's
-eyes went to Barney. Barney, in the past, had been very appreciative of
-becoming hats. But he had no eyes for Nancy now. He had drawn Miss Toner
-aside and Oldmeadow heard their colloquy:
-
-"Would you rather I didn't go?"
-
-"I'd rather, always, you followed your light, dear friend."
-
-"I do like going here, you know. It seems to belong with it all--and
-Mummy can't bear our not going."
-
-"It makes your dear mother happy. It all means love to you."
-
-"Not only that"--Oldmeadow imagined that Barney blushed, and he heard
-his stammer: "I don't know what I believe about everything; but the
-service goes much deeper than anything I could think for myself." Their
-voices dropped. All that came further to Oldmeadow was from Miss Toner:
-"It makes you nearer than if you stayed."
-
-"Confound her ineffability!" he thought. "It rests with her, then,
-whether he should go or stay."
-
-It certainly did. Barney moved away with them all, leaving Palgrave to
-the more evident form of proximity.
-
-"You know," Mrs. Chadwick murmured to Oldmeadow as they went, between
-the primroses, down the little path and through a wicket-gate that led
-to the village--"you know, Roger, it's _quite_ possible that they may
-say their prayers together. It's like Quakers, isn't it--or Moravians;
-or whoever those curious people are who are buried standing up--so
-dismal and uncomfortable, I always think. But it's better that Palgrave
-should say his prayers with some one, and somewhere, isn't it, than that
-he shouldn't say them at all?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-"Mother's got the most poisonous headache," said Meg. "I don't think
-she'll be able to come down to tea."
-
-She had joined Oldmeadow on the rickety old bench where he sat reading
-and smoking in a sunny corner of the garden. A band of golden
-wallflowers behind them exhaled the deep fragrance that he always
-associated with spring and Sunday and Coldbrooks, and the old stone wall
-behind the flowers exhaled a warmth that was like a fragrance.
-
-"Adrienne is with her," Meg added. She had seated herself and put her
-elbows on her knees and her chin in her hands as though she intended a
-solid talk.
-
-"Will that be likely to help her head?" Oldmeadow inquired. "I should
-say not, if she's going to continue the discourse of this morning."
-
-"Did you think all that rather silly?" Meg inquired, tapping her smart
-toes on the ground and watching them. "You looked as if you did. But
-then you usually do look as though you thought most things and people
-silly. I didn't--I mean, not in her. I quite saw what you did; at least
-I think so. But she can say things that would be silly in other people.
-Now Palgrave is silly. There's just the difference. Is it because he
-always feels he's scoring off somebody and she doesn't?" Meg was
-evidently capable, for all her devotion, of dispassionate inquiry.
-
-"She's certainly more secure than Palgrave," said Oldmeadow. "But I
-feel that's only because she's less intelligent. Palgrave is aware,
-keenly, of a critical and probably hostile world; and Miss Toner is
-unaware of everything except her own benevolence, and the need for it."
-
-Meg meditated. Then she laughed. "You _are_ spiteful, Roger. Oh--I don't
-mean about Adrienne in particular. But you always see the weak spots in
-people, first go. It's rather jolly, all the same, if you come to think
-it over, to be like that. Perhaps that's all she is aware of; but it
-takes you a good way--wanting to help people and seeing how they can be
-helped."
-
-"Yes; it does take you a good way. I don't deny that Miss Toner will go
-far."
-
-"And make us go too far, perhaps?" Meg mused. "Well, I'm quite ready for
-a move. I think we're all rather stodgy, really, down here. And up in
-London, too, if it comes to that. I'm rather disappointed in London, you
-know, Roger, and what it does for one. Just a different kind of sheep,
-it seems to me, from the kind we are in the country; noisy skipping
-sheep instead of silent, slow ones. But they all follow each other about
-in just the same way. And what one likes is to see someone who isn't
-following."
-
-"Yes; that's true, certainly," Oldmeadow conceded. "Miss Toner isn't a
-sheep. She's the sort of person who sets the sheep moving. I'm not so
-sure that she knows where she is going, all the same."
-
-"You mean--Be careful; don't you?" said Meg, looking up at him sideways
-with her handsome eyes. "I'm not such a sheep myself, when it comes to
-that, you know, Roger. I look before I leap--even after Adrienne," she
-laughed; and Oldmeadow, looking back at her, laughed too--pleased with
-her, yet a little disconcerted by what she revealed of experience.
-
-"The reason I like her so awfully," Meg went on--while he reflected
-that, after all, she was now twenty-five--"and it's a good thing I do,
-isn't it, since it's evident she's going to take Barney; but the reason
-is that she's so interested in one. More than anyone I ever knew--far
-and far away. Of course Mother's interested; but it's _for_ one; _about_
-one; not _in_ one, as it were. And then darling old Mummy isn't exactly
-intelligent, is she; or only in such unexpected spots that it's never
-much good to one; one can never count on it beforehand. Whereas Adrienne
-is so interested in you that she makes you feel more interested in
-yourself than you ever dreamed you could feel. Do you know what I mean?
-Is it because she's American, do you think? English people aren't
-interested in themselves, off their own bat, perhaps; or in other people
-either! I don't mean we're not selfish all right!" Meg laughed.
-
-"Selfish and yet impersonal," Oldmeadow mused. "With less of our social
-consciousness in use, with more of it locked up in automatism,
-possibly."
-
-"There's nothing locked up in Adrienne; absolutely nothing," Meg
-declared. "It's all there--out in the shop-window. And it's a big window
-too, even though some of the hats and scarves, so to speak, may strike
-us as funny. But, seriously, what is it about her, do you think? How can
-she care so much?--about everybody?"
-
-He remembered Nancy's diagnosis. "Not about everybody. Only about people
-she can do something for. You'll find she won't care about me."
-
-"Why should she? You don't care for her. Why should she waste herself on
-people who don't need her?" Meg's friendliness of glance did not
-preclude a certain hardness.
-
-"Why indeed? It could never occur to her, of course, that she might need
-somebody. I don't mean that spitefully. She is strong. She doesn't
-need."
-
-"Exactly. Like you," said Meg. "She's quite right to pay no attention to
-the other strong people. For of course you are very strong, Roger, and
-frightfully clever; and good, too. Only one has to be cleverer, no
-doubt, than we are to see your goodness as easily as Adrienne's. It's
-the shop-window again. She shows her goodness all the time; and you
-don't."'
-
-Oldmeadow knocked the ashes out of his pipe and felt for his
-tobacco-pouch. "I show my spite. No; you mustn't count me among the
-good. I suppose your mother's headache came on this morning after she
-found out that Miss Toner doesn't go to church."
-
-"Of course it was that. You saw that she was thinking about it all
-through the service, didn't you?" said Meg. "And once, poor lamb, she
-said, 'Have mercy upon us, miserable sinners' instead of Amen. Did you
-notice? It will bother her frightfully, of course. But after all it's
-not so bad as if Adrienne were a Dissenter and wanted to go to chapel!
-Mummy in her heart of hearts would much rather you were a pagan than a
-Dissenter. I don't think it will make a bit of difference really. So
-long as she gives money to the church, and is nice to the village
-people. Mother will get over it," said Meg.
-
-He thought so too. His own jocose phrase returned to him. As long as the
-money was there it didn't make any difference. But Meg's security on
-that score interested him. With all her devotion to the new friend she
-struck him, fundamentally, as less kind than Nancy, who had none. But
-that, no doubt, was because Meg, fundamentally, was hard and Nancy
-loving. It was because of Miss Toner's interest in herself that Meg was
-devoted. "You're so sure, then, that she's going to take Barney?" he
-asked.
-
-"Quite sure," said Meg. "Surer than he is. Surer than she is. She's in
-love with him all right; more than she knows herself, poor dear. No
-doubt she thinks she's making up her mind and choosing. Weighing Barney
-in the balance and counting up his virtues. But it's all decided
-already; and not by his virtues; it never is," said Meg, again with her
-air of unexpected experience. "It's something much more important than
-virtues; it's the thickness of his eyelashes and the way his teeth show
-when he smiles, and all his pretty ways and habits. Things like that.
-She loves looking at him and more than that, even, she loves having him
-look at her. I have an idea that she's not had people very much in love
-with her before; not people with eyelashes and teeth like Barney. In
-spite of all her money. And she's getting on, too. She's as old as
-Barney, you know. It's the one, real romance that's ever come to her,
-poor dear. Funny you don't see it. Men don't see that sort of thing I
-suppose. But she _couldn't_ give Barney up now, simply. It's because of
-that, you know"--Meg glanced behind them and lowered her voice--"that
-she doesn't like Nancy."
-
-"Doesn't like Nancy!" Oldmeadow's instant indignation was in his voice.
-"What has Nancy to do with it?"
-
-"She might have had a great deal, poor darling little Nancy; and it's
-that Adrienne feels. She felt it at once. I saw she did; that Nancy and
-Barney had been very near each other; that there was an affinity, a
-sympathy, call it what you like, that would have led to something more.
-It wouldn't have done at all, of course; at least I suppose not. They
-knew each other too well; and, until the last year or two, she's been
-too young for him. And then, above all, she's hardly any money. But all
-the same, if he hadn't come across Adrienne and been bowled over like
-this, Barney would have fallen in love with Nancy. She's getting to be
-so lovely looking, for one thing, isn't she? And Barney's so susceptible
-to looks. He was falling in love with her last winter and she knew it as
-well as I did. It's rather rotten luck for Nancy because I'm afraid she
-cares; but then women do have rotten luck about love affairs," said Meg,
-now sombrely. "The dice are loaded against them every time."
-
-Oldmeadow sat smoking in silence for some moments, making no effort to
-master his strong resentment; taking, rather, full possession of its
-implications. "Somewhat of a flaw in your angel you must admit," he said
-presently. "She doesn't like people who are as strong as she is and she
-doesn't like people who might have been loved instead of herself. It
-narrows the scale of her benevolence, you know. It makes her look
-perilously like a jealous prig, and a prig without any excuse for
-jealousy into the bargain."
-
-"Temper, Roger," Meg observed, casting her hard, friendly glance round
-at him; "I know you think there's no one quite to match Nancy; and I
-think you're not far wrong. She's the straightest, sweetest-tempered
-girl who ever stepped on two feet. But all the same Adrienne isn't a
-prig, and if she's jealous she can't help herself. She _wants_ to love
-Nancy; she thinks she does love her; she'll always be heavenly to her.
-She can do a lot for Nancy, you know. She will do a lot for her, even if
-Nancy holds her off. But she wishes frightfully that she was old and
-ugly. She wishes that Barney weren't so fond of her without thinking
-about her. She's jealous and she can't help herself--like all the rest
-of us!" Meg laughed grimly. "When it comes to that we're none of us
-angels."
-
-It was tea-time and the dear old gong sounded balmily from the house. As
-they went along the path the rooks again were cawing overhead and dimly,
-like the hint of evening in the air, he remembered his dream and the
-sense of menace. "You know, it's not like all the rest of you," he said.
-"It's not like Nancy, for instance. Nancy wouldn't dislike a person
-because she was jealous of them. In fact I don't believe Nancy could be
-jealous. She'd only be hurt."
-
-"It's rather a question of degree, that, isn't it?" said Meg. "In one
-form of it you're poisoned and in the other you're cut with a knife; and
-the latter is the prettier way of suffering; doesn't make you come out
-in a rash and feel sick. Nancy is cut with the knife; and if she's not
-jealous in the ugly sense, she dislikes Adrienne all right."
-
-"Why should she like her?" Oldmeadow retorted, and Meg's simile seemed
-to cut into him, too. "She doesn't need her money or her interest or her
-love. She doesn't dislike her. She merely wishes she were somewhere
-else--as I do."
-
-The garden path led straight into the house. One entered a sort of
-lobby, where coats and hats and rackets and gardening baskets were kept,
-and from the lobby went into the hall. Tea was, as always, laid there
-and Mrs. Chadwick, as Meg and Oldmeadow came in, was descending the
-staircase at the further end, leaning on Adrienne Toner's arm.
-
-"You see. She's done it!" Meg murmured. She seemed to bear him no
-ill-will for his expressed aversion. "I never knew one of Mother's
-headaches go so quickly."
-
-"I expect she'd rather have stayed quietly upstairs," said Oldmeadow;
-"she looks puzzled. As if she didn't know what had happened to her."
-
-"Like a rabbit when it comes out of the conjuror's hat," said the
-irreverent daughter.
-
-That was precisely what poor Eleanor Chadwick did look like and for the
-moment his mind was diverted by amusement at her appearance from its
-bitter preoccupation. Mrs. Chadwick was the rabbit and Miss Toner was
-the conjuror indeed; bland and secure and holding her trophy in a firm
-but gentle grasp. Not until they were all seated did Barney and Nancy
-appear and then it was evident to him that if Miss Toner were jealous of
-Nancy she did not fear her, for it was she who had arranged the walk
-from which the young couple had just returned.
-
-"Was it lovely?" she asked Barney, as he took the place beside her. "Oh,
-I do wish I could have come; but I knew your Mother needed me."
-
-"The primroses are simply ripping in the wood," said Barney.
-
-Nancy carried a large bunch of primroses.
-
-"Ripping," said Miss Toner, laughing gently.
-
-"How absurd of you, Barney. Could anything be less ripping than
-primroses? How beautiful they are and what a lovely bunch. One sees that
-Miss Averil loves them from the way she has picked them." If she did not
-call Nancy by her Christian name it was, Oldmeadow knew, not her but
-Nancy's fault.
-
-Nancy still stood beside the table and from the fact of standing, while
-all the rest of them were seated, from the fact of being called Miss
-Averil, she seemed, for the moment, oddly an outsider; as if she hardly
-belonged to the circle of which Miss Toner was the centre. "Do come and
-sit near us," said Miss Toner. "For I had to miss you, too, you see, as
-well as the primroses."
-
-"I'd crowd you there," said Nancy, smiling. "I'll sit here near Aunt
-Eleanor." From something in her eyes Oldmeadow felt suddenly sure that
-not till now had she realized that it had not, really, been her and
-Barney's walk. She offered the primroses to Mrs. Chadwick as she took
-the chair beside her, saying, "They'll fill your white bowl in the
-morning-room, Aunt Eleanor."
-
-"Oh, I say; but I meant those for Adrienne, Nancy!" Barney exclaimed,
-and as he did so Meg's eyes met Oldmeadow's over the household loaf.
-"She didn't see them in the wood, so she ought to have them. Mummy is
-suffocated with primroses already."
-
-But Nancy showed no rash and only an acute Meg could have guessed a cut
-as she answered: "I'll pick another bunch to-morrow for Miss Toner,
-Barney. They'll be fresher to take to London. These are really Aunt
-Eleanor's. I always fill that bowl for her."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-"I do so want a talk with you, Roger," Mrs. Chadwick murmured to him
-when tea was over. The dining-room opened at one end of the hall and the
-drawing-room at the other and the morning-room, Mrs. Chadwick's special
-retreat, into which she now drew him, was tucked in behind the
-dining-room and looked out at an angle of the garden wall and at the
-dove-cot that stood there. Mrs. Chadwick's doves were usually fluttering
-about the window and even, when it was open, entering the room, where
-she sometimes fondly fed them, causing thereby much distress of mind to
-Turner, the good old parlourmaid. A pleasant little fire was burning
-there and, after placing her primroses in the white bowl, Mrs. Chadwick
-drew her chair to it, casting a glance, as she did so, up at the large
-portrait of her husband in hunting dress that hung above the
-mantelpiece. It was painted with the same glib unintelligence as the
-dining-room portraits, but the painter had been unable to miss entirely
-the whimsical daring of the eyes or to bring into conformity with his
-own standard of good looks the charm of the irregular and narrow face.
-Francis Chadwick had been an impulsive, idle, endearing man, and,
-remaining always in love with his wife, had fondly cherished all her
-absurdities. Since his death poor Mrs. Chadwick had been perplexed by
-her effort to associate with gravity and inspiration one who had always
-been a laughing incentive to inconsequence. Oldmeadow reflected, as he,
-too, looked up at him, that Francis Chadwick would neither have needed
-nor have liked Miss Toner.
-
-"It's so very, very strange, Roger, I really must tell you," Mrs.
-Chadwick said. Her hair, still bright and abundant, was very untidy. She
-had evidently not brushed it since rising from her sofa. "I had one of
-my dreadful headaches, you know. It came on at church this morning and I
-really couldn't attend to Mr. Bodman at all. Perhaps you saw."
-
-"I heard. Yes. Miss Toner had disturbed you a good deal."
-
-"I did feel so bewildered and unhappy about it all," said Mrs. Chadwick,
-fixing her blue eyes upon the family friend. Eleanor Chadwick's eyes
-could show the uncanny ingenuousness and the uncanny wisdom of a baby's.
-"Nothing so innocent or so sharp was ever seen outside a perambulator,"
-her husband had once said of them. "About her, you know, Roger," she
-continued, "and Barney and Palgrave. The influence. I could not bear
-them to lose their faith in the church of their fathers."
-
-"No," said Oldmeadow. "But you must be prepared to see it shift a good
-deal. Faiths have to shift nowadays if they're to stand."
-
-"Well. Yes. I know what you mean, Roger. But it isn't a question of
-shifting, is it? I'm very broad. I've always been all for breadth. And
-the broader you are the firmer you ought to be, oughtn't you?"
-
-"Well, Miss Toner's broad and firm," Oldmeadow suggested. "I never saw
-anyone more so."
-
-"But in such a queer way, Roger. Like saying one's prayers out of doors
-and thinking oneself as good as Christ. Oh, it all made me perfectly
-wretched and after lunch my head was so bad that I went and lay down in
-the dark; and it raged, simply. Oh, dear, I thought; this means a day
-and night of misery. They go on like that once they begin. Mamma used
-to have them in precisely the same way. Absolutely incapacitating. I can
-never see how anybody can deny heredity. That's another point, Roger.
-I've always accepted evolution. I gave up Adam and Eve long ago; gave
-them up as white and good-looking, I mean; because we must have begun
-_somewhere_, mustn't we? And Darwin was such a good man; though you
-remember he came not to care anything at all about music. That may mean
-a great deal, if one could think it all out; it's the most religious of
-the arts, isn't it? But there's no end to thinking things out!" Mrs.
-Chadwick pressed her hand against her forehead, closing her eyes for a
-moment. "And Adrienne is very musical."
-
-"You were at your headache," Oldmeadow reminded her. It was customary in
-the family circle thus to shepherd Mrs. Chadwick's straying thoughts.
-
-"Yes, I know. But it all hangs together. Heredity and Mamma and my
-headaches; and Adrienne's mother, who was musical, too, and played on a
-harp. Well, it was raging and I was lying there, when there came a
-little rap at the door. I knew at once who it was and she asked in such
-a gentle voice if she might come in. It's a very soothing voice, isn't
-it? But do you know I felt for a moment quite frightened, as if I simply
-couldn't see her. But I had to say yes, and she came in so softly and
-sat down beside me and said: 'I used to help Mother, sometimes, with her
-headaches. May I help you?' She didn't want to talk about things, as I'd
-feared. Such a relief it was. So I said: 'Oh, do my dear,' and she laid
-her hand on my forehead and said: 'You will soon feel better. It will
-soon quite pass away.' And then not another word. Only sitting there in
-the dark, with her hand on my forehead. And do you know, Roger, almost
-at once the pain began to melt away. You know how a dish of junket melts
-after you cut into it. It was like that. 'Junket, junket,' I seemed to
-hear myself saying; and such a feeling of peace and contentment. And
-before I knew anything more I fell into the most delicious sleep and
-slept till now, just before tea. She was sitting there still, in the
-dark beside me and I said: 'Oh, my dear, to think of your having stayed
-in on this lovely afternoon!' But she went to pull up the blinds and
-said that she loved sitting quietly in the dark with some one she cared
-for, sleeping. 'I think souls come very close together, then,' she said.
-Wasn't it beautiful of her, Roger? Like astral bodies, you know, and
-auras and things of that sort. She _is_ beautiful. I made up my mind to
-that, then. She gives me such a feeling of trust. How can one help it?
-It's like what one reads of Roman Catholic saints and people in the
-Bible. The gift of healing. The laying on of hands. We don't seem to
-have any of them and we can't count _her_, since she doesn't believe in
-the church. But if only they'd give up the Pope, I don't see why we
-shouldn't accept their saints; such dear, good people, most of them. And
-the Pope is quite an excellent man just now, I believe. But isn't it
-very strange, Roger? For a person who can do that to one can't be
-irreligious, can they?"
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's eye was now fixed upon him, less wistfully and more
-intently, and he knew that something was expected of him.
-
-"Hypnotic doctors can do it, you know. You needn't be a saint to do it,"
-he said. "Though I suppose you must have some power of concentration
-that implies faith. However," he had to say all his thought, though most
-of it would be wasted upon poor Eleanor Chadwick, "Miss Toner is
-anything but irreligious. You may be sure of that."
-
-"You feel it, too, Roger. I'm so, so glad."
-
-"But her religion is not as your religion," he had to warn her, "nor her
-ways your ways. You must be prepared to have the children unsettled;
-everyone of them; because she has great power and is far more religious
-than most people. She believes in her creed and acts on it. You must
-give the children their heads. It's no good trying to circumvent or
-oppose them."
-
-"But they mustn't do wrong things, Roger. How can I give them their
-heads if it's to do wrong things? I don't know what Mamma would have
-said to their not going to church--especially in the country. She would
-have thought it very wrong, simply. Sinful and dangerous."
-
-"Hardly that," Oldmeadow smiled. "Even in the country. You don't think
-Miss Toner does wrong things. If they take up Miss Toner's creed instead
-of going to church, they won't come to much harm. The principal thing is
-that there should be something to take up. After all," he was reassuring
-himself as well as Mrs. Chadwick, "it hasn't hurt her. It's made her a
-little foolish; but it hasn't hurt her. And your children will never be
-foolish. They'll get all the good of it and, perhaps, be able to combine
-it with going to church.
-
-"Foolish, Roger?" Mrs. Chadwick, relieved of her headache, but not of
-her perplexity, gazed wanly at him. "You think Adrienne foolish?"
-
-"A little. Now and then. You mustn't accept anything she says to you
-just because she can cure you of a headache."
-
-"But how can you say foolish, Roger? She's had a most wonderful
-education?"
-
-"Everything that makes her surer of herself and makes other people surer
-of her puts her in more danger of being foolish. One can be too sure of
-oneself. Unless one is a saint--and even then. And though I don't think
-she's irreligious I don't think she's a saint. Not by any means."
-
-"I don't see how anyone can be more of one, nowadays, Roger. She heals
-people and she says prayers, and she is always good and gentle and never
-thinks of herself. I'm sure I can't think what you want more."
-
-A touch of plaintiveness and even of protest had come into Mrs.
-Chadwick's voice.
-
-"Perhaps what I want is less," he laughed. "Perhaps she's too much of a
-saint for my taste. I think she's a little too much of one for your
-taste, really--if you were to be quite candid with yourself. Has she
-spoken to you at all about Barney? Are you quite sure you'll have to
-reckon with her for yourself and the children?"
-
-At this Mrs. Chadwick showed a frank alarm. "Oh, quite, quite sure!" she
-said. "She couldn't be so lovely to us all if she didn't mean to take
-him! Why do you ask, Roger? You haven't any reason for thinking she
-won't?"
-
-"None whatever. Quite the contrary." He didn't want to put poor Mrs.
-Chadwick to the cruel test of declaring whether she would rather have
-the children go to church and lose Miss Toner and all her money or have
-them stay away and keep Miss Toner. After all such a test was not to be
-asked of her. Miss Toner wanted people to follow their own light. "I
-only wondered if she talked to you about him. Asked any girlish leading
-questions."
-
-"None, none whatever," said Mrs. Chadwick. "But I feel that's because
-she thinks she knows him far better than I do and that he's told her
-everything already. It's rather hard to be a mother, Roger. For of
-course, though she is so much better and cleverer than I am, I feel sure
-that no one understands Barney as I do."
-
-"She'd be a little cleverer still if she could see that, wouldn't she?"
-
-"Well, I don't know. Girls never do. I was just the same when I was
-engaged to Francis. Even now I can't think that old Mrs. Chadwick really
-understood him as I did. It's very puzzling, isn't it? Very difficult to
-see things from other people's point of view. When she pulled up the
-blind this afternoon, she told me that Nancy and Barney were down in the
-copse and she seemed pleased."
-
-"Oh, did she?"
-
-"I told her that they'd always been like brother and sister, for I was
-just a little afraid, you know, that she might imagine Barney had ever
-cared about Nancy."
-
-"I see. You think she wouldn't like that?"
-
-"What woman would, Roger?" And he imagined that Mrs. Chadwick, for all
-her folly, was cleverer than Miss Toner guessed, as she added: "And then
-she told me that she'd made Barney go without her. She wanted me to see,
-you know, that it depended on her. That's another reason why I feel sure
-she is going to take him."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-He sat, for the first time, next Miss Toner that night at dinner and
-Nancy sat across from them next Barney. Nancy was pale, and now that he
-could scrutinize her he imagined that the walk had been more of an
-ordeal than a pleasure. Barney, no doubt, with the merciless blindness
-of his state, had talked to her all the time of Adrienne. But Nancy
-would not have minded that. She was of the type that hides its cut for
-ever and may become aunt and guardian-angel to the other woman's
-children. It had not been Barney's preoccupation that had so drained her
-of warmth and colour, but its character, its object. Her grey eyes had
-the considering look with which they might have measured the height of a
-difficult hedge in hunting, and, resting on Oldmeadow once or twice,
-seemed to tell him that the walk had shown her more clearly than ever
-that, if Barney married Miss Toner, they must lose him. He felt sure
-that she had lain down since tea with a headache to which had come no
-ministering angel.
-
-She and Barney did not talk to each other now, for he had eyes and ears
-only for Miss Toner. At any former time they would have kept up the
-happiest interchange, and Oldmeadow would have seen Nancy's eyelashes
-close together as she smiled her loving smile. There was a dim family
-likeness between her face and Barney's, for both were long and narrow,
-and both had the singular sweetness in the very structure of the smile.
-But where Barney was clumsy, Nancy was clear, and her skin was as fair
-as his was brown. To the fond onlooker at both, they were destined mates
-and only an insufferable accident had parted them.
-
-Nancy was as much a part of the Coldbrooks country as the primroses and
-the blackcaps in the woods. Her life had risen from the familiar soil to
-the familiar sky, as preordained to fitness, as ordered by instinct and
-condition as theirs, and from her security of type she had gained not
-lost in savour. The time that unfinished types must give to growing
-conscious roots and building conscious nests, Nancy had all free for
-spontaneities of flight and song. Beside her, to his hostile eye, Miss
-Toner was as a wide-spread water-weed, floating, rootless and scentless,
-upon chance currents: A creature of surfaces, of caprice and hazard. If
-the multiplicity of her information constituted mental wealth, its
-impersonality constituted mental poverty. She was as well furnished and
-as deadening as a catalogue, and as he listened to her, receiving an
-impression of continual, considered movings-on, earnest pursuits, across
-half the globe, of further experience, he saw her small, questing figure
-on a background of railways, giant lines stretching forth across plain
-and mountain, climbing, tunnelling, curving; stopping at great capitals,
-and passing on again to glitter on their endless way under the sun and
-moon. That was what he seemed to see as Miss Toner talked: and
-sleeping-berths and wardrobe-boxes and luxurious suites in vast hotels.
-
-She wore again her white dress, contrasting in its richness of texture
-with the simplicity of her daytime blue, and, rather stupidly, an
-artificial white rose had been placed, in her braids, over each ear.
-Her pearls were her only other ornament, and her pearls, he supposed,
-were surprising.
-
-Oldmeadow was aware, in his close proximity to her, while she ate beside
-him with a meticulous nicety that made the manners of the rest of them,
-by contrast, seem a little casual and slovenly, of the discomfort that
-had visited him in his dream. Yet the feeling she evoked was not all
-discomfort. It was as if from her mere physical presence he were
-subjected to some force that had in its compulsion a dim, conjectural
-charm. It was for this reason no doubt that he seemed to be aware of
-everything about her. Her hands were small and white, but had no beauty
-of form or gesture. She moved them slowly and without grace, rather like
-a young child handling unfamiliar objects in a kindergarten, and this in
-spite of the singular perfection of her table manners. She could have
-made little use of them, ever, in games of skill or in any art requiring
-swift accuracy and firmness. It was as if her mind, overtrained in
-receptivity and retentiveness, had only dull tentacles to spare for her
-finger-tips. He was aware of these hands beside him all through dinner
-and their fumbling deliberation brought to him, again and again, a
-mingled annoyance, and satisfaction. There was something positive and
-characteristic about her scentlessness, for if she smelt of anything it
-was of Fuller's Earth--a funny, chalky smell--and beside Meg, who
-foolishly washed liquid powder over her silvery skin, Miss Toner's
-colourlessness was sallow. She had hardly talked at all the night
-before, but to-night she talked continuously. It was Meg who questioned
-her, and Mrs. Chadwick, and Oldmeadow guessed that his ingenuous
-friend, still perplexed by his use of the word foolish, was drawing out
-and displaying her future daughter-in-law for his benefit.
-
-Miss Toner and her mother had been to Russia, to India, to China and
-Japan. They had visited Stevenson's grave at Vailima and in describing
-it she quoted "Under the wide and starry sky." They had studied every
-temple in Greece and Sicily and talked of the higher education with
-ladies in Turkish harems. "But it was always Paris we came back to," she
-said, "when we were not at home. Home was, and is, a great many places:
-California and Chicago--where my father's people live, and New England.
-But Paris was, after it, closest to our hearts. Yes, we knew a great
-many French people; but it was for study rather than friendship we went
-there. It is such a treasure-house of culture. Mother worked very hard
-at French diction for several winters. She had lessons from Mademoiselle
-Jouffert--you know perhaps--though she has not acted for so many years
-now. Our friendship with her was a great privilege, for she was a rare
-and noble woman and had a glorious gift. Phedre was her favourite role
-and I shall never forget her rendering of it:
-
- Ariane ma soeur! de quel amour blessee
- Vous mourutes aux bords ou vous futes laissee!
-
-She taught Mother to recite Phedre's great speeches with such fire and
-passion. There could hardly be a better training for French," said Miss
-Toner, repeating the lines with a curious placidity and perfection. "I
-preferred Mademoiselle Jouffert's rendering to Bernhardt's. Her Phedre
-was, with all the fire, more tender and womanly."
-
-"Do you care about Racine?" Oldmeadow asked her, while the lines rang in
-his ears--rather as in his dream the rooks' cawing had done--with an
-evocative sadness that hung, irrelevantly, about their speaker. "It's
-not easy for our English ears to hear the fire and passion, is it; but
-they are there."
-
-"He is very perfect and accomplished," said Miss Toner. "But I always
-feel him small beside our Shakespeare. He lacks heart, doesn't he?"
-
-"There's heart in those lines you've just recited."
-
-"Yes," said Miss Toner. "Those lines are certainly very beautiful. It's
-the mere music of them, I think. They make me feel--" she paused. It was
-unlike her to pause and he wondered what she made of Ariane, off her own
-bat, without Mademoiselle Jouffert to help her.
-
-"They make you feel?" he questioned.
-
-"They are so sad--so terribly melancholy. The sound of them. They make
-me want to cry when I hear them. But I think it's the sound; for their
-meaning makes me indignant. There is such weakness in them; such
-acceptance of destiny. I want to revolt and protest, too--for women. She
-should not have died."
-
-Oldmeadow involuntarily glanced across at Nancy. She was looking at Miss
-Toner and if she had been pale before, she was paler now. Nancy would
-never think of herself in connection with Ariane and tragic grief; yet
-something in the lines, something in Miss Toner's disavowal of their
-applicability, had touched the hidden cut. And, once again, it was Meg's
-eyes that met his, showing him that what he saw she saw, too. Barney saw
-nothing. All his solicitude was for Miss Toner in her imaginary plight.
-"I'm sure you never would!" he exclaimed. "Never die, I mean!"
-
-"You think Miss Toner would have come to terms with Bacchus," Oldmeadow
-suggested. He didn't want to take it out of Barney, though he was vexed
-with him, nor to take it out of Miss Toner, either. He only wanted to
-toss and twist the theme and make it gay where Miss Toner made it
-solemn.
-
-"Come to terms with Bacchus!" Barney quite stared, taken aback by the
-irreverence. "Why should she! She'd have found somebody more worth while
-than either of the ruffians."
-
-Miss Toner smiled over at him.
-
-"I'm sure that if Bacchus had been fortunate enough to meet Miss Toner
-she'd have converted him to total abstinence in a jiffy and made a model
-husband of him. He was a fine, exhilarating fellow; no ruffian at all;
-quite worth reforming." Oldmeadow, as he thus embroidered his theme, was
-indulging in his own peculiar form of mirth.
-
-He saw Miss Toner laying her hand on the head of Bacchus; Miss Toner
-very picturesque on the rugged sea-shore in her white and pearls and
-roses, and Bacchus dazed and penitent, his very leopards tamed to a
-cat-like docility. His laugh was visible rather than audible and that
-Miss Toner had never before been the subject of such mirth was evident
-to him.
-
-She met whatever she saw or guessed of irreverence, however, as
-composedly as she would have met Bacchus; perhaps already, he reflected,
-she was beginning to think of him in the light of an undesirable
-wine-bibber. Perhaps even, she was beginning to think of him as a
-ruffian. He didn't mind in the least, so long as he succeeded in keeping
-off her solemnity.
-
-"I should have been quite willing to try and reform him," she said;
-"though it takes much longer than a jiffy to reform people, Mr.
-Oldmeadow; but I shouldn't have been willing to marry him. There are
-other things in life, aren't there, than love-stories--even for women."
-
-"Bravo!" said Oldmeadow. He felt as well as uttered it. She wasn't being
-solemn, and she had returned his shuttlecock smartly. "But are there?"
-he went on. He had adjusted his eyeglass for a clearer confrontation of
-her.
-
-Miss Toner's large eyes, enlarged still further by the glass, met his,
-not solemnly, but with a considering gravity.
-
-"You are a sceptic, Mr. Oldmeadow," she observed. "A satirist. Do you
-find that satire and scepticism take you very far in reading human
-hearts?"
-
-"There's one for you, Roger!" cried Barney.
-
-Oldmeadow kept his gaze fixed on Miss Toner. "You think that Ariane
-might prefer Infant Welfare work or Charity Organization to a
-love-story?"
-
-"Not those necessarily." She returned his gaze. "Though I have known
-very fine big people who did prefer them. But they are not the only
-alternatives to love-stories."
-
-"I am sceptical," said Oldmeadow. "I am, if you like, satirical. I don't
-believe there are any alternatives to love-stories; only palliatives to
-disappointment."
-
-Barney leaned forward: "Adrienne, you see, doesn't accept that
-old-fashioned, sentimentalizing division of the sexes. She doesn't
-accept the merely love-story, hearth-side role for women."
-
-"Oh, well," Oldmeadow played with his fork, smiling with the wryness
-that accompanied his reluctant sincerities, "I don't divide the sexes as
-far as love-stories are concerned. We are all in the same boat. For us,
-too, Barney, it's love-story or palliative. You don't agree? If you were
-disappointed in love? Hunting? Farming? Politics? Post-Impressionism?
-Would any of them fill the gap?"
-
-It wasn't at all the line he had intended the talk to take. He knew that
-as he glanced across at Nancy. Saying nothing, as if its subject could
-not concern her, and with a dim little smile, she listened, and he knew
-that for her, though she wouldn't die of it, there would be only
-palliatives. If only Barney, confound him, hadn't been so charming.
-
-Barney did not know how to answer the last assault, and, boyishly,
-looked across at his beloved for succour. She gave it instantly.
-
-"Sadness, sorrow, tragedy, even, isn't despair," she said. "Barney, I
-believe, if sorrow overtook him, would mould the rough clay of his
-occupation to some higher beauty than the beauty he'd lost. To lie down
-and die; to resign oneself to palliatives. Oh, no. That's not the
-destiny of the human soul."
-
-"Roger's pulling your leg, Barney, as usual," Palgrave put in
-scornfully. He had been listening with his elbows on the table, his eyes
-on the table-cloth. "He knows as well as I do that there's only one
-love. The sort you're all talking about--the Theseus and Ariane
-affair--is merely an ebullition of youth and as soon as nature has
-perpetuated the species by means of it, it settles down, if there's any
-reality under the ebullition, to grow into the other--the divine love;
-the love of the soul for the Good, the True and the Beautiful," Palgrave
-declared, growing very red as he said it.
-
-"Really--my dear child!" Mrs. Chadwick murmured. She had never heard
-such themes broached at her table and glanced nervously up at old
-Johnson to see if he had followed. "That is a very, very materialistic
-view!"
-
-Oldmeadow at this began to laugh, audibly as well as visibly, and
-Palgrave, as their eyes met in a glance of communicated comedy, could
-not withhold an answering smile. But Barney's face showed that he
-preferred to see Palgrave's interpretation as materialistic and even
-Miss Toner looked thoughtfully at her champion.
-
-"But we need the symbol of youth and nature," she suggested. "The divine
-love, yes, Palgrave, is the only real one; but then all love is divine
-and human love sometimes brings the deepest revelation of all. Browning
-saw that so wonderfully."
-
-"Browning, my dear!" Palgrave returned with a curious mingling of
-devotion, intimacy and aloofness, "Browning never got nearer God than a
-woman's breast!"
-
-At this, almost desperately, Mrs. Chadwick broke in: "Did you ever see
-our Ellen Terry act, Adrienne? I liked her much better than Madame
-Bernhardt who had such a very artificial face, I think. I can't imagine
-her as Rosalind, can you? While Miss Terry was a perfect Rosalind. I met
-her once with Henry Irving at a garden-party in London and she was as
-charming off as on the stage and I'm sure I can't see why anybody
-should wish to act Phedre--poor, uncontrolled creature. Rhubarb-tart,
-dear, and custard? or wine-jelly and cream? How beautifully you speak
-French. How many languages do you speak?" Mrs. Chadwick earnestly
-inquired, still turning the helm firmly away from the unbecoming topic.
-
-Miss Toner kept her head very creditably and, very tactfully, at once
-accepted her hostess's hint. "Rhubarb-tart, please, dear Mrs. Chadwick.
-Not so very many, really. My German has never been good; though French
-and Italian I do know well, and enough Spanish for Don Quixote. But,"
-she went on, while Mrs. Chadwick looked gratefully at her, "Mother and I
-were always working. We never wasted any of our precious hours together.
-She couldn't bear the thought of _missing_ anything in life; and she
-missed very little, I think. Music, poetry, painting--all the
-treasure-houses of the human spirit--were open to her. And what she won
-and made her own, she gave out again with greater radiance. How I wish
-you could all have known her!" said Miss Toner, looking round at them
-with an unaccustomed touch of wistfulness. "She was radiance
-personified. She never let unhappiness _rest_ on her. I remember once,
-when she had had a cruel blow from a person she loved and trusted--in
-the middle of her sadness she looked at me and saw how sad she was
-making me; and she sprang up and seized my hands and cried: 'Let's
-dance! Let's dance and dance and dance!' And we did, up and down the
-terrace--it was at San Remo--she in her white dress, with the blue sky
-and sea and the orange-trees all in bloom. I can see her now. And then
-she rushed to get music, her harp, and flowers and fruit, to take to an
-invalid friend, and we spent the afternoon with her, mother surpassing
-herself in charm and witchery. She was always like that. She would have
-found something, oh, very beautiful, to make from her sorrow if Theseus
-had abandoned her! But no one," said Miss Toner, looking round at
-Oldmeadow, now with a mild playfulness, "could ever have abandoned
-Mother."
-
-There was something to Oldmeadow appealing in her playfulness; her
-confidence, when it took on this final grace, was really touching. For
-Mrs. Toner the light-giver he knew that he had conceived a rooted
-aversion. And he wondered if she would go on, over the rhubarb-tart, to
-tell, after the dancing on the terrace, of the death at sea. But he was
-spared that.
-
-"And your father died when you were very young, didn't he, dear?" said
-Mrs. Chadwick, fearful of the reference to Theseus. "I think your mother
-must often have been so very lonely; away from home for such a great
-part of the time and with so few relatives."
-
-Miss Toner shook her head. "We were always together, she and I, so we
-could never, either of us, be lonely. And wherever we went she made
-friends. People were always so much more than mere people to her. She
-saw them always, at once, high and low, prince and peasant, as souls,
-and they felt it always, and opened to her. Then, until I was quite big,
-we had my lovely grandmother. Mother came from Maine and it was such a
-joy to go and stay there with Grandma. It was a very simple little home.
-It was always high thinking and plain living, with Grandma; and though,
-when she married and became rich, Mother showered beautiful things upon
-her, Grandma stayed always in the little house, doing for her poor
-neighbours, as she had always done, and dusting her parlour--a real New
-England parlour--and making her own griddle cakes--such wonderful cakes
-she made! I was fifteen when she died; but the tie was so close and
-spiritual that she did not seem gone away from us."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-"Rather nice to think that there are so many good and innocent people in
-the world, isn't it," Barney remarked, when he, Palgrave and Oldmeadow
-were left to their wine and cigars. It was evident that he would have
-preferred to omit the masculine interlude, but Oldmeadow was resolved on
-the respite. She had touched him because she was so unaware; but he was
-weary and disconcerted. How could Barney be unaware? And was he?
-Altogether? His comment seemed to suggest a suspicion that Miss Toner's
-flow might have aroused irony or require justification.
-
-"Miss Toner and her mother seem to have found the noble and the gifted
-under every bush," he remarked, and he was not sure that he wished to
-avoid irony though he knew that he did wish to conceal it from Barney.
-"It's very good and innocent to be able to do that; but one may keep
-one's goodness at the risk of one's discrimination. Not that Miss Toner
-is at all stupid."
-
-Palgrave neither smoked nor drank. He had again leaned his elbows on the
-table and his head on his fists, but, while Oldmeadow spoke, he lifted
-and kept his gaze on him. "You don't like her," he said suddenly. He and
-Oldmeadow had, irrepressibly, over Mrs. Chadwick's conception of
-materialism, interchanged their smile at dinner; but since the morning
-Oldmeadow had known that Palgrave suspected him of indifference, perhaps
-even hostility, towards the new-comer. "Why don't you like her?" the
-boy went on and with a growing resentment as his suspicions found voice.
-"She _isn't_ stupid; that's just it. She's good and noble and innocent;
-and gifted, too. Why should we pretend to be too sophisticated to
-recognize such beauty when we meet it? Why should we be ashamed of
-beauty--afraid of it?"
-
-Barney, flushing deeply, looked down into his wine-glass.
-
-"My dear Palgrave, I don't understand you," said Oldmeadow. But he did.
-He seemed to hear the loud beating of Palgrave's heart. "I don't dislike
-Miss Toner. How should I? I don't know her."
-
-"You do know her. That's an evasion. It's all there. She can't be seen
-without being known. It's all there; at once. I don't know why you don't
-like her. It's what I want to know."
-
-"Drop it, Palgrave," Barney muttered. "Let Roger alone. He and Adrienne
-get on very well together. It's no good forcing things."
-
-"I'm not forcing anything. It's Roger who forces his scepticism and his
-satire on us," Palgrave declared.
-
-"I'm sorry to have displeased you," said Oldmeadow with a slight
-severity. "I am unaware of having displayed my disagreeable qualities
-more than is usual with me."
-
-"Of course not. What rot, Palgrave! Roger is always disagreeable, bless
-him!" Barney declared with a forced laugh. "Adrienne understands him
-perfectly. As he says: she isn't stupid."
-
-"Oh, all right. I'm sorry," Palgrave rose, thrusting his hands in his
-pockets and looking down at the two as he stood above them. He hesitated
-and then went on: "All I know is that for the first time in my
-life--the very first time, mind you--all the things we are told about in
-religion, all the things we read about in poetry, the things we're
-supposed to care for and live by, have been made real to me--outside of
-books and churches. What do we ever see of them at home here, with dear
-Mummy and the girls? What do we ever talk of, all of us--but the
-everlasting round--hunting, gardening, cricket, hay; village treats and
-village charities. A lot of chatter about people--What a rotter
-So-and-so is; and How perfectly sweet somebody else: and a little about
-politics--Why doesn't somebody shoot Lloyd George?--and How wicked Home
-Rulers are. That's about all it amounts to. Oh, I know we're not as
-stupid as we sound. _She_ sees that. We can feel things and see things
-though we express ourselves like savages. But we're too comfortable to
-think; that's what's the trouble with us. We don't want to change; and
-thought means change. And we're shy; idiotically shy; afraid to express
-anything as it really comes to us; so that I sometimes wonder if things
-will go on coming; if we shan't become like the Chinese--a sort of
-_objet d'art_ set of people, living by rote, in a rut. Well. That's all
-I mean. With her one isn't ashamed or afraid to know and say what one
-feels. With her one wants to feel more. And I, for one, reverence her
-and am grateful to her for having made beauty and goodness real to me."
-Having so delivered himself, Palgrave, who had, after his deep flush,
-become pale, turned away and marched out of the room.
-
-The older men sat silent for a moment, Oldmeadow continuing to smoke and
-Barney turning the stem of his wine-glass in his fingers. "I'm awfully
-sorry," he said at last. "I can't think what's got into the boy. He's in
-rather a moil just now, I fancy."
-
-"He's a dear boy," said Oldmeadow. "There's any amount of truth in what
-he says. He's at an age when one sees these things, if one is ever going
-to see them. I hope he'll run straight. He ought to amount to
-something."
-
-"That's what Adrienne says," said Barney. "She says he's a poet. You
-think, too, then, that we're all in such a rut; living Chinese lives;
-automata?"
-
-"It's the problem of civilization, isn't it, to combine automatism with
-freedom. Without a rut to walk in you reach nowhere--if we're to walk
-together. And yet we must manage to ramble, too; individuals must;
-that's what it comes to, I suppose. Individuals must take the risk of
-rambling and alter the line of the rut for the others. Palgrave may be a
-rambler. But I hope he won't go too far afield."
-
-"You do like her, Roger, don't you?" said Barney suddenly.
-
-It had had to come. Oldmeadow knew that, as the depth of silence fell
-about them. It was inevitable between them, of course. Yet he wished it
-might have been avoided, since now it must be too late. He pressed out
-the glow of his cigar and leaned his arms on the table, not looking at
-his friend while he meditated, and he said finally--and it might seem,
-he knew, another evasion--"Look here, Barney, I must tell you something.
-You know how much I care about Nancy. Well, that's the trouble. It's
-Nancy I wanted you to marry."
-
-Barney had held himself ready and a deep, involuntary sigh of relief, or
-of postponed suspense, now escaped him. "I see. I didn't realize that,"
-he said. And how he hoped, poor Barney! it was all there was to realize!
-"Of course I'm very fond of Nancy."
-
-"You realize, of course, how fond she is of you."
-
-"Well; yes; of course. We're both awfully good pals," said Barney,
-confused.
-
-"That's what Palgrave would call speaking like a savage, Barney. Own to
-it that if Miss Toner hadn't appeared upon the scene you could have
-hoped to make Nancy your wife. I don't say you made love to her or
-misled her in any way. I'm sure you never meant to at any rate. But the
-fact remains that you were both so fond of each other that you would
-certainly have married. So you'll understand that when I come down here
-and find Miss Toner installed as tutelary goddess over you all, what I'm
-mainly conscious of is grief for my dear little relegated nymph."
-
-Still deeply flushed, but still feeling his relief, Barney turned his
-wine-glass and murmured: "I see. I quite understand. Yes; I should have
-been in love with her, I own. I nearly was, last winter. As to her being
-in love with me, that's a different matter. I've no reason to think she
-was in love. It would just be a difference of degree, with Nancy,
-wouldn't it; she loves us all so much, and she's really such a child,
-still. Of course that's what she seems to me now, since Adrienne's come;
-just a darling child."
-
-"I suppose so. But you understand what I feel, too. I feel her much more
-than a darling child, and it's difficult for me to like anybody who has
-dispossessed her. I perfectly recognize Miss Toner's remarkable
-qualities and hope to count myself among her friends one day; but, being
-a satirist and a sceptic, I rebel instinctively against goddesses of
-whatever brand. Nymphs are good enough for me; and I can't help wishing,
-irrepressibly, that nymphs had remained good enough for you, my dear
-boy."
-
-"It isn't a question of nymphs; it isn't a question of goddesses,"
-Barney said, glancing up now at his friend. "I'm awfully sorry about
-Nancy; but of course she'll find some one far better than I am; she's
-such a dear. You're not quite straight with me, Roger. I don't see
-Adrienne as a goddess at all; I'm not like Palgrave, a silly boy, bowled
-over. It's something quite different she does to me. She makes me feel
-safe; safe and happy in a way I never imagined possible. It's like
-having the sunlight fall about one; it's like life, new life, to be with
-her. She's not a goddess; but she's the woman it would break my heart to
-part with. I never met such loveliness."
-
-"My dear boy," Oldmeadow murmured. He still leaned on the table and he
-still looked down. "I do wish you every happiness, as you know." He was
-deeply touched and Barney's quiet words troubled him as he had not
-before been troubled.
-
-"Thanks. I know you do. I know you care for my happiness. And I can't
-imagine anything coming into my life that would make a difference to us.
-That's just it." Barney paused. "It won't, will it, Roger?"
-
-The crisis was again upon them. Oldmeadow did not look up as he said:
-"That depends on her, doesn't it?"
-
-"No; it depends on you," Barney quickly replied.
-
-"She likes you, quite immensely, already. She says you make her think of
-one of Meredith's dry, deep-hearted heroes," Barney gave a slightly
-awkward laugh, deprecating the homage as he offered it. "She says you
-are the soul of truth. There's no reason, none whatever, why you
-shouldn't be the best of friends, as far as she is concerned. It's all
-she asks."
-
-"It's all I ask, of course."
-
-"Yes, I know. But if you don't meet her half-way? Sometimes I do see
-what Palgrave means. Sometimes you misunderstand her."
-
-"Very likely. It takes time really to understand people, doesn't it."
-
-But poor Barney was embarked and could not but push on. "As just now,
-you know, about finding nobility behind every bush and paying for one's
-goodness by losing one's discrimination. There are deep realities and
-superficial realities, aren't there, and she sees the deep ones first.
-It's more than that. Palgrave says she makes reality. He didn't say it
-to me, because I don't think he feels me to be worthy of her. He said it
-to Mother, and puzzled her by it. But I know what he means. It's because
-of that he feels her to be a sort of saint. Do be straight with me,
-Roger. Say what you really think. I'd rather know; much. You've never
-kept things from me before," Barney added in a sudden burst of boyish
-distress.
-
-"My dear Barney," Oldmeadow murmured.
-
-It had to come, then. He pushed back his chair and turned in it, resting
-an arm on the table; and he passed his hand over his head and kept it
-there while he stared for a moment hard at the ceiling.
-
-"I think you've made a mistake," he then said.
-
-"A mistake?" Barney faltered blushing. It was not anger; it was pain,
-simple, boyish pain that thus confessed itself.
-
-"Yes; a mistake," Oldmeadow repeated, not looking at him, "and since I
-fear it's gone too far to be mended, I think it would have been better
-if you'd not pressed me, my dear boy."
-
-"How do you mean? I'd rather know, you see," Barney murmured, after a
-moment.
-
-"I don't mean about the goodness, or the power," said Oldmeadow. "She is
-good, and she has power; but that's in part, I feel, because she has no
-inhibitions--no doubts. To know reality we must do more than blow
-soap-bubbles with it. It must break us to be known. She's never been
-broken. Perhaps she never will be. And in that case she'll go on blind."
-
-Barney was silent for a moment, and that it was not as bad as he had
-feared it might be was apparent from the attempted calm with which he
-asked, presently: "Why shouldn't you be blind to evil and absurdity if
-you can see much further than most people into goodness? Perhaps one
-must be one-sided to go far."
-
-"Perhaps. But it's dangerous to be one-sided--to oneself and others. And
-does she see further? That's the question. Doesn't she tend, rather, to
-accept as first-rate what you incline to find second? You're less strong
-than she is, Barney, and less good, no doubt. But you can't deny that
-you're less blind. So what you must ask yourself is whether you can be
-sure of being happy with a wife who'll never doubt herself and who'll
-not see absurdity where you see it. Put it at that. Will you be happy
-with her?"
-
-He was, he knew, justified of Miss Toner's commendation, for truth
-between friends could go no further and, in the silence, while he
-sickened for his friend, he felt it searching Barney's heart. How it
-searched, how many echoes it found awaiting it, was proved by the
-prolongation of the silence.
-
-"I think you exaggerate," said Barney at length, and in the words
-Oldmeadow read his refusal to examine further the truths revealed to
-him. "You see all the defects and none of the beauty. It can't be a
-mistake if I can see both. She'll learn a little from me, that's what it
-comes to, for all the lot I'll have to learn from her. I'll be happy
-with her if I'm worthy of her. What it comes to, you see, as I said at
-the beginning, is that I can't be happy without her." He rose and
-Oldmeadow, rising also, knew that they closed upon an unresolved
-discord. Yet these final words of Barney's pleased him so much that he
-could not leave it quite at that.
-
-"Mine may be the mistake, after all," he said. "Only you must give me
-time to find it out. I began by telling you I couldn't be really
-dispassionate; and I feel much better for our talk, if that's any
-satisfaction to you. If you can learn from each other and see the truth
-together, you'll be happy. You're right there, Barney. That is what it
-comes to." They moved towards the door. "Try not to dislike me for my
-truth too much," he added.
-
-"My dear old fellow," Barney muttered. He laid his hand for a moment on
-his friend's shoulder, standing back for him to pass first. "Nothing can
-ever alter things between you and me."
-
-But things were altered already.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-
-Palgrave had not gone to the drawing-room, and that, at all events, was
-a comfort. A wood fire burned on the hearth and near it Nancy was
-holding wool for Mrs. Chadwick to wind. Barbara had been sent to bed and
-Meg and Miss Toner sat on the sofa hand in hand. Even in the pressure of
-his distress and anxiety Oldmeadow could but be aware of amusement at
-seeing Meg thus. It had, of course, been Miss Toner who had taken her
-hand. But no one else could have taken it. No one else could have been
-allowed to go on holding it placidly before on-lookers of whose mirthful
-impressions Meg must be well aware. She didn't mind in the least. That
-was what Miss Toner had done to her. She enjoyed having her hand held by
-anyone so much interested in her.
-
-Barney walked to the fireplace and stood before it. He had no faculty
-for concealing his emotions and the painful ones through which he had
-just passed were visible on his sensitive face.
-
-"Give us a song, Meg," Oldmeadow suggested. He did not care for Meg's
-singing, which conveyed, in a rich, sweet medium, a mingled fervour and
-shallowness of feeling. But to hear her sing would be better than to see
-her holding Miss Toner's hand.
-
-Barney crossed at once to the seat Meg vacated and dropped down into it,
-no doubt thanking his friend for what he imagined to be a display of
-tact, and Oldmeadow saw the quiet, firm look that flowed over and took
-possession of him. Miss Toner knew, of course, that Barney had been
-having painful emotions; and she probably knew that they had been caused
-by the dry, deep-hearted Meredithian hero. But after the long look she
-did not speak to him. She sat in her pearls and whiteness and gave
-careful attention to the music.
-
-Oldmeadow accompanied Meg, tolerantly, and a trifle humorously, throwing
-a touch of mockery into his part. Meg's preference to-night seemed to be
-for gardens; Gardens of Sleep; Gardens of Love; God's Gardens. "What a
-wretch you are, Roger," she said, when she had finished. "You despise
-feeling."
-
-"I thought I was wallowing in it," Oldmeadow returned. "Did I stint
-you?"
-
-"No; you helped me to wallow. That's why you're such a wretch. Always
-showing one that one is wallowing when one thinks one's soaring. It's
-your turn, now, Adrienne. Let's see if he'll manage to make fun of you."
-
-"Does Miss Toner sing, too? Now do you know, Meg," said Oldmeadow,
-keeping up the friendly banter, "I'm sure she doesn't sing the sort of
-rubbish you do."
-
-"I think they're beautiful songs," Mrs. Chadwick murmured from her wool,
-"and I think Roger played them most beautifully. Why should you say he
-is making fun of you, Meg?"
-
-"Because he makes you think something's beautiful that he thinks
-rubbish, Mummy. Come along, Adrienne. You will, won't you? I expect my
-voice sounds all wrong to you. I've had no proper training."
-
-"It's a very lovely voice, Meg, used in a poor cause," said Miss Toner
-smiling. "And it is badly placed. I think I could help you there. I've
-no voice at all, but I have been taught how to sing. It would be more to
-the point, though, if Mr. Oldmeadow were to play to us, for I hear that
-he is an accomplished musician."
-
-"I'm really anything but accomplished," said Oldmeadow; "but I can play
-accompaniments cleverly. Do sing to us. I know you'll give us something
-worth accompanying."
-
-Miss Toner rose and came to the piano with her complete and unassuming
-confidence. She turned the pages of the music piled there and asked him
-if he cared for Schubert's songs. Yes; she was a watch wound to go
-accurately and she could rely on herself, always, to the last tick. Even
-if she knew--and he was sure she knew--that he had been undermining her,
-she would never show a shadow or a tremor; and she would always know
-what was the best music. Only, as she selected "Litanei" and placed it
-before him, he felt that over him, also, flowed the quiet, firm look.
-
-"Litanei" was one of his favourites in a composer he loved, and, as she
-sang there above him, he found the song emerging unharmed from her
-interpretation. It was as she had said--no voice to speak of; the
-dryest, flattest little thread of sound; and no feeling, either (what a
-relief after Meg!), except the feeling for scrupulous accuracy. Yet her
-singing was what he found in her to like best. It was disciplined; it
-accepted its own limits; it fulfilled an order. There was no desecration
-of the heavenly song, for, intelligently after all, she made no attempt
-upon its heart.
-
-When she had finished, she looked down at him. They were removed by half
-the length of the room from the fireside group. The lamps were behind
-them. Only the candles set in the piano-rack illumined Miss Toner; and
-while the white roses over her ears struck him anew as foolish, her eyes
-anew struck him as powerful.
-
-"Thank you. That was a pleasure," he said.
-
-It was a pleasure. It was almost a link. He had found a ground to meet
-her on. He saw himself in the future accompanying Barney's wife. He
-need, then, so seldom talk to her. But, alas! she stepped at once from
-the safe frame of art.
-
-"If we can rise from loss to feel like that, if we can lift our sorrows
-like that, we need never turn to palliatives, need we, Mr. Oldmeadow?"
-she said.
-
-Stupidity, complacency, or power, whatever it was, it completely
-disenchanted him. It left him also bereft of repartee. What he fell back
-upon, as he looked up at her and then down at the keys again, was a mere
-schoolboy mutter of "Come now!"
-
-After all a schoolboy mutter best expressed what he felt. She was not
-accustomed to having her ministrations met with such mutters and she did
-not like it. That was apparent to him as she turned away and went back
-to the sofa and Barney. She had again tried him and again found him
-wanting.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Barney and Miss Toner left in her motor next morning shortly after
-breakfast, and though with his friend Oldmeadow had no further exchange,
-he had, with Miss Toner, a curious encounter that was, he felt sure, a
-direct result of her impressions of the night before. They met in the
-dining-room a few moments before breakfast, and as she entered, wearing
-already her motoring hat, closely bound round her face with a veil, he
-was aware that she looked, if that were possible, more composed than he
-had ever seen her. He felt sure that she had waited for her opportunity,
-and had followed him downstairs, knowing that she would find him alone;
-and he realized then that she was more composed, because she had an
-intention or, rather, since it was more definite, a determination.
-Determination in her involved no effort: it imparted, merely, the added
-calm of an assured aim.
-
-She gave him her hand and said good morning with the same air of
-scrupulous accuracy that she had given to the rendering of "Litanei" and
-then, standing before the fire, her hands clasped behind her, her eyes
-raised to his, she said: "Mr. Oldmeadow, I want to say something to
-you."
-
-It was the gentle little voice, unaltered, yet he knew that he was in
-for something he would very much rather have avoided; something with
-anybody else unimaginable, but with her, he saw it now, quite
-inevitable. Yet he tried, even at this last moment, to avoid it and
-said, adjusting his eyeglass and moving to the sideboard: "But not
-before we've had our tea, surely. Can't I get you some? Will you trust
-me to pour it out?"
-
-"Thanks; I take coffee--not tea," said Miss Toner from her place at the
-fire, "and neither has been brought in yet."
-
-He had just perceived, to his discomfiture, that they had not. There was
-nothing for it but to turn from the ungarnished sideboard and face her
-again.
-
-"It's about Barney, Mr. Oldmeadow," Miss Toner said, unmoved by his
-patent evasion. "It's because I know you love Barney and care for his
-happiness. And it's because I hope that you and I are to be friends, and
-friendship can only be built on truth. Try to trust more; will you?
-That's all I want to say. Try to trust. You will be happier if you do
-and make other people happier."
-
-Oldmeadow had never experienced such an assault upon his personality,
-and he met it gagged and bound, for, assuredly, this was to be Barney's
-wife. A slow flush mounted to his face.
-
-"I'm afraid I seem very strange and unconventional to you," Adrienne
-Toner went on. "You've lived in a world where people don't care enough
-for each other to say the real things. They must be felt if they've to
-be said, mustn't they? Yet you do care for people. I have seen that,
-watching you here; and you care for real things. It's a crust of caution
-and convention that is about you. You are afraid of expression. You are
-afraid of feeling. You are afraid of being taken in and of wasting
-yourself. Don't be afraid, Mr. Oldmeadow. We never lose ourselves by
-trusting. We never lose ourselves by giving. It's a realer self that
-comes. And with you, I see it clearly, if you let the crust grow
-thicker, it will shut life and light and joy away from you; and when
-light cannot visit our hearts, they wither within us. That is your
-danger. I want to be your friend, so I must say the truth to you."
-
-He knew, though he had to struggle not to laugh, that he was very angry
-and that he must not show anger; though it would really be better to
-show that than his intense amusement; and it took him a moment, during
-which they confronted each other, to find words; dry, donnish words;
-words of caution and convention. They were the only ones he had
-available for the situation. "My dear young lady," he said, "you take
-too much upon yourself."
-
-She was not in the least disconcerted. She met his eyes steadily. "You
-mean that I am presumptuous, Mr. Oldmeadow?"
-
-"You take too much upon yourself," he repeated. "As you say, I hope we
-may be friends."
-
-"Is that really all, Mr. Oldmeadow?" she said, looking at him with such
-a depth of thoughtfulness that he could not for the life of him make out
-whether she found him odious or merely pitiful.
-
-"Yes; that's really all," he returned.
-
-The dining-room was very bright and the little blue figure before the
-fire was very still. The moment fixed itself deep in his consciousness
-with that impression of stillness and brightness. It was an
-uncomfortable impression. Her little face, uplifted to his, absurd, yet
-not uncharming, was, in its still force, almost ominous.
-
-"I'm sorry," was all she said, and she turned and went forward to greet
-Mrs. Chadwick.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-
-It was a soft June day and Oldmeadow was strolling about Mrs. Averil's
-garden admiring her herbaceous borders. It was a day that smelt of
-ripening strawberries, of warm grass and roses, and the air was full of
-a medley of bird voices, thrushes and blackbirds, sweet as grass and
-strawberries, and the bubbling rattle of the chaffinch as happy as the
-sunlight.
-
-Adrienne Toner was Mrs. Chadwick now, and she and Eleanor Chadwick and
-Barney were motoring together in the French Alps. Coldbrooks was empty,
-and he had come to stay with Nancy and her mother.
-
-They lived in a small stone house with a Jacobean front that looked,
-over a stone wall, at Chelford Green, and had behind it a delightfully
-unexpected length of lawn and orchard and kitchen-garden, all enclosed
-by higher walls and presided over by a noble cedar. Seen from the garden
-The Little House was merely mid-Victorian, but the modern additions were
-masked by climbing roses and a great magnolia-tree opened its
-lemon-scented cups at the highest bedroom windows. The morning-room was
-in the modern part, and from one of its windows, presently, Mrs. Averil
-emerged, opening her sunshade as she crossed the grass to join her
-guest. She wore a white straw garden hat, tipping over her eyes and
-tying, behind, over her thick knot of hair, in a manner that always
-recalled to Oldmeadow a lady out of Trollope. Her face was pale, like
-Nancy's, and her eyes grey; but rather than blackcaps and primroses she
-suggested lace tippets and porcelain tea-sets, and though it was from
-her Nancy had her pretty trick of closing her eyes when she smiled, Mrs.
-Averil's smile was cogitative and impersonal, and in her always
-temperate mirth there was an edge of grimness.
-
-"Well, Roger, I want to hear what you thought about the wedding," she
-said. She had not gone to church that morning with Nancy and it was, he
-knew, because she wanted an interchange of frank impressions. She had
-been prevented from attending Miss Toner's London nuptials by a touch of
-influenza and, as she now went on to say, she had got little from Nancy,
-who had no eye for pageants and performances. "Eleanor was so absorbed,"
-she went on, "in the fact that the Bishop had indigestion and had, at
-her suggestion, taken magnesia with his breakfast, that I could not get
-much else out of her. She seemed to have seen the Bishop's symptoms
-rather than Adrienne and Barney. Now from you I expect all the relevant
-details."
-
-"Well, if you call it a detail, Nancy was lovely," said Oldmeadow. "She
-looked like a silver-birch in her white and green."
-
-"And pearls," said Mrs. Averil. "You noticed, of course, the necklaces
-Adrienne gave them; quite the gift of a princess, yet so innocent and
-unobtrusive looking, too. She has great taste in such matters. Did she
-look well? Eleanor did say that she, like the Bishop, was very pale."
-
-"She was pale; but not a bit nervous. She rather looked as if she had
-been married every day of her life. Nothing ever puts her out, you know.
-She was very grave and benign; but she wasn't an imposing bride and the
-wreath of orange-blossoms aged her. Nancy and Meg and Barbara and the
-Lumley girl aged her, too. She must be older than Barney."
-
-"Yes; she is. A year older. But she's the sort of woman who will wear,"
-said Mrs. Averil, pausing before a bed of rose-trees to snip off a
-fading flower. "She'll not look very differently at fifty, you know; and
-her hair is the sort that may never turn grey. I can see her at seventy
-with those big golden braids and all her teeth. There's something very
-indestructible about her. Like a doll made of white leather compared to
-one made of porcelain. She'll last and last," said Mrs. Averil. "She'll
-outlast us all. Barney was radiant, of course."
-
-"Yes. But he _was_ nervous; like a little boy frightened by the
-splendour of his Christmas-tree. He looked as though he were arm in arm
-with the Christmas-tree itself as he came down the nave. A rather dumpy
-little Christmas-tree, but exquisitely lighted and garnished."
-
-"Well, he ought to be radiant," Mrs. Averil observed. "With all that
-money, it's an extremely good match for him. The fact of her being
-nobody in particular makes no difference, really, since she's an
-American. And she has, I gather, no tiresome relations to come
-bothering."
-
-"She's very unencumbered, certainly. There's something altogether very
-solitary about her," Oldmeadow agreed, watching Mrs. Averil snip off the
-withered roses. "I felt that even as she came down the nave on Barney's
-arm. It's not a bit about the money he's radiant," he added.
-
-"Oh, I know. Of course not. That was only my own gross satisfaction
-expressing itself. He's as in love as it's possible to be. And with
-every good reason."
-
-"You took to her as much as they all did, then?"
-
-"That would be rather difficult, wouldn't it? And Barney's reasons would
-hardly be those of a dry old aunt. She was very nice and kind to Nancy
-and me and she's evidently going to do everything for them. Barbara's
-already, you know, been sent to that admirable school that was too
-expensive for Eleanor; riding and singing and all the rest of it. And
-Meg's been given a perfect trousseau of fine clothes for her London
-season. Naturally I don't feel very critically towards her."
-
-"Don't you? Well, if she weren't a princess distributing largess,
-wouldn't you? After all, she's not given Nancy a trousseau. So why be
-mute with an old friend?"
-
-"Ah, but she's given her the pearls," said Mrs. Averil. "Nancy couldn't
-but accept a bridesmaid's gift. And she would give her a trousseau if
-she wanted it and would take it. However, I'll own, though decency
-should keep me mute, that I should find myself a little bored if I had
-to see too much of her. I'm an everyday person and I like to talk about
-everyday things."
-
-"I can hear her asking you, in answer to that, if there is anything more
-everyday than the human soul. I wish I could have seen you _aux prises_
-with her," Oldmeadow remarked. "Did she come down here? Did she like
-your drawing-room and garden?"
-
-Mrs. Averil's drawing-room and garden lay very near her heart. Eleanor
-Chadwick sometimes accused her of caring more about her china and her
-roses than about anything else in the world except Nancy.
-
-"I don't think she saw them; not what I call see," Mrs. Averil now said.
-"Oh, yes; she came several times and recognized, very appreciatively,
-the periods of my Queen Anne furniture and my Lowestoft. Beyond their
-period I don't think she went. She said the garden was old-world," Mrs.
-Averil added, looking about her and twirling her parasol on her
-shoulder.
-
-"She would," Oldmeadow agreed. "That's just what she would call it. And
-she'd call you a true, deep-hearted woman and Nancy a gifted girl. How
-do she and Nancy hit it off? It's that I want most of all to hear
-about."
-
-"They haven't much in common, have they?" said Mrs. Averil. "She's never
-hunted and doesn't, I imagine, know a wren from a hedge-sparrow. She
-_does_ know a skylark when she hears one, for she said 'Hail to thee,
-blithe spirit' while one was singing. But I felt, somehow, it was like
-the Queen Anne and the Lowestoft--a question of the label."
-
-Oldmeadow at this began to laugh with an open and indulged mirth. He and
-Mrs. Averil, at all events, saw eye to eye. "If you'd tie the correct
-label to the hedge-sparrow she'd know that, too," he said. "Poor girl.
-The trouble with her isn't that she doesn't know the birds, but that she
-wouldn't know the poets, either, without their labels. It's a mind made
-up of labels. No; I don't think it likely that Nancy, who hasn't a label
-about her, will get much out of her--beyond necklaces."
-
-"I wish Nancy _had_ a few labels," said Mrs. Averil. "I wish she could
-have travelled and studied as Miss Toner--Adrienne that is--has done.
-She is such a little ignoramus. Adrienne may bore you and me, but Nancy
-will never interest anyone--except you and me."
-
-It was always amusing to Oldmeadow, if a little sardonically so, to note
-that any conception of himself as a possible suitor for Nancy had never
-entered Mrs. Averil's mind. As a friend he was everything a mother could
-desire; as a match for Nancy almost unimaginable. Well, he could not
-give a wife even one hunter and he never had had any intention of
-falling in love with his dear nymph; yet that other people might not do
-so was a suggestion he repudiated with warmth.
-
-"Oh; in love, yes," Mrs. Averil agreed. "I don't deny that she's very
-loveable and I hope she may marry well. But that's not the same thing as
-being interesting, is it? A man may be in love with a woman who doesn't
-interest him."
-
-"I dispute that statement."
-
-"I'm sure dear Eleanor never interested her husband--devoted to the day
-of his death as he was. There's something in my idea. To be interesting
-one must offer something new. If Nancy had been interesting to Barney
-she would now, I think, have been in Adrienne's place. Not that it would
-have been a marriage to be desired for either of them."
-
-So he and Mrs. Averil had been thinking the same thoughts.
-
-"And you contend that if Nancy had been to China and read Goethe and
-Dante in the originals he'd have been interested? I think he was quite
-sufficiently interested and that if Miss Toner hadn't come barging into
-our lives he'd have known he was in love."
-
-"Going to China is a figure of speech and stands for all the things she
-hasn't got and doesn't know. My poor little Nancy. All the same, _she_
-isn't a bore!" said Mrs. Averil with as near an approach to acerbity as
-she could show.
-
-"No; she isn't a bore. The things she knows have to be found out, by
-degrees, through living with her. Barney hasn't been to China, either,
-so, according to your theory, Nancy didn't find him interesting."
-
-At this Mrs. Averil's eyes met his and, after a moment of contemplation,
-they yielded up to him the secret they saw to be shared. "If only it
-were the same for women! But they don't need the new. She's young.
-She'll get over it. I don't believe in broken hearts. All the same,"
-Mrs. Averil stopped in their walk, ostensibly to examine the growth of a
-fine pink lupin, "it hasn't endeared Adrienne to me. I'm too
-_terre-a-terre_, about that, too, not to feel vexation, on Nancy's
-account. And what I'm afraid of is that she knows she's not endeared to
-me. That she guesses. She's a bore; but she's not a bit stupid, you
-know."
-
-"You don't think she's spiteful?" Oldmeadow suggested after a moment,
-while Mrs. Averil still examined her lupin.
-
-"Dear me, no! I wish she could be! It's that smooth surface of hers
-that's so tiresome. She's not spiteful. But she's human. She'll want to
-keep Barney away and Nancy will be hurt."
-
-"Want to keep him away when she's got him so completely?"
-
-"Something of that sort. I felt it once or twice."
-
-"My first instinct about her was right, then," said Oldmeadow. "She's a
-bore and an interloper, and she'll spoil things."
-
-"Oh, perhaps not. She'll mend some things. Have you heard about Captain
-Hayward?"
-
-"Do you mean that stupid, big, tawny fellow? What about him?"
-
-"You may well ask. I've been spoken to about him and Meg by more than
-one person. They are making themselves conspicuous, and it's been going
-on for some time."
-
-"You don't mean that Meg's in love with him?"
-
-"He's in love with her, at all events, and, as you know, he's a married
-man. I questioned Nancy, who was with Meg for a few weeks in London, and
-she owns that Meg's unhappy."
-
-"And they're seeing each other in London now?" Oldmeadow was deeply
-discomposed.
-
-"No. He's away just now. And Meg is going to meet the bridal party in
-Paris at the end of July. Nancy feels that when Meg gets back under
-Adrienne's influence there'll be nothing to fear."
-
-"We depend on her, then, so much, already," he murmured. He was
-reviewing, hastily, his last impressions of Meg and they were not
-reassuring. The only thing that was reassuring was to reflect on his
-impressions of Adrienne. "Grandma's parlour" returned to him with its
-assurance of deep security. Above everything else Adrienne was
-respectable.
-
-"Yes. That's just it," Mrs. Averil agreed. "We depend on her. And I feel
-we're going to depend more and more. She's the sort of person who mends
-things. So we mustn't think of what she spoils."
-
-What Adrienne Toner had spoiled was, however, to be made very plain next
-morning both to Nancy's old friend and to her mother. Beside her plate
-at breakfast was a letter addressed in Barney's evident hand, a letter
-in a narrow envelope stamped with the name of a French hotel and
-showing, over the address, an engraving of peaks against the sky. Nancy
-met the occasion with perfect readiness, saying as she looked at the
-letter, waiting to open it till she had made the tea--Nancy always made
-the tea in the morning while her mother sat behind the bacon and eggs at
-the other end of the table--"How nice; from Barney. Now we shall have
-news of them."
-
-Nothing less like an Ariane could be imagined than Nancy as she stood
-there in her pink dress above the pink, white and gold tea-cups. One
-might have supposed from her demeanour that a letter from Barney was but
-a happy incident in a happy day. But, when she dropped into her chair
-and read, it was evident that she was not prepared for what she found.
-She read steadily, in silence, while Oldmeadow cut bread at the
-sideboard and Mrs. Averil distributed her viands, and, when the last
-page was reached, they both could not fail to see that Nancy was
-blushing, blushing so deeply that, as she thus felt herself betray her
-emotion, tears came thickly into her downcast eyes.
-
-"I'll have my tea now, dear," said Mrs. Averil. "Will you wait a little
-longer, Roger?" She tided Nancy over.
-
-But Nancy was soon afloat. "The letter is for us all," she said. "Do
-read it aloud, Roger, while I have my breakfast."
-
-Barney's letters, in the past, had, probably, always been shared and
-Nancy was evidently determined that her own discomposure was not to
-introduce a new precedent. Oldmeadow took up the sheets and read.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"DEAREST NANCY,--How I wish you were with us up here. It's the most
-fantastically lovely place. One feels as if one could sail off into it.
-I dug up some roots of saxifrage for your wall yesterday, such pretty
-pink stuff. It's gone off in a box wrapped in damp moss and I hope will
-reach you safely. A horrid, vandal thing to do; but for you and Aunt
-Monica I felt it justified, and there are such masses of it. I saw a
-snow-bunting yesterday, much higher up than the saxifrage; such a jolly,
-composed little fellow on a field of snow. The birds would drive you
-absolutely mad, except that you're such a sensible young person you'd no
-doubt keep your head even when you saw a pair of golden eagles, as we
-did, floating over a ravine. I walked around the Lac d'Annecy this
-morning, before breakfast, and did wish you were with me. I thought of
-our bird-walks at dawn last summer. There were two or three darling
-warblers singing, kinds we haven't got at home; and black redstarts and
-a peregrine falcon high in the air. I could write all day if I'd the
-time, about the birds and flowers. You remember Adrienne telling us that
-afternoon when she first came to Coldbrooks about the flowers. But I
-mustn't go on now. We're stopping for tea in a little valley among the
-mountains with flowers thick all around us and I've only time to give
-our news to you and Aunt Monica and to send our love. Mother is
-extremely fit and jolly, though rather scared at the hairpin curves;
-Adrienne has to hold her hand. I'm too happy for words and feel as if
-I'd grown wings. How is Chummie's foot? Did the liniment help? Those
-traps are beastly things. I feel just as you do about the rabbits.
-Adrienne reads aloud to us in the evenings; a man called Claudel;
-awfully stiff French to follow but rather beautiful. I think you'd like
-him. Not a bit like Racine! Best love to you and Aunt Monica. Here's
-Adrienne, who wants to have her say."
-
-Had it been written in compunction for _Ariane aux bords laissee_? or,
-rather, in a happy reversion to sheer spontaneity, a turning, without
-any self-consciousness, to the comrade of the bird-walks who would,
-after all, best feel with him about snow-buntings and redstarts?
-Oldmeadow paused for the surmise, not looking up, before he went on from
-Barney's neat, firm script to his wife's large, clear clumsy hand.
-
- "DEAREST NANCY," ran the postscript, and it had been at the
- postscript, Oldmeadow now could gauge, that Nancy had first found
- herself unprepared. "I, too, am thinking of you, with Barney. It is
- a great joy to feel that where, he says, I've given him golden
- eagles and snow-buntings he's given me--among so many other dear,
- wonderful people--a Nancy. I get the best of the bargain, don't I?
- I can't see much of the birds for looking at the peaks--_my_ peaks,
- so familiar yet, always, so new again. 'Stern daughters of the
- voice of God' that they are. Radiantly white against a cloudless
- sky we find them to-day. Barney's profile is beautiful against
- them--but his nose is badly sun-burned! _All_ our noses are
- sun-burned! That's what one pays for flying among the Alps.
-
- "Mother Nell--we've decided that that's what I'm to call
- her--looks ten years younger all the same, as I knew she would. We
- talk of you all so often--of you and Meg and Palgrave and Barbara,
- and half a dozen times a day Barney wishes that one or the other of
- you were with us to see this or that. It's specially you for the
- birds I notice. You must take me for some bird-walks at dawn some
- day and teach me to know all your lovely English songsters.... Dear
- little Cousin-Sister, I send you my love with his and, with him,
- hold you warmly in my heart. Will 'Aunt Monica' accept my
- affectionate and admiring homages?
-
- "Yours ever
-
- "ADRIENNE"
-
-
-
-Oldmeadow had not expected that she could write such a human letter; yet
-it explained Nancy's blush. Barney's spontaneous affection she could
-have faced, but she had not been able to face his wife's determined
-tenderness. Adrienne had meant it well, no doubt--Oldmeadow gazed on
-after he had finished, but she had no business to mean so well, no
-business to thrust herself, in this community of intimacy, into what was
-Barney's place alone. There was more in it, he knew, with Meg and Mrs.
-Averil to help him, than the quite successful playfulness. She was to be
-more intimate than Barney, that was what it came to; more, much more
-tender if Barney was to be allowed intimacy and tenderness. That was
-really what she intended Nancy to see, and that Barney had no place at
-all where she, Adrienne, did not also belong.
-
-"Very sweet; very sweet and pretty," Mrs. Averil's voice broke in, and
-he realized that he had allowed himself to drop into a grim and
-tactless reverie; "I didn't know she had such a sense of humour.
-Sun-burned noses and 'Stern daughters of the voice of God.' Well done. I
-didn't think Adrienne would ever look as low as noses. They must be
-having a delightful tour. I know black redstarts. There was one that
-used to wake me every morning at four, one summer, in Normandy, with the
-most foolish, creaking song; just outside my window. Give Barney my love
-when you write and return my niece's affectionate and admiring homages.
-Mother Nell. I shouldn't care to be called Mother Nell somehow."
-
-So Mrs. Averil's vexation expressed itself and so she floated Nancy
-along. But Nancy, long since, had pulled herself together and was able
-to look at Oldmeadow, while her lashes closed together in her own smile,
-and to say that she'd almost be willing to lose her nose for the sake of
-hearing the new warblers. Mrs. Averil opened her "Times" and over
-marmalade Nancy and Oldmeadow planned the trip that they would take some
-day, when their ship came in, the three of them, a bird-trip to the
-French Alps.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat beside Adrienne Chadwick and knew that from the other end
-of the room, where he talked to Mrs. Aldesey, Barney's eyes were on
-them, though he tried to keep them off. It was the first dinner-party
-the young couple had given since they had come up to town, for though
-they were established at Coldbrooks in the communal family life Adrienne
-seemed to find to her taste, and though Barney had at once immersed
-himself in country pursuits, they had taken and furnished this large
-house in Connaught Square and it was, apparently, settled that the
-winter months were to be spent in London. How that was to be combined
-with farming at Coldbrooks, or whether Barney intended to take a header
-into politics and felt a London house, big enough for entertaining, part
-of the programme, Oldmeadow hadn't an idea, and for the rather sinister
-reason that he had hardly laid his eyes on Barney since his return from
-his wedding-journey. Even though asked to tea once or twice, while,
-established in an hotel, they were finding and furnishing the house, he
-had never found them alone and either Barney had made no opportunity, or
-his wife had seen to it that none should be made, for having a
-_tete-a-tete_ with his old friend.
-
-Oldmeadow could not associate Barney with ambitions, either social or
-political, nor, he was bound to say, as he looked round the
-dinner-table, where Adrienne sat at one end with Lord Lumley and Barney
-at the other with Lady Lumley, could one infer from its disparate and
-irrelevant elements any such ambitions in Adrienne. He had taken Mrs.
-Aldesey down and had felt her at moments to be almost too resourceful,
-her air of graceful skill in keeping the ball rolling seeming too much
-to emphasize its tendency to drop. Without Mrs. Aldesey, without
-Meg--vividly engaged at one corner with a fair young American--without
-himself, for he had aided and abetted Lydia to the best of his ability,
-the dinner would have been a dull one and he was not sure that even
-their enterprise had redeemed it. Adrienne had not any air of fearing
-dullness or of being in need of assistance. Oldmeadow saw that the blue
-ribbon was frequently unrolled and that, as always, it made a silence in
-which it could be watched. Lord Lumley, his handsome, official head bent
-in an attitude of chivalrous devotion, watched earnestly, and the fair
-young American paused in the midst of whatever he might be saying to Meg
-to take almost reverent note; but Oldmeadow fancied more than once that
-he caught startled eyes fixed upon it, especially when there emerged a
-lustrous loop of quotation:--
-
- "One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
- Never doubted clouds would break,--"
-
-The silence for that had been so general that even Barney, far away, and
-protected by Mrs. Aldesey, was aware of it.
-
-"How wonderfully he _wears_, doesn't he, dear old Browning," said Mrs.
-Aldesey, and in the glance that Barney cast upon her was an oddly
-mingled gratitude and worry. The fair young American, he was very fair
-and had clear, charming eyes, finished the verse in a low voice to Meg
-and Meg looked at him affectionately the while. He was evidently one of
-Adrienne's appurtenances.
-
-It was a dull dinner. Pretty, festive Mrs. Pope and young Mr. Haviland,
-reputed to be a wit and one of Meg's young men as Mrs. Pope was one of
-Barney's young women, would not with any eagerness again attend a board
-where the hostess quoted Browning and didn't know better than to send
-you down, the first with a stern young socialist who sat silent for the
-most part and frowned when addressed, and the second with a jocular,
-middle-aged lady from California, the mother, Oldmeadow gathered, of the
-clear-eyed youth, from whose ample bosom Mr. Haviland's subtle arrows
-glanced aside leaving him helplessly exposed to the stout bludgeonings
-of her humour. Adrienne paused once or twice in her conversation to
-smile approval upon her compatriot and to draw Lord Lumley's attention
-to her special brand of merriment, good Lord Lumley adjusting his
-glasses obediently to take it in.
-
-And now they were all assembled in the drawing-room. Like everything
-about Adrienne, it was simple and rather splendid. Barney had wisely
-kept his modernities for his own study and it was a pity, Oldmeadow
-reflected, that Adrienne had not kept for her own boudoir the large
-portrait of herself that hung over the mantelpiece, since it was a note
-more irrelevant than any Post Impressionist could have been and cast a
-shade of surmise over the taste displayed in the Chippendale furniture
-and the Chinese screens.
-
-"Rather sweet, isn't it; pastoral and girlish, you know," Barney had
-suggested tentatively as Mrs. Aldesey had placed herself before it.
-"Done in Paris a good many years ago; the man was very much the fashion
-then. Adrienne was only sixteen. It's an extraordinarily perfect
-likeness still, isn't it?"
-
-To which Mrs. Aldesey, all old lace and exquisite evasion, had murmured,
-her lorgnette uplifted: "Quite dear and ingenuous. Such a relief after
-your arid Cubists. What would they make of Mrs. Barney _en bergere_, I'd
-like to know? A jumble of packing-cases with something twisted in a
-corner to signify a bleat."
-
-For the picture, painted with glib assurance and abounding in pink and
-azure, portrayed Adrienne dressed as a shepherdess and carrying a
-flower-wreathed crook.
-
-Adrienne, to-night at all events, was looking very unlike the
-shepherdess, but that might be because of the approaches of her
-maternity. Mrs. Chadwick, when he had last been at Coldbrooks, had told
-him that the baby was expected in May and that Adrienne was wonderful
-about it, dedicating herself to its perfection in thought and deed with
-every conscious hour.
-
-"If only I'd thought about my babies before they came like that, who
-knows what they might have turned out!" she had surmised. "But I was
-very silly, I'm afraid, and the only thing I really did think of was how
-I should dress them. I've always loved butcher's-blue linen for children
-and I must say that mine did look very nice in it. For everyday, you
-know."
-
-Oldmeadow found it extremely difficult to think of Adrienne as a mother;
-it was much easier to think of her as a shepherdess. Such solidities of
-experience gave her even a certain pathos in his eyes, though he was in
-no whit dislodged from his hostility to her. She was as mild, as
-satisfied, apparently, with herself and with existence, as ever, yet her
-eyes and lips expressed fatigue and a purely physical sadness that was
-uncharacteristic, and it was uncharacteristic that she should be rather
-thickly powdered.
-
-They had not really met since the morning of her adjuration to him at
-Coldbrooks and he wondered if she remembered that little scene as
-vividly as he did. She would be very magnanimous did she not remember it
-unpleasantly; and he could imagine her as very magnanimous; yet from the
-fact that she had kept Barney from him he could not believe that she was
-feeling magnanimously.
-
-She watched Barney and Mrs. Aldesey now, as they stood before her
-portrait, and he fancied that the sadness in her eyes, whatever might be
-its cause, deepened a little. When she turned them on him it was with an
-effect of being patiently ready for him. Perhaps, really, she had been
-more patient than pleased all evening.
-
-"So you are settled here for the winter?" he said. "Have you and Barney
-any plans? I've hardly seen anything of him of late."
-
-"We have been so very, very busy, you know," said Adrienne, as if quite
-accepting his right to an explanation.
-
-She was dressed in pale blue and wore, with her pearl necklace, a little
-wreath of pearls in her hair. In her hands she turned, as they talked, a
-small eighteenth-century fan painted in pink and grey and blue, and he
-was aware, as he had been at Coldbrooks, of those slow and rather
-fumbling movements.
-
-"We couldn't well ask friends," she went on, "even the dearest, to come
-and sit on rolls of carpet with us while we drank our tea, could we?
-We've kept our squalor for the family circle. Meg's been with us; so
-dear and helpful; but only Meg and a flying visit once or twice from
-Mother Nell. Nancy couldn't come. But nothing, it seems, will tear Nancy
-from hunting. I feel that strange and rather sad; the absorption of a
-fine young life in such primitiveness."
-
-"Oh, well; it's not her only interest, you know," said Oldmeadow, very
-determined not to allow himself vexation. "Nancy is a creature of such
-deep country roots. Not the kind that grow in London."
-
-"I know," said Adrienne. "And it is just those roots that I want to
-prevent my Barney's growing. Roots like that tie people to routine;
-convention; acceptance. I want Barney to find a wider, freer life. I
-hope he will go into politics. If we have left Coldbrooks and the dear
-people there for these winter months it's because I feel he will be
-better able to form opinions here than in the country. I saw quite well,
-there, that people didn't form opinions; only accepted traditions. I
-want Barney to be free of tradition and to form opinions for himself. He
-has none now," she smiled.
-
-She had been clear before, and secure; but he felt now the added weight
-of her matronly authority. He felt, too, that, while ready for him and,
-perhaps, benevolently disposed, she was far more indifferent to his
-impressions than she had been at Coldbrooks. She had possessed Barney
-before; but how much more deeply she possessed him now and how much
-more definitely she saw what she intended to do with him.
-
-"You must equip him with your opinions," said Oldmeadow, and his voice
-was a good match for hers in benevolence. "I know that you have so many
-well-formed ones."
-
-"Oh, no; never that," said Adrienne. "That's how country vegetables are
-grown; first in frames and then in plots; all guided and controlled. He
-must find his own opinions; quite for himself; quite freely of
-influence. That is the rock upon which Democracy is founded. Nothing is
-more arresting to development than living by other people's opinions."
-
-"But we must get our opinions from somebody and somewhere. The danger of
-democracy is that we don't grow them at all; merely catch them, like
-influenza, from a mob. Not that I disbelieve in democracy."
-
-"Don't you, Mr. Oldmeadow?" She turned her little fan and smiled on him.
-"You believe in liberty, equality, fraternity? That surprises me."
-
-"Democracy isn't incompatible with recognizing that other people are
-wiser than oneself and letting them guide us; quite the contrary. Why
-surprised? Have I seemed so autocratic?"
-
-"It would surprise me very much to learn that you believed in equality,
-to start with that alone"; Adrienne smiled on.
-
-"Well, I own that I don't believe in people who have no capacity for
-opinions being impowered to act as if they had. That's the fallacy
-that's playing the mischief with us, all over the world."
-
-"They never will have opinions worth having unless they are given the
-liberty to look for them. You don't believe in liberty, either, when you
-say that."
-
-"No; not for everybody. Some of our brothers are too young and others
-too stupid to be trusted with it."
-
-"They'll take it for themselves if you don't trust them with it," said
-Adrienne, and he was again aware that though she might be absurd she, at
-all events, was not stupid. "All that we can do in life is to trust, and
-help, and open doors. Only experience teaches. People must follow their
-own lights."
-
-He moved forward another pawn, and though he did not find her stupid he
-was not taking her seriously. "Most people have no lights to follow.
-It's a choice for them between following other people's or resenting and
-trampling on them. That, again, is what we can see happening all over
-the world."
-
-"So it is, you must own, just as I thought; you don't even believe in
-fraternity," said Adrienne, and she continued to smile her weary,
-tranquil smile upon him; "for we cannot feel towards men as towards
-brothers, and trust them, unless we believe that the light shines into
-each human soul."
-
-He saw now that unless they went much deeper, deeper than he could be
-willing, ever, to go with Adrienne Toner, he must submit to letting
-himself appear as worsted. He knew where he believed the roots of trust
-to grow and he did not intend, no never, to say to Adrienne Toner that
-only through the love of God could one at once distrust and love the
-species to which one belonged. He could have shuddered at the thought of
-what she would certainly have found to say about God.
-
-"You've got all sorts of brothers here to-night, haven't you," he
-remarked, putting aside the abstract theme and adjusting his glass.
-"Some of them look as though they didn't recognize the relationship.
-Where did you find our young socialist over there in the corner? He
-looks very menacing. Most of the socialists I've known have been the
-mildest of men."
-
-"He is a friend of Palgrave's. Palgrave brought him to see me. Oh, I'm
-so glad--Gertrude is going to take care of him. She always sees at once
-if anyone looks lonely. That's all right, then."
-
-Oldmeadow was not so sure it was as he observed the eye with which Mr.
-Besley measured the beaming advance of the lady from California.
-
-"I wonder if you would like my dear old friend, Mrs. Prentiss," Adrienne
-continued, watching her method with Mr. Besley. "The Laughing
-Philosopher, Mother used to call her. She is a very rare, strong soul.
-That is her son, talking to Lady Lumley. He's been studying architecture
-in Paris for the past three years. A radiant person. Mrs. Prentiss runs
-a settlement in San Francisco and has a brilliant literary and artistic
-salon. She is a real force in the life of our country."
-
-"Why should you question my appreciation of rarity and strength? I can
-see that she is very kind and that if anybody can melt Mr. Besley she
-will."
-
-"Gertrude would have melted Diogenes," said Adrienne with a fond
-assurance that, though it took the form of playfulness, lacked its
-substance. "I hope they will find each other, for he is rare and strong,
-too. What he needs is warmth and happiness. He makes me think of Shelley
-when he talks."
-
-"He's too well up in statistics to make me think of Shelley," Oldmeadow
-commented. Barney, he saw, from his place beside Mrs. Aldesey at the
-other end of the room, was still watching them, pleased now, it was
-evident, by the appearance of friendly, drifting converse they
-presented. "He's not altogether unknown to me for we often, in our
-review, get our windows broken by his stones; well-thrown, too. He's
-very able. So you thought it might do the British Empire good to face
-him? Well, I suppose it may."
-
-"Which are the British Empire?" asked Adrienne. "You. To begin with."
-
-"Oh, no. Count me out. I'm only a snappy, snuffy scribbler. Good old
-Lord Lumley, of course, with all his vast, well-governed provinces
-shimmering in the Indian sun behind him. And Sir Archibald, who talks so
-loudly in the House. Palgrave didn't bring him, I'll be bound."
-
-"No. Lady Lumley brought him. He and Lord Lumley are certainly more than
-odds and ends." She had an air of making no attempt to meet his
-badinage, if it was that, but of mildly walking past it. "They are, both
-of them, rather splendid people, in spite of their limitations. They've
-accepted tradition, you see, instead of growing opinion. That is their
-only trouble. I was afraid you were going to say Mr. Haviland. He is
-certainly an odd and end."
-
-Mr. Haviland and Mrs. Pope had found each other and were indulging in
-mirthful repartee in the back drawing-room. "I feel safe with Lord
-Lumley and Sir Archibald," Adrienne added.
-
-"I'd certainly rather trust myself in their hands than in Mr. Besley's.
-I'd almost rather trust myself in the hands of Mr. Haviland."
-
-"You mean that they would, at least, keep you comfortable and that Mr.
-Besley wouldn't." She, too, had her forms of repartee.
-
-"I expect it's just what I do mean," he assented. "If Mr. Besley and his
-friends had their way, I for instance, and workers of my type, would
-soon, I suspect, have to forego our tobacco and our chamber-music. We're
-only marketable in a comfortable world. And there are more comfortable
-people, I maintain, under Lord Lumley, than there would be under Mr.
-Besley."
-
-"'Heartily know, when half-gods go, the gods arrive,'" said Adrienne.
-"All revolutions must begin by burning away the evil and the refuse. Not
-that I am a revolutionist, or even a socialist."
-
-"You can't separate good from evil by burning," he said. "You burn them
-both. That's what the French did in their lamentable bonfire, for which
-they've been paying in poorer brains and poorer blood ever since. We
-don't want revolutions. All we want is slow, good-tempered reform.
-Revolutions are always ill-tempered, aren't they, and nothing worth
-doing was ever done in an ill-temper. You are making me very didactic."
-
-"Oh, but I prefer that so much to persiflage," said Adrienne, with her
-tranquillity. "And I am glad to hear what you really believe. But it is
-sad to me that you should see no ardour or glory in anything. With all
-its excesses and errors, I have always felt the French Revolution to be
-a sublime expression of the human spirit."
-
-"It might have been; if they could only have kept their
-heads--metaphorically as well as literally. But the glory and ardour
-were too mixed with hatred and ignorance. I'm afraid I do tend to
-distrust those states of feeling. They tend so easily to
-self-deception."
-
-She was looking at him, quietly and attentively, and he was, for the
-first time since their initial meeting, perhaps, feeling quite
-benevolently towards her; quite as the British Empire might feel towards
-a subject race. It was, therefore, the more difficult to feel anything
-but exasperation when she said, having, evidently, summed up her
-impressions and found her verdict: "Yes. You distrust them. We always
-come back to that, don't we? You distrust yourself, too. So that, when
-you tell me what you believe, you can only do it in the form of making
-fun of my beliefs. I feel about you, Mr. Oldmeadow, what I felt that
-morning when I tried to come near you and you wouldn't let me. I feel it
-more the more I see you; and it makes me sad. It isn't only that you
-distrust ardour and glory, all the sunlight and splendour of life; but
-you are afraid of them; afraid to open your heart to trust. You shut
-your door upon the sunlight and take up your caustic pen; and you don't
-see how the shadows fall about you."
-
-It was indeed a dusty tumble from the quite civilized pavement of their
-interchange, and it was unfortunate that upon his moment of
-discomfiture, when he saw himself as trying to clap the dust off his
-knees and shoulders in time to be presentable, Barney and Mrs. Aldesey
-should have chosen to approach them. Barney, no doubt, imagined it a
-propitious moment in which to display to Mrs. Aldesey his wife's and his
-friend's amity.
-
-Adrienne was perfectly composed. She had borne her testimony and, again,
-done her best for him, pointing out to him that the first step towards
-enfranchisement was to open his door to the sunlight that she could so
-bountifully supply. She turned a clear, competent eye upon her husband
-and his companion.
-
-"Well, dear, and what have you and Roger been so deep in?" Barney
-inquired, looking down at her with a fondness in which, all the same,
-Oldmeadow detected the anxiety that had hovered in his eye all evening.
-"You've seemed frightfully deep."
-
-"We have been," said Adrienne, looking up at him. "In liberty, equality
-and fraternity; all the things I believe in and that Mr. Oldmeadow
-doesn't. I can't imagine how he gets on at all, he believes in so few
-things. It must be such a sad, dim, groping world to live in when there
-are no stars above to look at and no hands below to hold."
-
-"Oh, well, you see," said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile, "his
-ancestors didn't sign the Declaration of Independence."
-
-"We don't need ancestors to do that," Adrienne smiled back. "All of us
-sign it for ourselves--all of us who have accepted our birthright and
-taken the gifts that our great, modern, deep-hearted world hold out to
-us. You are an American, Mrs. Aldesey, so you find it easy to believe in
-freedom, don't you?"
-
-"Very easy; for myself; but not for other people," Mrs. Aldesey replied
-and Oldmeadow saw at once, with an added discomfort, that she
-underestimated, because of Adrienne's absurdity, Adrienne's
-intelligence. "But then the very name of any abstraction--freedom,
-humanity, what you will--has always made me feel, at once, dreadfully
-sleepy. It's not ever having had my mind trained, Mrs. Barney. Now
-yours was, beautifully, I can see."
-
-Adrienne looked up at her, for Mrs. Aldesey, her lace about her
-shoulders, her lorgnette in her hands, had not seated herself, and it
-was further evident to Oldmeadow that she weighed Mrs. Aldesey more
-correctly than Mrs. Aldesey weighed her. "Very carefully, if not
-beautifully," she said. "Have I made you sleepy already? But I don't
-want to go on talking about abstractions. I want to talk about Mr.
-Oldmeadow. The truth is, Barney," and her voice, as she again turned her
-eyes on her husband, had again the form but not the substance of gaiety,
-"the truth is that he's a lonely, lonely bachelor and that we ought to
-arrange a marriage for him, you and I. Since he doesn't believe in
-freedom, he won't mind having a marriage arranged, will he?--if we can
-find a rare, sweet, gifted girl."
-
-Barney had become red. "Roger's been teasing you, darling. Nobody
-believes in freedom more. Don't let him take you in. He's an awful old
-humbug with his Socratic method. He upsets you before you know where you
-are. He's always been like that."
-
-"Yes; hasn't he," Mrs. Aldesey murmured.
-
-"But he hasn't upset me at all," said Adrienne. "I grant that he was
-trying to, that he was doing his very best to give me a tumble; but I
-quite see through him and he doesn't conceal himself from me in the very
-least. He doesn't really believe in freedom, however much he may have
-taken _you_ in, Barney; he'd think it wholesome, of course, that you
-should believe in it. That's his idea, you see; to give people what he
-thinks wholesome; to choose for them. It's the lack of faith all
-through. But the reason is that he's lonely; dreadfully lonely, and
-because of that he's grown to be, as he says, snappy and snuffy; so that
-we must borrow a page from his book and find what is wholesome for him.
-I know all the symptoms so well. I've had friends just like that. It's a
-starved heart and having nobody to be fonder of than anyone else; no one
-near at all. He must be happily married as soon as possible. A happy
-marriage is the best gift of life, isn't it, Mrs. Aldesey? If we haven't
-known that we haven't known our best selves, have we?"
-
-"It may be; we mayn't have," said Mrs. Aldesey, cheerfully; but she was
-not liking it. "I can't say. Am I to have a hand in choosing his bride?
-I know his tastes, I think. We're quite old friends, you see."
-
-"No one who doesn't believe in freedom for other people may help to
-choose her," said Adrienne, with a curious blitheness. "That's why he
-mayn't choose her himself. We must go quite away to find her; away from
-ceilings and conventions and out into the sunlight. I don't believe
-happiness is found under ceilings. And it's what we all need more than
-anything else. Even tobacco and chamber-music don't make you a bit
-happy, do they, Mr. Oldmeadow? and if one isn't happy one can't know
-anything about anything. Not really."
-
-"Alas!" sighed Mrs. Aldesey, keeping up her end, but not very
-successfully, while Barney fixed his eyes upon his wife. "And I thought
-I'd found it this evening, under this ceiling. Well, I shall cherish my
-illusion, since you tell me it's only that, and thank you for it, Mrs.
-Barney. The Lumleys are going to give me a lift and I see that their car
-has been announced."
-
-"Stay on a bit, Roger," Barney murmured, as the Lumleys approached.
-"I've seen nothing of you for ages."
-
-Adrienne rose to greet her parting guests.
-
-"Darling Adrienne, good-night. It's been perfectly delightful, your
-little party," said Lady Lumley, who was large, light and easily
-pleased; an English equivalent of the lady from California, but without
-the sprightliness. "Your dear young Mr. Prentiss is a treasure. He's
-been telling me about Sicilian temples. We _must_ get there one day.
-Mrs. Prentiss says they will come to us for a week-end before they go.
-How extraordinarily interesting she is. Don't forget that you are coming
-on the fifteenth."
-
-"I shall get up a headache, first thing!" Lord Lumley stated in a loud,
-jocular whisper, reverting to a favourite jest on Adrienne's powers.
-"That's the thing to go in for, eh? I won't let Charlie cut me out this
-time. Not a night's sleep till you come!"
-
-"Go in for as many as you like, dear Lord Lumley," said Adrienne,
-smiling her assurance of being able to deal with a series.
-
-"Good-night, Mrs. Barney," said Mrs. Aldesey. "Leave me a little
-standing-room under the stars, won't you."
-
-"There's always standing-room under the stars," said Adrienne. "We don't
-exclude each other there."
-
-The party showed no other signs of breaking up. The Laughing Philosopher
-had melted, or, at all events, mastered Mr. Besley, and talked to him
-with, now and again, a maternal hand laid on his knee. Mr. Haviland and
-Mrs. Pope still laughed in the back drawing-room, Meg and Mr. Prentiss
-had come together again and Sir Archibald was engaged with a pretty
-girl. After looking around upon them all, Adrienne, with the appearance
-of a deeper fatigue, sank back upon her sofa.
-
-"You know, darling," Barney smiled candidly upon his wife, "you rather
-put your foot in it just now. Mrs. Aldesey's marriage isn't happy. I
-ought to have warned you."
-
-"How do you mean not happy, Barney?" Adrienne looked up at him. "Isn't
-Mr. Aldesey dead?"
-
-"Not at all dead. She left him some years ago, didn't she, Roger? He
-lives in New York. It's altogether a failure."
-
-Adrienne looked down at her fan. "I didn't know. But one can't avoid
-speaking of success sometimes, even to failures."
-
-"Of course not. Another time you will know."
-
-Adrienne seemed to meditate, but without compunction. "That was what she
-meant, then, by saying she believed in freedom for herself but not for
-other people."
-
-"Meant? How do you mean? She was joking."
-
-"If she left him. It was she who left him?"
-
-"I don't know anything about it," Barney spoke now with definite
-vexation and Oldmeadow, in his corner of the sofa, his arms folded, his
-eyes on the cornice, gave him no help. "Except that, yes, certainly;
-it's she who left him. She's not a deserted wife. Anything but."
-
-"It's only Mr. Aldesey who is the deserted husband," Adrienne turned her
-fan and kept her eyes on it. "It's only he who can't be free. Forgive me
-if she's a special friend of yours, Mr. Oldmeadow; but it explains. I
-felt something so brittle, so unreal in her, charming and gracious as
-she is. It is so very wrong for a woman to do that, I think."
-
-"Wrong?" Barney echoed, staring at Oldmeadow while this firm hand was
-laid upon his Egeria. "What the dickens do you mean, darling? She is a
-special friend of Roger's. You don't surely mean to say a woman must,
-under all circumstances, stick to a man she doesn't love?"
-
-"Anything but that, Barney. I think that she should leave him and set
-him free. It's quite plain to me that if a wife will not live with her
-husband it is her duty to divorce him. Then, at any rate, he can try for
-happiness again."
-
-"Divorce him, my dear child!" Barney was trying to keep up appearances
-but the note of marital severity came through and as it sounded Adrienne
-raised her eyes to his: "It's not so easy as all that! Aldesey, whatever
-his faults, may have given her no cause to divorce him, and I take it
-you'll not suggest that Mrs. Aldesey should give him cause to divorce
-her."
-
-On her sofa, more pallid under her powder, more sunken than before, and
-with the queer squashed-in look emphasized, Adrienne kept steady eyes
-uplifted to her husband. "Not at all, dear Barney," she returned and
-Oldmeadow, though hardened against the pathos of her physical
-disability, saw that she spoke with difficulty, "but I think that you
-confuse the real with the conventional wrong. Mrs. Aldesey would not
-care to face any unconventionality; that is quite apparent. She would
-draw her skirts aside from any conventional wrong-doing. But the real
-wrong she would be blind to; the wrong of keeping anyone bound in the
-emptiness you have made for them. Setting free is not so strange and
-terrible a matter as you seem to imagine. It's quite easy for brave,
-unshackled people."
-
-"Well, I must really be off," Oldmeadow now seized the occasion to
-declare. "I believe, as a matter of fact, that Mr. Aldesey lives very
-contentedly in New York, collecting French prints and giving excellent
-dinners. Anything open and scandalous would be as distasteful to him as
-to his wife. They are, both of them, happier apart; that's all it comes
-to. So you must read your lessons, even by proxy, to more authentic
-misdemeanants, Mrs. Barney. All right, Barney. Don't come down. I'll
-hope to see you both again quite soon."
-
-So he got away, concealing as best he might, his sense of tingling
-anger. But it died away to a sense of chill as he walked down Park Lane.
-Was not Barney unhappy, already? What did she say to him when she got
-him to herself? He felt sure that she had never bargained for a husband
-who could look at her with ill-temper.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-"Roger, see here, I've only come to say one word--about the absurd
-little-matter of last night. Only one; and then we'll never speak of it
-again," said poor Barney.
-
-He had come as soon as the very next day--to exonerate, not to
-apologize; that was evident at once. Oldmeadow had not long to wait
-before learning what she had said to him when she got him to herself,
-nor long to wait before realizing that if Barney had been unhappy last
-night he thought himself happy to-day.
-
-"Really, my dear boy," he said, "it's not worth talking about."
-
-"Oh, but we must talk about it," said Barney. He was red and spoke
-quickly. "It upset her frightfully; it made her perfectly miserable. She
-cried for hours, Roger," Barney's voice dropped to a haggard note. "You
-know, though she bears up so marvellously, she's ill. She doesn't admit
-illness and that makes it harder for her, because it simply bewilders
-her when she finds herself on edge like this and her body refusing to
-obey her. The baby is coming in May, you know."
-
-"I know, my dear Barney. The evening was very fatiguing for her. I saw
-it all I think. I noticed from the beginning how tired she looked."
-
-"Horribly tired. Horribly fatiguing. I'm glad you saw it. For that's
-really what I came to explain. She was tired to begin with and Mrs.
-Aldesey put her on edge. I think I saw that myself at dinner--and, oh,
-before that; on the day we had tea with her, when we first came up, in
-November--Adrienne felt then that Mrs. Aldesey didn't understand or care
-for her. You know she is so full of love and sympathy for everybody
-herself that she is literally sickened when she is treated in that
-artificial, worldly way. And you know, Roger, Mrs. Aldesey _is_
-artificial and worldly."
-
-That was how she had put it to Barney, of course. But Oldmeadow saw
-further than Mrs. Aldesey and her artificiality. He saw a dishevelled
-and weeping Adrienne stricken to the heart by the sense of threatened
-foundations, aghast by what she had seen in her husband's eyes; and he
-was aware, even while he resented having it put upon Lydia, of a
-curious, reluctant pity for the pale, weeping figure. Lydia had,
-obviously, displeased her; but Lydia had been the mere occasion; she
-could have dealt easily enough with Lydia. It had been the revelation
-that Barney could oppose her, could almost, for a moment, dislike her,
-that had set her universe rocking. Her first taste of reality, then. The
-thought came rather grimly, with the pity. After all it was their best
-chance of happiness; that she should learn to accept herself as a person
-who could be opposed, even disliked, in flashes, while still loved. He
-had sat silent while he thought, one of his silences which, when he
-emerged from them, he often recognized as over-long. Barney must have
-felt the weight of all he did not say when all that he found to say was:
-"What it comes to, doesn't it, is that they neither of them take much to
-each other. Lydia is certainly conventional."
-
-"Ah, but Lady Lumley is conventional, too," said Barney with an
-irrepressible air of checkmate. "Hordes of conventional people adore
-Adrienne. It's a question of the heart. There are people who are
-conventional without being worldly. It's worldliness that stifles
-Adrienne. It's what she was saying last night: 'They have only ceilings;
-I must have the sky.' Not that she thinks _you_ worldly, dear old boy."
-
-"I hope you try to interpret me to her kindly," said Oldmeadow, smiling.
-Even at the moment when Barney, all innocently, was revealing to him
-Adrienne's tactics, the fragments of her vocabulary imbedded in his
-speech were affording him amusement. "You must try and persuade her that
-I've quite a fondness for the sky myself, and even published a volume of
-verse in my youth."
-
-"I do. Of course I do," said Barney eagerly. "And I gave her your poems,
-long ago. She loved them. It's your sardonic pessimism she doesn't
-understand--in anyone who could have written like that when they were
-young. She never met anything like it before in her life. And the way
-you never seem to take anything seriously. It makes her dreadfully sorry
-for you, even while she finds it so hard to accept in anyone she cares
-for--because she really does so care for you, Roger"--there was a note
-of appeal in Barney's voice--"and does so long to find a way out for
-you. It was a joke, of course; but all the same we've often wished you
-could find the right woman to marry."
-
-Barney, as he had done last night, grew very red again, so that it was
-apparent to Oldmeadow that not only the marriage but the woman--the
-rare, gifted girl--had been discussed between him and his wife.
-
-"Adrienne thinks everyone ought to be married, you see," he tried to
-pass it off. "Since we are so happy ourselves."
-
-"I see," said Oldmeadow. "There's another thing you must try to persuade
-her of: that I'm not at all _un jeune homme a marier_, and that if I
-ever seek a companion it will probably be some one like myself, some one
-sardonic and pessimistic. If I fixed my affections on the lovely girl,
-you see, it isn't likely they'd be reciprocated."
-
-"Oh, but"--Barney's eagerness again out-stepped his
-discretion--"wouldn't the question of money count there, Roger? If she
-had plenty of money, you know, or you had; enough for both; and a place
-in the country? Of course, it's all fairy-tale; but Adrienne is a
-fairy-tale person; material things don't count with her at all. She
-waves them away and wants other people to wave them away, too. What she
-always says is: 'What does my money _mean_ unless it's to open doors for
-people I love?' She's starting that young Besley, you know, just because
-of Palgrave; setting him up as editor of a little review--rotten it is,
-I think--but Adrienne says people must follow their own lights. And it's
-just that; she'd love to open doors for you, if it could make you
-happy."
-
-Oldmeadow at this, after a moment of receptivity, began to laugh softly;
-but the humour of the situation grew upon him until he at last threw
-back his head and indulged in open and prolonged mirth. Barney watched
-him bashfully. "You're not angry, I see," he ventured. "You don't think
-it most awful cheek, I mean?"
-
-"I think it is most awful cheek; but I'm not angry; not a bit," said
-Oldmeadow. "Fairy-godmothers are nothing if not cheeky; are they? Oh, I
-know you meant your, not her, cheek. But it's the fault of the
-fairy-godmother, all the same, and you must convince her that I'm not in
-love with anybody, and that if ever I am she'll have to content herself
-with my small earnings and a flat in Chelsea."
-
-So he jested; but, when his friend was gone, he realized that he was a
-little angry all the same and he feared that his mirth had not been able
-to conceal from Barney that what he really found it was confounded
-impudence. Barney's face had worn, as he departed, the look of mingled
-gratitude and worry and Barney must feel, as well as he felt, that their
-interview hadn't really cleared up anything--except his own readiness to
-overlook the absurdities of Barney's wife. What became more and more
-clear to himself was that unless he could enable Adrienne to enroll his
-name on her banner she would part him from Barney and that her very
-benevolence was a method. The more he thought of it the more
-uncomfortable he felt, and his inner restlessness became at length an
-impulse urging him out to take counsel or, rather, seek solace, with the
-friend from whom Adrienne could never part him. He would go and have tea
-with Lydia Aldesey and with the more eagerness from the fact that he was
-aware of a slight dissatisfaction in regard to Lydia. She had not
-altogether pleased him last night. She had put herself in the wrong; she
-had blundered; she hadn't behaved with the skill and tact requisite; and
-to elicit from her a confession of ineptitude would make his sense of
-solace the more secure.
-
-The day was a very different day from the one in April when he had
-first gone to ask Mrs. Aldesey for information about people called
-Toner. It was early February, dull and cold and damp. No rain was
-falling, but the trees were thick with moisture and Oldmeadow had his
-hands deep in his pockets and the collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears. As he crossed the Serpentine, an electric brougham passed him,
-going slowly, and he had a glimpse within it, short but very vivid, of
-Adrienne, Meg, and Captain Hayward.
-
-Adrienne, wearing a small arrangement of black velvet that came down
-over her brows, was holding Meg's hand and, while she spoke, was looking
-steadily at her, her face as white as that of a Pierrot. Meg listened,
-gloomily it seemed, and Captain Hayward's handsome countenance, turned
-for refuge towards the window, showed an extreme embarrassment.
-
-They passed and Oldmeadow pursued his way, filled with a disagreeable
-astonishment though, absurdly, his mind was at first occupied only in an
-attempt to recover a submerged memory that Captain Hayward's demeanour
-suggested. It came at last in an emancipating flash and he saw again,
-after how many years, the golden-brown head of his rather silly setter,
-John, turned aside in shy yet dignified repudiation, that still, by a
-dim, sick smile, attempted to conceal distress and to enter into the
-spirit of the game--as a kitten was held up for his contemplation. A
-kitten was a very inadequate analogy, no doubt, for the theme of
-Adrienne's discourse; yet Captain Hayward's reaction to a situation for
-which he found himself entirely unprepared was markedly like John's. And
-he, like John, had known that the game was meant to be at his expense.
-John and Captain Hayward got Oldmeadow out of the park before he had
-taken full possession of his astonishment and could ask himself why, if
-Adrienne were engaged in rescuing Meg from her illicit attachment, she
-should do it in the company of the young man. Yet, strangely enough, he
-felt, as he walked, a growing sense of reassurance. For an emergency
-like this, after all, given amenable subjects, Adrienne was the right
-person. He hadn't dreamed it to be such an emergency; but since it was,
-Adrienne would pull them through. As she would have laid her hand on the
-head of Bacchus and reformed him, so she would lay it on the head of
-Captain Hayward.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-The incident put Mrs. Aldesey quite out of his mind, and it was not till
-he stood on her doorstep and rang her bell that he remembered his
-grievance against her and realized that it had been made more definite
-by this glimpse of Adrienne's significance. That his friend was prepared
-for him was evident at his first glance; she had even, he saw, been
-expecting him, for she broke out at once with: "Oh, my dear Roger--what
-_are_ you going to do with her?"
-
-He was actually pleased to find himself putting her, with some grimness,
-in her place. "What is she going to do with us? you mean. You underrate
-Mrs. Barney's capacity, let me tell you, my dear friend."
-
-But Mrs. Aldesey was not easily quelled. "Underrate her! Not I! She's a
-Juggernaut if ever there was one. Her capacity is immense. She'll roll
-on and she'll crush flat. That poor Barney! She is as blind as a
-Juggernaut, but _he_ will come to see--alas! he is seeing
-already--though you and I danced round him with veils and cymbals--that
-people won't stand being pelted with platitudes from soup to dessert.
-The Lumleys will, of course; it's their natural diet; though even they
-like their platitudes served with a touch of _sauce piquante_; but
-Rosamund Pope told me that she felt black and blue all over and Cuthbert
-Haviland--malicious toad--imitates her already to perfection: dreadful
-little voice, dreadful little smile, dreadful little quotations and all.
-It will be one of his London gags. That shepherdess! My dear Roger,
-don't pretend to me that _you_ don't see it!"
-
-Oldmeadow, sunken in the chair opposite her, surveyed her over his
-clasped hands with an air of discouragement.
-
-"What I'm most seeing at the moment is that she's made you angry," he
-remarked. "If what you say were all the truth, why should she make you
-angry? She's not as blind as a Juggernaut. That's where you made your
-mistake. She'll only crush the people who don't lie down before her. She
-knows perfectly well where she is going--and over whom. So be careful,
-that is my advice, and keep out of her way; unless you want to lose a
-toe or a finger."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey showed, at this, that he had arrested her. In spite of the
-element of truth in Adrienne's verdict upon her he knew her to be, when
-veils and cymbals were cast aside, a sincere and gallant creature. She
-did not attempt to hide from him now and, after a moment of mutual
-contemplation, she laughed a little, with not unreal mirth and said: "I
-suppose I am angry. I suppose I'm even spiteful. It's her patronage, you
-know. Her suffocating superiority. To have to stand there, for his sake,
-and _take_ it! You overrate her, Roger. No woman not abysmally stupid
-could say the things she says."
-
-"Your mistake again. She's able to say them because she's never met
-irony or criticism. She's not stupid," he found his old verdict. "Only
-absurd. You know, you gave yourself away to her. You showed her what you
-thought of her. You patronized _her_."
-
-"Is _no_ retaliation permitted?" Mrs. Aldesey moaned. "Must one accept
-it all? Be scourged with the stars and Browning and then bow one's head
-to her caresses? After all, Barney is your friend, not mine, and it's
-as your friend that I've tried to be decent to his wife. But she hates
-me like poison. She gave herself away, too, you know. I liked the way
-she excluded me from her prospects for your welfare. And of course she
-knew my marriage wasn't a happy one."
-
-"I don't think that she did. No; I don't think so. You _are_ poison to
-her--cold poison," said Oldmeadow. "Don't imagine for a moment she
-didn't see that you were dancing about him with veils and cymbals. She
-didn't give herself away, for she had nothing to conceal. She was candid
-and you weren't. She didn't pretend that you were under the stars with
-her; while you kept up appearances."
-
-"But what's to become of your Barney if we don't keep them up!" Mrs.
-Aldesey cried. "Is he to be allowed to see that nobody can stand
-her--except people he can't stand? He'll have to live, then, with Mrs.
-and Mr. Prentiss. Did you try to talk to Mrs. Prentiss? Do you know that
-she told me that death was 'perfectly sublime'?"
-
-"Perhaps it is. Perhaps she'll find it so. They all seem to think well
-of death, out in California"--Oldmeadow allowed himself to relax from
-his admonitory severity. "Mrs. Prentiss isn't as silly as she seems, I
-expect. And you exaggerate Barney's sensitiveness. He'd get on very well
-with Mrs. Prentiss if you weren't there to show him you found her a
-bore. He has a very simple side and we must hope it may become simpler.
-The only chance for Barney, I see it more and more, is that we should
-efface ourselves as much as possible. The people who find the Prentisses
-a bore, I mean. And it won't be difficult for us to do that. She will
-see to it that we are effaced. Only, of course, it's a grief. I'm so
-fond of him"; and as Oldmeadow stretched forth his legs and put his
-hands in his pockets there drifted across his mind, in a thin, sharp,
-knife-like stroke, the memory of Barney--tall eighteen-year-old
-Barney--with dear old Effie, luxuriously upturned in his arms, being
-softly scratched--Barney's hand with a cat was that of an expert--and
-told that she was the best and most beautiful of cats.
-
-"It's a great shame," said Mrs. Aldesey; "I've been thinking my spiteful
-thoughts, too, instead of sympathizing with you. Of course, if it's any
-consolation to you, one usually does lose one's friends when they marry.
-But it needn't have been as bad as this. What a thousand pities he
-couldn't have fallen in love with a nice girl of his own kind. You
-couldn't do anything about it when you went down in the spring?"
-
-Oldmeadow had never said anything to Mrs. Aldesey about his hopes for
-Nancy. He had a secretive instinct for keeping his friendships in
-compartments and discussed only those portions that overflowed.
-"Nothing," he said. "And the mischief was that I went down hostile, as
-you warned me against doing. Barney saw at once that I didn't care for
-her; and she saw it at once. He even forced a sort of expression of
-opinion from me and I know now that it's always glooming there at the
-back of his mind when he sees me. It was quite useless. Once he'd fallen
-under her spell it was all up with him. She has her singular power and,
-for a man in love with her, her singular charm. Even I, you know,
-understand that."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey contemplated him. "I confess I can't," she said. "She is so
-desperately usual. I've seen her everywhere, ever since I can remember.
-Attending lectures at the Sorbonne; listening to Wagner at Bayreuth;
-having dresses tried on at Worth's; sitting in the halls of a hundred
-European hotels. She is the most unescapable form of the American woman;
-only not _du peuple_ because of the money and opportunity that has also
-extirpated everything racy, provincial and individual."
-
-"I don't know," said Oldmeadow. He mused, his hands clasped behind his
-head. "She's given me all sorts of new insights." His eyes, after his
-wont, were on the cornice and his friend's contemplation, relaxed a
-little from its alert responsiveness, allowed itself a certain
-conjectural softness as she watched him. "I feel," he went on, "since
-knowing her, that I understand America, her America, better than you do.
-You're engaged in avoiding rather than in understanding it, aren't you?
-What you underrate, what Americans of your type don't see--because, as
-you say, it's so oppressively usual--is the power of her type. If it is
-a type; if she is as ordinary as you say. It's something bred into them
-by the American assumption of the fundamental rightness of life; a
-confidence unknown before in the history of the world. An individual,
-not an institutional or social, confidence. They do, actually, seem to
-take their stand on the very universe itself. Whereas the rest of us
-have always had churches or classes to uphold us. They have all the
-absurdities and crudities of mere individualism. They have all the
-illusions of their ignorance. Yet I sometimes imagine, after I've seen
-her, that it's a power we haven't in the least taken into our
-reckoning. Isn't it the only racial thing that America has produced--the
-only thing that makes them a race? It makes them independent of us, when
-we've always imagined, in our complacency, that they were dependent. It
-enables them to take what we have to give, but to do with it what they,
-not we, think best. And by Jove, who knows how far it will carry them!
-Not you, my dear Lydia. You'll stay where you are--with us."
-
-His eyes had come back and down to her, and her gaze resumed its
-alertness and showed him that she found the picture he drew disquieting.
-"You mean it's a new kind of civilization that will menace ours?"
-
-"It's not a civilization; that's just what it's not. It's a state of
-mind. Perhaps it will menace us. Perhaps it does. We've underrated it;
-of that I'm sure; and underrated power is always dangerous. It will be
-faith without experience against experience without faith. What we must
-try for, if we're not to be worsted, is to have both--to keep experience
-and to keep faith, too. Only so shall we be able to hold our own against
-Mrs. Barney. And even so we shan't be able to prevent her doing things
-to us--and for us. She'll do things for us that we can't do for
-ourselves." His mind reverted to the faces of the brougham. "In that way
-she's bound to worst us. We'll have to accept things from her."
-
-Oldmeadow's eyes had gone back to the cornice and, in the silence that
-followed, Mrs. Aldesey, as she sat with folded arms, played absently
-with the lace ruffle at her wrist. The lace was an heirloom, like her
-rings, and the contemplation of them may have afforded her some
-sustainment. "She's made you feel all that, then," she remarked. "With
-her crook and her hat and her rose-wreathed lamb. If such a sardonic
-old lion as you does really grow bodeful before the rose-wreathed lamb
-there is, I own, reason to fear for the future. I'm glad I'm growing
-old. It would hurt me to see her cutting your claws."
-
-"Oh, she won't hurt us!" Oldmeadow smiled at her. "It's rather we who
-will hurt her--by refusing to lie down with her lamb. If that's any
-comfort to you."
-
-"Not in the least. I'm not being malicious. You don't call it hurt,
-then, to be effaced?"
-
-"Smothered in rose-leaves, eh?" he suggested. "It would be suffocating
-rather than suffering. She does give me that feeling. But you'll make
-her suffer--you have, you know--rather than she you."
-
-"I really don't know about that," said Mrs. Aldesey. "You make me quite
-uncomfortable, Roger. You make me superstitious. She's done that to me
-already. I refuse to take her seriously, but I shall avoid her. That's
-what it comes to. Like not giving the new moon a chance to look at you
-over your left shoulder."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-
-On a morning in early March Oldmeadow found, among the letters waiting
-for him on his breakfast-table, one from Nancy. Nancy and he, with all
-their fondness, seldom wrote to each other and he was aware, on seeing
-her writing, of the presage of something disagreeable that the
-unexpected often brings.
-
- "Dear Roger," he read, and in his first glance he saw his presage
- fulfilled. "We are in great trouble. Aunt Eleanor has asked me to
- write because she is too ill and it is to me as well as to her that
- Meg has written and she wants you to see Barney at once. Here are
- Meg's letters. She has gone away with Captain Hayward. Aunt Eleanor
- and Mother think that Barney may be able to persuade Adrienne to
- bring her back. No one else, we feel convinced, will have any
- influence with her. Do anything, anything you can, dear Roger.
- Mother and I are almost frightened for Aunt Eleanor. She walks
- about wringing her hands and crying, and she goes up to Meg's room
- and opens the door and looks in--as if she could not believe she
- would not find her there. It is heart-breaking to see her. We
- depend on you, dear Roger.
-
- "Yours ever
-
- "NANCY."
-
-
-
-"Good Lord!" Oldmeadow muttered while, in lightning flashes, there
-passed across his mind the face of John the setter and a Pierrot's face,
-white under a low line of black velvet. He took up Meg's letters,
-written from a Paris hotel.
-
- "DARLING MOTHER, I know it will make you frightfully miserable and
- I can't forgive myself for that; but it had to be. Eric and I cared
- too much and it wasn't life at all, going on as we were apart. Try,
- darling Mother, to see it as we do see things nowadays. Adrienne
- will explain it all--and you must believe her. You know what a
- saint she is and she has been with us in it all, understanding
- everything and helping us to be straight. Everything will come
- right. Iris Hayward will set Eric free, of course; she doesn't care
- one bit for him and has made him frightfully unhappy ever since
- they married, and she wants to marry some one else herself--only of
- course she'd never be brave enough to do it this way. When Eric is
- free, we will marry at once and come home, and, you will see, there
- are so many sensible people nowadays; we shall not have a bad time
- at all. Everything will come right, I'm sure; and even if it
- didn't, in that conventional way--I could not give him up. No one
- will ever love me as he does.
-
- "Your devoted child
-
- "MEG."
-
-
-
-That was the first: the second ran:
-
- "DEAREST NANCY,--I know you'll think it frightfully wrong; you are
- such an old-fashioned little dear and you told me often enough that
- I oughtn't to see so much of Eric. Only of course that couldn't
- have prepared you for this and I expect Aunt Monica won't let you
- come and stay with us for ages. Never mind; when you marry, you'll
- see, I'm sure. Love is the _only_ thing, really. But I should hate
- to feel I'd lost you and I'm sure I haven't. I want to ask you,
- Nancy dear, to do all you can to make Mother _take_ it. I feel,
- just because you will think it so wrong, that you may be more good
- to her than Adrienne--who doesn't think it wrong at all--at least
- not in Mother's way. It would be frightfully unfair if Mother
- blamed Adrienne. She did all she could to show us where we stood
- and to make us play the game, and it would be pretty hard luck if
- people were to be down on her now because we _have_ played it. We
- might have been really rotters if it hadn't been for Adrienne;
- cheats and hypocrites, I mean; stealing our happiness. I know
- Adrienne can bring Barney round. It's only Mother who troubles me,
- just because she is such a child that it's almost impossible to
- make her see reason. She doesn't recognize right and wrong unless
- they're in the boxes she's accustomed to. Everything is in a box
- for poor, darling old Mummy. But I mustn't go on. Be the dear old
- pal you always have and help me out as well as you can.
-
- "Your loving
-
- "MEG."
-
-
-
-"Good Lord," Oldmeadow muttered once more. He pushed back his chair and
-rose from the table in the bright spring sunlight. He had the feeling,
-almost paternal, of disgrace and a public stripping. He saw Eleanor
-Chadwick stopping at Meg's door to look in at the forsaken room,
-distraught in her grief and incomprehension. He saw Nancy's pale,
-troubled face and Monica Averil's, pinched and dry in its sober dismay.
-And then again, lighted by a flare at once tawdry and menacing, the
-face of Adrienne Toner, the intruder, the insufferable meddler and
-destroyer, a Pierrot among fire-works that had, at last, set fire to the
-house. He found a taxi on the Embankment and drove to Connaught Square.
-Freshly decorated with window-boxes, the pleasant, spacious house had a
-specially smiling air of welcome, but the butler's demeanour told him
-that something of the calamity had already penetrated. Adrienne, if she
-had not heard before, would have had her letters; Barney, who had been
-kept in the dark, would have been enlightened, and the irrepressible
-exclamations that must have passed between them seemed dimly reflected
-on the man's formal countenance. Mrs. Chadwick, he told Oldmeadow, was
-breakfasting upstairs with Mr. Chadwick, and he ushered him into
-Barney's study.
-
-Oldmeadow waited for some time among the Post Impressionist pictures,
-one of which remained for ever afterwards vividly fixed in his memory of
-the moment; a chaotic yet determined picture; featureless yet, as it
-were, conveying through its unrecognizable elements the meaning of a
-grin. And, as he stood in the centre of the room and looked away from
-the derisive canvas, he saw on Barney's desk photographs of Adrienne,
-three photographs of her; one as a child, a sickly looking but beaming
-child; one in early girlhood, singularly childlike still; and one in her
-bridal dress of only the other day, it seemed, mild and radiant in her
-unbecoming veil and wreath.
-
-It was Barney who came to him. Poor Barney. He was more piteously boyish
-than ever before to his friend's eye; so beautifully arrayed, all in
-readiness for a happy London day with his angel, so pale, so haggard
-and perplexed. "Look here, Roger," were his first words, "do you mind
-coming upstairs to Adrienne's room? She's not dressed yet; not very
-well, you know. You've heard, then, too?"
-
-"I've just heard from Nancy. Why upstairs? I'd rather not. We'd better
-talk this over alone, Barney. All the more if your wife isn't well."
-
-"Yes; yes; I know. I told her it would be better. But she insists."
-
-The effect of a general misery Barney gave was heightened now by his
-unhappy flush. "She doesn't want us to talk it over without her, you
-see. She comes into it all too much. From Nancy, did you say? What's
-Nancy got to do with this odious affair?"
-
-"Only what Meg has put upon her--to interpret her as kindly as she can
-to your mother. Here are the letters. I'd really rather not go
-upstairs."
-
-"I know you'll hold Adrienne responsible--partly at least. She expects
-that. She knows that I do, too; she's quite prepared. I only heard half
-an hour ago and of course it knocked me up frightfully. Meg! My little
-sister! Why she's hardly more than a child!"
-
-"I'm afraid she's a good deal more than a child. I'm afraid we can't
-hold Meg to be not responsible, though, obviously, she'd never have
-taken such a step unaided and unabetted. Just read these letters,
-Barney; it won't take a moment to decide what's best to be done. I'll go
-down to your mother and you must be off, at once, to Paris, and see if
-you can fetch Meg back."
-
-But after Barney, with a hesitating hand and an uncertain glance, had
-taken the letters and begun to read them, the door was opened with
-decorous deliberation and Adrienne's French maid appeared, the tall,
-sallow, capable-looking woman whom Oldmeadow remembered having seen at
-Coldbrooks a year ago.
-
-"Madame requests that _ces Messieurs_ should come up at once; she awaits
-them," Josephine announced in unemphatic but curiously potent accents.
-Adrienne's potency, indeed, was of a sort that flowed through all her
-agents and Oldmeadow thought that he detected, in the melancholy gaze
-bent upon Barney, reprobation for his failure to attain the standard set
-for him by a devotion wholehearted and reverential. Mrs. Chadwick, he
-remembered, had said that Adrienne's maid adored her.
-
-"Yes, yes. We're coming at once, Josephine," said Barney. Reading the
-letters as he went, he moved to the door and Oldmeadow found himself,
-perforce, following.
-
-He had not yet visited the morning-room and even before his eyes rested
-on Adrienne they saw, hanging above her head where she sat on a little
-sofa, a full-length portrait of Mrs. Toner; in white, standing against a
-stone balustrade and holding lilies; seagulls above her and a background
-of blue sea.
-
-Adrienne was also in white, but she wore over her long, loose dress a
-little jacket of pink silk edged with swan's down and the lace cap
-falling about her neck was rosetted with pink ribbon. It was curious to
-see her in this almost frivolous array, recalling the shepherdess, when
-her face expressed, for the first time in his experience of her, an
-anger and an agitation all the more apparent for its control. She was
-pale yet flushed, odd streaks of colour running up from her throat and
-dying in the pallor of her cheeks. Her condition had evidently much
-affected her complexion and her nose, through its layer of powder,
-showed a pinched and reddened tint. It made Oldmeadow uncomfortable to
-look at her; her mask of calm was held at such a cost; she was at once
-so determinedly herself and so helplessly altered; and it was not with
-an automatic courtesy only that he went up to her and held out his hand.
-An impulse of irrelevant yet irrepressible pity stirred him.
-
-She had fixed her eyes on him as he entered, but now looking at her
-husband and not moving, she said: "I do not think you want to take my
-hand, Mr. Oldmeadow. You will think me a criminal too, as Barney does."
-
-"Darling! Don't talk such nonsense!" Barney cried. "I haven't blamed
-you, not by a word. I know you've done what you think right. Look,
-darling; Roger has had these letters. Just read them. You see what Meg
-writes--there--to Nancy--about your having done all you could to keep
-them straight. You haven't been fair to yourself in talking to me just
-now."
-
-Adrienne, without speaking, took the letters and Oldmeadow moved away to
-the window and stood looking down at the little garden at the back of
-the house where a tall almond-tree delicately and vividly bloomed
-against the pale spring sky. He heard behind him the flicker of the fire
-in the grate, the pacing of Barney's footsteps as he walked up and
-down, and the even turning of the pages in Adrienne's hands. Then he
-heard her say: "Meg contradicts nothing that I have said to you, Barney.
-She writes bravely and truly; as I knew that she would write."
-
-Barney stopped in his pacing. "But darling; what she says about
-straightness?" It was feeble of Barney and he must know it. Feeble of
-him even to think that Adrienne might wish to avail herself of the
-loophole or that she considered herself in any need of a shield.
-
-"You can't misunderstand so much as that, Barney," she said. "Meg and I
-mean but one thing by straightness; and that is truth. That was the way
-I tried to help them; it is the only way in which I can ever help
-people. I showed them the truth and kept it before their eyes when they
-were in danger of forgetting it. I said to them that if they were to be
-worthy of their love they must be brave enough to make sacrifices for
-it. I did not hide from them that there would be sacrifices--if that is
-what you mean."
-
-"It's not what I mean, darling! Of course it's not!" broke from poor
-Barney almost in a wail. "Didn't you try at all to dissuade them? Didn't
-you show them that it was desperate, and ruinous, and wrong? Didn't you
-tell Meg that it would break Mother's heart!"
-
-The blue ribbon was again unrolled and Oldmeadow, listening with rising
-exasperation, heard that the sound of her own solemn cadences sustained
-her. "I don't think anything in life is desperate or ruinous or wrong,
-Barney, except turning away from one's own light. Meg met a reality and
-was brave enough to face it. I regret, deeply, that it came to her
-tragically, not happily; but happiness can grow from tragedy if we are
-brave and true and Meg is brave and true in her love. It won't break
-your mother's heart. Hers is a small, but not such a feeble, heart as
-that. I believe that the experience may strengthen and ennoble her. She
-has led too sheltered a life."
-
-Oldmeadow at this turned from the window and met Barney's miserable
-eyes. "There's really no reason for my staying on, Barney," he said, and
-his voice as well as his look excluded Adrienne from their interchange.
-"I'll take the 1.45 to Coldbrooks. What shall I tell your mother? That
-you've gone to Paris this morning?"
-
-"Yes, that I've gone to Paris. That I'll do my best, you know. That I
-hope to bring Meg back. Tell her to keep up her courage. It'll only be a
-day or two after all, and we may be able to hush it up."
-
-"Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne in a grave, commanding tone. It was
-impossible before it to march out of the room and shut the door, though
-that was what his forcibly arrested attitude showed that he wished to
-do. "You as well as Barney must hear my protest," said Adrienne, and she
-fixed her sombre eyes upon him. "Meg is with the man she loves. In the
-eyes of heaven he is her husband. It would be real as contrasted with
-conventional disgrace were she to leave him now. She will not leave him.
-I know her better than you do. I ask you"--her gaze now turned on
-Barney--"I desire you, not to go to her on such an unworthy errand."
-
-"But, Adrienne," Barney, flushed and hesitating, pleaded, "it's for
-Mother's sake. Mother's too old to be enlarged like that--that's really
-nonsense, you know, darling. You see what Nancy says. They are
-frightened about her. It's not only convention. It's a terrible mistake
-Meg's made and she may be feeling it now and only too glad to have the
-way made easy for her to come back. I promise you to be as gentle as
-possible. I won't reproach her in any way. I'll tell her that we're all
-only waiting to forgive her and take her back."
-
-"Forgive her, Barney? For what? It is only in the eyes of the world that
-she has done wrong and I have lifted her above that fear. Convention
-does not weigh for a moment with me beside the realities of the human
-heart; nor would it with you, Barney, if it were not for the influence
-of Mr. Oldmeadow. I have warned you before; it is easy to be
-worldly-wise and cynical and to keep to the broad road; it is easy to be
-safe. But withering lies that way: withering and imprisonment, and--"
-
-"Come, come, Mrs. Barney," Oldmeadow interposed, addressing her for the
-first time and acidly laughing. "Really we haven't time for sermons. You
-oughtn't to have obliged me to come up if you wanted to influence Barney
-all by yourself. He sees quite clearly for himself the rights and the
-wrongs of this affair, as it happens. If I were to preach for a moment
-in my turn I might ask you how it was that you didn't see that it was
-your duty to tell Meg's mother and brother how things were going and let
-them judge. You're not as wise as you imagine--far from it. Some things
-you can't judge at all. Meg and Hayward aren't people of enough
-importance to have a right to break laws; that's all that it comes to;
-there's nothing to be gained by their breaking laws; not only for other
-people, but for themselves. They're neither of them capable of being
-happy in the ambiguous sort of life they'd have to lead. There's a
-reality you didn't see at all in your haste to flout convention. Barney
-could have dealt with Hayward, and Meg could have been packed off to the
-country and kept there till she'd learned to think a little more about
-other people's hearts and a little less about her own. What business had
-you, after all, to have secrets from your husband and to plot with the
-two young fools behind his back? Isn't Meg his sister rather than
-yours?" His bitterness betrayed him and conscious hostility rose in him,
-answering the menace that measured him in her eyes. "What business had
-you, a new-comer among us, to think yourself capable of managing all
-their lives and to set yourself up above them all in wisdom? You take
-too much upon yourself"; his lips found the old phrase: "Really you do.
-It's been your mistake from the beginning."
-
-He could not have believed that a face so framed for gentleness could
-show itself at once so calm and so convulsed. He knew that something had
-happened to her that had never happened to her before in her life. She
-kept her eyes steadily on him and he wondered if she were not reciting
-some incantation, some exorcism, derived from the seagulled lady above
-her: Power in Repose--Power in Love--Power in Light. Her mouth and eyes
-and nostrils were dark on her pallor and he felt that she held back all
-the natural currents of her being in order to face and quell him with
-the supernatural.
-
-"Never mind all that, Roger," Barney was sickly murmuring. "I don't
-feel like that. I know Adrienne didn't for a moment mean to deceive me."
-
-"We will mind it, Barney," said Adrienne, breathing with difficulty. "I
-had, Mr. Oldmeadow, the business, first, of loyalty to another human
-soul who, in the crisis of its destiny, confided in me. I have been
-nearer Meg than any of you have guessed, from my first meeting with her.
-You were all blind. I saw at once that she was tossed and tormented. I
-am nearer, far nearer her, than her brother and mother. In them she
-would never have dreamed of confiding and she came to me because she
-felt that in me she would find reality and in them mere formulas. I do
-not look upon women as chattels to be handed about by their male
-relatives and locked up if they do not love according to rule and
-precedent. I look upon them as the equals of men in every respect, as
-free as men to shape their lives and to direct their destinies. You
-speak a mediaeval language, Mr. Oldmeadow. The world, our great, modern,
-deep-hearted world, has outstripped you."
-
-"Darling," Barney forestalled, breathlessly, as she paused, any reply
-that Oldmeadow might have been tempted to make, "don't mind if Roger
-speaks harshly. He's like that and no one cares for us more. He doesn't
-mean conventionality at all, or anything mediaeval. You don't understand
-him. He puts his finger on the spot about Meg and Hayward. It's exactly
-as he says; they're not of enough importance to have a right to break
-laws. If you could have confided in me, it would have been better; you
-must own that. We'd have given Meg a chance to pull herself together.
-We'd have sent Hayward about his business. It's a question, as Roger
-says, of your wisdom; of your knowledge of the world. You didn't
-understand them. They're neither of them idealists like you. They can't
-be happy doing what you might be big enough to do. Just because they're
-not big. Try to take it in, darling. And we really needn't go on talking
-about it any longer, need we? It isn't a question of influence. All we
-have to decide on is what's to be done. Roger must go to Mother and tell
-her I'm starting this morning to try and fetch Meg back. Imagine Mother
-with a divorce case on! It would kill her, simply. That's all. Isn't it,
-Roger?"
-
-"Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne, again. She rose as she spoke. As
-he saw her stand before them, her approaching maternity dominated for a
-moment all his impressions of her. Veiled and masked adroitly as it was,
-its very uncouthness curiously became her. Her head, for once, looked
-small. Like an archaic statue, straight and short and thick, her altered
-form had dignity and amplitude and her face, heavy with its menace, hard
-with its control, might have been that of some austere and threatening
-priestess of fruitfulness.
-
-"Barney, wait," she said. Her arms hung straight beside her, but she
-slightly lifted a hand as she spoke and Oldmeadow noted that it was
-tightly clenched. "It is I, not your friend, whom you must question as
-to what it is right that you should do. I do not consent to his reading
-of my unwisdom and unworthiness. I ask you not to consent to it. I ask
-you again not to go. I ask you again to respect my judgment rather than
-his."
-
-"Darling," the unfortunate husband supplicated; "it's not because it's
-Roger's judgment. You know it's what I felt right myself--from the
-moment you told me what had happened. You say people must follow their
-own light. It _is_ my light. I must do what Mother asks and try to bring
-Meg back."
-
-"It is not your light, Barney. It is craft and caution and fear. More
-than that, do you not see, must I make plain to you what it is you do to
-me in going? You insult me. You treat what I have believed right for Meg
-to do as a crime from which she must be rescued. You drag me in the dust
-with her. Understand me, Barney"--the streaks of colour deepened on her
-neck, her breath came thickly--"if you go, you drag me in the dust."
-
-"How can it drag you in the dust, Mrs. Barney, if Meg wants to come
-back?" Oldmeadow interposed in the tone of a caustic doctor addressing a
-malingering patient. "We're not talking of crimes; only of follies.
-Come; be reasonable. Don't make it so painful for Barney to do what's
-his plain duty. You're not a child. You have, I hope, courage enough and
-humour enough to own that you can make mistakes--like other people."
-
-"Yes, yes, Adrienne, that's just it," broke painfully from Barney, and,
-as he seized the clue thus presented to him, Adrienne turned her head
-slowly, with an ominous stillness, and again rested her eyes upon him.
-"It's childish, you know, darling. It's not like you. And of course I
-understand why; and Roger does. You're not yourself; you're
-over-strained and off-balance and I'm so frightfully sorry all this has
-fallen upon you at such a time. I don't want to oppose you in anything,
-darling--do try to believe me. Only you must give me the credit for my
-own convictions. I do feel I must go. I do feel Roger must take that
-message to Mother. After all, darling," and now in no need of helping
-clues he found his own and the irrepressible note of grief vibrated in
-his voice, "you do owe me something, don't you? You do owe us all
-something--to make up, I mean. Because, without you, Meg would never
-have behaved like this and disgraced us all. Oh--I don't mean to
-reproach you!"
-
-"Good-bye then, I'm off," said Oldmeadow. "I'm very sorry you made me
-come up. Good-bye, Mrs. Barney." She had not spoken, nor moved, nor
-turned her eyes from Barney's face.
-
-"Good-bye. Thanks so much, Roger." Barney followed him, with a quickness
-to match his own, to the door. But Adrienne, this time, did not call him
-back. She remained standing stock-still in front of her sofa.
-
-"Tell Mother I'm off," said Barney, grasping his hand. "Tell her she'll
-hear at once, as soon as I know anything. Thanks so awfully," he
-repeated. "You've been a great help."
-
-It was unfortunate, perhaps, that Barney should say that, Oldmeadow
-reflected as he sped down the stairs. "But she's met reality at last,"
-he muttered, wondering how she and Barney faced each other above and
-hearing again the words that must echo so strangely in her ears:
-"Disgraced us all." And, mingled with his grim satisfaction, was, again,
-the sense of irrelevant and reluctant pity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-It was Saturday and he had to wire to Mrs. Aldesey that he could not go
-with her next day to the Queen's Hall concert they had planned to hear
-together.
-
-Nancy was waiting for him at the station in her own little pony-cart and
-as he got in she said: "Is Barney gone?"
-
-"Yes; he'll have gone by now," said Oldmeadow and, as he said it, he
-felt a sudden sense of relief and clarity. The essential thing, he saw
-it as he answered Nancy's question, was that he should be able to say
-that Barney had gone. And he knew that if he hadn't been there to back
-him up, he wouldn't have gone. So that was all right, wasn't it?
-
-As he had sped past the sun-swept country the reluctant pity had
-struggled in him, striving, unsuccessfully, to free itself from the
-implications of that horrid word: "Disgraced." It was Adrienne who had
-disgraced them; that was what Barney's phrase had really meant, though
-he hadn't intended it to mean it. She, the stranger, the new-comer, had
-disgraced them. And it was true. Yet he wished Barney hadn't stumbled on
-the phrase--just because she was a stranger and a new-comer. And Barney
-would never have found it had he not been there. But now came the sense
-of relief. If he hadn't been there, Barney wouldn't have gone.
-
-"Aunt Eleanor is longing to see you," said Nancy. "Her one hope, you
-know, is that he may bring Meg back." Nancy's eyes had a strained look,
-as though she had lain awake all night.
-
-"You think she may come back?"
-
-He felt, himself, unable to form any conjectures as to what Meg was
-likely to do. What she had done was so strangely unlike her.
-
-"Not if it means leaving Captain Hayward for good," said Nancy. "But
-Aunt Eleanor and Mother both think that she may be willing to come till
-they can marry."
-
-"That's better than nothing, isn't it," said Oldmeadow, and Nancy then
-surprised him by saying, as she looked round at him: "I don't want her
-to come back."
-
-"Don't want her to come back? But you wanted Barney to go?"
-
-"Yes. He had to go. Just so that everything might be done. So that it
-might be put before her. And to satisfy Aunt Eleanor. But, don't you
-see, Roger, it would really make it far more difficult for Aunt Eleanor
-to have her here. What would she do with her?--since she won't give up
-Captain Hayward? She can love Meg and grieve and yearn over her now. But
-if she were here she couldn't. It would be all grief and bitterness."
-
-Nancy had evidently been thinking to some purpose during her sleepless
-night and he owned that her conclusion was the sound one. What
-disconcerted him was her assurance that Meg would not leave her lover.
-After Adrienne, Nancy was likely to have the most authentic impressions
-of Meg's attitude; and, as they drove towards Chelford, he was further
-disconcerted by hearing her murmur, half to herself: "It would be silly
-to leave him now, wouldn't it."
-
-"Not if she's sorry and frightened at what she's done," he protested.
-"After all the man's got a wife who may be glad to have him back."
-
-But Nancy said: "I don't think she would. I think she'll be glad not to
-have him back. Meg may be frightened; but I don't believe she'll be
-sorry; yet."
-
-He meditated, somewhat gloomily, as they drove, on the unexpectedness of
-the younger generation. He had never thought of Nancy as belonging, in
-any but the chronological sense, to that category; yet here she was,
-accepting, if not condoning, the rebellion against law and morality.
-
-Mrs. Averil had driven down to the Little House where she was to be
-picked up and, as they turned the corner to the Green, they saw her
-waiting at the gate, her furs turned up around her ears, her neat little
-face pinched and dry, as he had known that he would find it, and showing
-a secure if controlled indignation, rather than Nancy's sad perplexity.
-
-"Well, Roger, you find us in a pleasant predicament," she observed as
-Oldmeadow settled the rug around her knees. "Somehow one never thinks of
-things like this happening in one's own family. Village girls misbehave
-and people in the next county run away sometimes with other people's
-wives; but one never expects such adventures to come walking in to one's
-own breakfast-table."
-
-"Disagreeable things do have a way of happening at breakfast-time, don't
-they," Oldmeadow assented. The comfort of Mrs. Averil was that even on
-her death-bed she would treat her own funeral lightly: "I wonder it
-remains such a comfortable meal, all the same."
-
-"I suppose you've had lunch on the train," said Mrs. Averil. "Will you
-believe it? Poor Eleanor was worrying about that this morning. She's
-got some coffee and sandwiches waiting for you, in case you haven't. I'm
-so thankful you've come. It will help her. Poor dear. She's begun to
-think of all the other things now. Of what people will say and how they
-will hear. Lady Cockerell is very much on her mind. You know what a
-meddlesome gossip she is, and only the other day Eleanor snubbed her
-when she was criticizing Barbara's new school. The thought of her is
-disturbing her dreadfully now."
-
-"I suppose these leech-bites do help to alleviate the pain of the real
-wound," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Not in the least. They envenom it," Mrs. Averil replied. "I'd like to
-strangle Lady Cockerell myself before the news reaches her."
-
-Nancy drove on, her eyes fixed on the pony's ears. "I don't believe
-people will talk nearly as much as you and Aunt Eleanor imagine," she
-now remarked. "I've told her so; and so must you, Mother."
-
-"You are admirable with her, Nancy. Far better than I am. I sit grimly
-swallowing my curses, or wringing my hands. Neither wringing nor cursing
-is much good, I suppose."
-
-"Not a bit of good. It's better she should think of what people say than
-of Meg; but when it comes to agonizing over them I believe the truth is
-that people nowadays _do_ get over it; far more than they used to;
-especially if Aunt Eleanor can show them that _she_ gets over it."
-
-"But she can't get over it, my dear child!" said Mrs. Averil, gazing at
-her daughter in a certain alarm. "How can one get over disgrace like
-that or lift one's head again--unless one is an Adrienne Toner! Oh, when
-I think of that woman and of what she's done! For she is responsible
-for it all! Every bit of it. Meg was a good girl, at heart; always. In
-spite of that silly liquid powder. And so I tell Eleanor. Adrienne is
-responsible for it all."
-
-"I don't, Mother; that's not my line at all," said Nancy. "I tell her
-that what Meg says is true." Nancy touched the pony with the whip. "If
-it hadn't been for Adrienne she might have done much worse."
-
-"Really, my dear!" Mrs. Averil murmured.
-
-"Come, Nancy," Oldmeadow protested; "that was a retrospective threat of
-Meg's. Without Adrienne she'd never have considered such an
-adventure--or its worse alternative. Encourage your aunt to curse
-Adrienne. Your Mother's instinct is sound there."
-
-But Nancy shook her head. "I don't know, Roger," she said. "Perhaps Meg
-would have considered the alternative. Girls do consider all sorts of
-things nowadays that Mother and Aunt Eleanor, in their girlhood, would
-have thought simply wicked. They _are_ wicked; but not simply. That's
-the difference between now and then. And don't you think that it's
-better for Meg and Captain Hayward to go away so that they can be
-married than to be, as she says, really rotters; than to be, as she
-says, cheats and hypocrites and steal their happiness?"
-
-"My dear child!" Mrs. Averil again murmured, while Oldmeadow, finding
-it, after all, a comfort to have a grown-up Nancy to discuss it with,
-said, "My contention is that, left to herself, Meg would have thought
-them both wicked."
-
-"Perhaps," Nancy said again; "but even old-fashioned girls did things
-they knew to be wicked sometimes. The difference Adrienne has made is
-that Meg doesn't think herself wicked at all. She thinks herself rather
-noble. And that's what I mean about Aunt Eleanor. It will comfort her if
-she can feel a little as Adrienne feels--that Meg isn't one bit the
-worse, morally, for what she's done."
-
-"Are you trying to persuade us that Meg isn't guilty, my dear?" Mrs.
-Averil inquired dryly. "Are you trying to persuade us that Adrienne has
-done us all a service? You surely can't deny that she's behaved
-atrociously, and first and foremost, to Barney. Barney could have known
-nothing about it, and can you conceive a woman keeping such a thing from
-her husband?"
-
-But Nancy was feeling the pressure of her own realizations and was not
-to be scolded out of them. "If Meg is guilty, and doesn't know it, she
-will suffer dreadfully when she finds out, won't she? It all depends on
-whether she has deceived herself or not, doesn't it? I'm not justifying
-her or Adrienne, Mother; only trying to see the truth about them. How
-could Adrienne tell Barney when it was Meg's secret? We may feel it
-wrong; but she thought she was justified." The colour rose in Nancy's
-cheek as she named Barney, but she kept her tired eyes on her mother and
-added, "I don't believe it was easy for her to keep it from him."
-
-"My dear, anything is easy for her that flatters her self-importance!"
-cried Mrs. Averil impatiently. "I'll own, if you like, that she's more
-fool than knave--as Meg may be; though Meg never struck me as a fool.
-Things haven't changed so much since my young days as all that; it's
-mainly a matter of names. If girls who behave like Meg find it
-pleasanter to be called fools than knaves, they are welcome to the
-alternative. Noble they never were nor will be, whatever the fashion."
-
-Oldmeadow did not want the sandwiches, so, as soon as they reached
-Coldbrooks, he was led upstairs to Mrs. Chadwick's room. He found his
-poor friend lying on the sofa, the blinds drawn down and a wet
-handkerchief on her forehead. She burst out crying as he entered.
-Oldmeadow sat down beside her and took her hand and, as he listened to
-her sobs, felt that he need not trouble to pity Adrienne.
-
-"What I cannot, cannot understand, Roger," she was at last able to say,
-and he realized that it was of Adrienne, not Meg, that she was speaking,
-"is how she can bear to treat us so. We all loved and trusted her. You
-know how I loved her, Roger. I felt Meg as safe in her hands as in my
-own. Oh, that wicked, wicked man! I hardly know him by sight. That makes
-it all so much more dreadful. All I do know is that his wife is a
-daughter of poor Evelyn Madderley, who broke her back out hunting."
-
-"I don't believe there's much harm in him, you know," Oldmeadow
-suggested. "And I believe that he is sincerely devoted to Meg."
-
-"Harm, Roger!" poor Mrs. Chadwick wailed, "when he is a married man and
-Meg only a girl! Oh, if there is harm in anything there is in that!
-Running away with a girl and ruining her life! Barney will make him feel
-what he has done. Barney _has_ gone?"
-
-"Yes, he's gone, and I am sure we can rely on him to speak his mind to
-Hayward."
-
-"And don't you think he may bring Meg back, Roger? Nancy says I must not
-set my mind on it; but don't you think she may be repenting already? My
-poor little Meg! She was hot-tempered and could speak very crossly if
-she was thwarted; but I think of her incessantly as she was when she was
-a tiny child. Self-willed; but so sweet and coaxing in her ways, with
-beautiful golden hair and those dark eyes. I always thought of Meg, with
-her beauty, as sure to marry happily; near us, I hoped"--Mrs. Chadwick
-began to sob again. "And now!--Will he find them in Paris? Will they not
-have moved on?"
-
-"In any case he'll be able to follow them up. I don't imagine they'll
-think of hiding."
-
-"No; I'm afraid they won't. That is the worst of it! They won't hide and
-every one will come to know and then what good will there be in her
-coming back! If only I'd had her presented last year, Roger! She can
-never go to court now," Mrs. Chadwick wept, none the less piteously for
-her triviality. "To think that Francis's daughter cannot go to court!
-She would have looked so beautiful, with my pearls and the feathers. The
-feathers are becoming to so few girls. Nancy could not wear them nearly
-so well. Nancy can go and my daughter can't!"
-
-"I don't think the lack of feathers will weigh seriously upon Meg's
-future, my dear friend."
-
-"Oh, but it's what they stand for, Roger, that will weigh!" Mrs.
-Chadwick, even in her grief, retained her shrewdness. "It's easy to
-laugh at the feathers, but you might really as well laugh at
-wedding-rings! To think that Francis's daughter is travelling about with
-a man and without a wedding-ring! Or do you suppose they'll have thought
-of it and bought one? It would be a lie, of course; but don't you think
-that a lie would be justifiable under the circumstances?"
-
-"I don't think it really makes any difference, until they can come home
-and be married."
-
-"I suppose she must marry him now--if they won't hide--and will be proud
-of what they've done; she seems quite proud of it!--everyone will hear,
-so that they will have to marry. Oh--I don't know what to hope or what
-to fear! How can you expect me to have tea, Nancy!" she wept, as Nancy
-entered carrying the little tray. "It's so good of you, my dear, but how
-can I eat?--I can hardly face the servants, Roger. They will all hear.
-And Meg was always such a pet of Johnson's; his favourite of all my
-children. He used to give her very rich, unwholesome things in the
-pantry and once, when her father punished her for disobeying him and put
-her in the corner, in the drawing-room, one day, after lunch, Johnson
-nearly dropped the coffee, when he came in. It upset him dreadfully and
-he would hardly speak to Francis for a week afterwards. I know he will
-think it all our fault, when he hears, now. And so it is, for having
-trusted to a stranger. I can't drink tea, Nancy."
-
-"Yes, you can, for Meg's sake, Aunt Eleanor, and eat some tea-cake,
-too," said Nancy. "If you aren't brave for her, who will be. And you
-can't be brave unless you eat. I remember so well, when I was little,
-Uncle Francis saying that when it came to the pinch you were the bravest
-woman he knew. You'll see, darling; it will all come out better than you
-fear. Johnson and all of us will help you to make it come out better."
-
-"She is such a comfort to me, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick with a summoned
-smile. "Somehow, when I see her, I feel that things _will_ come out
-better. _You_ will have to go to court, dear, next spring. We can't
-have none of our girls going. And you shall wear my pearls." Mrs.
-Chadwick's tears fell, but she took up the tea-cup.
-
-Nancy more and more was striking Oldmeadow as the wisest person in the
-house. He walked with her on the terrace after tea; it was an old custom
-of his and Nancy's to step outside then, whatever the weather, and have
-a few turns. This was a clear, chill evening and Nancy had wrapped a
-woollen scarf closely round her neck and shoulders. Her chin was sunken
-in its folds as she held it together on her breast, and with her dropped
-profile, her sad, meditative eyes, it was as if she saw a clue and, far
-more clearly than he did, knew where they all stood.
-
-"Adrienne was bitterly opposed to Barney's going," he said. "She seemed
-unable to grasp the fact that she herself had been in error."
-
-Nancy turned her eyes on him. "Did Barney tell you she was bitterly
-opposed?"
-
-"He didn't tell me. I was with them. It was most unfortunate. She
-insisted on my coming up."
-
-"Oh, dear," said Nancy. She even stopped for a moment to face him with
-her dismay. "Yes, I see," she then said, walking on, "she would."
-
-"Why would she? Unless she was sure of getting her own way? The only
-point in having me up was to show me that she could always get her own
-way with Barney."
-
-"Of course. And to make it quite clear to herself, too. She's not afraid
-of you, Roger. She's not afraid of anything but Barney."
-
-"I don't think she had any reason to be afraid of him this morning. He
-was badly upset, of course. But if I hadn't gone up, I imagine she'd
-have kept him from going. And you own that that would have been a pity,
-don't you?"
-
-"Yes. Oh, yes. He had to go," said Nancy, absently. And she added. "Were
-you very rough and scornful?"
-
-"Rough and scornful? I don't think so. I think I kept my temper very
-well, considering all things. I showed her pretty clearly, I suppose,
-that I considered her a meddling ass. I don't suppose she'll forgive me
-easily for that."
-
-"Well, you can't wonder at it, can you?" said Nancy. "Especially if she
-suspects that you made Barney consider her one, too."
-
-"But it's necessary, isn't it, that she should be made to suspect it
-herself? I don't wonder at her not forgiving me for showing her up
-before Barney, and upholding him against her, but I do wonder that one
-can never make her see she's wrong. It's that that's so really monstrous
-about her."
-
-"Do you think that anyone can ever make us see we are wrong unless they
-love us?" Nancy asked.
-
-"Well, Barney loves her," said Oldmeadow after a moment.
-
-"Yes; but he's afraid of her, too, isn't he? He'd never have quite the
-courage to try and make her see, would he?--off his own bat I mean. He'd
-never really have quite the courage to see, himself, how wrong she was,
-unless he were angry. And to have anyone who is angry with you trying to
-make you see, only pushes you further and further back into yourself,
-doesn't it, and away from seeing?"
-
-"You've grown very wise in the secrets of the human heart, my dear,"
-Oldmeadow observed. "It's true. He hasn't courage with her--unless some
-one is there to give it to him. But, you know, I don't think she'd
-forgive him if he had. I don't think she'd forgive anyone who made her
-see."
-
-"I don't know," Nancy pondered. "I don't love her, yet I feel as if I
-understood her; better, perhaps, than you do. I think she's good, you
-know. I mean, I think she might be good, if she could ever see."
-
-"She's too stupid ever, really, to see," said Oldmeadow, and it was with
-impatience. "She's encased in self-love like a rhinoceros in its hide.
-One can't penetrate anywhere. You say she's afraid of Barney and I can't
-imagine what you mean by that. It's true, when I'm by, she's afraid of
-losing his admiration. But that's not being afraid of him."
-
-Nancy still pondered; but not, now, in any perplexity. "She's afraid
-because she cares so much. She's afraid because she _can_ care so much.
-It's difficult to explain; but I feel as if I understood her. She's
-never cared so much before for just one other person. It's always been
-for people altogether; and because she was doing something for them. But
-Barney does something for her. He makes her happy. Perhaps she never
-knew before what it was to be really happy. You know, she didn't give me
-the feeling of a really happy person. It's something quite, quite new
-for her. It makes her feel uncertain of herself and almost bewildered
-sometimes. Oh, I'm sure of it the more I think of it. And you know,
-sometimes," Nancy turned her deep, sweet eyes on him, "I feel very sorry
-for her, Roger. I can't help it; although I don't love her at all."
-
-Yes. It must be true. Though he had seen Adrienne's vanity rather than
-her love. Nancy and Meg were united in their assurance and that must be,
-he saw, because they both, in their so different ways, knew what it was
-to care; to care so much that you were frightened. It was strange that
-the pang of pity that came with his new perception should be for
-Adrienne rather than for his dear little Nancy herself. Nancy had
-suffered, he knew, and her life was perhaps permanently scarred; yet,
-clear-eyed and unduped, he saw her as mistress of the very fate that had
-maimed her. Whereas Adrienne was blindfolded; a creature swayed and
-surrounded by forces of which she was unaware.
-
-Nancy had deepened his sense of perplexity, his sense of taking refuge
-from something, and what it was came fully upon him that night when he
-was at last alone. Meg and her misdemeanour sank into a mere background
-for the image of the cold, convulsed face that he had seen that morning.
-Almost angrily he felt himself pushing it back, pushing it down, as if
-he pushed it down to drown, and again and again it re-emerged to look at
-him.
-
-He fell asleep at last; but as, a year ago, on the first night of his
-meeting with her, he had dreamed of her, so to-night he dreamed again.
-
-He did not see her, but she was in some dreadful plight and the sense of
-her panic and bewilderment broke upon him in shocks of suffering. He
-could not see her, but he was aware of her, horribly aware. All remained
-a broken, baffled confusion, but it was as though, unable to shape and
-assert itself, he yet felt her very being wrestling with extinction.
-
-The sharpness had gone out of the sunlight next day and Mrs. Chadwick
-consented to come and sit with them in the warmest corner of the garden,
-the corner where, a year ago, Oldmeadow remembered, Meg had sat with him
-and explained to him the secret of Adrienne's power. Pitifully, with
-swollen eyes and trembling fingers, Mrs. Chadwick resumed her
-interrupted stocking while Oldmeadow read aloud from a Sunday paper the
-leading article on the critical situation in Ireland. "I suppose every
-one in London will be talking about Ulster and Sir Edward Carson, won't
-they?" said Mrs. Chadwick, and it was evident that she derived a dim
-comfort from the thought. The situation in Ireland, Oldmeadow reflected,
-had, at all events, been of so much service.
-
-Upon this quiet scene there broke suddenly the sound of a motor's horn
-and a motor's wheels turned into the front entrance.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick dropped her stocking and laid her hand on Nancy's arm.
-"Dear Aunt Eleanor--you know he couldn't possibly be back yet," said
-Nancy. "And if it's anyone to call, Johnson knows you're not at home."
-
-"Lady Cockerell is capable of anything. She might sit down in the hall
-and wait. She must have heard by now," poor Mrs. Chadwick murmured.
-"That married girl of hers in London must have written. With the
-projecting teeth."
-
-"I'll soon get rid of her, if it's really she," said Mrs. Averil; but
-she had hardly risen when the door at the back of the house opened and
-they saw Johnson usher forth a hurrying female figure, obviously not
-Lady Cockerell's; a figure so encumbered by its motoring wraps, so
-swathed in veils, that only Mrs. Chadwick's ejaculation enlightened
-Oldmeadow as to its identity.
-
-"Josephine!" cried Mrs. Chadwick and then, between the narrow framing of
-purple gauze, he recognized the dramatic, melancholy eyes and pale,
-pinched lips of Adrienne's maid.
-
-"Oh, Madame! Madame!" Josephine was exclaiming as she came towards them
-down the path. Her face wore the terrible intensity of expression so
-alien to the British countenance. "Oh, Madame! Madame!" she repeated.
-They had all risen and stood to await her. "He is dead! The little child
-is dead! And she is alone. Monsieur left her yesterday. Quite, quite
-alone, and her child born dead."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick faced her in pallid stupefaction.
-
-"The baby, Aunt Eleanor," said Nancy, for she looked indeed as if she
-had not understood. "Barney's baby. It has been born and it is dead.
-Oh--poor Barney. And poor, poor Adrienne."
-
-"Yes, dead!" Josephine, regardless of all but her exhaustion and her
-grief, dropped down into one of the garden-chairs and put her hands
-before her face. "Born dead last night. A beautiful little boy. The
-doctors could not save it and fear for her life. They will not let me
-stay with her. Only the doctors and the nurses--strangers--are with
-her." Josephine was sobbing. "Ah, it was not right to leave her so.
-Already she was ill. It could be seen that already she was very ill when
-Monsieur left her. I came to her when he was gone. She did not say a
-word to me. She tried to smile. _Mais j'ai bien vu qu'elle avait la mort
-dans l'ame._"
-
-"Good heavens," Mrs. Chadwick murmured, while Josephine, now, let her
-tears flow unchecked. "She is alone and Barney has left her! Oh, this
-is terrible! At such a time!"
-
-"He had to go, Aunt Eleanor. You know he had to go. We will send for him
-at once," said Nancy, and Josephine, catching the words, sobbed on in
-her woe and her resentment: "But where to send for him? No one knows
-where to send. The doctors sent a wire yesterday, at once, when she was
-taken ill; to the Paris hotel. But no answer came. He must have left
-Paris. That is why I have come. No telegrams for Sunday. No trains in
-time. I took the car. The doctor said, Yes, it was well that I should
-come. Some one who cares for Madame should return with me. If she is to
-die she must not die alone."
-
-"But she shall not die!" cried Mrs. Chadwick with sudden and surprising
-energy. "Oh, the poor baby! It might have lived had I been there. No
-doctor, no nurse, can understand like a mother. And I shall be able to
-help with Adrienne. I must go. I must go at once. Mademoiselle will see
-that you have something to eat and drink, my poor Josephine, and then
-you and I will return together. It will not take me a moment to get
-ready."
-
-"It will be the best thing for them all," Oldmeadow murmured to Mrs.
-Averil, as, taking Josephine's arm, Mrs. Chadwick hurried her along the
-path. "And I'll go with them."
-
-A little later, while Mrs. Chadwick made ready above and Josephine, in
-the hall, ate the meal that Johnson had brought for her, Oldmeadow and
-Nancy stood outside near the empty waiting car.
-
-"I'll wire to you at once, of course, how she is," he said. Adrienne had
-put Meg out of all their thoughts. "But it's rather grotesque," he
-added, "if poor Barney is to be blamed."
-
-Nancy stood and looked before her, wrapped, as she had been the day
-before, in her woollen scarf. "Roger," she said after a moment, "no one
-can be blamed; yet, if she dies, I shall feel that we have killed her."
-
-"Killed her! What nonsense, my dear! What do you mean?" He spoke angrily
-because something in his heart, shaken by his dream, echoed her. The
-dreaming had now revealed itself as definitely uncanny. What had he to
-do with Adrienne Toner that his sub-consciousness should be aware of her
-extremity?
-
-"I can't explain," said Nancy. "We couldn't help it. It's even all her
-fault. But she never asked to come to us. She never sought us out. She
-had her life and we had ours. It was we who sought her and drew her in
-and worshipped her. She never hid what she was; never in the least
-little way. It was for what she was, because she was so different and
-believed so in herself, that Barney loved her. And now because she has
-gone on believing in herself, we have struck her down."
-
-The rooks were cawing overhead and Oldmeadow was remembering his dream
-of a year ago, how Adrienne had come to him along the terrace saying, as
-she lifted her hand: "I can hear them, too." They had drawn her in. Yet
-she had loved their life. She had wanted to understand it and to be part
-of it. He wished he could get the pale, streaked, drowning face out of
-his mind. "It's generous of you, my dear child," he said, "to say 'we.'
-You mean 'you.' If anyone struck her down it was I."
-
-"You spoke for us all, Roger. And you only spoke for us. You were always
-outside. I count myself with them. I can't separate myself from them. I
-received her love--with them all."
-
-"Did you?" he looked at her. "I don't think so, Nancy."
-
-Nancy did not pretend not to understand. "I know," she said. "But I'm
-part of it. And she tried to love me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat in Barney's study, Mrs. Chadwick beside him. It was
-Tuesday and the only news of Barney had been a letter to his mother,
-from Paris, where he had not found Meg, and two wires from the South of
-France, one to Oldmeadow and one to his wife, saying that he had found
-Meg and was returning alone. He had not, it was evident, received the
-doctor's messages.
-
-Oldmeadow had not seen his old friend since the Sunday night when he had
-left her and Josephine in Connaught Square, and in his first glance at
-her this morning he saw that for her, too, Adrienne's peril had actually
-effaced Meg's predicament. It had done more. Faint and feeble as she
-must be, scarcely able to take possession of her returning life and, as
-Mrs. Chadwick told him, not yet out of danger, Adrienne had already
-drawn her mother-in-law back into the circle of her influence.
-
-"You see, Roger," she said, sitting there on the absurdly incongruous
-background of the Post Impressionist pictures and tightly squeezing her
-handkerchief first in one hand and then in the other, "You see, when one
-is with her one _has_ to trust her. I don't know why it is, but almost
-at once I felt all my bitterness against her die quite away. I knew,
-whatever she had done, that she believed it to be right; to be really
-_best_ for Meg, you know. And oh, Roger, Barney has hurt her so
-terribly! She can't speak of him without crying. I never saw her cry
-before. I never imagined Adrienne crying. She feels, she can't help
-feeling, that it is because of that they have lost their baby."
-
-Oldmeadow ordered with difficulty his astonished and indignant thoughts.
-"That is absolutely unfair to Barney," he said. "I was with them. No one
-could have been gentler or more patient."
-
-"I know you were with them. It would seem like that to you, Roger,
-because you are a man and men still think of women as a sort of chattel.
-That's how it looks to Adrienne. So much more independence, you know,
-than we ever had.--Oh, I don't say it's a good thing! I feel that we are
-weaker and need guidance."
-
-"Chattels? Where do chattels come in here? She said that to you. Barney
-merely pleaded with her so that he could do what you wanted him to do."
-
-"I know--I know, Roger. Don't get angry. But if I had been here and seen
-her I should have known that he must not go. I should have seen that she
-was in danger. A woman would have understood. No; you didn't treat
-Adrienne like a chattel; no one could treat Adrienne like one. It was
-poor little Meg I meant. I see now how wrong it was to think of taking
-her from the man she loves; when she _has_ gone, you know, so that
-everyone must know and there can be no good in it. And they probably
-_have_ bought a wedding-ring. Oh, Roger, she does comfort me about Meg.
-She makes me feel the deeper things, the things conventions blind us to.
-She makes me feel that the great thing, the only thing, is to follow
-one's own light and that Meg did do that. And after all, you know,
-Roger, Jowett had George Eliot and Lewes to breakfast and they were
-never married."
-
-"Ha! ha! ha!" Oldmeadow laughed. He could not repress his bitter mirth.
-"Follow your light if there's breakfast with a clergyman at the end of
-it!" he cruelly suggested. Yet he was too much amused, while so
-incensed, for there to be much cruelty, and Mrs. Chadwick, gazing at him
-as if from under her twisted straw, murmured: "He _was_ a sort of
-clergyman, Roger; and if people do what _seems_ to them right, why
-should they be punished?"
-
-He saw it all. He heard it all, in her echoes. The potent influence had
-been poured through her, all the more irresistible for the appeal of
-Adrienne's peril. Adrienne, bereaved and dying; yet magnanimous, gentle
-and assured; always assured. How could Mrs. Chadwick's feathers and
-wedding-rings stand a chance against her? They had been swept away, or
-nearly away, and what Nancy had seen as a possible hope was now an
-accomplished fact. Mrs. Chadwick had been brought to feel about Meg as
-Adrienne felt about her, and Oldmeadow, for his part, was not sure that
-the game was worth the candle. There was something more than absurd in
-his poor friend's attempts to adjust herself to the new standards. They
-were pitiable and even a little unseemly. She began presently softly to
-weep. "Such a pretty baby it was, Roger. A lovely little creature--that
-was the first thing she said to me--'Oh, Mother Nell, it was such a
-pretty baby.' And all that she said this morning--when it was taken
-away--was: 'I wish Barney could have been in time to see our baby.' Oh,
-it is terrible, terrible, Roger, that he is not here! Her heart is
-broken by it. How can she ever forget that he left her alone at such a
-time. And she begged him not to go. She told me that she almost knelt to
-him."
-
-The tears, irrepressibly, had risen to Oldmeadow's eyes; but as Mrs.
-Chadwick's sentence meandered on, his thoughts were roughly jolted from
-their pity. "But I tell you that that is absolutely unfair!" he
-repeated, fixing his glass to look his protest the more firmly at her.
-"I tell you that I was there and saw it all. It wasn't for the baby. She
-was thinking of the baby as little as Barney was; less than he was. What
-she was thinking of was her power over Barney. She was determined that
-she should not seem to be put in the wrong by his going."
-
-Like the March Hare Mrs. Chadwick was wild yet imperturbable. "Of course
-she was determined. How could she be anything else? It did put her in
-the wrong. And it put Meg in the wrong. That's where we were so blind.
-Oh, I blame myself as much as anybody. But Barney is her husband; and he
-was with her and should have seen and felt. How could she beg him to
-stay for her danger when he would not stay for her love?"
-
-Yes; Adrienne had her very firmly. She had even imparted to her, when it
-came to the issue, something of coherency. She was building up, in
-Barney's absence, strange ramparts against him. Barney had dragged her
-in the dust and there she intended to drag him. Wasn't that it?
-Oldmeadow asked himself as he eyed his altered friend, muttering
-finally: "I'm every bit as responsible as Barney, if it comes to that. I
-upheld him, completely, in his decision. I do still. Adrienne may turn
-you all upside down; but she won't turn me; and I hope she won't turn
-Barney."
-
-"I think, Roger, that you might at all events remember that she's not
-out of danger," said Mrs. Chadwick. "She may die yet and give you no
-more trouble. You have never cared for her; I know that, and so does
-she; and I do think it's unfeeling of you to speak as you do when she's
-lying there above us. And she looks so lovely in bed," Mrs. Chadwick
-began to weep again. "I never saw such thick braids; like Marguerite in
-Faust. Her hands on the sheets so thin and white and her eyes enormous.
-I don't think even you could have the heart to jibe and laugh if you saw
-her."
-
-"I didn't laugh at Adrienne, you know," Oldmeadow reminded her, rising
-and buttoning his overcoat. "I laughed at you and Jowett. No; Adrienne
-is no laughing matter. But she won't die. I can assure you of that now.
-She's too much life in her to die. And though I'm very sorry for
-her--difficult as you may find it to believe--I shall reserve my pity
-for Barney."
-
-Barney needed all his pity and the sight of him on the following Sunday
-evening, as he appeared on his threshold, would have exorcised for
-Oldmeadow, if Mrs. Chadwick had not already done so, the memory of the
-pale, drowning face. He looked like a dog that has been beaten for a
-fault it cannot recognize. There was bewilderment in his eyes and
-acceptance, and a watchful humility. To see them there made Oldmeadow
-angry.
-
-Barney had sent a line to say that he was back; but his friend had been
-prepared not to see him. Once engulfed in the house of mourning it was
-but too likely that he would not emerge for many days. And besides, what
-would Barney have to say to him now? But here he was, with his hollow
-eyes and faded cheeks, and it was with an echo of his old boyish manner
-of dropping in when beset by some perplexity that, without speaking, he
-crossed the room and sank on the sofa by the fireplace. But he had not
-come to seek counsel or sustainment. Oldmeadow saw that, as, after he
-had offered cigarettes, which Barney refused, and lighted his own pipe,
-he walked to and fro and watched him while Barney watched the flames. He
-had not come with a purpose at all. It was, again, precisely like the
-unhappy dog who wanders forth aimlessly, guided merely by a dim yearning
-towards warmth and kindliness. Barney had come where he would be
-understood. But it was not because he believed himself to be
-misunderstood that he came.
-
-"I went to Coldbrooks, first, you know," he said presently, and with an
-effect of irrelevance. "I thought I'd find Mother there. So it was only
-on that Thursday night I got back here. None of the wires caught me."
-
-"I know," said Oldmeadow. "It was most unfortunate. But you couldn't
-have got back sooner, could you, once you'd gone on from Paris."
-
-"Not possibly. I went on from Paris that very night, you see. I caught
-the night express to the Riviera. They'd left Cannes as an address, but
-when I got there I found they'd moved on to San Remo. It was Tuesday
-before I found them. My one idea was to find them as soon as possible,
-of course. No; I suppose it couldn't be helped; once I'd gone."
-
-"And it was quite useless? You'd no chance with Meg at all?"
-
-"None whatever. Quite useless. Never was such a wild-goose chase. It was
-exactly as Adrienne had said."
-
-"Still it couldn't have been foreseen so securely by anyone but
-Adrienne. Many girls would have jumped at the chance."
-
-"Not if they'd had Adrienne to help them. We might have realized that.
-That's what armed Meg. I heard Adrienne in everything she said. Even
-Mother thinks Adrienne was right, now, you know, Roger. And it was all
-for Mother, wasn't it? that I went. That makes it all so particularly
-ironic. Only dear Mummy was never very strong at logic. She takes the
-line now that we're narrow-minded conventionalists, you and I, for
-thinking that a girl oughtn't to go off with a married man. I can't feel
-that, you know, Roger," said Barney in his listless tone. "I can't help
-feeling that Meg has done something shameful. You ought to have seen
-her! Positively smug! sitting there with that ass of a fellow in that
-damned Riviera hotel! I had the horridest feeling, too, that Meg had
-brought him rather than he her. I don't mean he doesn't care for her--he
-does; I'll say that for him. He's a stupid fellow, but honest; and he
-came outside and tried to tell me what he felt and how it would be all
-right and that he was going to devote his life to her. But I think he
-feels pretty sick, really. While Meg treated me as if I were a silly
-little boy. If anyone can carry the thing through, Meg will."
-
-"It won't prove her right because she carries it through, you know,"
-Oldmeadow observed.
-
-"No," said Barney, "but it will make us seem more wrong. Not that you
-have any responsibility in it, dear old boy. I did what I felt I must do
-and mine was the mistake. It's not only Mother who thinks I've wronged
-Adrienne," he went on after a moment, lifting his arms as though he
-felt a weight upon them and clasping them behind his head. "Even Nancy,
-though she was so sorry for me, made me feel that I'd done something
-very dreadful."
-
-"Nancy? How did you come to see Nancy?"
-
-"Why, at Coldbrooks. She's still there with Aunt Monica. That was just
-it. It was my going there first, seeing her first, that upset her so.
-She couldn't understand, till I could explain, how it came about. She
-was thinking of Adrienne, you see. And I, knowing nothing, had been
-thinking of Mother all the time. It was too late, then, to go back at
-once. The next train wasn't for three hours. So I had to stay."
-
-"And it was Nancy who had to tell you everything?"
-
-"Yes; Nancy," said Barney, staring at the ceiling. There was a note,
-now, of control in his voice and Oldmeadow knew that if he had said no
-word of what must be foremost in both their thoughts it was because he
-could not trust himself to speak of it. And he went on quickly, taking
-refuge from his invading emotion, "Aunt Monica wasn't there. I didn't
-even see Johnson. I went right through the house and into the garden and
-there was Nancy, planting something in the border. Everything looked so
-natural. I just went up to her and said 'Hello, Nancy,' and then, when
-she looked up at me, I thought she was going to faint. Poor little
-Nancy. I knew something terrible had happened from the way she looked at
-me."
-
-"Poor little Nancy. But I'm glad it was she who told you, Barney."
-
-"No one could have been sweeter," said Barney, talking on quickly. "She
-kept saying, 'Oh, you oughtn't to be here, Barney. You oughtn't to be
-here.' But no one could have been sweeter. We sat down on the old bench,
-you know, and she told me. That Adrienne had nearly died. That the baby
-was dead. I could hardly believe her, at first. I stared at her, I know,
-and I kept saying, 'What do you mean, Nancy?--what do you mean?' And she
-began to cry and I cried, too. Men do feel, Roger, all the same, even
-though they haven't the mother's claim to feel. I thought about our baby
-so much. I loved it, too. And now--to think it's dead; and that I never
-saw it; and that it's my fault"--his voice had shaken more and more; he
-had put his hand before his eyes, and, then, suddenly, he leaned forward
-and buried his head on the arm of the sofa.
-
-"My poor Barney! My dear boy!" Oldmeadow muttered. He came and sat down
-beside him; he laid his arm around his shoulders. "It's not your fault,"
-he said.
-
-"Oh, don't say that, Roger!" sobbed Barney. "It's no good trying to
-comfort me. I've broken her heart. She doesn't say so. She's too angelic
-to say it; but she lies there and looks it. My poor darling! My poor,
-courageous darling; what she has been through! It can't be helped. I
-must face it. I'm her husband. I ought to have understood. She
-supplicated me, and I rejected her, and the child is dead."
-
-"The child's death is a calamity for which no one can be held
-responsible unless it is Adrienne herself," said Oldmeadow. While Barney
-sobbed he was thinking intently, for this was a turning-point in
-Barney's destiny. He would remain in subjugation to Adrienne's
-conception of the wrong done her or he must be enabled to regain the
-sense of innocence to which he had every right. "She forced the
-situation on you. She chose to break rather than bend," he said. "Listen
-to me, Barney. I don't speak in any enmity to your wife; but listen to
-me and try to think it out. Don't you remember how you once said that
-your marriage couldn't be a mistake if you were able to see the defects
-as well as the beauty of the woman you love. Don't you remember that you
-said she'd have to learn a little from you for the much you'd have to
-learn from her. Nothing more reassured me than what you said that night.
-And I was reassured the other day by your firmness. It implies no
-disloyalty in you to see the defects now. It was power over you she
-wanted the other day and to see herself put in the right, before me; and
-to see me worsted, before you. You know it, Barney; you know it in your
-heart. And she knows it too. There was no failure of love in what you
-said. There was only failure of homage. You were right in opposing her.
-She was wrong in the issue she made. She was wrong from the first of the
-miserable affair in having concealed it from you. If you'd stayed behind
-as she wanted you to do, you'd have shown yourself a weakling and she'd
-have been further than ever from knowing herself in error. There is the
-truth; and the sooner you see it, the sooner she will."
-
-For some time after his friend had ended, Barney lay silent, his face
-still hidden. But his sobs had ceased. And his silence, at last, grew
-too long for any disclaimer to be possible to him. He had been brought,
-Oldmeadow knew it from the very rhythm of his breathing, to the
-passionless contemplation where alone truth is visible. And what he said
-at last was: "She'll never see it like that."
-
-"Oh, yes, she will," said Oldmeadow. And he remembered Nancy's wisdom.
-"If you hold to it firmly and tenderly and make her feel you love her
-while you make her feel you think her wrong."
-
-"She'll never see it," Barney repeated, and Oldmeadow now suspected, and
-with a deep uneasiness, that Barney might be seeing further than
-himself. "She can't."
-
-"You mean that she's incapable of thinking herself wrong?"
-
-"Yes, incapable," said Barney. "Because all she's conscious of is the
-wish to do right. And she is right so often, she is so good and
-beautiful, that it must be like that with her. She can break; but she
-can't bend."
-
-Oldmeadow was silent for a moment and Barney, on the arm of the sofa,
-was silent. "Of course," Oldmeadow then said, "the less you say about it
-the better. Things will take their place gradually."
-
-"I've not said anything about it," said Barney. "I've only thought of
-comforting and cherishing her. But it's not enough. I'll never say
-anything; but she'll know I'm keeping something back. She knows it
-already. I see that now. And I didn't know it till you put it to me."
-
-"She'll have to accept it; or to live with it unaccepted, then. You
-can't consider yourself a criminal to give her moral ease."
-
-"No," said Barney after a pause. "No; I can't do that. Though that's
-what Mummy wants me to do. But I can be horribly sorry."
-
-"Horribly sorry. Let the rest sink into the unspoken. When people love
-each other they can, I'm sure, live over any amount of unspoken things."
-
-"It hasn't been unspoken between you and me, though, has it, Roger?"
-said Barney, and he raised himself and got upon his feet as he said it.
-"There's the trouble. There's where I _am_ wrong. For she'd feel it an
-intolerable wrong if she knew that it hadn't been unspoken between you
-and me. And she'd be right. When people love each other such reticences
-and exclusions wrong their love."
-
-"But since you say she knows," Oldmeadow suggested after another moment.
-
-Barney stood staring out of the twilight window.
-
-"She doesn't know that I tell you," he said.
-
-"You've told me nothing," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Well, she doesn't know what I listen to, then," said Barney.
-
-Oldmeadow was again conscious of the deep uneasiness. "It's quite true
-I've no call to meddle in your affairs," he said. "The essential thing
-is that you love each other. Let rights and wrongs go hang."
-
-"You haven't meddled, Roger." Barney moved towards the door. "You've
-been in my affairs, and haven't been allowed to keep out. Yes. We love
-each other. But rights and wrongs never go hang with Adrienne."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-Oldmeadow did not see Barney again for some months. He met Eleanor
-Chadwick towards the end of April, in the park, he on his way to Mrs.
-Aldesey's, she, apparently, satisfying her country appetite for
-exercise, since she seemed to be walking fast and at random. He almost
-thought for a moment that she was going to pretend not to see him and
-hurry down a path that led away from his; but his resolute eye perhaps
-checked the impulse. She faltered and then came forward, holding out her
-hand and looking rather wildly about her, and she said that London was
-really suffocating, wasn't it?
-
-"You've been here for so long, haven't you," said Oldmeadow. "Or have
-you been here all this time? I've had no news of any of you, you see."
-
-"It's all been such a troubled, busy time, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick.
-"Yes, I've been here ever since. But, thank goodness, the doctors say
-she may be moved now, and she and I and Barney are going down to
-Devonshire next week. To Torquay. Such a dismal place, I think; but
-perhaps that's because so many of my relations have died there. I never
-have liked that red Devonshire soil. But the primroses will be out. That
-makes up a little."
-
-"I'm glad that Mrs. Barney is better. When will you all be back at
-Coldbrooks?"
-
-"In June, I hope. Yes; she is better. But so feeble, still; so frail.
-And quite, quite changed from her old bright self. It's all very
-depressing, Roger. Very depressing and wearing," said Mrs. Chadwick,
-opening her eyes very wide and staring before her in a way
-characteristic of her when she repressed tears. "Sometimes I hardly know
-how to keep up at all. For nothing cheers her. And Barney isn't really
-much help. He has very little power of fighting against depression."
-
-"You've all been too much shut up with each other, I'm afraid."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick still held her eyes widely opened. "I don't think it's
-that, Roger. Being alone wouldn't have helped us to be happier, after
-what's happened."
-
-"Being with other people might. You must get back to Coldbrooks as soon
-as possible and see Nancy and Mrs. Averil and your neighbours. That will
-help to change the current of your thoughts."
-
-"People don't forget so easily as that, Roger," Mrs. Chadwick murmured,
-and it was now with severity, as though she suspected him of triviality.
-"When something terrible has happened to people they are _in_ the
-current and Nancy and the neighbours are not going to change it. Poor
-Nancy; she feels it all as much as we do, I'm sure."
-
-And that Mrs. Chadwick thought of him as unfeeling he saw. She thought
-of him, too, with Barney, as criminal; as responsible for the
-catastrophe. The old phrase of presage floated back into his mind:
-"She'll spoil things." She had spoiled, for ever perhaps, this deepest,
-dearest relation of his life. What was Coldbrooks to become to him with
-Adrienne Toner in possession? He said, and he was unable to keep a
-certain dryness that must sound like lightness, from his voice: "You are
-in it but you needn't keep your heads under it, you know. That's what
-people tend to do when they shut themselves up with their misfortunes.
-You and Barney and Mrs. Barney, I suspect, are engaged in drowning each
-other. If one of you puts their head up the others pull it down."
-
-"I suppose you mean Adrienne does," said Mrs. Chadwick. He had not meant
-it at all; but now he felt sure that so, exactly, did it happen. Poor
-Mrs. Chadwick left to herself would have drifted to the shore by this
-time and Barney, at all events, would be swimming with his head up; it
-was Adrienne, of course, that kept them suffocating under the surface.
-"Well, I think it a pity you three should go off to Torquay alone," he
-evaded. "What's happening to the farm all this time?"
-
-"Nancy is seeing to it for Barney," said Mrs. Chadwick. "She understands
-those things so well. Barney would not dream of letting the farm come
-between him and Adrienne at a time like this. He wants to be with her of
-course."
-
-"Of course. All I mean is that I wish he could be with her at
-Coldbrooks. I suppose the doctor knows what's best, however."
-
-"I'm glad to hear you own that anybody can know what's best, Roger,
-except yourself," said Mrs. Chadwick with her singularly unprovocative
-severity. "Of course she must go to the sea and of course Barney and I
-must be with her. She has two excellent nurses; but I would never trust
-the best nurse for certain things. I remember so well when I was ill
-myself once and saw the nurse behind a screen, eating raspberry jam out
-of the pot with her finger. You can't trust anybody, really." And that
-was all he got out of Eleanor Chadwick. Adrienne had spoiled things.
-
-It was in June that he heard from Mrs. Averil that she and Nancy were in
-London for a few days staying with an old aunt in Eccleston Square. Mrs.
-Averil asked him to come to tea and he asked her and Nancy to do a play
-with him; but before these meetings took place he saw them both. It was
-at a Queen's Hall concert on Sunday afternoon that Mrs. Aldesey called
-his attention to his friends and, to his surprise, Oldmeadow saw that
-Barney was with them. They sat across the gangway at some little
-distance and his first impression of the three was that they were not
-happy.
-
-"Did you know he was in town?" asked Mrs. Aldesey. "How ill he looks. I
-suppose he was frightfully upset about the baby, poor fellow."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey knew nothing of the catastrophes that had followed the
-baby's death. He had instinctively avoided any reference to the latest
-progress of the Juggernaut.
-
-"She's much better now, you know," he said, and he wasn't aware that he
-was exonerating Barney. "And they're all back at Coldbrooks."
-
-"She's not at Coldbrooks," said Mrs. Aldesey. "She's well enough to pay
-visits and Lady Lumley told me she was coming down to them for this
-week-end. I wonder he hasn't gone with her."
-
-Oldmeadow was wondering too. There was something about Barney's attitude
-as he sat there beside his cousin, silent and absent-minded it seemed,
-listening as little to the music as he looked little at her, that he
-would rather Lydia Aldesey had not been there to observe. They had a
-curiously marital appearance, the young couple, or, rather, Barney had;
-the air of being safe with some one with whom no explanations were
-needed and for whom no appearances must be kept up; some one, even, with
-whom he was so identified that he was hardly conscious of her. Nancy was
-not so unconscious. Once, when Barney leaned over to look at the
-programme, she drew away a little; and Oldmeadow even fancied a slight
-constraint in her glance when, now and then, he spoke to her. Had
-Adrienne spoiled things there, too? Mrs. Averil next day, in Eccleston
-Square, enlightened him as to Barney's presence. "It's been most
-unfortunate. He had planned to come up to this concert for a long time.
-He wanted Nancy to hear the Cesar Franck with him. And then it appeared
-that Adrienne had made an engagement for them with the Lumleys. He
-refused to go, I'm afraid, and she made an issue of it and, from what
-poor Eleanor told me, there was rather a row. So Adrienne has gone off
-alone and Barney is here till this evening. He's gone out now with Nancy
-to show her some pictures by a friend of his. It had all been arranged.
-So what were we to do about it, Roger?"
-
-"Do about it? Why just what you have done. Why shouldn't she go with
-him?"
-
-"Why indeed? Except that Adrienne has made the issue. It's awkward, of
-course, when you know there's been a row, to go on as if nothing had
-happened."
-
-Oldmeadow meditated. His friend's little face had been pinched by the
-family's distress when he had last seen it; it was clouded now by a
-closer, a more personal perplexity. "I suppose she made the issue on
-purpose so that Barney shouldn't come up," he said at length.
-
-"I really don't know. Perhaps it had been arranged first with the
-Lumleys. If it was to keep him from coming, that didn't come out. She
-wouldn't let it come out; not into the open; of course."
-
-"So things are going very badly. I'd imagined, with all Barney's
-contrition, that they might have worked out well."
-
-"They've worked out as badly, I'm afraid, as they could. He was full of
-contrition. He was as devoted as possible, when they came back in May.
-But nothing altered her unflagging melancholy. And I suppose what
-happened was that he got tired. Barney was always like that, from the
-time he was in the nursery. He'd go on being patient and good-tempered
-until, suddenly, everything would break down and he would sulk for days.
-It's when he's pushed too far. And she has pushed him too far. She's set
-them all against him."
-
-"Who is them?" Oldmeadow asked. "I saw, when we met in London, that Mrs.
-Chadwick actually had been brought to look upon Barney as a sort of
-miscreant and Adrienne as a martyr. Who else is there?"
-
-"Well, no one else except Palgrave and Barbara. Palgrave can be very
-exasperating, as you know, and he takes the attitude now that Barney has
-done Adrienne an irreparable injury. As you may imagine it isn't a
-pleasant life Barney leads among them all."
-
-"I see," said Oldmeadow. "I think I see it all. What happens now is that
-Barney more and more takes refuge with you and Nancy, and Adrienne more
-and more can't bear it."
-
-"That is precisely it, Roger," said Mrs. Averil. "And what are we to do?
-How can I shut my door against Barney? Yet it is troubling me more than
-I can say. We are forced to seem on his side and against her. And
-Adrienne has her eye upon them."
-
-"Let her keep it on them," said Oldmeadow in strong indignation. "And
-much good may it do her!"
-
-"Oh, it won't do her any good--nor us!" said Mrs. Averil. "She's sick
-with jealousy, Roger. Sick. I'm almost sorry for her when I see it and
-see her trying to hide it, and see it always, coming in by the back door
-when she shuts the front door on it--as it always does, you know. And
-Nancy sees it, of course; and is quite as sick as she is; and Barney, of
-course, remains as blind as a bat."
-
-"Well, as long as he remains blind--"
-
-"Yes. As long as he does. But Adrienne will make him see. She'll pick
-and pull at their friendship until Nancy will be forced into drawing
-back, and if she draws back Barney will see. What it's already come to
-is that she has to stand still, and smile, while Adrienne scratches her,
-lest Barney should see she's scratched; and once or twice of late I've
-had a suspicion that he has seen. It doesn't endear Nancy to Adrienne
-that Barney should scowl at her when he's caught her scratching."
-
-"What kind of scratches?" Oldmeadow asked, but Mrs. Averil had only time
-to say, "Oh, all kinds; she's wonderful at scratches," when the
-door-bell rang and Nancy, a moment after, came in.
-
-Nancy, if anything so fresh and neat could be so called, was looking
-rather dowdy, and he suspected that some self-effacing motive lay behind
-her choice of clothes.
-
-"Oh, Roger, Barney was so sorry to have to miss you," she said. And, at
-all events, whatever else Adrienne had spoiled, she had not spoiled
-Nancy's loving smile for him. "He had to catch the 4.45 to Coldbrooks,
-you know. There's a prize heifer arriving this evening and he must be
-there to welcome it. You must see his herd of Holsteins, Roger."
-Friesians were, at that date, still Holsteins.
-
-"I'd like to," said Oldmeadow. "But I don't know when I shall, for, to
-tell you the truth, I've not been asked to Coldbrooks this summer. The
-first time since I've known them."
-
-Nancy looked at him in silence.
-
-"You'll come to us, of course," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"Do you really think I'd better, all things considered?" Oldmeadow
-asked.
-
-"Why, of course you'd better. What possible reasons could there be for
-your not coming, except ones we don't accept?"
-
-"It won't seem to range us too much in a hostile camp?"
-
-"Not more than we're ranged already. Nancy and I are not going to give
-you up, my dear Roger, because Adrienne considers herself a martyr."
-
-"I hope not, indeed. But it makes my exclusion from Coldbrooks more
-marked, perhaps, if I go to you. I imagine, though I am so much in her
-black books, that poor Mrs. Chadwick doesn't want my exclusion to be
-marked."
-
-"You're quite right there. You are in her black books; but she doesn't
-want it marked; she'd like to have you, really, if Adrienne weren't
-there and if she didn't feel shy. And I really think it will make it
-easier for her if you come to us instead. It will tide it over a
-little. She'll be almost able to feel you are with them. After all, you
-do come to us, often."
-
-"And I'll go up with you to Coldbrooks as if nothing had happened? I
-confess I have a curiosity to see how Mrs. Barney takes me."
-
-"She's very good at taking things, you know," said Nancy.
-
-Mrs. Averil cast a glance upon him. "It may be really something of a
-relief to their minds, Roger," she said, "if you turn up as if nothing
-had happened. They are in need of distractions. They are all dreadfully
-on edge, though they won't own to it, about Meg. The case is coming on
-quite soon now. Mrs. Hayward has lost no time, and poor Eleanor only
-keeps up because Adrienne is there to hold her up."
-
-"Where is Meg? Do they hear from her?"
-
-"They hear from her constantly. She's still on the Continent. She writes
-very easily and confidently. I can't help imagining, all the same, that
-Adrienne is holding her up, too. She's written to Nancy and Nancy hasn't
-shown me her letters."
-
-"There is nothing to hide, Mother," said Nancy, and Oldmeadow had never
-seen her look so dejected. "Nothing at all, except that she's not as
-easy and confident as she wants to appear. Adrienne does hold her up.
-Poor Meg."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-The picture of Adrienne holding them up was spread before Oldmeadow's
-eyes on the hot July day when Mrs. Averil drove him up from the Little
-House to Coldbrooks. The shade of the great lime-tree on the lawn was
-like a canvas, only old Johnson, as he moved to and fro with tea-table,
-silver and strawberries, stepping from its cool green atmosphere into
-the framing sunshine. The Chadwick family, seated or lying in the shade,
-were all nearly as still as in a picture, and Adrienne was its centre.
-She sat in a high-backed wicker chair, her hands lying listlessly in her
-lap, a scarf about her shoulders, and in her black-veiled white, her
-wide, transparent hat, she was like a clouded moon. There was something
-even of daring, to Oldmeadow's imagination, in their approach across the
-sunny spaces. Her eyes had so rested upon them from the moment that they
-had driven up, that they might have been bold wayfarers challenging the
-magic of a Circe in her web. Palgrave, in his white flannels, lay
-stretched at her feet, and he had been reading aloud to her; Barbara and
-Mrs. Chadwick sat listening while they worked on either hand. Only
-Barney was removed, sitting at some little distance, his back half
-turned, a pipe between his teeth and his eyes on a magazine that lay
-upon his knee. But the influence, the magic, was upon him too. He was
-consciously removed.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick sprang up to greet them. "This is nice!" she cried, and
-her knitting trailed behind her as she came so that Barbara, laughing,
-stooped to catch and pick it up as she followed her; "I was expecting
-you! How nice and dear of you! On this hot day! I always think the very
-fishes must feel warm on a day like this! Or could they, do you
-think?--Dear Roger!" There was an evident altering in Mrs. Chadwick's
-manner towards him since the meeting in the Park. She was, with all her
-fluster, manifestly glad to see him.
-
-Palgrave had hoisted himself to his feet and now stood beside Adrienne,
-eyeing them as a faithful hound eyes suspicious visitors.
-
-"Isn't it lovely in the shade," Mrs. Chadwick continued, drawing them
-into it. "Adrienne darling, Aunt Monica after all. And we were afraid
-the heat might keep you away. I suppose the hill was very hot, Monica?"
-Adrienne was still, apparently, something of an invalid, for she did not
-rise to greet them. Neither did she speak as she held out her hand to
-each of them in turn, and while an enveloping smile dwelt fondly on Mrs.
-Averil, she made no attempt to smile at Oldmeadow.
-
-He found himself observing her with a sort of wonder. All the flaws and
-deformities of her maternity had fallen from her and she had the
-appearance almost of beauty. Yet he had never so little liked her face.
-Her dimly patterned features made him think of a Chinese picture he had
-once seen where, on a moth-wing background, pale chrysanthemums,
-mauvy-pink, a disk of carved jade with cord and tassel and a narrow
-ivory box softly spotted with darkness, conveyed in their seeming
-triviality an impression almost sinister of impersonality and magic.
-There was as little feeling in her face. It was like a mask.
-
-"Where's Nancy?" Barney asked. He had got up and joined them, giving
-Oldmeadow's hand, as they met, a curiously lifeless shake.
-
-"She had letters to write," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"Why, I thought we'd arranged she was to come up and walk round the farm
-after tea with me," said Barney and as he spoke Oldmeadow noted that
-Adrienne turned her head slowly, somewhat as she had done on the ominous
-morning in March, and rested her eyes upon him.
-
-"Oh, I'm so sorry," said Mrs. Averil cheerfully. "She must have
-misunderstood. She had these letters to finish for the post."
-
-Barbara was reconnoitring at the tea-table. "Strawberries!" she
-announced. "Who said they'd be over? Oh, what a shame of Nancy not to
-come! Roger, why aren't you staying here rather than with Aunt Monica,
-I'd like to know? Aren't we grand enough for you since she's had that
-bathroom put in!" Barbara had advanced to a lively flapperdom.
-
-"You see, by this plan, I get the bath with her and get you when she
-brings me up," Oldmeadow retorted.
-
-"And leave Nancy behind! I call it a shame when we're having the last
-strawberries--and you may have a bathroom with Aunt Monica, but her
-strawberries are over. Letters! Who ever heard of Nancy writing
-letters--except to you, Barney. She was always writing to you when you
-were living in London--before you married. And what screeds you used to
-send her--all about art!" said Barbara, and that her liveliness cast a
-spell of silence was apparent to everyone but herself.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick took Oldmeadow's arm and drew him aside. "You'll be able
-to come later and be quite with us, won't you, Roger?" she said
-"September is really a lovelier month, don't you think? Adrienne is
-going to take Palgrave and Barbara for a motor-trip in September. Won't
-it be lovely for them?" Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a swiftness that did
-not veil a sense of insecurity. "Barbara's never seen the Alps. They are
-going to the Tyrol."
-
-"If we don't have a European war by then," Oldmeadow suggested. "What is
-Barney going to do?"
-
-"Oh, Barney is going to the Barclay's in Scotland, to shoot. He loves
-that. A war, Roger? What do you mean? All those tiresome Serbians? Why,
-they won't go into the Tyrol, will they?"
-
-"Perhaps not the Tyrol; but they may make it difficult for other people
-to go there."
-
-"Do you hear what Roger is saying?" Mrs. Chadwick turned to her family.
-"That the Serbians may make war by September and that it might interfere
-with the trip. But I'm sure Sir Edward will quiet them. He always does.
-Though he is a Liberal, I've always felt him to be such a good man,"
-said Mrs. Chadwick, "and really patriotic. Simply sitting round a table
-with him cools their heads more than one would believe possible.
-Dreadfully violent people, I believe, killing their kings and queens and
-throwing them out of the window. I always think there's nothing in the
-world for controlling people's tempers like getting them to sit together
-round a table. I wonder why it is. Something to do with having your legs
-out of the way, perhaps. People don't look nearly so threatening if
-their legs are hidden, do they? My poor cousin, Fanny Jocelyn, used
-always to say that if any of the clergymen in Fred's diocese got very
-troublesome her one recipe was to ask them to lunch, or, if they were
-very bad, to dinner. But she had wonderful tact--that gift, you know,
-for seeming to care simply _immensely_ for the person she was talking
-to. Francis used to tell her that when she looked at you as if you were
-the only person in the world she loved she was really working out her
-next menu."
-
-"I'm afraid if war comes it won't be restricted to people, like Serbians
-and clergymen, who can be quieted by being asked to dinner," said
-Oldmeadow laughing. "We'll be fighting, too."
-
-"And who will we fight?" Palgrave inquired. After passing tea, he had
-resumed his place at Adrienne's feet. "Who has been getting in our way
-now?"
-
-"Don't you read the papers?" Oldmeadow asked him.
-
-"Not when I can avoid it," said Palgrave. "They'll be bellowing out the
-same old Jingo stuff on the slightest provocation, of course. As far as
-I can make out the Serbians are the most awful brutes and Russia is
-egging them on. But when it comes to a crime against humanity like war,
-every one is responsible."
-
-"Are you ready for strawberries, Aunt Monica," Barbara interposed. "If
-there is a war, I hope we may be in it so that I can do some of my first
-aid on real people at last."
-
-She was carrying strawberries now to Adrienne who, as she leaned down,
-took her gently by the wrist, and said some low-toned words to her. "I
-know, my angel. Horrid of me!" said Barbara. "But one can't take war
-seriously, can one!"
-
-"I can," said Mrs. Averil. "Too many of my friends had their sons and
-husbands killed in South Africa."
-
-"And it's human nature," said Mrs. Chadwick, eating her strawberries
-mournfully. "Like the poor: whom you have always with you, you know."
-
-"Human nature is altered already a good deal more than governments
-imagine," said Palgrave, "and they'll find themselves pretty well dished
-if they try to bring on a capitalist war now. The workers all over the
-world are beginning to see whose the hands are that pull the strings and
-they'll refuse to dance to their piping. They'll down weapons just as
-they've learned, at last, to down tools; and without them you can do
-nothing. That's the way human nature will end war."
-
-"A spirited plan, no doubt," said Oldmeadow, "and effective if all the
-workers came to be of the same mind simultaneously. But if those of one
-country downed weapons and those of another didn't, the first would get
-their throats cut for their pains."
-
-"It's easy to sneer," Palgrave retorted. "As a matter of principle, I'd
-rather have my throat cut by a hired ruffian than kill an innocent
-man--even if he did belong to a nation that happened to be cleverer and
-more efficient than my own. That's a crime, of course, that we can't
-forgive."
-
-"Don't talk such rot, Palgrave," Barney now remarked in a tone of
-apathetic disgust.
-
-"I beg your pardon," Palgrave sat up instantly, flushing all over his
-face. "I think it's truth and sanity."
-
-"It's not truth and sanity. It's rot and stupid rot," said Barney. "Some
-more tea, please, Barbara."
-
-"Calling names isn't argument," said Palgrave. "I could call names, too,
-if it came to that. It's calling names that is stupid. I merely happen
-to believe in what Christ said."
-
-"Oh, but, dear--Christ drove the money-lenders out of the Temple very,
-very roughly," Mrs. Chadwick interposed with the head-long irrelevance
-characteristic of her in such crises. "Thongs must hurt so much, mustn't
-they? He surely believed in punishing people who did wrong."
-
-"Which nation doesn't do wrong, Mummy? Which nation is a Christ with a
-right to punish another? It's farcical. And punishing isn't killing.
-Christ didn't kill malefactors."
-
-"The Gadarene swine," Mrs. Chadwick murmured. "They were killed. So
-painfully, too, poor things. I never could understand about that. I hope
-the Higher Criticism will manage to get rid of it, for it doesn't really
-seem kind. They had done no wrong at all and I've always been specially
-fond of pigs myself."
-
-"Ah, but you never saw a pig with a devil in it," Oldmeadow suggested,
-to which Mrs. Chadwick murmured, "I'm sure they seem to have devils in
-them, sometimes, poor dears, when they won't let themselves be caught.
-Do get some more cream, Barbara. It's really too hot for arguments,
-isn't it," and Mrs. Chadwick sighed with the relief of having rounded
-that dangerous corner.
-
-Barbara went away with the cream-jug and Johnson emerged bearing the
-afternoon post.
-
-"Ah. Letters. Good." Palgrave sat up to take his and Adrienne's share.
-"One for you, Adrienne; from Meg. Now we shall see what she says about
-meeting us in the Tyrol." His cheeks were still flushed and his eyes
-brilliant with anger. Though his words were for Adrienne his voice was
-for Barney, at whom he did not glance.
-
-Adrienne unfolded the foreign sheets, and held them so that Palgrave,
-leaning against her knee, could read with her.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick had grown crimson. She looked at Oldmeadow. "Dear Meg is
-having such an interesting time," she told him. "She and Eric are seeing
-all manner of delightful places and picking up some lovely bits of old
-furniture." Oldmeadow bowed assent. He had his eyes on Adrienne and he
-was wondering about Barbara.
-
-"What news is there, dear?" Mrs. Chadwick continued in the same badly
-controlled voice. Palgrave's face had clouded.
-
-"I'm afraid it may be bad news, Mother Nell," said Adrienne looking up.
-
-It was the first time Oldmeadow had heard her voice that afternoon and
-he could hardly have believed it the voice that had once reminded him of
-a blue ribbon. It was still slow, still deliberate and soft; but it had
-now the steely thrust and intention of a dagger.
-
-"It's this accursed war talk!" Palgrave exclaimed. "Eric evidently
-thinks it serious and he has to come home at once. What rotten luck."
-
-Adrienne handed the sheets to Mrs. Chadwick. "It will all have blown
-over by September," she said. "As Mother Nell says, we can trust Sir
-Edward to keep us out of anything so wicked as a war. I am so completely
-with you in all you say about the wickedness of war, Paladin, although I
-do not see its causes quite so simply, perhaps."
-
-It was the first time that Oldmeadow had heard the new name for her
-knight.
-
-"For my part," said Barney, casting a glance at the house, Barbara not
-having yet reappeared, "I shall be grateful to the war if it dishes your
-trip to the Tyrol. It's most unsuitable for Barbara."
-
-He did not look at his wife as he spoke. His hat brim pulled down over
-his eyes, he sat with folded arms and stared in front of him.
-
-"You find it unsuitable for one sister to meet another?" Adrienne
-inquired. Her eyes were on Barney, but Oldmeadow could not interpret
-their gaze.
-
-"Most unsuitable, to use no stronger word," said Barney, "while one
-sister is living with a man whose name she doesn't bear."
-
-"You mean to say," said Palgrave, sitting cross-legged at Adrienne's
-feet and grasping his ankles with both hands, "that Meg, until she's
-legally married, isn't fit for her little sister to associate with?"
-
-"Just what I do mean, Palgrave. Precisely what I do mean," said Barney,
-and his face, reddening, took on its rare but characteristic expression
-of sullen anger. "And I'll thank you--in my house, after all--to keep
-out of an argument that doesn't concern you."
-
-"Barney; Palgrave," murmured Mrs. Chadwick supplicatingly. Adrienne,
-not moving her eyes from her husband's face, laid her hand on Palgrave's
-shoulder.
-
-"It does concern me," said Palgrave, and he put up his hand and grasped
-Adrienne's. "Barbara's well-being concerns me as much as it does you;
-and your wife's happiness concerns me a good deal more. I can promise
-you that I wouldn't trouble your hospitality for another day if it
-weren't for her--and Mother. It's perfectly open to you, of course, to
-turn me out of my home whenever you like to make use of your legal
-privilege. But until I'm turned out I stay--for their sakes."
-
-"You young ass! You unmitigated young ass!" Barney snarled, springing to
-his feet. "All right, Mother. Don't bother. I'll leave you to your
-protector for the present. I only wish he were young enough to be given
-what he needs--a thorough good hiding. I'll go down and see Nancy. Don't
-expect me back to dinner."
-
-"Nancy is busy, my dear," poor Mrs. Averil, deeply flushing, interposed,
-while Palgrave, under his breath, yet audibly, murmured: "Truly
-Kiplingesque! Home and Hidings! Our Colonial history summed up!"
-
-"She would be here if she weren't busy," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"I won't bother her," said Barney. "I'll sit in the garden and read.
-It's more peaceful than being here."
-
-"Please tell dear Nancy that it's ten days at least since _I've_ seen
-her," said Adrienne, "and that I miss her and beg that she'll give me,
-sometime, a few of her spare moments."
-
-At that Barney stopped short, and looked at his wife. "No, Adrienne, I
-won't," he said with a startling directness. "I'll take no messages
-whatever from you to Nancy. Let Nancy alone--do you see? That's all I've
-got to ask of you. Let her alone. She and Aunt Monica are the only
-people you haven't set against me and I don't intend to quarrel with
-Nancy to please you, I promise you."
-
-Sitting motionless and upright, her hand laid on Palgrave's shoulder,
-her face as unalterable as a little mask, Adrienne received these
-well-aimed darts as a Saint Sebastian might have received the arrows.
-Barney stared hard at her for a moment, then turned his back and marched
-out into the sunlight and Oldmeadow, as he saw him go, felt that he
-witnessed the end, as he had, little more than a year ago, witnessed the
-beginning, of an epoch. What was there left to build on after such a
-scene? And what must have passed between husband and wife during their
-hours of intimacy to make it credible? Barney was not a brute.
-
-When Barney had turned through the entrance gates and
-disappeared--Adrienne's eyes dropped to Palgrave's. "I think I'll go in,
-Paladin," she said, and it was either with faintness or with the mere
-stillness of her rage. "I think I'll lie down for a little while."
-
-Palgrave had leaped to his feet and, as she rose, drew her hand within
-his arm, and Mrs. Chadwick, her eyes staring wide, hastened to her: but
-Adrienne gently put her away. "No, no, dearest Mother Nell. Paladin will
-help me. You must stay with Aunt Monica and Mr. Oldmeadow." Her hand
-rested for a moment on Mrs. Chadwick's shoulder and she looked into her
-eyes. "I'm so sorry, Mother Nell. I meant no harm."
-
-"Oh, my darling child! As if I did not know that!" Mrs. Chadwick moaned
-and, as Adrienne moved away, she turned as if half distraught to her two
-friends. "Oh, it's dreadful! dreadful!" she nearly wept. "Oh, how can he
-treat her so--before you all! It's breaking my heart!"
-
-Barbara came running out with the cream. "Great Scott!" she exclaimed,
-stopping short. "What's become of everybody?"
-
-"They've all gone, dear. Yes, we've all finished. No one wants any more
-strawberries. Take yours away, will you, dear, we want to have a little
-talk, Aunt Monica, Roger and I."
-
-"I suppose it's Barney again," said Barbara, standing still and gazing
-indignantly around her. "Where's Adrienne?"
-
-"She has gone to lie down, dear. Yes. Barney has been very unkind."
-
-"About my trip, I suppose? He's been too odious about my trip and it's
-only the other day he made Adrienne cry. What possible business is it of
-Barney's, I'd like to know? One would think he imagined that wives and
-sisters were a sort of chattel. Why mayn't I stay, Mother--if you're
-going to talk about my trip? Adrienne has explained everything to me and
-I think Meg was quite right and I'd do the same myself if I were in her
-place. So I'm perfectly able to understand."
-
-"I know, dear; I know; Adrienne is so wonderful. But don't say things
-like that, I beg of you, for it makes me very, very unhappy. And please
-run away for a little while, for we have other things to talk of. I'm
-afraid there may be no trip at all, Barbara; Meg may be coming home at
-once. The letters had news about it, and Eric has to go to the war--if
-there is a war, you see." Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a supplicatory note
-very unlike her usual placid if complaining authority.
-
-"But I'd like to hear about the letters, then. Do we really have to give
-up the trip? I'm sure it's Barney at the bottom of it. He's been trying
-to dish it from the first and I simply won't stand it from him."
-
-"It's not Barney at all, Barbara. You shall hear all that there is to
-hear. And you mustn't, really, forget that Barney is your elder brother
-and has some right to say what you should do--even though we mayn't
-agree with him."
-
-"No, he hasn't. Not an atom," Barbara declared. "If anyone has any
-right, except you, it's Adrienne, because she's a bigger, wiser person
-than any of us."
-
-"And since you've borne your testimony, Barbara," Oldmeadow suggested,
-"you might obey your mother and give us the benefit of your experience
-on an occasion when it's invited."
-
-"Oh, I know you're against Adrienne, Roger," said Barbara, but with a
-sulkiness that showed surrender. "I shan't force myself on you, I assure
-you, and girls of fifteen aren't quite the infants in arms you may
-imagine. If Adrienne weren't here to stand up for me I don't know where
-I'd be. Because, you know, you _are_ weak, Mother. Yes you are. You've
-been really wobbling like anything about my trip and trying to wriggle
-out of it whenever you had a loop-hole, and Adrienne thinks you're weak,
-I know, for she told me so, and said we must help you to be brave and
-strong and that you belonged to a generation that had its eyes tightly
-bandaged from birth. So there!" And delivering this effective shot,
-Barbara marched away, not forgetting to pick up her plate of
-strawberries as she passed the table.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick attempted to conceal her confusion by following her
-child's retreating figure with grave disapprobation and Oldmeadow seized
-the propitious moment to remark: "I can't help feeling that there's
-something to be said for Barney, all the same. His wife _has_ set you
-all against him, hasn't she? I suspect Barbara's right, too, my dear
-friend, and that in your heart of hearts you dislike this trip of hers
-as much as he does. Certainly Barbara isn't a very pleasing example of
-Adrienne's influence."
-
-"She is very naughty, very naughty and rebellious," poor Mrs. Chadwick
-murmured, twisting and untwisting her handkerchief. "I know I've not a
-strong character, but I never spoiled my children and dear Adrienne
-does, I feel, spoil Barbara by taking her so seriously and talking to
-her as if she were grown up, you know. I had an aunt who married at
-sixteen; but it didn't turn out at all happily. They quarrelled
-constantly and she had two sets of twins, poor thing--almost like a
-judgment, dear Mamma used to say. But of course Barbara is really too
-young to understand; and so I've told dear Adrienne. Not that she isn't
-perfectly frank about it. She's told me over and over again that
-weakness was my besetting danger and that I must stand up straight and
-let the winds of freedom blow away my cobwebs. So dear and original,
-always, you know. And of course I see her point of view and Barbara
-will, no doubt, be a bigger, finer person"--Mrs. Chadwick's voice
-trailed off in its echo. "But I don't agree with you, Roger; I don't
-agree with you at all!" she took up with sudden vehemence, "about the
-trip. I don't agree that my poor Meg is a leper to be avoided until a
-legal ceremony has been performed. I think that a cruel
-convention--cruel, base and cowardly. She must have suffered so much
-already. Nothing will give her so much courage as for us to be seen
-standing by her. Adrienne has explained all that most beautifully to
-Barbara. And how true love is the most sacred thing in life."
-
-"My dear friend, Meg isn't a leper, of course, and we all intend to
-stand by her. But it is certainly best that a young girl like Barbara
-shouldn't be asked to meet, or understand, or exonerate such difficult
-situations."
-
-"That's what I've tried to say to Eleanor," Mrs. Averil murmured.
-
-"And why not, Roger! Why not!" Mrs. Chadwick cried, surprisingly yet not
-convincingly aroused. "Nothing develops the character so much as facing
-and understanding difficulty. And as for exoneration--I don't agree with
-you, and Adrienne doesn't agree. You and Monica are conventionalists and
-we must live on a higher plane than convention. I'm sure I try to,
-though it's very hard sometimes, but the noblest things are hardest.
-There is nothing to exonerate. Meg was following her own light in doing
-what she did."
-
-"It's not a question of Meg, but of her situation," Oldmeadow returned.
-
-"And because of her situation, because she is so in need of help and
-loyalty, you ask that Barbara should draw back her skirts from her! Oh!
-I knew it!" cried Mrs. Chadwick, "I knew that you would feel like that!
-That is why I felt it would be happier if you were not here with
-Adrienne."
-
-"You need hardly tell me that," said Oldmeadow smiling. "But it's not a
-question of convention, except in so far as convention means right
-feeling and good taste. Meg, whatever her lights--and personally I don't
-believe that she followed them--has done something that involves pain
-and humiliation for all concerned with her, and whether she was or was
-not justified in doing it is a moral problem that a child shouldn't be
-asked to meet. Such problems should be kept from her until she is old
-enough to understand them."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's vehemence had only fictitiously sustained her. It
-dropped from her now and for a little while she sat silent, and the
-confusion of her heart was piteously revealed to her friend as she said
-at last, "If there _is_ a war, it will all settle itself, won't it, for
-then Barbara couldn't go. I don't try to wriggle out of it. That's most
-unfair and untrue. I've promised Adrienne and I agree with Adrienne
-about it. I can't explain it clearly, as she does; it's all quite, quite
-different when Adrienne explains it. She seems to hold me up and you and
-Monica pull me down--oh, yes, you do, Roger. Of course it would kill
-me--I know that I should die, if Barbara were to do what Meg has done;
-you mustn't think Adrienne _wants_ her to behave like that, you know.
-Adrienne only wants people to be brave and follow their light; but your
-light needn't be a married man, need it? And sometimes I think it isn't
-_really_ so serious--falling in love, you know. I'm sure I thought _I_
-was in love half a dozen times before Francis proposed. It's a question
-of seeing what's best for you all round, isn't it, and it can't be best
-if it's a married man, can it? Oh! I know I'm saying what Adrienne
-wouldn't like, now; because it sounds so worldly and as if I believed in
-the French way. But I don't at all. I think love's everything, too. Only
-it always seemed to me when I was a girl that love meant white satin and
-orange-blossoms; and my poor, poor Meg can never wear those now. I
-should feel miserable, quite miserable about her, of course, if Adrienne
-weren't here to make me see the big, real things instead of the little
-ones. And Barney has been so unkind. Sneering and scoffing at
-everything"--her voice quivered. "However, if there's a war, that will
-settle it. Barbara couldn't go if there was a war."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-
-The war thus had its uses to Mrs. Chadwick. Barbara did not go to the
-Tyrol. By the end of September Oldmeadow and Barney were in training,
-one on the Berkshire and one on the Wiltshire downs, and Meg was
-ambiguously restored to her family at Coldbrooks.
-
-Oldmeadow had not seen Barney for many days, when they met one afternoon
-at Paddington and travelled together as far as Didcot. They had the
-carriage to themselves and though Barney's demeanour was reticent there
-were many things about which, it was evident, he found it a relief to be
-communicative. It was from him that Oldmeadow learned of Meg's return.
-
-"She'll be in a pretty box, won't she, if Hayward is killed," he said,
-smoking his cigarette and not looking at his friend. "He's over there,
-you know, and for my part I think there's very little chance of any of
-them coming back alive."
-
-They both smoked in silence for a little while after this, contemplating
-the ordeal in which their country was involved rather than their own
-relation to it; but Oldmeadow's mind returned presently to Barney's
-difficulties and he asked him if it had been to see Hayward off that
-he'd just been up to London.
-
-Barney, at this, had a quiet sardonic laugh. "Good heavens, no," he
-said. "Hayward went in the first week and Adrienne and Palgrave went up
-with Meg to see him off. Even if I'd wanted to, I'd have been allowed to
-have no hand in that. Adrienne is seeing to it all. Lawyers, money, I
-don't know what. No; I went up to spend my leave with old Boyd at his
-place in Chelsea. I didn't want to go home. Home is the last place I
-want to be just now."
-
-Oldmeadow at this maintained a silence that could not pretend surprise
-and Barney continued in a moment. "Palgrave isn't coming in, you know."
-
-"You mean he's carrying out his pacifist ideas?"
-
-"If they are his," said Barney in his colourless yet sardonic voice.
-"Any ideas of Palgrave's are likely to be Adrienne's, you know. She got
-hold of him from the first."
-
-"Well, after all," Oldmeadow after another moment felt impelled to say,
-"She got hold of you, too. In the same way; by believing in herself and
-by understanding you. She thinks she's right."
-
-"Ha! ha!" laughed Barney and for a moment, an acutely uncomfortable one
-for Oldmeadow, he turned his eyes on his friend. "Thinks she's right!
-You needn't tell me that, Roger!"
-
-It had indeed, Oldmeadow felt, hardly been decent of him.
-
-"I know. Of course she would. But, all the same, people must be allowed
-to hold their own opinions."
-
-"Must they?" said Barney. "At a time like this? Adrienne must, of
-course; as a woman she doesn't come into it; she brings other people in,
-that is to say, and keeps out herself. Besides she's an American. But
-Palgrave shouldn't be allowed the choice. He's dishonouring us all--as
-Meg has done. Poor, foolish, wretched Mother! She's seeing it at last,
-though she won't allow herself to say it, or, rather, Adrienne won't
-allow her--" He checked himself.
-
-"Dishonour is a strong word, Barney. Palgrave is hardly more than a
-boy."
-
-"Jim Errington is a year younger than Palgrave, and Peter Layard six
-months. They're both in. I don't think nineteen is too young to
-dishonour your family. If Palgrave committed a murder, he'd be hanged.
-But it will no doubt come to conscription and then we'll see where he'll
-find himself. Herded in as a Tommy. All this talk of a few months is
-folly."
-
-"I know. Yes. Folly," said Oldmeadow absently. "Have you tried to have
-it out with Palgrave, Barney? If he only hears Adrienne's side what can
-you expect of him? If you leave them all to sink or swim without you,
-you mustn't blame Adrienne for steering as best she can."
-
-"Sink or swim without me!" Barney echoed. "Why they'd none of them
-listen to me. You saw well enough how it was with them that day in July
-when you came up. Adrienne is twice as strong as I am when it comes to
-anything like a struggle and she has them all firmly under her thumb.
-She steers because she intends to steer and intends I shan't. I've tried
-nothing with Palgrave, except to keep my hands off him. Mother's talked
-to him, and Meg's talked to him; but nothing does any good. Oh, yes; Meg
-hangs on Adrienne because she's got nothing else to hang to; but she's
-frightfully down on Palgrave all the same. They're all united against
-me, but they're not united among themselves by any means. It's not a
-peaceful family party at Coldbrooks, I promise you. Poor Mother spends
-most of her time shut up in her room crying."
-
-Barney offered no further information on this occasion and Oldmeadow
-asked for no more. It was from Mrs. Aldesey, some weeks later, that he
-heard that Eric Hayward had been killed. Mrs. Aldesey was his most
-punctual correspondent and her letters, full of pungent, apposite
-accounts of how the war was affecting London, the pleasantest
-experiences that came to him on the Berkshire downs, where, indeed, he
-did not find life unpleasant. Mrs. Aldesey made time for these long
-letters after tiring days spent among Belgian refugees and his sense of
-comradeship had been immensely deepened by the vast, new experience they
-were, from their different angles, sharing. It was difficult, on the
-soft October day, to dissociate the mere pleasure of reading her letter
-from the miserable news she gave. Yet he knew, stretched at ease after
-strenuous exercise, the canvas of his tent idly flapping above him and
-the sunlight falling across his feet, that it was very miserable news
-indeed and must miserably affect his friends at Coldbrooks. What was to
-become of poor Meg now? And after his mind had paused on poor Meg a pang
-of memory brought back the face of his setter John. Poor Hayward.
-
-"She must, of course, find some work at once," Mrs. Aldesey wrote. "The
-war does help to solve problems of this sort as nothing else before ever
-could. She must nurse, or drive an ambulance and perhaps by the time
-it's all over we'll have forgotten irrelevancies that happened so long
-ago. Sometimes it feels like that to me and I know I'm much too old to
-face the world that will have grown up out of the wreckage of the world
-I knew." Mrs. Aldesey, still, always spoke of herself as antique,
-relegated and on the shelf. Rather absurd of her, as her friend pointed
-out in his reply, when she was obviously one of the people who were
-going to make the new world. She was organizing the Belgians in the most
-remarkable manner.
-
-As to Coldbrooks he hesitated. He could hardly see himself writing to
-Mrs. Chadwick or to Meg. Of Nancy he felt a little shy. There would be
-too much to say to Nancy if he said anything and he allowed the
-anonymous calamity that had overtaken his friends to pass without
-comment or condolence. But after an interval of some weeks it was from
-Nancy herself that he heard. Nancy seemed always to be selected as the
-vehicle for other people's emergencies.
-
-"Dear Roger," she wrote. "You have heard how very unhappy we all are. It
-is dreadful to see poor Meg, and Aunt Eleanor makes it really worse for
-her. Meg wears mourning, like a widow, and she is terribly bitter about
-Palgrave, and about Adrienne, too. Doesn't that seem to you very strange
-and unjust? Adrienne is doing for Palgrave what she did for
-Meg--standing by him. It is all more unhappy than you can imagine.
-Palgrave is at New College, now, you know, and I'm writing, because Aunt
-Eleanor's one hope is that you may be able to talk to him. Kindly, you
-know, Roger; and not as if you thought him a criminal or a coward; that
-is worse than useless, naturally. Palgrave is very arrogant; but you
-know what a tender heart he really has and I am sure that he is very
-lonely and unhappy. So be kind and understanding, won't you? He really
-cares for you and trusts you more than he likes to show; and of course
-he would expect you to be against him."
-
-Oldmeadow was going into Oxford in a week's time and he wrote to
-Palgrave and asked him to give him tea. "I've got to talk to you, if
-you'll let me," he said, "but I shan't make myself a nuisance, I promise
-you. I only want to satisfy myself that you have thought everything out,
-and if you have I'll be able to tell your people that they must give up
-tormenting themselves and you about it. I shall like talking over your
-work with you, too, if I may, and renewing my own Oxford memories." So
-conciliatory, so affectionate (and he found it easy to be affectionate
-to poor Palgrave) was the tone of the letter that he had a swift reply.
-Palgrave would be very glad to see him.
-
-It was a melancholy, deserted Oxford into which Oldmeadow drove his
-little car on a late October afternoon. Most of the youths he saw were
-of a nondescript variety, a type to whom Oxford means scholastic
-opportunity and nothing more. There were dark-skinned lads from distant
-parts of the Empire looking, to Oldmeadow's eye, rather pitiful and
-doomed to disappointment, and a hurrying, absorbed little Jap had an
-almost empty Broad as a setting for his alien figure.
-
-Palgrave's name was freshly painted at the bottom of a staircase in the
-Garden Quad and Oldmeadow mounted to rooms that most delightfully
-overlooked the garden and its catalpa-tree.
-
-Palgrave was ready for him. The tea was laid and he stood at the table
-cutting a cake as Oldmeadow entered. But some one else, too, was ready,
-for there, in the window-seat, her gaze fixed on the waning golds and
-russets beneath, sat Adrienne Toner. Oldmeadow, very much and very
-disagreeably affected, paused at the door.
-
-"Come in, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne, and there was a strange, jaded
-eagerness in the gaze she fixed on him. "I've only come for tea. I have
-to go directly afterwards. I am staying in Oxford, now, you know. To be
-near Palgrave."
-
-"Meg's turned her out of Coldbrooks," Palgrave announced, standing
-still, over the tea-tray, his hands in his pockets while, with bent
-head, he looked from under his brows at Oldmeadow. "Meg, you understand;
-for whose sake she's gone through everything. We're pariahs together,
-now; she and I."
-
-"It's not quite true or fair to say that, Palgrave," said Adrienne,
-whose eyes had returned to the garden. "Meg hasn't turned me out. I felt
-it would be happier for her if I weren't there; and for your
-Mother--since they feel as they do about what has happened; and happier
-for you and me to be together. You can't be surprised at Meg. She is
-nearly beside herself with grief."
-
-Adrienne was very much altered. The magic of the lime-tree scene no
-longer lay about her. Her skin was sallow, her eyes sunken, her
-projecting mouth was at once stubborn, weary and relaxed. She had been
-almost beautiful on that July day and to-day she was definitely ugly.
-Oldmeadow saw that some intent inner preoccupation held her thoughts.
-
-"I _am_ surprised at her; very much surprised," said Palgrave, "though I
-might have warned you that Meg wasn't a person worth risking a great
-deal for. Oh, yes, she's nearly beside herself all right. She's lost the
-man she cared for and she can't, now, ever be made 'respectable.' Oh, I
-see further into Meg's grief than you do, my poor Adrienne. She's just
-as conventional and unheroic at heart as Mother; and that's what _she_
-minds--more than anything."
-
-Oldmeadow, sunken in the deep chair Palgrave had drawn for him to the
-table, watched the curious interchange, and after a pause, in her jaded
-voice, Adrienne from the window-seat commented: "I understand her rage
-and misery. It's because her grief is divided and spoiled and tainted
-like that that she is distracted."
-
-"Will you pour out tea?" Palgrave asked her gloomily. "You'll see
-anyone's side, always, except your own."
-
-To this Adrienne, rising and coming forward to the table, made no reply.
-She wore a dark dress that recalled to Oldmeadow the one in which he had
-first seen her; the short jacket tying across white in front and white
-ruffles falling about her neck and hands. A small, dark hat was bent
-down about her face.
-
-Strange, brooding face. What was she thinking of, Oldmeadow wondered, as
-he watched her hands, impeded by the falling ruffles, moving with the
-old, fumbling gestures among the tea-things; she had constantly to throw
-back the ruffles, and the tea-pot, after all, was too heavy for her. It
-slipped on one side as she lifted it and the hot tea poured over her
-hand. She kept her hold bravely and Oldmeadow rescued her.
-
-"How stupid I am!" she said, biting her lip.
-
-"You've scalded your hand," said Palgrave, eyeing her with his air no
-longer of rapturous but of gloomy devotion.
-
-They made Oldmeadow think of comrade political prisoners moving off
-together in a convoy to Siberia. There was something as bleak, as
-heavy, as uninspired in their aspect. He could not think that Palgrave
-could now catch much light or flame from such a companion. They would
-trudge through the snow; condemned, but together; to be together was the
-best thing, now, that life offered them.
-
-She said that the scald was nothing and asked to be trusted to go on
-with the tea, grasping the handle with resolution. Oldmeadow, however,
-standing beside her, insisted on filling the cups for her.
-
-"You can be allowed to put in the milk and sugar, you see," he said. He
-was aware, as he thus succoured and rallied her, of an influx of feeling
-like the feeling that came with the uncanny dreams. Here she was, and
-reality had caught her. She deserved to be caught, of course; tragic,
-meddling Pierrot. But his heart was heavy and gentle; as in his dreams.
-
-They sat round the table together. On the mantelpiece was a large,
-framed photograph of Adrienne; on the walls photographs of a Botticelli
-Madonna, a Mantegna from Padua and the da Vinci drawing for the Christ
-of the Last Supper. Seeing Oldmeadow's eyes on them Palgrave said:
-"Adrienne gave me those. And lots of the books."
-
-"And don't forget the beautiful cushions, Palgrave," said Adrienne, with
-a flicker of her old, contented playfulness. "I'm sure good cushions are
-the foundation of a successful study of philosophy."
-
-The cushions were certainly very good; and very beautiful, as Oldmeadow
-commented. "That gorgeous chair, too," said Palgrave. "It ought to make
-a Plato of me."
-
-It was curious, the sense they gave him of trusting him. Were they
-aware, if only sub-consciously, that he was feeling Adrienne, her
-follies and misdeeds thick upon her, ill-used? Or was it only that they
-had come down to such fundamental securities as were left to them and
-felt that with him, at all events, they were in the hands of an
-impartial judge?
-
-"It's a happy life Meg and Mother lead at Coldbrooks, as you may
-imagine," Palgrave took up the theme that preoccupied him. "They only
-see Nancy and Aunt Monica, of course. Barbara is at school and Barney,
-as you are probably aware, never comes near his disgraced sister. Would
-you believe it, Roger," Palgrave went on, while Oldmeadow saw that a
-dull colour crept up to Adrienne's face and neck as her husband was thus
-mentioned, "Meg blames Adrienne now for the whole affair! About Eric and
-herself! Actually! On the one hand Eric is her hero for whom she'll
-mourn for ever and on the other Adrienne is responsible for the fact
-that she's not 'respectable' and can't claim to be his widow. Oh, don't
-ask me how she contrives to work it out! Women like Meg don't need logic
-when they've a thong in their hands and want to use it. And Adrienne's
-shoulders are bared for the lash! God! It makes me fairly mad to think
-of it!"
-
-"Please, Palgrave!" Adrienne supplicated in a low voice. She did not
-eat. She had drunk her tea and sat looking down at her plate. "Don't
-think of it any more. Meg is very, very unhappy. We can hardly imagine
-what the misery and confusion of Meg's heart must be."
-
-"Oh, you'll make excuses for anyone, Adrienne! You're not a shining
-example of happiness either, if it comes to that. It's atrocious of Meg
-to treat you as she does. Atrocious of her to hold you responsible."
-
-"But I am responsible," said Adrienne, while the dull flush still dyed
-her face. "I've always said that I was responsible. It was I who
-persuaded them to go."
-
-"Yes. To go. Instead of staying and being lovers secretly. I know all
-about it. And no doubt Meg would rather it had been so now. And so would
-Mother!" Palgrave ground his teeth on a laugh. "That's where morality
-lands them! Pretty, isn't it!"
-
-A silence fell and then Adrienne rose and said that Mr. Jackson would be
-waiting for her. "He's coming at half-past five," she said, and, with
-his gloomy tenderness, Palgrave informed Oldmeadow that she was reading
-logic and Plato; "to keep up with me, you know."
-
-Adrienne, smiling faintly, laid her hand for a moment on his shoulder as
-she went past his chair. "Come in to-night, after dinner, and tell me
-what you decide," she said.
-
-"I'll have no news for you," Palgrave replied.
-
-Oldmeadow had gone to hold the door open for her and, as she paused
-there to give him her hand, he heard her murmur: "Will you come down
-with me?"
-
-"Let me see you to the bottom of the stair," he seized the intimation,
-and, as she went before him, she said, still in the low, purposeful
-voice, and he felt sure now that this had been her intention in coming
-to tea: "It's only so that you shan't think I'll oppose you. If you can
-persuade him, I shall not oppose it. I think he's right. But it's too
-hard. I mean, I hope you can persuade him that it's right to go."
-
-She had stepped out on to the threshold at the foot of the stairs and he
-paused behind her, astonished. "You want me to persuade him of what you
-think wrong?"
-
-She stood still looking out at the sunny quadrangle. "People must think
-for themselves. I don't know who is right or who is wrong. Perhaps I've
-influenced Palgrave. Perhaps he wouldn't have felt like this if it
-hadn't been for me. I don't know. But if you can make him feel it right
-to go, I shall be glad." She stepped out into the quadrangle.
-
-"You mean," said Oldmeadow, following her, and strangely moved, "that
-you'd rather have him killed than stay behind like this?"
-
-"It would be much happier for him, wouldn't it," she said. "If he could
-feel it right to go."
-
-They were under the arch of the Library, she still going slowly, before
-him, and Oldmeadow stopped her there. "Mrs. Barney, forgive me--may I
-ask you something?" He had put his hand on her shoulder and she paused
-and faced him. "It's something personal, and I've no right to be
-personal with you, as I know. But--have you been to see Barney at
-Tidworth?"
-
-As Oldmeadow spoke these Words, Adrienne turned away vehemently, and
-then stood still, as though arrested in her impulse of flight by an
-irresistible desire to listen. "Barney does not want to see me," she
-said, speaking with difficulty.
-
-"You think so," said Oldmeadow. "And he may think so. But you ought to
-see each other at a time like this. He may be ordered to France at any
-time now." He could not see her face.
-
-"Do you mean," she said, after a moment, keeping the rigidity of her
-listening poise, "that he won't come to say good-bye?"
-
-"I know nothing at all," said Oldmeadow. "I can only infer how far the
-mischief between you has gone. And I'm most frightfully sorry for it.
-I've been sorry for Barney; but now I'm sorry for you, too. I think
-you're being unfairly treated. But yours have been the mistakes, Mrs.
-Barney, and it's for you to take the first step."
-
-"Barney doesn't want to see me," she repeated, and she went on, while he
-heard, growing in her voice, the note of the old conviction: "He has
-made mistakes, too. He has treated me unfairly, too. I can't take the
-first step."
-
-"Don't you love him, then?" said Oldmeadow, and in his voice was the
-note of the old harshness.
-
-"Does he love me?" she retorted, turning now, with sudden fire, and
-fixing her eyes upon him. "Why should he think I want to see him if he
-doesn't want to see me? Why should I love, if he doesn't? Why should I
-sue to Barney?"
-
-"Oh," Oldmeadow almost groaned. "Don't take that line; don't, I beg of
-you. You're both young. And you've hurt him so. You've meant to hurt
-him; I've seen it! I've seen it, Mrs. Barney. If you'll put by your
-pride everything can grow again."
-
-"No! no! no!" she cried almost violently, and he saw that she was
-trembling. "Some things don't grow again! It's not like plants, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Some things are like living creatures; and they can die. They
-can die," she repeated, now walking rapidly away from him out into the
-large quadrangle with its grass plot cut across by the late sunshine. He
-followed her for a moment and he heard her say, as she went: "It's
-worse, far worse, not to mean to hurt. It's worse to care so little that
-you don't know when you are hurting."
-
-"No, it's not," said Oldmeadow. "That's only being stupid; not cruel."
-
-"It's not thinking that is cruel; it's not caring that is cruel," she
-repeated, passionately, half muttering the words, and whether with tears
-of fury he could not say.
-
-He stood still at the doorway. "Good-bye, then," he said. And not
-looking behind her, as she went out swiftly into New College Lane, she
-answered, still on the same note of passionate protest: "Good-bye, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Good-bye." He watched her small, dark figure hurry along in
-the shadow of the wall until the turning hid it from view.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-Palgrave, apparently, had formed no conjectures as to their conversation
-and was thinking still of Adrienne's wrongs rather than of his own
-situation. "Did you take her home?" he said. "I see you're sorry for
-her, Roger. It's really too abominable, you know. I really can't say
-before her what I think, I really can't say before you what I think of
-Barney's treatment of her; because I know you agree with him."
-
-Oldmeadow felt all the more able, shaken though he was by the interview
-below, to remember, because of it, what he thought. "If you mean that I
-don't consider Barney in the very least responsible for the death of the
-baby, I do agree with him," he said.
-
-"Apart from that, apart from the baby," said Palgrave, controlling his
-temper, it was evident, in his wish to keep the ear of the impartial
-judge, "though what the loss of a child means to a woman like Adrienne I
-don't believe you can guess; apart from whose was the responsibility, he
-ought to have seen, towards the end, at all events, if he'd eyes in his
-head and a heart in his breast, that all she asked was to forgive him
-and take him back. She was proud, of course. What woman of her power and
-significance wouldn't have been? She couldn't be the first to move. But
-Barney must have seen that her heart was breaking."
-
-"Well," said Oldmeadow, taking in, with some perplexity, this new
-presentation of Adrienne Toner; "what about his heart? She'd led it a
-pretty dance. And you forget that I don't consider she had anything to
-forgive him."
-
-"His heart!" Palgrave echoed scornfully, yet with a sorrowful scorn; "He
-mended his heart quick enough. Went and fell in love with Nancy, who
-only asks to be let alone."
-
-"He's always loved Nancy. She's always been like a sister to him.
-Adrienne has infected you with her groundless jealousy."
-
-"Groundless indeed!" Palgrave reached for his pipe and began to stuff it
-vindictively. "Nancy sees well enough, poor dear! She's had to keep him
-off by any device she could contrive. She's a good deal more than a
-sister to him, now. She's the only person in the world for him. You can
-call it jealousy if you like. That's only another name for a broken
-heart."
-
-"I don't know what Barney's feeling may be, Palgrave, but I do know, it
-was quite plain to me, that Adrienne was jealous long before she had any
-ground for jealousy. If Nancy's all Barney's got left now, it's simply
-because Adrienne has taken everything else from him. You don't seem to
-realize that Adrienne drove him from her with her airs of martyrdom.
-Took vengeance on him, too; what else was the plan for Barbara going
-abroad with you? I don't want to speak unkindly of her. It's quite true;
-I'm sorry for her. I've never liked her so well. But the reason is that
-she's beginning, I really believe, to find out that her own feet are of
-clay, while her mistake all along has been to imagine herself above
-ordinary humanity. All our feet are of clay, and we never get very far
-unless we are aware of the weakness in our structure and look out for a
-continual tendency to crumble. You don't get over it by pretending you
-don't need to walk and imagining you have wings instead of feet."
-
-Palgrave, drawing stiffly at his pipe during this little homily,
-listened, gloomily yet without resentment. "You see, where you make
-_your_ mistake--if you'll allow the youthful ass you consider me to say
-so--is that you've always imagined Adrienne to be a self-righteous prig
-who sets herself up above others. She doesn't; she doesn't," Palgrave
-repeated with conviction. "She'd accept the feet of clay if you'll grant
-her the heart of flame--for everybody; the wings--for everybody. There's
-your mistake, Roger. Adrienne believes that everybody has wings as well
-as herself; and the only difference she sees in people is that some have
-learned and some haven't how to use them. She may be mortal woman--bless
-her--and have made mistakes; but they're the mistakes of flame; not of
-earthiness."
-
-"You are not an ass, Palgrave," said Oldmeadow, after a moment. "You are
-wise in everything but experience; and you see deep. Suppose we come to
-a compromise. You've owned that Adrienne may make mistakes and I own
-that I may misjudge her. I see what you believe about her and I see why
-you believe it. I've seen her at her worst, no doubt, and to you she's
-been able to show only her best. So let it rest at that. What I came to
-talk about, you know, was you."
-
-"I know," said Palgrave, and he gave a deep sigh.
-
-"Be patient with me," said Oldmeadow. "After all, we belong to the same
-generation. You can't pretend that I'm an old fogey who's lost the
-inspirations of his youth and has marched so far down towards the grave
-that the new torches coming up over the horizon are hidden from him."
-
-"That's rather nice, you know, Roger," Palgrave smiled faintly. "No;
-you're not an old fogey. But all the same there's not much torch about
-you."
-
-"It's rather sad, isn't it," Oldmeadow mused, "that we should always
-seem to begin with torches and then to spend the rest of our lives in
-quenching them. It may be, you know, that we're only trying to hold them
-straight, so that the wind shan't blow them out. However!--you'll let me
-talk. That's the point."
-
-"Of course you may. You've been awfully decent," Palgrave murmured.
-
-"Well, then, it seems to me you're not seeing straight," said Oldmeadow.
-"It's not crude animal patriotism--as you'd put it--that's asked of you.
-It's a very delicate discrimination between ideals."
-
-"I know! I know!" said Palgrave. The traces of mental anguish were on
-his worn young face. He knocked the ashes out of his pipe and rose to
-lean against the mantelpiece." I don't suppose I can explain," he said,
-staring out at the sky. "I suppose that with me the crude animal thing
-is the personal inhibition. I can't do it. I'd rather, far, be killed
-than have to kill other men. That's the unreasoning part, the
-instinctive part, but it's a part of one's nature that I don't believe
-one can violate without violating one's very spirit. I've always been
-different, I know, from most fellows of my age and class. I've always
-hated sport--shooting and hunting. The fox, the stag, the partridge,
-have always spoiled it for me. Oh, I know they have to be killed--poor
-brutes! I know that; but I can't myself be the butcher."
-
-"You'll own, though, that there must be butchers," said Oldmeadow, after
-a little meditation. He felt himself in the presence of something
-delicate, distorted and beautiful. "And you'll own, won't you, when it
-comes to a war like this, when not only our national honour but our
-national existence is at stake, that some men must kill others. Isn't it
-then, baldly, that you profit, personally, by other people doing what
-you won't do? You'll eat spring lamb as long as there are butchers to
-kill the lamb for you, and you'll be an Englishman and take from England
-all that she has to give you--including Oxford and Coldbrooks--and let
-other men do the nasty work that makes the survival of England and
-Oxford and Coldbrooks possible. That's what it comes to, you know.
-That's all I ask you to look at squarely."
-
-"I know, I know," Palgrave repeated. He had looked at little else, poor
-boy. Oldmeadow saw that. "But that's where the delicate discrimination
-between ideals comes in, Roger. That's where I have to leave intuition,
-which says 'No,' and turn to reason. And the trouble is that for me
-reason says 'No,' too. Because humanity--all of it that counts--has
-outgrown war. That's what it comes to. It's a conflict between a
-national and an humanitarian ideal. There are enough of us in the world
-to stop war, if we all act together; and why, because others don't,
-should I not do what I feel right? Others may follow if only a few of us
-stand out. If no one stands out, no one will ever follow. And you can't
-kill England like that. England is more than men and institutions,"
-Palgrave still gazed at the sky. "It's an idea that will survive;
-perhaps the more truly in the spirit for perishing in the flesh, if it
-really came to that. Look at Greece. She's dead, if you like; yet what
-existing nation lives as truly? It is Grecian minds we think with and
-Grecian eyes we see with. It's Plato's conception of the just man being
-the truly happy man--even if the whole world's against him--that is the
-very meaning of our refusal to go with the world."
-
-"You'll never stop war by refusal so long as the majority of men still
-believe in it," said Oldmeadow. "There are not enough of you to stop it
-now. The time to stop it is before it comes; not while it's on. It's
-before it begins that you must bring the rest of humanity not to behave
-in ways that make it inevitable. I'm inclined to think that ideas can
-perish," he went on, as Palgrave, to this, made no reply, "as far as
-their earthly manifestation goes, that is, if enough men and
-institutions are destroyed. If Germany could conquer and administer
-England, I'm inclined to think the English idea would perish. And war
-need not be unspiritual. Killing our fellow-men need not mean hating
-them. There's less hatred in war, I imagine, than in some of the
-contests of peaceful civilian life. Put it fairly on the ground of
-humanitarianism, then, Palgrave; not of nationality. It's the whole
-world that is threatened by a hateful idea, by the triumph of all you
-most fear and detest, and unless we strive against it with all we are
-and have it seems to me that we fall short of our duty not only as
-Englishmen, but as humanitarians. Put it at that, Palgrave: would you
-really have had England stand by and not lift a finger when Belgium was
-invaded and France menaced?"
-
-Palgrave was not ready with his reply and he turned away while he looked
-for it and shuffled the papers on his desk with a nervous hand. "Yes, I
-would," he said at last. "Hateful as it is to have to say it--I would
-have stood by." He came back to his place at the mantelpiece and looked
-down at Oldmeadow as he spoke. "The choice, of course, is hateful; but I
-think we should have stood by and helped the sufferers and let France
-and Germany fight it out. It always comes back to them, doesn't it?
-They're always fighting it out; they always will, till they find it's no
-good and that they can't annihilate each other; which is what they both
-want to do. Oh, I've read too many of the young French neo-Catholics to
-be able to believe that the hateful idea was all on one side. Their
-ideals don't differ much, once you strip them of their theological
-tinsel, from those of the Germans. Germany happens to be the aggressor
-now; but if the militarist party in France had had the chance, they'd
-have struck as quickly."
-
-"The difference--and it's an immense one--is that the militarist party
-in France wouldn't have had the chance. The difference is that it
-doesn't govern and mould public opinion. It's not a menace to the world.
-It's only a sort of splendid pet, kept in a Zoo, for the delectation of
-a certain class and party. Whereas Germany's the _bona fide_ hungry
-tigress at large. What you really ask of England, Palgrave, is that she
-should be a Buddha and lie down and let the tigress, after finishing
-France, devour her, too. It really comes to that. Buddhism is the only
-logical basis for your position, and I don't believe, however sorry one
-may be for hungry tigresses, that the right way to deal with them is to
-let them eat you. The Christian philosophy of the incarnation is the
-true one. Matter does make a spiritual difference. It does make a
-difference, a real difference, that the ideal should be made flesh. It's
-important to the world, spiritually, that the man rather than the
-tigress should survive."
-
-"Christ gave his life," said Palgrave, after a moment.
-
-"I'm not speaking of historical personages; but of eternal truths," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-But he knew already that he spoke in vain. Palgrave had turned away his
-eyes again and on his sad young face he read the fixity of a fanatic
-idealism. He had not moved him, though he had troubled him. No one would
-move Palgrave. He doubted, now, whether Adrienne herself had had much
-influence over him. It was with the sense of pleading a lost cause that
-he said, presently, "Adrienne hopes you'll feel it right to go."
-
-Palgrave at this turned a profound gaze upon him. "I know it," he said.
-"Though she's never told me so. It's the weakness of her love, its
-yearning and tenderness, not its strength, that makes her want it.
-Because she knows it would be so much easier. But she can't go back on
-what she's meant to me. It's because of that, in part at all events,
-that I've been able to see steadily what I mean to myself. That's what
-she helps one to do, you know. Hold to yourself; your true, deep self.
-It's owing to her that I can only choose in one way--even if I can't
-defend it properly. It seems to come back to metaphysics, doesn't it?"
-
-"Like everything else," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Yes. Like everything else. It would take a four-years' course in Greats
-to argue it out, Roger. Come back to me--if you're here and I'm here
-then--and we'll see what we can make of it."
-
-"I will," said Oldmeadow, rising, for the room was growing dark. "And
-before that, I hope."
-
-"After all, you know," Palgrave observed, "England isn't in any danger
-of becoming Buddhistic; there's not much nihilism about her, is there,
-but hardly much Christianity, either. England has evolved all sorts of
-things besides Oxford and Coldbrooks. She's evolved industrialism and
-factory-towns."
-
-"I don't consider industrialism and factory-towns incompatible with
-Christianity, you know," Oldmeadow observed. "Good-bye, my dear boy."
-
-"Good-bye, Roger," Palgrave grasped his hand. "You've been most awfully
-kind."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-"Isn't it becoming to him, Mother? And how tall he looks!" said Nancy,
-holding Oldmeadow off in his khaki for displayal.
-
-He had only written a line of his failure and that he would come as soon
-as he could and see them all and tell in full of his interview with
-Palgrave. And he had motored over to The Little House this afternoon in
-early November.
-
-Nancy was showing an unexpected gaiety. "What a nice grilled-salmon
-colour you are, too," she said.
-
-He divined the self-protective instinct under the gaiety. Most of the
-women in England were being gayer and more talkative at this time, in
-order to keep up. Nancy was thin and white; but she was keeping up. And
-she had put on a charming dress to receive him in.
-
-"I've been grilled all right; out on the downs," he said. "But it's more
-like cold storage just now, with these frosts at night. Yes; the big
-cup, please. I'm famished for tea. Ah! that's something like! It smells
-like your rose outside. I sniffed it as I waited at the door. Wonderful
-for such a late blooming."
-
-"Isn't it," said Mrs. Averil. "And I only put it in last autumn. It's
-doing beautifully; but I've cherished it. And now tell us about
-Palgrave."
-
-He felt reluctant to tell about Palgrave. The impression that remained
-with him of Palgrave was that impression of beauty and distortion and he
-did not want to have to disentangle his feelings or to seem to put
-Palgrave in the wrong. It was so sweet, too, after the long, chilly
-drive over the empty uplands, to sit here and forget the war, although
-it was for scenes like this, for girls like Nancy, women like Mrs.
-Averil--with so much else--that the war was so worth fighting. He turned
-his thoughts back to the realities that underlay the happy appearances
-and was aware, as he forced himself to tell, of what must seem a note of
-advocacy in his voice. "He can't think differently, I'm afraid," he
-said. "It's self-sacrifice, not selfishness, that is moving him."
-
-"He can't think differently while Adrienne is living there," said Mrs.
-Averil. "He didn't tell you, I suppose, that she has now taken up her
-abode in Oxford in order to study philosophy with him?"
-
-He was rather uncomfortably aware of the disingenuousness that must now
-be made apparent in his avoidance of all mention of Adrienne.
-
-"I saw her," he said, and he knew that it was lamely. "She was there
-when I got there."
-
-"You saw her!" Mrs. Averil exclaimed. "But then, of course you didn't
-convince him. I might have known it. Of course she would not let you see
-him alone."
-
-"But she did let me see him alone. That was what she wanted. And she was
-there only in order to tell me what she wanted. She wants him to go."
-
-Mrs. Averil was eyeing him with such astonishment that he turned to
-Nancy with his explanations. But Mrs. Averil would not leave him to
-Nancy's sympathy. "It's rather late in the day for her to want him to
-go," she said. "She may be sorry for what she's done; but it's her
-work."
-
-"Well, she's sorry for her work. That's what it comes to. And I'm sorry
-for her," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Good heavens! The cleverness of that woman!" Mrs. Averil exclaimed. "If
-she can't be powerful, she'll be pitiful! She's worked on your feelings;
-I can see that, Roger. And I thought you, at least, were immune. Well;
-she does not work on mine. I am not in the least sorry for her."
-
-"She's being unfairly treated," said Oldmeadow. "It's grotesque that Meg
-should have turned upon her."
-
-"And Eleanor has, too, you know," said Mrs. Averil. "It's grotesque, if
-you like; but I see a grim justice in it. She made them do things and
-believe things that weren't natural to them and now she's lost her power
-and they see things as they are."
-
-"It's because she's failed that they've turned against her," said Nancy.
-"If she'd succeeded they would have gone on accepting what she told them
-and making her their idol."
-
-"Adrienne mustn't fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only justification
-for Adrienne is to be in the right. If the blood of Saint Januarius
-doesn't liquefy, why should you keep it in a shrine? She's a woman who
-has quarrelled with her husband and disgraced her sister and
-brother-in-law, and broken her mother-in-law's heart. You can't go on
-making an idol of a saint who behaves like that."
-
-"She never claimed worldly success," said Nancy. "She never told Meg to
-go so that she could get married afterwards; she never told Palgrave
-that war was wrong because it was easier not to fight."
-
-"Oh, yes, she did claim worldly success, really," said Mrs. Averil,
-while her eyes rested on her daughter with a tenderness that contrasted
-with her tone. "Her whole point was that if you were right
-spiritually--'poised' she called it, you remember--all those other
-things would be added unto you. I've heard her claim that if you were
-poised you could get anything you really wanted. I asked her once if I
-should find a ten-pound note under the sofa-cushion every morning after
-breakfast if I could get poised sufficiently!" Mrs. Averil laughed,
-still more dryly while she still maintained her tender gaze and Nancy
-said, smiling a little: "She might have put it there for you if she'd
-been sure you were poised."
-
-"Well, let us bury Adrienne for the present," said Mrs. Averil. "Tell
-Roger about your nursing plans. She may go to London, Roger, this
-winter, and I'm to be left alone."
-
-"You're to be left to take care of Aunt Eleanor, if I do go," said
-Nancy; and Mrs. Averil said that there must certainly be some one left
-to take care of poor Eleanor.
-
-Oldmeadow went up to Coldbrooks next morning. The first person he saw
-was old Johnson at the door and he remembered Eleanor Chadwick's griefs
-on his account. Nothing, now, could have been kept from Johnson and his
-face bore the marks of the family calamities. He was aged and whitened
-and his voice had armed itself, since the downfall of his grave,
-vicarious complacency, with solemn cadences.
-
-"Yes, sir. The ladies will be very glad to see you, sir. These are sad
-days for them--the family dispersed as it is."
-
-Johnson defined the situation as he felt that it could be most fittingly
-defined and Oldmeadow inwardly applauded his "dispersed."
-
-The drawing-room, into which Johnson ushered him, had, for the first
-time in his memory of it, a mournful air. It had always been shabby, and
-these were the same faded chintzes, the same worn rugs; but now,
-fireless and flowerless, it neither spoke nor smiled and, with the sense
-it gave of an outlived epoch, it was almost spectral. The photographs
-all looked like the photographs of dead people and the only similitude
-of life was the loud, silly ticking of the French clock on the
-mantelpiece; Mrs. Chadwick's cherished clock; one of her
-wedding-presents.
-
-"I'm afraid it's rather chilly, sir," said Johnson. "No one has sat here
-of an evening now for a long time." He put a match to the ranged logs,
-drew the blinds up farther so that the autumnal sunlight might more
-freely enter, and left him.
-
-Oldmeadow went to the window and turned over the magazines, a month old,
-that lay on a table there.
-
-He was standing so when Meg entered, and she had half the length of the
-room to traverse before they met. She was in black, in deep black; but
-more beautiful than he had ever seen her; her tossed auburn locks bound
-low on her forehead with a black ribbon, her white throat upright, her
-eyes hard with their readiness, their resource. Beautiful and
-distressing. It distressed him terribly to see that hardness in her
-eyes.
-
-"How do you do, Roger," she said, giving him her hand. "It's good to see
-you. Mother will be glad."
-
-They seated themselves on one of the capacious sofas and she questioned
-him quickly, competently, while the hard eyes seemed to measure him lest
-he measure her. It was almost the look of the _declassee_ woman who
-forestalls withdrawal in an interlocutor. But, as he answered her
-quietly, his fond regard upon her, her defences began to fall. "It's the
-only life, a soldier's, isn't it?" she said. "At all times, really. But,
-at a time like this, anything else seems despicable, doesn't it;
-contemptibly smug and safe. The uniform is so becoming to you. You look
-a soldier already. One feels that men will trust and follow you. Didn't
-you burn with rage and shame, too, when, for those four days, it seemed
-we might not come in?"
-
-"I felt too sure we should come in, to burn with rage and shame," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-"Ah! but it was not so sure, I'm afraid," said Meg, and in her eyes, no
-longer hard, wild lights seemed to pass and repass. "I'm afraid that
-there are nearly enough fools and knaves in England to wreck us. Not
-quite enough, thank heaven! But, for those four days, Eric was terribly
-afraid. He was killed, you know, Roger, very splendidly, leading his
-men."
-
-"I know, Meg. My dear Meg," Oldmeadow murmured.
-
-"Oh! I don't regret it! I don't regret it!" Meg cried, while her colour
-rose and her young breast lifted. "It's the soldier's death! The
-consecrating, heroic death! He was ready. And deaths like that
-atone--for the others. He was not killed instantaneously, Roger."
-
-"I didn't know," said Oldmeadow, looking at her with a pitying, troubled
-gaze.
-
-"He lived for a day and night afterwards," said Meg, looking back,
-tearless. "They carried him to a barn. Only his man was with him. There
-was no one to dress his dreadful wound; no food. The man got him some
-water, at the risk of his own life. He was conscious until the end and
-he suffered terribly."
-
-Oldmeadow dropped his eyes before her fierce stare while, strangely,
-dimly, there passed through his mind the memory of the embarrassed,
-empty, handsome young face in the brougham and, again, the memory of his
-dog John. He had seen John die and his eyes of wistful appeal. So Eric
-Hayward's eyes might have looked as he lay in the barn dying.
-
-"Oh, Roger!" Meg said suddenly, seizing his hand. "Kill them! Kill them!
-Oh, revenge him! I was not with him! Think of it! I would have had no
-right to have been with him--had it been possible. I did not know till a
-week later. He was buried there. His man buried him."
-
-"My poor, poor child," said Oldmeadow, clasping her hands.
-
-But, at once, taking refuge from his pity and from her own desperate
-pain: "So you've seen Palgrave," she said. "And he isn't going. I knew
-it was useless. I told Mother it was useless--with that stranger--that
-American, with him. She has disgraced us all.--Wretched boy! Hateful
-woman!"
-
-"Meg, Meg; be soldierly. He wouldn't have spoken like that."
-
-"He never liked her! Never!" she cried. "I knew he didn't, even at the
-time she was flattering and cajoling us. I saw that she bewildered him
-and that he accepted her only because she was mine. How I loathe myself
-for having listened to her! How I loathe her! All that she ever wanted
-was power! Power over other people's lives! She'd commit any crime for
-that!"
-
-"You seem to me cruelly unfair," he said.
-
-"No! no! I'm not unfair! You know I'm not!" she cried. "You always saw
-the truth about her--from the very beginning. You never fell down and
-worshipped her, like the rest of us. And she knew that you were her
-enemy and warned us against you. Oh--why did Barney marry her!"
-
-"I never worshipped her; but I never thought her base and hateful."
-
-"You never knew her as I did; that was all. And I never knew her until I
-came back and found her doing to Palgrave what she had done to us.
-Paladin! Did you hear her call him Paladin? Always flattery! Always to
-make one think one was wonderful, important, mysterious! She forced us
-to go away, Roger. Sometimes I think it was hypnotism; that she uses her
-will-power consciously. We did not want to go. We did not want the
-divorce and the scandal."
-
-"What did you want, then, Meg?"
-
-She felt the gravity of his tone but, like a fierce Maenad, she snatched
-at the torch, not caring how it revealed her. "What of it! What if we
-had been secret lovers! Who would have known! Who would have been
-harmed! Some people go on for years and years. His wife loved another
-man. He had no one. Why should we have been pushed--such pitiful fools
-we were--into displaying our love to the world and being crushed by it!
-Oh, he was so loyal, so brave; but it made him very, very unhappy. Oh, I
-was cruel to him sometimes! I used to reproach him sometimes! Oh, Roger!
-Roger!--" She broke into wild tears and stumbled to her feet.
-
-As she reached the door, covering her face with her hands, her mother
-opened it and, meeting her on the threshold, Meg, with almost the effect
-of beating her aside with the other impediments to her rage and grief,
-pushed past her so that the knitting Mrs. Chadwick held was flung to the
-floor, the ball of khaki wool running rapidly away under a sofa and the
-socks and needles dangling at her feet.
-
-She stood looking down at them with a curious apathy and, as Oldmeadow
-went to help and greet her, he saw that as much as Meg was wild she was
-dulled and quiet.
-
-"Meg is so very, very violent," she said, as he disentangled the wool
-and restored her sock and ball to her. She spoke with listlessness
-rather than sympathy.
-
-"Poor child," said Oldmeadow. "One can hardly wonder at it. But it makes
-a wretched existence for you, I'm afraid. You and she oughtn't to be
-alone together."
-
-He drew her to a chair and, seating herself, her faded face and eyes
-that had lost their old look of surprise turned to the light, Mrs.
-Chadwick assented, "It's very fatiguing to live with, certainly.
-Sometimes I really think I must go away for a little while and have a
-change. Nancy would come and stay with Meg, you know. But I can't miss
-Barney's last weeks. He comes to us, now, again. And it might not be
-right to leave Meg. One must not think of oneself at a time like this,
-must one?" The knitting lay in her lap and she was twisting and
-untwisting her handkerchief after her old fashion; but her fingers
-moved slowly and without agitation and Oldmeadow saw that some spring of
-life in her had been broken.
-
-"The best plan would be that Meg should, as soon as possible, take up
-some work," he said, "and that you and Nancy should go away. Work is the
-only thing for Meg now. She'll dash herself to pieces down here; and you
-with her. There'll soon be plenty to do. Nursing and driving
-ambulances."
-
-"Nancy is going to nurse, you know," said Mrs. Chadwick. "But she won't
-go as long as we need her here. She has promised me that. I don't know
-what I should do without Nancy. I shouldn't care to be nursed by Meg
-myself, if I were a wounded soldier. She is so very restless and would
-probably forget quite simple things like giving one a handkerchief or
-seeing that hot-water-bottles were wrapped up before she put them to
-one's feet. A friend of mine--Amy Hatchard--such a pretty woman, though
-her hair was bright, bright red--and I never cared for that--had the
-soles of her feet nearly scorched off once by a careless nurse. Dear
-Nancy. I often think of Nancy now, Roger. I believe, you know, that if
-Adrienne had not come Nancy and Barney might have married. How happy we
-should all have been; though she has so little money."
-
-"I wish you could all think a little more kindly of Adrienne," said
-Oldmeadow after a silence. Mrs. Chadwick had begun to knit. "I must tell
-you that I myself feel differently about her."
-
-"Do you, Roger?" said Mrs. Chadwick, without surprise. "You have a very
-judicious and balanced mind, I know; even when you were hardly more
-than a boy Francis noticed it and said that he'd rather go by your
-opinion than by that of most of the men he knew. I always remembered
-that, afterwards. Till she came. And then I believed in her rather than
-in you. You thought us all far too fond of her from the very first. And
-now we have certainly changed. Meg is certainly very violent; much more
-violent than I could ever be.... I am sorry for Adrienne. I don't think
-she meant to do us any harm--as Meg believes."
-
-"She only meant to do you good, I am sure of it. I saw her in Oxford,
-let me tell you about it, when I went in to see Palgrave. She is very
-unhappy. She wants Palgrave to go. She wants him to feel it right to go.
-It's not she, really, who is keeping him back now."
-
-"My poor Palgrave. Meg is very unkind about him; very bitter and unkind;
-her own brother. But it was very wrong of Adrienne to go and set up
-housekeeping in Oxford near him. You must own that, Roger. She may not
-be keeping him back; but she is aiding and abetting him always. It made
-Barney even more miserable and disgusted than he was before. And it
-looks so very odd. Though I don't think that anyone could ever gossip
-about Adrienne. There is something about her that makes that
-impossible."
-
-"There certainly is. I am glad she is with Palgrave, poor boy."
-
-"I am glad you are sorry for him, Roger"--Mrs. Chadwick dropped a
-needle. "How clumsy I am. My fingers seem all to have turned to thumbs.
-Thank you so much. I try to make as many socks as I can for our poor
-men; fingering wool; not wheeling, which is so much rougher to the
-feet. I'm sure I'd rather march, and, if it came to that, die in
-fingering than in wheeling. Just as I've always felt, foolish as it may
-sound, that if I had to be drowned I'd rather it were in warm, soapy
-water than in cold salt. Not that one is very likely, ever, to drown in
-one's bath. But tell me about Adrienne and Palgrave, Roger, and what
-they said."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's discourse seemed, beforehand, to make anything he might
-have to tell irrelevant and, even while he tried to make her see what he
-had seen, he felt it to be a fruitless effort.
-
-There was indeed no enmity to plead against. Only a deep exhaustion.
-Adrienne had pressed too heavily on the spring and it was broken.
-
-"I'm sure she is very sorry to have made so much mischief, but she isn't
-what I thought her, Roger," she said, shaking her head, when he had
-finished. "I'm sorry for her, but I used to believe her to be a sort of
-saint and now I know that she is very far indeed from being one."
-
-"The mere fact of failure doesn't deprive you of sainthood," said
-Oldmeadow, remembering Nancy's plea. "You haven't less reason now than
-you had then for believing her one."
-
-But even with her broken spring Mrs. Chadwick had not lost all her
-shrewdness. It flickered in the sad eyes she lifted from the khaki sock.
-"Some kinds of failure do, Roger. That gift of healing, you remember;
-all she could do for people in that way; she has quite, quite lost it.
-That is a reason. It's that more than anything that has made me feel
-differently about her."
-
-"Lost it?" He felt strangely discomposed, little as the gift of healing
-had ever impressed him.
-
-"Quite," Mrs. Chadwick repeated. "I think it distressed her dreadfully
-herself. I think she counted upon it more than upon anything, perhaps
-without knowing she did. It must have made her seem so sure to herself,
-mustn't it? The first time was before the war, just a little after you
-were here that day in the summer--dear me, how long ago it seems; and I
-had one of my headaches, one of the worst I ever had. I was so
-dreadfully troubled, you know, about Barbara and Meg. And Adrienne came
-and sat by me as she used to and put her hand on my forehead; and I know
-it wasn't my lack of faith, for I quite believed it would get well; but
-instead of the peaceful feeling, it grew much worse; oh, _much_. As if
-red hot needles were darting through my eyes and an iron weight pressing
-down on my head. And such tumult and distress. I had to tell her. I had
-to ask her to take away her hand. Oh, she felt it very much, poor thing,
-and grew very white and said it must be because she was still not
-strong; not quite herself. But I knew then that it was because she was
-not _right_; not what I had thought her. I began to suspect, from that
-very moment, that I had been mistaken; because hypnotizing people isn't
-the same as being a saint, is it, Roger? and--I think you said so once,
-long ago; and that was all that she had done; hypnotized us all to think
-her good and wonderful. Later on, after Meg had come, I let her try once
-more, though it quite frightened me; she looked so strange. And!--oh,
-dear--it was dreadful. It distressed me dreadfully. She suddenly put her
-hands before her face and sat quite still and then she burst into tears
-and got up and ran out of the room, crying. It made me feel quite ill.
-And of course I knew there could be nothing saintly about a person who
-made you feel like that--who could feel like that themselves, and break
-down."
-
-"Even saints have their times of darkness and dryness," Oldmeadow found
-after a little time had passed. The picture she put before him hurt him.
-"It was an error of judgment to have believed her a saint because she
-could hypnotize you--if that was what it was; but the fact that she
-can't hypnotize you any longer--that she's too unhappy to have any power
-of that sort--doesn't prove she's not a saint. Of course she's not. Why
-should she be?"
-
-"I'm sure I don't know why she should be; but she used to behave as if
-she were one, didn't she? And when I saw that she wasn't one in that way
-I began to see that she wasn't in other ways, too. It was she who made
-me so unjust, so unkind to poor Barney. _She_ was so unjust and so
-unkind; and I never saw it till then. I was blind till then; though you
-saw very well, that day you came to Connaught Square, that it was a sort
-of spell she cast. It was a spell, Roger. The moment I saw her, after
-the baby's death, I forgot everything she'd done and felt I loved her
-again. She willed me to. So as to get power over me. Everything, always,
-with her, was to get power over other people's lives," said Mrs.
-Chadwick, and as he had, in the past, heard echoes of Adrienne in all
-she said, now he heard echoes of Meg, "It's by willing it, you know.
-Some people practise it like five-finger exercises. You have to sit
-quite still and shut your eyes and concentrate. Meg has heard how it's
-done. I don't pretend to understand; but that must have been her way.
-And she made poor Barney miserable and set me against him at once; you
-said so yourself, Roger, and blinded me to all the cruel things she did.
-It was to punish him, you know. To make him feel he was dreadfully wrong
-and she quite right; about Meg, and everything else; for you came in,
-too. It used to be so dreadful at Torquay. I knew it would be sad there;
-but I never guessed how sad it would be--with that horrid blue, blue
-sea. She used to sit, day after day, on the terrace of the house, and
-gaze and gaze at the sea and if Barney would come, so lovingly, and ask
-her what he could do for her and take her hand, oh, it was more and more
-mournful, the way she would look at him; that dreadful, loving look that
-didn't mean love at all, but only trying to break him down and make him
-_say_ that he was down. I begged Barney's pardon, Roger, for having
-treated him as I did. We treated him dreadfully, all of us; because she
-put him, always, in the wrong. Oh, no, Roger, I'm sorry for her, but
-she's a dangerous woman; or _was_ dangerous. For now she has lost it all
-and has become like everybody else; quite ordinary and unhappy."
-
-He felt, in the little silence that, again, followed, that he could
-hardly better this summing-up. That was precisely what poor Adrienne
-Toner had become; ordinary and unhappy. The two things she would have
-believed herself least capable of becoming. There was nothing to be
-gained in urging extenuating circumstances, especially since he was not
-sure that there were any. Mrs. Chadwick, at bottom, saw as clearly as he
-did. He asked her presently, leaving the theme of Adrienne, whether she
-would not seriously consider going away for a little while with Nancy.
-"Meg could go down to The Little House," he said.
-
-"Oh, no, she couldn't, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick, "she won't go
-anywhere. She'll hardly speak to Monica. She just sits out-of-doors, all
-day, wrapped in a cloak, in the corner of the garden, staring in front
-of her, and she pays not the slightest attention to anything I say. And
-at night, in her room, I hear her sobbing, sobbing, as if her heart
-would break. I can't think hardly of Eric any longer, Roger. Isn't it
-strange; but it's almost as if he were my son that had been killed. And
-Barney may be killed," the poor mother's lip and chin began to tremble.
-"And you, too, Roger. I don't know how we shall live through all that we
-must bear and I keep thinking of the foolish little things, like your
-having cold feet and wearing the same clothes day after day in those
-horrible trenches. He suffered it all, poor Eric. No, I can't think
-hardly of him. All the same," she sobbed, "my heart is broken when I
-remember that they can never be married now."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-"That's the way Mummy surprises one," said Barney as he and Oldmeadow
-went together through the Coldbrooks woods. "One feels her, usually,
-such a darling goose and then, suddenly, she shows one that she can be a
-heroine."
-
-Barney was going to France in two days' time and Oldmeadow within the
-fortnight, and the Coldbrooks good-byes had just been said. It had been
-poor Meg who had broken down and clung and cried. Mrs. Chadwick had, to
-the very last, talked with grave cheerfulness of Barney's next leave and
-given wise advice as if he had been merely leaving them for a rather
-perilous mountain-climbing feat. Oldmeadow could hardly believe her the
-same woman that he had seen ten days before.
-
-He was staying at The Little House and had come up on this afternoon of
-Barney's departure to join him at Coldbrooks and walk down with him.
-Barney had not yet seen or said good-bye to Nancy and her mother, and
-Oldmeadow had seized this, his only chance, of a talk with him. But, as
-they left the woods and began to climb the bare hill-side, Barney went
-on:
-
-"I've wanted a talk, too, Roger. I'm glad you managed this."
-
-"It doesn't rob anyone of you, does it," said Oldmeadow. "We'll get to
-Chelford in time to give you a good half-hour with them before your car
-comes for you."
-
-"That will be enough for Nancy," said Barney. "The less she sees of me,
-the better she's pleased. I've lots of things I want to say, Roger. Of
-course you understand that in every way it's a relief to be going out."
-
-"It settles things; or seems to settle them," said Oldmeadow. "They take
-another place at all events."
-
-"Yes; just that. They take another place. What difference does it make,
-after all, if a fellow has made a mess of his personal life when his
-personal life has ceased to count. I'm not talking mawkish sentiment
-when I say I hope I'll be killed--if I can be of some use first. I see
-no other way out of it. I'm sorry for Adrienne, after a fashion, for
-she's dished herself, too. We made a hopeless mistake in getting married
-and she knows it as well as I do; and when a man and woman don't love
-each other any longer it's the man's place to get out if he can."
-
-"It was about Adrienne I wanted to talk to you, Barney." For the first
-time in their long friendship Oldmeadow felt that he spoke to an equal.
-Barney had at last ceased to be a boy. "I've seen her, since seeing you
-that last time in the train."
-
-"Well?" Barney inquired, as Oldmeadow paused. "What have you got to say
-to me about Adrienne, Roger? You've not said very much, from the
-beginning; but everything you have said has been true and I've forgotten
-none of it. I'm the more inclined," and he smiled with a slight
-bitterness, "to listen to you now."
-
-"That's just the trouble," Oldmeadow muttered. "You've forgotten
-nothing. That's what I feel, with remorse. That it was I who helped to
-spoil things for you both, from the beginning. You'd not have seen her
-defects as you did if I hadn't shown them to you; and if you hadn't seen
-them you'd have adjusted yourselves to each other and have found them
-out together. She'd not have resented your finding them out in the
-normal course of your shared lives. It's been my opinion of her, in the
-background of both your minds, that has envenomed everything."
-
-Barney listened quietly. "Yes," he assented. "That's all true enough. As
-far as it goes. I mightn't have seen if you hadn't shown me. But I can't
-regret you did show me, for anything else would have been to have gone
-through life blind; as blind as Adrienne is herself. And it's because
-she can't stand being seen through that she revealed so much more; so
-much that you didn't see and that I had to find out for myself. What you
-saw was absurdity and inexperience; they're rather loveable defects; I
-think I accepted them from the beginning, because of all the other
-things I believed in her. You said, too, you remember, that she'd never
-know she was wrong. Well, it's worse than that. She'll never know she's
-wrong and she won't bear it that you should think her anything but
-right. She's rapacious. She's insatiable. Nothing but everything will
-satisfy her. You must be down on your knees, straight down, before her;
-and if you're not, she has no use for you. She turns to stone and you
-break your head and your heart against her. It's hatred Adrienne has
-felt for me, Roger, and I'm afraid I've felt it for her, too. She's done
-things and said things that I couldn't have believed her capable of;
-mean things; clever things; cruelly clever that get you right on the
-raw; things I can't forget. There's much more in her than you saw at the
-beginning. I was right rather than you about that; only they weren't
-the things I thought."
-
-Oldmeadow walked, cutting at the withered way-side grasses with his
-cane. Barney's short, slow sentences seemed to sting him as they came.
-He had to adjust himself to their smart; to adjust himself to the
-thought of this malignant Adrienne. Yet what he felt was not all
-surprise; he had foreseen, suspected, even this. "I know," he said at
-last; "I mean, I can see that it would happen just like that."
-
-"It did happen just like that," said Barney. "I don't claim to have been
-an angel or anything like one. I gave her as good as I got, or nearly,
-sometimes, no doubt. But I know that it wasn't my fault. I know it was
-Adrienne who spoiled everything."
-
-They had come out now on the upland road. The country dropped away
-beneath them wrapped in the dull mole-colour, the distant, dull
-ultramarines of the November afternoon. The smell of burning weeds was
-in the air and, in the west, a long, melancholy sheet of advancing
-rain-cloud hid the sun. Oldmeadow wondered if he and Barney would ever
-walk there together again, and his mind plunged deep into the past, the
-many years of friendship to which this loved country had been a
-background.
-
-"Barney," he said, "what I wanted to say is this: All that you feel is
-true; I'm sure of it. But other things are true, too. I've seen her and
-I've changed about her. If I was right before, I'm right now. She's been
-blind because she didn't know she could be broken. Well, she's beginning
-to break."
-
-"Is she?" said Barney, and his quiet was implacable. "I can quite
-imagine that, you know. Everyone, except poor Palgrave--all the rest of
-us, have found out that she's not the beautiful benignant being she
-thought she was, and that bewilders her and makes her pretty wretched,
-no doubt."
-
-Oldmeadow waited a moment. "I want you to see her," he said. "Don't be
-cruel. You are a little cruel, you know. It's because you are thinking
-of her abstractly; remembering only how she has hurt you. If you could
-see her, see how unhappy she is, you'd feel differently. That's what I
-want you to do. That's what I beg you to do, Barney."
-
-"I can't," said Barney after a moment. "That I can't do, Roger. It's
-over. She might want me back if she could get me back adoring her. It's
-only so she'd want me. But it's over. It's more than over. There's
-something else." Barney's face showed no change from its sad fixity.
-"You were right about that, too. It's Nancy I ought to have married.
-It's Nancy I love. And Adrienne knows it."
-
-At this there passed before Oldmeadow's mind the memory of the small,
-dark, hurrying figure, the memory of the words she had spoken: "Some
-things are like living creatures; and they can die. They can die."
-
-He felt rather sick. "In that case, how can you blame your wife?" he
-muttered. "Doesn't that explain it all?"
-
-"No, it doesn't explain it all." There was no fire of self-justification
-in Barney's voice. It was as fixed and sad as his face. "It was only
-after Adrienne made me so wretched I began to find it out. She was
-jealous of Nancy from the beginning, of course. But then she was jealous
-of everything that wasn't, every bit of it, hers. She had no reason for
-jealousy. No man was ever more in love than I was with Adrienne. Even
-now I don't feel for Nancy what I felt for her. It's something, I
-believe, one only feels once and if it burns out it burns out for ever.
-With Nancy, it's as if I had come home; and Adrienne and I were parted
-before I knew that I was turning to her."
-
-They had begun the final descent into Chelford and the wind now brought
-a fine rain against their faces. Neither spoke again until the grey
-roofs of the village came into sight at a turning of the road. "About
-money matters, Roger," Barney said. "Mother and Meg and Barbara. If you
-get through, and I don't, will you see to them for me? I've appointed
-you my trustee. I told Adrienne last summer that I couldn't take any of
-her money any longer, so that, of course, with my having thrown up the
-city job and taken on the farms, my affairs are in a bit of a mess. But
-I hope they'll be able to go on at Coldbrooks all right. Palgrave will
-have Coldbrooks if I don't come back, and perhaps you'll be able to
-prevent him handing it over to his Socialist friends."
-
-"Palgrave would be safely human if it came to taking care of his mother
-and sisters," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Would he?" said Barney. "I don't know."
-
-Across the village green the lights of The Little House shone at them.
-The curtains were still undrawn and, as they waited at the door, they
-could see Nancy in the drawing-room, sitting by the fire alone.
-
-"I want you to come in with me, please, Roger," said Barney. "Nancy
-hasn't felt it right to be very kind to me of late and she'll be able
-to be kinder if you are there. You'll know, you'll see if a chance comes
-for me to say what I want to say to her. You might leave us for a moment
-then."
-
-"You have hardly more than a half-hour, you know," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"One can say a good deal in a half-hour," Barney replied.
-
-Nancy had risen and, as they entered, she came forward, trying to smile
-and holding out her hand to each. But Oldmeadow was staying there. He
-was not going in half an hour. There was no reason why Nancy should give
-him her hand and Barney, quietly, took both her hands in his. "It's
-good-bye, then, Nancy, isn't it?" he said.
-
-They stood there in the firelight together, his dear young people, both
-so pale, both so fixedly looking at each other, and Nancy still tried to
-smile as she said, "It's dear of you to have come." But her face
-betrayed her. It was sick with the fear that, in conquering her own
-heart, she should hurt Barney's; Barney's, whom she might never see
-again. Oldmeadow went on to the fire and stood, his back to them,
-looking down at it.
-
-"Oh, no, it's not; not dear at all," Barney returned. "You knew I'd come
-to say good-bye, of course. Why haven't you been over to see me, you and
-Aunt Monica? I've asked you often enough."
-
-"You mustn't scold me to-day, Barney, since it's good-bye. We couldn't
-come," said Nancy.
-
-"It's never I who scold you. It's you who scold me. Not openly, I know,"
-said Barney, "but by implication; punish me, by implication. I quite
-understood why you haven't come. Well, I want things to be clear now.
-Roger's here, and I want to say them before him, because he's been in it
-all since the beginning. It's because of Adrienne you've never come; and
-changed so much in every way towards me."
-
-He had kept her hands till then, but Oldmeadow heard now that she drew
-away from him. For a moment she did not speak; and then it was not to
-answer him. "Have you said good-bye to her, Barney?"
-
-"No; I haven't," Barney answered. "I'm not going to say good-bye to
-Adrienne, Nancy. It must be plain to you by this time that Adrienne and
-I have parted. What did it all mean but that?"
-
-"It didn't mean that to her. She never dreamed it was meaning that,"
-said Nancy.
-
-"Well, she said it, often enough," Barney retorted.
-
-"Barney, please listen to me," said Nancy. "You must let me speak. She
-never dreamed it was meaning that. If she was unkind to you it was
-because she could not believe it would ever mean parting. She had
-started wrong; by holding you to blame; after the baby; when you and
-Roger so hurt her pride. And then she wasn't able to go back. She wasn't
-able to see it all so differently--just to get you back. It would have
-seemed wrong to her; a weakness, just because she longed so. And then,
-most of all, she believed you loved her enough to come of yourself."
-
-"I tried to," said Barney, in the sad, bitter voice of the hill-side
-talk with Oldmeadow. "You see, you don't know everything, Nancy, though
-you know so much. I tried to again and again."
-
-"Yes. I know you did. But only on your own terms. And by then I had come
-in. Oh, yes, I had, Barney. You didn't know it. It was long, long before
-you knew. But I knew it; and so did she and it was more than she could
-bear. What woman could bear it? I couldn't have, in her place." Tears
-were in Nancy's voice.
-
-"It's queer, Nancy," said Barney, "that--barring Palgrave, who doesn't
-count--you and Roger are the only two people she has left to stick up
-for her. Roger's just been saying all that to me, you know. The two she
-tried to crab whenever she got a chance. Well, say it's my fault, then.
-Say that I've been faithless to my wife and fallen in love with another
-woman. The fact is there, and you've said it now yourself. I don't love
-her any longer. I shall never love her again. And I love you. I love
-you, Nancy, and it's you I ought to have married; would have married, I
-believe, if I hadn't been a blinded fool. I love you, and I can say it
-now because this may be the end of everything. Don't let her spoil this,
-too. Nancy darling, look at me. Can't you consent to forget Adrienne for
-this one time, when we may never see each other again?"
-
-"I can't forget her! I can't forget her!" Nancy sobbed. "I mustn't.
-She's miserable. She hasn't stopped loving you. And she's your wife."
-
-"Do you want to make me hate her?"
-
-"Oh, Barney--that is cruel of you."
-
-There was a silence and in it Oldmeadow heard Barney's car draw up at
-the gate. He took out his watch. There were only a few more moments left
-them. Not turning to them he said. "It does her no good, you know, Nancy
-dear."
-
-"No. It does her no good," Barney repeated. "But forgive me. I was
-cruel. I don't hate her. I'm sorry for her. It's simply that we ought
-never to have married. Forget it, Nancy, and forget her. Don't let it
-be, then, that I love you and don't love my wife. Let it be in the old
-way. As if she'd never come. As if I'd come to say good-bye to my
-cousin; to my dearest friend on earth. Look at me. Give me your hands.
-It's your face I want to take with me."
-
-"Five minutes, Barney," Oldmeadow whispered, as he went past them. Nancy
-had given him her hands; she had lifted her face to his, and Barney's
-arms had closed around her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-Mrs. Averil was in the hall. "Give them another moment," he said. "I'm
-going outside."
-
-Tears were in his own eyes. He stepped out on to the flagged path of the
-little plot in front of the house where strips of turf and rose-beds ran
-between the house and the high wall. Between the clipped holly-trees at
-the gate he saw Barney's car, and its lights, the wall between, cast a
-deep shadow over the garden.
-
-The rain was falling thickly now and he stood, feeling it on his face,
-filled with a sense of appeasement, of accomplishment. They were
-together at last. It was not too late. At such a time, when all the
-world hung on the edge of an abyss, to be together for a moment might
-sum up more of real living than many happy years. They knew each other's
-hearts and what more could life give its creatures than that
-recognition.
-
-Suddenly, how he did not know, for there was no apparent movement and
-his eyes were fixed on the pallid sky, he became aware that a figure was
-leaning against the house in the shadow beside him. His eyes found it
-and it was familiar. Yet he could not believe his eyes.
-
-She was leaning back, her hands against the wall on either side, and he
-saw, with the upper layer of perception that so often blunts a violent
-emotion, that her feet were sunken in the mould of Mrs. Averil's
-rose-bed and that the cherished shoots of the new climbing rose were
-tangled in her clothes. The open window was but a step away.
-
-She had come since they had come. She had crept up. She had looked
-in--for how long?--and had fallen back, casting out her arms so that it
-might not be to the ground. Her eyes were closed; but she had heard and
-seen him. As he stood before her, aghast, unable to find a word, he
-heard her mutter: "Take me away, please."
-
-Barney's car blocked the egress of the gate and Barney might emerge at
-any moment. He leaned towards her and found that she was intricately
-caught in the rose. Her hat with its veil, her sleeve, her hair, were
-all entangled.
-
-Dumbly, patiently, she stood, while, with fumbling fingers and terror
-lest they should be heard within--Mrs. Averil's voice now reached him
-from the drawing-room--Oldmeadow released her and, his fingers deeply
-torn by the thorns, he was aware, in all the tumult of his thought, more
-than of the pain, of the wet fragrance of the roses that surrounded her.
-He shared what he felt to be her panic.
-
-She had come hoping to see Barney; she had come to say good-bye to
-Barney, who would not come to her; and his heart sickened for her at the
-shameful seeming of her plight. She knew now that it must be her hope
-never to see Barney again.
-
-There was a narrow passage, leading to the lawn and garden, between the
-house and the stable walls. Thickly grown with ivy, showing only a
-narrow opening above, where chimneys and gables cut against the sky, it
-was nearly as dark as a tunnel, and into this place of hiding he half
-led, half carried the unfortunate woman.
-
-With the darkness, the pungent smell of the wet ivy closed thickly,
-ominously about them. It was as if he and Adrienne Toner were buried
-there together. He heard a maid laugh far away and a boy passed on the
-green stridently whistling "Tipperary." It was like hearing, in the
-grave, the sounds of the upper world.
-
-Adrienne leaned against the wall. The ivy closing round her, nearly
-obliterated her, but he could dimly see the grey disk of her face,
-showing the unexpectedness of contour that reveals itself in the faces
-of the dead. The trivial features were erased and only a shape of grief
-remained, strangely august and emotionless.
-
-An eternity seemed to pass before the front door opened and Mrs.
-Averil's voice, steadied to a galvanized cheerfulness, came, half
-obliterated to a wordless rhythm. Barney's voice answered her, and his
-steps echoed on the flagged path. "Say good-bye to Roger for me if I
-don't see him on the road!" he called out from the gate. Then the car
-coughed, panted; the horn croaked out its cry and, above them, a shaft
-of light across the ivy, of which he had till then been unaware, flitted
-suddenly away, leaving the darkness more visible.
-
-He heard then that she was weeping.
-
-Putting his arm behind her, for the rain fell heavily and the ivy was
-drenched with it, he drew her forward and for a little while it was
-almost against his breast that she lay while her very heart dissolved
-itself in tears.
-
-She had come, he knew it all, with a breakdown of her pride, with a last
-wild hope and, perhaps, a longing to atone, believing that she might
-snatch a word somewhere with her husband, and find her way, at this
-last moment, back to the heart she had so alienated. She had seen all.
-She had heard all. He was sure of it. It had been as an outcast that he
-had found her leaning there. He understood her through and through and
-the tender heaviness that had already so often visited his heart flooded
-it to suffocation.
-
-Among her sobs, he heard her, at last, speaking to him. "Even Palgrave
-doesn't know. He told me--only this afternoon--that Barney was here. I
-thought I might find him. I was going to wait in the road. And when I
-got here there was no car and I was afraid that there was a mistake.
-That I had missed him. And I went up to the house; to the open window;
-and looked in; to see if he was there. It was not jealousy: not now. I
-did not mean to be an eavesdropper. But, when I saw them, I stayed and
-listened. It was not jealousy," she repeated. "It was because I had to
-know that there was no more hope."
-
-"Yes," said Oldmeadow gently, while, with long pauses, she spoke on and
-on; to the impartial judge, to the one sure refuge; and he said "Yes"
-again, gently, after she had finished; a long time after. She still half
-lay against his breast. He had never felt such an infinite tenderness
-towards any creature; not since his boyhood and his mother's death.
-
-She drew away from him at last. "Take me," she said. "There is a train;
-back to Oxford." She had ceased to weep. Her voice was hoarse and faint.
-
-"Did you walk up from the station? You're not fit to walk back. I can
-get a trap. There's a man just across the green."
-
-"No. Walking, please. I would be recognized. They might know me. I can
-walk. If you will help me."
-
-He drew her arm through his. "Lean on me," he said. "We'll go slowly."
-
-They went past the drawing-room windows and, softly opening, softly
-shutting, through the gate. The road, when it turned the corner, left
-the village behind; between its rarely placed trees, vague silhouettes
-against the sky that seemed of one texture with them, it showed its
-mournful pallor for only a little space before them; there was not
-enough light left in the sky to glimmer on its pools. The fields, on
-either side, vanished into obscurity. Pale cattle, once, over a hedge,
-put disconsolate heads and lowed and a garrulous dog, as they passed by,
-ran out from a way-side farm-yard, smelt at their heels, growled
-perfunctorily and, having satisfied his sense of duty, went back to his
-post. The sense of dumb emptiness was so complete that it was only after
-they had gone a long way that he knew that she was weeping and the soft,
-stifling sounds seemed only a part of nature's desolation.
-
-Her head bent down, she stumbled on, leaning on his arm, and from time
-to time she raised her handkerchief and pressed it to her mouth and
-nose. He did not say a word; nor did she.
-
-As he led her along, submissive to her doom, it was another feeling of
-accomplishment that overwhelmed him; the dark after the radiant; after
-Nancy and Barney, he and Adrienne. It was this, from their first
-meeting, that he had been destined to mean to her. She was his appointed
-victim. He had killed, as really as if with a knife, the girl whom he
-had seen at Coldbrooks, in the sunlight, on that Sunday morning in
-spring, knowing no doubts. She had then held the world in her hands and
-a guileless, untried heaven had filled her heart. Between her and this
-crushed and weeping woman there seemed no longer any bond; unless it was
-the strange aching that, in his heart, held them both together.
-
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat in Mrs. Aldesey's drawing-room and, the tea-table between
-them, Mrs. Aldesey poured out his tea. So it was, after three years,
-that they found each other. So it was, all over the world, Oldmeadow
-said to himself, that the tea-table, or its equivalent, reasserted
-itself in any interval where the kindly amenities of human intercourse
-could root themselves; though the world rocked and flames of anarchy
-rimmed its horizons.
-
-It was more real, he felt that now, to sit and look at Lydia over her
-tea than to parch on Eastern sands and shiver in Western trenches; from
-the mere fact that the one experience became a nightmare while the other
-was as natural as waking at dawn. Horrors became the dropped stitches of
-life; and though if there were too many of them they would destroy the
-stocking, the stocking itself was made up of tea-table talks and walks
-in the woods with Nancy. He had just come from Coldbrooks.
-
-So he put it, trivially, to himself, and he felt the need of clinging to
-triviality. The dropped stitches had been almost too much for him and
-the nightmare, at times, had seemed the only reality. At times he had
-known a final despair of life and even now he remembered that the worst
-might still come. One might be called upon to face the death of the
-whole order of civilization. Faith required one, perhaps, to recognize
-that the human spirit was bound up, finally, with no world order and
-unless one could face its destruction as one had to face the death of a
-loved individual, one was not secure of the spiritual order that
-transcended all mundane calamity. He believed, or hoped, that during
-these last three years, in Gallipoli, Egypt and Palestine, when, to the
-last fibre, he had felt his faiths tested, he had learned to be ready
-for the great relinquishment, should it be required of him; and it was
-therefore the easier to doff that consciousness, as he might have doffed
-a sword, and think of Lydia and of the order that still survived and
-that she still stood for.
-
-Lydia did not look the worse for the war; indeed she looked the better.
-She looked as if, in spite of long days in the hospital, she digested
-better and, in spite of air-raids, slept better, and as they talked,
-finding their way back to intimacy by the comparing of such
-superficialities, she told him that for years she hadn't been so strong
-or well. "Nothing is so good for you, I've found out, as to feel that
-you are being used; being used by something worth while. People like
-myself must keep still about our experiences, for we've had none that
-bear talking of. But even the others, even the people bereaved
-unspeakably, are strangely lifted up. And I believe that the populace
-enjoys the air-raids rather than the reverse; they give them a chance of
-feeling that they are enduring something, too; with good-humour and
-pluck. If anyone is pessimistic about the effect of war on average human
-nature, I should only ask them to come and talk to our men at the
-hospital. Of course, under it all, there's the ominous roar in one's
-ears all the time."
-
-"Do you mean the air-raids?" he asked her and, shaking her head,
-showing him that she, too, had seen with him and, he believed, with him
-accepted: "No; I mean the roar of nation after nation collapsing into
-the abyss. A sort of tumbril roar of civilization, Roger. And, for that,
-there's always the last resource of going gallantly to the guillotine.
-But all the same, I believe we shall pull through."
-
-It was the spring of 1918 and one needed faith to believe it. She asked
-him presently about his friends at Coldbrooks. He had gone to Coldbrooks
-for three days of his one week's leave. After this he went to France.
-
-"What changes for you there, poor Roger," said Mrs. Aldesey.
-
-"Yes. Terrible changes. Palgrave dead and Barney broken. Yet, do you
-know, it's not as sad as it was. Something's come back to it. Nancy sits
-by him and holds his hand and is his joy and comfort."
-
-"Will he recover?"
-
-"Not in the sense of being really mended. He'll go on crutches, always,
-if he gets up. But the doctors now hope that the injury to the back
-isn't permanent."
-
-"And Meg's married," said Mrs. Aldesey after a little pause. "Have you
-seen her?"
-
-"No. She runs a hospital in the country, at her husband's place, Nancy
-tells me; and is very happy."
-
-"Very. Has a fine boy, and is completely reinstated. It's a remarkable
-ending to the story, isn't it? She met him at the front, you know,
-driving her ambulance; and he has twice as much in him as poor Eric
-Hayward."
-
-"Remarkable. Yet Meg's a person who only needs her chance. She's the
-sort that always comes out on top."
-
-"Does it comfort her mother a little for all she's suffered to see her
-on top?"
-
-"It almost comically comforts her. All the same, Eleanor Chadwick has
-her depths. Nothing will ever comfort her for Palgrave's death."
-
-"I understand that," said Mrs. Aldesey. "Nothing could. How she must
-envy the happy mothers whose boys were killed at the front. To have
-one's boy die in prison as a conscientious objector must be the
-bitterest thing the war has given any mother to bear."
-
-"He was a dear boy," said Oldmeadow. "Heroically wrong-minded." He could
-hardly bear to think of Palgrave.
-
-"He wasn't alone, you know," said Mrs. Aldesey after a moment. Something
-was approaching that he would rather not have to speak of; a name he
-would so much rather not name. And, evading it, feebly, he said, "His
-mother got to him in time, I know."
-
-"Yes. But all the time. She went and lived near the prison. Adrienne
-Toner I mean."
-
-Her eyes were on him and he hoped that no readjustment of his features
-was visible. "Oh, yes. Nancy told me that," he said.
-
-"What's become of her, Roger?" Mrs. Aldesey asked. "Since Charlie was
-killed the Lumleys have lived in the country and I hardly see them. I
-haven't heard a word of her for years."
-
-He was keeping his eyes on her and he knew from her expression that he
-showed some strain or some distress.
-
-"Nor have I. Nancy said that they hadn't either. She went away, after
-Palgrave's death. Disappeared completely."
-
-"Nancy told you, of course, about the money; the little fortune she gave
-Palgrave, so that he could leave it to his mother?"
-
-"Oh, yes. Nancy wrote to me of that."
-
-"It was cleverly contrived, wasn't it. They are quite tied up to it,
-aren't they; whatever they may feel. No one could object to her giving a
-fortune to the boy she'd ruined. I admired that in her, I must confess;
-the way she managed it. And then her disappearance."
-
-"Very clever indeed," said Oldmeadow. "All that remains for her to do
-now is to manage to get killed. And that's easily managed. Perhaps she
-is killed."
-
-He did not intend that his voice should be emptier or dryer, yet Lydia
-looked at him with a closer attention.
-
-"Barney and Nancy could get married then," she said.
-
-"Yes. Exactly. They could get married."
-
-"That's what you want, isn't it, Roger?"
-
-"Want her to be killed, or them to be married?"
-
-"Well, as you say, so many people _are_ being killed. One more or less,
-if it's in such a good cause as their marriage--"
-
-"It's certainly a good cause. But I don't like the dilemma," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-He knew from the way she looked at him, discreet and disguised as her
-recognition was, that he was hiding something from her. Casting about
-his mind, in the distress that took the form of confusion, he could
-himself find nothing that he hid, or wished to hide, unless it was the
-end of Adrienne's story as Barney's wife. That wasn't for him to show;
-ever; to anyone.
-
-"Perhaps she's gone back to America," said Mrs. Aldesey presently,
-"California, you know. Or Chicago. She may very well be engaged in great
-enterprises out there that we never hear of. They'd be sure to be great,
-wouldn't they."
-
-"I suppose they would."
-
-"You saw her once more, didn't you, at the time you saw Palgrave," Mrs.
-Aldesey went on. "Lady Lumley told me of that. And how kind you had
-been. Adrienne had spoken of it. You were sorry for them both, I
-suppose; for her as well as for him, in spite of everything. Or did she
-merely take it for granted that the kindness to him extended to her?"
-
-"Not at all. It was for her too," said Oldmeadow, staring a little and
-gathering together, after this lapse of time that seemed so immense, his
-memories of that other tea-table set up in the chaos: Palgrave's
-tea-table on that distant day in Oxford. What was so confusing him was
-his consciousness that it hadn't been the last time he had seen
-Adrienne. "I was as sorry for her as for him," he went on. "Sorrier.
-There was so much more in her than I'd supposed. She was capable of
-intense suffering."
-
-"In losing her husband's affections, you mean? You never suspected her
-of being inhuman, surely? Lady Lumley blamed poor Barney for all that
-sad story. But, even from her account, I could see his side very
-plainly."
-
-"Perhaps I did think her inhuman. At all events I thought her
-invulnerable."
-
-"Yes. I remember. With all her absurdity you thought she had great
-power." Mrs. Aldesey looked at him thoughtfully. "And it was when you
-found she hadn't that you could be sorry for her."
-
-"Not at all," said Oldmeadow again. "I still think she has great power.
-People can have power and go to pieces."
-
-"Did she go to pieces? That day in Oxford? I can't imagine her in
-pieces, you know."
-
-He had a feeling of drawing back; or of drawing Adrienne back. "In the
-sense of being so unhappy, so obviously unhappy, over Palgrave," he
-said.
-
-He saw that Lydia would have liked to go on questioning, as, of course,
-it would have been perfectly natural for her to do. Was not Adrienne
-Toner and her absurdity one of their pet themes? Yet she desisted. She
-desisted and it was because she felt some change in him; some shrinking
-and some pain. "Well, let's hope that she is happy, now, or as happy as
-she can be, poor thing, doing great deeds in America," she said. And she
-turned the talk back to civilization and its danger.
-
-They talked a good deal about civilization during their last three days
-together. He wanted things, during these three days of mingled recovery
-and farewell, to be as happy as possible between him and his friend, for
-he knew that Lydia's heart was heavy, for him and not for civilization.
-The front to which he was going was more real to her, because it was
-much nearer, and his peril was more real than during his absence in
-distant climes. He felt himself that the French front, at this special
-time, would probably make an end of him and, for the first time since
-their early friendship, he knew conjecture as to his relation with
-Lydia; wondered, if it had not been for Mr. Aldesey in New York, whether
-Lydia might have been in love with him, and realized, with a curious
-sense of anxiety and responsibility, that her friendship for him now was
-the closest tie in her life. The war might to her, too, mean irreparable
-loss. And he was sorry that it was so; sorry to think that the easy,
-happy intercourse had this hidden depth of latent suffering.
-
-Lydia's feeling, and its implications, became the clearer to him when,
-on their last evening together, she said to him suddenly: "Perhaps
-you'll see her over there."
-
-He could not pretend not to know whom she meant, nor could he pretend to
-himself not to see that if it troubled Lydia that he should be sorry for
-Adrienne that could only be because she cared far more for him than he
-had ever guessed.
-
-He said, as easily as he could manage it, for the pressure of his
-realizations made him feel a little queer: "Not if she's in America."
-
-"Ah, but perhaps she's come back from America," said Mrs. Aldesey.
-"She's a great traveller. What will you do with her if you do find her?
-Bring her back to Barney?"
-
-"Hardly that," he said. "There'd be no point in bringing her back to
-Barney, would there?"
-
-"Well, then, what would you do with her?" Mrs. Aldesey smiled, as if
-with a return to their old light dealing with the theme, while, still in
-her nurse's coiffe and dress, she leaned back against her chair.
-
-"What would she do with me, rather, isn't it?" he asked. And he, too,
-tried to be light.
-
-"She'll be mended then, you think? Able to do things to people again?"
-
-"I'm not at all afraid of her, you know. She never did me any harm," he
-said.
-
-"Because you were as strong as she, you mean. She did other people harm,
-surely. You warned me once to keep away from her unless I wanted to lose
-my toes and fingers," Mrs. Aldesey still smiled. "She does make people
-lose things, doesn't she?"
-
-"Well, she makes them gain things, too. Fortunes for instance. Perhaps
-if I find her, she'll give me a fortune."
-
-"But that's only when she's ruined you," she reminded him.
-
-"And it's she who's ruined now," he felt bound to remind her; no longer
-lightly.
-
-Leaning back in her chair, her faded little face framed in white, Mrs.
-Aldesey looked at once younger yet more tired than he had ever seen her
-look and she sat for a little while silent; as if she had forgotten
-Adrienne Toner and were thinking only of their parting. But all her
-gaiety had fallen from her as she said at last: "I can be sorry for her,
-too; if she's really ruined. If she still loves him when he has ceased
-to care for her. Does she, do you think?"
-
-With the question he seemed to see a fire-lit room and lovers who had
-found each other and to smell wet roses. Lydia was coming too near; too
-near the other figure, outside the window, fallen back with outstretched
-arms against the roses. And again he felt himself softly, cautiously,
-disentangle the sleeve, the hair, felt himself draw Adrienne away into
-the darkness where the smell was now of wet ivy and where he could see
-only the shape of an accepting grief.
-
-"How could I know?" he said. "She was very unhappy when I last saw her.
-But three years have passed and people can mend in three years."
-
-"Especially in America," Mrs. Aldesey suggested. "It's a wonderful place
-for mending. Let's hope she's there. Let's hope that we shall never, any
-of us, ever hear of her again. That would be much the happiest thing,
-wouldn't it?"
-
-He was obliged to say that it would certainly be much the happiest
-thing; and he was too unhappy about Lydia to be able to feel angry with
-her. He knew how tired she must be when, for the first time in their
-long friendship, she must know that she was not pleasing him, yet not be
-able to help herself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-"Good Lord!" Oldmeadow heard himself groaning.
-
-Even as he took possession of his physical suffering he knew that there
-was satisfaction in suffering, at last, himself. Until now the worst
-part of war had been to see the sufferings of others. This was at last
-the real thing; but it was so mingled with acquiescence that it ceased
-to be the mere raw fact. "We're all together, now," he thought, and he
-felt himself, even as he groaned, lifted on a wave of beatitude.
-
-Until now he had not, as a consciousness, known anything. There was a
-shape in his memory, a mere immense black blot shot with fiery lights.
-It must symbolize the moment when the shell struck him, bending, in the
-trench, over his watch and his calculations. And after that there were
-detached visions, the ceiling of a train where he had swung in a hammock
-bed, looking up; clean sheets, miraculously clean and the face of a
-black-browed nurse who reminded him of Trixie. The smell of chloroform
-was over everything. It bound everything together so that days might
-have passed since the black blot and since he lay here, again in clean
-sheets, the sweet, thick smell closing round him and a raging thirst in
-his throat. He knew that he had just been carried in from the operating
-room and he groaned again "Good Lord," feeling the pain snatch as if
-with fangs and claws at his thigh and belly, and muttered, "Water!"
-
-Something sweet, but differently sweet from the smell, sharp, too, and
-insidious, touched his lips and opening them obediently, as a young bird
-opens its bill to the parent bird, he felt a swab passed round his
-parched mouth and saw the black-browed nurse. "Not water, yet, you
-know," she said. "This is lemon and glycerine and will help you
-wonderfully."
-
-He wanted to ask something about Paris and the long-distance gun firing
-on it every day and he seemed to see it over the edge of the trench, far
-away on the horizon of No-man's-land, a tiny city flaming far into the
-sky. But other words bubbled up and he heard himself crying: "Mother!
-Mother!" and remembered, stopping himself with an act of will, that they
-all said that when they were dying. But as he closed his eyes he felt
-her very near and knew that it would be sweet to die and find her.
-
-A long time must have passed. Was it days or only the time of daylight?
-It was night now and a shaded light shone from a recess behind him and
-thoughts, visions, memories raced through his mind. Nancy; Barney; he
-would never see them again, then: poor Lydia and civilization.
-"Civilization will see me out," he thought and he wondered if they had
-taken off the wings of the Flying Victory when they packed her.
-
-A rhythm was beating in his brain. Music was it? Something of Bach's? It
-gathered words to itself and shaped itself sentence by sentence into
-something he had heard? or read? Ah, he was glad to have found it.
-"Under the orders of your devoted officers you will march against the
-enemy or fall where you stand, facing the foe. To those who die I say:
-You will not die: you will enter living into immortality, and God will
-receive you into his bosom." He seemed to listen to the words as he
-lay, quietly smiling. But it was music after all for, as he listened,
-they merged into the "St. Matthew Passion." He had heard it, of course,
-with Lydia, at the Temple. But Lydia did not really care very much for
-Bach. She might care more for "Litanei." She had sung it standing beside
-him with foolish white roses over her ears. How unlike Lydia to wear
-those roses. And was it Lydia who stood there? A mental perplexity
-mingled with the physical pain and spoiled his peace. It was not
-Lydia's, that white face in the coffin with wet ivy behind it. What
-suffering was this that beat upon his heart? The music had faded all
-away and he saw faces everywhere, dying faces; and blood and terrible
-mutilations. All the suffering of the war, worse, far worse than the
-mere claws and fangs that tore at him. Dying boys choked out their
-breaths in agonies of conscious loneliness, yearning for faces they
-would never see again. Oh, how many he had seen die like that!
-Intolerable to watch them. And could one do nothing? "Cigarettes. Give
-them cigarettes," he tried to tell somebody. "And marmalade for
-breakfast; and phonographs, and then they will enter living into
-immortality"--No: he did not mean that. What did he mean? He could catch
-at nothing now. Thoughts were tossed and tumbled like the rubbish of
-wreckage from an inundated town on the deep currents of his anguish. A
-current that raced and seethed and carried him away. He saw it. Its
-breathless speed was like the fever in his blood. If it went faster he
-would lose his breath. Church-bells ringing on the banks lost theirs as
-he sped past so swiftly and made a trail of whining sound.--Effie!
-Effie! It was poor little Effie, drowning. He saw her wild, small face,
-battling. Bubbles boiled up about his cry.
-
-Suddenly the torrent was stilled. Without commotion, without tumult, it
-was stilled. There was a dam somewhere; it had stopped racing; he could
-get his breath. Still and slow; oh! it was delicious to feel that quiet
-hand on his forehead; his mother's hand, and to know that Effie was
-safe. He lay with closed eyes and saw a smooth waterfall sliding and
-curving with green grey depths into the lower currents of the stream. He
-remembered the stream well, now; one of his beloved French rivers; one
-of the smaller, sylvan rivers, too small for majesty; with silver
-poplars spaced against the sky on either bank and a small town, white
-and pink and pearly-grey, clear on the horizon. Tranquil sails were
-above him and the bells from the distant church-tower floated to him
-across the fields. Soundlessly, slowly, he felt himself borne into
-oblivion.
-
-The black-browed nurse was tending him next morning. "You are better,"
-she said, smiling at him. "You slept all night. No; it's a shame, but
-you mayn't have water yet." She put the lemon and glycerine to his lips.
-"The pain is easier, isn't it?"
-
-He said it was. He felt that he must not stir an inch so as to keep it
-easier, but he could not have stirred had he wanted to, for he was all
-tightly swathed and bandaged. He remembered something he wanted
-specially to ask: "Paris? They haven't got it yet?"
-
-"They'll never get it!" she smiled proudly. "Everything is going
-splendidly."
-
-The English surgeon was such a nice fellow. He had spectacles on a
-square-tipped nose and a square, chubby face; yet his hair was nearly
-white. Oldmeadow remembered, as if of days before the flood, that his
-name was a distinguished one. Perhaps it was morphia they gave him,
-after his wound was dressed, or perhaps he fainted. The day passed in a
-hot and broken stupor and at night the tides of fever rose again and
-carried him away. But, again, before he had lost his breath, before he
-had quite gone down into delirium, the quiet hand came and sent him,
-under sails, to sleep.
-
-Next day Oldmeadow knew, from the way the surgeon looked at him, that
-his case was grave. His face was grim as he bent over the dressing and
-he hurt horribly. They told him, when it was over, that he had been very
-brave, and, like a child, he was pleased that they should tell him so.
-But the pain was worse all day and the sense of the submerging fever
-imminent, and he lay with closed eyes and longed for the night that
-brought the hand. Hours, long hours passed before it came. Hours of
-sunlight when, behind his eyelids, he saw red, and hours of twilight
-when he saw mauve. Then, for a little while, it was a soft, dense grey
-he saw, like a bat's wing, and then the small light shone across his
-bed; he knew that the night had come, and felt, at last, the hand fall
-softly on his head.
-
-He lay for some time feeling the desired peace flow into him and then,
-through its satisfaction, another desire pushed up into his
-consciousness and he remembered that, more than about Paris, he had
-wanted to speak to the nurse about what she did for him and thank her.
-
-"It's you who make me sleep, isn't it," he said, lying with closed eyes
-under the soft yet insistent pressure. "I've never thanked you."
-
-She did not reply. She did not want him to talk. But he still wanted to.
-
-"I couldn't thank you last night," he said, "I can't keep hold of my
-thoughts. And when morning comes I seem to have forgotten everything
-about the night. You are the nurse who takes care of me in the daytime,
-too, aren't you?"
-
-Again, for a moment, there was no reply; and then a voice came. "No; I
-am the night nurse. Go to sleep now."
-
-It was a voice gentle, cold and soft, like snow. It was not an English
-voice and he had heard it before. Where had he heard it? Rooks were
-cawing and he saw a blue ribbon rolling, rolling out across a
-spring-tide landscape. This voice was not like a blue ribbon; it was
-like snow. Yet, when he turned his head under her hand, he looked round
-at Adrienne Toner.
-
-The first feeling that came uppermost in the medley that filled him at
-the sight of her was one of amused vexation. It was as if he went back
-to his beginnings with her, back to the rooks and the blue ribbon. "At
-it again!" was what he said to himself, and what he said aloud,
-absurdly, was: "Oh, come, now!"
-
-She did not lift her hand, but there was trouble on her face as she
-looked back at him. "I hoped you wouldn't see me, Mr. Oldmeadow," she
-said.
-
-He was reminded of Bacchus and the laying on of hands; but a classical
-analogy, even more ridiculous, came to him with her words. "Like Cupid
-and Psyche," he said. "The other way round. It's I who mustn't look."
-
-The trouble on her face became more marked and he saw that she imagined
-him to be delirious. He was not quite himself, certainly, or he would
-not have greeted Adrienne Toner thus, and he made an effort to be more
-decorous and rational as he said, "I'm very glad to see you again. Safe
-and sound: you know."
-
-She had always had a singular little face, but it had never looked so
-singular as now, seen from below with shadows from the light behind cast
-so oddly over it. The end of her nose jutted from a blue shadow and her
-eyes lay in deep hollows of blue. All that he was sure of in her
-expression was the gravity with which she made up her mind to humour
-him. "We want you to be safe and sound, too. Please shut your eyes and
-go to sleep."
-
-"All right; all right, Psyche," he murmured, and he knew it wasn't quite
-what he intended to say, yet in his flippancy he was taking refuge from
-something; from the flood of suffering that had broken over him the
-other night after he had seen that dead face with white roses over its
-ears. This queer face, half dissolved in blue and yellow, was not dead
-and the white coiffe came closely down about it. If he obeyed her he
-knew that she would keep the other faces away and he closed his eyes
-obediently and lay very still, seeing himself again as the good little
-boy being praised. This was Psyche; not Ariane. "Ariane ma soeur," he
-murmured. It was Ariane who had the white roses--or was it wet ivy? and
-after her face pressed all the other dying faces. "You'll keep them
-away, won't you?" he murmured, and he heard her say: "Yes; I'll keep
-them quite away," and, softly, a curtain of sleep fell before his eyes
-crossed by a thin drift of mythological figures.
-
-"I thought it was you who sent me to sleep," he said to the English
-nurse next day. He could hardly, in the morning light, believe it was
-not a dream.
-
-She smiled with an air of vicarious pride. "No indeed. I can't send
-people to sleep. It's our wonderful Mrs. Chadwick. She does a good deal
-more than put people to sleep. She cures people--oh, I wouldn't have
-believed it myself, till I saw it--who are at death's door. It's lucky
-for you and the others that we've got her here for a little while."
-
-"Where's here?" he asked after a moment.
-
-"Here's Boulogne. Didn't you know?"
-
-"I thought I heard the sea sometimes. It's for cases too bad, then, to
-be taken home. Get her here from where?"
-
-"From her hospital in the firing-line. Now that we're advancing at the
-front everything there is changed and she could come away for a little.
-Sir Kenneth's been begging her to come ever since he saw her. He knew
-she would work marvels here, too." The nice young nurse was exuberant in
-her darkness and rosiness with a Jewish streak of fervour in her lips
-and eyes. "It's a sort of rest for her," she added. "She's been badly
-wounded once. You can just see the scar, under her cap, on her forehead.
-And she nearly died of fever out in Salonika. She had a travelling
-ambulance there before she came to France."
-
-"It must be very restful for her," Oldmeadow remarked with a touch of
-his grim mirth, "if she has to sit up putting all your bad cases to
-sleep. Why haven't I heard of her and her hospital?"
-
-"It's not run in her name. It's an American hospital--she is
-American--called after her mother, I believe. The Pearl Ambulance is
-what it's called and everybody here knows about it; all of us nurses and
-doctors, I mean. Her organizing power is as wonderful as her cures; her
-influence over her staff. They all worship the ground she walks on."
-
-"Pearl, Pearl Toner," Oldmeadow was saying to himself. How complete, how
-perfect it was. And the nurse went on, delighted, evidently, to talk of
-an idol, and rather as if she were speaking of a special cure they had
-installed, a sort of Carrel treatment not to be found anywhere else:
-"Everything's been different since she came. It's almost miraculous to
-see what the mere touch of her hand can do. Matron says she wouldn't be
-surprised if it turned out she was a sort of nun and wore a hair shirt
-under her dress. Whatever she is, it makes one feel better and stronger
-just to see her and one would do anything for her just to have her smile
-at one. She has the most heavenly smile."
-
-It was all very familiar.
-
-"Ah, you haven't abandoned me after all, though I have found you out,"
-he said to Adrienne Toner that night.
-
-He was able at last to see her clearly as she came in, so softly that it
-was like a dream sliding into one's sleep. She was like a dream in her
-nurse's dress which, though so familiar on other women, seemed to
-isolate and make her strange. Her face was smaller than he had
-remembered it and had the curious look, docile yet stubborn, that one
-sees on the faces of dumb-mutes. She might have looked like that had
-she been deafened by the sound of so many bursting shells and lost the
-faculty of speech through doing much and saying nothing among scenes of
-horror. But she spoke to him, after all, as naturally as he spoke to
-her, saying, though with no touch of his lightness: "You mustn't talk,
-you know, if I come to make you sleep. Sir Kenneth wants sleep for you
-more than anything else."
-
-"I promise you to be good," said Oldmeadow. "But I'm really better,
-aren't I? and can talk a little first."
-
-"You are really better. But it will take a long time. A great deal of
-sleeping."
-
-"No one knew what had become of you," said Oldmeadow, and he remembered
-that he ought to be sorry that Adrienne Toner had not been killed.
-
-She hesitated, and then sat down beside him. He thought that she had
-been going to ask him something and then checked herself. "I can't let
-you talk," she said, and in her voice he heard the new authority; an
-authority gained by long submission to discipline.
-
-"Another night, then. We must talk another night," he murmured, closing
-his eyes, for he knew that he must not disobey her. All the same it was
-absurd that Adrienne Toner should be doing this for him; absurd but
-heavenly to feel her hand fall softly, like a warm, light bird, and
-brood upon his forehead.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-They never spoke of Coldbrooks, nor of Barney, nor of Palgrave; not
-once. Not once during all those nights that she sat beside him and made
-him sleep.
-
-He had heard from Coldbrooks, of course; letters came often now. And the
-dark young nurse had written for him since he could not yet write for
-himself. He had said no word of seeing Adrienne. Nor had he let them
-know how near to death he had been and, perhaps, still was. He would
-have liked to have seen Lydia and Nancy if he were to die; but most of
-all he wanted to be sure of not losing Adrienne. And he knew that were
-he to tell them, were they to come, Adrienne would go.
-
-She never spoke to him at all, he remembered--as getting stronger with
-every day, he pieced his memories of these nights together--unless he
-spoke to her; and she never smiled. And it came upon him one morning
-after he had read letters that brought so near the world from which she
-was now shut out, that she had, perhaps, never forgiven him. After all,
-though he could not see that he had been wrong, she had everything to
-forgive him and the thought made him restless. That night, for the first
-time, she volunteered a remark. His temperature had gone up a little. He
-must be very quiet and go to sleep directly.
-
-"Yes; I know," he said. "It's because of you. Things I want to say. I'm
-really so much better. We can't go on like this, can we," he said,
-looking up at her as she sat beside him. "Why, you might slip out of my
-life any day, and I might never hear of you again."
-
-She sat looking down at him, a little askance, though gentle still, if
-gentle was the word for her changed face. "That's what I mean to do,"
-she said.
-
-"Oh, but--" Oldmeadow actually, in his alarm and resentment, struggled
-up on an elbow--"that won't do. I want to see you, really see you, now
-that I'm myself again. I want to talk with you--now that I can talk
-coherently. I want to ask you; well, I won't ask it now." She had put
-out her hand, her small, potent hand, and quietly pressed him back, and
-down upon his pillow while her face took on its look of almost stern
-authority. "I'll be good. But promise me you'll not go without telling
-me. And haven't you questions to ask, too?"
-
-Her face kept its severity, but, as he found this last appeal, her eyes
-widened, darkened, looked, for a moment, almost frightened.
-
-"I know that Barney is safe," she said. "I have nothing to ask."
-
-"Well; no; I see." He felt that he had been guilty of a blunder and it
-made him fretful. "For me, then. Not for you. Promise me. I won't be
-good unless you promise me. You can't go off and leave me like that."
-
-With eyes still dilated, she contemplated this rebellion.
-
-"You must promise me something, then," she said after a moment.
-
-He felt proud, delighted, as if he had gained a victory over her.
-
-"Done. If it's not too hard. What is it?"
-
-"You won't write to anybody. You won't tell anybody that you've seen me.
-Only Lady Lumley knows that I am here. And she has promised not to tell.
-Probably, soon, I shall have left France for ever."
-
-"I won't tell. I won't write. I can keep secrets as well as Lady Lumley.
-She does keep them, you know. So it's a compact."
-
-"Yes. It's a compact. You'll never tell them; and I won't go without
-letting you know. I promise. Now go to sleep."
-
-She laid her hand on his forehead, but, for a little while, he heard her
-breathing deeply and quickly and the sense of his blundering stayed with
-him so that sleep was longer in coming.
-
-All the same he was much better next day. He was able to sit up and had
-the glory and excitement of a chop for his midday dinner. And when the
-pleasant hour of tea arrived it was Adrienne herself who came in
-carrying the little tray.
-
-He had not seen her in daylight before and his first feeling was one of
-alarm, for, if she were afoot like this, in daylight, must it not mean
-that she was soon to leave the hospital? He felt shy of her, too, for,
-altered as she was by night, the day showed her as far more altered.
-Whether she seemed much older or much younger he could not have said.
-The coiffe, covering her forehead, and bound under her chin in a way
-peculiar to her, left only, as it were, the means of expression visible.
-
-She sat down by the window and looked out, glancing round from time to
-time as he drank his tea and it was she who found the calm little
-sentences, about the latest news from the front, the crashing of
-Bulgaria, that carried them on until he had finished. When he had pushed
-down his tray she turned her chair and faced him, folding her hands
-together on her white apron, and she said, and he knew that she had come
-to say it, "What was it you wanted to ask me?"
-
-He had had, while she sat at the window, her profile with the jutting
-nose, and her face, as it turned upon him now, made him think suddenly
-of a seagull. Questing, lonely, with vigilant eyes, it seemed to have
-great spaces before it; to be flying forth into empty spaces and to an
-unseen goal.
-
-"Are you going away, then?" He had not dared, somehow, to ask her
-before. He felt now that he could not talk until he knew.
-
-"Not yet," she said. "But I shall be going soon. The hospital is
-emptying and my nights on duty are very short. I have, really, only you
-and two others to take care of. That's why I am up so early to-day. And
-you are so much better that we can have a little talk; if you have
-anything to ask me."
-
-"It's this, of course," said Oldmeadow. "It seems to me you ought to
-dislike me. I misunderstood you in many ways. And now I owe you my life.
-Before we part I want to thank you and to ask you to forgive me."
-
-Her eyes, seen in daylight, were of the colour of distance, of arctic
-distances. That had always been their colour, though he had never before
-identified it.
-
-"But there is nothing to thank me for," she said. "I am here to take
-care of people."
-
-"Even people who misunderstood you. Even people you dislike. I know."
-He flushed, feeling that he had been duly snubbed. "But though you take
-care of everyone, anyone may thank you, too, mayn't they?"
-
-"I don't dislike you, Mr. Oldmeadow," she said after a moment. "And you
-didn't misunderstand me."
-
-"Oh," he murmured, more abashed than before. "I think so. Not, perhaps,
-what you did; but what you were. I didn't see you as you really were.
-That's what I mean."
-
-The perplexity, which had grown, even, to amazement, had left her eyes
-and she was intently looking at him. "There is nothing for you to be
-sorry for," she said. "Nothing for me to forgive. You were always
-right."
-
-"Always right? I can't take that, you know," said Oldmeadow, deeply
-discomposed. "You were blind, of course, and more sure of yourself than
-any of us can safely afford to be; but I wasn't always right."
-
-"Always. Always," she repeated. "I was blinder than you knew. I was more
-sure of myself."
-
-He lay looking at her and she looked back at him, but with a look that
-invited neither argument not protest. It remained remote and vigilant.
-She might have been the seagull looking down and noting, as she flew
-onward, that the small figure on the beach so far below had ceased to be
-that of an assailant in its attitude. How remote she was, white strange,
-fleeting creature! How near she had been once! The memory of how near
-rushed over his mind. He had, despite the delirious visions of her
-stricken face, hardly thought at all, since really seeing her again, of
-that last time. Everything had fitted itself on, rather, to his earliest
-memories of her, tinged all of them, it was true, with a deeper meaning,
-but not till this moment consciously admitting it. It rushed in now,
-poignant with the recovered smell of wet, dark ivy, the recovered sound
-of her stifled sobs as she had stumbled, broken, beside him in the rain.
-And with the memory came the desire that she should again be near.
-
-"Tell me," he said, "what are you going to do? You said you might be
-leaving France for ever. Shall you go back to America?"
-
-"I don't think so. Not for a long time," she answered. "There will be
-things to do over here, out of France, for a great many years I
-imagine."
-
-He hesitated, then took a roundabout way. "And when I get home, if,
-owing to you, I ever get there, may I not tell them that you're safe and
-sound? It would be happier for them to know that, wouldn't it?"
-
-Her vigilance still dwelt upon him as though she suspected in this
-sudden change of subject some craft of approach, but she answered
-quietly:
-
-"No; I think it will be happier for them to forget me. They will be told
-if I die. I have arranged for that."
-
-"They can't very well forget you," said Oldmeadow after a moment. "They
-must always wonder."
-
-"I know." She glanced away and trouble came into her face. "I know. But
-as much as possible. You must not make me real again by telling them.
-You have promised. You care for them. You know what I mean."
-
-"Yes; I've promised. And I see what you mean. But," said Oldmeadow
-suddenly, and this, of course, was what he had been coming to. "I don't
-want to forget. I want you to stay real. You must let me know what
-becomes of you, always, please."
-
-Astonishment, now, effaced her trouble. "You? Why?" she asked.
-
-He smiled a little. "Well, because, if you'll let me say it, I'm fond of
-you. I feel responsible for you. I've been too deeply in your life,
-you've been too deeply in mine, for us to disappear from each other.
-Don't you remember," he said, and he found it with a sense of
-achievement, ridiculous as it might sound, "how I held the tea-pot for
-you? That's what I mean. You must let me go on holding it."
-
-But she could feel no amusement. She was pressing her hands tightly
-together in her lap, her eyes were wide and her astonishment, he seemed
-to see, almost brought tears to them. "Fond? You?" she said. "Of me? Oh,
-no, Mr. Oldmeadow, I can't believe that. You are sorry, I know. You are
-very sorry. But you can't be fond."
-
-"And why not?" said Oldmeadow, and he raised himself on his elbow the
-more directly to challenge her. "Why shouldn't I be fond of you, pray?
-You must swallow it, for it's the truth and I've a right to my own
-feelings, I hope."
-
-She put aside the playfulness in which his grim earnest veiled itself.
-"Because you saw. Because you know. All about me. From the first."
-
-"Well?" he questioned after a moment, still raised on his elbow but now
-with the grimness unalloyed. "What of it?"
-
-"You remember what I was. You remember what you saw. You would have
-saved them from me if you could; and you couldn't. How can you be fond
-of a person who has ruined all their lives?"
-
-"Upon my soul," said Oldmeadow laughing, his eyes on hers, "you talk as
-though you'd been a Lucrezia Borgia! What were you worse than an
-exalted, stubborn, rather conceited girl? Things went wrong, I know, and
-partly because of me. But it wasn't all your fault, I'll swear it. And
-if it was, it was your mistake; not your crime."
-
-"Oh, no, no, no," said Adrienne, and the compulsion of his feeling had
-brought a note of anguish to her voice. "It wasn't that. It was worse
-than that. Don't forget. Don't think you are fond of me because I can
-make you sleep. It's always been so; I see it now--the power I've had
-over people; the horrible power. For power is horrible unless one is
-good; unless one is using it for goodness."
-
-"Well, so you were," Oldmeadow muttered, falling back on his pillow, her
-vehemence, her strange passion, almost daunting him. "It's not because
-you make me go to sleep that I'm fond of you. What utter rubbish!"
-
-"It is! it is!" she repeated. "I've seen it happen too often. It always
-happens. It binds people to me. It makes them cling to me as if I could
-give them life. It makes them believe me to be a sort of saint!"
-
-"Well, if you can help them with it? You have helped them. The war's
-your great chance in that, you'll admit. No one can accuse you of trying
-to get power over people now."
-
-"Perhaps not. I'm not thinking of what I may be accused of, but of what
-happens."
-
-"It doesn't happen with me. I was fond of you--well, we won't go back to
-that. And you did use it for goodness. Power came by the way and you
-took it. Of course."
-
-"I thought I was using it for goodness. I thought I was good. That was
-the foundation of everything. We must go back, Mr. Oldmeadow. You don't
-see as I thought you did. You don't understand. I didn't mean to set
-myself up above other people. I thought they were good, too. I was happy
-in my goodness, and when they weren't happy it seemed to me they missed
-something I had and that it was a mistake that I could set right for
-them. I'm going back to the very beginning. Long before you ever knew
-me. Everything fell into my hand. I loved people, or thought I did, and
-if they didn't love me I thought it their mistake. That was the way it
-looked to me, for my whole life long, until you came. I couldn't
-understand at first, when you came. I couldn't see what you thought. I
-believed that I could make you love me, too, and when I saw, for you
-made it plain, that you disliked me, it seemed to me worse than mistake.
-I thought that you must be against goodness; dangerous; the way you
-pushed me back--back--and showed me always something I had not thought I
-meant at the bottom of everything I did. I felt that I wanted to turn
-away from you and to turn people who loved me away from you, lest you
-should infect them. And all the while, all the while I was trying to
-escape--the truth that you saw and that I didn't." She stopped for a
-moment while, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow stared at her. Her breath
-seemed to fail her, and she leaned forward and put her elbows on her
-knees and bent her forehead on her joined hands. "It came at last. You
-remember how it came," she said, and the passion of protest had fallen
-from her voice. She spoke with difficulty. "Partly through you, and,
-partly, through my failure; I had never failed before. My failure with
-Barney. My failure to keep him and to get him back. I couldn't believe
-it at first. I struggled and struggled. You saw me. Everything turned
-against me. It was as if the world had changed its shape and colour when
-I struggled against it. Everything went down. And when I felt I wasn't
-loved, when I felt myself going down, with all the rest, I became bad.
-Bad, bad," she repeated, and her voice, heavy with its slow reiteration,
-was like a clenched hand of penitence beating on a breast: "really bad
-at last, for I had not known before what I was and the truth was there,
-staring me in the face. I did dreadful things, then. Mean things; cruel,
-hateful things, shutting my eyes, stopping my ears, so that I should not
-see what I was doing. I ran about and crouched and hid--from myself; do
-you follow my meaning?--from God. And then at last, when I was stripped
-bare, I had to look at Him."
-
-She raised herself and leaned back in her chair. Her voice had trembled
-more and more with the intensity of the feeling that upheld her and she
-put her handkerchief to her lips and pressed it to them, looking across
-at him. And, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow looked back at her,
-motionless and silent.
-
-Was it sympathy, pity or tenderness that almost overwhelmed him as he
-gazed at her? He could not have said, though knowing that the unity that
-was in them both, the share of the eternal that upheld their lives,
-flowed out from his eyes into hers as he looked and from hers to his.
-They were near at last; near as it is rarely given to human beings to
-experience nearness, and the awe of such a partaking was perhaps the
-ground of all he felt.
-
-"You see," he said, and a long time had passed, "I was mistaken."
-
-She did not answer him. Perhaps she did not understand.
-
-"I never knew you were a person who could come to the truth like that,"
-he said.
-
-Still holding her handkerchief to her lips, she slightly shook her head.
-
-"Even you never thought that I was bad."
-
-"I thought everybody was bad," said Oldmeadow, "until they came to know
-that goodness doesn't lie in themselves. The reason you angered me so
-was that you didn't see you were like the rest of us. And only people
-capable of great goodness can know such an agony of self-recognition."
-
-"No," she repeated. "Everyone is not bad like me. You know that's not
-true. You know that some people, people you love--are not like that.
-They need no agony of recognition, for nothing could ever make them mean
-and cruel."
-
-He thought for a moment. "That's because you expected so much more of
-yourself; because you'd believed so much more, and were, of course, more
-wrong. Your crash was so much greater because your spiritual pride was
-so great. And I thought you were a person a crash would do for; that
-there'd be nothing left of you if you came a crash. That was my mistake;
-for see what there is left."
-
-She rose to her feet. His words seemed to press her too far. "You are
-kind," she said in a hurried voice. "I understand. You are so sorry.
-I've talked and talked. It's very thoughtless of me. I must go now."
-
-She came and took the tray, but he put his hand on her arm, detaining
-her. "You'll own you're not bad now? You'll own there's something real
-for me to be fond of? Wait. I want you to acknowledge it, to accept
-it--my fondness. Don't try to run away."
-
-She stood above him, holding the tray, while he kept his hold on her
-arm. "All I need to know," she said, after a moment, and she did not
-look at him, "is that no one is ever safe--unless they always remember."
-
-"That's it, of course," said Oldmeadow gravely, "and that you must die
-to live; and you did die. But you live now, really, and life comes
-through you again. Your gift, you know, of which you were so much afraid
-just now, lest it had enveigled me. Don't you see it? How can I put it
-for you? You had a sort of wholeness before. There must be wholeness of
-a sort if life is to come through; harmony of a sort, and faith. It
-wasn't an illusion even then. When you were shattered you lost your
-gift. The light can't shine through shattered things; and that was when
-you recognized that without God we are a nothingness; a nothingness and
-a restlessness mingled. You know. There are no words for it, though so
-many people have found it and tried to say it. I know, too, after a
-fashion. I've had crashes, too. But now your gift has come back, for you
-are whole again; built up on an entirely new principle. You see, it's
-another you I am fond of. You must believe in her, too. You do believe
-in her. If you didn't you could not have found your gift."
-
-She had stood quite still while he spoke, looking down, not at him but
-at the little tray between her hands, and he saw that she was near
-tears. Her voice was scarcely audible as she said: "Thank you." And she
-made an effort over herself to add: "What you say is true."
-
-"We must talk," said Oldmeadow. He felt extraordinarily happy. "There
-are so many things I want to ask you about." And he went on, his hand
-still on her arm, seeing that she struggled not to cry and helping her
-to recover: "You're not going away for some time, yet, I hope. Please
-don't. There'll soon be no need of hospitals of this sort, anywhere,
-will there? and you must manage to stay on here a little longer. I
-shan't get on if you go. You won't leave me just as you've saved me,
-will you, Mrs. Barney?"
-
-At the name, over-taxed as she was already, a pitiful colour flooded her
-face and before his blunder made visible his own blood answered hers,
-mounting hotly to his forehead. "Oh, I'm so sorry," he murmured,
-helpless and hating himself, while his hand dropped. She stood over him,
-holding herself there so as not to hurt him by the aspect of flight. She
-even, in a moment, forced herself to smile. It was the first smile he
-had seen on her face. "You've nothing to be sorry for, Mr. Oldmeadow,"
-she said, as she had said before. "You're very kind to me. I wish I
-could tell you how kind I feel you are." And as she turned away,
-carrying the tray, she added: "No; I won't go yet."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-He did not see her again for two days; and she did not even come at
-night. But he now kept possession of his new strength and slept without
-her help. The sense of happiness brooded upon him. He did not remember
-ever having felt so happy. His life was irradiated and enhanced as if by
-some supreme experience.
-
-It was already late afternoon when, on the second day, she appeared; but
-in this month of August his room was still filled with the reflection of
-the sunlight and the warm colour bathed her as she entered. She wore a
-blue cloak over her white linen dress and she had perhaps been walking,
-for there was a slight flush on her cheeks and a look almost of
-excitement in her eyes.
-
-She unfastened her cloak and put it aside and then, taking the chair
-near the window, clasping her hands, as before, in her lap, she said,
-without preamble and with a peculiar vehemence: "You hear often from
-Barney, don't you?"
-
-Oldmeadow felt himself colouring. "Only once, directly. It rather tires
-him to sit up, you know. But he's getting on wonderfully and the doctors
-think he'll soon be able to walk a little--with a crutch, of course."
-
-"But you do hear, constantly, from Nancy, don't you," said Adrienne,
-clasping and unclasping her hands but speaking with a steadiness he felt
-to be rehearsed. "He is at Coldbrooks, I know, and Nancy is with him,
-and his mother and Mrs. Averil. It all seems almost happy, doesn't it?
-as happy as it can be, now, with Palgrave dead and Barney shackled."
-
-Startled as he was by her directness Oldmeadow managed to meet it.
-
-"Yes; almost happy," he said. "I was with them before I came out this
-last time and felt that about them. Poor Mrs. Chadwick is a good deal
-changed; but even she is reviving."
-
-"She has had too much to bear," said Adrienne. "I saw her again, too, at
-the end, when she came to Palgrave. She can never forgive me. Meg is
-happy now, but she will never forgive me either. I wrought havoc in
-their lives, didn't I?"
-
-"Well, you or fate. I don't blame you for any of that, you know," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-"I don't say that I blame myself for it," said Adrienne. "I may have
-been right or I may have been wrong. I don't know. It is not in things
-like that that I was bad. But what we must face is that I wrought havoc;
-that if it hadn't been for me they might all, now, be really happy.
-Completely happy. If I had not been there Palgrave would not have been
-so sure of himself. And if I had not been there Nancy and Barney would
-have married."
-
-"I don't know," said Oldmeadow. "If Barney hadn't fallen in love with
-you he might very probably have fallen in love with some one else, not
-Nancy."
-
-"Perhaps, not probably," said Adrienne. "And if he had he would have
-stayed in love with her, for Barney is a faithful person. And it may
-have been because I was so completely the wrong person for him that he
-came to know so quickly that Nancy was completely the right one. What I
-feel is that anybody but Nancy would always have been, really, wrong.
-And now that he loves her but is shackled, there's only one thing more
-that can be done. I have often thought of it; I needn't tell you that.
-But, till now, I could never see my way. It's you who have shown it to
-me. In what you said the other day. It's wonderful the way you come into
-my life, Mr. Oldmeadow. You made me feel that I had a friend in you; a
-true, true friend. And I know what a friend Nancy and Barney have. So
-the way opens. We must set Barney free, Mr. Oldmeadow. He and Nancy must
-be free to marry. You and I can do it for them and only you and I."
-
-"What do you mean?" Oldmeadow murmured as, after her words, the silence
-had grown deep between them. He repeated, using now the name inevitably
-and forgetting the other day. "What do you mean, Mrs. Barney?"
-
-To-day she did not flush, but to-day there was a reason for her
-acceptance. It was, he saw in her next words, only as Barney's wife that
-she could help him.
-
-"He must divorce me," she said. "You and I could go away together and he
-could divorce me. Oh, I know, it's a dreadful thing to ask of you, his
-friend. I've thought of all that. Wait. Let me finish. I've thought of
-nothing else since the other day. It came to me in the night after you
-had been so wonderful to me; after that wonderful thing had happened to
-us. You felt it, too, I know. It was as if we had taken a sacrament
-together. I'm not a Christian. You know what I mean. We felt the deepest
-things together, didn't we. And it's because of that that I can ask
-this of you. No one else would understand. No one else would care for me
-enough, or for him. And then, you could explain it all to him and no one
-else could do that. You could explain that it had been to set him free.
-To set _me_ free. Because they'd have to think and believe it was for my
-sake, too, that you did it, wouldn't they? so as to have it really happy
-for them; so that it shouldn't hurt. When it was all over you could go
-and explain why you had done it. All we have to do, you know, is to stay
-in a hotel together; I bearing your name. It's very simple, really."
-
-He lay staring at her, overwhelmed. The tears had risen to his eyes as
-her beauty and her absurdity were thus revealed to him, and as she spoke
-of their sacrament; but amazement blurred all his faculties. He had
-never in his life been so amazed. And when he began to emerge, to take
-possession of himself again, it was only of her he could think; not of
-himself or Nancy and Barney. Only of her and of her beauty and
-absurdity.
-
-"Dear Mrs. Barney," he said at last, and he did not know what to say;
-"it's you who are wonderful, you alone. I'd do anything, anything for
-you that I could. Anything but this. Because, truly, this is
-impossible."
-
-"Why impossible?" she asked, and her voice was almost stern.
-
-"You can't smirch yourself like that." It was only one reason; but it
-was the first that came to him.
-
-"I?" she stared. "I don't think it is to be smirched. I shall know why I
-do it."
-
-"Other people won't know. Other people will think you smirched."
-
-"No one I care for. Everyone I care for will understand."
-
-"But to the world at large? Your name? Your reputation?" Oldmeadow
-protested. "Do they mean nothing to you?"
-
-A faintly bitter humour touched her lips. "You've always taken the side
-of the world in all our controversies, haven't you, Mr. Oldmeadow? and
-you were probably right and I was probably wrong; but not because of
-what the world would think. I know I'm right now, and those words: name:
-reputation--mean nothing to me. The world and I haven't much to do with
-each other. A divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and fever hospitals
-just as well as the most unsmirched woman of the world. I'm not likely
-to want to be presented at courts, am I? Don't think of me, please. It's
-not a question of me. Only of you. Will you do it?"
-
-"I couldn't possibly do it," said Oldmeadow, and he was still hardly
-taking her monstrous proposal seriously.
-
-"Why not?" she asked, scrutinizing him. "It's not that you mind about
-your name and reputation, is it?"
-
-"Not much. Perhaps not much," said Oldmeadow; "but about theirs. That's
-what you don't see. That it would be impossible for them. You don't see
-how unique you are; how unlike other people. Nancy and Barney couldn't
-marry on a fake. The only way out," said Oldmeadow, looking at her with
-an edge of ironic grimness in his contemplation, "if one were really to
-consider it, would be for you to marry me afterwards and for us to
-disappear."
-
-She gazed at him and he saw that she weighed the idea. "But you'd be
-shackled then," she said, and her thoughts were evidently clear. "It
-would mean, besides, that you would lose them."
-
-"As to being shackled," Oldmeadow, still grimly, met the difficulty,
-"that's of no moment. I'm the snuffy, snappy bachelor type, you
-remember, and I don't suppose I'd ever have married. As to losing them,
-I certainly should."
-
-"We mustn't think of it then," said Adrienne. "You and Barney and Nancy
-mustn't lose each other."
-
-"But we should in either way. I could hardly take up my friendship with
-them again after Barney had divorced you on account of me, even if you
-and I didn't marry. It would give the whole thing away, if it were
-possible for them to meet me again. As I say, they'd feel they had no
-right to their freedom on such a fake as that."
-
-"They couldn't feel really free unless some one had really committed
-adultery for their sakes?" Again Adrienne smiled with her faint
-bitterness and he wondered if a man and woman had ever before had a more
-astonishing conversation. "That seems to me to be asking for a little
-too much icing on your cake. Of course it couldn't be a nice, new, snowy
-wedding-cake; poor Mrs. Chadwick wouldn't like it at all, nor Mrs.
-Averil; but it would be the best we could do for them; and I should
-think that when people love each other and are the right people for each
-other they'd be thankful for any kind of cake. Even if it were a good
-deal burned around the edges," Adrienne finished, her slight bitterness
-evidently finding satisfaction in the simile.
-
-"But they wouldn't see it at all like that," said Oldmeadow, now with
-unalloyed gravity. "They'd see it as a cake they had stolen; a cake they
-had no right to. It's a question of the laws we live under. Not of
-personal, but of public integrity. They couldn't profit by a hoodwinked
-law. It's that that would spoil things for them. According to the law
-they'd have no right to their freedom. And, now that I am speaking
-seriously, it's that I feel, too. What you are asking of me, my dear
-friend, is no more nor less than a felony."
-
-She meditated, unmoved, still almost sternly, turning her eyes from him
-and leaning her elbow on the window-sill, her head upon her hand. "I
-see," she said at last. "For people who mind about the law, I see that
-it would spoil it. I don't mind. I think the law's there to force us to
-be kind and just to each other if we won't be by ourselves. If the law
-gets tied up in such a foolish knot as to say that people may sin to set
-other people free, but mayn't pretend to sin, I think we have a right to
-help it out and to make it do good against its own will. I don't mind
-the law; luckily for them. Because I won't go back from it now. I won't
-leave them there, loving each other but never knowing the fullness of
-love. I won't give up a thing I feel right because other people feel it
-wrong. So I must find somebody else."
-
-Oldmeadow looked at her in a culminated and wholly unpleasant
-astonishment. "Somebody else? Who could there be?"
-
-"You may well ask," Adrienne remarked, glancing round at him with a
-touch of mild asperity. "You are the only completely right person,
-because only you and I feel enough for them to do it for them. What I
-must do now is to find some one who would feel enough, just for me, to
-do it for me. It makes it more unfair for him, doesn't it. He'll have
-only the one friend to help. But on the other hand it will leave them
-without a scruple. They'd know from the beginning that with you and me
-it was a fake; but with him it might seem quite probable. Yes; it's
-strange; I had a letter from him only yesterday. I shouldn't have
-thought of him otherwise. I might have had to give up. But the more I
-think," Adrienne meditated intently, her head on her hand, her eyes
-turned on the prospect outside, "the more I seem to see that Hamilton
-Prentiss is the only other chance."
-
-"Hamilton Prentiss?" Oldmeadow echoed faintly.
-
-"You met him once," said Adrienne, looking round at him again. "But
-you've probably forgotten. At the dinner we gave, Barney and I, in
-London, so long ago. Tall, fair, distinguished looking. The son of my
-Californian friend; the one you and Mrs. Aldesey thought so tiresome."
-
-He felt himself colouring, but he could give little thought to the minor
-discomfiture, so deeply was his mind engaged with the major one.
-
-"Did we?" he said.
-
-"And you thought I didn't see it," said Adrienne. "It made me dreadfully
-angry with you both, though I didn't know I was angry; I thought I was
-only grieved. I behaved spitefully to Mrs. Aldesey that night, you will
-remember, though I didn't know I was spiteful. I did know, however, that
-she was separated from her husband"--again Adrienne looked, calmly,
-round at him--"and it was a lie I told Barney when I said I didn't.
-Sometimes I think that lie was the beginning of everything; that it was
-when I told it that I began to hide from myself. However--" She passed
-from the personal theme. "Yes; Hamilton is, I believe, big enough and
-beautiful and generous enough to do it."
-
-"Oh, he is, is he?" said Oldmeadow. "And I'm not, I take it. You're
-horribly unkind. But I don't want to talk about myself. What I want to
-talk about is you. You must drop this preposterous idea of yours. Really
-you must. You've had ideas like it before. Remember Meg; what a mess you
-made there. I told you then that you were wrong and I tell you you're
-wrong now. You must give it up. Do you see? We're always quarrelling,
-aren't we?"
-
-"But I don't at all know that I was wrong about Meg, Mr. Oldmeadow,"
-said Adrienne. "And if I was, it was because I didn't understand her. I
-do understand myself, and I don't agree that I'm wrong or that my plan
-is preposterous. You won't call it preposterous, I suppose, if it
-succeeds and makes Barney and Nancy happy. No; I'm not going to drop it.
-Nothing you could say could make me drop it. As for Hamilton, I don't
-set him above you; not in any way. It's only that you and he have
-different lights. I know why you can't do this. You've shown me why. And
-I wouldn't for anything not have you follow your own light."
-
-"And you seriously mean," cried Oldmeadow, "that you'd ask this young
-fellow--I remember him perfectly and I'm sure he's capable of any degree
-of ingenuousness--you'd ask him to go about with you as though he were
-your husband? Why, for one thing, he'd be sure to fall head over heels
-in love with you, and where would you be then?"
-
-Adrienne examined him. "But from the point of view of hoodwinking, that
-would be all to the good, wouldn't it?" she inquired; "though
-unfortunate for Hamilton. He won't, however," she went on, her dreadful
-lucidity revealing to him the hopelessness of any protest he might still
-have found to make. "There's a very lovely girl out in California he's
-devoted to; a young poetess. He'll have to write to her about it first,
-of course; Hamilton's at the front now, you see; and I must write to his
-mother. She and Carola Brown are very near each other and will talk it
-out together and I feel sure they will see it as I do. They'll see it as
-something big I'm asking them to do for me--to set me free. I'm sure I
-can count on Gertrude and I'm sure Hamilton can count on Carola. She's a
-very rare, strong spirit."
-
-Oldmeadow, suddenly, was feeling exhausted, and a clutch of hysterical
-laughter, as she spoke these last words, held his throat for a moment.
-He laid his head back on his pillow and closed his eyes, while he saw
-Adrienne and Hamilton Prentiss wandering by the banks of a French river
-where poplars stood against a silver sky. He knew that he had accepted
-nothing when he said at last: "Shall we talk about it another time?
-To-morrow? I mean, don't take any steps, will you, until we've talked.
-Don't write to your beautiful, big friend."
-
-"You always make fun of me a little, don't you," said Adrienne
-tranquilly. She seemed aware of some further deep discomposure in him
-and willing, though not comprehending it, to meet it with friendly
-tolerance. "If he is big and beautiful, why shouldn't I say it? But I
-won't write until we've talked again. It can't be, anyway, until the war
-is over. And I've had already to wait for four years."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-She might feel that he had cruelly failed her; but when she came at the
-same hour next day it was evident to him from her demeanour that she
-imagined him resigned, if not converted, to her alternative plan. She
-carried a bunch of late roses and said that she had been having a lovely
-drive with a dear old friend from Denver, who had managed to get to
-Boulogne to see her.
-
-"Your friends all come from such distant places," said Oldmeadow with a
-pretended fretfulness that veiled an indescribable restlessness.
-"California, Denver, Chicago. They have, all of them, an implacably
-remote sound, as if they were carrying you, already, off to other
-planets."
-
-"Well, it doesn't take so long, really, to get to any of them," said
-Adrienne, placing the roses in a glass of water by his side, a close,
-funny little bunch, red roses in the middle and white ones all round.
-She had taken off her cloak and laid a newspaper down on the little
-table, seating herself, then, in the window and keeping in her hands a
-pocket-book that, in its flatness and length and the way she held it,
-reminded him of the little blue and grey fan of the dinner-party where
-she had told her first lie. His mind was emptied of thought. Only
-pictures crossed it, pictures of Adrienne and the tall, fair youth with
-the ingenuous eyes, wandering by the French river; and, again, Adrienne
-on that night, now as distant as California, when, with her fan and
-pearl-wreathed hair, she had met his persiflage with her rebuking
-imperturbability. But under the pictures a sense of violent tension made
-his breathing shallow. He fixed his eyes on the pocket-book and wondered
-how she had nursed people with those ineffectual-looking hands.
-
-"Where were you trained for nursing?" he asked her suddenly. "Out here?
-or in England?"
-
-"In England. In Oxford. Before Palgrave was taken," said Adrienne. "I
-gave up my philosophy very soon for that. I worked in a hospital there."
-
-"And how came you to go out to Salonika? Tell me about it. And about
-your hospital here," he went on with a growing sense of keeping
-something off. "It's your own hospital I hear, and wonderfully run. Sir
-Kenneth was talking to me about you this morning."
-
-"What a fine person he is," said Adrienne. "Yes, he came to see us and
-liked the way it was done." She was pleased, he saw, to tell him
-anything he chose to ask about. She told him about her hospital and of
-all its adventures--they had been under fire so often that it had become
-an everyday event; and about how admirable a staff she had
-organized--"rare, devoted people"--and about their wounded, their
-desperately wounded _poilus_ and how they came to love them all. He
-remembered, as she talked, that she was rich; even richer than he had
-thought, since she could leave a fortune to Palgrave and yet equip
-hospitals in France and in Salonika. She told him about Salonika, too.
-It had been a fever hospital there and the misery and suffering had
-seemed worse than the suffering here in France. Yes; she had caught the
-fever herself and had nearly died.
-
-She had no gift for the apt or vivid word. Her nature had been revealed
-to him as barbarous, or sublime, in its unconventionality, yet it
-expressed itself only in the medium of trite convention. But his time of
-jibbing at her platitudes was long since passed. He listened, rather,
-with a tender, if superficial interest, seeing her heroic little figure
-moving, unconcerned, among pestilences and bombardments. "It's not only
-what you tell me," he said, when she had brought her recital up to date.
-"I heard so much from Sir Kenneth. You are one of the great people of
-the war."
-
-"Am I?" she said. That, too, unfeignedly, left her unconcerned.
-
-"You've the gift of leadership. The gift for big things generally."
-
-She nodded. "I'm only fit for big things."
-
-"Only? How do you mean?"
-
-"Little ones are more difficult, aren't they. My feet get tangled in
-them. To be fit for daily life and all the tangles; that's the real
-test, isn't it? That's just the kind of thing you see so clearly, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Big things and the people who do them are just the kind of
-things you see through."
-
-"Oh, but you misunderstood me--or misunderstand," said Oldmeadow. "Big
-things are the condition of life; the little things can only be built up
-on them. One must fight wars and save the world before one can set up
-one's tea-tables." He remembered having thought of something like this
-at Lydia's tea-table. "Tea-tables are important, I know, and the things
-that happen round them. But if one can nurse a ward of typhus patients
-single-handed one must be forgiven for letting the tea-pot slip. Really
-I never imagined you capable of all you've done."
-
-"I always thought I was capable of anything," said Adrienne smiling
-slightly, her eyes meeting his in a tranquil partaking of the jest, that
-must be at her expense. "You helped me to find that out about
-myself--with all the rest. And I was right enough in thinking that I
-could face things and lead people. But I wasn't capable of the most
-important things. I wasn't capable of being a wise and happy wife. I
-wasn't even capable of being truthful in drawing-rooms when other women
-made me angry. But I can go on battle-fields and found hospitals and
-tend the sick and dying. Shells and pestilences"--her smile was
-gone--"if people knew how trivial they are--compared to seeing your
-husband look at you with hatred."
-
-She had turned her eyes away as she was thus betrayed into revealing the
-old bitternesses of her heart and he dropped his to the little
-pocket-book that now lay still between her hands. The feeling in her
-voice, the suffering it revealed to him, with the bitterness, woke an
-unendurable feeling in himself. He did not clearly see what the test was
-to which he put himself; but he knew that what he must say to her was
-the most difficult thing he had ever had to say; and he found it only
-after the silence had grown long.
-
-"Mrs. Barney--everything has changed, hasn't it; you've changed; I've
-changed; Barney may have changed. It was only, after all, a moment of
-miserable misunderstanding between you. He never really knew what you
-were feeling. He thought you didn't care for him any longer, when,
-really, you were finding out how much you cared. Don't you think,
-before you take final decisions, that you ought to see Barney again?
-Don't you think you ought to give him another chance? I could arrange it
-all for you, when I got home."
-
-The flood of colour, deep and sick, had mounted to her face, masking it
-strangely, painfully, to where the white linen cut across her brow and
-bound her chin. And, almost supplicatingly, since he saw that she could
-not speak, he murmured: "You can be a wise and happy wife now; and he
-loved you so dearly."
-
-She did not lift her eyes. She sat there, looking down, tightly holding
-the pocket-book in her lap.
-
-"Let me tell him, when I get home, that I've seen you again," he
-supplicated. "Let me arrange a meeting."
-
-Slowly, not lifting her eyes, she shook her head and he heard her, just
-heard her say: "It's not pride. Don't think that."
-
-"No; no; I know it's not. Good heavens, I couldn't think it that. You
-feel it's no good. You feel that his heart is occupied. It is. I can't
-pretend to hide from you that it is. But your place in it was supreme.
-There would be no unfairness if you took it again. Nancy would be the
-first person to want you to take it. You know that that is true of
-Nancy."
-
-"I know. I heard her plead for me," said Adrienne.
-
-The sentence fell, soft and trenchant; and he remembered, in the silence
-that followed, what she had heard. He drew a long breath, feeling half
-suffocated. But he had met his test. It was inevitable, he knew it now,
-that she should say "Barney and I are parted for ever."
-
-Silence dropped again between them. He did not know what was passing
-behind its curtain and whether bitterness or only grief was in her
-heart.
-
-He lay, drawing the slow, careful breaths of his recovery, and saw her
-presently put out her hand and take up her _New York Herald_ and unfold
-it. She looked down the columns unseeingly; but the little feint of
-interest helped her.
-
-Slowly the colour faded from her face and it was as if the curtain
-lifted when, laying the paper down, she said, and he knew that she was
-finding words to comfort him: "Really everything is quite clear before
-me now. I shall write at once to Hamilton, and to his mother. If he
-agrees, if they all agree, he and I can go away very soon I think.
-Afterwards, I shall stay over here. I've quite made up my mind to that.
-There'll be so much to do; for years and years; for all one's lifetime.
-Ways will open. When one is big," she smiled the smile at once so gentle
-and so bitter, "and has plenty of money, ways always do. I'm a
-_deracinee_ creature; I never had any roots, you know; and I can't do
-better, I'm sure, than to make soil for the uprooted people to grow in
-again. That's what's most needed now, isn't it? Soil. It's the
-fundamental things of life, its bare possibilities, that have been so
-terribly destroyed over here. America has, still, more soil than she can
-use, and since I'm an American, and a rich one, my best plan is to use
-America, in my fortune and my person, for Europe. Because I love them
-both and because they both need each other."
-
-She had quite recovered herself Her face had found again its pale, fawn
-tints and she was looking at him with her quietest contemplation while
-he, in silence, lay looking at her.
-
-"It's not about the things I shall do that I'm perplexed, ever," she
-went on. "But I'm sometimes perplexed about myself. I sometimes wish I
-were a Roman Catholic. In an order of some kind. Under direction. To put
-oneself in the hands of a wise director, it must be so peaceful. Like
-French friends I have; such wise, fine women; so poised and so secure. I
-often envy them. But that can't be for me."
-
-She must feel in his silence now the quality of some extreme emotion,
-and that she believed it to be pity was evident to him as she went on,
-seeking to comfort him; and troubled by his trouble: "You mustn't be
-sorry. I am not unhappy. I am a happy person. Do you remember that
-Sunday morning at Coldbrooks, long ago? How I said to Mother--to Mrs.
-Chadwick--that I had no doubts? You thought me fatuous. I dimly saw that
-you thought me fatuous. But it's still true of me. I must tell you, so
-that you shan't think I'm unhappy. I've been, it seems to me, through
-everything since then. I've had doubts--every doubt: of myself; of life;
-of all the things I trusted. Doubt at last, when the dreadful darknesses
-came--Barney's hatred, Palgrave's death--of God. We've never spoken of
-Palgrave, have we? I was with him, you had heard, and at the very end it
-was he who helped me rather than I him. He held me up. When he was dying
-he held me up. He made me promise him that I would not kill myself--for
-he guessed what I was thinking; he made me promise to go on. And he
-saved me. The light began to come back to me while I sat beside him
-after he had died."
-
-She had not looked at him while she spoke, but down at her hands that,
-trembling, turned and returned the little pocket-book. And controlling
-her voice as she sought to control the trembling of her hands, she said:
-"Perhaps it is always like that. When one confesses one's sin and hates
-it in oneself, even if it is still there, tempting one, the light begins
-to come back. After that it came more and more. What you call my gift is
-part of it. Isn't it strange that I should have had that gift when I was
-so blind? But what you said was true. I had a sort of wholeness then,
-because I was blind. And now that I see, it's a better wholeness and a
-safer gift. That is what I wanted to say, really. To explain, so that
-you shan't be sorry. No one who can find that light can be unhappy. It
-comes to me now, always, when I need it. I can make it shine in other
-people--as Palgrave made it shine in me. Love does it. Isn't it
-wonderful that it should be so? Nothing else is real beside it. Nothing
-is real without it. And when it happens, when one feels it come through
-and shine further, it is more, far more, than happiness."
-
-All the while that she had spoken, pale, and with her trembling hands,
-he had lain looking at her in silence, a silence that was dividing him,
-as if by a vast chasm, from all his former life.
-
-He and Adrienne stood on one side of this chasm, and, while it seemed to
-widen with a dizzying rapidity, he saw that on the other stood Barney,
-Nancy, Coldbrooks, and Lydia--poor Lydia--and that they were being borne
-away from him for ever. He saw nothing before him but Adrienne; and for
-how long was he to keep her? That was his supreme risk; but he could
-not allay it or step back to the further brink. It was his very life
-that had fallen in two while she had spoken and without the sense of
-choice; though he dimly saw that, in the restlessness and urgency of the
-hours since he had seen her last, the choice had been preparing.
-
-He was taking the only step possible for him to take on the narrow
-foothold of the present when he said, in a voice so quiet that she might
-even be unaware of his seeming gross irrelevance, "Do you know, about
-your plan--for Barney and Nancy--I've been thinking it over and I've
-decided that it must be I, not Hamilton."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Her eyes met his for a long time before he realized that she might find
-not only irrelevance but even irreverence. She had shown him her very
-soul and he had answered with this announcement. Of course it had been
-because of what she told him that he had seen at last his own necessity;
-but he could not tell her that.
-
-"I'm not sorry for you," he said. "I envy you. You are one of the few
-really happy people in the world."
-
-"But I'd quite given that idea up, Mr. Oldmeadow," she said. "What has
-made you change?"
-
-He saw the trouble in her face, the suspicion of her power and its
-compulsion over the lives of others. He took the bull by the horns.
-
-"You, of course. I can't pretend that it's anything else. I want to do
-it for you and with you."
-
-"But it's for Barney and Nancy that it's to be done," she said, and her
-gravity had deepened. "It's just the same for them--and you explained
-yesterday that it would spoil it for them."
-
-"It may spoil it somewhat," said Oldmeadow, contemplating her with a
-curious tranquillity; she was now all that was left him in life to
-contemplate; and she was all he needed. "But it won't prevent it. I
-still think it a wrong thing to do. I still think it a felony. But,
-since I can't turn you from it, what I've come to see is that it's, as
-you said, for you and me, who care for them, to do. It's not right, not
-decent or becoming, that anyone who doesn't even know them should be
-asked to do such a thing."
-
-"But Hamilton wouldn't do it for them," she said. "It would be for me he
-would do it. And he wouldn't think it a felony."
-
-"All the more reason that his innocence shouldn't be taken advantage of.
-I can't stand by and see it done. It's for my friends the felony will be
-committed and it's I who will bear the burden for them. As to his doing
-it for you, I know you better than he possibly can know you, and care
-for you more than he possibly can. If you're determined on committing a
-crime, I'll share the responsibility with you."
-
-"I know you care more. You are a wonderful friend. You are my best
-friend in the world." She gazed at him and he saw that for once he had
-troubled and perplexed her. "And it's wonderful of you to say you'll do
-it. But Hamilton won't feel it a burden; not as you will; and for him to
-do it won't spoil it for them. If you do it, it will spoil it for them.
-You said so. And how can I let you do a thing you feel so wrong for my
-sake?"
-
-"You'll have to. I won't have Hamilton sacrificed in order that their
-cake shall have no burnt edges. They'll have to pay something for it in
-social and moral discomfort. It would be nothing to the discomfort of
-Miss Brown, would it? I shall be able to put it clearly to Barney when I
-write and tell him that it's for your sake as well as his and that he
-and Nancy, who have never sought anything or hoped for anything, are in
-no way involved by our misdemeanour. I won't emphasize to Barney what I
-feel about that side of it. He's pretty ingenuous, too. It will be a
-less tidy happiness they'll have to put up with. That's all it comes to,
-as far as they are concerned."
-
-She was looking at him with the trouble and perplexity and she said:
-
-"They'll have to pay in far more than social and moral discomfort."
-
-"Well? In what way? How?" he challenged her.
-
-"You said they'd lose you."
-
-"Only, if you married me," he reminded her.
-
-But she remembered more accurately. "No. They'd lose you anyway. You
-said so. You said that if they could ever see you again it would make it
-too blatantly a fake. And it's true. I see it now. How could you turn up
-quietly, as if nothing had happened, after Barney had divorced me with
-you as co-respondent? There's Lady Cockerell," said Adrienne, and,
-though she was so grave, so troubled, it was with a touch of mild
-malice. "There's Mr. Bodman and Johnson, to say nothing of Mrs. Chadwick
-and Nancy's mother. No, I really don't see you facing them all at
-Coldbrooks after we'd come out in the 'Daily Mail' with head-lines and
-pictures."
-
-Her lucidity could indeed disconcert him when it sharpened itself like
-this with the apt use of his vocabulary. He had to stop to think.
-
-"There won't, at all events, be pictures," he paused by the triviality
-to remark. "We shan't appear. It will be an hotel over here and the case
-will be undefended. We needn't, really, consider all that too closely.
-At the worst, if they do lose me, it's not a devastating loss. They'll
-have each other."
-
-"Ah, but who will you have?" Adrienne inquired. "Hamilton will have
-Carola and they will have each other. But who will you have?"
-
-He lay and looked at her. There was only one answer to that question
-and he could not make it. He was aware of the insufficiency of his
-substitute. "I'd have your friendship," he said.
-
-"You have that now," said Adrienne. "And though I'm so your friend, I'll
-be leaving you, soon, probably for ever. We'll probably never meet
-again, Mr. Oldmeadow. Our paths lie so apart, don't they? My friendship
-will do you very little good."
-
-Her words cut into him, but he kept a brave countenance. "I'd have the
-joy of knowing I'd done something worth while for you. How easily I
-might have died here, if it hadn't been for you. My life is yours in a
-sense and I want you to use it rather than Hamilton's. I have my work,
-you know; lots of things I'm interested in to go back to some day. As
-you remarked, a divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and in the same way
-a co-respondent can write articles and go to concerts."
-
-"I know. I know what a fine, big life you have," she murmured, and the
-trouble on her face had deepened. "But how can I take it from you? A
-felony? How can I let you do, for my sake, something you feel to be so
-wrong?"
-
-"Give it up then," said Oldmeadow. And if he had found it difficult to
-make his plea for Barney a little while before, how much more difficult
-he found it to say this, and to mean it, now. "Give it up. That's your
-choice, and your only choice. You owe that to me. Indeed you do. To give
-it up or to accept me as your companion in iniquity. I'm not going to
-pretend I don't think it iniquity to give you ease. You're not a person
-who needs ease. And I can do without it, too. For your sake. So there
-you have it."
-
-"Not quite. Not quite," she really almost pleaded. "I couldn't ask it of
-Hamilton if he felt about it in the least little way as you do. And
-Carola doesn't care a bit about the law either. She's an Imagist, you
-know."--Adrienne offered this fact as if it would help to elucidate
-Carola's complaisances. "She's written some very original poetry. If it
-were Hamilton no one would lose anything, and Barney and Nancy would be
-free. Indeed, indeed I can't give it up when it's all there, before me,
-with everything to gain and nothing to lose for anybody, if it's
-Hamilton."
-
-"Then it must be me, you see," said Oldmeadow. "And I shan't talk to you
-about the iniquity again, I promise you. I've made my protest and
-civilization must get on as best it can. You're a terrible person, you
-know"--he smiled a little at her, finding the banter so that she should
-not guess at the commotion of his heart. "But I like you just as you
-are. Now where shall we go?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-He could not have believed that it would be so delicious to live with
-Adrienne Toner.
-
-Even at the moment when he had known that he loved her, he had been,
-though filled with the sense of a present heaven, as aware as ever of
-the discrepancies between them, and during the three months that
-separated them, he at Cannes, she nursing in Paris, he knew many doubts;
-never of his love, but of what it was making him do and of where it was
-going to lead them. He couldn't for the life of him imagine what was to
-become of them if his hopes were fulfilled, for he hardly saw himself
-following her off to Central Europe--it was to Serbia, her letters
-informed him, that her thoughts were turning--nor saw them established
-in London under the astonished gaze of Lydia Aldesey.
-
-She had selected Lyons as their place of meeting, because of the work
-for the _rapatries_ that she wished to inspect there, and from the
-moment that he saw her descend from the Paris express, dressed in dark
-civilian clothes and carrying, with such an air of competence, her rug
-and dressing-case, all doubts were allayed and all restlessness
-dispelled.
-
-He had arrived the day before and had found an old-fashioned hotel with
-spacious rooms overlooking the Saone, and, as they drove to it on that
-November evening, she expressed herself, scrutinizing him with a
-professional eye, as dissatisfied with his recovery.
-
-It was because of the restlessness, of course, that he had not got as
-well as he should have, and he knew that he must, in the stress of
-feeling that now beset him, look strangely, and he promised her, feeling
-that he spoke the truth, that now that he had his nurse again complete
-recovery would be only a matter of days.
-
-"I want you to see our view," he said to her when the porter had carried
-up her little box and they were left alone in the brocaded and gilded
-salon that separated their rooms; "I chose this place for the view; it's
-the loveliest in Lyons, I think."
-
-There was still a little twilight, and standing at the window they
-looked down at the lighted quai with its double row of lofty plane-trees
-and across the jade-green Saone at St. Jean, the grey cathedral, and at
-the beautiful white _archeveche_ glimmering in a soft, dimmed atmosphere
-that made him think of London.
-
-"There's a horrible modern cathedral up on the hill," he said; "but we
-don't need to see it. We need only see the river and the _archeveche_
-and St. Jean. And in the mornings there's a market below, a mile of it,
-all under huge mushroom-coloured umbrellas; flowers and cheeses and
-every kind of country produce. I think you'll like it here."
-
-"I like it very much. I think it's beautiful," said Adrienne. "I like
-our room, too," and she turned and looked up at the painted ceiling and
-round at the consoles and mirrors, inlaid tables and richly curved,
-brocaded chairs. "Isn't it splendid."
-
-"Madame Recamier is said to have lived here," Oldmeadow told her. "And
-this is said to have been her room."
-
-"And now it's mine," said Adrienne, smiling slightly as though she
-found the juxtaposition amusing.
-
-Already the stealing sense of deliciousness was breathing over him. The
-very way in which she said, "our room," was part of it. Even the way in
-which she said that made him feel the peace, comfort, and charm of a
-shared life as he had never before felt it. And the sense grew and grew
-on that first evening.
-
-It was delicious to hear the waiters address her as Madame, and to know
-that it was his madame they imagined her to be, when he sat opposite to
-her at their little table in the dining-room. She wore a grey dress now
-and, with her quiet, her calm glances cast about her, might indeed have
-been the veritable Madame Oldmeadow inscribed at the _bureau_. If they
-had the aspect of a devoted, long-mated couple, it was because of her
-calm. But she would have been as unperturbed, he felt sure, had she been
-stopping there under her own name instead of his and looked upon as his
-well-established mistress. Situations would never embarrass her as long
-as she knew what she was doing with them. That night when she gave him
-her hand at bedtime she said, looking at him with the affectionate,
-professional eyes: "I'll come and put you to sleep if you need me; be
-sure to let me know."
-
-But he had no need to call her. He slept as soundly as though she sat
-beside him with her hand upon his brow.
-
-So the mirage of conjugal felicity was evoked about him.
-
-She poured out his coffee for him in the morning wearing a silk
-_neglige_ edged with fur, and said, as they buttered their rolls, that
-they must buy some honey for their breakfasts. She said, too, that they
-must do a great deal of sight-seeing in the afternoons. "There is so
-much to be seen in Lyons. And I shall finish with my _rapatrie_ work in
-the mornings." He asked if he might not come with her to the _rapatrie_
-work, but was told that he was not yet strong enough for more than one
-walk in the day. "In our evenings, after tea," she went on, "I thought
-perhaps you'd like to study Dante a little with me. My Dante is getting
-so rusty and I've brought a very fine edition. Are you good at Italian?"
-
-He said he wasn't, but would love to read Dante with her.
-
-"And we must get a piano," she finished, "and have music after dinner.
-It will be a wonderful holiday for me."
-
-So the days fell at once into a series of rituals. He saw that she had
-always mapped them out conscientiously, as Mrs. Toner had doubtlessly
-taught her to do, careful of the treasure of time--as Mrs. Toner would
-have said--entrusted to each soul by life. So, no doubt, Adrienne would
-put it still. And what he would, in first knowing her, have found part
-of her absurdity, he found now part of her charm.
-
-That was what it all came back to. He saw, reconstructing their past,
-that from the beginning she had had her deep charm for him.
-
-It was the trivial word for the great fact; the compulsion of
-personality; the overflow of vitality; the secret at once of the saint
-and of the successful music-hall singer. Her own absorption in life was
-so intense that it communicated itself. Her confidence was so secure
-that it begot confidence. Her power was implicit in all she did. It was
-not only the _rapatries_ she dealt with, as, at the first, she had dealt
-with the wounded. She dealt as successfully and as accurately with the
-little things of life. Honey was on their breakfast-table; flowers on
-the consoles; music on the piano. The gilded hotel salon became a home.
-
-She was still, in demeanour, the cultured, travelled American, equipped
-always, for their walks, with a guide-book or history, from which she
-often read to him as they paused to lean on the parapets of the splendid
-quais. There were few salient facts in the history of the potent city
-that were not imparted to him; and with anyone else what a bore it would
-have been to have to listen! But he was more than content that she
-should tell him about the Romans or Richelieu. It was everything to him
-to feel that they shared it all, from the honey to Richelieu.
-
-And with all the intimacy went the extreme reserve.
-
-She had showed him, when it was necessary for their understanding as
-friends, the centre of her life; yet she remained, while so gentle, so
-absorbed, and even loving, as remote, as inaccessible, as he had felt
-her to be on those first days in the hospital. She never referred to her
-own personal situation not to any emotion connected with it. She never
-referred to herself or expressed a taste or an opinion touched with
-personal ardour. He did not know what she was really feeling, ever.
-Though, when he looked at her, sitting opposite him in her grey and
-addressed by the assiduities of the waiters, he could imagine that he
-was living with a wife, he could imagine more often that he was living
-with a nun. Her control and her selflessness were cloistral. He could
-not think her in any need of a director.
-
-They walked one afternoon along the Quai des Brotteaux, returning from
-the park of the Tete d'Or, where they had wandered on the gravel under
-the tall, melancholy trees and fed the deer. The ugly yet magnificent
-city was spread before them in one of its most splendid aspects,
-climbing steeply, on the further banks of the Rhone, to the cliff-like
-heights of the Croix Rousse and marching, as it followed the grandiose
-curve of the river, into a sunset sky where the cupola of the Hospice
-hung like a dark bubble against the gold and the Alps, not visible from
-the river level, seemed yet to manifest themselves in the illumined
-clouds ranged high above the horizon.
-
-Ten days of their appointed fortnight had now passed and while Oldmeadow
-kept a half unseeing yet appraising eye upon the turbulent glories of
-the river, he was wondering when and how he should make his revelation
-and his appeal. If her reserve made it more difficult to imagine, her
-intimacy did not make it more easy. It was because she was so intimate
-that she had remained so unaware. For all his self-command he felt sure
-that in any other circumstances she could not, for these ten days, have
-remained so blind.
-
-Here she walked beside him, the Madame Oldmeadow of the hotel, looking
-before her as she walked and thinking, he would have wagered, not of him
-but of Serbia.
-
-She wore a beautifully adjusted little costume, conveying in its sober
-darkness the impression of richness and simplicity that her clothes had
-always given him. Fur was turned up about her ears and a small hat of
-fur and velvet was turned down over her eyes as she had always worn her
-hats. The straight fringe of gold showed under its brim and under the
-gold were those calm, those questing, melancholy eyes.
-
-Or perhaps--he carried further his rueful reverie--she was thinking
-about the date of the Hospice. He had the guide-book in his pocket.
-
-"Isn't it jolly?" he suggested, as she looked up at him, indicating the
-prospect spread before them and adding, since he knew that his English
-instinct for boyish understatement still puzzled her: "Like a great,
-grim queen in shabby clothes; raised on such a throne and crowned with
-such jewels that one feels her glorious rather than ugly."
-
-Adrienne studied the shabby queen attentively and then looked back at
-him. Perhaps something dwelling in his eyes, something for her only and
-not at all for Lyons, caught her more special attention, for she said
-suddenly, and so unexpectedly that, with a sort of terror, he felt that
-his crisis might be coming: "You've been very dear to me, Mr. Oldmeadow,
-in all our time here. I feel it to have been a great privilege, you
-know; a great opportunity."
-
-"Really? In what way?" He could at all events keep his voice quiet and
-light. "I thought it had been you who made all the opportunities."
-
-"Oh, no. I never make any of the opportunities I am thinking of," said
-Adrienne. "I only know how to take them. It isn't only that you are more
-widely and deeply cultured than I am--though your Italian accent isn't
-good!"--she smiled; "but I always feel that you see far more in
-everything than I do, even when you seem to be seeing less. I have to go
-carefully and pick up fact by fact, while you see things in a sort of
-vision and they are all related as they enter your mind. That's where my
-privilege comes in. You make me share your vision sometimes. You have
-the artistic mind, and I am not really artistic at all--though Mother
-always wanted that for me more than anything; with all that goes with
-it."
-
-She was speaking of herself--though it was only in order to express more
-exactly her gratitude, and, as he walked beside her, he was filled with
-the mingled hope and terror. After all he had still four more days of
-her. It would be terrible to spoil them.
-
-"No; you aren't artistic," he agreed. "And I don't know that I am,
-either. Whether I am or not, I feel mine to have been the opportunity
-and the privilege."
-
-"I can't understand that at all," she said, with her patent candour.
-
-"It may be part of the artistic temperament to feel things one can't
-understand. Though I do understand why I feel it," he added.
-
-"And it's part of the artistic temperament not to try"--Adrienne turned
-their theme to its more impersonal aspect. "Never to try to enjoy
-anything that you don't enjoy naturally. I don't believe I ever enjoy
-any of the artistic things quite naturally. I've always been trained to
-enjoy and I've always tried to enjoy; because I thought it was right to
-try. But since I've been here with you I've come to feel that what I've
-enjoyed has been my own effort and my mastery of the mere study, and I
-seem to feel that it might be as well to give up trying and training and
-fall back on the things that come naturally; scenery artists would think
-sentimental, and babies; and patriotic songs." She smiled a little as
-she found her list. But she was grave, too, thinking it out and adding
-another to her discovered futilities.
-
-"It may be as well to limit your attention to the sentimental scenery
-and the babies, since you've so many other things to do with it," he
-acquiesced. "We come back to big people again, you see; they haven't
-time to be artistic; don't need to be."
-
-"Ah, but it's not a question of time at all," said Adrienne, and he
-remembered that long ago, from the very first, he had said that she
-wasn't stupid. "It's a question of how you're born. That's a thing I
-would never have admitted in my old days, you know. I would never have
-admitted that any human soul was really shut out from anything. Perhaps
-we're not, any of us, if we are to have all eternity to grow in. But as
-far as this life is concerned I see quite clearly now that some people
-are shut out from all sorts of things, and that the sort of mistake I
-made in my old time was in thinking that anyone who had the will could
-force eternity into any given fragment of our temporal life. I did do a
-little philosophy, you see! That's what I mean and you understand, I
-know. All the same I wish I weren't one of the shut-out people. I wish I
-were artistic. I'd have liked to have that side of life to meet people
-with. I sometimes think that one doesn't get far with people, really, if
-all that one has to give are the fundamental things like the care of
-their minds and bodies. One goes deep, of course; but one doesn't go
-far. You can do something for them; but there's nothing, afterwards,
-that they can do _with_ you; and it makes it rather lonely in a
-way--when one has time to be lonely."
-
-He did not know, indeed, whether she saw the beauty of the scene spread
-before them as they walked, and he was remembering, with a sort of
-tranced tenderness, the flower-wreathed shepherdess and her crook; and
-Mrs. Toner with her lilies and seagulls. But why should she see beauty
-when she made it? It was all that he could see in her now.
-
-"What you can do for them afterwards is to pour out their coffee for
-them in the most enhancing way," he suggested, "and make sight-seeing a
-pleasure, and arrange flowers and place chairs and tables so that a
-hotel salon becomes loveable. If you find the person to whom you can
-give the fundamental things and do all sorts of homely things with
-afterwards, why be lonely? We are very happy together, aren't we? We get
-a great deal out of each other. I can speak for myself, at all events;
-and you've just told me that I give something, too. So why should you go
-off to Central Europe next week? Why not go back with me to the South,"
-he finished, "and wander about together enjoying, quite naturally, the
-sentimental scenery?"
-
-He held his breath after he had thus spoken, wondering with intensity,
-while he felt his heartbeats, what she would make of it. He knew what he
-could make of it, seizing his opportunity on the instant, if only she
-would recognize the meaning that underlay the easy words. And framed in
-the little hat on the background of transfigured Lyons, Adrienne's face
-was turned towards him and, after he had made his suggestion, she
-studied him in silence for what seemed to him a long lapse of time. Then
-she said, overwhelmingly:
-
-"That's perfectly lovely of you, Mr. Oldmeadow."
-
-"Not at all; not perfectly lovely at all," he stammered as he
-contradicted her and he heard that his voice sounded angry. "It's what I
-want. I want it very much."
-
-"Yes. I know you do. And that's what's so lovely," said Adrienne. "I
-know you want it. You are sorry for me all the time. And you want to
-cheer me up. Because you feel I've lost so much. But, you know; you
-remember; I told you the truth that time. I don't need cheering. I'm not
-unhappy. One can be lonely without being unhappy."
-
-"I'm not sorry for you," poor Oldmeadow rejoined, still in the angry
-voice. "I'm not thinking of you at all. I'm thinking of myself. I'm
-lonely, too, and I am unhappy, even if you aren't."
-
-She stopped short in her walk. He saw in her eyes the swift, almost
-diagnosing solicitude that measured his need and her own capacity. It
-was as though his temperature had gone up alarmingly.
-
-"Dear Mr. Oldmeadow," she said; and then she faltered; she paused. She
-no longer found her remedies easily. "It's because you are separated
-from your own life," she did find. "It's because all this is so bitter
-to you; what you are doing now--how could I not understand?--and the
-war, that has torn us all. But when it's over, when you can go home
-again and take up your own big life-work and find your own roots,
-happiness will come back; I'm sure of it. We are all unhappy sometimes,
-aren't we? We must be; with our minds and hearts. Our troubled minds;
-our lonely hearts. But you know as well as I do, dear Mr. Oldmeadow,
-that our souls can find the way out."
-
-Her nature expressed itself in platitudes; yet sometimes she had
-phrases, rising from her heart as if from a fountain fed by unseen
-altitudes, that shook him in their very wording. "Our troubled minds.
-Our lonely hearts," echoed in his ears while, bending his head
-downwards, he muttered stubbornly: "My soul can't, without you."
-
-She still stood, not moving forward, her eyes raised to his. "Please
-don't say that," she murmured, and he heard the trouble in her voice.
-"It can't be so, except for this time that you are away from everybody.
-You have so many things to live for. So many people near you. You are
-such a big, rare person. It's what I was afraid of, you know. It happens
-so often with me; that people feel that. But you can't really need me
-any longer."
-
-He said nothing, still not raising his eyes to hers, and she went on
-after a moment. "And I have so many things to live for, too. You've
-never really thought about that side of my life, I know. Why should you?
-You think of any woman's life--isn't it true?--as not seriously
-important except on its domestic side. And you know how important I
-think that. But it isn't so with me, you see. I have no hearth and I
-have no home; I have only my big, big life and it's more important than
-you could believe unless you could see it all. When I'm in it it takes
-all my mind and all my strength and I'm bound to it, yes, just as
-finally, just as irrevocably as a wife who loves is bound by her
-marriage vows; because I love it. Do you see? They are waiting for me
-now. They need me now. There are starving people, dying people; and
-confusion; terrible confusion. I have a gift for all that. I can deal
-with it. Those are just the things I can deal with. And I mustn't put it
-off any longer--when our time is up. I must leave you, my dear, dear
-friend, however much I'd love to stay."
-
-She was speaking at last with ardour, and about herself. And what she
-said was true. He had never thought about her work except in the sense
-that he thought her a saint and knew that saints did good deeds. That
-she was needed, sorely needed, by the starving and dying, was a fact,
-now that it was put before him, silencing and even shaming him. It gave
-him, too, a new fear. If she had her blindness, he had his. His hopes
-and fears, after all, were all that he had to think of; she had the
-destinies of thousands. He remembered Sir Kenneth's tone in speaking of
-her; its deep respect. Not the respect of the man for the
-tender-hearted, merciful woman; but the respect of a professional expert
-for another expert; respect for the proved organizer and leader of men.
-
-"I have been stupid," he said after a moment. "It's true that I've been
-thinking about you solely in relation to myself. Would you really love
-to stay? If it wasn't for your work? It would be some comfort to believe
-that."
-
-"Of course I'd love to stay," she said, eagerly scanning his face. "I'd
-love to travel with you--to pour out your coffee in Avignon, Nimes,
-Cannes--anywhere you liked. I'd love our happy time here to go on and
-on. If life could be like that; if I didn't want other things more. You
-remember how Blake saw it all:
-
- 'He who bends to himself a joy
- Doth the winged life destroy.'
-
-I mustn't try to bend and keep this lovely time. I must let it fly--and
-bless it as it goes. And so it will bless me."
-
-She seldom made quotations nowadays. For this one he felt a gratitude
-such as his life had rarely known.
-
-"It's been a joy to you, too, then?"
-
-"Of course it has," said Adrienne smiling at him and turning at last
-towards the bridge that they must cross. "It's been one of the most
-beautiful things that has ever happened to me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat at the inlaid table in the gilded salon on the afternoon
-of the last day. He had two letters to write, for, as he had put off
-speaking to Adrienne till their last evening, so he had put off writing
-to Barney and to Lydia Aldesey till this last afternoon, and he saw now
-how difficult it would be to write coherently while his thoughts
-stretched themselves forward to those few hours of the night when his
-fate would be decided.
-
-Adrienne had gone out. She had written her short communication to Barney
-and brought it in with its envelope and laid it before him, asking him
-in the voice that, again, made him think of snow: "Is that quite right?"
-
-It was, quite, he told her, after glancing through it swiftly. It
-stated, in the most colourless terms, the facts that Barney was to take
-to his solicitor. "Quite right," he repeated, looking up at her. "Are
-you going out? Will you post it?--or shall I?"
-
-"Will you post it with yours? Yes. I must go out. But I'll try to be
-back by tea-time. It's very disappointing; our last afternoon. But that
-poor woman from Roubaix--the one with consumption up at the Croix
-Rousse--is dying. They've sent for me. All the little children, you
-remember I told you. I'm going to wire to Josephine and ask her if she
-can come down and look after them for a little while."
-
-"Josephine?" he questioned. He had, till now, entirely forgotten
-Josephine. Adrienne told him that she was with her parents in a
-provincial town. "They lost their only son and are very sad. Fine, brave
-old people. He is a baker, the old father, and makes the most wonderful
-bread. I went to see them last summer."
-
-Their packing was done and the room denuded; the men had taken away the
-piano that morning. He had his letters to write; so there was really no
-reason why she should not go. And there was, besides, nothing that they
-had to say to each other, except the one thing he had to say.
-
-The silence that overtakes parting friends on a station platform had
-overtaken them since the morning, though, at lunch, Adrienne had talked
-with some persistence of her immediate plans and prospects and about the
-unit of doctors and nurses who were to meet her in Italy. There was no
-reason why she should not go, and he would even rather she did. He would
-rather see no more of her until evening when everything but the one
-thing would be over and done with. And so he was left with his letters,
-leaning his elbows on the table over the hotel paper and staring out at
-the Saone and the white _archeveche_.
-
-Both letters were difficult to write; but beside the one to Lydia, the
-one to Barney was easy. Barney, after all, was to gain everything from
-what he had to tell him, and Lydia was to lose; how much was Lydia to
-lose? He recalled their last evening together and its revelations and
-saw that the old laughing presage was now more than fulfilled. Lydia was
-to lose more than her toes and fingers; in any case. Even if he returned
-to her alone, she cared for him too much not to feel, always, the shadow
-of his crippled heart; his heart not only crippled, but occupied, so
-occupied that friendships, however near, became, in a sense,
-irrelevancies. And if he returned with Adrienne--but could he return
-with Adrienne? What kind of a life could he and Adrienne lead in
-London?--even if Lydia's door, generously, was opened to them, as he
-believed it would be--knowing her generous.
-
-He laid down his pen and fixed his eyes on the river and he tried to see
-Lydia and Adrienne together. But it was a useless effort. From this
-strange haven of the Lyons hotel where he had spent the happiest
-fortnight of his life, he could not see himself into any future with
-familiar features. He could only see himself and Adrienne, alone, at
-hotels. To attempt to place her in Lydia's generous drawing-room was to
-measure more accurately than he had yet measured it the abyss that
-separated him from his former life. If it could be spanned; if Adrienne
-could be placed there, on the background of eighteenth-century fans and
-old glass, she became a clipped and tethered seagull in a garden,
-awkward, irrelevant, melancholy. Lydia might cease to find her
-third-rate and absurd; but she wouldn't know what to do with her any
-more than she would have known what to do with the seagull. So what, if
-Adrienne became his wife, remained of his friendship with Lydia?
-
-He put aside the unresolved perplexity and took Barney first.
-
-"My dear Barney," he wrote,--"I don't think that the letter Adrienne has
-written to you will surprise you as much as this letter of mine. You
-will understand from hers that she wishes to free herself and to free
-you. You will understand that that is my wish, too. She only tells you
-that she has been staying here with me, for a fortnight, as my wife;
-that's for your solicitor; you will read between the lines and know that
-it seemed worth while to both of us to make the necessary sacrifice in
-order to gain so much for you and for her. I hope that you and my dear
-Nancy will feel that we are justified, and that you will take your
-happiness as bravely as we secure it for you. You'll know that our step
-hasn't been taken lightly.
-
-"But, now, dear Barney, comes my absolutely personal contribution. It is
-a contribution, for it will make you and Nancy happier to know that I
-have as much to gain as you and she. I have fallen in love with Adrienne
-and I hope that I may win her consent to be my wife. Yes, dear Barney,
-unbelievable as it will look to you, there it is; and she dreams of it
-as little as you could have dreamed of it. I met her again, as her
-letter informs you, at the Boulogne hospital. She asked me to say
-nothing about our meeting. She wanted to disappear out of your lives.
-She saved my life, I think, and I saw a great deal of her. What I found
-in her that I had not seen before I need not say.
-
-"My great difficulty, my burden and perplexity now, lie in the fact that
-she has no trace of feeling for me that might give me hope. We became,
-at Boulogne, the best of friends; such friends that this plan suggested
-itself to her; and we remain, after our fortnight here, the best of
-friends; and that is all. Yet I have hope, unjustified and groundless
-though it may be, and had I not had it from the beginning I couldn't
-have entered upon the enterprise; not even for you and Nancy. From one
-point of view it's possible that you may feel that I've entered upon it
-in spite of you and Nancy. You may feel inclined to repudiate and disown
-the whole affair and to remain unaware of it. In that case it would come
-down to an appeal from me to you to carry it through for my sake. But
-from another point of view it makes it easier for you; easier for you to
-accept, since my hope gives integrity to the situation. That's another
-thing that decided me. If it had been mere sham I don't think I could
-have undertaken it. Adrienne felt none of my scruples on this score. She
-walked over legal and conventional commandments like a saint over hot
-ploughshares. But I haven't her immunities. I should have felt myself
-badly scorched, and felt that I'd scorched you and Nancy, if my hope
-hadn't given everything its character of _bona fides_.
-
-"Dear Barney, dear Nancy, please forgive me if I've been selfish. It
-hasn't all been selfishness, that I promise you; it was in hopes for
-you, too; and I have to face sacrifices. The worst of them will be that
-if Adrienne takes me I'll have to lose you. You can measure the depth of
-my feeling for her from the fact that I can make such sacrifices.
-Perhaps you'll feel that even if she doesn't take me I'll have to lose
-you. I hope not. I hope, in that case, that mitigations and refuges will
-be found for me and that some day you'll perhaps be able to make a
-corner in your lives where I may creep and feel my wounds less aching.
-In any case, after Adrienne, you are the creatures dearest to me in the
-world and I am always and for ever your devoted friend,
-
- ROGER."
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now Lydia. There was no use in thinking about it. The plunge must be
-taken.
-
-"My dear Lydia," he wrote,--"I have fallen in love with Adrienne Toner.
-I feel that with such a friend as you it's better to begin with the
-bomb-shell. She doesn't know it, and if we are here in this Lyons hotel
-together, it's only, she imagines, because she wishes to set Barney free
-and that I've undertaken, for her sake and for Barney's, a repugnant
-task. It is a repugnant task, in spite of what it may mean to me of
-happiness. I hate it for her, and for Barney and for myself. But since
-she was determined on it and since, if it wasn't I it was to be another
-friend, and since I have fallen in love with her, I saw that it was only
-decent that the co-respondent in the case should be the man who married
-her afterwards. For I hope to become her husband, and I haven't one jot
-of ground for my hope. We are studying Dante together, and she shows me
-the sights of Lyons. She is just the same. Yet completely altered.
-
-"I don't know whether you'll feel you can ever see me again, with or
-without her. I don't want to cast myself too heavily on your compassion,
-so I'll only remind you that even if I return to England alone I shall
-probably have to lose Nancy and Barney and that you will be my only
-refuge. It will be the culmination of my misfortunes if I have to lose
-you.
-
-"Dear Lydia, I am always your devoted
-
- "ROGER"
-
- * * * * *
-
-But he hadn't lost her. He knew he hadn't lost her; in any case. And the
-taste of what he did was sharp and bitter to him, for she was generous
-and loyal and he had cut off her very limbs. When he had addressed and
-stamped the letters he went downstairs, and, for the sense of greater
-finality, carried them to the post instead of dropping them into the
-hotel-box.
-
-He had almost the sense of disembodiment as he returned to the empty and
-dismantled room. He seemed to have become a mere consciousness suspended
-between two states of being. The past was gone. He had dropped it into
-the post-box. And he saw no future. He felt, for the moment, no hopes.
-At the moment it seemed absurd to think that Adrienne could ever love
-him. He tried to picture Coldbrooks and Somer's Place when the
-bomb-shell struck them. Would Barney show Nancy the letter? Nancy would
-be pale, aghast, silent. Barney would have to wait for days, perhaps,
-before saying to her: "But, after all, it's for their sakes, too, Nancy
-dear. See what Roger says." Mrs. Averil would cast up her hands and cry
-"That woman!"--but, perhaps, with as much admiration as repudiation, and
-Meg, if she were summoned to the scene of confusion, would say, "So
-she's got hold of Roger, too." Funnily enough it was the dear March
-Hare, he felt sure, who would be the first one to stretch out a hand
-towards the tarnished freedom. "After all, you know," he could hear her
-murmuring, "it would be much _nicer_ for Barney and Nancy to be married,
-wouldn't it? And Adrienne wasn't a Christian, you know, so probably the
-first marriage doesn't _really_ count. We mustn't be conventional,
-Monica." Yes, perhaps it would go like that at Coldbrooks. But at
-Somer's Place Lydia would sit among her fans and glass and wish that
-they had never seen Adrienne Toner.
-
-He paced up and down before the windows and he had never been so lonely
-in his life. He was so lonely that he became aware at last that his mere
-negative state was passing into a positive and that grief at the
-severance of old ties had become fear of losing Adrienne. The fear and
-the loneliness seemed actualized when, at five, the waiter appeared
-bearing the tea-tray on his shoulder. He had never had tea alone before
-in this strange, foreign room. Adrienne always made a complicated and
-charming ritual of the occasion, boiling the water on their own little
-spirit-kettle and measuring the tea from her own caddy--the very same
-kettle and caddy, she told him, that had accompanied herself and her
-mother on all their travels. And to see the cups and bread and butter
-and not to have her there, added a poignant taste of abandonment to his
-loneliness.
-
-She kept the kettle in her room and when the boy was gone he softly
-opened the door and went in. It would keep his heart up to have the
-water boiling in readiness for her arrival. He recognized, as he stood,
-then, and looked about him, that his instinct had also been that of
-taking refuge. In her room he could more closely recover the sense of
-her presence.
-
-She had finished all the essentials of her packing and her box stood
-with its lid open ready for the last disposals. Yet the room seemed
-still full of her personality. He noted it all gazing around him with
-eyes almost those of a solemn little boy permitted to glance in at a
-Christmas-tree.
-
-Her dressing-table, improvised from the mantelpiece, was neatly laid out
-with small, worn, costly, and immaculate appurtenances. He moved forward
-and looked at them, not touching. The initials intertwined on the backs
-of the ivory brushes were her girlish ones: A. T. She had discarded,
-long since, no doubt, her wedding toilet set.
-
-If he became her husband, the thought crossed his mind and quickened his
-heart, he might brush her hair for her, that wonderful golden hair,
-before many months were over.
-
-Near the ivory hand-glass stood two photographs in a folding frame of
-faded blue leather. He stooped to look and saw that one was of Mrs. and
-the other certainly of Mr. Toner, in their early days. Remote,
-mysterious and alien, their formally directed eyes looked back at him
-and in the father's ingenuous young countenance, surmounted by a roll of
-hair that was provincial without being exactly rural, the chin resting
-upon a large, peculiar collar, he could strangely retrace Adrienne's
-wide brow and steadfast light-filled eyes. Mrs. Toner wore a ruffled
-dress and of her face little remained distinct but the dark
-gaze--forceful and ambiguously gentle.
-
-The room was full of the fragrance that was not a fragrance and that
-had, long ago, reminded him of Fuller's earth. A pair of small blue
-satin _mules_ stood under a chair near the bed.
-
-Only after he had withdrawn, gently closing the door behind him, did he
-realize that he had forgotten the kettle and then he felt that he could
-not go back again. A moment after the boy returned with a note, sent, by
-hand, he was informed, from the Croix Rousse.
-
-"I am so dreadfully sorry, so disappointed," he read. "Our last
-afternoon, but I can't get away yet. Don't wait dinner for me, if I
-should be late, even for that. I won't be very late, I promise, and we
-will have our evening."
-
-The note had no address. He rushed forth and down to find the messenger
-gone. Had he only known where to seek her in the vast, high, melancholy
-district of the Croix Rousse he would have gone to join her. His sense
-of loneliness was almost a panic.
-
-Of course, he tried to fix his mind on that realization, as he went back
-to the salon, her rapatries had no doubt preoccupied her mind, from the
-first, quite as much as their own situation. She had spoken to him in
-especial of this family and of their sorrows. One child they had left
-dead at Evian and the mother, on the eve of their return to their
-Northern home, had become too desperately ill to travel. "Such dear,
-good, _gentle_ people," he recalled her saying. No; he must not repine.
-After all he had only the one thing to say to her; and the evening would
-be long enough for that.
-
-It was nearly seven when he heard her quick footstep outside. When she
-entered, the brim of her little hat, in the electric light, cast a sharp
-shadow over her eyes, but he saw at once that she had been crying.
-
-She came in so quickly that he had not time to rise and, going to him,
-behind his chair, she put her hands on his shoulders and pressed him
-down, saying: "I'm so sorry to have left you all alone."
-
-It was astonishingly comforting to have her put these fraternal hands
-upon him like this. She had never done it before. Yet there was a salty
-smart in her words to him. What else did she intend to do but leave him
-all alone for always?
-
-"I'm dreadfully lonely, I confess," he said, "and I see that you're
-dreadfully tired."
-
-She went round to the other side of the table and sat down, not looking
-at him and said, in a low voice: "Oh--the seas--the seas of misery."
-
-"You are completely worn out," he said. He was not thinking so much of
-the seas of misery as of his few remaining hours. Were they to be
-spoiled by her fatigue?
-
-"No; not worn out. Not at all worn out," said Adrienne, stretching her
-arms along the table in front of her as she sat, and though she had wept
-he could see something of ardour, of a strength renewed, in the lines of
-her pallid lips. "I've sat quite still all afternoon. I've been with
-him. She died soon after I got there. At the end she was talking about
-the little girl's grave at Evian. I was able to comfort her about that.
-She was so afraid it would not be tended. That it would have no flowers.
-Josephine will go to Evian afterwards and see about it. There are always
-dear nuns to do those things. There was a nun with her to-day. That was
-the greatest comfort of all; and the priest who came. But I was with the
-father and the five poor little children; so frightened and miserable. I
-could not leave them, you see. He talked and talked and talked. It
-helped him to talk and tell me about their home and how they had had
-everything so nice and bright. Linen, a garden, a goat and fowls. Oh, if
-only she could have seen her home again! That was what he kept saying
-and saying. They were full of hope when they got to Evian. He told me
-how the children sang at dawn when the train panted up the mountain
-among the golden trees. Like birds, he said, and _Vive la France_! They
-all believed they were to be safe and happy. _Et, Madame, c'etait notre
-calvaire qui commencait alors seulement._"
-
-She spoke, not really thinking of him, he saw, absorbed still in the
-suffering she had just left, measuring her power against such problems
-and the worse ones to which she was travelling to-morrow.
-
-"Josephine will be with them, I hope," she went on presently, "in three
-or four days. She will help them to get home and then she will come back
-and go to see about the grave at Evian. Josephine is a tower of strength
-for me."
-
-Her eyes were raised to him now, and, as they rested, he saw the
-compunction, the solicitude, with which they had met him on her
-entrance, return to them. "I'm not so very late, am I?" she said,
-rising. "I'll take off my hat and be ready in a moment."
-
-"Don't hurry," said Oldmeadow.
-
-She was tired, more tired than she knew. During dinner she hardly spoke,
-and, finding the resolve suddenly, he said, as they came back to their
-salon: "Do you know what you must do now. Go and lie down and rest for
-an hour. Until nine. It's not unselfishness. I'd rather have half of you
-to talk to for our last talk, than none of you at all."
-
-"How dear of you," she said. She looked at him with gratitude and,
-still, with the compunction. "It would be a great rest. It would be
-better for our talk. I can go to sleep at once, you know. Like
-Napoleon," she added with a flicker of her playfulness.
-
-When she had gone into her room Oldmeadow went out and walked along the
-quai. The night was dark and dimmed with fog, but there was a moon and
-as he walked he watched it glimmer on the windows of St. Jean. He seemed
-to see the august form of the cathedral through a watery element and the
-grey and silver patterns of the glass were like the scales of some vast
-fish. A sort of whale waiting to swallow up the Jonah that was himself,
-he reflected, and, leaning his elbows on the parapet of the quai, the
-analogy carried him further and he saw the cathedral like a symbol of
-Adrienne's life--her "big, big" life--looming there before him,
-becoming, as the moon rose higher, more and more visible in its austere
-and menacing majesty. What was his love to measure itself against such a
-vocation?--for that was what it came to, as she had said. She was as
-involved, as harnessed, as passionately preoccupied as a Saint Theresa.
-How could he be fitted in with Serbia and all the hordes of human need
-and wretchedness that he saw her sailing forward to succour? He knew a
-discouragement deeper than any he had felt, for he was not a doctor and
-his physical strength was crippled by his wounds; and, shaking his
-shoulders in the chilly November air, he turned his back on the
-cathedral and leaned against the parapet to look up through leafless
-branches where the plane tassels still hung, at the lighted windows of
-the hotel; their hotel, where the room, still theirs, waited for them.
-He felt himself take refuge in the banal lights. After all, she wasn't
-really a Saint Theresa. There was human misery everywhere to succour.
-Couldn't she, after a winter in Serbia, found creches and visit slums in
-London? The masculine scepticism she had detected in him had its
-justification. Women weren't meant to go on, once the world's crisis
-past, doing feats of heroism; they weren't meant for austere careers
-that gave no leisure and no home. The trivial yet radiant vision of
-intimacy rose again before him. She slept there above him and he was
-guarding her slumber. He would always watch over her and guard her. He
-would follow her round the world, if need be, and brush her hair for her
-in Serbia or California.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-The gilt clock on the mantelpiece pointed to nine, but when he went to
-Adrienne's door and listened there was no sound within her room, and his
-heart sank as he wondered if she might not sleep on, in her fatigue,
-sleep past all possible hour for their colloquy. Yet he did not feel
-that he could go in and wake her. The analogy of the cathedral loomed
-before him. It would be like waking Saint Theresa.
-
-He walked up and down the empty, glittering salon; walked and walked
-until the clock struck ten. Desperation nerved him then and he went
-again to her door and knocked.
-
-With hardly a pause her voice answered him; yet he knew that he had
-awakened her and it echoed for him with the pathos of so many past
-scenes of emergency when it must so have answered a summons from
-oblivion: "Coming, coming." Among bombings, he reflected; and sudden
-terrible influxes of dying men from the front.
-
-"Coming," he heard her repeat, on a note of dismay. She had sprung up,
-turned on her light and seen the hour.
-
-He was reminded vividly, as he saw her enter--and it was as if a great
-interval of time had separated them--of his first meeting with her. She
-was so changed; but now as then she was more composed than anyone he had
-ever met.
-
-But it was of much more than the first meeting that the pale, still face
-reminded him. His dreams were in it; the dream where she had come to
-him along the terrace, lifting her hand in the moonlight; and the dream
-of horror when he had again and again pushed it down to drown.
-
-"I'm so ashamed," she said, and he saw that it was with an effort she
-smiled. The traces of her weeping were now, after her sleep, far more
-visible, ageing her, yet making her, too, look younger; like a child
-with swollen lids and lips. "I didn't know I was so tired. I slept and
-slept. I didn't stir until I heard your knock. Never mind. We'll talk
-till midnight."
-
-She was very sorry for him.
-
-She sat down at the table and under the electric chandelier her braided
-hair showed itself all ruffled and disarranged. She had on her dark
-travelling dress and she had thrust her feet into the pale blue satin
-_mules_. The disparity of costume in one so accurate, her air of
-readiness for the morrow, made him feel her transitoriness almost more
-than her presence, though his sense of that pressed upon him with a
-stifling imminence. Even though she sat there the room kept its look of
-desolate, glittering emptiness and more than their shared life in it he
-remembered the far places from which she had come and to which she was
-going. It was as if she had just arrived and were pausing for the night
-_en route_.
-
-As he had seen them years ago, so he saw again the monster engines
-crossing the prairies at night and flying illumined pennons of smoke
-against the sky as they bore her away from blue seas, golden sands, a
-land where the good and gifted lurked behind every bush; and before her
-stretched the shining rails, miles and miles of them, running through
-ruin and desolation, that were to bear her ever onwards into the
-darkness. This was what life had brought her to. She had been only a
-sojourner among them at Coldbrooks. The linked life of order and family
-affection had cast her forth and he saw her, for ever now, unless he
-could rescue her, with only hotels to live in and only the chaos she was
-to mould, to live for. She seemed already, as she sat there under the
-light with her ruffled hair, to be sitting in the train that was to bear
-her from him.
-
-"I think you owe me till midnight, at least," he said. He had not sat
-down. He stood at some little distance from her leaning, his arms
-folded, against a gilded and inlaid console. "We've lots of things to
-talk about."
-
-"Have we?" Adrienne asked, smiling gently, but as if she humoured an
-extravagance. "We'll be together, certainly, even if we don't talk much.
-But I have some things to say, too."
-
-She had dropped her eyes to her hands which lay, lightly crossed, on the
-table before her, and she seemed to reflect how best to begin. "It's
-about Nancy and Barney," she said. "I wanted, before we part, to talk to
-you a little about them. There are things that trouble me and you are
-the only person with whom I can keep in touch. You will know how I shall
-be longing to hear, everything. You'll let me know at once, won't you?"
-
-"At once," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"There might be delays and difficulties," Adrienne went on. "I shall be
-very troubled until all that is clear. And then the money. You know
-about the money? Barney isn't well off and he was worse off after I'd
-come and gone. I tried to arrange that as best I could. Palgrave
-understood and entered into all my feelings."
-
-"Yes; I'd heard. You arranged it all very cleverly," said Oldmeadow.
-
-He moved away now and, at the other end of the room, his back to her,
-came to a standstill, while his eyes dwelt on a large gilt-framed
-engraving that hung there; some former Salon triumph; a festive,
-spring-tide scene where young women in bustles and bonnets offered sugar
-to race-horses in a meadow, admired by young men in silk hats.
-
-"Do you think this may make a difficulty?" Adrienne asked. "Make him
-more reluctant to take what is to come to him? It's Mrs. Chadwick's now,
-you know."
-
-"You've arranged it all so well," said Oldmeadow, noting the gardenias
-in the young men's button-holes, "that I don't think they can get away
-from it."
-
-"But will they hate it dreadfully?" she insisted, and he felt that her
-voice in its added urgency protested, though unconsciously, against his
-distance; "I seem to see that they might. If they can't take it as a
-sign of accepted love, won't they hate it?"
-
-"Well," said Oldmeadow, trying to reflect, though his mind was far from
-Barney and Nancy, "dear Eleanor Chadwick doesn't mind taking it,
-whatever it's a sign of. And since it will come to Barney through her, I
-don't think there'll be enough personality left hanging about it to hurt
-much."
-
-"I wish they could take it as a sign of accepted love," Adrienne
-murmured.
-
-"Perhaps they will," he said. "I'll do my best that they shall, I
-promise you."
-
-It was one thing to promise it and another to know his hope that it
-might be a promise never to be redeemed. The cross-currents in his own
-thought made him light-headed as he stood there, his back to her, and
-examined the glossy creatures in the meadow. "Do you think it will all
-take a long time?" Adrienne added, after a little pause. "Will they be
-able to marry in six or eight months, say?"
-
-"It depends on how soon Barney takes action. Say about a year," he
-suggested. "They'd wait a little first, wouldn't they?"
-
-"I hope not. They've waited so long already. I hope it will be as soon
-as possible. I shall feel so much more peaceful when I hear they're
-married. Could you, perhaps, make them see that, too?"
-
-And again he promised. "I'll make them see everything I can."
-
-He turned to her at last. She sat, her face still downcast in its
-shadow, while the light glittered on her wreaths of hair. Her hands
-still lay before her on the table, and the light fell on her
-wedding-ring. Perhaps she was looking at the ring.
-
-"It all depends on something else," he heard himself say suddenly.
-
-She turned her head and looked round at him. His attitude, his distance
-from her, drew her attention rather than his words, for she repeated
-mildly: "On something else?"
-
-"Whether I can keep those promises, you know," said Oldmeadow. "Yes, it
-all depends on something else. That's what I want to talk to you about."
-
-He hardly knew what he was saying as he approached the table and pushed
-the brocaded chair, companion to the one in which she sat, a little
-from its place. He leaned on its back and looked down at her hands and
-Adrienne kept her eyes on him, attentive rather than perplexed.
-
-"May I talk to you about it now?" he asked. "It's something quite
-different."
-
-"Oh, do," said Adrienne. She drew her hands into her lap and sat
-upright, in readiness. And, suddenly, as he was silent, she added:
-"About yourself? I've been forgetting that, haven't I? I've only been
-thinking of my side. You have quite other plans, perhaps. Perhaps you're
-not going back to England for ever so long. Is it an appointment?"
-
-"No; not an appointment," he muttered, still looking down, at the table
-now, since her hands were no longer there. "But perhaps I shan't be
-going back for a long time. I hope not."
-
-"Oh," she murmured. And now he had perplexed her. After what he had just
-promised her, his hope must perplex and even trouble her. "Do tell me,"
-she said.
-
-"It's something I want to ask you," said Oldmeadow--"And it will
-astonish you. You may find it hard to forgive; because I've meant to ask
-it from the beginning; from our deciding to go away together. As far
-back as the time in the hospital."
-
-"But you may ask anything. Anything at all," she almost urged upon him.
-"After what I've asked you--you have every right. If there's anything I
-can do in the wide, wide world for you--oh! you know how glad and proud
-I should be. As for forgiveness"--he heard the smile in her voice, she
-was troubled, yet tranquil, too--"you're forgiven in advance."
-
-"Am I? Wait and see." He, too, tried to smile, as he used the tag; but
-it was a mechanical smile and he felt his heart knocking against the
-chair-back as he went on: "Because I haven't done what you asked me to
-do as you asked me to do it. I haven't done it from the motive you
-supposed. It's been for Barney and for Nancy and for you; but it's been
-most of all for myself." He screwed his glass into his eye as he spoke
-with a gesture as mechanical as the smile had been and he looked at her
-at last, thus brought nearer. "I want you not to go on to-morrow." It
-was the first, the evident, the most palpable desire that rose to his
-lips. "I want you never to go on again, alone. If you can't stay with
-me, I want you to let me follow you. When the time comes I want you to
-marry me. I love you."
-
-The light as it fell on her seemed suddenly strange, almost portentous
-in its brilliancy. Or was it her stillness, as she sat and gazed at him
-after he had spoken the words, that was strange and portentous? It was
-as if they arrested the currents of her being and she sat tranced,
-frozen into the fixed shape of an astonishment too deep for emotion. Her
-eyes did not alter in their gentleness; but the gentleness became tragic
-and pitiful, like the inappropriate calm on the mask of a dead face at
-Pompeii, fixed in an eternal unreadiness by the engulfing lava.
-
-She put up her hand at last and pushed back her hair. With her forehead
-bared she became more like the photograph of her father. When she spoke
-her voice was slow and feeble, like the voice of a person dangerously
-ill. "I don't understand you."
-
-"Try to," said Oldmeadow. "You must begin far back."
-
-She still kept her hand pressed upon her hair. "You don't mean that it's
-the conventionally honourable thing to do? Oh, no; you don't mean that?"
-Her face in its effort to understand was appalled.
-
-"No; I don't mean anything conventional," he returned. "I'm thinking
-only of you. Of my love. I'll come with you to Serbia to-morrow--if
-you'll let me. I could kneel and worship you as you sit there."
-
-"Oh," she more feebly murmured. She sank back in her chair.
-
-"My darling, my saint," said Oldmeadow, gazing at her; "if you must
-leave me, you'll take that with you; that the man who destroyed you is
-your lover; that you are dearer to him than anything on earth."
-
-"Oh," she murmured again, and she put her hands before her face. Her
-eyes were hidden; she had spoken no word of reproach and he could not
-keep himself from her. He knelt beside her, grasping the chair across,
-behind her. She was so near that he could have laid his head upon her
-breast. "Don't leave me," he heard his pleading voice, but she seemed so
-much nearer than his own voice; "or let me come. Everything shall be as
-you wish and when you wish. Tell me that you care, too; or that you can
-come to care. Tell me that you can think of me as your husband."
-
-She was there, with her hidden eyes, within his arms, and inevitably
-they closed around her, and though he heard her murmur, "Please, please,
-please," he could not relinquish her. She was free and he was free.
-They had cut themselves off from the world. They were alone in the
-strange city; in the strange, bright, hallucinated room; and he knew
-from the ache and rapture of her nearness how he had craved it.
-
-But, gently, he heard her say again, "Please," and gently she put him
-from her and he saw her face, and her eyes full of grief and gentleness.
-"Forgive me," she said.
-
-"My darling. For what?" he almost groaned. "Don't say you're going to
-break my heart."
-
-She kept her hand on his breast, holding him from her while she looked
-into his eyes. "It is so beautiful to be loved," she said, and her voice
-was still the slow, feeble voice of exhaustion. "Even when one has no
-right to be. Don't misunderstand. Even when one may not love back; not
-in that way. Forgive me; not in that way; my dearest friend."
-
-"Why mayn't you love back? Why not in that way? If it's beautiful, why
-mayn't you?"
-
-"Sit there, will you? Yes; keep my hand. How weak I've been, and cruel.
-It can't be. Don't you know? Haven't you seen? It has always been for
-him. He must be free; but I can never be free."
-
-"Oh, no. No. That's impossible," Oldmeadow said, leaning towards her
-across the table and keeping her hand in both of his. "I can't stand
-that. I could stand your work, your vocation, better. But not Barney,
-who loves another woman. That's impossible."
-
-"But it is so," she said, softly, looking at him. "Really it is so."
-
-"No, no," Oldmeadow repeated, and he raised her hand to his lips and
-kept it there, a talisman against the menace of her words. "He lost
-you. He's gone. I've found you and you care for me. You can't hide from
-me that you care for me. Just now. For those moments. You were mine."
-
-"No," she repeated. "I was weak and cruel, but I was not yours."
-
-She had been incredibly near so short a time ago before. Now, looking at
-him, with her difficult breaths and gentle, inflexible eyes, she was
-incredibly remote. "I am his, only his," she said. "I love him and I
-shall always love him. It makes no difference. He loves Nancy, but it
-makes no difference. He is my husband. The father of my baby."
-
-She tried to speak on steadily while she thus gave him the truth that
-ended all his hope; but the desperate emotion with which he received it
-made real and overpowering to her her outlived yet living sorrow. With
-all that she must relinquish laid bare to her in the passion of his eyes
-she could measure all that she had lost, as she had, perhaps, till then,
-never measured it. "Don't you know?" she said. "Don't you see? My heart
-is broken, broken, broken."
-
-She put her head down on her arms as she said the words and he heard her
-bitter weeping.
-
-He knew, as he listened, that it was all over with him. Dimly, in the
-terrible suffering that wrenched at him, he received his further
-revelation of the nature already nearer him than any in the world. Her
-strength would be in all she did and felt. She had loved Barney and she
-would always love him. Her marriage had been to her an ultimate and
-indissoluble experience. That was why she had been so blind. She could
-not have thought of herself as a woman to be again loved and wooed.
-
-Her hair lay against his hands, still holding hers, and he found himself
-stroking it, without tenderness or solicitude it seemed. It seemed to be
-only automatically that his fingers passed across it, while he noted its
-warmth and fineness and bright, lovely colour, remembering that he had
-thought it at the first her one indubitable beauty.
-
-They sat there thus for a long time. The gilt clock paused, choked, then
-in a voice of hurrying, hoarsened silver rang out eleven strokes.
-Footsteps passed and faded up the corridor; doors closed. A tramway on
-the quai clashed and clanged, came to a noisy standstill, and moved on
-again with a rattling of cables and raucous blasts from a horn; and in
-the profound silence that followed he seemed to hear the deep old river
-flowing.
-
-"Really, you see, it's broken," said Adrienne. She had ceased to weep,
-but she still leaned forward, her head upon her folded arms. "You saw it
-happen," she said. "That night when you found me in the rain."
-
-"I've seen everything happen to you, haven't I?" said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Yes," she assented. "Everything. And I've made you suffer, too. Isn't
-that strange; everybody who comes near me I make suffer."
-
-"Well, in different ways," he said. "Some because you are near and
-others because you won't be."
-
-His voice was colourless. His hand still passed across her hair.
-
-"Don't you see," she said, after a moment, "that it couldn't have been.
-Try to see that and to accept it. Not you and me. Not Barney's friend
-and Barney's wife. In every way it couldn't have done, really. It makes
-no difference for me. I'm a _deracinee_, as I said. A wanderer. But what
-would have become of you, all full of roots as you are? You can live it
-down without me. You never could have with. And how could you have
-wandered with me? For that must be my life."
-
-"You know, it's no good trying to comfort me," said Oldmeadow. "What I
-feel is that any roots I have are in you."
-
-"They will grow again. The others will grow again."
-
-"I don't want others, darling," said Oldmeadow. "You see, my heart is
-broken, too."
-
-She lifted her head at last and he saw her marred and ravaged face.
-
-"It can't be helped," he tried to smile at her. "You weren't there to be
-recognized when I first met you and now that you are there, I've come
-too late. I believe that if I'd come before Barney, you'd have loved me.
-It's my only comfort."
-
-"Who can say," said Adrienne. Her gaze, as she looked at him, was deep
-with the mystery of her acceptance. "Perhaps. It seems to me all this
-was needed to bring us where we are--enmity and bitterness and grief.
-And my love for Barney, too. Let me tell you. It's in the past that I
-think of him. As if he were dead. It's something over; done with for
-ever; yet something always there. How can one be a mother and forget?
-Even when he is Nancy's husband and when she is a mother, I shall not
-cease to feel myself his wife. Perhaps you think that strange, after Meg
-and what I believed right for her. But it is quite clear to me, and
-simple. It isn't a thing of laws and commandments; only of our own
-hearts. If we can love again, we may. But for me it would be impossible.
-With me everything was involved. I couldn't, ever, be twice a wife."
-
-Silence fell between them.
-
-"I'll see about the little girl's grave," said Oldmeadow suddenly. He
-did not know what had made him think of it. Perhaps something that had
-gone on echoing in him after she had spoken of her maternity. "I'll go
-to Evian to-morrow. It will spare Josephine the journey and give me
-something to do. You'll tell me the name and give me the directions
-before you go."
-
-Tears filled her eyes as she looked at him; but they did not fall. They
-could need no controlling. The springs of weeping must be nearly
-drained. "Thank you," she said, and she looked away, seeming to think
-intently.
-
-It was now too late for the tramways. They had ceased to crash and
-rattle by, but a sound of belated singing passed along the quais,
-melancholy in its induced and extravagant mirth.
-
-The horrible sense of human suffering that had beaten in upon him at the
-hospital, pressed again upon his heart. He saw himself departing next
-day to find the abandoned grave and he saw himself standing beside her
-train and measuring along the shining rails the vast distances that were
-to bear her away for ever.
-
-"That's the worst," he said. "You're suffering too. I must see you go
-away and know that you are unhappy. I must think of you as unhappy. With
-a broken heart."
-
-Her eyes, after she had thanked him, had been fixed in the intent
-reverie. She, too, perhaps, had been seeing those tides of misery, the
-sea of which she had spoken, breaking in tragic waves for ever; so
-unchanged by all the alleviations that love or mercy could bring; and it
-was perhaps with despair that she saw herself as one with it. Her eyes
-as she turned them on him were full of distance and of depth and, with
-sickening grief, he felt that a woman with a broken heart could do
-nothing more for herself or for him.
-
-But her thought, whatever the voids of darkness it had visited, drew
-nearer and nearer to his need as she looked at him. Something of her own
-strong vigilance was in the look, bringing the seagull to his mind. The
-seagull caught and battered by the waves, with sodden wings, half
-dragged down, yet summoning its strength to rise from the submerging
-sea.
-
-"But you can be happy with a broken heart," she said. Their hands had
-fallen apart long since. She stretched out hers now and took his in her
-small, firm grasp.
-
-"Can you?" he asked.
-
-"You mustn't think of me like this," she said, and it was as if she read
-his thoughts and their imagery. "I went down, I know; like drowning.
-Sometimes the waves break over you and pull you down, and there seems
-nothing else in all the world but yourself and what you've suffered. But
-it doesn't last. Something brings you up again."
-
-Something had brought her up again now. His darkness. His misery. It was
-as if he saw her spread her wings and saw her eyes measuring, for them
-both, the spaces of sea and sky.
-
-He remembered a picture in a book he had loved as a little boy: little
-Diamond held to the breast of the North Wind as she flies forth in her
-streaming hair against a sky of stars. So he felt himself lying on her
-breast and lifted with her.
-
-"I've told you how happy I can be. It's all true," she said. "It's all
-there. The light, the peace, the strength. I shall find them. And so
-will you."
-
-"Shall I?" he questioned gently. "Without you?"
-
-"Yes. Without me. You will find them. But you won't be without me," said
-Adrienne.
-
-Already she was finding them. He knew that, for, as she looked at him,
-he felt an influence passing from her to him like the laying of her hand
-upon his brow. But it was closer than that. It was to her breast that
-her eyes held him while, in a long silence, the compulsion of her faith
-flowed into him. First quietness; then peace; then a lifting radiance.
-
-"Promise me," he heard her say.
-
-He did not know what it was he must promise, but he seemed to feel it
-all without knowing and he said: "I promise."
-
-She rose and stood above him. "You mustn't regret. You mustn't want."
-
-She laid her hands upon his shoulders as she spoke and looked down at
-him, so austere, so radiant. "Anything else would have spoiled it. We
-were only meant to find each other like this and then to part."
-
-"I'll be good," said Oldmeadow. It was like saying one's prayers at
-one's mother's knees and his lips found the child-like formula.
-
-"We must part," said Adrienne. "I have my life and you have yours and
-they take different ways. But you won't be without me, I won't be
-without you. How can we be, when we will never, never forget each other
-and our love?"
-
-He looked up at her. He had put out his hands and they grasped her dress
-as a donor in a votive altarpiece grasps the Madonna's healing garment.
-It was not, he knew, to keep her. It was rather in an accepting
-relinquishment that he held her thus for their last communion, receiving
-through touch and sight and hearing her final benison.
-
-"I will think of you every day, until I die," she said. "I will pray for
-you every day. Dear friend--dearest friend--God bless and keep you."
-
-She had stooped to him and for a transcending moment he was taken into
-her strong, life-giving embrace. The climax of his life was come as he
-felt her arms close round him and her kiss upon his forehead. And as she
-held him thus he believed all that she had said and all for which she
-could have found no words. That he should find the light and more and
-more feel their unity in it: that the thought of her would be strength
-to him always; as the thought of him and of his love would be strength
-to her.
-
-After she had gone, he sat for a long time bathed in the sense of her
-life, and tasting, for that span of time, her own security of eternal
-goodness.
-
-THE END
-
-
-Typographical error was corrected by the etext transcriber:
-
-"Adriennes mustn't fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only
-justification for Adriennes is to be in the right. => "Adrienne mustn't
-fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only justification for Adrienne is
-to be in the right. {pg 241}
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Adrienne Toner, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Adrienne Toner, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Adrienne Toner
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: March 29, 2013 [EBook #42428]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADRIENNE TONER ***
-
-
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-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-_A Novel_
-
-BY
-ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK
-(Mrs. Basil de Sélincourt)
-
-AUTHOR OF "CHRISTMAS ROSES, AND OTHER STORIES," "TANTE"
-"FRANKLIN KANE," "THE ENCOUNTER," ETC.
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-BOSTON AND NEW YORK
-HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
-The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY ANNE DOUGLAS DE SÉLINCOURT
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-THIRD IMPRESSION, MAY, 1922
-
-The Riverside Press
-CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS
-PRINTED IN THE U . S . A.
-
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-
-
-
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-"Come down to Coldbrooks next week-end, will you, Roger?" said Barney
-Chadwick. He had been wandering around the room, pausing once to glance
-at the César Franck on the piano and once at the window to look down at
-the Thames, and his voice now, though desultory in intention, betrayed
-to his friend preoccupation and even anxiety. "There is going to be an
-interesting girl with us: American; very original and charming."
-
-Roger Oldmeadow sat at his writing-bureau in the window, and his high
-dark head was silhouetted against the sky. It had power and even beauty,
-with moments of brooding melancholy; but the type to which it most
-conformed was that of the clever, cantankerous London bachelor; and if
-he sometimes looked what he was, the scholar who had taken a double
-first at Balliol and gave brain and sinew to an eminent review, he
-looked more often what he was not, a caustic, cautious solicitor,
-clean-shaved and meticulously neat, with the crisp bow at his collar,
-single eyeglass, and thin, wry smile.
-
-There was a cogitative kindness in his eyes and a latent irony on his
-lips as he now scrutinized Barney Chadwick, who had come finally to lean
-against the mantelpiece, and it was difficult before Roger Oldmeadow's
-gaze at such moments not to feel that you were giving yourself away.
-This was evidently what Barney was trying not to feel, or, at all
-events, not to show. He tapped his cigarette-end, fixing his eyes upon
-it and frowning a little. He had ruffled his brown hair with the nervous
-hand passed through it during his ramble, but ruffled or sleek Barney
-could never look anything but perfection, just as, whether he smiled or
-frowned, he could never look anything but charming. In his spring-tide
-grey, with a streak of white inside his waistcoat and a tie of petunia
-silk that matched his socks, he was a pleasant figure of fashion; and he
-was more than that; more than the mere London youth of 1913, who danced
-the tango and cultivated Post-Impressionism and the Russian ballet. He
-was perhaps not much more; but his difference, if slight, made him
-noticeable. It came back, no doubt, to the fact of charm. He was radiant
-yet reserved; confident yet shy. He had a slight stammer, and his smile
-seemed to ask you to help him out. His boyhood, at twenty-nine, still
-survived in his narrow face, clumsy in feature and delicate in contour,
-with long jaw, high temples and brown eyes, half sweet, half sleepy. The
-red came easily to his brown cheek, and he had the sensitive, stubborn
-lips of the little boy at the preparatory school whom Oldmeadow had met
-and befriended now many years ago.
-
-In Oldmeadow's eyes he had always remained the "little Barney" he had
-then christened him--even Barney's mother had almost forgotten that his
-real name was Eustace--and he could not but know that Barney depended
-upon him more than upon anyone in the world. To Barney his negations
-were more potent than other people's affirmations, and though he had
-sometimes said indignantly, "You leave one nothing to agree about,
-Roger, except Plato and Church-music," he was never really happy or
-secure in his rebellions from what he felt or suspected to be
-Oldmeadow's tastes and judgments. Oldmeadow had seen him through many
-admirations, not only for books and pictures, but for original girls.
-Barney thought that he liked the unusual. He was a devotee of the
-ballet, and had in his rooms cushions and curtains from the Omega shop
-and a drawing by Wyndham Lewis. But Oldmeadow knew that he really
-preferred the photograph of a Burne-Jones, a survival from Oxford days,
-that still bravely, and irrelevantly, hung opposite it, and he waited to
-see the Wyndham Lewis replaced by a later portent. Barney could remain
-stubbornly faithful to old devotions, but he was easily drawn into new
-orbits; and it was a new star, evidently, that he had come to describe
-and justify.
-
-"What have I to do with charming American girls?" Oldmeadow inquired,
-turning his eyes on the blurred prospect of factory-chimneys and
-warehouses that the farther waterside of Chelsea affords. One had to go
-to the window and look out to see the grey and silver river flowing, in
-the placidity that revealed so little power. Oldmeadow lived in a flat
-on the Embankment; but he was not an admirer of Chelsea, just as he was
-not an admirer of Whistler nor--and Barney had always suspected it--of
-Burne-Jones. His flat gave him, at a reasonable cost, fresh air,
-boiling-hot water and a walk in Battersea Park; these, with his piano,
-were his fundamental needs; though he owned, for the mean little stream
-it was, that the Thames could look pretty enough by morning sunlight
-and--like any river--magical under stars. After Plato and Bach,
-Oldmeadow's passions were the rivers of France.
-
-"She'll have something to do with you," said Barney, and he seemed
-pleased with the retort. "I met her at the Lumleys. They think her the
-marvel of the age."
-
-"Well, that doesn't endear her to me," said Oldmeadow. "And I don't like
-Americans."
-
-"Come, you're not quite so hide-bound as all that," said Barney, vexed.
-"What about Mrs. Aldesey? I've heard you say she's the most charming
-woman you know."
-
-"Except Nancy," Oldmeadow amended.
-
-"No one could call Nancy a charming woman," said Barney, looking a
-little more vexed. "She's a dear, of course; but she's a mere girl. What
-do you know about Americans, anyway--except Mrs. Aldesey?"
-
-"What she tells me about them--the ones she doesn't know," said
-Oldmeadow, leaning back in his chair with a laugh. "But I own that I'm
-merely prejudiced. Tell me about your young lady, and why you want her
-to have something to do with me. Is she a reformer of some sort?"
-
-"She's a wonderful person, really," said Barney, availing himself with
-eagerness of his opportunity. "Not a reformer. Only a sort of mixture of
-saint and fairy-princess. She cured Charlie Lumley of insomnia, three
-years ago, at Saint Moritz. Nothing psychic or theatrical, you know.
-Just sat by him and smiled--she's a most extraordinary smile--and laid
-her hand on his head. He'd not slept for nights and went off like a
-lamb. Lady Lumley almost cries when she tells about it. They thought
-Charlie might lose his mind if he went on not sleeping."
-
-"My word! She's a Christian Science lady? A medium? What?"
-
-"Call her what you like. You'll see. She does believe in spiritual
-forces. It's not only that. She's quite lovely. In every way. Nancy and
-Meg will worship her. The Lumley girls do."
-
-Oldmeadow's thoughts were already dwelling in rueful surmise on Nancy.
-He had always thought her the nicest young creature he had ever known,
-nicer even than Barney; and he had always wanted them to marry. She was
-Barney's second cousin, and she and her mother lived near the Chadwicks
-in Gloucestershire.
-
-"Oh, Nancy will worship her, will she? She must be all right, then.
-What's her name?" he asked.
-
-Barney had given up trying to be desultory, and his conscious firmness
-was now not lost upon his friend as he answered, stammering a little,
-"Adrienne. Adrienne Toner."
-
-"Why Adrienne?" Oldmeadow mildly inquired. "Has she French blood?"
-
-"Not that I know of. It's a pretty name, I think, Adrienne. One hears
-more inane names given to girls every day. Her mother loved France--just
-as you do, Roger. Adrienne was born in Paris, I think."
-
-"Oh, a very pretty name," said Oldmeadow, noting Barney's already
-familiar use of it. "Though it sounds more like an actress's than a
-saint's."
-
-"There was something dramatic about the mother, I fancy," said Barney,
-sustained, evidently, by his own detachment. "A romantic, rather absurd,
-but very loveable person. Adrienne worshipped her and, naturally, can't
-see the absurdity. She died out in California. On a boat," said Barney
-stammering again, over the _b_.
-
-"On a boat?"
-
-"Yes. Awfully funny. But touching, too. That's what she wanted, when she
-died: the sea and sky about her. They carried her on her yacht--doctors,
-nurses, all the retinue--and sailed far out from shore. It's beautiful,
-too, in a way you know, to be able to do that sort of thing quite simply
-and unself-consciously. Adrienne sat beside her, and they smiled at each
-other and held hands until the end."
-
-Oldmeadow played with his penholder. He was disconcerted; and most of
-all by the derivative emotion in Barney's voice. They had gone far,
-then, already, the young people. Nancy could have not the ghost of a
-chance. And the nature of what touched Barney left him singularly dry.
-He was unable to credit so much simplicity or unself-consciousness. He
-coughed shortly, and after a decently respectful interval inquired: "Is
-Miss Toner very wealthy?"
-
-"Yes, very," said Barney, relapsing now into a slight sulkiness. "At
-least, perhaps not very, as rich Americans go. She gave away a lot of
-her fortune, I know, when her mother died. She founded a place for
-children--a convalescent home, or crèche--out in California. And she did
-something in Chicago, too."
-
-And Miss Toner had evidently done something in London at the Lumleys'.
-It couldn't be helped about Nancy, and if the American girl was pretty
-and, for all her nonsense, well-bred, it might not be a bad thing, since
-there was so much money. The Chadwicks were not at all well off, and
-Coldbrooks was only kept going by Mrs. Chadwick's economies and Barney's
-labours at his uncle's stock-broking firm in the city. Oldmeadow could
-see Eleanor Chadwick's so ingenuous yet so practical eye fixed on Miss
-Toner's gold, and he, too, could fix his. Miss Toner sounded benevolent,
-and it was probable that her presence as mistress of Coldbrooks would be
-of benefit to all Barney's relatives. All the same, she sounded as
-irrelevant in his life as the Wyndham Lewis.
-
-"Adrienne Toner," he heard himself repeating aloud, for he had a trick,
-caught, no doubt, from his long loneliness, of relapsing into
-absent-minded and audible meditations. The cadence of it worried him. It
-was an absurd name. "You know each other pretty well already, it seems,"
-he said.
-
-"Yes; it's extraordinary how one seems to know her. One doesn't have any
-formalities to get through with her, as it were," said Barney. "Either
-you are there, or you are not there."
-
-"Either on the yacht, or not on the yacht, eh?" Oldmeadow reached out
-for his pipe.
-
-"Put it like that if you choose. It's awfully jolly to be on the yacht,
-I can tell you. It _is_ like a voyage, a great adventure, to know her."
-
-"And what's it like to be off the yacht? Suppose I'm not there? Suppose
-she doesn't like me?" Oldmeadow suggested. "What am I to talk to her
-about--of course I'll come, if you really want me. But she frightens me
-a little, I confess. I'm not an adventurous person."
-
-"But neither am I, you know!" Barney exclaimed, "and that's just what
-she does to you: makes you adventurous. She'll be immensely interested
-in you, of course. You can talk to her about anything. It was down at a
-week-end at the Lumleys' I first met her, and there were some tremendous
-big-wigs there, political, you know, and literary, and all that sort of
-thing; and she had them all around her. She'd have frightened me, too,
-if I hadn't seen at once that she took to me and wouldn't mind my being
-just ordinary. She likes everybody; that's just it. She takes to
-everybody, big and little. She's just like sunshine," Barney stammered a
-little over his _s_'s. "That's what she makes one think of straight off;
-shining on everything."
-
-"On the clean and the unclean. I see," said Oldmeadow. "I feel it in my
-bones that I shall come into the unclean category with her. But it'll do
-me the more good to have her shine on me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-Roger Oldmeadow went to have tea with Mrs. Aldesey next afternoon. She
-was, after the Chadwicks, his nearest friend, and his relation to the
-Chadwicks was one of affection rather than affinity. They had been
-extraordinarily kind to him since the time that he had befriended Barney
-at the preparatory school, hiding, under his grim jocularities, the
-bewilderment of a boy's first great bereavement. His love for his mother
-had been an idolatry, and his childhood had been haunted by her
-ill-health. She died when he was thirteen, and in some ways he knew
-that, even now, he had never got over it. His unfortunate and frustrated
-love-affair in early manhood had been, when all was said and done, a
-trivial grief compared to it. Coldbrooks had become, after that, his
-only home, for he had lost his father as a very little boy, and the
-whole family had left the country parsonage and been thrown on the
-mercies of an uncle and aunt who lived in a grim provincial town.
-Oldmeadow's most vivid impression of home was the high back bedroom
-where the worn carpet was cold to the feet and the fire a sulky spot of
-red, and the windows looked out over smoky chimney-pots. Here his
-stricken mother lay in bed with her cherished cat beside her and read
-aloud to him. There was always a difficulty about feeding poor Effie,
-Aunt Aggie declaring that cats should live below stairs and on mice; and
-Roger, at midday dinner, became adroit at slipping bits of meat from
-his plate into a paper held in his lap and carried triumphantly to his
-mother's room afterwards. "Oh, darling, you _oughtn't_ to," she would
-say with her loving, girlish smile, and he would reply, "But I went
-without, Mummy; so it's quite all right." His two little sisters were
-kept in the nursery, as they were noisy, high-spirited children, and
-tired their mother too much. Roger was her companion, her comrade; her
-only comrade in the world, really, beside Effie. It had been Mrs.
-Chadwick who had saved Effie from the lethal chamber after her
-mistress's death. Roger never spoke about his mother, but he did speak
-about Effie when she was thus threatened, and he had never forgotten,
-never, never, Mrs. Chadwick's eager cry of, "But bring her here, my dear
-Roger. I _like_ idle cats! Bring her here, and I promise you that we'll
-make her happy. Animals are _so_ happy at Coldbrooks." To see Effie
-cherished, petted, occupying the best chairs during all the years that
-followed, had been to see his mother, in this flickering little ghost,
-remembered in the only way he could have borne to see her explicitly
-remembered, and it was because of Effie that he had most deeply loved
-Coldbrooks. It remained always his refuge during a cheerless and
-harassed youth, when, with his two forceful, black-browed sisters to
-settle in life, he had felt himself pant and strain under the harness.
-He was fonder of them than they of him, for they were hard, cheerful
-young women, inheriting harshness of feature and manner from their
-father, with their father's black eyes. It was from his mother that
-Oldmeadow had his melancholy blue ones, and he had never again met his
-mother's tenderness.
-
-Both sisters were now settled, one in India and one, very prosperously,
-in London; but he seldom turned for tea into Cadogan Gardens and
-Trixie's brisk Chippendale drawing-room; though Cadogan Gardens was
-obviously more convenient than Somer's Place, where, on the other side
-of the park, Mrs. Aldesey lived. He had whims, and did not know whether
-it was because he more disliked her husband or her butler that he went
-so seldom to see Trixie. Her husband was jovial and familiar, and the
-butler had a face like a rancid ham and a surreptitious manner. One had
-always to be encountered at the door, and the other was too often in the
-drawing-room, and Trixie was vexatiously satisfied with both; Trixie
-also had four turbulent, intelligent children, in whom complacent
-parental theories of uncontrol manifested themselves unpleasantly, and
-altogether she was too much hedged in by obstacles to be tempting; even
-had she been tempting in herself. Intercourse with Trixie, when it did
-take place, consisted usually of hard-hearted banter. She bantered him a
-great deal about Mrs. Aldesey, who, she averred, snubbed her. Not that
-Trixie minded being snubbed by anybody.
-
-It was a pleasant walk across the park on this spring day when the
-crocuses were fully out in the grass, white, purple and gold, and the
-trees just scantly stitched with green, and, as always, it was with a
-slight elation that he approached his friend. However dull or jaded
-oneself or the day, the thought of her cheered one as did the thought of
-tea. She made him think of her own China tea. She suggested delicate
-ceremoniousness. Though familiar, there was always an aroma of
-unexpectedness about her; a slight, sweet shock of oddity and surprise.
-
-Mrs. Aldesey was unlike the traditional London American. She was neither
-rich nor beautiful nor noticeably well-dressed. One became gradually
-aware, after some time spent in her company, that her clothes,
-soft-tinted and silken, were pleasing, as were her other appurtenances;
-the narrow front of her little house, painted freshly in white and green
-and barred by boxes of yellow wallflower; the serenely unfashionable
-water-colours of Italy, painted by her mother, on the staircase; and her
-drawing-room, grey-green and primrose-yellow, with eighteenth-century
-fans, of which she had a collection, displayed in cabinets, and good old
-glass.
-
-Mrs. Aldesey herself, behind her tea-table, very faded, very thin, with
-what the French term a _souffreteux_ little face--an air of just not
-having taken drugs to make her sleep, but of having certainly taken
-tabloids to make her digest--seemed already to belong to a passing order
-of things; an order still sustained, if lightly, by stays, and keeping a
-prayer-book as punctually in use as a card-case.
-
-Oldmeadow owed her, if indirectly, to the Chadwicks, as he owed so much,
-even if it was entirely on his own merits that he had won her regard.
-They had met, years ago, in France; an entirely chance encounter, and
-probably a futureless one, had it not been for the presence in the hotel
-at Amboise of the Lumleys. They both slightly knew the Lumleys, and the
-Lumleys and the Chadwicks were old friends. So it had come about; and if
-he associated Mrs. Aldesey with tea, he associated her also with perfect
-omelettes and the Loire. He had liked her at once so much, that, had it
-not been for an always unseen yet never-repudiated husband in New York,
-he would certainly, at the beginning, have fallen in love with her. But
-the unrepudiated husband made as much a part of Mrs. Aldesey's
-environment as her stays and her prayer-book. The barrier was so evident
-that one did not even reflect on what one might have done had it not
-been there; and indeed, Mrs. Aldesey, he now seemed, after many pleasant
-years of friendship, to recognize, for all the sense of sweetness and
-exhilaration she gave him, had not enough substance to rouse or sustain
-his heart. She was, like the tea again, all savour.
-
-She lifted to-day her attentive blue eyes--with age they would become
-shrewd--and gave him her fine little hand, blue-veined and ornamented
-with pearls and diamonds in old settings. She wore long earrings and a
-high, transparent collar of net and lace. Her earrings and her
-elaborately dressed hair, fair and faded, seemed as much a part of her
-personality as her eyes, her delicate nose and her small, slightly
-puckered mouth that dragged provocatively and prettily at one corner
-when she smiled. Oldmeadow sometimes wondered if she were happy; but
-never because of anything she said or did.
-
-"I want to hear about some people called Toner," he said, dropping into
-the easy-chair on the opposite side of the tea-table. It was almost
-always thus that he and Mrs. Aldesey met. He rarely dined out. "I'm
-rather perturbed. I think that Barney--you remember young Chadwick--is
-going to marry a Miss Toner--a Miss Adrienne Toner. And I hope you'll
-have something to her advantage to tell me. As you know, I'm devoted to
-Barney and his family."
-
-"I know. The Lumleys' Chadwicks. I remember perfectly. The dear boy with
-the innocent eyes and sulky mouth. Why don't you bring him to see me?
-He's dancing the tango in all his spare moments, I suppose, and doesn't
-care about old ladies." Mrs. Aldesey was not much over forty, but always
-thus alluded to herself. "Toner," she took up, pouring out his tea. "Why
-perturbed? Do you know anything against them? Americans, you mean. We
-poor expatriates are always seen as keepers to so many curious
-brethren.--Toner. _Celà ne me dit rien_."
-
-"I know nothing against them except that Mrs. Toner, the girl's mother,
-died, by arrangement, out at sea, on her yacht--in sunlight. Does that
-say anything? People don't do that in America, do they, as a rule? A
-very opulent lady, I inferred."
-
-"Oh, dear!" Mrs. Aldesey now ejaculated, as if enlightened. "Can it be?
-Do you mean, I wonder, the preposterous Mrs. Toner, of whom, fifteen
-years ago, I had a glimpse, and used to hear vague rumours? She wandered
-about the world. She dressed in the Empire period: Queen Louise of
-Prussia, white gauze bound beneath her chin. She had a harp, and warbled
-to monarchs. She had an astral body, and a Yogi and a yacht and
-everything handsome about her. The typical spiritual _cabotine_ of our
-epoch--though I'm sure they must always have existed. Of course it must
-be she. No one else could have died like that. Has she died, poor woman?
-On a yacht. Out at sea. In sunlight. How uncomfortable!"
-
-"Yes, she's dead," said Oldmeadow resignedly. "Yes; it's she, evidently.
-And her daughter is coming down to Coldbrooks this week-end. I'm afraid
-that unless Barney has too many rivals, he'll certainly marry her. But
-what you say leads me to infer that he will have rivals and to hope they
-may be successful. She will, no doubt, marry a prince."
-
-"Something Italian, perhaps. Quite a small fortune will do that.
-Certainly your nice Barney wouldn't have been at all Mrs. Toner's
-_affaire_. The girl on her own may think differently, for your Barney
-is, I remember, very engaging, and has a way with him. I don't know
-anything about the girl. I didn't know there was one. There's no reason
-why she may not be charming. Our wonderful people have the gift of
-picking up experience in a generation and make excellent princesses."
-
-"But she's that sort, you think. The sort that marries princes and has
-no traditions. Where did they come from? Do you know that?"
-
-"I haven't an idea. Yet, stay. Was it not tooth-paste?--Toner's Peerless
-Tooth-Paste. Obsolete; yet I seem to see, reminiscently, in far-away
-nursery days, the picture of a respectable old gentleman with
-side-whiskers, on a tube. A pretty pink glazed tube with a gilt top to
-it. Perhaps it's that. Since it was Toner's it would be the father's
-side; not the warbling mother's. Well, many of us might wish for as
-unambiguous an origin nowadays. And, in America, we did all sorts of
-useful things when we first, all of us, came over in the Mayflower!"
-said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile.
-
-Oldmeadow gazed upon his friend with an ironically receptive eye. "Have
-they ever known anyone decent? Anyone like yourself? I don't mean over
-here. I mean in America."
-
-"No one like me, I imagine; if I'm decent. Mrs. Toner essayed a season
-in New York one winter, and it was then I had my glimpse of her, at the
-opera, in the Queen Louise dress. A pretty woman, dark, with a sort of
-soulful and eminently respectable coquetry about her; surrounded by
-swarms of devotees--all male, to me unknown; and with something in a
-turban that I took to be a Yogi in the background. She only tried the
-one winter. She knew what she wanted and where she couldn't get it. We
-are very dry in New York--such of us as survive. Very little moved by
-warblings or astral bodies or millions. As you intimate, she'll have
-done much better over here. You _are_ a strange mixture of materialism
-and ingenuousness, you know."
-
-"It's only that we have fewer Mrs. Toners to amuse us and more to do
-with millions than you have," said Oldmeadow; but Mrs. Aldesey, shaking
-her head with a certain sadness, said that it wasn't as simple as all
-that.
-
-"Have you seen her? Have you seen Adrienne?" she took up presently,
-making him his second cup of tea. "Is she pretty? Is he very much in
-love?"
-
-"I'm going down to Coldbrooks on Saturday to see her," said Oldmeadow,
-"and I gather that it's not to subject her to any test that Barney wants
-me; it's to subject me, rather. He's quite sure of her. He thinks she's
-irresistible. He merely wants to make assurance doubly sure by seeing me
-bowled over. I don't know whether she's pretty. She has powers,
-apparently, that make her independent of physical attractions. She lays
-her hands on people's heads and cures them. She cured Charlie Lumley of
-insomnia at Saint Moritz three years ago."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey, at this, looked at him for some moments in silence.
-"Yes," she assented, and in her pause she seemed to have recognized and
-placed a familiar object. "Yes. She would. That's just what Mrs. Toner's
-daughter would do. I hope she doesn't warble, too. Laying on hands is
-better than warbling."
-
-"I see you think it hopeless," said Oldmeadow, pushing back his chair
-and yielding, as he thrust his hands into his pockets and stretched out
-his legs, to an avowed chagrin. "What a pity it is! A thousand pities.
-They are such dear, good, simple people, and Barney, though he doesn't
-know it, is as simple as any of them. What will become of them with this
-overwhelming cuckoo in their nest."
-
-At this Mrs. Aldesey became serious. "I don't think it hopeless at all.
-You misunderstand me. Isn't the fact that he's in love with her
-reassuring in itself? He may be simple, but he's a delicate, discerning
-creature, and he couldn't fall in love with some one merely pretentious
-and absurd. She may be charming. I can perfectly imagine her as
-charming, and there's no harm in laying on hands; there may be good.
-Don't be narrow, Roger. Don't go down there feeling dry."
-
-"I am narrow, and I do feel dry; horribly dry," said Oldmeadow. "How
-could the child of such a mother, and of tooth-paste, be charming? Don't
-try specious consolation, now, after having more than justified all my
-suspicions."
-
-"I'm malicious, not specious; and I can't resist having my fling. But
-you mustn't be narrow and take me _au pied de la lettre_. I assert that
-she may be charming. I assert that I can see it all working out most
-happily. She'll lay her hands on them and they'll love her. What I
-really want to say is this: don't try to set Barney against her. He'll
-marry her all the same and never forgive you."
-
-"Ah; there we have the truth of it. But Barney would always forgive me,"
-said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Well then, she won't. And you'd lose him just as surely. And she'll
-know. Let me warn you of that. She'll know perfectly."
-
-"I'll keep my hands off her," said Oldmeadow, "if she doesn't try to lay
-hers on me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-The Chadwicks all had a certain sulkiness in their charming looks, and
-where in Barney it mingled with sweetness, in Palgrave, his younger
-brother, it mingled with brilliancy. It was Palgrave who, at the
-station, met the family friend and counsellor in the shabby, inexpensive
-family car. He was still a mere boy, home from Marlborough for the
-Easter holidays; fond of Oldmeadow, as all the Chadwicks were; but more
-resentful of his predominance than Barney and more indifferent to his
-brotherly solicitude. He had Barney's long, narrow face and Barney's
-eyes and lips; but the former were proud and the latter petulant.
-To-day, as he sat beside him in the car, Oldmeadow was aware of
-something at once fixed and vibrating in his bearing. He wanted to say
-something, and he had resolved to be silent. During their last encounter
-at Coldbrooks, he and Oldmeadow had had a long, antagonistic political
-discussion, and Palgrave's resentment still, no doubt, survived.
-
-Coldbrooks lay among the lower Cotswolds, three miles from the station,
-and near the station was the village of Chelford where Nancy Averil and
-her mother lived. Nancy was at Coldbrooks; Aunt Monica--she was called
-aunt by the Chadwick children, though she and Mrs. Chadwick were first
-cousins--was away. So Palgrave informed him. But he did not speak again
-until the chill, green curve of arable hill-side was climbed and a
-stretch of wind-swept country lay before them. Then suddenly he
-volunteered: "The American girl is at Coldbrooks."
-
-"Oh! Is she? When did she come?" Somehow Oldmeadow had expected the
-later train for Miss Toner.
-
-"Yesterday. She and Barney came down together in her car."
-
-"So you've welcomed her already," said Oldmeadow, curious of the
-expression on the boy's face. "How does she fit into Coldbrooks? Does
-she like you all and do you like her?"
-
-For a moment Palgrave was silent. "You mean it makes a difference
-whether we do or not?" he then inquired.
-
-"I don't know that I meant that. Though if people come into your life it
-does make a difference."
-
-"And is she going to come into our lives?" Palgrave asked, and Oldmeadow
-felt pressure of some sort behind the question. "That's what I mean. Has
-Barney told you? He's said nothing to us. Not even to Mother."
-
-"Has Barney told me he's going to marry her? No; he hasn't. But it's
-evident he hopes to. Perhaps it depends on whether she likes Coldbrooks
-and Coldbrooks likes her."
-
-"Oh, no, it doesn't. It doesn't depend on anything at all except whether
-she likes Barney," said Palgrave. "She's the sort of person who doesn't
-depend on anything or anybody except herself. She cuts through
-circumstance like a knife through cheese. And if she's not going to take
-him I wish she'd never come," he added, frowning and turning, under the
-peak of his cap, his jewel-like eyes upon his companion. "It's a case of
-all or nothing with a person like that. It's too disturbing--just for a
-glimpse."
-
-Oldmeadow felt himself disconcerted. Oddly enough, for the boy was
-capricious and extravagant, Palgrave's opinion had more weight with him
-than Barney's. Barney, for one thing, was sexually susceptible and
-Palgrave was not. Though so young, Oldmeadow felt him already of a
-poetic temperament, passionate in mind and cold in blood.
-
-"She's so charming? You can't bear to lose her now you've seen her?" he
-asked.
-
-"I don't know about charming. No; I don't think her charming. At least
-not if you mean something little by the word. She's disturbing. She
-changes everything."
-
-"But if she stays she'll be more disturbing. She'll change more."
-
-"Oh, I shan't mind that! I shan't mind change," Palgrave declared. "If
-it's her change and she's there to see it through." And, relapsing to
-muteness, he bent to his brakes and they slid down among the woods of
-Coldbrooks.
-
-For the life of him and with the best will in the world, he couldn't
-make it out. That was Oldmeadow's first impression as, among the
-familiar group gathered in the hall about the tea-table, Miss Toner was
-at last made manifest to him. She was, he felt sure, in his first shrewd
-glance at her, merely what Lydia Aldesey would have placed as a
-third-rate American girl, and her origins in commercial enterprise were
-eminently appropriate.
-
-She got up to meet him, as if recognizing in him some special
-significance or, indeed, as it might be her ingenuous habit to do in
-meeting any older person. But he was not so much older if it came to
-that; for, after he had met the direct and dwelling gaze of her large,
-light eyes, the second impression was that she was by no means so young
-as Barney had led him to expect. She was certainly as old as Barney.
-
-There were none of the obvious marks of wealth upon her. She wore a
-dark-blue dress tying on the breast over white. She was small in stature
-and, in manner, composed beyond anything he had ever encountered. With
-an irony, kindly enough, yet big, he knew, with unfavourable inferences,
-he even recognized, reconstructing the moment in the light of those that
-followed, that in rising to meet him as he was named to her, it had
-been, rather than in shyness or girlishness, in the wish to welcome him
-and draw him the more happily into a group she had already made her own.
-
-They were all sitting round the plentiful table, set with home-made
-loaves and cakes, jams and butter, and a Leeds bowl of primroses; Miss
-Toner just across from him, Barney on one side of her--his was an air of
-tranquil ecstasy--and little Barbara on the other, and they all seemed
-to emanate a new radiance; almost, thought Oldmeadow, with an
-irritability that was still genial, like innocent savages on a remote
-seashore gathered with intent eyes and parted lips round the newly
-disembarked Christopher Columbus. Mrs. Chadwick, confused, as usual,
-among her tea-cups, sending hasty relays of sugar after the unsugared or
-recalling those sugared in error, specially suggested the simile. She
-could, indeed, hardly think of her tea. Her wide, startled gaze turned
-incessantly on the new-comer and to Oldmeadow, for all his nearly filial
-affection, the eyes of Eleanor Chadwick looked like nothing in the
-world so much as those of the March Hare in Tenniel's evocation of the
-endearing creature. Unlike her children, she was fair, with a thin,
-high, ridiculously distinguished nose; but her mouth and chin had
-Barney's irresolution and sweetness, and her untidy locks Meg's beauty.
-Meg was a beauty in every way, rose, pearl and russet, a Romney touched
-with pride and daring, and the most sophisticated of all the Chadwicks;
-yet she, too, brooded, half merrily, half sombrely, on Miss Toner, her
-elbows on the table for the better contemplation. Palgrave's absorption
-was manifest; but he did not brood. He held his head high, frowned and,
-for the most part, looked out of the window.
-
-Oldmeadow sat between Palgrave and Nancy and it was with Nancy that the
-magic ended. Nancy did not share in the radiance. She smiled and was
-very busy cutting the bread and butter; but she was pale; not puzzled,
-but preoccupied. Poor darling Nancy; always his special pet; to him
-always the dearest and most loveable of girls. Not at all a Romney. With
-her pale, fresh face, dark hair and beautiful hands she suggested,
-rather, a country lady of the seventeenth century painted by Vandyck. A
-rural Vandyck who might have kept a devout and merry journal, surprising
-later generations by its mixture of ingenuousness and wisdom. Her lips
-were meditative, and her grey eyes nearly closed when she smiled in a
-way that gave to her gaiety and extraordinary sweetness and intimacy.
-Nancy always looked as if she loved you when she smiled at you; and
-indeed she did love you. She had spent her life among people she loved
-and if she could not be intimate she was remote and silent.
-
-But there was no hope for Nancy. He saw that finally, as he drank his
-tea in silence and looked across the primroses at the marvel of the age.
-
-Miss Toner's was an insignificant little head, if indeed it could be
-called little, since it was too large for her body, and her way of
-dressing her hair in wide braids, pinned round it and projecting over
-the ears, added to the top-heavy effect. The hair was her only
-indubitable beauty, fine and fair and sparkling like the palest, purest
-metal. It was cut in a light fringe across a projecting forehead and her
-mouth and chin projected, too; so that, as he termed it to himself, it
-was a squashed-in face, ugly in structure, the small nose, from its
-depressed bridge, jutting forward in profile, the lips, in profile, flat
-yet prominent. Nevertheless he owned, studying her over his tea-cup,
-that the features, ugly, even trivial in detail, had in their assemblage
-something of unexpected force. Her tranquil smile had potency and he
-suddenly became aware of her flat, gentle voice, infrequent, yet oddly
-dominating. Sensitive as he was to voices, he saw it as a bland, blue
-ribbon rolled out among broken counters of colour, and listened to its
-sound before he listened to what it said. All the other voices went up
-and down; all the others half said things and let them drop or trail.
-She said things to the end: when the ribbon began it was unrolled; and
-it seemed, always, to make a silence in which it could be watched.
-
-"We went up high into the sunlight," she said, "and one saw nothing but
-snow and sky. The bells were ringing on the mountains beneath; one heard
-no other sound. I have never forgotten the moment. It seemed an
-inspiration of joy and peace and strength."
-
-"You've walked so much in the Alps, haven't you, Roger?" said Mrs.
-Chadwick. "Miss Toner has motored over every pass."
-
-"In the French Alps. I don't like Switzerland," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"I think I love the mountains everywhere," said Miss Toner, "when they
-go so high into the sky and have the sun and snow on their summits. But
-I love the mountains of Savoy and Jura best."
-
-It vexed him that she should. She was a person to stay in and prefer
-Switzerland. "Joy and peace and strength," echoed in his ears and with
-the words, rudely, and irrelevantly, the image of the pink glazed tube
-with the gilt stopper. Miss Toner's teeth were as white as they were
-benignant.
-
-"I wish I could see those flowers," said Mrs. Chadwick. "I've only been
-to Vevey in the summer; oh, years and years ago. So dull. Fields of
-flowers. You've seen them, too, of course, Roger. All the things we grow
-with such pains. My Saint Brigid anemones never really do--though what I
-put in of leaf-mould!"
-
-"You'll see anemones, fields of them, in the Alpine meadows; and violets
-and lilies; the little lilies of Saint Bruno that look like freesias. I
-love them best of all," the bland, blue ribbon unrolled. "You shall go
-with me some day, Mrs. Chadwick. We'll go together." And, smiling at her
-as if they had, already, a happy secret between them, Miss Toner
-continued: "We'll go this very summer, if you will. We'll motor all the
-way. I'll come and get you here. For a whole month you shall forget that
-you've ever had a family to bring up or a house to take care of or
-anemones that won't grow properly--even in leaf-mould."
-
-Her eyes, as they rested on her hostess, seemed to impart more than her
-words. They imparted something to Oldmeadow. He had not before
-conjectured that Eleanor Chadwick might be bored or tired, nor realized
-that since Barbara's birth, fourteen years ago, she had not left
-Coldbrooks except to go to London for a week's shopping, or to stay with
-friends in the English country. He had taken Eleanor Chadwick's life for
-granted. It seemed Miss Toner's function not to take things that could
-be changed for granted. It was easy to do that of course, when you had a
-large banking account behind you; and yet he felt that Miss Toner would
-have had the faculty of altering accepted standards, even had she been
-materially unequipped. She and Mrs. Chadwick continued to look at each
-other for a moment and the older woman, half bashfully, seemed, with
-what softness, compelled to a tacit confession. She'd never known before
-that she was tired. Springs of adventure and girlishness within her were
-perhaps unsealed by Miss Toner's gaze.
-
-"And where do the rest of us come in!" Barney ejaculated. He was so
-happy in the triumph of his beloved that his eyes, their sleepiness
-banished, were almost as brilliant as Palgrave's.
-
-"But you're always coming in with Mrs. Chadwick," said Miss Toner. She
-looked at him, if with a touch of tender humour, exactly as she looked
-at his mother; but then she looked at them both as if they were precious
-to her. "I don't want you to come in at all for that month. I want her
-to forget you ever existed. There ought to be waters of Lethe for
-everyone every now and then, even in this life. We come out, after the
-plunge into forgetfulness, far brighter and stronger and with a
-renovated self to love the better with. Afterwards--after she's had her
-dip--you'll all come in, if you want to, with me. I'll get a car big
-enough. You, too, Miss Averil; and Mr. Oldmeadow; though he and Barney
-and Palgrave may have to take turns sitting on the portmanteaus."
-
-"Barney" and "Palgrave" already. Her unpretentious mastery alarmed
-almost as much as it amused him. He thanked her, with his dry smile,
-saying that he really preferred to see the Alps on his legs and asked,
-to temper the possible acerbity, "Do you drive yourself?" for it seemed
-in keeping with his picture of her as an invading providence that she
-should with her own hand conduct the car of fate. He could see her,
-somehow, taking the hairpin curves on the Galibier.
-
-But Miss Toner said she did not drive. "One can't see flowers if one
-drives oneself; and it would hurt dear Macfarlane's feelings so.
-Macfarlane is my chauffeur and he's been with me for years; from the
-time we first began to have motors, my mother and I, out in California.
-Apart from that, I should like it, I think, with the sense of risk and
-venture it must give. I like the sense of high adventure--of 'Childe
-Roland to the dark tower came'; don't you, Palgrave? It's life, isn't
-it? The pulse of life. Danger and venture and conquest. And then
-resting, on the heights, while one hears the bells beneath one."
-
-This, thought Oldmeadow, as he adjusted his glass the better to examine
-Miss Toner, must prove itself too much, even for Palgrave to swallow.
-But Palgrave swallowed it without a tremor. His eyes on hers he
-answered: "Yes, I feel life like that, too."
-
-"Oh, dear!" sighed Mrs. Chadwick, and Oldmeadow blessed her antidote to
-the suffocating sweetness: "I'm afraid I don't! I don't think I know
-anything about risks and dangers; or about conquest either. I'm sure
-I've never conquered anything; though I have been dreadfully afraid of
-ill-tempered servants--if that counts, and never let them see it.
-Barbara had such an odious nurse. She tried, simply, to keep me out of
-the nursery; but she didn't succeed. And there was a Scotch cook once,
-with red hair--that so often goes with a bad temper, doesn't it? Do you
-remember, Barney?--your dear father had to go down to the kitchen when
-she was found lying quite, quite drunk under the table. But cooks and
-nurses can't be called risks--and I've never cared for hunting."
-
-Miss Toner was quietly laughing, and indeed everybody laughed.
-
-"Dear Mrs. Chadwick," she said. And then she added: "How can a mother
-say she has not known risks and dangers? I think you've thought only of
-other people for all your life and never seen yourself at all. Alpine
-passes aren't needed to prove people's courage and endurance."
-
-Oldmeadow now saw, from the sudden alarm and perplexity of Mrs.
-Chadwick's expression, that she was wondering if the marvellous guest
-alluded to the perils of child-birth. Perhaps she did. She was ready, he
-imagined, to allude to anything.
-
-"You're right about her never having seen herself," said Palgrave,
-nodding across at Miss Toner. "She never has. She's incapable of
-self-analysis."
-
-"But she's precious sharp when it comes to analysing other people,
-aren't you, Mummy dear!" said Barney.
-
-"I don't think she is," said Meg. "I think Mummy sees people rather as
-she sees flowers; things to be fed and staked and protected."
-
-"You're always crabbing Mummy, Meg. It's a shame!--Isn't it a shame,
-Mummy dear!" Barbara protested, and Barney tempered the apparent
-criticism--peacemaker as he usually was--with: "But you have to
-understand flowers jolly well to make them grow. And we do her credit,
-don't we!"
-
-Miss Toner looked from one to the other as they spoke, with her clear,
-benignant, comprehending gaze, and Mrs. Chadwick stared with her March
-Hare ingenuousness that had its full share, too, of March Hare
-shrewdness. She undertook no self-justification, commenting merely, in
-the pause that followed Barney's contribution: "I don't know what you
-mean by self-analysis unless it's thinking about yourself and mothers
-certainly haven't much time for that. You're quite right there, my
-dear," she nodded at Miss Toner, adding in a tone intended specially for
-her: "But young people often exaggerate things that are quite, quite
-simple when they come."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-"Come out and have a stroll," said Oldmeadow to Nancy. Tea was over and
-a primrose-coloured sunset filled the sky. They walked up and down the
-gravelled terrace before the house.
-
-Coldbrooks stood high, yet encircled by still higher stretches of bare
-or wooded upland. Its walled garden, where vegetable beds and lines of
-cordon apple-trees were pleasingly diversified by the herbaceous borders
-that ran beneath the walls, lay behind it; most of the bedroom windows
-looked down into the garden. Before it, to the south, lawns and meadows
-dropped to a lake fed by the brooks that gave the place its name. Beyond
-the lake were lower copses, tinkling now with the musical run of water
-and climbing softly on either side, so that from the terrace one had a
-vast curved space of sky before one. The sun was setting over the woods.
-
-It was Barney's grandfather, enriched by large shipping enterprises in
-Liverpool, who had bought the pleasant old house, half farm, half manor,
-and Barney's father had married the daughter of a local squire. But the
-family fortunes were much dwindled, and though Barney still nursed the
-project of returning one day to farm his own land there was little
-prospect of such a happy restoration. In spite of the Russian ballet and
-London portents, he was fonder, far, of Coldbrooks than of all of them
-put together. But he could afford neither time nor money for hunting,
-and his home was his only for week-ends and holidays. It was the most
-loveable of homes, more stately without than within, built of grey-gold
-Cotswold stone with beautiful stone chimneys and mullioned windows and
-three gables facing the southern sky. Within, everything was rather bare
-and shabby. There was no central heating, and no bathrooms. The
-tiger-skin that lay on the stone flags of the hall had lost all its
-hair. The piano rattled and wheezed in many of its notes. The patterns
-of the drawing-room chintzes were faded to a mere dim rosy riot, and
-stuffing protruded from the angles of the leather arm-chairs in the
-smoking-room. But it was, all the same, a delightful house to stay in.
-Eleanor Chadwick's shrewdness showed itself in her housekeeping. She
-knew what were the essentials. There was always a blazing fire in one's
-bedroom in the evening and the hottest of water with one's bath in the
-morning. Under the faded chintz, every chair in the drawing-room was
-comfortable. The toast was always crisp; the tea always made with
-boiling water; the servants cheerful. Mrs. Chadwick had a great gift
-with servants. She could reprove with extreme plaintiveness, yet never
-wound a susceptibility, and the servants' hall, as she often remarked
-with justice, was smarter and prettier than the drawing-room. Johnson,
-the old butler, had been at Coldbrooks since before her marriage, and
-the grey-haired parlourmaid had come with her when she had come as a
-bride. These familiar faces added depth to the sense of intimacy that
-was the gift of Coldbrooks. Oldmeadow loved the place as much as any of
-the Chadwicks did, and was as much at home in it.
-
-"There is a blackcap," said Nancy, "down in the copse. I felt sure I
-heard one this morning."
-
-"So it is," said Oldmeadow. They paused to listen.
-
-"It's the happiest of all," said Nancy.
-
-He had been wondering about Nancy ever since he had come. It was not her
-voice, gentle and meditative, that told him now she was unhappy. It was
-rather in contrast to the bird's clear ecstasy that he felt the
-heaviness of her heart.
-
-"It's wilder than the thrush and blackbird, isn't it?" he said. "Less
-conscious. The thrush is always listening to himself, I feel. Do you
-want to go to the Alps with Miss Toner, Nancy?"
-
-Nancy would not see Miss Toner as an angelic being and he wanted to know
-how she did see her. The others, it was evident, thought her angelic by
-a sort of group suggestion. She thought herself so, to begin with; snow,
-flowers, bells and all the rest of it; and they, ingenuous creatures,
-saw the mango-tree rising to heaven as the calm-eyed Yogi willed they
-should. But Nancy did not see the mango-tree. She was outside the group
-consciousness--with him.
-
-"Oh, no!" she now said quickly; and she added: "I don't mean that I
-don't like her. It's only that I don't know her. How can she want us?
-She came only yesterday."
-
-"But, you see, she means you to know her. And when she's known she
-couldn't imagine that anyone wouldn't like her."
-
-"I don't think she's conceited, if you mean that, Roger."
-
-"Conceit," he rejoined, "may be of an order so monstrous that it loses
-all pettiness. You've seen more of her than I have, of course."
-
-"I think she's good. She wants to do good. She wants to make people
-happy; and she does," said Nancy.
-
-"By taking them about in motors, you mean."
-
-"In every way. She's always thinking about pleasing them. In big and
-little ways. Aunt Eleanor loves her already. They had a long talk last
-night in Aunt Eleanor's room. She's given Meg the most beautiful little
-pendant--pearl and amethyst, an old Italian setting. She had it on last
-night and Meg said how lovely it was and she simply lifted it off her
-own neck and put it around Meg's. Meg had to keep it. She gave it in
-such a way that one would have to keep it."
-
-"Rather useful, mustn't it be, to have pendants so plentifully about you
-that you can hand them out to the first young lady who takes a fancy to
-them? Has she given you anything, Nancy?"
-
-"I'm sure she would. But I shall be more careful than Meg was."
-
-"Perhaps Meg will practise carelessness, since it's so remunerative.
-What has she given Palgrave? He seems absorbed."
-
-"Isn't it wonderful," said Nancy. "It's wonderful for Palgrave, you
-know, Roger, because he is rather sad and bitter, really, just now; and
-I think she will make him much happier. They went off to the woods
-together directly after breakfast."
-
-"What's he sad and bitter about? You mean his socialism and all the rest
-of it?"
-
-"Yes; and religion. You remember; when you were here at Christmas."
-
-"I remember that he was very foolish and made me lose my temper. Is
-there a chance of Miss Toner turning him into a good capitalist and
-churchman?"
-
-Nancy smiled, but very faintly. "It's serious, you know, Roger."
-
-"What she's done to them already, you mean?"
-
-"Yes. What she's done already. She had Meg, after lunch, in her room.
-Meg looked quite different when she came out. It's very strange, Roger.
-It's as if she'd changed them all. I almost feel," Nancy looked round at
-the happy house and up at the tranquil elms where the rooks were noisily
-preparing for bed, "as if nothing could be the same again, since she's
-come." Her clear profile revealed little of the trouble in her heart.
-They had not named Barney; but he must be named.
-
-"It's white magic," said Oldmeadow. "You and I will keep our heads, my
-dear. We don't want to be changed, do we? What has she done to Barney?
-He is in love with her, of course."
-
-"Of course," said Nancy.
-
-He had never been sure before that she was in love with Barney. She was
-nine years younger and had been a child during years of his manhood.
-Oldmeadow had thought it in his own fond imagination only that the link
-between them was so close. But now he knew what Nancy herself, perhaps,
-had hardly known till then. The colour did not rise in her cheek, but
-through her voice, through her bearing, went a subtle steadying of
-herself. "Of course he is in love with her," she repeated and he felt
-that she forced herself to face the truth.
-
-They stopped at the end of the terrace. A little path turned aside
-towards the copse and the grass beneath the trees was scattered with the
-pale radiance of primroses. Nancy seemed to look at the flowers, but she
-sought no refuge in comment on them; and as they looked in silence,
-while the rooks, circling and cawing above, settled on their nests, a
-sense of arrested time came to Oldmeadow, and a phrase of music,
-blissful in its sadness, where gentle German words went to a gentle
-German strain, passed through his mind. Something of Schubert's--Young
-Love--First Grief. It seemed to pierce to him from the young girl's
-heart and he knew that he would never forget and that Nancy would never
-forget the moment; the rooks; the primroses; the limpid sky. The
-blackcap's flitting melody had ceased.
-
-"Do you think she may make him happy?" he asked. It was sweet to him to
-know that she had no need of a refuge from him. She could take counsel
-with him as candidly as if there had been no tacit avowal between them.
-She looked round at him as they went on walking and he saw pain and
-perplexity in her eyes.
-
-"What do you think, Roger?" she said. "Can she?"
-
-"Well, might she, if Barney is stupid enough?"
-
-"I don't feel he would have to be stupid to be happy with her, Roger.
-You are not fair to her. What I wonder is whether he will be strong
-enough not to be quite swept away."
-
-"You think she'll overpower him? Leave him with no mind of his own?"
-
-"Something like that perhaps. Because she's very strong. And she is so
-different. Everything in her is different. She has nothing--nothing with
-us, or we with her. We haven't done the same things or seen the same
-sights or thought the same thoughts. I hardly feel as if the trees could
-look the same to her as they do to us or the birds sound the same. And
-she'll want such different things."
-
-"Perhaps she'll want his things," Oldmeadow mused. "She seems to like
-them quite immensely already."
-
-"Ah, but only because she's going to do something to them," said Nancy.
-"Only because she's going to change them. I don't think she'd like
-anything she could do nothing for."
-
-Nancy had quite grown up. She had seen further than he had. He felt her
-quiet comment big with intuitive wisdom.
-
-"You see deep, my dear," he said. "There's something portentous in your
-picture, you know."
-
-"There is something portentous about her, Roger. That is just what I
-feel. That is just what troubles me."
-
-"She may be portentous, in relation to us, and what she may do to us,"
-said Oldmeadow, "but I'm convinced, for all her marvels, that she's a
-very ordinary young person. Don't let us magnify her. If she's not
-magnified she won't work so many marvels. They're largely an affair, I'm
-sure of it, of motors and pendants. She's ordinary. That's what I take
-my stand on."
-
-"If she's ordinary, why do you feel, too, that she'll sweep Barney
-away?" Nancy was not at all convinced by his demonstration.
-
-"Why, because he's in love with her. That's all. Her only menace is in
-her difference; her complacency. What it comes to, I suppose, is that we
-must hope, if they're to be happy, that he'll like her things."
-
-"Yes; but what it comes to then, Roger, is that we shall lose Barney,"
-Nancy said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Miss Toner did not come down to breakfast next morning and Oldmeadow was
-conscious of a feeling of disproportionate relief at not finding her in
-the big, bare, panelled dining-room where a portrait of Mrs. Chadwick in
-court dress presided over one wall and Meg and Barney played with
-rabbits, against an imitation Gainsborough background, on another. Both
-pictures were an affliction to Barney; but to Mrs. Chadwick's eye they
-left nothing to be desired in beauty, and, when Barney was not there to
-protest, she would still fondly point out the length of eyelash that the
-artist had so faithfully captured in the two children.
-
-The sense of change and foreboding that he and Nancy, with differences,
-had recognized in their talk, must have haunted Oldmeadow's slumbers,
-for he had dreamed of Miss Toner, coming towards him along the terrace,
-in white, as she had been at dinner, with the beautiful pearls she had
-worn, lifting her hand and saying as the rooks cawed overhead--for the
-rooks cawed though the moon was brightly shining: "I can hear them,
-too."
-
-There had been nothing to suggest such a dream in her demeanour at
-dinner; nothing portentous, that is. Simple for all her competence,
-girlish for all the splendour of her white array, she had spoken little,
-looking at them all, and listening, gravely sometimes, but with a
-pervading gentleness; and once or twice he had found her eyes on his;
-those large, light eyes, dispassionately and impersonally benignant,
-giving him, with their suggestion of seeing around but also very far
-beyond you, a curious sense of space. Once or twice he had felt himself
-a little at a loss as he met their gaze--it had endeared her to him the
-less that she should almost discompose him--and he had felt anew the
-presence of power in her ugly little face and even of beauty in her
-colourless skin, her colourless yet so living eyes, and her crown of
-wondrous gold. It had been, no doubt, this element of aesthetic
-significance, merging with Nancy's words, that had built up the figure
-of his dream; for so he had seen her, grey and white and gold in the
-unearthly light, while the rooks cawed overhead.
-
-His friends this morning, though they were all talking of her, possessed
-in their gaiety and lightness of heart an exorcising quality. So much
-gaiety and lightness couldn't be quenched or quelled--if that was what
-Miss Toner's influence menaced. Between them all they would manage to
-quench and quell Miss Toner, rather, and he recovered his sense of her
-fundamental absurdity as he felt anew their instinctive and
-unself-conscious wisdom.
-
-"Isn't it odd, Roger, she hardly knows England at all," said Mrs.
-Chadwick, as he finished his porridge, made his tea at the side-table,
-and took his place beside her. "She's been so little here, although she
-seems to have travelled everywhere and lived everywhere."
-
-"Except in her own country," Oldmeadow ventured the surmise, but
-urbanely, for Barney sat opposite him.
-
-"Oh, but she's travelled there, too, immensely," said Barney. "She's
-really spent most of her life in America, I think, Mother. She has a
-little sort of bungalow on the coast in California, orange-trees and
-roses and all the rest of it; a fairy-tale place; and a house in the
-mountains in New England, high up among the pine-woods."
-
-"And a private train, I suppose, to carry her from one to the other.
-What splendid pearls," said Oldmeadow, buttering his toast. "Haven't you
-asked for them yet, Meg?"
-
-Meg was not easily embarrassed. "Not yet," she said. "I'm waiting for
-them, though. Meanwhile this is pretty, isn't it?" The pendant hung on
-her breast.
-
-"I believe she would give Meg her pearls, or any of us. I believe she'd
-give _anything_ to _anyone_," sighed Mrs. Chadwick. "She doesn't seem to
-think about money or things of that sort, material things you know, at
-all. I do wish I could get the map of America straight. All being in
-those uneven squares, like Turkish Delight, makes it so difficult. One
-can't remember which lump is which--though Texas, in my geography, was
-pale green. The nice tinned things come from California, don't they? And
-New England is near Boston--the hub of the universe, that dear, droll
-Oliver Wendell Holmes used to call it. I suppose they _are_ very clever
-there. She has been wonderfully educated. There's nothing she doesn't
-seem to have learned. And her maid adores her, Roger. I was talking to
-her just now. Such a nice French woman with quite beautiful dark eyes,
-but very melancholy; we make a mistake, I believe, in imagining that the
-French are a gay people. I always think that's such a good sign. So kind
-about my dreadful accent."
-
-"A good sign to have your maid like you, Mummy, or to have melancholy
-eyes?" Meg inquired. "I think she's a rather ill-tempered looking woman.
-But of course anybody would adore Adrienne. She's an angel of patience,
-I'm sure. I never met such an angel. We don't grow them here," said Meg,
-while Barney's triumphant eyes said: "I told you so," to Oldmeadow
-across the table.
-
-After breakfast, in the sunlight on the terrace, Mrs. Chadwick confided
-her hopes to him. "She really is an angel, Roger. I never met anyone in
-the least like her. So good, and gifted, too, and all that money. Only
-think what it would mean for dear Barney. He could take back the farm;
-the lease falls in next year, and come back here to live."
-
-"You think she cares for him?"
-
-"Yes; indeed I do. She cares for us all, already, as you can see. But I
-believe it's because she's adopting us all, as her family. And she said
-to me yesterday that she disapproved so much of our English way of
-turning out mothers and thought families ought to love each other and
-live together, young and old. That's from being so much in France,
-perhaps. I told her _I_ shouldn't have liked it at all if old Mrs.
-Chadwick had wanted to come and live with Francis and me. She was such a
-masterful old lady, Roger, very Low Church, and quite dreadfully jealous
-of Francis. And eldest sons should inherit, of course, or what would
-become of estates? My dear father used always to say that the greatness
-of England was founded on landed estates. I told her that. But she
-looked at me quite gravely as if she hardly understood when I tried to
-explain--it all goes in with Waterloo being won on the fields of Eton,
-doesn't it? It's quite curious the feeling of restfulness she gives me,
-about Barney--a sort of Nunc Dimittis feeling, you know."
-
-"Only she doesn't want you to depart. Well, that's certainly all to the
-good and let's hope England's greatness won't suffer from the
-irregularity. Has she told you much about her life? her people?"
-Oldmeadow asked. He could not find it in his heart to shadow such
-ingenuous contentment. And after all what was there to say against Miss
-Toner, except that she would change things?
-
-"Oh, a great deal. Everything I asked; for I thought it best, quite
-casually you know, to find out what I could. Not people of any position,
-you know, Roger, though I think her mother was better in that way than
-her father; for _his_ father made tooth-paste. It's from the tooth-paste
-all the money comes. But it's always puzzling about Americans, isn't it?
-And it doesn't really make any difference, once they're over here, does
-it?"
-
-"Not if they've got the money," he could not suppress; it was for his
-own personal enjoyment and Mrs. Chadwick cloudlessly concurred: "No, not
-if they have the money. And she has, you see. And besides that she's
-good and gifted and has had such a wonderful education. Her mother died
-five years ago. She showed me two pictures of her. A beautiful woman;
-very artistic-looking. Rather one's idea of Corinne, though Corinne was
-really Madame de Staël, I believe; and she was very plain."
-
-"Was she dressed like Queen Louise of Prussia; coming down the steps,
-you know, in the Empire dress with white bound round her head?"
-
-"Yes; she was. How did you know, Roger? Extremely picturesque; but quite
-a lady, too. At least"--Mrs. Chadwick hesitated, perplexed between
-kindliness and candour--"almost."
-
-"I heard about her from Mrs. Aldesey. You remember my American friend.
-She didn't know her, but had seen her years ago in New York in that
-romantic costume."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick felt perhaps the slight irony in his voice, for she
-rejoined, though not at all provocatively: "Why shouldn't people look
-romantic if they can? I should think Mrs. Toner had a much more romantic
-life than Mrs. Aldesey. _She's_ gone on just as we have, hasn't she,
-seeing always the same people; and being conventional. Whereas Adrienne
-and her mother seem to have known everyone strange and interesting
-wherever they went; great scientists and thinkers, you know; and poets
-and pianists. Adrienne told me that her mother always seemed to her to
-have great wings and that's just what I felt about her when I looked at
-her. She'd flown everywhere." As she spoke Miss Toner appeared upon the
-doorstep.
-
-Although it was Sunday she had not varied her dress, which was still the
-simple dress of dim, dark-blue; but over it she wore a silk jacket, and
-a straw hat trimmed with a lighter shade of blue was tied, in
-summer-like fashion, beneath her chin. She carried a sunshade and a
-small basket filled with letters.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick, both hands outstretched, went to meet her. Oldmeadow had
-never before seen her kiss an acquaintance of two days' standing. "I do
-hope you slept well, my dear," she said.
-
-"Very well," said Miss Toner, including Oldmeadow in her smile. "Except
-for a little while when I woke up and lay awake and couldn't get the
-cawing of your rooks out of my mind. I seemed to hear them going on and
-on."
-
-"Oh, dear! How unfortunate! But surely they weren't cawing in the
-night!" cried Mrs. Chadwick, and Miss Toner, laughing and holding her
-still by the hands, turned to tell Barney, who closely followed her,
-that his mother was really afraid, because she had thought of rooks in
-the night, that their Coldbrooks birds had actually been inhospitable
-enough to keep her awake with their cawings. Meg and Barbara and Nancy
-had all now emerged and there was much laughter and explanation.
-
-"You see, Mummy thinks you might work miracles--even among the rooks,"
-said Barney, while Oldmeadow testily meditated on his own discomfort. It
-might have been mere coincidence, or it might--he must admit it--have
-been Miss Toner's thoughts travelling into his dream or his dream
-troubling her thoughts; of the two last alternatives he didn't know
-which he disliked the more.
-
-"It's time to get ready for church, children," said Mrs. Chadwick, when,
-after much merriment at her expense, the rooks and their occult
-misdemeanours were disposed of. "Where is Palgrave? I do hope he won't
-miss again. It does so hurt dear Mr. Bodman's feelings. Are you coming
-with us, my dear?" she asked Miss Toner.
-
-Miss Toner, smiling upon them all, her sunshade open on her shoulder,
-said that if they did not mind she did not think she would come. "I only
-go to church when friends get married or their babies christened," she
-said, "or something of that sort. I was never brought up to it, you see.
-Mother never went."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's March Hare eyes dwelt on her. "You aren't a
-Churchwoman?"
-
-"Oh, dear, no!" said Miss Toner, and the very suggestion seemed to amuse
-her.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick hesitated: "A Dissenter?" she ventured. "There are so many
-sects in America I've heard. Though I met a very charming American
-bishop once."
-
-"No--not a Dissenter; if you mean by that a Presbyterian or a Methodist
-or a Swedenborgian," said Miss Toner, shaking her head.
-
-Palgrave had now joined them and stood on the step above her. She smiled
-round and up at him.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick, her distress alleviated yet her perplexity deepened,
-ventured further: "You are a Christian, I hope, dear?"
-
-"Oh, not at all," said Miss Toner gravely now and very kindly. "Not in
-any orthodox way, I mean. Not in any way that an American bishop or your
-Mr. Bodman would acknowledge. I recognize Christ as a great teacher, as
-a great human soul; one of the very greatest; gone on before. But I
-don't divide the human from the divine in the way the churches do;
-creeds mean nothing to me, and I'd rather say my prayers out of doors on
-a day like this, in the sunlight, than in any church. I feel nearer God
-alone in His great world, than in any church built with human hands. But
-we must all follow our own light." She spoke in her flat, soft voice,
-gravely but very simply; and she looked affectionately at her hostess as
-she added: "You wouldn't want me to come with you from mere conformity."
-
-Poor Mrs. Chadwick, standing, her brood about her, in the sweet Sabbath
-sunlight, had to Oldmeadow's eye an almost comically arrested air. How
-was a creedless, churchless mistress of Coldbrooks to be fitted in to
-her happy vision of Barney's future? What would the village say to a
-squiress who never went to church and who said her prayers in the
-sunlight alone? "But, of course, better alone," he seemed to hear her
-cogitate, "than that anyone should see her doing such a very curious
-thing." And aloud she did murmur: "Of course not; of course not, dear.
-And if you go into the little arbour down by the lake no one will
-disturb you, I'm sure. Must it be quite in the open? Mere conformity is
-such a shallow thing. But all the same I should like the rector to come
-and talk things over with you. He's such a good man and very, very
-broad-minded. He brings science so often into his sermons--sometimes I
-think the people don't quite follow it all; and only the other day he
-said to me, about modern unrest and scepticism:
-
- 'There is more faith in honest doubt,
- Believe me, than in half the creeds.'
-
-Mamma met Lord Tennyson once and felt him to be a deeply religious
-man--though rather ill-tempered; he was really very rude to her, I
-always thought, and I do so dislike rudeness.--And travelling about so
-much, dear, you probably had so little teaching."
-
-Miss Toner's eyes were incapable of irony and they only deepened now in
-benevolence as they rested on her hostess. "But I haven't any doubts,"
-she said, shaking her head and smiling: "No doubts at all. You reach the
-truth through your church and I reach it through nature and love and
-life. And the beautiful thing is that it's the same truth, really; the
-same beautiful truth that God loves us all, and that we are all the
-children of God. I should be very pleased to meet your rector, of
-course, because I like meeting anyone who is good and true. But I was
-taught. My mother taught me always. And she was the freest, wisest soul
-I have ever known."
-
-"I'll stay with you," said Palgrave suddenly from his place on the step
-above her. His eyes, over her shoulder, had met Oldmeadow's and perhaps
-what he saw in the old friend's face determined his testimony. "Church
-means nothing to me, either; and less than nothing. I'm not so
-charitable as you are, and don't think all roads lead to truth. Some
-lead away, I think. You know perfectly well, Mummy, that the dear old
-rector is a regular duffer and you slept all through the sermon the last
-time I went; you did, really! I was too amused to sleep. He was trying
-to explain original sin without mentioning Adam or Eve or the Garden of
-Eden. It was most endearing! Like some one trying to avoid the eye of an
-old acquaintance whom they'd come to the conclusion they really must
-cut! I do so like the idea of Adam and Eve becoming unsuitable
-acquaintances for the enlightened clergy!"
-
-"There is no sin," said Miss Toner. Barney was not quite comfortable;
-Oldmeadow saw that. He kicked about in the gravel, a little flushed,
-and when, once or twice, the old family friend met his eye, it was
-quickly averted. "God is Good; and everything else is mortal
-mind--mistake--illusion."
-
-"You are a sound Platonist, Miss Toner," Oldmeadow observed, and his
-kindness hardly cloaked his irony.
-
-"Am I?" she said. When she looked at one she never averted her eyes.
-She looked until she had seen all that she wished to see. "I am not fond
-of metaphysics."
-
-"Socrates defined sin as ignorance, you know, and in a sense it may be.
-All the same," said Oldmeadow, and he felt that they were all listening
-and that in the eyes of his old friends it was more than unlikely that
-he would get the better of Miss Toner--"there's mortal mind to be
-accounted for, isn't there, and why it gets us continually into such a
-mess. Whatever name you call it by, there is something that does get us
-into a mess and mightn't it be a wholesome discipline to hear it
-denounced once a week?"
-
-"Not by some one more ignorant than I am!" said Miss Toner, laughing
-gently. "I'll go to church for love of Mrs. Chadwick, but not for the
-sake of the discipline!"
-
-"Mr. Bodman never denounces. Roger is giving you quite a wrong idea,"
-said Mrs. Chadwick. She had stood looking from one to the other,
-distressed and bewildered, and she now prepared to leave them. "And
-Palgrave is very, very unjust. Of course you must not come, dear. It
-would make me quite unhappy. But Mr. Bodman is not a duffer. If Palgrave
-feels like that he must certainly stay away. Perhaps you can teach him
-to be more charitable. It's easy to see the mote in our neighbour's
-eye." Mrs. Chadwick's voice slightly trembled. She had been much moved
-by her son's defection.
-
-"Come, Mummy, you're not going to say _I'm_ a duffer!" Palgrave passed
-an affectionately bantering arm round her shoulders. "Dufferism isn't
-_my_ beam!"
-
-But very sadly Mrs. Chadwick drew away, saying as she turned into the
-house: "No; that isn't your beam. But pride may be, Palgrave. Spiritual
-pride."
-
-Oldmeadow remained standing in the sunlight with Miss Toner and the two
-young men. The girls had followed Mrs. Chadwick, Meg casting a laughing
-glance of appreciation at him as she went. Religious scruples would
-never keep Meg from church if she had a pretty spring dress to wear.
-
-"After all," he carried on, mildly, the altercation--if that was what it
-was between him and Miss Toner--"good Platonists as we may be, we
-haven't reached the stage of Divine Contemplation yet and things do
-happen that are difficult to account for, if sin is nothing more
-positive than illusion and mistake. All the forms of _ôte-toi que je m'y
-mette_. All the forms of jealousy and malice. Deliberate cruelties.
-History is full of horrors, isn't it? There's a jealousy of goodness in
-the human heart, as well as a love. The betrayal of Christ by Judas is
-symbolic."
-
-He had screwed his eyeglass into his eye the better to see Miss Toner
-and looked very much like a solicitor trying to coax dry facts out of a
-romantic client. And in the transparent shadow of her hat Miss Toner,
-with her incomparable composure, gave him all her attention.
-
-"I don't account. I don't account for anything. Do you?" she said. "I
-only feel and know. But even the dreadful things, the things that seem
-to us so dreadful--isn't it always ignorance? Ignorance of what is
-really good and happy--and the illusion of a separate self? When we are
-all, really, one. All, really, together." She held out her arms, her
-little basket hanging from her wrist. "And if we feel that at last, and
-know it, those dreadful things can't happen any more."
-
-"Your 'if' is the standing problem of metaphysics and ethics. Why don't
-we feel and know it? That's the question? And since we most of us, for
-most of the time, don't feel and know it, don't we keep closer to the
-truth if we accept the traditional phraseology and admit that there's
-something in the texture of life, something in ourselves, that tempts
-us, or impedes us, or crushes us, and call it sin--evil?"
-
-He was looking at her, still with his latent irony though kindly enough
-indeed, and he had, as he looked, an intuition about her. She had never
-been tempted, she had never been impeded, she had never been crushed.
-That was her power. She was, in a fashion, sinless. It was as if she had
-been hypnotized in infancy to be good. And while the fact made her in
-one sense so savourless, it made her in another so significant. She
-would go much further than most people in any direction she wanted to go
-simply because she was not aware of obstacles and had no inhibitions.
-
-"Call it what you like," said Miss Toner. She still smiled--but more
-gravely. Barney had ceased to stroll and kick. He had come to a
-standstill beside them, and, his hands in his pockets, his eyes fixed on
-his beloved, showed himself as completely reassured. Palgrave still
-stood on the step above her and seemed to watch the snowy, piled-up
-clouds that adorned the tranquil sky. "I feel it a mistake to make
-unreal things seem real by giving them big names. We become afraid of
-them and fear is what impedes us most of all in life. For so many
-generations humanity has seen ghosts in the evening mists and taken its
-indigestion for the promptings of a demon. We've got away from all that
-now, Mr. Oldmeadow. We see that mists are mists and indigestion
-indigestion, and that there aren't such things as ghosts and demons.
-We've come out, all together, hand in hand, on the Open Road and we
-don't want, ever any more, to be reminded, even, of the Dark Ages."
-
-Before her fluency, Oldmeadow felt himself grow less kindly. "You grant
-there have been dark ages, then? I count that a concession. Things may
-not be evil now, but they were once."
-
-"Not a concession at all," said Miss Toner. "Only an explanation of what
-has happened--an explanation of what you call the mess, Mr. Oldmeadow."
-
-"So that when we find ourselves misbehaving to one another as we march
-along the Open Road, we may know it's only indigestion and take a pill."
-
-She didn't like badinage. That, at all events, was evident to him, even
-in her imperturbability. She took it calmly--not lightly; and if she was
-not already beginning to dislike him, it was because disliking people
-was a reality she didn't recognize. "We don't misbehave if we are on the
-Open Road," she said.
-
-"Oh, but you're falling back now on good old-fashioned theology,"
-Oldmeadow retorted. "The sheep, saved and well-behaved, keeping to the
-road, and the goats--all those who misbehave and stray--classed with the
-evening mists."
-
-"No," said Miss Toner eyeing him, "I don't class them with the evening
-mists; I class them with the sick, whom we must be kind to and take care
-of."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick was now emerging in her new spring hat, which was not very
-successful and gave emphasis to her general air of strain. Meg's hat was
-very successful, as Meg's hats always were; and if Nancy's did not shine
-beside it, it was, at all events, exceedingly becoming to her. Nancy's
-eyes went to Barney. Barney, in the past, had been very appreciative of
-becoming hats. But he had no eyes for Nancy now. He had drawn Miss Toner
-aside and Oldmeadow heard their colloquy:
-
-"Would you rather I didn't go?"
-
-"I'd rather, always, you followed your light, dear friend."
-
-"I do like going here, you know. It seems to belong with it all--and
-Mummy can't bear our not going."
-
-"It makes your dear mother happy. It all means love to you."
-
-"Not only that"--Oldmeadow imagined that Barney blushed, and he heard
-his stammer: "I don't know what I believe about everything; but the
-service goes much deeper than anything I could think for myself." Their
-voices dropped. All that came further to Oldmeadow was from Miss Toner:
-"It makes you nearer than if you stayed."
-
-"Confound her ineffability!" he thought. "It rests with her, then,
-whether he should go or stay."
-
-It certainly did. Barney moved away with them all, leaving Palgrave to
-the more evident form of proximity.
-
-"You know," Mrs. Chadwick murmured to Oldmeadow as they went, between
-the primroses, down the little path and through a wicket-gate that led
-to the village--"you know, Roger, it's _quite_ possible that they may
-say their prayers together. It's like Quakers, isn't it--or Moravians;
-or whoever those curious people are who are buried standing up--so
-dismal and uncomfortable, I always think. But it's better that Palgrave
-should say his prayers with some one, and somewhere, isn't it, than that
-he shouldn't say them at all?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-"Mother's got the most poisonous headache," said Meg. "I don't think
-she'll be able to come down to tea."
-
-She had joined Oldmeadow on the rickety old bench where he sat reading
-and smoking in a sunny corner of the garden. A band of golden
-wallflowers behind them exhaled the deep fragrance that he always
-associated with spring and Sunday and Coldbrooks, and the old stone wall
-behind the flowers exhaled a warmth that was like a fragrance.
-
-"Adrienne is with her," Meg added. She had seated herself and put her
-elbows on her knees and her chin in her hands as though she intended a
-solid talk.
-
-"Will that be likely to help her head?" Oldmeadow inquired. "I should
-say not, if she's going to continue the discourse of this morning."
-
-"Did you think all that rather silly?" Meg inquired, tapping her smart
-toes on the ground and watching them. "You looked as if you did. But
-then you usually do look as though you thought most things and people
-silly. I didn't--I mean, not in her. I quite saw what you did; at least
-I think so. But she can say things that would be silly in other people.
-Now Palgrave is silly. There's just the difference. Is it because he
-always feels he's scoring off somebody and she doesn't?" Meg was
-evidently capable, for all her devotion, of dispassionate inquiry.
-
-"She's certainly more secure than Palgrave," said Oldmeadow. "But I
-feel that's only because she's less intelligent. Palgrave is aware,
-keenly, of a critical and probably hostile world; and Miss Toner is
-unaware of everything except her own benevolence, and the need for it."
-
-Meg meditated. Then she laughed. "You _are_ spiteful, Roger. Oh--I don't
-mean about Adrienne in particular. But you always see the weak spots in
-people, first go. It's rather jolly, all the same, if you come to think
-it over, to be like that. Perhaps that's all she is aware of; but it
-takes you a good way--wanting to help people and seeing how they can be
-helped."
-
-"Yes; it does take you a good way. I don't deny that Miss Toner will go
-far."
-
-"And make us go too far, perhaps?" Meg mused. "Well, I'm quite ready for
-a move. I think we're all rather stodgy, really, down here. And up in
-London, too, if it comes to that. I'm rather disappointed in London, you
-know, Roger, and what it does for one. Just a different kind of sheep,
-it seems to me, from the kind we are in the country; noisy skipping
-sheep instead of silent, slow ones. But they all follow each other about
-in just the same way. And what one likes is to see someone who isn't
-following."
-
-"Yes; that's true, certainly," Oldmeadow conceded. "Miss Toner isn't a
-sheep. She's the sort of person who sets the sheep moving. I'm not so
-sure that she knows where she is going, all the same."
-
-"You mean--Be careful; don't you?" said Meg, looking up at him sideways
-with her handsome eyes. "I'm not such a sheep myself, when it comes to
-that, you know, Roger. I look before I leap--even after Adrienne," she
-laughed; and Oldmeadow, looking back at her, laughed too--pleased with
-her, yet a little disconcerted by what she revealed of experience.
-
-"The reason I like her so awfully," Meg went on--while he reflected
-that, after all, she was now twenty-five--"and it's a good thing I do,
-isn't it, since it's evident she's going to take Barney; but the reason
-is that she's so interested in one. More than anyone I ever knew--far
-and far away. Of course Mother's interested; but it's _for_ one; _about_
-one; not _in_ one, as it were. And then darling old Mummy isn't exactly
-intelligent, is she; or only in such unexpected spots that it's never
-much good to one; one can never count on it beforehand. Whereas Adrienne
-is so interested in you that she makes you feel more interested in
-yourself than you ever dreamed you could feel. Do you know what I mean?
-Is it because she's American, do you think? English people aren't
-interested in themselves, off their own bat, perhaps; or in other people
-either! I don't mean we're not selfish all right!" Meg laughed.
-
-"Selfish and yet impersonal," Oldmeadow mused. "With less of our social
-consciousness in use, with more of it locked up in automatism,
-possibly."
-
-"There's nothing locked up in Adrienne; absolutely nothing," Meg
-declared. "It's all there--out in the shop-window. And it's a big window
-too, even though some of the hats and scarves, so to speak, may strike
-us as funny. But, seriously, what is it about her, do you think? How can
-she care so much?--about everybody?"
-
-He remembered Nancy's diagnosis. "Not about everybody. Only about people
-she can do something for. You'll find she won't care about me."
-
-"Why should she? You don't care for her. Why should she waste herself on
-people who don't need her?" Meg's friendliness of glance did not
-preclude a certain hardness.
-
-"Why indeed? It could never occur to her, of course, that she might need
-somebody. I don't mean that spitefully. She is strong. She doesn't
-need."
-
-"Exactly. Like you," said Meg. "She's quite right to pay no attention to
-the other strong people. For of course you are very strong, Roger, and
-frightfully clever; and good, too. Only one has to be cleverer, no
-doubt, than we are to see your goodness as easily as Adrienne's. It's
-the shop-window again. She shows her goodness all the time; and you
-don't."'
-
-Oldmeadow knocked the ashes out of his pipe and felt for his
-tobacco-pouch. "I show my spite. No; you mustn't count me among the
-good. I suppose your mother's headache came on this morning after she
-found out that Miss Toner doesn't go to church."
-
-"Of course it was that. You saw that she was thinking about it all
-through the service, didn't you?" said Meg. "And once, poor lamb, she
-said, 'Have mercy upon us, miserable sinners' instead of Amen. Did you
-notice? It will bother her frightfully, of course. But after all it's
-not so bad as if Adrienne were a Dissenter and wanted to go to chapel!
-Mummy in her heart of hearts would much rather you were a pagan than a
-Dissenter. I don't think it will make a bit of difference really. So
-long as she gives money to the church, and is nice to the village
-people. Mother will get over it," said Meg.
-
-He thought so too. His own jocose phrase returned to him. As long as the
-money was there it didn't make any difference. But Meg's security on
-that score interested him. With all her devotion to the new friend she
-struck him, fundamentally, as less kind than Nancy, who had none. But
-that, no doubt, was because Meg, fundamentally, was hard and Nancy
-loving. It was because of Miss Toner's interest in herself that Meg was
-devoted. "You're so sure, then, that she's going to take Barney?" he
-asked.
-
-"Quite sure," said Meg. "Surer than he is. Surer than she is. She's in
-love with him all right; more than she knows herself, poor dear. No
-doubt she thinks she's making up her mind and choosing. Weighing Barney
-in the balance and counting up his virtues. But it's all decided
-already; and not by his virtues; it never is," said Meg, again with her
-air of unexpected experience. "It's something much more important than
-virtues; it's the thickness of his eyelashes and the way his teeth show
-when he smiles, and all his pretty ways and habits. Things like that.
-She loves looking at him and more than that, even, she loves having him
-look at her. I have an idea that she's not had people very much in love
-with her before; not people with eyelashes and teeth like Barney. In
-spite of all her money. And she's getting on, too. She's as old as
-Barney, you know. It's the one, real romance that's ever come to her,
-poor dear. Funny you don't see it. Men don't see that sort of thing I
-suppose. But she _couldn't_ give Barney up now, simply. It's because of
-that, you know"--Meg glanced behind them and lowered her voice--"that
-she doesn't like Nancy."
-
-"Doesn't like Nancy!" Oldmeadow's instant indignation was in his voice.
-"What has Nancy to do with it?"
-
-"She might have had a great deal, poor darling little Nancy; and it's
-that Adrienne feels. She felt it at once. I saw she did; that Nancy and
-Barney had been very near each other; that there was an affinity, a
-sympathy, call it what you like, that would have led to something more.
-It wouldn't have done at all, of course; at least I suppose not. They
-knew each other too well; and, until the last year or two, she's been
-too young for him. And then, above all, she's hardly any money. But all
-the same, if he hadn't come across Adrienne and been bowled over like
-this, Barney would have fallen in love with Nancy. She's getting to be
-so lovely looking, for one thing, isn't she? And Barney's so susceptible
-to looks. He was falling in love with her last winter and she knew it as
-well as I did. It's rather rotten luck for Nancy because I'm afraid she
-cares; but then women do have rotten luck about love affairs," said Meg,
-now sombrely. "The dice are loaded against them every time."
-
-Oldmeadow sat smoking in silence for some moments, making no effort to
-master his strong resentment; taking, rather, full possession of its
-implications. "Somewhat of a flaw in your angel you must admit," he said
-presently. "She doesn't like people who are as strong as she is and she
-doesn't like people who might have been loved instead of herself. It
-narrows the scale of her benevolence, you know. It makes her look
-perilously like a jealous prig, and a prig without any excuse for
-jealousy into the bargain."
-
-"Temper, Roger," Meg observed, casting her hard, friendly glance round
-at him; "I know you think there's no one quite to match Nancy; and I
-think you're not far wrong. She's the straightest, sweetest-tempered
-girl who ever stepped on two feet. But all the same Adrienne isn't a
-prig, and if she's jealous she can't help herself. She _wants_ to love
-Nancy; she thinks she does love her; she'll always be heavenly to her.
-She can do a lot for Nancy, you know. She will do a lot for her, even if
-Nancy holds her off. But she wishes frightfully that she was old and
-ugly. She wishes that Barney weren't so fond of her without thinking
-about her. She's jealous and she can't help herself--like all the rest
-of us!" Meg laughed grimly. "When it comes to that we're none of us
-angels."
-
-It was tea-time and the dear old gong sounded balmily from the house. As
-they went along the path the rooks again were cawing overhead and dimly,
-like the hint of evening in the air, he remembered his dream and the
-sense of menace. "You know, it's not like all the rest of you," he said.
-"It's not like Nancy, for instance. Nancy wouldn't dislike a person
-because she was jealous of them. In fact I don't believe Nancy could be
-jealous. She'd only be hurt."
-
-"It's rather a question of degree, that, isn't it?" said Meg. "In one
-form of it you're poisoned and in the other you're cut with a knife; and
-the latter is the prettier way of suffering; doesn't make you come out
-in a rash and feel sick. Nancy is cut with the knife; and if she's not
-jealous in the ugly sense, she dislikes Adrienne all right."
-
-"Why should she like her?" Oldmeadow retorted, and Meg's simile seemed
-to cut into him, too. "She doesn't need her money or her interest or her
-love. She doesn't dislike her. She merely wishes she were somewhere
-else--as I do."
-
-The garden path led straight into the house. One entered a sort of
-lobby, where coats and hats and rackets and gardening baskets were kept,
-and from the lobby went into the hall. Tea was, as always, laid there
-and Mrs. Chadwick, as Meg and Oldmeadow came in, was descending the
-staircase at the further end, leaning on Adrienne Toner's arm.
-
-"You see. She's done it!" Meg murmured. She seemed to bear him no
-ill-will for his expressed aversion. "I never knew one of Mother's
-headaches go so quickly."
-
-"I expect she'd rather have stayed quietly upstairs," said Oldmeadow;
-"she looks puzzled. As if she didn't know what had happened to her."
-
-"Like a rabbit when it comes out of the conjuror's hat," said the
-irreverent daughter.
-
-That was precisely what poor Eleanor Chadwick did look like and for the
-moment his mind was diverted by amusement at her appearance from its
-bitter preoccupation. Mrs. Chadwick was the rabbit and Miss Toner was
-the conjuror indeed; bland and secure and holding her trophy in a firm
-but gentle grasp. Not until they were all seated did Barney and Nancy
-appear and then it was evident to him that if Miss Toner were jealous of
-Nancy she did not fear her, for it was she who had arranged the walk
-from which the young couple had just returned.
-
-"Was it lovely?" she asked Barney, as he took the place beside her. "Oh,
-I do wish I could have come; but I knew your Mother needed me."
-
-"The primroses are simply ripping in the wood," said Barney.
-
-Nancy carried a large bunch of primroses.
-
-"Ripping," said Miss Toner, laughing gently.
-
-"How absurd of you, Barney. Could anything be less ripping than
-primroses? How beautiful they are and what a lovely bunch. One sees that
-Miss Averil loves them from the way she has picked them." If she did not
-call Nancy by her Christian name it was, Oldmeadow knew, not her but
-Nancy's fault.
-
-Nancy still stood beside the table and from the fact of standing, while
-all the rest of them were seated, from the fact of being called Miss
-Averil, she seemed, for the moment, oddly an outsider; as if she hardly
-belonged to the circle of which Miss Toner was the centre. "Do come and
-sit near us," said Miss Toner. "For I had to miss you, too, you see, as
-well as the primroses."
-
-"I'd crowd you there," said Nancy, smiling. "I'll sit here near Aunt
-Eleanor." From something in her eyes Oldmeadow felt suddenly sure that
-not till now had she realized that it had not, really, been her and
-Barney's walk. She offered the primroses to Mrs. Chadwick as she took
-the chair beside her, saying, "They'll fill your white bowl in the
-morning-room, Aunt Eleanor."
-
-"Oh, I say; but I meant those for Adrienne, Nancy!" Barney exclaimed,
-and as he did so Meg's eyes met Oldmeadow's over the household loaf.
-"She didn't see them in the wood, so she ought to have them. Mummy is
-suffocated with primroses already."
-
-But Nancy showed no rash and only an acute Meg could have guessed a cut
-as she answered: "I'll pick another bunch to-morrow for Miss Toner,
-Barney. They'll be fresher to take to London. These are really Aunt
-Eleanor's. I always fill that bowl for her."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-"I do so want a talk with you, Roger," Mrs. Chadwick murmured to him
-when tea was over. The dining-room opened at one end of the hall and the
-drawing-room at the other and the morning-room, Mrs. Chadwick's special
-retreat, into which she now drew him, was tucked in behind the
-dining-room and looked out at an angle of the garden wall and at the
-dove-cot that stood there. Mrs. Chadwick's doves were usually fluttering
-about the window and even, when it was open, entering the room, where
-she sometimes fondly fed them, causing thereby much distress of mind to
-Turner, the good old parlourmaid. A pleasant little fire was burning
-there and, after placing her primroses in the white bowl, Mrs. Chadwick
-drew her chair to it, casting a glance, as she did so, up at the large
-portrait of her husband in hunting dress that hung above the
-mantelpiece. It was painted with the same glib unintelligence as the
-dining-room portraits, but the painter had been unable to miss entirely
-the whimsical daring of the eyes or to bring into conformity with his
-own standard of good looks the charm of the irregular and narrow face.
-Francis Chadwick had been an impulsive, idle, endearing man, and,
-remaining always in love with his wife, had fondly cherished all her
-absurdities. Since his death poor Mrs. Chadwick had been perplexed by
-her effort to associate with gravity and inspiration one who had always
-been a laughing incentive to inconsequence. Oldmeadow reflected, as he,
-too, looked up at him, that Francis Chadwick would neither have needed
-nor have liked Miss Toner.
-
-"It's so very, very strange, Roger, I really must tell you," Mrs.
-Chadwick said. Her hair, still bright and abundant, was very untidy. She
-had evidently not brushed it since rising from her sofa. "I had one of
-my dreadful headaches, you know. It came on at church this morning and I
-really couldn't attend to Mr. Bodman at all. Perhaps you saw."
-
-"I heard. Yes. Miss Toner had disturbed you a good deal."
-
-"I did feel so bewildered and unhappy about it all," said Mrs. Chadwick,
-fixing her blue eyes upon the family friend. Eleanor Chadwick's eyes
-could show the uncanny ingenuousness and the uncanny wisdom of a baby's.
-"Nothing so innocent or so sharp was ever seen outside a perambulator,"
-her husband had once said of them. "About her, you know, Roger," she
-continued, "and Barney and Palgrave. The influence. I could not bear
-them to lose their faith in the church of their fathers."
-
-"No," said Oldmeadow. "But you must be prepared to see it shift a good
-deal. Faiths have to shift nowadays if they're to stand."
-
-"Well. Yes. I know what you mean, Roger. But it isn't a question of
-shifting, is it? I'm very broad. I've always been all for breadth. And
-the broader you are the firmer you ought to be, oughtn't you?"
-
-"Well, Miss Toner's broad and firm," Oldmeadow suggested. "I never saw
-anyone more so."
-
-"But in such a queer way, Roger. Like saying one's prayers out of doors
-and thinking oneself as good as Christ. Oh, it all made me perfectly
-wretched and after lunch my head was so bad that I went and lay down in
-the dark; and it raged, simply. Oh, dear, I thought; this means a day
-and night of misery. They go on like that once they begin. Mamma used
-to have them in precisely the same way. Absolutely incapacitating. I can
-never see how anybody can deny heredity. That's another point, Roger.
-I've always accepted evolution. I gave up Adam and Eve long ago; gave
-them up as white and good-looking, I mean; because we must have begun
-_somewhere_, mustn't we? And Darwin was such a good man; though you
-remember he came not to care anything at all about music. That may mean
-a great deal, if one could think it all out; it's the most religious of
-the arts, isn't it? But there's no end to thinking things out!" Mrs.
-Chadwick pressed her hand against her forehead, closing her eyes for a
-moment. "And Adrienne is very musical."
-
-"You were at your headache," Oldmeadow reminded her. It was customary in
-the family circle thus to shepherd Mrs. Chadwick's straying thoughts.
-
-"Yes, I know. But it all hangs together. Heredity and Mamma and my
-headaches; and Adrienne's mother, who was musical, too, and played on a
-harp. Well, it was raging and I was lying there, when there came a
-little rap at the door. I knew at once who it was and she asked in such
-a gentle voice if she might come in. It's a very soothing voice, isn't
-it? But do you know I felt for a moment quite frightened, as if I simply
-couldn't see her. But I had to say yes, and she came in so softly and
-sat down beside me and said: 'I used to help Mother, sometimes, with her
-headaches. May I help you?' She didn't want to talk about things, as I'd
-feared. Such a relief it was. So I said: 'Oh, do my dear,' and she laid
-her hand on my forehead and said: 'You will soon feel better. It will
-soon quite pass away.' And then not another word. Only sitting there in
-the dark, with her hand on my forehead. And do you know, Roger, almost
-at once the pain began to melt away. You know how a dish of junket melts
-after you cut into it. It was like that. 'Junket, junket,' I seemed to
-hear myself saying; and such a feeling of peace and contentment. And
-before I knew anything more I fell into the most delicious sleep and
-slept till now, just before tea. She was sitting there still, in the
-dark beside me and I said: 'Oh, my dear, to think of your having stayed
-in on this lovely afternoon!' But she went to pull up the blinds and
-said that she loved sitting quietly in the dark with some one she cared
-for, sleeping. 'I think souls come very close together, then,' she said.
-Wasn't it beautiful of her, Roger? Like astral bodies, you know, and
-auras and things of that sort. She _is_ beautiful. I made up my mind to
-that, then. She gives me such a feeling of trust. How can one help it?
-It's like what one reads of Roman Catholic saints and people in the
-Bible. The gift of healing. The laying on of hands. We don't seem to
-have any of them and we can't count _her_, since she doesn't believe in
-the church. But if only they'd give up the Pope, I don't see why we
-shouldn't accept their saints; such dear, good people, most of them. And
-the Pope is quite an excellent man just now, I believe. But isn't it
-very strange, Roger? For a person who can do that to one can't be
-irreligious, can they?"
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's eye was now fixed upon him, less wistfully and more
-intently, and he knew that something was expected of him.
-
-"Hypnotic doctors can do it, you know. You needn't be a saint to do it,"
-he said. "Though I suppose you must have some power of concentration
-that implies faith. However," he had to say all his thought, though most
-of it would be wasted upon poor Eleanor Chadwick, "Miss Toner is
-anything but irreligious. You may be sure of that."
-
-"You feel it, too, Roger. I'm so, so glad."
-
-"But her religion is not as your religion," he had to warn her, "nor her
-ways your ways. You must be prepared to have the children unsettled;
-everyone of them; because she has great power and is far more religious
-than most people. She believes in her creed and acts on it. You must
-give the children their heads. It's no good trying to circumvent or
-oppose them."
-
-"But they mustn't do wrong things, Roger. How can I give them their
-heads if it's to do wrong things? I don't know what Mamma would have
-said to their not going to church--especially in the country. She would
-have thought it very wrong, simply. Sinful and dangerous."
-
-"Hardly that," Oldmeadow smiled. "Even in the country. You don't think
-Miss Toner does wrong things. If they take up Miss Toner's creed instead
-of going to church, they won't come to much harm. The principal thing is
-that there should be something to take up. After all," he was reassuring
-himself as well as Mrs. Chadwick, "it hasn't hurt her. It's made her a
-little foolish; but it hasn't hurt her. And your children will never be
-foolish. They'll get all the good of it and, perhaps, be able to combine
-it with going to church.
-
-"Foolish, Roger?" Mrs. Chadwick, relieved of her headache, but not of
-her perplexity, gazed wanly at him. "You think Adrienne foolish?"
-
-"A little. Now and then. You mustn't accept anything she says to you
-just because she can cure you of a headache."
-
-"But how can you say foolish, Roger? She's had a most wonderful
-education?"
-
-"Everything that makes her surer of herself and makes other people surer
-of her puts her in more danger of being foolish. One can be too sure of
-oneself. Unless one is a saint--and even then. And though I don't think
-she's irreligious I don't think she's a saint. Not by any means."
-
-"I don't see how anyone can be more of one, nowadays, Roger. She heals
-people and she says prayers, and she is always good and gentle and never
-thinks of herself. I'm sure I can't think what you want more."
-
-A touch of plaintiveness and even of protest had come into Mrs.
-Chadwick's voice.
-
-"Perhaps what I want is less," he laughed. "Perhaps she's too much of a
-saint for my taste. I think she's a little too much of one for your
-taste, really--if you were to be quite candid with yourself. Has she
-spoken to you at all about Barney? Are you quite sure you'll have to
-reckon with her for yourself and the children?"
-
-At this Mrs. Chadwick showed a frank alarm. "Oh, quite, quite sure!" she
-said. "She couldn't be so lovely to us all if she didn't mean to take
-him! Why do you ask, Roger? You haven't any reason for thinking she
-won't?"
-
-"None whatever. Quite the contrary." He didn't want to put poor Mrs.
-Chadwick to the cruel test of declaring whether she would rather have
-the children go to church and lose Miss Toner and all her money or have
-them stay away and keep Miss Toner. After all such a test was not to be
-asked of her. Miss Toner wanted people to follow their own light. "I
-only wondered if she talked to you about him. Asked any girlish leading
-questions."
-
-"None, none whatever," said Mrs. Chadwick. "But I feel that's because
-she thinks she knows him far better than I do and that he's told her
-everything already. It's rather hard to be a mother, Roger. For of
-course, though she is so much better and cleverer than I am, I feel sure
-that no one understands Barney as I do."
-
-"She'd be a little cleverer still if she could see that, wouldn't she?"
-
-"Well, I don't know. Girls never do. I was just the same when I was
-engaged to Francis. Even now I can't think that old Mrs. Chadwick really
-understood him as I did. It's very puzzling, isn't it? Very difficult to
-see things from other people's point of view. When she pulled up the
-blind this afternoon, she told me that Nancy and Barney were down in the
-copse and she seemed pleased."
-
-"Oh, did she?"
-
-"I told her that they'd always been like brother and sister, for I was
-just a little afraid, you know, that she might imagine Barney had ever
-cared about Nancy."
-
-"I see. You think she wouldn't like that?"
-
-"What woman would, Roger?" And he imagined that Mrs. Chadwick, for all
-her folly, was cleverer than Miss Toner guessed, as she added: "And then
-she told me that she'd made Barney go without her. She wanted me to see,
-you know, that it depended on her. That's another reason why I feel sure
-she is going to take him."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-He sat, for the first time, next Miss Toner that night at dinner and
-Nancy sat across from them next Barney. Nancy was pale, and now that he
-could scrutinize her he imagined that the walk had been more of an
-ordeal than a pleasure. Barney, no doubt, with the merciless blindness
-of his state, had talked to her all the time of Adrienne. But Nancy
-would not have minded that. She was of the type that hides its cut for
-ever and may become aunt and guardian-angel to the other woman's
-children. It had not been Barney's preoccupation that had so drained her
-of warmth and colour, but its character, its object. Her grey eyes had
-the considering look with which they might have measured the height of a
-difficult hedge in hunting, and, resting on Oldmeadow once or twice,
-seemed to tell him that the walk had shown her more clearly than ever
-that, if Barney married Miss Toner, they must lose him. He felt sure
-that she had lain down since tea with a headache to which had come no
-ministering angel.
-
-She and Barney did not talk to each other now, for he had eyes and ears
-only for Miss Toner. At any former time they would have kept up the
-happiest interchange, and Oldmeadow would have seen Nancy's eyelashes
-close together as she smiled her loving smile. There was a dim family
-likeness between her face and Barney's, for both were long and narrow,
-and both had the singular sweetness in the very structure of the smile.
-But where Barney was clumsy, Nancy was clear, and her skin was as fair
-as his was brown. To the fond onlooker at both, they were destined mates
-and only an insufferable accident had parted them.
-
-Nancy was as much a part of the Coldbrooks country as the primroses and
-the blackcaps in the woods. Her life had risen from the familiar soil to
-the familiar sky, as preordained to fitness, as ordered by instinct and
-condition as theirs, and from her security of type she had gained not
-lost in savour. The time that unfinished types must give to growing
-conscious roots and building conscious nests, Nancy had all free for
-spontaneities of flight and song. Beside her, to his hostile eye, Miss
-Toner was as a wide-spread water-weed, floating, rootless and scentless,
-upon chance currents: A creature of surfaces, of caprice and hazard. If
-the multiplicity of her information constituted mental wealth, its
-impersonality constituted mental poverty. She was as well furnished and
-as deadening as a catalogue, and as he listened to her, receiving an
-impression of continual, considered movings-on, earnest pursuits, across
-half the globe, of further experience, he saw her small, questing figure
-on a background of railways, giant lines stretching forth across plain
-and mountain, climbing, tunnelling, curving; stopping at great capitals,
-and passing on again to glitter on their endless way under the sun and
-moon. That was what he seemed to see as Miss Toner talked: and
-sleeping-berths and wardrobe-boxes and luxurious suites in vast hotels.
-
-She wore again her white dress, contrasting in its richness of texture
-with the simplicity of her daytime blue, and, rather stupidly, an
-artificial white rose had been placed, in her braids, over each ear.
-Her pearls were her only other ornament, and her pearls, he supposed,
-were surprising.
-
-Oldmeadow was aware, in his close proximity to her, while she ate beside
-him with a meticulous nicety that made the manners of the rest of them,
-by contrast, seem a little casual and slovenly, of the discomfort that
-had visited him in his dream. Yet the feeling she evoked was not all
-discomfort. It was as if from her mere physical presence he were
-subjected to some force that had in its compulsion a dim, conjectural
-charm. It was for this reason no doubt that he seemed to be aware of
-everything about her. Her hands were small and white, but had no beauty
-of form or gesture. She moved them slowly and without grace, rather like
-a young child handling unfamiliar objects in a kindergarten, and this in
-spite of the singular perfection of her table manners. She could have
-made little use of them, ever, in games of skill or in any art requiring
-swift accuracy and firmness. It was as if her mind, overtrained in
-receptivity and retentiveness, had only dull tentacles to spare for her
-finger-tips. He was aware of these hands beside him all through dinner
-and their fumbling deliberation brought to him, again and again, a
-mingled annoyance, and satisfaction. There was something positive and
-characteristic about her scentlessness, for if she smelt of anything it
-was of Fuller's Earth--a funny, chalky smell--and beside Meg, who
-foolishly washed liquid powder over her silvery skin, Miss Toner's
-colourlessness was sallow. She had hardly talked at all the night
-before, but to-night she talked continuously. It was Meg who questioned
-her, and Mrs. Chadwick, and Oldmeadow guessed that his ingenuous
-friend, still perplexed by his use of the word foolish, was drawing out
-and displaying her future daughter-in-law for his benefit.
-
-Miss Toner and her mother had been to Russia, to India, to China and
-Japan. They had visited Stevenson's grave at Vailima and in describing
-it she quoted "Under the wide and starry sky." They had studied every
-temple in Greece and Sicily and talked of the higher education with
-ladies in Turkish harems. "But it was always Paris we came back to," she
-said, "when we were not at home. Home was, and is, a great many places:
-California and Chicago--where my father's people live, and New England.
-But Paris was, after it, closest to our hearts. Yes, we knew a great
-many French people; but it was for study rather than friendship we went
-there. It is such a treasure-house of culture. Mother worked very hard
-at French diction for several winters. She had lessons from Mademoiselle
-Jouffert--you know perhaps--though she has not acted for so many years
-now. Our friendship with her was a great privilege, for she was a rare
-and noble woman and had a glorious gift. Phèdre was her favourite rôle
-and I shall never forget her rendering of it:
-
- Ariane ma soeur! de quel amour blessée
- Vous mourûtes aux bords où vous fûtes laissée!
-
-She taught Mother to recite Phèdre's great speeches with such fire and
-passion. There could hardly be a better training for French," said Miss
-Toner, repeating the lines with a curious placidity and perfection. "I
-preferred Mademoiselle Jouffert's rendering to Bernhardt's. Her Phèdre
-was, with all the fire, more tender and womanly."
-
-"Do you care about Racine?" Oldmeadow asked her, while the lines rang in
-his ears--rather as in his dream the rooks' cawing had done--with an
-evocative sadness that hung, irrelevantly, about their speaker. "It's
-not easy for our English ears to hear the fire and passion, is it; but
-they are there."
-
-"He is very perfect and accomplished," said Miss Toner. "But I always
-feel him small beside our Shakespeare. He lacks heart, doesn't he?"
-
-"There's heart in those lines you've just recited."
-
-"Yes," said Miss Toner. "Those lines are certainly very beautiful. It's
-the mere music of them, I think. They make me feel--" she paused. It was
-unlike her to pause and he wondered what she made of Ariane, off her own
-bat, without Mademoiselle Jouffert to help her.
-
-"They make you feel?" he questioned.
-
-"They are so sad--so terribly melancholy. The sound of them. They make
-me want to cry when I hear them. But I think it's the sound; for their
-meaning makes me indignant. There is such weakness in them; such
-acceptance of destiny. I want to revolt and protest, too--for women. She
-should not have died."
-
-Oldmeadow involuntarily glanced across at Nancy. She was looking at Miss
-Toner and if she had been pale before, she was paler now. Nancy would
-never think of herself in connection with Ariane and tragic grief; yet
-something in the lines, something in Miss Toner's disavowal of their
-applicability, had touched the hidden cut. And, once again, it was Meg's
-eyes that met his, showing him that what he saw she saw, too. Barney saw
-nothing. All his solicitude was for Miss Toner in her imaginary plight.
-"I'm sure you never would!" he exclaimed. "Never die, I mean!"
-
-"You think Miss Toner would have come to terms with Bacchus," Oldmeadow
-suggested. He didn't want to take it out of Barney, though he was vexed
-with him, nor to take it out of Miss Toner, either. He only wanted to
-toss and twist the theme and make it gay where Miss Toner made it
-solemn.
-
-"Come to terms with Bacchus!" Barney quite stared, taken aback by the
-irreverence. "Why should she! She'd have found somebody more worth while
-than either of the ruffians."
-
-Miss Toner smiled over at him.
-
-"I'm sure that if Bacchus had been fortunate enough to meet Miss Toner
-she'd have converted him to total abstinence in a jiffy and made a model
-husband of him. He was a fine, exhilarating fellow; no ruffian at all;
-quite worth reforming." Oldmeadow, as he thus embroidered his theme, was
-indulging in his own peculiar form of mirth.
-
-He saw Miss Toner laying her hand on the head of Bacchus; Miss Toner
-very picturesque on the rugged sea-shore in her white and pearls and
-roses, and Bacchus dazed and penitent, his very leopards tamed to a
-cat-like docility. His laugh was visible rather than audible and that
-Miss Toner had never before been the subject of such mirth was evident
-to him.
-
-She met whatever she saw or guessed of irreverence, however, as
-composedly as she would have met Bacchus; perhaps already, he reflected,
-she was beginning to think of him in the light of an undesirable
-wine-bibber. Perhaps even, she was beginning to think of him as a
-ruffian. He didn't mind in the least, so long as he succeeded in keeping
-off her solemnity.
-
-"I should have been quite willing to try and reform him," she said;
-"though it takes much longer than a jiffy to reform people, Mr.
-Oldmeadow; but I shouldn't have been willing to marry him. There are
-other things in life, aren't there, than love-stories--even for women."
-
-"Bravo!" said Oldmeadow. He felt as well as uttered it. She wasn't being
-solemn, and she had returned his shuttlecock smartly. "But are there?"
-he went on. He had adjusted his eyeglass for a clearer confrontation of
-her.
-
-Miss Toner's large eyes, enlarged still further by the glass, met his,
-not solemnly, but with a considering gravity.
-
-"You are a sceptic, Mr. Oldmeadow," she observed. "A satirist. Do you
-find that satire and scepticism take you very far in reading human
-hearts?"
-
-"There's one for you, Roger!" cried Barney.
-
-Oldmeadow kept his gaze fixed on Miss Toner. "You think that Ariane
-might prefer Infant Welfare work or Charity Organization to a
-love-story?"
-
-"Not those necessarily." She returned his gaze. "Though I have known
-very fine big people who did prefer them. But they are not the only
-alternatives to love-stories."
-
-"I am sceptical," said Oldmeadow. "I am, if you like, satirical. I don't
-believe there are any alternatives to love-stories; only palliatives to
-disappointment."
-
-Barney leaned forward: "Adrienne, you see, doesn't accept that
-old-fashioned, sentimentalizing division of the sexes. She doesn't
-accept the merely love-story, hearth-side rôle for women."
-
-"Oh, well," Oldmeadow played with his fork, smiling with the wryness
-that accompanied his reluctant sincerities, "I don't divide the sexes as
-far as love-stories are concerned. We are all in the same boat. For us,
-too, Barney, it's love-story or palliative. You don't agree? If you were
-disappointed in love? Hunting? Farming? Politics? Post-Impressionism?
-Would any of them fill the gap?"
-
-It wasn't at all the line he had intended the talk to take. He knew that
-as he glanced across at Nancy. Saying nothing, as if its subject could
-not concern her, and with a dim little smile, she listened, and he knew
-that for her, though she wouldn't die of it, there would be only
-palliatives. If only Barney, confound him, hadn't been so charming.
-
-Barney did not know how to answer the last assault, and, boyishly,
-looked across at his beloved for succour. She gave it instantly.
-
-"Sadness, sorrow, tragedy, even, isn't despair," she said. "Barney, I
-believe, if sorrow overtook him, would mould the rough clay of his
-occupation to some higher beauty than the beauty he'd lost. To lie down
-and die; to resign oneself to palliatives. Oh, no. That's not the
-destiny of the human soul."
-
-"Roger's pulling your leg, Barney, as usual," Palgrave put in
-scornfully. He had been listening with his elbows on the table, his eyes
-on the table-cloth. "He knows as well as I do that there's only one
-love. The sort you're all talking about--the Theseus and Ariane
-affair--is merely an ebullition of youth and as soon as nature has
-perpetuated the species by means of it, it settles down, if there's any
-reality under the ebullition, to grow into the other--the divine love;
-the love of the soul for the Good, the True and the Beautiful," Palgrave
-declared, growing very red as he said it.
-
-"Really--my dear child!" Mrs. Chadwick murmured. She had never heard
-such themes broached at her table and glanced nervously up at old
-Johnson to see if he had followed. "That is a very, very materialistic
-view!"
-
-Oldmeadow at this began to laugh, audibly as well as visibly, and
-Palgrave, as their eyes met in a glance of communicated comedy, could
-not withhold an answering smile. But Barney's face showed that he
-preferred to see Palgrave's interpretation as materialistic and even
-Miss Toner looked thoughtfully at her champion.
-
-"But we need the symbol of youth and nature," she suggested. "The divine
-love, yes, Palgrave, is the only real one; but then all love is divine
-and human love sometimes brings the deepest revelation of all. Browning
-saw that so wonderfully."
-
-"Browning, my dear!" Palgrave returned with a curious mingling of
-devotion, intimacy and aloofness, "Browning never got nearer God than a
-woman's breast!"
-
-At this, almost desperately, Mrs. Chadwick broke in: "Did you ever see
-our Ellen Terry act, Adrienne? I liked her much better than Madame
-Bernhardt who had such a very artificial face, I think. I can't imagine
-her as Rosalind, can you? While Miss Terry was a perfect Rosalind. I met
-her once with Henry Irving at a garden-party in London and she was as
-charming off as on the stage and I'm sure I can't see why anybody
-should wish to act Phèdre--poor, uncontrolled creature. Rhubarb-tart,
-dear, and custard? or wine-jelly and cream? How beautifully you speak
-French. How many languages do you speak?" Mrs. Chadwick earnestly
-inquired, still turning the helm firmly away from the unbecoming topic.
-
-Miss Toner kept her head very creditably and, very tactfully, at once
-accepted her hostess's hint. "Rhubarb-tart, please, dear Mrs. Chadwick.
-Not so very many, really. My German has never been good; though French
-and Italian I do know well, and enough Spanish for Don Quixote. But,"
-she went on, while Mrs. Chadwick looked gratefully at her, "Mother and I
-were always working. We never wasted any of our precious hours together.
-She couldn't bear the thought of _missing_ anything in life; and she
-missed very little, I think. Music, poetry, painting--all the
-treasure-houses of the human spirit--were open to her. And what she won
-and made her own, she gave out again with greater radiance. How I wish
-you could all have known her!" said Miss Toner, looking round at them
-with an unaccustomed touch of wistfulness. "She was radiance
-personified. She never let unhappiness _rest_ on her. I remember once,
-when she had had a cruel blow from a person she loved and trusted--in
-the middle of her sadness she looked at me and saw how sad she was
-making me; and she sprang up and seized my hands and cried: 'Let's
-dance! Let's dance and dance and dance!' And we did, up and down the
-terrace--it was at San Remo--she in her white dress, with the blue sky
-and sea and the orange-trees all in bloom. I can see her now. And then
-she rushed to get music, her harp, and flowers and fruit, to take to an
-invalid friend, and we spent the afternoon with her, mother surpassing
-herself in charm and witchery. She was always like that. She would have
-found something, oh, very beautiful, to make from her sorrow if Theseus
-had abandoned her! But no one," said Miss Toner, looking round at
-Oldmeadow, now with a mild playfulness, "could ever have abandoned
-Mother."
-
-There was something to Oldmeadow appealing in her playfulness; her
-confidence, when it took on this final grace, was really touching. For
-Mrs. Toner the light-giver he knew that he had conceived a rooted
-aversion. And he wondered if she would go on, over the rhubarb-tart, to
-tell, after the dancing on the terrace, of the death at sea. But he was
-spared that.
-
-"And your father died when you were very young, didn't he, dear?" said
-Mrs. Chadwick, fearful of the reference to Theseus. "I think your mother
-must often have been so very lonely; away from home for such a great
-part of the time and with so few relatives."
-
-Miss Toner shook her head. "We were always together, she and I, so we
-could never, either of us, be lonely. And wherever we went she made
-friends. People were always so much more than mere people to her. She
-saw them always, at once, high and low, prince and peasant, as souls,
-and they felt it always, and opened to her. Then, until I was quite big,
-we had my lovely grandmother. Mother came from Maine and it was such a
-joy to go and stay there with Grandma. It was a very simple little home.
-It was always high thinking and plain living, with Grandma; and though,
-when she married and became rich, Mother showered beautiful things upon
-her, Grandma stayed always in the little house, doing for her poor
-neighbours, as she had always done, and dusting her parlour--a real New
-England parlour--and making her own griddle cakes--such wonderful cakes
-she made! I was fifteen when she died; but the tie was so close and
-spiritual that she did not seem gone away from us."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-"Rather nice to think that there are so many good and innocent people in
-the world, isn't it," Barney remarked, when he, Palgrave and Oldmeadow
-were left to their wine and cigars. It was evident that he would have
-preferred to omit the masculine interlude, but Oldmeadow was resolved on
-the respite. She had touched him because she was so unaware; but he was
-weary and disconcerted. How could Barney be unaware? And was he?
-Altogether? His comment seemed to suggest a suspicion that Miss Toner's
-flow might have aroused irony or require justification.
-
-"Miss Toner and her mother seem to have found the noble and the gifted
-under every bush," he remarked, and he was not sure that he wished to
-avoid irony though he knew that he did wish to conceal it from Barney.
-"It's very good and innocent to be able to do that; but one may keep
-one's goodness at the risk of one's discrimination. Not that Miss Toner
-is at all stupid."
-
-Palgrave neither smoked nor drank. He had again leaned his elbows on the
-table and his head on his fists, but, while Oldmeadow spoke, he lifted
-and kept his gaze on him. "You don't like her," he said suddenly. He and
-Oldmeadow had, irrepressibly, over Mrs. Chadwick's conception of
-materialism, interchanged their smile at dinner; but since the morning
-Oldmeadow had known that Palgrave suspected him of indifference, perhaps
-even hostility, towards the new-comer. "Why don't you like her?" the
-boy went on and with a growing resentment as his suspicions found voice.
-"She _isn't_ stupid; that's just it. She's good and noble and innocent;
-and gifted, too. Why should we pretend to be too sophisticated to
-recognize such beauty when we meet it? Why should we be ashamed of
-beauty--afraid of it?"
-
-Barney, flushing deeply, looked down into his wine-glass.
-
-"My dear Palgrave, I don't understand you," said Oldmeadow. But he did.
-He seemed to hear the loud beating of Palgrave's heart. "I don't dislike
-Miss Toner. How should I? I don't know her."
-
-"You do know her. That's an evasion. It's all there. She can't be seen
-without being known. It's all there; at once. I don't know why you don't
-like her. It's what I want to know."
-
-"Drop it, Palgrave," Barney muttered. "Let Roger alone. He and Adrienne
-get on very well together. It's no good forcing things."
-
-"I'm not forcing anything. It's Roger who forces his scepticism and his
-satire on us," Palgrave declared.
-
-"I'm sorry to have displeased you," said Oldmeadow with a slight
-severity. "I am unaware of having displayed my disagreeable qualities
-more than is usual with me."
-
-"Of course not. What rot, Palgrave! Roger is always disagreeable, bless
-him!" Barney declared with a forced laugh. "Adrienne understands him
-perfectly. As he says: she isn't stupid."
-
-"Oh, all right. I'm sorry," Palgrave rose, thrusting his hands in his
-pockets and looking down at the two as he stood above them. He hesitated
-and then went on: "All I know is that for the first time in my
-life--the very first time, mind you--all the things we are told about in
-religion, all the things we read about in poetry, the things we're
-supposed to care for and live by, have been made real to me--outside of
-books and churches. What do we ever see of them at home here, with dear
-Mummy and the girls? What do we ever talk of, all of us--but the
-everlasting round--hunting, gardening, cricket, hay; village treats and
-village charities. A lot of chatter about people--What a rotter
-So-and-so is; and How perfectly sweet somebody else: and a little about
-politics--Why doesn't somebody shoot Lloyd George?--and How wicked Home
-Rulers are. That's about all it amounts to. Oh, I know we're not as
-stupid as we sound. _She_ sees that. We can feel things and see things
-though we express ourselves like savages. But we're too comfortable to
-think; that's what's the trouble with us. We don't want to change; and
-thought means change. And we're shy; idiotically shy; afraid to express
-anything as it really comes to us; so that I sometimes wonder if things
-will go on coming; if we shan't become like the Chinese--a sort of
-_objet d'art_ set of people, living by rote, in a rut. Well. That's all
-I mean. With her one isn't ashamed or afraid to know and say what one
-feels. With her one wants to feel more. And I, for one, reverence her
-and am grateful to her for having made beauty and goodness real to me."
-Having so delivered himself, Palgrave, who had, after his deep flush,
-become pale, turned away and marched out of the room.
-
-The older men sat silent for a moment, Oldmeadow continuing to smoke and
-Barney turning the stem of his wine-glass in his fingers. "I'm awfully
-sorry," he said at last. "I can't think what's got into the boy. He's in
-rather a moil just now, I fancy."
-
-"He's a dear boy," said Oldmeadow. "There's any amount of truth in what
-he says. He's at an age when one sees these things, if one is ever going
-to see them. I hope he'll run straight. He ought to amount to
-something."
-
-"That's what Adrienne says," said Barney. "She says he's a poet. You
-think, too, then, that we're all in such a rut; living Chinese lives;
-automata?"
-
-"It's the problem of civilization, isn't it, to combine automatism with
-freedom. Without a rut to walk in you reach nowhere--if we're to walk
-together. And yet we must manage to ramble, too; individuals must;
-that's what it comes to, I suppose. Individuals must take the risk of
-rambling and alter the line of the rut for the others. Palgrave may be a
-rambler. But I hope he won't go too far afield."
-
-"You do like her, Roger, don't you?" said Barney suddenly.
-
-It had had to come. Oldmeadow knew that, as the depth of silence fell
-about them. It was inevitable between them, of course. Yet he wished it
-might have been avoided, since now it must be too late. He pressed out
-the glow of his cigar and leaned his arms on the table, not looking at
-his friend while he meditated, and he said finally--and it might seem,
-he knew, another evasion--"Look here, Barney, I must tell you something.
-You know how much I care about Nancy. Well, that's the trouble. It's
-Nancy I wanted you to marry."
-
-Barney had held himself ready and a deep, involuntary sigh of relief, or
-of postponed suspense, now escaped him. "I see. I didn't realize that,"
-he said. And how he hoped, poor Barney! it was all there was to realize!
-"Of course I'm very fond of Nancy."
-
-"You realize, of course, how fond she is of you."
-
-"Well; yes; of course. We're both awfully good pals," said Barney,
-confused.
-
-"That's what Palgrave would call speaking like a savage, Barney. Own to
-it that if Miss Toner hadn't appeared upon the scene you could have
-hoped to make Nancy your wife. I don't say you made love to her or
-misled her in any way. I'm sure you never meant to at any rate. But the
-fact remains that you were both so fond of each other that you would
-certainly have married. So you'll understand that when I come down here
-and find Miss Toner installed as tutelary goddess over you all, what I'm
-mainly conscious of is grief for my dear little relegated nymph."
-
-Still deeply flushed, but still feeling his relief, Barney turned his
-wine-glass and murmured: "I see. I quite understand. Yes; I should have
-been in love with her, I own. I nearly was, last winter. As to her being
-in love with me, that's a different matter. I've no reason to think she
-was in love. It would just be a difference of degree, with Nancy,
-wouldn't it; she loves us all so much, and she's really such a child,
-still. Of course that's what she seems to me now, since Adrienne's come;
-just a darling child."
-
-"I suppose so. But you understand what I feel, too. I feel her much more
-than a darling child, and it's difficult for me to like anybody who has
-dispossessed her. I perfectly recognize Miss Toner's remarkable
-qualities and hope to count myself among her friends one day; but, being
-a satirist and a sceptic, I rebel instinctively against goddesses of
-whatever brand. Nymphs are good enough for me; and I can't help wishing,
-irrepressibly, that nymphs had remained good enough for you, my dear
-boy."
-
-"It isn't a question of nymphs; it isn't a question of goddesses,"
-Barney said, glancing up now at his friend. "I'm awfully sorry about
-Nancy; but of course she'll find some one far better than I am; she's
-such a dear. You're not quite straight with me, Roger. I don't see
-Adrienne as a goddess at all; I'm not like Palgrave, a silly boy, bowled
-over. It's something quite different she does to me. She makes me feel
-safe; safe and happy in a way I never imagined possible. It's like
-having the sunlight fall about one; it's like life, new life, to be with
-her. She's not a goddess; but she's the woman it would break my heart to
-part with. I never met such loveliness."
-
-"My dear boy," Oldmeadow murmured. He still leaned on the table and he
-still looked down. "I do wish you every happiness, as you know." He was
-deeply touched and Barney's quiet words troubled him as he had not
-before been troubled.
-
-"Thanks. I know you do. I know you care for my happiness. And I can't
-imagine anything coming into my life that would make a difference to us.
-That's just it." Barney paused. "It won't, will it, Roger?"
-
-The crisis was again upon them. Oldmeadow did not look up as he said:
-"That depends on her, doesn't it?"
-
-"No; it depends on you," Barney quickly replied.
-
-"She likes you, quite immensely, already. She says you make her think of
-one of Meredith's dry, deep-hearted heroes," Barney gave a slightly
-awkward laugh, deprecating the homage as he offered it. "She says you
-are the soul of truth. There's no reason, none whatever, why you
-shouldn't be the best of friends, as far as she is concerned. It's all
-she asks."
-
-"It's all I ask, of course."
-
-"Yes, I know. But if you don't meet her half-way? Sometimes I do see
-what Palgrave means. Sometimes you misunderstand her."
-
-"Very likely. It takes time really to understand people, doesn't it."
-
-But poor Barney was embarked and could not but push on. "As just now,
-you know, about finding nobility behind every bush and paying for one's
-goodness by losing one's discrimination. There are deep realities and
-superficial realities, aren't there, and she sees the deep ones first.
-It's more than that. Palgrave says she makes reality. He didn't say it
-to me, because I don't think he feels me to be worthy of her. He said it
-to Mother, and puzzled her by it. But I know what he means. It's because
-of that he feels her to be a sort of saint. Do be straight with me,
-Roger. Say what you really think. I'd rather know; much. You've never
-kept things from me before," Barney added in a sudden burst of boyish
-distress.
-
-"My dear Barney," Oldmeadow murmured.
-
-It had to come, then. He pushed back his chair and turned in it, resting
-an arm on the table; and he passed his hand over his head and kept it
-there while he stared for a moment hard at the ceiling.
-
-"I think you've made a mistake," he then said.
-
-"A mistake?" Barney faltered blushing. It was not anger; it was pain,
-simple, boyish pain that thus confessed itself.
-
-"Yes; a mistake," Oldmeadow repeated, not looking at him, "and since I
-fear it's gone too far to be mended, I think it would have been better
-if you'd not pressed me, my dear boy."
-
-"How do you mean? I'd rather know, you see," Barney murmured, after a
-moment.
-
-"I don't mean about the goodness, or the power," said Oldmeadow. "She is
-good, and she has power; but that's in part, I feel, because she has no
-inhibitions--no doubts. To know reality we must do more than blow
-soap-bubbles with it. It must break us to be known. She's never been
-broken. Perhaps she never will be. And in that case she'll go on blind."
-
-Barney was silent for a moment, and that it was not as bad as he had
-feared it might be was apparent from the attempted calm with which he
-asked, presently: "Why shouldn't you be blind to evil and absurdity if
-you can see much further than most people into goodness? Perhaps one
-must be one-sided to go far."
-
-"Perhaps. But it's dangerous to be one-sided--to oneself and others. And
-does she see further? That's the question. Doesn't she tend, rather, to
-accept as first-rate what you incline to find second? You're less strong
-than she is, Barney, and less good, no doubt. But you can't deny that
-you're less blind. So what you must ask yourself is whether you can be
-sure of being happy with a wife who'll never doubt herself and who'll
-not see absurdity where you see it. Put it at that. Will you be happy
-with her?"
-
-He was, he knew, justified of Miss Toner's commendation, for truth
-between friends could go no further and, in the silence, while he
-sickened for his friend, he felt it searching Barney's heart. How it
-searched, how many echoes it found awaiting it, was proved by the
-prolongation of the silence.
-
-"I think you exaggerate," said Barney at length, and in the words
-Oldmeadow read his refusal to examine further the truths revealed to
-him. "You see all the defects and none of the beauty. It can't be a
-mistake if I can see both. She'll learn a little from me, that's what it
-comes to, for all the lot I'll have to learn from her. I'll be happy
-with her if I'm worthy of her. What it comes to, you see, as I said at
-the beginning, is that I can't be happy without her." He rose and
-Oldmeadow, rising also, knew that they closed upon an unresolved
-discord. Yet these final words of Barney's pleased him so much that he
-could not leave it quite at that.
-
-"Mine may be the mistake, after all," he said. "Only you must give me
-time to find it out. I began by telling you I couldn't be really
-dispassionate; and I feel much better for our talk, if that's any
-satisfaction to you. If you can learn from each other and see the truth
-together, you'll be happy. You're right there, Barney. That is what it
-comes to." They moved towards the door. "Try not to dislike me for my
-truth too much," he added.
-
-"My dear old fellow," Barney muttered. He laid his hand for a moment on
-his friend's shoulder, standing back for him to pass first. "Nothing can
-ever alter things between you and me."
-
-But things were altered already.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-
-Palgrave had not gone to the drawing-room, and that, at all events, was
-a comfort. A wood fire burned on the hearth and near it Nancy was
-holding wool for Mrs. Chadwick to wind. Barbara had been sent to bed and
-Meg and Miss Toner sat on the sofa hand in hand. Even in the pressure of
-his distress and anxiety Oldmeadow could but be aware of amusement at
-seeing Meg thus. It had, of course, been Miss Toner who had taken her
-hand. But no one else could have taken it. No one else could have been
-allowed to go on holding it placidly before on-lookers of whose mirthful
-impressions Meg must be well aware. She didn't mind in the least. That
-was what Miss Toner had done to her. She enjoyed having her hand held by
-anyone so much interested in her.
-
-Barney walked to the fireplace and stood before it. He had no faculty
-for concealing his emotions and the painful ones through which he had
-just passed were visible on his sensitive face.
-
-"Give us a song, Meg," Oldmeadow suggested. He did not care for Meg's
-singing, which conveyed, in a rich, sweet medium, a mingled fervour and
-shallowness of feeling. But to hear her sing would be better than to see
-her holding Miss Toner's hand.
-
-Barney crossed at once to the seat Meg vacated and dropped down into it,
-no doubt thanking his friend for what he imagined to be a display of
-tact, and Oldmeadow saw the quiet, firm look that flowed over and took
-possession of him. Miss Toner knew, of course, that Barney had been
-having painful emotions; and she probably knew that they had been caused
-by the dry, deep-hearted Meredithian hero. But after the long look she
-did not speak to him. She sat in her pearls and whiteness and gave
-careful attention to the music.
-
-Oldmeadow accompanied Meg, tolerantly, and a trifle humorously, throwing
-a touch of mockery into his part. Meg's preference to-night seemed to be
-for gardens; Gardens of Sleep; Gardens of Love; God's Gardens. "What a
-wretch you are, Roger," she said, when she had finished. "You despise
-feeling."
-
-"I thought I was wallowing in it," Oldmeadow returned. "Did I stint
-you?"
-
-"No; you helped me to wallow. That's why you're such a wretch. Always
-showing one that one is wallowing when one thinks one's soaring. It's
-your turn, now, Adrienne. Let's see if he'll manage to make fun of you."
-
-"Does Miss Toner sing, too? Now do you know, Meg," said Oldmeadow,
-keeping up the friendly banter, "I'm sure she doesn't sing the sort of
-rubbish you do."
-
-"I think they're beautiful songs," Mrs. Chadwick murmured from her wool,
-"and I think Roger played them most beautifully. Why should you say he
-is making fun of you, Meg?"
-
-"Because he makes you think something's beautiful that he thinks
-rubbish, Mummy. Come along, Adrienne. You will, won't you? I expect my
-voice sounds all wrong to you. I've had no proper training."
-
-"It's a very lovely voice, Meg, used in a poor cause," said Miss Toner
-smiling. "And it is badly placed. I think I could help you there. I've
-no voice at all, but I have been taught how to sing. It would be more to
-the point, though, if Mr. Oldmeadow were to play to us, for I hear that
-he is an accomplished musician."
-
-"I'm really anything but accomplished," said Oldmeadow; "but I can play
-accompaniments cleverly. Do sing to us. I know you'll give us something
-worth accompanying."
-
-Miss Toner rose and came to the piano with her complete and unassuming
-confidence. She turned the pages of the music piled there and asked him
-if he cared for Schubert's songs. Yes; she was a watch wound to go
-accurately and she could rely on herself, always, to the last tick. Even
-if she knew--and he was sure she knew--that he had been undermining her,
-she would never show a shadow or a tremor; and she would always know
-what was the best music. Only, as she selected "Litanei" and placed it
-before him, he felt that over him, also, flowed the quiet, firm look.
-
-"Litanei" was one of his favourites in a composer he loved, and, as she
-sang there above him, he found the song emerging unharmed from her
-interpretation. It was as she had said--no voice to speak of; the
-dryest, flattest little thread of sound; and no feeling, either (what a
-relief after Meg!), except the feeling for scrupulous accuracy. Yet her
-singing was what he found in her to like best. It was disciplined; it
-accepted its own limits; it fulfilled an order. There was no desecration
-of the heavenly song, for, intelligently after all, she made no attempt
-upon its heart.
-
-When she had finished, she looked down at him. They were removed by half
-the length of the room from the fireside group. The lamps were behind
-them. Only the candles set in the piano-rack illumined Miss Toner; and
-while the white roses over her ears struck him anew as foolish, her eyes
-anew struck him as powerful.
-
-"Thank you. That was a pleasure," he said.
-
-It was a pleasure. It was almost a link. He had found a ground to meet
-her on. He saw himself in the future accompanying Barney's wife. He
-need, then, so seldom talk to her. But, alas! she stepped at once from
-the safe frame of art.
-
-"If we can rise from loss to feel like that, if we can lift our sorrows
-like that, we need never turn to palliatives, need we, Mr. Oldmeadow?"
-she said.
-
-Stupidity, complacency, or power, whatever it was, it completely
-disenchanted him. It left him also bereft of repartee. What he fell back
-upon, as he looked up at her and then down at the keys again, was a mere
-schoolboy mutter of "Come now!"
-
-After all a schoolboy mutter best expressed what he felt. She was not
-accustomed to having her ministrations met with such mutters and she did
-not like it. That was apparent to him as she turned away and went back
-to the sofa and Barney. She had again tried him and again found him
-wanting.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Barney and Miss Toner left in her motor next morning shortly after
-breakfast, and though with his friend Oldmeadow had no further exchange,
-he had, with Miss Toner, a curious encounter that was, he felt sure, a
-direct result of her impressions of the night before. They met in the
-dining-room a few moments before breakfast, and as she entered, wearing
-already her motoring hat, closely bound round her face with a veil, he
-was aware that she looked, if that were possible, more composed than he
-had ever seen her. He felt sure that she had waited for her opportunity,
-and had followed him downstairs, knowing that she would find him alone;
-and he realized then that she was more composed, because she had an
-intention or, rather, since it was more definite, a determination.
-Determination in her involved no effort: it imparted, merely, the added
-calm of an assured aim.
-
-She gave him her hand and said good morning with the same air of
-scrupulous accuracy that she had given to the rendering of "Litanei" and
-then, standing before the fire, her hands clasped behind her, her eyes
-raised to his, she said: "Mr. Oldmeadow, I want to say something to
-you."
-
-It was the gentle little voice, unaltered, yet he knew that he was in
-for something he would very much rather have avoided; something with
-anybody else unimaginable, but with her, he saw it now, quite
-inevitable. Yet he tried, even at this last moment, to avoid it and
-said, adjusting his eyeglass and moving to the sideboard: "But not
-before we've had our tea, surely. Can't I get you some? Will you trust
-me to pour it out?"
-
-"Thanks; I take coffee--not tea," said Miss Toner from her place at the
-fire, "and neither has been brought in yet."
-
-He had just perceived, to his discomfiture, that they had not. There was
-nothing for it but to turn from the ungarnished sideboard and face her
-again.
-
-"It's about Barney, Mr. Oldmeadow," Miss Toner said, unmoved by his
-patent evasion. "It's because I know you love Barney and care for his
-happiness. And it's because I hope that you and I are to be friends, and
-friendship can only be built on truth. Try to trust more; will you?
-That's all I want to say. Try to trust. You will be happier if you do
-and make other people happier."
-
-Oldmeadow had never experienced such an assault upon his personality,
-and he met it gagged and bound, for, assuredly, this was to be Barney's
-wife. A slow flush mounted to his face.
-
-"I'm afraid I seem very strange and unconventional to you," Adrienne
-Toner went on. "You've lived in a world where people don't care enough
-for each other to say the real things. They must be felt if they've to
-be said, mustn't they? Yet you do care for people. I have seen that,
-watching you here; and you care for real things. It's a crust of caution
-and convention that is about you. You are afraid of expression. You are
-afraid of feeling. You are afraid of being taken in and of wasting
-yourself. Don't be afraid, Mr. Oldmeadow. We never lose ourselves by
-trusting. We never lose ourselves by giving. It's a realer self that
-comes. And with you, I see it clearly, if you let the crust grow
-thicker, it will shut life and light and joy away from you; and when
-light cannot visit our hearts, they wither within us. That is your
-danger. I want to be your friend, so I must say the truth to you."
-
-He knew, though he had to struggle not to laugh, that he was very angry
-and that he must not show anger; though it would really be better to
-show that than his intense amusement; and it took him a moment, during
-which they confronted each other, to find words; dry, donnish words;
-words of caution and convention. They were the only ones he had
-available for the situation. "My dear young lady," he said, "you take
-too much upon yourself."
-
-She was not in the least disconcerted. She met his eyes steadily. "You
-mean that I am presumptuous, Mr. Oldmeadow?"
-
-"You take too much upon yourself," he repeated. "As you say, I hope we
-may be friends."
-
-"Is that really all, Mr. Oldmeadow?" she said, looking at him with such
-a depth of thoughtfulness that he could not for the life of him make out
-whether she found him odious or merely pitiful.
-
-"Yes; that's really all," he returned.
-
-The dining-room was very bright and the little blue figure before the
-fire was very still. The moment fixed itself deep in his consciousness
-with that impression of stillness and brightness. It was an
-uncomfortable impression. Her little face, uplifted to his, absurd, yet
-not uncharming, was, in its still force, almost ominous.
-
-"I'm sorry," was all she said, and she turned and went forward to greet
-Mrs. Chadwick.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-
-It was a soft June day and Oldmeadow was strolling about Mrs. Averil's
-garden admiring her herbaceous borders. It was a day that smelt of
-ripening strawberries, of warm grass and roses, and the air was full of
-a medley of bird voices, thrushes and blackbirds, sweet as grass and
-strawberries, and the bubbling rattle of the chaffinch as happy as the
-sunlight.
-
-Adrienne Toner was Mrs. Chadwick now, and she and Eleanor Chadwick and
-Barney were motoring together in the French Alps. Coldbrooks was empty,
-and he had come to stay with Nancy and her mother.
-
-They lived in a small stone house with a Jacobean front that looked,
-over a stone wall, at Chelford Green, and had behind it a delightfully
-unexpected length of lawn and orchard and kitchen-garden, all enclosed
-by higher walls and presided over by a noble cedar. Seen from the garden
-The Little House was merely mid-Victorian, but the modern additions were
-masked by climbing roses and a great magnolia-tree opened its
-lemon-scented cups at the highest bedroom windows. The morning-room was
-in the modern part, and from one of its windows, presently, Mrs. Averil
-emerged, opening her sunshade as she crossed the grass to join her
-guest. She wore a white straw garden hat, tipping over her eyes and
-tying, behind, over her thick knot of hair, in a manner that always
-recalled to Oldmeadow a lady out of Trollope. Her face was pale, like
-Nancy's, and her eyes grey; but rather than blackcaps and primroses she
-suggested lace tippets and porcelain tea-sets, and though it was from
-her Nancy had her pretty trick of closing her eyes when she smiled, Mrs.
-Averil's smile was cogitative and impersonal, and in her always
-temperate mirth there was an edge of grimness.
-
-"Well, Roger, I want to hear what you thought about the wedding," she
-said. She had not gone to church that morning with Nancy and it was, he
-knew, because she wanted an interchange of frank impressions. She had
-been prevented from attending Miss Toner's London nuptials by a touch of
-influenza and, as she now went on to say, she had got little from Nancy,
-who had no eye for pageants and performances. "Eleanor was so absorbed,"
-she went on, "in the fact that the Bishop had indigestion and had, at
-her suggestion, taken magnesia with his breakfast, that I could not get
-much else out of her. She seemed to have seen the Bishop's symptoms
-rather than Adrienne and Barney. Now from you I expect all the relevant
-details."
-
-"Well, if you call it a detail, Nancy was lovely," said Oldmeadow. "She
-looked like a silver-birch in her white and green."
-
-"And pearls," said Mrs. Averil. "You noticed, of course, the necklaces
-Adrienne gave them; quite the gift of a princess, yet so innocent and
-unobtrusive looking, too. She has great taste in such matters. Did she
-look well? Eleanor did say that she, like the Bishop, was very pale."
-
-"She was pale; but not a bit nervous. She rather looked as if she had
-been married every day of her life. Nothing ever puts her out, you know.
-She was very grave and benign; but she wasn't an imposing bride and the
-wreath of orange-blossoms aged her. Nancy and Meg and Barbara and the
-Lumley girl aged her, too. She must be older than Barney."
-
-"Yes; she is. A year older. But she's the sort of woman who will wear,"
-said Mrs. Averil, pausing before a bed of rose-trees to snip off a
-fading flower. "She'll not look very differently at fifty, you know; and
-her hair is the sort that may never turn grey. I can see her at seventy
-with those big golden braids and all her teeth. There's something very
-indestructible about her. Like a doll made of white leather compared to
-one made of porcelain. She'll last and last," said Mrs. Averil. "She'll
-outlast us all. Barney was radiant, of course."
-
-"Yes. But he _was_ nervous; like a little boy frightened by the
-splendour of his Christmas-tree. He looked as though he were arm in arm
-with the Christmas-tree itself as he came down the nave. A rather dumpy
-little Christmas-tree, but exquisitely lighted and garnished."
-
-"Well, he ought to be radiant," Mrs. Averil observed. "With all that
-money, it's an extremely good match for him. The fact of her being
-nobody in particular makes no difference, really, since she's an
-American. And she has, I gather, no tiresome relations to come
-bothering."
-
-"She's very unencumbered, certainly. There's something altogether very
-solitary about her," Oldmeadow agreed, watching Mrs. Averil snip off the
-withered roses. "I felt that even as she came down the nave on Barney's
-arm. It's not a bit about the money he's radiant," he added.
-
-"Oh, I know. Of course not. That was only my own gross satisfaction
-expressing itself. He's as in love as it's possible to be. And with
-every good reason."
-
-"You took to her as much as they all did, then?"
-
-"That would be rather difficult, wouldn't it? And Barney's reasons would
-hardly be those of a dry old aunt. She was very nice and kind to Nancy
-and me and she's evidently going to do everything for them. Barbara's
-already, you know, been sent to that admirable school that was too
-expensive for Eleanor; riding and singing and all the rest of it. And
-Meg's been given a perfect trousseau of fine clothes for her London
-season. Naturally I don't feel very critically towards her."
-
-"Don't you? Well, if she weren't a princess distributing largess,
-wouldn't you? After all, she's not given Nancy a trousseau. So why be
-mute with an old friend?"
-
-"Ah, but she's given her the pearls," said Mrs. Averil. "Nancy couldn't
-but accept a bridesmaid's gift. And she would give her a trousseau if
-she wanted it and would take it. However, I'll own, though decency
-should keep me mute, that I should find myself a little bored if I had
-to see too much of her. I'm an everyday person and I like to talk about
-everyday things."
-
-"I can hear her asking you, in answer to that, if there is anything more
-everyday than the human soul. I wish I could have seen you _aux prises_
-with her," Oldmeadow remarked. "Did she come down here? Did she like
-your drawing-room and garden?"
-
-Mrs. Averil's drawing-room and garden lay very near her heart. Eleanor
-Chadwick sometimes accused her of caring more about her china and her
-roses than about anything else in the world except Nancy.
-
-"I don't think she saw them; not what I call see," Mrs. Averil now said.
-"Oh, yes; she came several times and recognized, very appreciatively,
-the periods of my Queen Anne furniture and my Lowestoft. Beyond their
-period I don't think she went. She said the garden was old-world," Mrs.
-Averil added, looking about her and twirling her parasol on her
-shoulder.
-
-"She would," Oldmeadow agreed. "That's just what she would call it. And
-she'd call you a true, deep-hearted woman and Nancy a gifted girl. How
-do she and Nancy hit it off? It's that I want most of all to hear
-about."
-
-"They haven't much in common, have they?" said Mrs. Averil. "She's never
-hunted and doesn't, I imagine, know a wren from a hedge-sparrow. She
-_does_ know a skylark when she hears one, for she said 'Hail to thee,
-blithe spirit' while one was singing. But I felt, somehow, it was like
-the Queen Anne and the Lowestoft--a question of the label."
-
-Oldmeadow at this began to laugh with an open and indulged mirth. He and
-Mrs. Averil, at all events, saw eye to eye. "If you'd tie the correct
-label to the hedge-sparrow she'd know that, too," he said. "Poor girl.
-The trouble with her isn't that she doesn't know the birds, but that she
-wouldn't know the poets, either, without their labels. It's a mind made
-up of labels. No; I don't think it likely that Nancy, who hasn't a label
-about her, will get much out of her--beyond necklaces."
-
-"I wish Nancy _had_ a few labels," said Mrs. Averil. "I wish she could
-have travelled and studied as Miss Toner--Adrienne that is--has done.
-She is such a little ignoramus. Adrienne may bore you and me, but Nancy
-will never interest anyone--except you and me."
-
-It was always amusing to Oldmeadow, if a little sardonically so, to note
-that any conception of himself as a possible suitor for Nancy had never
-entered Mrs. Averil's mind. As a friend he was everything a mother could
-desire; as a match for Nancy almost unimaginable. Well, he could not
-give a wife even one hunter and he never had had any intention of
-falling in love with his dear nymph; yet that other people might not do
-so was a suggestion he repudiated with warmth.
-
-"Oh; in love, yes," Mrs. Averil agreed. "I don't deny that she's very
-loveable and I hope she may marry well. But that's not the same thing as
-being interesting, is it? A man may be in love with a woman who doesn't
-interest him."
-
-"I dispute that statement."
-
-"I'm sure dear Eleanor never interested her husband--devoted to the day
-of his death as he was. There's something in my idea. To be interesting
-one must offer something new. If Nancy had been interesting to Barney
-she would now, I think, have been in Adrienne's place. Not that it would
-have been a marriage to be desired for either of them."
-
-So he and Mrs. Averil had been thinking the same thoughts.
-
-"And you contend that if Nancy had been to China and read Goethe and
-Dante in the originals he'd have been interested? I think he was quite
-sufficiently interested and that if Miss Toner hadn't come barging into
-our lives he'd have known he was in love."
-
-"Going to China is a figure of speech and stands for all the things she
-hasn't got and doesn't know. My poor little Nancy. All the same, _she_
-isn't a bore!" said Mrs. Averil with as near an approach to acerbity as
-she could show.
-
-"No; she isn't a bore. The things she knows have to be found out, by
-degrees, through living with her. Barney hasn't been to China, either,
-so, according to your theory, Nancy didn't find him interesting."
-
-At this Mrs. Averil's eyes met his and, after a moment of contemplation,
-they yielded up to him the secret they saw to be shared. "If only it
-were the same for women! But they don't need the new. She's young.
-She'll get over it. I don't believe in broken hearts. All the same,"
-Mrs. Averil stopped in their walk, ostensibly to examine the growth of a
-fine pink lupin, "it hasn't endeared Adrienne to me. I'm too
-_terre-à-terre_, about that, too, not to feel vexation, on Nancy's
-account. And what I'm afraid of is that she knows she's not endeared to
-me. That she guesses. She's a bore; but she's not a bit stupid, you
-know."
-
-"You don't think she's spiteful?" Oldmeadow suggested after a moment,
-while Mrs. Averil still examined her lupin.
-
-"Dear me, no! I wish she could be! It's that smooth surface of hers
-that's so tiresome. She's not spiteful. But she's human. She'll want to
-keep Barney away and Nancy will be hurt."
-
-"Want to keep him away when she's got him so completely?"
-
-"Something of that sort. I felt it once or twice."
-
-"My first instinct about her was right, then," said Oldmeadow. "She's a
-bore and an interloper, and she'll spoil things."
-
-"Oh, perhaps not. She'll mend some things. Have you heard about Captain
-Hayward?"
-
-"Do you mean that stupid, big, tawny fellow? What about him?"
-
-"You may well ask. I've been spoken to about him and Meg by more than
-one person. They are making themselves conspicuous, and it's been going
-on for some time."
-
-"You don't mean that Meg's in love with him?"
-
-"He's in love with her, at all events, and, as you know, he's a married
-man. I questioned Nancy, who was with Meg for a few weeks in London, and
-she owns that Meg's unhappy."
-
-"And they're seeing each other in London now?" Oldmeadow was deeply
-discomposed.
-
-"No. He's away just now. And Meg is going to meet the bridal party in
-Paris at the end of July. Nancy feels that when Meg gets back under
-Adrienne's influence there'll be nothing to fear."
-
-"We depend on her, then, so much, already," he murmured. He was
-reviewing, hastily, his last impressions of Meg and they were not
-reassuring. The only thing that was reassuring was to reflect on his
-impressions of Adrienne. "Grandma's parlour" returned to him with its
-assurance of deep security. Above everything else Adrienne was
-respectable.
-
-"Yes. That's just it," Mrs. Averil agreed. "We depend on her. And I feel
-we're going to depend more and more. She's the sort of person who mends
-things. So we mustn't think of what she spoils."
-
-What Adrienne Toner had spoiled was, however, to be made very plain next
-morning both to Nancy's old friend and to her mother. Beside her plate
-at breakfast was a letter addressed in Barney's evident hand, a letter
-in a narrow envelope stamped with the name of a French hotel and
-showing, over the address, an engraving of peaks against the sky. Nancy
-met the occasion with perfect readiness, saying as she looked at the
-letter, waiting to open it till she had made the tea--Nancy always made
-the tea in the morning while her mother sat behind the bacon and eggs at
-the other end of the table--"How nice; from Barney. Now we shall have
-news of them."
-
-Nothing less like an Ariane could be imagined than Nancy as she stood
-there in her pink dress above the pink, white and gold tea-cups. One
-might have supposed from her demeanour that a letter from Barney was but
-a happy incident in a happy day. But, when she dropped into her chair
-and read, it was evident that she was not prepared for what she found.
-She read steadily, in silence, while Oldmeadow cut bread at the
-sideboard and Mrs. Averil distributed her viands, and, when the last
-page was reached, they both could not fail to see that Nancy was
-blushing, blushing so deeply that, as she thus felt herself betray her
-emotion, tears came thickly into her downcast eyes.
-
-"I'll have my tea now, dear," said Mrs. Averil. "Will you wait a little
-longer, Roger?" She tided Nancy over.
-
-But Nancy was soon afloat. "The letter is for us all," she said. "Do
-read it aloud, Roger, while I have my breakfast."
-
-Barney's letters, in the past, had, probably, always been shared and
-Nancy was evidently determined that her own discomposure was not to
-introduce a new precedent. Oldmeadow took up the sheets and read.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"DEAREST NANCY,--How I wish you were with us up here. It's the most
-fantastically lovely place. One feels as if one could sail off into it.
-I dug up some roots of saxifrage for your wall yesterday, such pretty
-pink stuff. It's gone off in a box wrapped in damp moss and I hope will
-reach you safely. A horrid, vandal thing to do; but for you and Aunt
-Monica I felt it justified, and there are such masses of it. I saw a
-snow-bunting yesterday, much higher up than the saxifrage; such a jolly,
-composed little fellow on a field of snow. The birds would drive you
-absolutely mad, except that you're such a sensible young person you'd no
-doubt keep your head even when you saw a pair of golden eagles, as we
-did, floating over a ravine. I walked around the Lac d'Annecy this
-morning, before breakfast, and did wish you were with me. I thought of
-our bird-walks at dawn last summer. There were two or three darling
-warblers singing, kinds we haven't got at home; and black redstarts and
-a peregrine falcon high in the air. I could write all day if I'd the
-time, about the birds and flowers. You remember Adrienne telling us that
-afternoon when she first came to Coldbrooks about the flowers. But I
-mustn't go on now. We're stopping for tea in a little valley among the
-mountains with flowers thick all around us and I've only time to give
-our news to you and Aunt Monica and to send our love. Mother is
-extremely fit and jolly, though rather scared at the hairpin curves;
-Adrienne has to hold her hand. I'm too happy for words and feel as if
-I'd grown wings. How is Chummie's foot? Did the liniment help? Those
-traps are beastly things. I feel just as you do about the rabbits.
-Adrienne reads aloud to us in the evenings; a man called Claudel;
-awfully stiff French to follow but rather beautiful. I think you'd like
-him. Not a bit like Racine! Best love to you and Aunt Monica. Here's
-Adrienne, who wants to have her say."
-
-Had it been written in compunction for _Ariane aux bords laissée_? or,
-rather, in a happy reversion to sheer spontaneity, a turning, without
-any self-consciousness, to the comrade of the bird-walks who would,
-after all, best feel with him about snow-buntings and redstarts?
-Oldmeadow paused for the surmise, not looking up, before he went on from
-Barney's neat, firm script to his wife's large, clear clumsy hand.
-
- "DEAREST NANCY," ran the postscript, and it had been at the
- postscript, Oldmeadow now could gauge, that Nancy had first found
- herself unprepared. "I, too, am thinking of you, with Barney. It is
- a great joy to feel that where, he says, I've given him golden
- eagles and snow-buntings he's given me--among so many other dear,
- wonderful people--a Nancy. I get the best of the bargain, don't I?
- I can't see much of the birds for looking at the peaks--_my_ peaks,
- so familiar yet, always, so new again. 'Stern daughters of the
- voice of God' that they are. Radiantly white against a cloudless
- sky we find them to-day. Barney's profile is beautiful against
- them--but his nose is badly sun-burned! _All_ our noses are
- sun-burned! That's what one pays for flying among the Alps.
-
- "Mother Nell--we've decided that that's what I'm to call
- her--looks ten years younger all the same, as I knew she would. We
- talk of you all so often--of you and Meg and Palgrave and Barbara,
- and half a dozen times a day Barney wishes that one or the other of
- you were with us to see this or that. It's specially you for the
- birds I notice. You must take me for some bird-walks at dawn some
- day and teach me to know all your lovely English songsters.... Dear
- little Cousin-Sister, I send you my love with his and, with him,
- hold you warmly in my heart. Will 'Aunt Monica' accept my
- affectionate and admiring homages?
-
- "Yours ever
-
- "ADRIENNE"
-
-
-
-Oldmeadow had not expected that she could write such a human letter; yet
-it explained Nancy's blush. Barney's spontaneous affection she could
-have faced, but she had not been able to face his wife's determined
-tenderness. Adrienne had meant it well, no doubt--Oldmeadow gazed on
-after he had finished, but she had no business to mean so well, no
-business to thrust herself, in this community of intimacy, into what was
-Barney's place alone. There was more in it, he knew, with Meg and Mrs.
-Averil to help him, than the quite successful playfulness. She was to be
-more intimate than Barney, that was what it came to; more, much more
-tender if Barney was to be allowed intimacy and tenderness. That was
-really what she intended Nancy to see, and that Barney had no place at
-all where she, Adrienne, did not also belong.
-
-"Very sweet; very sweet and pretty," Mrs. Averil's voice broke in, and
-he realized that he had allowed himself to drop into a grim and
-tactless reverie; "I didn't know she had such a sense of humour.
-Sun-burned noses and 'Stern daughters of the voice of God.' Well done. I
-didn't think Adrienne would ever look as low as noses. They must be
-having a delightful tour. I know black redstarts. There was one that
-used to wake me every morning at four, one summer, in Normandy, with the
-most foolish, creaking song; just outside my window. Give Barney my love
-when you write and return my niece's affectionate and admiring homages.
-Mother Nell. I shouldn't care to be called Mother Nell somehow."
-
-So Mrs. Averil's vexation expressed itself and so she floated Nancy
-along. But Nancy, long since, had pulled herself together and was able
-to look at Oldmeadow, while her lashes closed together in her own smile,
-and to say that she'd almost be willing to lose her nose for the sake of
-hearing the new warblers. Mrs. Averil opened her "Times" and over
-marmalade Nancy and Oldmeadow planned the trip that they would take some
-day, when their ship came in, the three of them, a bird-trip to the
-French Alps.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat beside Adrienne Chadwick and knew that from the other end
-of the room, where he talked to Mrs. Aldesey, Barney's eyes were on
-them, though he tried to keep them off. It was the first dinner-party
-the young couple had given since they had come up to town, for though
-they were established at Coldbrooks in the communal family life Adrienne
-seemed to find to her taste, and though Barney had at once immersed
-himself in country pursuits, they had taken and furnished this large
-house in Connaught Square and it was, apparently, settled that the
-winter months were to be spent in London. How that was to be combined
-with farming at Coldbrooks, or whether Barney intended to take a header
-into politics and felt a London house, big enough for entertaining, part
-of the programme, Oldmeadow hadn't an idea, and for the rather sinister
-reason that he had hardly laid his eyes on Barney since his return from
-his wedding-journey. Even though asked to tea once or twice, while,
-established in an hotel, they were finding and furnishing the house, he
-had never found them alone and either Barney had made no opportunity, or
-his wife had seen to it that none should be made, for having a
-_tête-à-tête_ with his old friend.
-
-Oldmeadow could not associate Barney with ambitions, either social or
-political, nor, he was bound to say, as he looked round the
-dinner-table, where Adrienne sat at one end with Lord Lumley and Barney
-at the other with Lady Lumley, could one infer from its disparate and
-irrelevant elements any such ambitions in Adrienne. He had taken Mrs.
-Aldesey down and had felt her at moments to be almost too resourceful,
-her air of graceful skill in keeping the ball rolling seeming too much
-to emphasize its tendency to drop. Without Mrs. Aldesey, without
-Meg--vividly engaged at one corner with a fair young American--without
-himself, for he had aided and abetted Lydia to the best of his ability,
-the dinner would have been a dull one and he was not sure that even
-their enterprise had redeemed it. Adrienne had not any air of fearing
-dullness or of being in need of assistance. Oldmeadow saw that the blue
-ribbon was frequently unrolled and that, as always, it made a silence in
-which it could be watched. Lord Lumley, his handsome, official head bent
-in an attitude of chivalrous devotion, watched earnestly, and the fair
-young American paused in the midst of whatever he might be saying to Meg
-to take almost reverent note; but Oldmeadow fancied more than once that
-he caught startled eyes fixed upon it, especially when there emerged a
-lustrous loop of quotation:--
-
- "One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
- Never doubted clouds would break,--"
-
-The silence for that had been so general that even Barney, far away, and
-protected by Mrs. Aldesey, was aware of it.
-
-"How wonderfully he _wears_, doesn't he, dear old Browning," said Mrs.
-Aldesey, and in the glance that Barney cast upon her was an oddly
-mingled gratitude and worry. The fair young American, he was very fair
-and had clear, charming eyes, finished the verse in a low voice to Meg
-and Meg looked at him affectionately the while. He was evidently one of
-Adrienne's appurtenances.
-
-It was a dull dinner. Pretty, festive Mrs. Pope and young Mr. Haviland,
-reputed to be a wit and one of Meg's young men as Mrs. Pope was one of
-Barney's young women, would not with any eagerness again attend a board
-where the hostess quoted Browning and didn't know better than to send
-you down, the first with a stern young socialist who sat silent for the
-most part and frowned when addressed, and the second with a jocular,
-middle-aged lady from California, the mother, Oldmeadow gathered, of the
-clear-eyed youth, from whose ample bosom Mr. Haviland's subtle arrows
-glanced aside leaving him helplessly exposed to the stout bludgeonings
-of her humour. Adrienne paused once or twice in her conversation to
-smile approval upon her compatriot and to draw Lord Lumley's attention
-to her special brand of merriment, good Lord Lumley adjusting his
-glasses obediently to take it in.
-
-And now they were all assembled in the drawing-room. Like everything
-about Adrienne, it was simple and rather splendid. Barney had wisely
-kept his modernities for his own study and it was a pity, Oldmeadow
-reflected, that Adrienne had not kept for her own boudoir the large
-portrait of herself that hung over the mantelpiece, since it was a note
-more irrelevant than any Post Impressionist could have been and cast a
-shade of surmise over the taste displayed in the Chippendale furniture
-and the Chinese screens.
-
-"Rather sweet, isn't it; pastoral and girlish, you know," Barney had
-suggested tentatively as Mrs. Aldesey had placed herself before it.
-"Done in Paris a good many years ago; the man was very much the fashion
-then. Adrienne was only sixteen. It's an extraordinarily perfect
-likeness still, isn't it?"
-
-To which Mrs. Aldesey, all old lace and exquisite evasion, had murmured,
-her lorgnette uplifted: "Quite dear and ingenuous. Such a relief after
-your arid Cubists. What would they make of Mrs. Barney _en bergère_, I'd
-like to know? A jumble of packing-cases with something twisted in a
-corner to signify a bleat."
-
-For the picture, painted with glib assurance and abounding in pink and
-azure, portrayed Adrienne dressed as a shepherdess and carrying a
-flower-wreathed crook.
-
-Adrienne, to-night at all events, was looking very unlike the
-shepherdess, but that might be because of the approaches of her
-maternity. Mrs. Chadwick, when he had last been at Coldbrooks, had told
-him that the baby was expected in May and that Adrienne was wonderful
-about it, dedicating herself to its perfection in thought and deed with
-every conscious hour.
-
-"If only I'd thought about my babies before they came like that, who
-knows what they might have turned out!" she had surmised. "But I was
-very silly, I'm afraid, and the only thing I really did think of was how
-I should dress them. I've always loved butcher's-blue linen for children
-and I must say that mine did look very nice in it. For everyday, you
-know."
-
-Oldmeadow found it extremely difficult to think of Adrienne as a mother;
-it was much easier to think of her as a shepherdess. Such solidities of
-experience gave her even a certain pathos in his eyes, though he was in
-no whit dislodged from his hostility to her. She was as mild, as
-satisfied, apparently, with herself and with existence, as ever, yet her
-eyes and lips expressed fatigue and a purely physical sadness that was
-uncharacteristic, and it was uncharacteristic that she should be rather
-thickly powdered.
-
-They had not really met since the morning of her adjuration to him at
-Coldbrooks and he wondered if she remembered that little scene as
-vividly as he did. She would be very magnanimous did she not remember it
-unpleasantly; and he could imagine her as very magnanimous; yet from the
-fact that she had kept Barney from him he could not believe that she was
-feeling magnanimously.
-
-She watched Barney and Mrs. Aldesey now, as they stood before her
-portrait, and he fancied that the sadness in her eyes, whatever might be
-its cause, deepened a little. When she turned them on him it was with an
-effect of being patiently ready for him. Perhaps, really, she had been
-more patient than pleased all evening.
-
-"So you are settled here for the winter?" he said. "Have you and Barney
-any plans? I've hardly seen anything of him of late."
-
-"We have been so very, very busy, you know," said Adrienne, as if quite
-accepting his right to an explanation.
-
-She was dressed in pale blue and wore, with her pearl necklace, a little
-wreath of pearls in her hair. In her hands she turned, as they talked, a
-small eighteenth-century fan painted in pink and grey and blue, and he
-was aware, as he had been at Coldbrooks, of those slow and rather
-fumbling movements.
-
-"We couldn't well ask friends," she went on, "even the dearest, to come
-and sit on rolls of carpet with us while we drank our tea, could we?
-We've kept our squalor for the family circle. Meg's been with us; so
-dear and helpful; but only Meg and a flying visit once or twice from
-Mother Nell. Nancy couldn't come. But nothing, it seems, will tear Nancy
-from hunting. I feel that strange and rather sad; the absorption of a
-fine young life in such primitiveness."
-
-"Oh, well; it's not her only interest, you know," said Oldmeadow, very
-determined not to allow himself vexation. "Nancy is a creature of such
-deep country roots. Not the kind that grow in London."
-
-"I know," said Adrienne. "And it is just those roots that I want to
-prevent my Barney's growing. Roots like that tie people to routine;
-convention; acceptance. I want Barney to find a wider, freer life. I
-hope he will go into politics. If we have left Coldbrooks and the dear
-people there for these winter months it's because I feel he will be
-better able to form opinions here than in the country. I saw quite well,
-there, that people didn't form opinions; only accepted traditions. I
-want Barney to be free of tradition and to form opinions for himself. He
-has none now," she smiled.
-
-She had been clear before, and secure; but he felt now the added weight
-of her matronly authority. He felt, too, that, while ready for him and,
-perhaps, benevolently disposed, she was far more indifferent to his
-impressions than she had been at Coldbrooks. She had possessed Barney
-before; but how much more deeply she possessed him now and how much
-more definitely she saw what she intended to do with him.
-
-"You must equip him with your opinions," said Oldmeadow, and his voice
-was a good match for hers in benevolence. "I know that you have so many
-well-formed ones."
-
-"Oh, no; never that," said Adrienne. "That's how country vegetables are
-grown; first in frames and then in plots; all guided and controlled. He
-must find his own opinions; quite for himself; quite freely of
-influence. That is the rock upon which Democracy is founded. Nothing is
-more arresting to development than living by other people's opinions."
-
-"But we must get our opinions from somebody and somewhere. The danger of
-democracy is that we don't grow them at all; merely catch them, like
-influenza, from a mob. Not that I disbelieve in democracy."
-
-"Don't you, Mr. Oldmeadow?" She turned her little fan and smiled on him.
-"You believe in liberty, equality, fraternity? That surprises me."
-
-"Democracy isn't incompatible with recognizing that other people are
-wiser than oneself and letting them guide us; quite the contrary. Why
-surprised? Have I seemed so autocratic?"
-
-"It would surprise me very much to learn that you believed in equality,
-to start with that alone"; Adrienne smiled on.
-
-"Well, I own that I don't believe in people who have no capacity for
-opinions being impowered to act as if they had. That's the fallacy
-that's playing the mischief with us, all over the world."
-
-"They never will have opinions worth having unless they are given the
-liberty to look for them. You don't believe in liberty, either, when you
-say that."
-
-"No; not for everybody. Some of our brothers are too young and others
-too stupid to be trusted with it."
-
-"They'll take it for themselves if you don't trust them with it," said
-Adrienne, and he was again aware that though she might be absurd she, at
-all events, was not stupid. "All that we can do in life is to trust, and
-help, and open doors. Only experience teaches. People must follow their
-own lights."
-
-He moved forward another pawn, and though he did not find her stupid he
-was not taking her seriously. "Most people have no lights to follow.
-It's a choice for them between following other people's or resenting and
-trampling on them. That, again, is what we can see happening all over
-the world."
-
-"So it is, you must own, just as I thought; you don't even believe in
-fraternity," said Adrienne, and she continued to smile her weary,
-tranquil smile upon him; "for we cannot feel towards men as towards
-brothers, and trust them, unless we believe that the light shines into
-each human soul."
-
-He saw now that unless they went much deeper, deeper than he could be
-willing, ever, to go with Adrienne Toner, he must submit to letting
-himself appear as worsted. He knew where he believed the roots of trust
-to grow and he did not intend, no never, to say to Adrienne Toner that
-only through the love of God could one at once distrust and love the
-species to which one belonged. He could have shuddered at the thought of
-what she would certainly have found to say about God.
-
-"You've got all sorts of brothers here to-night, haven't you," he
-remarked, putting aside the abstract theme and adjusting his glass.
-"Some of them look as though they didn't recognize the relationship.
-Where did you find our young socialist over there in the corner? He
-looks very menacing. Most of the socialists I've known have been the
-mildest of men."
-
-"He is a friend of Palgrave's. Palgrave brought him to see me. Oh, I'm
-so glad--Gertrude is going to take care of him. She always sees at once
-if anyone looks lonely. That's all right, then."
-
-Oldmeadow was not so sure it was as he observed the eye with which Mr.
-Besley measured the beaming advance of the lady from California.
-
-"I wonder if you would like my dear old friend, Mrs. Prentiss," Adrienne
-continued, watching her method with Mr. Besley. "The Laughing
-Philosopher, Mother used to call her. She is a very rare, strong soul.
-That is her son, talking to Lady Lumley. He's been studying architecture
-in Paris for the past three years. A radiant person. Mrs. Prentiss runs
-a settlement in San Francisco and has a brilliant literary and artistic
-salon. She is a real force in the life of our country."
-
-"Why should you question my appreciation of rarity and strength? I can
-see that she is very kind and that if anybody can melt Mr. Besley she
-will."
-
-"Gertrude would have melted Diogenes," said Adrienne with a fond
-assurance that, though it took the form of playfulness, lacked its
-substance. "I hope they will find each other, for he is rare and strong,
-too. What he needs is warmth and happiness. He makes me think of Shelley
-when he talks."
-
-"He's too well up in statistics to make me think of Shelley," Oldmeadow
-commented. Barney, he saw, from his place beside Mrs. Aldesey at the
-other end of the room, was still watching them, pleased now, it was
-evident, by the appearance of friendly, drifting converse they
-presented. "He's not altogether unknown to me for we often, in our
-review, get our windows broken by his stones; well-thrown, too. He's
-very able. So you thought it might do the British Empire good to face
-him? Well, I suppose it may."
-
-"Which are the British Empire?" asked Adrienne. "You. To begin with."
-
-"Oh, no. Count me out. I'm only a snappy, snuffy scribbler. Good old
-Lord Lumley, of course, with all his vast, well-governed provinces
-shimmering in the Indian sun behind him. And Sir Archibald, who talks so
-loudly in the House. Palgrave didn't bring him, I'll be bound."
-
-"No. Lady Lumley brought him. He and Lord Lumley are certainly more than
-odds and ends." She had an air of making no attempt to meet his
-badinage, if it was that, but of mildly walking past it. "They are, both
-of them, rather splendid people, in spite of their limitations. They've
-accepted tradition, you see, instead of growing opinion. That is their
-only trouble. I was afraid you were going to say Mr. Haviland. He is
-certainly an odd and end."
-
-Mr. Haviland and Mrs. Pope had found each other and were indulging in
-mirthful repartee in the back drawing-room. "I feel safe with Lord
-Lumley and Sir Archibald," Adrienne added.
-
-"I'd certainly rather trust myself in their hands than in Mr. Besley's.
-I'd almost rather trust myself in the hands of Mr. Haviland."
-
-"You mean that they would, at least, keep you comfortable and that Mr.
-Besley wouldn't." She, too, had her forms of repartee.
-
-"I expect it's just what I do mean," he assented. "If Mr. Besley and his
-friends had their way, I for instance, and workers of my type, would
-soon, I suspect, have to forego our tobacco and our chamber-music. We're
-only marketable in a comfortable world. And there are more comfortable
-people, I maintain, under Lord Lumley, than there would be under Mr.
-Besley."
-
-"'Heartily know, when half-gods go, the gods arrive,'" said Adrienne.
-"All revolutions must begin by burning away the evil and the refuse. Not
-that I am a revolutionist, or even a socialist."
-
-"You can't separate good from evil by burning," he said. "You burn them
-both. That's what the French did in their lamentable bonfire, for which
-they've been paying in poorer brains and poorer blood ever since. We
-don't want revolutions. All we want is slow, good-tempered reform.
-Revolutions are always ill-tempered, aren't they, and nothing worth
-doing was ever done in an ill-temper. You are making me very didactic."
-
-"Oh, but I prefer that so much to persiflage," said Adrienne, with her
-tranquillity. "And I am glad to hear what you really believe. But it is
-sad to me that you should see no ardour or glory in anything. With all
-its excesses and errors, I have always felt the French Revolution to be
-a sublime expression of the human spirit."
-
-"It might have been; if they could only have kept their
-heads--metaphorically as well as literally. But the glory and ardour
-were too mixed with hatred and ignorance. I'm afraid I do tend to
-distrust those states of feeling. They tend so easily to
-self-deception."
-
-She was looking at him, quietly and attentively, and he was, for the
-first time since their initial meeting, perhaps, feeling quite
-benevolently towards her; quite as the British Empire might feel towards
-a subject race. It was, therefore, the more difficult to feel anything
-but exasperation when she said, having, evidently, summed up her
-impressions and found her verdict: "Yes. You distrust them. We always
-come back to that, don't we? You distrust yourself, too. So that, when
-you tell me what you believe, you can only do it in the form of making
-fun of my beliefs. I feel about you, Mr. Oldmeadow, what I felt that
-morning when I tried to come near you and you wouldn't let me. I feel it
-more the more I see you; and it makes me sad. It isn't only that you
-distrust ardour and glory, all the sunlight and splendour of life; but
-you are afraid of them; afraid to open your heart to trust. You shut
-your door upon the sunlight and take up your caustic pen; and you don't
-see how the shadows fall about you."
-
-It was indeed a dusty tumble from the quite civilized pavement of their
-interchange, and it was unfortunate that upon his moment of
-discomfiture, when he saw himself as trying to clap the dust off his
-knees and shoulders in time to be presentable, Barney and Mrs. Aldesey
-should have chosen to approach them. Barney, no doubt, imagined it a
-propitious moment in which to display to Mrs. Aldesey his wife's and his
-friend's amity.
-
-Adrienne was perfectly composed. She had borne her testimony and, again,
-done her best for him, pointing out to him that the first step towards
-enfranchisement was to open his door to the sunlight that she could so
-bountifully supply. She turned a clear, competent eye upon her husband
-and his companion.
-
-"Well, dear, and what have you and Roger been so deep in?" Barney
-inquired, looking down at her with a fondness in which, all the same,
-Oldmeadow detected the anxiety that had hovered in his eye all evening.
-"You've seemed frightfully deep."
-
-"We have been," said Adrienne, looking up at him. "In liberty, equality
-and fraternity; all the things I believe in and that Mr. Oldmeadow
-doesn't. I can't imagine how he gets on at all, he believes in so few
-things. It must be such a sad, dim, groping world to live in when there
-are no stars above to look at and no hands below to hold."
-
-"Oh, well, you see," said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile, "his
-ancestors didn't sign the Declaration of Independence."
-
-"We don't need ancestors to do that," Adrienne smiled back. "All of us
-sign it for ourselves--all of us who have accepted our birthright and
-taken the gifts that our great, modern, deep-hearted world hold out to
-us. You are an American, Mrs. Aldesey, so you find it easy to believe in
-freedom, don't you?"
-
-"Very easy; for myself; but not for other people," Mrs. Aldesey replied
-and Oldmeadow saw at once, with an added discomfort, that she
-underestimated, because of Adrienne's absurdity, Adrienne's
-intelligence. "But then the very name of any abstraction--freedom,
-humanity, what you will--has always made me feel, at once, dreadfully
-sleepy. It's not ever having had my mind trained, Mrs. Barney. Now
-yours was, beautifully, I can see."
-
-Adrienne looked up at her, for Mrs. Aldesey, her lace about her
-shoulders, her lorgnette in her hands, had not seated herself, and it
-was further evident to Oldmeadow that she weighed Mrs. Aldesey more
-correctly than Mrs. Aldesey weighed her. "Very carefully, if not
-beautifully," she said. "Have I made you sleepy already? But I don't
-want to go on talking about abstractions. I want to talk about Mr.
-Oldmeadow. The truth is, Barney," and her voice, as she again turned her
-eyes on her husband, had again the form but not the substance of gaiety,
-"the truth is that he's a lonely, lonely bachelor and that we ought to
-arrange a marriage for him, you and I. Since he doesn't believe in
-freedom, he won't mind having a marriage arranged, will he?--if we can
-find a rare, sweet, gifted girl."
-
-Barney had become red. "Roger's been teasing you, darling. Nobody
-believes in freedom more. Don't let him take you in. He's an awful old
-humbug with his Socratic method. He upsets you before you know where you
-are. He's always been like that."
-
-"Yes; hasn't he," Mrs. Aldesey murmured.
-
-"But he hasn't upset me at all," said Adrienne. "I grant that he was
-trying to, that he was doing his very best to give me a tumble; but I
-quite see through him and he doesn't conceal himself from me in the very
-least. He doesn't really believe in freedom, however much he may have
-taken _you_ in, Barney; he'd think it wholesome, of course, that you
-should believe in it. That's his idea, you see; to give people what he
-thinks wholesome; to choose for them. It's the lack of faith all
-through. But the reason is that he's lonely; dreadfully lonely, and
-because of that he's grown to be, as he says, snappy and snuffy; so that
-we must borrow a page from his book and find what is wholesome for him.
-I know all the symptoms so well. I've had friends just like that. It's a
-starved heart and having nobody to be fonder of than anyone else; no one
-near at all. He must be happily married as soon as possible. A happy
-marriage is the best gift of life, isn't it, Mrs. Aldesey? If we haven't
-known that we haven't known our best selves, have we?"
-
-"It may be; we mayn't have," said Mrs. Aldesey, cheerfully; but she was
-not liking it. "I can't say. Am I to have a hand in choosing his bride?
-I know his tastes, I think. We're quite old friends, you see."
-
-"No one who doesn't believe in freedom for other people may help to
-choose her," said Adrienne, with a curious blitheness. "That's why he
-mayn't choose her himself. We must go quite away to find her; away from
-ceilings and conventions and out into the sunlight. I don't believe
-happiness is found under ceilings. And it's what we all need more than
-anything else. Even tobacco and chamber-music don't make you a bit
-happy, do they, Mr. Oldmeadow? and if one isn't happy one can't know
-anything about anything. Not really."
-
-"Alas!" sighed Mrs. Aldesey, keeping up her end, but not very
-successfully, while Barney fixed his eyes upon his wife. "And I thought
-I'd found it this evening, under this ceiling. Well, I shall cherish my
-illusion, since you tell me it's only that, and thank you for it, Mrs.
-Barney. The Lumleys are going to give me a lift and I see that their car
-has been announced."
-
-"Stay on a bit, Roger," Barney murmured, as the Lumleys approached.
-"I've seen nothing of you for ages."
-
-Adrienne rose to greet her parting guests.
-
-"Darling Adrienne, good-night. It's been perfectly delightful, your
-little party," said Lady Lumley, who was large, light and easily
-pleased; an English equivalent of the lady from California, but without
-the sprightliness. "Your dear young Mr. Prentiss is a treasure. He's
-been telling me about Sicilian temples. We _must_ get there one day.
-Mrs. Prentiss says they will come to us for a week-end before they go.
-How extraordinarily interesting she is. Don't forget that you are coming
-on the fifteenth."
-
-"I shall get up a headache, first thing!" Lord Lumley stated in a loud,
-jocular whisper, reverting to a favourite jest on Adrienne's powers.
-"That's the thing to go in for, eh? I won't let Charlie cut me out this
-time. Not a night's sleep till you come!"
-
-"Go in for as many as you like, dear Lord Lumley," said Adrienne,
-smiling her assurance of being able to deal with a series.
-
-"Good-night, Mrs. Barney," said Mrs. Aldesey. "Leave me a little
-standing-room under the stars, won't you."
-
-"There's always standing-room under the stars," said Adrienne. "We don't
-exclude each other there."
-
-The party showed no other signs of breaking up. The Laughing Philosopher
-had melted, or, at all events, mastered Mr. Besley, and talked to him
-with, now and again, a maternal hand laid on his knee. Mr. Haviland and
-Mrs. Pope still laughed in the back drawing-room, Meg and Mr. Prentiss
-had come together again and Sir Archibald was engaged with a pretty
-girl. After looking around upon them all, Adrienne, with the appearance
-of a deeper fatigue, sank back upon her sofa.
-
-"You know, darling," Barney smiled candidly upon his wife, "you rather
-put your foot in it just now. Mrs. Aldesey's marriage isn't happy. I
-ought to have warned you."
-
-"How do you mean not happy, Barney?" Adrienne looked up at him. "Isn't
-Mr. Aldesey dead?"
-
-"Not at all dead. She left him some years ago, didn't she, Roger? He
-lives in New York. It's altogether a failure."
-
-Adrienne looked down at her fan. "I didn't know. But one can't avoid
-speaking of success sometimes, even to failures."
-
-"Of course not. Another time you will know."
-
-Adrienne seemed to meditate, but without compunction. "That was what she
-meant, then, by saying she believed in freedom for herself but not for
-other people."
-
-"Meant? How do you mean? She was joking."
-
-"If she left him. It was she who left him?"
-
-"I don't know anything about it," Barney spoke now with definite
-vexation and Oldmeadow, in his corner of the sofa, his arms folded, his
-eyes on the cornice, gave him no help. "Except that, yes, certainly;
-it's she who left him. She's not a deserted wife. Anything but."
-
-"It's only Mr. Aldesey who is the deserted husband," Adrienne turned her
-fan and kept her eyes on it. "It's only he who can't be free. Forgive me
-if she's a special friend of yours, Mr. Oldmeadow; but it explains. I
-felt something so brittle, so unreal in her, charming and gracious as
-she is. It is so very wrong for a woman to do that, I think."
-
-"Wrong?" Barney echoed, staring at Oldmeadow while this firm hand was
-laid upon his Egeria. "What the dickens do you mean, darling? She is a
-special friend of Roger's. You don't surely mean to say a woman must,
-under all circumstances, stick to a man she doesn't love?"
-
-"Anything but that, Barney. I think that she should leave him and set
-him free. It's quite plain to me that if a wife will not live with her
-husband it is her duty to divorce him. Then, at any rate, he can try for
-happiness again."
-
-"Divorce him, my dear child!" Barney was trying to keep up appearances
-but the note of marital severity came through and as it sounded Adrienne
-raised her eyes to his: "It's not so easy as all that! Aldesey, whatever
-his faults, may have given her no cause to divorce him, and I take it
-you'll not suggest that Mrs. Aldesey should give him cause to divorce
-her."
-
-On her sofa, more pallid under her powder, more sunken than before, and
-with the queer squashed-in look emphasized, Adrienne kept steady eyes
-uplifted to her husband. "Not at all, dear Barney," she returned and
-Oldmeadow, though hardened against the pathos of her physical
-disability, saw that she spoke with difficulty, "but I think that you
-confuse the real with the conventional wrong. Mrs. Aldesey would not
-care to face any unconventionality; that is quite apparent. She would
-draw her skirts aside from any conventional wrong-doing. But the real
-wrong she would be blind to; the wrong of keeping anyone bound in the
-emptiness you have made for them. Setting free is not so strange and
-terrible a matter as you seem to imagine. It's quite easy for brave,
-unshackled people."
-
-"Well, I must really be off," Oldmeadow now seized the occasion to
-declare. "I believe, as a matter of fact, that Mr. Aldesey lives very
-contentedly in New York, collecting French prints and giving excellent
-dinners. Anything open and scandalous would be as distasteful to him as
-to his wife. They are, both of them, happier apart; that's all it comes
-to. So you must read your lessons, even by proxy, to more authentic
-misdemeanants, Mrs. Barney. All right, Barney. Don't come down. I'll
-hope to see you both again quite soon."
-
-So he got away, concealing as best he might, his sense of tingling
-anger. But it died away to a sense of chill as he walked down Park Lane.
-Was not Barney unhappy, already? What did she say to him when she got
-him to herself? He felt sure that she had never bargained for a husband
-who could look at her with ill-temper.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-"Roger, see here, I've only come to say one word--about the absurd
-little-matter of last night. Only one; and then we'll never speak of it
-again," said poor Barney.
-
-He had come as soon as the very next day--to exonerate, not to
-apologize; that was evident at once. Oldmeadow had not long to wait
-before learning what she had said to him when she got him to herself,
-nor long to wait before realizing that if Barney had been unhappy last
-night he thought himself happy to-day.
-
-"Really, my dear boy," he said, "it's not worth talking about."
-
-"Oh, but we must talk about it," said Barney. He was red and spoke
-quickly. "It upset her frightfully; it made her perfectly miserable. She
-cried for hours, Roger," Barney's voice dropped to a haggard note. "You
-know, though she bears up so marvellously, she's ill. She doesn't admit
-illness and that makes it harder for her, because it simply bewilders
-her when she finds herself on edge like this and her body refusing to
-obey her. The baby is coming in May, you know."
-
-"I know, my dear Barney. The evening was very fatiguing for her. I saw
-it all I think. I noticed from the beginning how tired she looked."
-
-"Horribly tired. Horribly fatiguing. I'm glad you saw it. For that's
-really what I came to explain. She was tired to begin with and Mrs.
-Aldesey put her on edge. I think I saw that myself at dinner--and, oh,
-before that; on the day we had tea with her, when we first came up, in
-November--Adrienne felt then that Mrs. Aldesey didn't understand or care
-for her. You know she is so full of love and sympathy for everybody
-herself that she is literally sickened when she is treated in that
-artificial, worldly way. And you know, Roger, Mrs. Aldesey _is_
-artificial and worldly."
-
-That was how she had put it to Barney, of course. But Oldmeadow saw
-further than Mrs. Aldesey and her artificiality. He saw a dishevelled
-and weeping Adrienne stricken to the heart by the sense of threatened
-foundations, aghast by what she had seen in her husband's eyes; and he
-was aware, even while he resented having it put upon Lydia, of a
-curious, reluctant pity for the pale, weeping figure. Lydia had,
-obviously, displeased her; but Lydia had been the mere occasion; she
-could have dealt easily enough with Lydia. It had been the revelation
-that Barney could oppose her, could almost, for a moment, dislike her,
-that had set her universe rocking. Her first taste of reality, then. The
-thought came rather grimly, with the pity. After all it was their best
-chance of happiness; that she should learn to accept herself as a person
-who could be opposed, even disliked, in flashes, while still loved. He
-had sat silent while he thought, one of his silences which, when he
-emerged from them, he often recognized as over-long. Barney must have
-felt the weight of all he did not say when all that he found to say was:
-"What it comes to, doesn't it, is that they neither of them take much to
-each other. Lydia is certainly conventional."
-
-"Ah, but Lady Lumley is conventional, too," said Barney with an
-irrepressible air of checkmate. "Hordes of conventional people adore
-Adrienne. It's a question of the heart. There are people who are
-conventional without being worldly. It's worldliness that stifles
-Adrienne. It's what she was saying last night: 'They have only ceilings;
-I must have the sky.' Not that she thinks _you_ worldly, dear old boy."
-
-"I hope you try to interpret me to her kindly," said Oldmeadow, smiling.
-Even at the moment when Barney, all innocently, was revealing to him
-Adrienne's tactics, the fragments of her vocabulary imbedded in his
-speech were affording him amusement. "You must try and persuade her that
-I've quite a fondness for the sky myself, and even published a volume of
-verse in my youth."
-
-"I do. Of course I do," said Barney eagerly. "And I gave her your poems,
-long ago. She loved them. It's your sardonic pessimism she doesn't
-understand--in anyone who could have written like that when they were
-young. She never met anything like it before in her life. And the way
-you never seem to take anything seriously. It makes her dreadfully sorry
-for you, even while she finds it so hard to accept in anyone she cares
-for--because she really does so care for you, Roger"--there was a note
-of appeal in Barney's voice--"and does so long to find a way out for
-you. It was a joke, of course; but all the same we've often wished you
-could find the right woman to marry."
-
-Barney, as he had done last night, grew very red again, so that it was
-apparent to Oldmeadow that not only the marriage but the woman--the
-rare, gifted girl--had been discussed between him and his wife.
-
-"Adrienne thinks everyone ought to be married, you see," he tried to
-pass it off. "Since we are so happy ourselves."
-
-"I see," said Oldmeadow. "There's another thing you must try to persuade
-her of: that I'm not at all _un jeune homme à marier_, and that if I
-ever seek a companion it will probably be some one like myself, some one
-sardonic and pessimistic. If I fixed my affections on the lovely girl,
-you see, it isn't likely they'd be reciprocated."
-
-"Oh, but"--Barney's eagerness again out-stepped his
-discretion--"wouldn't the question of money count there, Roger? If she
-had plenty of money, you know, or you had; enough for both; and a place
-in the country? Of course, it's all fairy-tale; but Adrienne is a
-fairy-tale person; material things don't count with her at all. She
-waves them away and wants other people to wave them away, too. What she
-always says is: 'What does my money _mean_ unless it's to open doors for
-people I love?' She's starting that young Besley, you know, just because
-of Palgrave; setting him up as editor of a little review--rotten it is,
-I think--but Adrienne says people must follow their own lights. And it's
-just that; she'd love to open doors for you, if it could make you
-happy."
-
-Oldmeadow at this, after a moment of receptivity, began to laugh softly;
-but the humour of the situation grew upon him until he at last threw
-back his head and indulged in open and prolonged mirth. Barney watched
-him bashfully. "You're not angry, I see," he ventured. "You don't think
-it most awful cheek, I mean?"
-
-"I think it is most awful cheek; but I'm not angry; not a bit," said
-Oldmeadow. "Fairy-godmothers are nothing if not cheeky; are they? Oh, I
-know you meant your, not her, cheek. But it's the fault of the
-fairy-godmother, all the same, and you must convince her that I'm not in
-love with anybody, and that if ever I am she'll have to content herself
-with my small earnings and a flat in Chelsea."
-
-So he jested; but, when his friend was gone, he realized that he was a
-little angry all the same and he feared that his mirth had not been able
-to conceal from Barney that what he really found it was confounded
-impudence. Barney's face had worn, as he departed, the look of mingled
-gratitude and worry and Barney must feel, as well as he felt, that their
-interview hadn't really cleared up anything--except his own readiness to
-overlook the absurdities of Barney's wife. What became more and more
-clear to himself was that unless he could enable Adrienne to enroll his
-name on her banner she would part him from Barney and that her very
-benevolence was a method. The more he thought of it the more
-uncomfortable he felt, and his inner restlessness became at length an
-impulse urging him out to take counsel or, rather, seek solace, with the
-friend from whom Adrienne could never part him. He would go and have tea
-with Lydia Aldesey and with the more eagerness from the fact that he was
-aware of a slight dissatisfaction in regard to Lydia. She had not
-altogether pleased him last night. She had put herself in the wrong; she
-had blundered; she hadn't behaved with the skill and tact requisite; and
-to elicit from her a confession of ineptitude would make his sense of
-solace the more secure.
-
-The day was a very different day from the one in April when he had
-first gone to ask Mrs. Aldesey for information about people called
-Toner. It was early February, dull and cold and damp. No rain was
-falling, but the trees were thick with moisture and Oldmeadow had his
-hands deep in his pockets and the collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears. As he crossed the Serpentine, an electric brougham passed him,
-going slowly, and he had a glimpse within it, short but very vivid, of
-Adrienne, Meg, and Captain Hayward.
-
-Adrienne, wearing a small arrangement of black velvet that came down
-over her brows, was holding Meg's hand and, while she spoke, was looking
-steadily at her, her face as white as that of a Pierrot. Meg listened,
-gloomily it seemed, and Captain Hayward's handsome countenance, turned
-for refuge towards the window, showed an extreme embarrassment.
-
-They passed and Oldmeadow pursued his way, filled with a disagreeable
-astonishment though, absurdly, his mind was at first occupied only in an
-attempt to recover a submerged memory that Captain Hayward's demeanour
-suggested. It came at last in an emancipating flash and he saw again,
-after how many years, the golden-brown head of his rather silly setter,
-John, turned aside in shy yet dignified repudiation, that still, by a
-dim, sick smile, attempted to conceal distress and to enter into the
-spirit of the game--as a kitten was held up for his contemplation. A
-kitten was a very inadequate analogy, no doubt, for the theme of
-Adrienne's discourse; yet Captain Hayward's reaction to a situation for
-which he found himself entirely unprepared was markedly like John's. And
-he, like John, had known that the game was meant to be at his expense.
-John and Captain Hayward got Oldmeadow out of the park before he had
-taken full possession of his astonishment and could ask himself why, if
-Adrienne were engaged in rescuing Meg from her illicit attachment, she
-should do it in the company of the young man. Yet, strangely enough, he
-felt, as he walked, a growing sense of reassurance. For an emergency
-like this, after all, given amenable subjects, Adrienne was the right
-person. He hadn't dreamed it to be such an emergency; but since it was,
-Adrienne would pull them through. As she would have laid her hand on the
-head of Bacchus and reformed him, so she would lay it on the head of
-Captain Hayward.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-The incident put Mrs. Aldesey quite out of his mind, and it was not till
-he stood on her doorstep and rang her bell that he remembered his
-grievance against her and realized that it had been made more definite
-by this glimpse of Adrienne's significance. That his friend was prepared
-for him was evident at his first glance; she had even, he saw, been
-expecting him, for she broke out at once with: "Oh, my dear Roger--what
-_are_ you going to do with her?"
-
-He was actually pleased to find himself putting her, with some grimness,
-in her place. "What is she going to do with us? you mean. You underrate
-Mrs. Barney's capacity, let me tell you, my dear friend."
-
-But Mrs. Aldesey was not easily quelled. "Underrate her! Not I! She's a
-Juggernaut if ever there was one. Her capacity is immense. She'll roll
-on and she'll crush flat. That poor Barney! She is as blind as a
-Juggernaut, but _he_ will come to see--alas! he is seeing
-already--though you and I danced round him with veils and cymbals--that
-people won't stand being pelted with platitudes from soup to dessert.
-The Lumleys will, of course; it's their natural diet; though even they
-like their platitudes served with a touch of _sauce piquante_; but
-Rosamund Pope told me that she felt black and blue all over and Cuthbert
-Haviland--malicious toad--imitates her already to perfection: dreadful
-little voice, dreadful little smile, dreadful little quotations and all.
-It will be one of his London gags. That shepherdess! My dear Roger,
-don't pretend to me that _you_ don't see it!"
-
-Oldmeadow, sunken in the chair opposite her, surveyed her over his
-clasped hands with an air of discouragement.
-
-"What I'm most seeing at the moment is that she's made you angry," he
-remarked. "If what you say were all the truth, why should she make you
-angry? She's not as blind as a Juggernaut. That's where you made your
-mistake. She'll only crush the people who don't lie down before her. She
-knows perfectly well where she is going--and over whom. So be careful,
-that is my advice, and keep out of her way; unless you want to lose a
-toe or a finger."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey showed, at this, that he had arrested her. In spite of the
-element of truth in Adrienne's verdict upon her he knew her to be, when
-veils and cymbals were cast aside, a sincere and gallant creature. She
-did not attempt to hide from him now and, after a moment of mutual
-contemplation, she laughed a little, with not unreal mirth and said: "I
-suppose I am angry. I suppose I'm even spiteful. It's her patronage, you
-know. Her suffocating superiority. To have to stand there, for his sake,
-and _take_ it! You overrate her, Roger. No woman not abysmally stupid
-could say the things she says."
-
-"Your mistake again. She's able to say them because she's never met
-irony or criticism. She's not stupid," he found his old verdict. "Only
-absurd. You know, you gave yourself away to her. You showed her what you
-thought of her. You patronized _her_."
-
-"Is _no_ retaliation permitted?" Mrs. Aldesey moaned. "Must one accept
-it all? Be scourged with the stars and Browning and then bow one's head
-to her caresses? After all, Barney is your friend, not mine, and it's
-as your friend that I've tried to be decent to his wife. But she hates
-me like poison. She gave herself away, too, you know. I liked the way
-she excluded me from her prospects for your welfare. And of course she
-knew my marriage wasn't a happy one."
-
-"I don't think that she did. No; I don't think so. You _are_ poison to
-her--cold poison," said Oldmeadow. "Don't imagine for a moment she
-didn't see that you were dancing about him with veils and cymbals. She
-didn't give herself away, for she had nothing to conceal. She was candid
-and you weren't. She didn't pretend that you were under the stars with
-her; while you kept up appearances."
-
-"But what's to become of your Barney if we don't keep them up!" Mrs.
-Aldesey cried. "Is he to be allowed to see that nobody can stand
-her--except people he can't stand? He'll have to live, then, with Mrs.
-and Mr. Prentiss. Did you try to talk to Mrs. Prentiss? Do you know that
-she told me that death was 'perfectly sublime'?"
-
-"Perhaps it is. Perhaps she'll find it so. They all seem to think well
-of death, out in California"--Oldmeadow allowed himself to relax from
-his admonitory severity. "Mrs. Prentiss isn't as silly as she seems, I
-expect. And you exaggerate Barney's sensitiveness. He'd get on very well
-with Mrs. Prentiss if you weren't there to show him you found her a
-bore. He has a very simple side and we must hope it may become simpler.
-The only chance for Barney, I see it more and more, is that we should
-efface ourselves as much as possible. The people who find the Prentisses
-a bore, I mean. And it won't be difficult for us to do that. She will
-see to it that we are effaced. Only, of course, it's a grief. I'm so
-fond of him"; and as Oldmeadow stretched forth his legs and put his
-hands in his pockets there drifted across his mind, in a thin, sharp,
-knife-like stroke, the memory of Barney--tall eighteen-year-old
-Barney--with dear old Effie, luxuriously upturned in his arms, being
-softly scratched--Barney's hand with a cat was that of an expert--and
-told that she was the best and most beautiful of cats.
-
-"It's a great shame," said Mrs. Aldesey; "I've been thinking my spiteful
-thoughts, too, instead of sympathizing with you. Of course, if it's any
-consolation to you, one usually does lose one's friends when they marry.
-But it needn't have been as bad as this. What a thousand pities he
-couldn't have fallen in love with a nice girl of his own kind. You
-couldn't do anything about it when you went down in the spring?"
-
-Oldmeadow had never said anything to Mrs. Aldesey about his hopes for
-Nancy. He had a secretive instinct for keeping his friendships in
-compartments and discussed only those portions that overflowed.
-"Nothing," he said. "And the mischief was that I went down hostile, as
-you warned me against doing. Barney saw at once that I didn't care for
-her; and she saw it at once. He even forced a sort of expression of
-opinion from me and I know now that it's always glooming there at the
-back of his mind when he sees me. It was quite useless. Once he'd fallen
-under her spell it was all up with him. She has her singular power and,
-for a man in love with her, her singular charm. Even I, you know,
-understand that."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey contemplated him. "I confess I can't," she said. "She is so
-desperately usual. I've seen her everywhere, ever since I can remember.
-Attending lectures at the Sorbonne; listening to Wagner at Bayreuth;
-having dresses tried on at Worth's; sitting in the halls of a hundred
-European hotels. She is the most unescapable form of the American woman;
-only not _du peuple_ because of the money and opportunity that has also
-extirpated everything racy, provincial and individual."
-
-"I don't know," said Oldmeadow. He mused, his hands clasped behind his
-head. "She's given me all sorts of new insights." His eyes, after his
-wont, were on the cornice and his friend's contemplation, relaxed a
-little from its alert responsiveness, allowed itself a certain
-conjectural softness as she watched him. "I feel," he went on, "since
-knowing her, that I understand America, her America, better than you do.
-You're engaged in avoiding rather than in understanding it, aren't you?
-What you underrate, what Americans of your type don't see--because, as
-you say, it's so oppressively usual--is the power of her type. If it is
-a type; if she is as ordinary as you say. It's something bred into them
-by the American assumption of the fundamental rightness of life; a
-confidence unknown before in the history of the world. An individual,
-not an institutional or social, confidence. They do, actually, seem to
-take their stand on the very universe itself. Whereas the rest of us
-have always had churches or classes to uphold us. They have all the
-absurdities and crudities of mere individualism. They have all the
-illusions of their ignorance. Yet I sometimes imagine, after I've seen
-her, that it's a power we haven't in the least taken into our
-reckoning. Isn't it the only racial thing that America has produced--the
-only thing that makes them a race? It makes them independent of us, when
-we've always imagined, in our complacency, that they were dependent. It
-enables them to take what we have to give, but to do with it what they,
-not we, think best. And by Jove, who knows how far it will carry them!
-Not you, my dear Lydia. You'll stay where you are--with us."
-
-His eyes had come back and down to her, and her gaze resumed its
-alertness and showed him that she found the picture he drew disquieting.
-"You mean it's a new kind of civilization that will menace ours?"
-
-"It's not a civilization; that's just what it's not. It's a state of
-mind. Perhaps it will menace us. Perhaps it does. We've underrated it;
-of that I'm sure; and underrated power is always dangerous. It will be
-faith without experience against experience without faith. What we must
-try for, if we're not to be worsted, is to have both--to keep experience
-and to keep faith, too. Only so shall we be able to hold our own against
-Mrs. Barney. And even so we shan't be able to prevent her doing things
-to us--and for us. She'll do things for us that we can't do for
-ourselves." His mind reverted to the faces of the brougham. "In that way
-she's bound to worst us. We'll have to accept things from her."
-
-Oldmeadow's eyes had gone back to the cornice and, in the silence that
-followed, Mrs. Aldesey, as she sat with folded arms, played absently
-with the lace ruffle at her wrist. The lace was an heirloom, like her
-rings, and the contemplation of them may have afforded her some
-sustainment. "She's made you feel all that, then," she remarked. "With
-her crook and her hat and her rose-wreathed lamb. If such a sardonic
-old lion as you does really grow bodeful before the rose-wreathed lamb
-there is, I own, reason to fear for the future. I'm glad I'm growing
-old. It would hurt me to see her cutting your claws."
-
-"Oh, she won't hurt us!" Oldmeadow smiled at her. "It's rather we who
-will hurt her--by refusing to lie down with her lamb. If that's any
-comfort to you."
-
-"Not in the least. I'm not being malicious. You don't call it hurt,
-then, to be effaced?"
-
-"Smothered in rose-leaves, eh?" he suggested. "It would be suffocating
-rather than suffering. She does give me that feeling. But you'll make
-her suffer--you have, you know--rather than she you."
-
-"I really don't know about that," said Mrs. Aldesey. "You make me quite
-uncomfortable, Roger. You make me superstitious. She's done that to me
-already. I refuse to take her seriously, but I shall avoid her. That's
-what it comes to. Like not giving the new moon a chance to look at you
-over your left shoulder."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-
-On a morning in early March Oldmeadow found, among the letters waiting
-for him on his breakfast-table, one from Nancy. Nancy and he, with all
-their fondness, seldom wrote to each other and he was aware, on seeing
-her writing, of the presage of something disagreeable that the
-unexpected often brings.
-
- "Dear Roger," he read, and in his first glance he saw his presage
- fulfilled. "We are in great trouble. Aunt Eleanor has asked me to
- write because she is too ill and it is to me as well as to her that
- Meg has written and she wants you to see Barney at once. Here are
- Meg's letters. She has gone away with Captain Hayward. Aunt Eleanor
- and Mother think that Barney may be able to persuade Adrienne to
- bring her back. No one else, we feel convinced, will have any
- influence with her. Do anything, anything you can, dear Roger.
- Mother and I are almost frightened for Aunt Eleanor. She walks
- about wringing her hands and crying, and she goes up to Meg's room
- and opens the door and looks in--as if she could not believe she
- would not find her there. It is heart-breaking to see her. We
- depend on you, dear Roger.
-
- "Yours ever
-
- "NANCY."
-
-
-
-"Good Lord!" Oldmeadow muttered while, in lightning flashes, there
-passed across his mind the face of John the setter and a Pierrot's face,
-white under a low line of black velvet. He took up Meg's letters,
-written from a Paris hotel.
-
- "DARLING MOTHER, I know it will make you frightfully miserable and
- I can't forgive myself for that; but it had to be. Eric and I cared
- too much and it wasn't life at all, going on as we were apart. Try,
- darling Mother, to see it as we do see things nowadays. Adrienne
- will explain it all--and you must believe her. You know what a
- saint she is and she has been with us in it all, understanding
- everything and helping us to be straight. Everything will come
- right. Iris Hayward will set Eric free, of course; she doesn't care
- one bit for him and has made him frightfully unhappy ever since
- they married, and she wants to marry some one else herself--only of
- course she'd never be brave enough to do it this way. When Eric is
- free, we will marry at once and come home, and, you will see, there
- are so many sensible people nowadays; we shall not have a bad time
- at all. Everything will come right, I'm sure; and even if it
- didn't, in that conventional way--I could not give him up. No one
- will ever love me as he does.
-
- "Your devoted child
-
- "MEG."
-
-
-
-That was the first: the second ran:
-
- "DEAREST NANCY,--I know you'll think it frightfully wrong; you are
- such an old-fashioned little dear and you told me often enough that
- I oughtn't to see so much of Eric. Only of course that couldn't
- have prepared you for this and I expect Aunt Monica won't let you
- come and stay with us for ages. Never mind; when you marry, you'll
- see, I'm sure. Love is the _only_ thing, really. But I should hate
- to feel I'd lost you and I'm sure I haven't. I want to ask you,
- Nancy dear, to do all you can to make Mother _take_ it. I feel,
- just because you will think it so wrong, that you may be more good
- to her than Adrienne--who doesn't think it wrong at all--at least
- not in Mother's way. It would be frightfully unfair if Mother
- blamed Adrienne. She did all she could to show us where we stood
- and to make us play the game, and it would be pretty hard luck if
- people were to be down on her now because we _have_ played it. We
- might have been really rotters if it hadn't been for Adrienne;
- cheats and hypocrites, I mean; stealing our happiness. I know
- Adrienne can bring Barney round. It's only Mother who troubles me,
- just because she is such a child that it's almost impossible to
- make her see reason. She doesn't recognize right and wrong unless
- they're in the boxes she's accustomed to. Everything is in a box
- for poor, darling old Mummy. But I mustn't go on. Be the dear old
- pal you always have and help me out as well as you can.
-
- "Your loving
-
- "MEG."
-
-
-
-"Good Lord," Oldmeadow muttered once more. He pushed back his chair and
-rose from the table in the bright spring sunlight. He had the feeling,
-almost paternal, of disgrace and a public stripping. He saw Eleanor
-Chadwick stopping at Meg's door to look in at the forsaken room,
-distraught in her grief and incomprehension. He saw Nancy's pale,
-troubled face and Monica Averil's, pinched and dry in its sober dismay.
-And then again, lighted by a flare at once tawdry and menacing, the
-face of Adrienne Toner, the intruder, the insufferable meddler and
-destroyer, a Pierrot among fire-works that had, at last, set fire to the
-house. He found a taxi on the Embankment and drove to Connaught Square.
-Freshly decorated with window-boxes, the pleasant, spacious house had a
-specially smiling air of welcome, but the butler's demeanour told him
-that something of the calamity had already penetrated. Adrienne, if she
-had not heard before, would have had her letters; Barney, who had been
-kept in the dark, would have been enlightened, and the irrepressible
-exclamations that must have passed between them seemed dimly reflected
-on the man's formal countenance. Mrs. Chadwick, he told Oldmeadow, was
-breakfasting upstairs with Mr. Chadwick, and he ushered him into
-Barney's study.
-
-Oldmeadow waited for some time among the Post Impressionist pictures,
-one of which remained for ever afterwards vividly fixed in his memory of
-the moment; a chaotic yet determined picture; featureless yet, as it
-were, conveying through its unrecognizable elements the meaning of a
-grin. And, as he stood in the centre of the room and looked away from
-the derisive canvas, he saw on Barney's desk photographs of Adrienne,
-three photographs of her; one as a child, a sickly looking but beaming
-child; one in early girlhood, singularly childlike still; and one in her
-bridal dress of only the other day, it seemed, mild and radiant in her
-unbecoming veil and wreath.
-
-It was Barney who came to him. Poor Barney. He was more piteously boyish
-than ever before to his friend's eye; so beautifully arrayed, all in
-readiness for a happy London day with his angel, so pale, so haggard
-and perplexed. "Look here, Roger," were his first words, "do you mind
-coming upstairs to Adrienne's room? She's not dressed yet; not very
-well, you know. You've heard, then, too?"
-
-"I've just heard from Nancy. Why upstairs? I'd rather not. We'd better
-talk this over alone, Barney. All the more if your wife isn't well."
-
-"Yes; yes; I know. I told her it would be better. But she insists."
-
-The effect of a general misery Barney gave was heightened now by his
-unhappy flush. "She doesn't want us to talk it over without her, you
-see. She comes into it all too much. From Nancy, did you say? What's
-Nancy got to do with this odious affair?"
-
-"Only what Meg has put upon her--to interpret her as kindly as she can
-to your mother. Here are the letters. I'd really rather not go
-upstairs."
-
-"I know you'll hold Adrienne responsible--partly at least. She expects
-that. She knows that I do, too; she's quite prepared. I only heard half
-an hour ago and of course it knocked me up frightfully. Meg! My little
-sister! Why she's hardly more than a child!"
-
-"I'm afraid she's a good deal more than a child. I'm afraid we can't
-hold Meg to be not responsible, though, obviously, she'd never have
-taken such a step unaided and unabetted. Just read these letters,
-Barney; it won't take a moment to decide what's best to be done. I'll go
-down to your mother and you must be off, at once, to Paris, and see if
-you can fetch Meg back."
-
-But after Barney, with a hesitating hand and an uncertain glance, had
-taken the letters and begun to read them, the door was opened with
-decorous deliberation and Adrienne's French maid appeared, the tall,
-sallow, capable-looking woman whom Oldmeadow remembered having seen at
-Coldbrooks a year ago.
-
-"Madame requests that _ces Messieurs_ should come up at once; she awaits
-them," Joséphine announced in unemphatic but curiously potent accents.
-Adrienne's potency, indeed, was of a sort that flowed through all her
-agents and Oldmeadow thought that he detected, in the melancholy gaze
-bent upon Barney, reprobation for his failure to attain the standard set
-for him by a devotion wholehearted and reverential. Mrs. Chadwick, he
-remembered, had said that Adrienne's maid adored her.
-
-"Yes, yes. We're coming at once, Joséphine," said Barney. Reading the
-letters as he went, he moved to the door and Oldmeadow found himself,
-perforce, following.
-
-He had not yet visited the morning-room and even before his eyes rested
-on Adrienne they saw, hanging above her head where she sat on a little
-sofa, a full-length portrait of Mrs. Toner; in white, standing against a
-stone balustrade and holding lilies; seagulls above her and a background
-of blue sea.
-
-Adrienne was also in white, but she wore over her long, loose dress a
-little jacket of pink silk edged with swan's down and the lace cap
-falling about her neck was rosetted with pink ribbon. It was curious to
-see her in this almost frivolous array, recalling the shepherdess, when
-her face expressed, for the first time in his experience of her, an
-anger and an agitation all the more apparent for its control. She was
-pale yet flushed, odd streaks of colour running up from her throat and
-dying in the pallor of her cheeks. Her condition had evidently much
-affected her complexion and her nose, through its layer of powder,
-showed a pinched and reddened tint. It made Oldmeadow uncomfortable to
-look at her; her mask of calm was held at such a cost; she was at once
-so determinedly herself and so helplessly altered; and it was not with
-an automatic courtesy only that he went up to her and held out his hand.
-An impulse of irrelevant yet irrepressible pity stirred him.
-
-She had fixed her eyes on him as he entered, but now looking at her
-husband and not moving, she said: "I do not think you want to take my
-hand, Mr. Oldmeadow. You will think me a criminal too, as Barney does."
-
-"Darling! Don't talk such nonsense!" Barney cried. "I haven't blamed
-you, not by a word. I know you've done what you think right. Look,
-darling; Roger has had these letters. Just read them. You see what Meg
-writes--there--to Nancy--about your having done all you could to keep
-them straight. You haven't been fair to yourself in talking to me just
-now."
-
-Adrienne, without speaking, took the letters and Oldmeadow moved away to
-the window and stood looking down at the little garden at the back of
-the house where a tall almond-tree delicately and vividly bloomed
-against the pale spring sky. He heard behind him the flicker of the fire
-in the grate, the pacing of Barney's footsteps as he walked up and
-down, and the even turning of the pages in Adrienne's hands. Then he
-heard her say: "Meg contradicts nothing that I have said to you, Barney.
-She writes bravely and truly; as I knew that she would write."
-
-Barney stopped in his pacing. "But darling; what she says about
-straightness?" It was feeble of Barney and he must know it. Feeble of
-him even to think that Adrienne might wish to avail herself of the
-loophole or that she considered herself in any need of a shield.
-
-"You can't misunderstand so much as that, Barney," she said. "Meg and I
-mean but one thing by straightness; and that is truth. That was the way
-I tried to help them; it is the only way in which I can ever help
-people. I showed them the truth and kept it before their eyes when they
-were in danger of forgetting it. I said to them that if they were to be
-worthy of their love they must be brave enough to make sacrifices for
-it. I did not hide from them that there would be sacrifices--if that is
-what you mean."
-
-"It's not what I mean, darling! Of course it's not!" broke from poor
-Barney almost in a wail. "Didn't you try at all to dissuade them? Didn't
-you show them that it was desperate, and ruinous, and wrong? Didn't you
-tell Meg that it would break Mother's heart!"
-
-The blue ribbon was again unrolled and Oldmeadow, listening with rising
-exasperation, heard that the sound of her own solemn cadences sustained
-her. "I don't think anything in life is desperate or ruinous or wrong,
-Barney, except turning away from one's own light. Meg met a reality and
-was brave enough to face it. I regret, deeply, that it came to her
-tragically, not happily; but happiness can grow from tragedy if we are
-brave and true and Meg is brave and true in her love. It won't break
-your mother's heart. Hers is a small, but not such a feeble, heart as
-that. I believe that the experience may strengthen and ennoble her. She
-has led too sheltered a life."
-
-Oldmeadow at this turned from the window and met Barney's miserable
-eyes. "There's really no reason for my staying on, Barney," he said, and
-his voice as well as his look excluded Adrienne from their interchange.
-"I'll take the 1.45 to Coldbrooks. What shall I tell your mother? That
-you've gone to Paris this morning?"
-
-"Yes, that I've gone to Paris. That I'll do my best, you know. That I
-hope to bring Meg back. Tell her to keep up her courage. It'll only be a
-day or two after all, and we may be able to hush it up."
-
-"Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne in a grave, commanding tone. It was
-impossible before it to march out of the room and shut the door, though
-that was what his forcibly arrested attitude showed that he wished to
-do. "You as well as Barney must hear my protest," said Adrienne, and she
-fixed her sombre eyes upon him. "Meg is with the man she loves. In the
-eyes of heaven he is her husband. It would be real as contrasted with
-conventional disgrace were she to leave him now. She will not leave him.
-I know her better than you do. I ask you"--her gaze now turned on
-Barney--"I desire you, not to go to her on such an unworthy errand."
-
-"But, Adrienne," Barney, flushed and hesitating, pleaded, "it's for
-Mother's sake. Mother's too old to be enlarged like that--that's really
-nonsense, you know, darling. You see what Nancy says. They are
-frightened about her. It's not only convention. It's a terrible mistake
-Meg's made and she may be feeling it now and only too glad to have the
-way made easy for her to come back. I promise you to be as gentle as
-possible. I won't reproach her in any way. I'll tell her that we're all
-only waiting to forgive her and take her back."
-
-"Forgive her, Barney? For what? It is only in the eyes of the world that
-she has done wrong and I have lifted her above that fear. Convention
-does not weigh for a moment with me beside the realities of the human
-heart; nor would it with you, Barney, if it were not for the influence
-of Mr. Oldmeadow. I have warned you before; it is easy to be
-worldly-wise and cynical and to keep to the broad road; it is easy to be
-safe. But withering lies that way: withering and imprisonment, and--"
-
-"Come, come, Mrs. Barney," Oldmeadow interposed, addressing her for the
-first time and acidly laughing. "Really we haven't time for sermons. You
-oughtn't to have obliged me to come up if you wanted to influence Barney
-all by yourself. He sees quite clearly for himself the rights and the
-wrongs of this affair, as it happens. If I were to preach for a moment
-in my turn I might ask you how it was that you didn't see that it was
-your duty to tell Meg's mother and brother how things were going and let
-them judge. You're not as wise as you imagine--far from it. Some things
-you can't judge at all. Meg and Hayward aren't people of enough
-importance to have a right to break laws; that's all that it comes to;
-there's nothing to be gained by their breaking laws; not only for other
-people, but for themselves. They're neither of them capable of being
-happy in the ambiguous sort of life they'd have to lead. There's a
-reality you didn't see at all in your haste to flout convention. Barney
-could have dealt with Hayward, and Meg could have been packed off to the
-country and kept there till she'd learned to think a little more about
-other people's hearts and a little less about her own. What business had
-you, after all, to have secrets from your husband and to plot with the
-two young fools behind his back? Isn't Meg his sister rather than
-yours?" His bitterness betrayed him and conscious hostility rose in him,
-answering the menace that measured him in her eyes. "What business had
-you, a new-comer among us, to think yourself capable of managing all
-their lives and to set yourself up above them all in wisdom? You take
-too much upon yourself"; his lips found the old phrase: "Really you do.
-It's been your mistake from the beginning."
-
-He could not have believed that a face so framed for gentleness could
-show itself at once so calm and so convulsed. He knew that something had
-happened to her that had never happened to her before in her life. She
-kept her eyes steadily on him and he wondered if she were not reciting
-some incantation, some exorcism, derived from the seagulled lady above
-her: Power in Repose--Power in Love--Power in Light. Her mouth and eyes
-and nostrils were dark on her pallor and he felt that she held back all
-the natural currents of her being in order to face and quell him with
-the supernatural.
-
-"Never mind all that, Roger," Barney was sickly murmuring. "I don't
-feel like that. I know Adrienne didn't for a moment mean to deceive me."
-
-"We will mind it, Barney," said Adrienne, breathing with difficulty. "I
-had, Mr. Oldmeadow, the business, first, of loyalty to another human
-soul who, in the crisis of its destiny, confided in me. I have been
-nearer Meg than any of you have guessed, from my first meeting with her.
-You were all blind. I saw at once that she was tossed and tormented. I
-am nearer, far nearer her, than her brother and mother. In them she
-would never have dreamed of confiding and she came to me because she
-felt that in me she would find reality and in them mere formulas. I do
-not look upon women as chattels to be handed about by their male
-relatives and locked up if they do not love according to rule and
-precedent. I look upon them as the equals of men in every respect, as
-free as men to shape their lives and to direct their destinies. You
-speak a mediæval language, Mr. Oldmeadow. The world, our great, modern,
-deep-hearted world, has outstripped you."
-
-"Darling," Barney forestalled, breathlessly, as she paused, any reply
-that Oldmeadow might have been tempted to make, "don't mind if Roger
-speaks harshly. He's like that and no one cares for us more. He doesn't
-mean conventionality at all, or anything mediæval. You don't understand
-him. He puts his finger on the spot about Meg and Hayward. It's exactly
-as he says; they're not of enough importance to have a right to break
-laws. If you could have confided in me, it would have been better; you
-must own that. We'd have given Meg a chance to pull herself together.
-We'd have sent Hayward about his business. It's a question, as Roger
-says, of your wisdom; of your knowledge of the world. You didn't
-understand them. They're neither of them idealists like you. They can't
-be happy doing what you might be big enough to do. Just because they're
-not big. Try to take it in, darling. And we really needn't go on talking
-about it any longer, need we? It isn't a question of influence. All we
-have to decide on is what's to be done. Roger must go to Mother and tell
-her I'm starting this morning to try and fetch Meg back. Imagine Mother
-with a divorce case on! It would kill her, simply. That's all. Isn't it,
-Roger?"
-
-"Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne, again. She rose as she spoke. As
-he saw her stand before them, her approaching maternity dominated for a
-moment all his impressions of her. Veiled and masked adroitly as it was,
-its very uncouthness curiously became her. Her head, for once, looked
-small. Like an archaic statue, straight and short and thick, her altered
-form had dignity and amplitude and her face, heavy with its menace, hard
-with its control, might have been that of some austere and threatening
-priestess of fruitfulness.
-
-"Barney, wait," she said. Her arms hung straight beside her, but she
-slightly lifted a hand as she spoke and Oldmeadow noted that it was
-tightly clenched. "It is I, not your friend, whom you must question as
-to what it is right that you should do. I do not consent to his reading
-of my unwisdom and unworthiness. I ask you not to consent to it. I ask
-you again not to go. I ask you again to respect my judgment rather than
-his."
-
-"Darling," the unfortunate husband supplicated; "it's not because it's
-Roger's judgment. You know it's what I felt right myself--from the
-moment you told me what had happened. You say people must follow their
-own light. It _is_ my light. I must do what Mother asks and try to bring
-Meg back."
-
-"It is not your light, Barney. It is craft and caution and fear. More
-than that, do you not see, must I make plain to you what it is you do to
-me in going? You insult me. You treat what I have believed right for Meg
-to do as a crime from which she must be rescued. You drag me in the dust
-with her. Understand me, Barney"--the streaks of colour deepened on her
-neck, her breath came thickly--"if you go, you drag me in the dust."
-
-"How can it drag you in the dust, Mrs. Barney, if Meg wants to come
-back?" Oldmeadow interposed in the tone of a caustic doctor addressing a
-malingering patient. "We're not talking of crimes; only of follies.
-Come; be reasonable. Don't make it so painful for Barney to do what's
-his plain duty. You're not a child. You have, I hope, courage enough and
-humour enough to own that you can make mistakes--like other people."
-
-"Yes, yes, Adrienne, that's just it," broke painfully from Barney, and,
-as he seized the clue thus presented to him, Adrienne turned her head
-slowly, with an ominous stillness, and again rested her eyes upon him.
-"It's childish, you know, darling. It's not like you. And of course I
-understand why; and Roger does. You're not yourself; you're
-over-strained and off-balance and I'm so frightfully sorry all this has
-fallen upon you at such a time. I don't want to oppose you in anything,
-darling--do try to believe me. Only you must give me the credit for my
-own convictions. I do feel I must go. I do feel Roger must take that
-message to Mother. After all, darling," and now in no need of helping
-clues he found his own and the irrepressible note of grief vibrated in
-his voice, "you do owe me something, don't you? You do owe us all
-something--to make up, I mean. Because, without you, Meg would never
-have behaved like this and disgraced us all. Oh--I don't mean to
-reproach you!"
-
-"Good-bye then, I'm off," said Oldmeadow. "I'm very sorry you made me
-come up. Good-bye, Mrs. Barney." She had not spoken, nor moved, nor
-turned her eyes from Barney's face.
-
-"Good-bye. Thanks so much, Roger." Barney followed him, with a quickness
-to match his own, to the door. But Adrienne, this time, did not call him
-back. She remained standing stock-still in front of her sofa.
-
-"Tell Mother I'm off," said Barney, grasping his hand. "Tell her she'll
-hear at once, as soon as I know anything. Thanks so awfully," he
-repeated. "You've been a great help."
-
-It was unfortunate, perhaps, that Barney should say that, Oldmeadow
-reflected as he sped down the stairs. "But she's met reality at last,"
-he muttered, wondering how she and Barney faced each other above and
-hearing again the words that must echo so strangely in her ears:
-"Disgraced us all." And, mingled with his grim satisfaction, was, again,
-the sense of irrelevant and reluctant pity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-It was Saturday and he had to wire to Mrs. Aldesey that he could not go
-with her next day to the Queen's Hall concert they had planned to hear
-together.
-
-Nancy was waiting for him at the station in her own little pony-cart and
-as he got in she said: "Is Barney gone?"
-
-"Yes; he'll have gone by now," said Oldmeadow and, as he said it, he
-felt a sudden sense of relief and clarity. The essential thing, he saw
-it as he answered Nancy's question, was that he should be able to say
-that Barney had gone. And he knew that if he hadn't been there to back
-him up, he wouldn't have gone. So that was all right, wasn't it?
-
-As he had sped past the sun-swept country the reluctant pity had
-struggled in him, striving, unsuccessfully, to free itself from the
-implications of that horrid word: "Disgraced." It was Adrienne who had
-disgraced them; that was what Barney's phrase had really meant, though
-he hadn't intended it to mean it. She, the stranger, the new-comer, had
-disgraced them. And it was true. Yet he wished Barney hadn't stumbled on
-the phrase--just because she was a stranger and a new-comer. And Barney
-would never have found it had he not been there. But now came the sense
-of relief. If he hadn't been there, Barney wouldn't have gone.
-
-"Aunt Eleanor is longing to see you," said Nancy. "Her one hope, you
-know, is that he may bring Meg back." Nancy's eyes had a strained look,
-as though she had lain awake all night.
-
-"You think she may come back?"
-
-He felt, himself, unable to form any conjectures as to what Meg was
-likely to do. What she had done was so strangely unlike her.
-
-"Not if it means leaving Captain Hayward for good," said Nancy. "But
-Aunt Eleanor and Mother both think that she may be willing to come till
-they can marry."
-
-"That's better than nothing, isn't it," said Oldmeadow, and Nancy then
-surprised him by saying, as she looked round at him: "I don't want her
-to come back."
-
-"Don't want her to come back? But you wanted Barney to go?"
-
-"Yes. He had to go. Just so that everything might be done. So that it
-might be put before her. And to satisfy Aunt Eleanor. But, don't you
-see, Roger, it would really make it far more difficult for Aunt Eleanor
-to have her here. What would she do with her?--since she won't give up
-Captain Hayward? She can love Meg and grieve and yearn over her now. But
-if she were here she couldn't. It would be all grief and bitterness."
-
-Nancy had evidently been thinking to some purpose during her sleepless
-night and he owned that her conclusion was the sound one. What
-disconcerted him was her assurance that Meg would not leave her lover.
-After Adrienne, Nancy was likely to have the most authentic impressions
-of Meg's attitude; and, as they drove towards Chelford, he was further
-disconcerted by hearing her murmur, half to herself: "It would be silly
-to leave him now, wouldn't it."
-
-"Not if she's sorry and frightened at what she's done," he protested.
-"After all the man's got a wife who may be glad to have him back."
-
-But Nancy said: "I don't think she would. I think she'll be glad not to
-have him back. Meg may be frightened; but I don't believe she'll be
-sorry; yet."
-
-He meditated, somewhat gloomily, as they drove, on the unexpectedness of
-the younger generation. He had never thought of Nancy as belonging, in
-any but the chronological sense, to that category; yet here she was,
-accepting, if not condoning, the rebellion against law and morality.
-
-Mrs. Averil had driven down to the Little House where she was to be
-picked up and, as they turned the corner to the Green, they saw her
-waiting at the gate, her furs turned up around her ears, her neat little
-face pinched and dry, as he had known that he would find it, and showing
-a secure if controlled indignation, rather than Nancy's sad perplexity.
-
-"Well, Roger, you find us in a pleasant predicament," she observed as
-Oldmeadow settled the rug around her knees. "Somehow one never thinks of
-things like this happening in one's own family. Village girls misbehave
-and people in the next county run away sometimes with other people's
-wives; but one never expects such adventures to come walking in to one's
-own breakfast-table."
-
-"Disagreeable things do have a way of happening at breakfast-time, don't
-they," Oldmeadow assented. The comfort of Mrs. Averil was that even on
-her death-bed she would treat her own funeral lightly: "I wonder it
-remains such a comfortable meal, all the same."
-
-"I suppose you've had lunch on the train," said Mrs. Averil. "Will you
-believe it? Poor Eleanor was worrying about that this morning. She's
-got some coffee and sandwiches waiting for you, in case you haven't. I'm
-so thankful you've come. It will help her. Poor dear. She's begun to
-think of all the other things now. Of what people will say and how they
-will hear. Lady Cockerell is very much on her mind. You know what a
-meddlesome gossip she is, and only the other day Eleanor snubbed her
-when she was criticizing Barbara's new school. The thought of her is
-disturbing her dreadfully now."
-
-"I suppose these leech-bites do help to alleviate the pain of the real
-wound," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Not in the least. They envenom it," Mrs. Averil replied. "I'd like to
-strangle Lady Cockerell myself before the news reaches her."
-
-Nancy drove on, her eyes fixed on the pony's ears. "I don't believe
-people will talk nearly as much as you and Aunt Eleanor imagine," she
-now remarked. "I've told her so; and so must you, Mother."
-
-"You are admirable with her, Nancy. Far better than I am. I sit grimly
-swallowing my curses, or wringing my hands. Neither wringing nor cursing
-is much good, I suppose."
-
-"Not a bit of good. It's better she should think of what people say than
-of Meg; but when it comes to agonizing over them I believe the truth is
-that people nowadays _do_ get over it; far more than they used to;
-especially if Aunt Eleanor can show them that _she_ gets over it."
-
-"But she can't get over it, my dear child!" said Mrs. Averil, gazing at
-her daughter in a certain alarm. "How can one get over disgrace like
-that or lift one's head again--unless one is an Adrienne Toner! Oh, when
-I think of that woman and of what she's done! For she is responsible
-for it all! Every bit of it. Meg was a good girl, at heart; always. In
-spite of that silly liquid powder. And so I tell Eleanor. Adrienne is
-responsible for it all."
-
-"I don't, Mother; that's not my line at all," said Nancy. "I tell her
-that what Meg says is true." Nancy touched the pony with the whip. "If
-it hadn't been for Adrienne she might have done much worse."
-
-"Really, my dear!" Mrs. Averil murmured.
-
-"Come, Nancy," Oldmeadow protested; "that was a retrospective threat of
-Meg's. Without Adrienne she'd never have considered such an
-adventure--or its worse alternative. Encourage your aunt to curse
-Adrienne. Your Mother's instinct is sound there."
-
-But Nancy shook her head. "I don't know, Roger," she said. "Perhaps Meg
-would have considered the alternative. Girls do consider all sorts of
-things nowadays that Mother and Aunt Eleanor, in their girlhood, would
-have thought simply wicked. They _are_ wicked; but not simply. That's
-the difference between now and then. And don't you think that it's
-better for Meg and Captain Hayward to go away so that they can be
-married than to be, as she says, really rotters; than to be, as she
-says, cheats and hypocrites and steal their happiness?"
-
-"My dear child!" Mrs. Averil again murmured, while Oldmeadow, finding
-it, after all, a comfort to have a grown-up Nancy to discuss it with,
-said, "My contention is that, left to herself, Meg would have thought
-them both wicked."
-
-"Perhaps," Nancy said again; "but even old-fashioned girls did things
-they knew to be wicked sometimes. The difference Adrienne has made is
-that Meg doesn't think herself wicked at all. She thinks herself rather
-noble. And that's what I mean about Aunt Eleanor. It will comfort her if
-she can feel a little as Adrienne feels--that Meg isn't one bit the
-worse, morally, for what she's done."
-
-"Are you trying to persuade us that Meg isn't guilty, my dear?" Mrs.
-Averil inquired dryly. "Are you trying to persuade us that Adrienne has
-done us all a service? You surely can't deny that she's behaved
-atrociously, and first and foremost, to Barney. Barney could have known
-nothing about it, and can you conceive a woman keeping such a thing from
-her husband?"
-
-But Nancy was feeling the pressure of her own realizations and was not
-to be scolded out of them. "If Meg is guilty, and doesn't know it, she
-will suffer dreadfully when she finds out, won't she? It all depends on
-whether she has deceived herself or not, doesn't it? I'm not justifying
-her or Adrienne, Mother; only trying to see the truth about them. How
-could Adrienne tell Barney when it was Meg's secret? We may feel it
-wrong; but she thought she was justified." The colour rose in Nancy's
-cheek as she named Barney, but she kept her tired eyes on her mother and
-added, "I don't believe it was easy for her to keep it from him."
-
-"My dear, anything is easy for her that flatters her self-importance!"
-cried Mrs. Averil impatiently. "I'll own, if you like, that she's more
-fool than knave--as Meg may be; though Meg never struck me as a fool.
-Things haven't changed so much since my young days as all that; it's
-mainly a matter of names. If girls who behave like Meg find it
-pleasanter to be called fools than knaves, they are welcome to the
-alternative. Noble they never were nor will be, whatever the fashion."
-
-Oldmeadow did not want the sandwiches, so, as soon as they reached
-Coldbrooks, he was led upstairs to Mrs. Chadwick's room. He found his
-poor friend lying on the sofa, the blinds drawn down and a wet
-handkerchief on her forehead. She burst out crying as he entered.
-Oldmeadow sat down beside her and took her hand and, as he listened to
-her sobs, felt that he need not trouble to pity Adrienne.
-
-"What I cannot, cannot understand, Roger," she was at last able to say,
-and he realized that it was of Adrienne, not Meg, that she was speaking,
-"is how she can bear to treat us so. We all loved and trusted her. You
-know how I loved her, Roger. I felt Meg as safe in her hands as in my
-own. Oh, that wicked, wicked man! I hardly know him by sight. That makes
-it all so much more dreadful. All I do know is that his wife is a
-daughter of poor Evelyn Madderley, who broke her back out hunting."
-
-"I don't believe there's much harm in him, you know," Oldmeadow
-suggested. "And I believe that he is sincerely devoted to Meg."
-
-"Harm, Roger!" poor Mrs. Chadwick wailed, "when he is a married man and
-Meg only a girl! Oh, if there is harm in anything there is in that!
-Running away with a girl and ruining her life! Barney will make him feel
-what he has done. Barney _has_ gone?"
-
-"Yes, he's gone, and I am sure we can rely on him to speak his mind to
-Hayward."
-
-"And don't you think he may bring Meg back, Roger? Nancy says I must not
-set my mind on it; but don't you think she may be repenting already? My
-poor little Meg! She was hot-tempered and could speak very crossly if
-she was thwarted; but I think of her incessantly as she was when she was
-a tiny child. Self-willed; but so sweet and coaxing in her ways, with
-beautiful golden hair and those dark eyes. I always thought of Meg, with
-her beauty, as sure to marry happily; near us, I hoped"--Mrs. Chadwick
-began to sob again. "And now!--Will he find them in Paris? Will they not
-have moved on?"
-
-"In any case he'll be able to follow them up. I don't imagine they'll
-think of hiding."
-
-"No; I'm afraid they won't. That is the worst of it! They won't hide and
-every one will come to know and then what good will there be in her
-coming back! If only I'd had her presented last year, Roger! She can
-never go to court now," Mrs. Chadwick wept, none the less piteously for
-her triviality. "To think that Francis's daughter cannot go to court!
-She would have looked so beautiful, with my pearls and the feathers. The
-feathers are becoming to so few girls. Nancy could not wear them nearly
-so well. Nancy can go and my daughter can't!"
-
-"I don't think the lack of feathers will weigh seriously upon Meg's
-future, my dear friend."
-
-"Oh, but it's what they stand for, Roger, that will weigh!" Mrs.
-Chadwick, even in her grief, retained her shrewdness. "It's easy to
-laugh at the feathers, but you might really as well laugh at
-wedding-rings! To think that Francis's daughter is travelling about with
-a man and without a wedding-ring! Or do you suppose they'll have thought
-of it and bought one? It would be a lie, of course; but don't you think
-that a lie would be justifiable under the circumstances?"
-
-"I don't think it really makes any difference, until they can come home
-and be married."
-
-"I suppose she must marry him now--if they won't hide--and will be proud
-of what they've done; she seems quite proud of it!--everyone will hear,
-so that they will have to marry. Oh--I don't know what to hope or what
-to fear! How can you expect me to have tea, Nancy!" she wept, as Nancy
-entered carrying the little tray. "It's so good of you, my dear, but how
-can I eat?--I can hardly face the servants, Roger. They will all hear.
-And Meg was always such a pet of Johnson's; his favourite of all my
-children. He used to give her very rich, unwholesome things in the
-pantry and once, when her father punished her for disobeying him and put
-her in the corner, in the drawing-room, one day, after lunch, Johnson
-nearly dropped the coffee, when he came in. It upset him dreadfully and
-he would hardly speak to Francis for a week afterwards. I know he will
-think it all our fault, when he hears, now. And so it is, for having
-trusted to a stranger. I can't drink tea, Nancy."
-
-"Yes, you can, for Meg's sake, Aunt Eleanor, and eat some tea-cake,
-too," said Nancy. "If you aren't brave for her, who will be. And you
-can't be brave unless you eat. I remember so well, when I was little,
-Uncle Francis saying that when it came to the pinch you were the bravest
-woman he knew. You'll see, darling; it will all come out better than you
-fear. Johnson and all of us will help you to make it come out better."
-
-"She is such a comfort to me, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick with a summoned
-smile. "Somehow, when I see her, I feel that things _will_ come out
-better. _You_ will have to go to court, dear, next spring. We can't
-have none of our girls going. And you shall wear my pearls." Mrs.
-Chadwick's tears fell, but she took up the tea-cup.
-
-Nancy more and more was striking Oldmeadow as the wisest person in the
-house. He walked with her on the terrace after tea; it was an old custom
-of his and Nancy's to step outside then, whatever the weather, and have
-a few turns. This was a clear, chill evening and Nancy had wrapped a
-woollen scarf closely round her neck and shoulders. Her chin was sunken
-in its folds as she held it together on her breast, and with her dropped
-profile, her sad, meditative eyes, it was as if she saw a clue and, far
-more clearly than he did, knew where they all stood.
-
-"Adrienne was bitterly opposed to Barney's going," he said. "She seemed
-unable to grasp the fact that she herself had been in error."
-
-Nancy turned her eyes on him. "Did Barney tell you she was bitterly
-opposed?"
-
-"He didn't tell me. I was with them. It was most unfortunate. She
-insisted on my coming up."
-
-"Oh, dear," said Nancy. She even stopped for a moment to face him with
-her dismay. "Yes, I see," she then said, walking on, "she would."
-
-"Why would she? Unless she was sure of getting her own way? The only
-point in having me up was to show me that she could always get her own
-way with Barney."
-
-"Of course. And to make it quite clear to herself, too. She's not afraid
-of you, Roger. She's not afraid of anything but Barney."
-
-"I don't think she had any reason to be afraid of him this morning. He
-was badly upset, of course. But if I hadn't gone up, I imagine she'd
-have kept him from going. And you own that that would have been a pity,
-don't you?"
-
-"Yes. Oh, yes. He had to go," said Nancy, absently. And she added. "Were
-you very rough and scornful?"
-
-"Rough and scornful? I don't think so. I think I kept my temper very
-well, considering all things. I showed her pretty clearly, I suppose,
-that I considered her a meddling ass. I don't suppose she'll forgive me
-easily for that."
-
-"Well, you can't wonder at it, can you?" said Nancy. "Especially if she
-suspects that you made Barney consider her one, too."
-
-"But it's necessary, isn't it, that she should be made to suspect it
-herself? I don't wonder at her not forgiving me for showing her up
-before Barney, and upholding him against her, but I do wonder that one
-can never make her see she's wrong. It's that that's so really monstrous
-about her."
-
-"Do you think that anyone can ever make us see we are wrong unless they
-love us?" Nancy asked.
-
-"Well, Barney loves her," said Oldmeadow after a moment.
-
-"Yes; but he's afraid of her, too, isn't he? He'd never have quite the
-courage to try and make her see, would he?--off his own bat I mean. He'd
-never really have quite the courage to see, himself, how wrong she was,
-unless he were angry. And to have anyone who is angry with you trying to
-make you see, only pushes you further and further back into yourself,
-doesn't it, and away from seeing?"
-
-"You've grown very wise in the secrets of the human heart, my dear,"
-Oldmeadow observed. "It's true. He hasn't courage with her--unless some
-one is there to give it to him. But, you know, I don't think she'd
-forgive him if he had. I don't think she'd forgive anyone who made her
-see."
-
-"I don't know," Nancy pondered. "I don't love her, yet I feel as if I
-understood her; better, perhaps, than you do. I think she's good, you
-know. I mean, I think she might be good, if she could ever see."
-
-"She's too stupid ever, really, to see," said Oldmeadow, and it was with
-impatience. "She's encased in self-love like a rhinoceros in its hide.
-One can't penetrate anywhere. You say she's afraid of Barney and I can't
-imagine what you mean by that. It's true, when I'm by, she's afraid of
-losing his admiration. But that's not being afraid of him."
-
-Nancy still pondered; but not, now, in any perplexity. "She's afraid
-because she cares so much. She's afraid because she _can_ care so much.
-It's difficult to explain; but I feel as if I understood her. She's
-never cared so much before for just one other person. It's always been
-for people altogether; and because she was doing something for them. But
-Barney does something for her. He makes her happy. Perhaps she never
-knew before what it was to be really happy. You know, she didn't give me
-the feeling of a really happy person. It's something quite, quite new
-for her. It makes her feel uncertain of herself and almost bewildered
-sometimes. Oh, I'm sure of it the more I think of it. And you know,
-sometimes," Nancy turned her deep, sweet eyes on him, "I feel very sorry
-for her, Roger. I can't help it; although I don't love her at all."
-
-Yes. It must be true. Though he had seen Adrienne's vanity rather than
-her love. Nancy and Meg were united in their assurance and that must be,
-he saw, because they both, in their so different ways, knew what it was
-to care; to care so much that you were frightened. It was strange that
-the pang of pity that came with his new perception should be for
-Adrienne rather than for his dear little Nancy herself. Nancy had
-suffered, he knew, and her life was perhaps permanently scarred; yet,
-clear-eyed and unduped, he saw her as mistress of the very fate that had
-maimed her. Whereas Adrienne was blindfolded; a creature swayed and
-surrounded by forces of which she was unaware.
-
-Nancy had deepened his sense of perplexity, his sense of taking refuge
-from something, and what it was came fully upon him that night when he
-was at last alone. Meg and her misdemeanour sank into a mere background
-for the image of the cold, convulsed face that he had seen that morning.
-Almost angrily he felt himself pushing it back, pushing it down, as if
-he pushed it down to drown, and again and again it re-emerged to look at
-him.
-
-He fell asleep at last; but as, a year ago, on the first night of his
-meeting with her, he had dreamed of her, so to-night he dreamed again.
-
-He did not see her, but she was in some dreadful plight and the sense of
-her panic and bewilderment broke upon him in shocks of suffering. He
-could not see her, but he was aware of her, horribly aware. All remained
-a broken, baffled confusion, but it was as though, unable to shape and
-assert itself, he yet felt her very being wrestling with extinction.
-
-The sharpness had gone out of the sunlight next day and Mrs. Chadwick
-consented to come and sit with them in the warmest corner of the garden,
-the corner where, a year ago, Oldmeadow remembered, Meg had sat with him
-and explained to him the secret of Adrienne's power. Pitifully, with
-swollen eyes and trembling fingers, Mrs. Chadwick resumed her
-interrupted stocking while Oldmeadow read aloud from a Sunday paper the
-leading article on the critical situation in Ireland. "I suppose every
-one in London will be talking about Ulster and Sir Edward Carson, won't
-they?" said Mrs. Chadwick, and it was evident that she derived a dim
-comfort from the thought. The situation in Ireland, Oldmeadow reflected,
-had, at all events, been of so much service.
-
-Upon this quiet scene there broke suddenly the sound of a motor's horn
-and a motor's wheels turned into the front entrance.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick dropped her stocking and laid her hand on Nancy's arm.
-"Dear Aunt Eleanor--you know he couldn't possibly be back yet," said
-Nancy. "And if it's anyone to call, Johnson knows you're not at home."
-
-"Lady Cockerell is capable of anything. She might sit down in the hall
-and wait. She must have heard by now," poor Mrs. Chadwick murmured.
-"That married girl of hers in London must have written. With the
-projecting teeth."
-
-"I'll soon get rid of her, if it's really she," said Mrs. Averil; but
-she had hardly risen when the door at the back of the house opened and
-they saw Johnson usher forth a hurrying female figure, obviously not
-Lady Cockerell's; a figure so encumbered by its motoring wraps, so
-swathed in veils, that only Mrs. Chadwick's ejaculation enlightened
-Oldmeadow as to its identity.
-
-"Joséphine!" cried Mrs. Chadwick and then, between the narrow framing of
-purple gauze, he recognized the dramatic, melancholy eyes and pale,
-pinched lips of Adrienne's maid.
-
-"Oh, Madame! Madame!" Joséphine was exclaiming as she came towards them
-down the path. Her face wore the terrible intensity of expression so
-alien to the British countenance. "Oh, Madame! Madame!" she repeated.
-They had all risen and stood to await her. "He is dead! The little child
-is dead! And she is alone. Monsieur left her yesterday. Quite, quite
-alone, and her child born dead."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick faced her in pallid stupefaction.
-
-"The baby, Aunt Eleanor," said Nancy, for she looked indeed as if she
-had not understood. "Barney's baby. It has been born and it is dead.
-Oh--poor Barney. And poor, poor Adrienne."
-
-"Yes, dead!" Joséphine, regardless of all but her exhaustion and her
-grief, dropped down into one of the garden-chairs and put her hands
-before her face. "Born dead last night. A beautiful little boy. The
-doctors could not save it and fear for her life. They will not let me
-stay with her. Only the doctors and the nurses--strangers--are with
-her." Joséphine was sobbing. "Ah, it was not right to leave her so.
-Already she was ill. It could be seen that already she was very ill when
-Monsieur left her. I came to her when he was gone. She did not say a
-word to me. She tried to smile. _Mais j'ai bien vu qu'elle avait la mort
-dans l'âme._"
-
-"Good heavens," Mrs. Chadwick murmured, while Joséphine, now, let her
-tears flow unchecked. "She is alone and Barney has left her! Oh, this
-is terrible! At such a time!"
-
-"He had to go, Aunt Eleanor. You know he had to go. We will send for him
-at once," said Nancy, and Joséphine, catching the words, sobbed on in
-her woe and her resentment: "But where to send for him? No one knows
-where to send. The doctors sent a wire yesterday, at once, when she was
-taken ill; to the Paris hotel. But no answer came. He must have left
-Paris. That is why I have come. No telegrams for Sunday. No trains in
-time. I took the car. The doctor said, Yes, it was well that I should
-come. Some one who cares for Madame should return with me. If she is to
-die she must not die alone."
-
-"But she shall not die!" cried Mrs. Chadwick with sudden and surprising
-energy. "Oh, the poor baby! It might have lived had I been there. No
-doctor, no nurse, can understand like a mother. And I shall be able to
-help with Adrienne. I must go. I must go at once. Mademoiselle will see
-that you have something to eat and drink, my poor Joséphine, and then
-you and I will return together. It will not take me a moment to get
-ready."
-
-"It will be the best thing for them all," Oldmeadow murmured to Mrs.
-Averil, as, taking Joséphine's arm, Mrs. Chadwick hurried her along the
-path. "And I'll go with them."
-
-A little later, while Mrs. Chadwick made ready above and Joséphine, in
-the hall, ate the meal that Johnson had brought for her, Oldmeadow and
-Nancy stood outside near the empty waiting car.
-
-"I'll wire to you at once, of course, how she is," he said. Adrienne had
-put Meg out of all their thoughts. "But it's rather grotesque," he
-added, "if poor Barney is to be blamed."
-
-Nancy stood and looked before her, wrapped, as she had been the day
-before, in her woollen scarf. "Roger," she said after a moment, "no one
-can be blamed; yet, if she dies, I shall feel that we have killed her."
-
-"Killed her! What nonsense, my dear! What do you mean?" He spoke angrily
-because something in his heart, shaken by his dream, echoed her. The
-dreaming had now revealed itself as definitely uncanny. What had he to
-do with Adrienne Toner that his sub-consciousness should be aware of her
-extremity?
-
-"I can't explain," said Nancy. "We couldn't help it. It's even all her
-fault. But she never asked to come to us. She never sought us out. She
-had her life and we had ours. It was we who sought her and drew her in
-and worshipped her. She never hid what she was; never in the least
-little way. It was for what she was, because she was so different and
-believed so in herself, that Barney loved her. And now because she has
-gone on believing in herself, we have struck her down."
-
-The rooks were cawing overhead and Oldmeadow was remembering his dream
-of a year ago, how Adrienne had come to him along the terrace saying, as
-she lifted her hand: "I can hear them, too." They had drawn her in. Yet
-she had loved their life. She had wanted to understand it and to be part
-of it. He wished he could get the pale, streaked, drowning face out of
-his mind. "It's generous of you, my dear child," he said, "to say 'we.'
-You mean 'you.' If anyone struck her down it was I."
-
-"You spoke for us all, Roger. And you only spoke for us. You were always
-outside. I count myself with them. I can't separate myself from them. I
-received her love--with them all."
-
-"Did you?" he looked at her. "I don't think so, Nancy."
-
-Nancy did not pretend not to understand. "I know," she said. "But I'm
-part of it. And she tried to love me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat in Barney's study, Mrs. Chadwick beside him. It was
-Tuesday and the only news of Barney had been a letter to his mother,
-from Paris, where he had not found Meg, and two wires from the South of
-France, one to Oldmeadow and one to his wife, saying that he had found
-Meg and was returning alone. He had not, it was evident, received the
-doctor's messages.
-
-Oldmeadow had not seen his old friend since the Sunday night when he had
-left her and Joséphine in Connaught Square, and in his first glance at
-her this morning he saw that for her, too, Adrienne's peril had actually
-effaced Meg's predicament. It had done more. Faint and feeble as she
-must be, scarcely able to take possession of her returning life and, as
-Mrs. Chadwick told him, not yet out of danger, Adrienne had already
-drawn her mother-in-law back into the circle of her influence.
-
-"You see, Roger," she said, sitting there on the absurdly incongruous
-background of the Post Impressionist pictures and tightly squeezing her
-handkerchief first in one hand and then in the other, "You see, when one
-is with her one _has_ to trust her. I don't know why it is, but almost
-at once I felt all my bitterness against her die quite away. I knew,
-whatever she had done, that she believed it to be right; to be really
-_best_ for Meg, you know. And oh, Roger, Barney has hurt her so
-terribly! She can't speak of him without crying. I never saw her cry
-before. I never imagined Adrienne crying. She feels, she can't help
-feeling, that it is because of that they have lost their baby."
-
-Oldmeadow ordered with difficulty his astonished and indignant thoughts.
-"That is absolutely unfair to Barney," he said. "I was with them. No one
-could have been gentler or more patient."
-
-"I know you were with them. It would seem like that to you, Roger,
-because you are a man and men still think of women as a sort of chattel.
-That's how it looks to Adrienne. So much more independence, you know,
-than we ever had.--Oh, I don't say it's a good thing! I feel that we are
-weaker and need guidance."
-
-"Chattels? Where do chattels come in here? She said that to you. Barney
-merely pleaded with her so that he could do what you wanted him to do."
-
-"I know--I know, Roger. Don't get angry. But if I had been here and seen
-her I should have known that he must not go. I should have seen that she
-was in danger. A woman would have understood. No; you didn't treat
-Adrienne like a chattel; no one could treat Adrienne like one. It was
-poor little Meg I meant. I see now how wrong it was to think of taking
-her from the man she loves; when she _has_ gone, you know, so that
-everyone must know and there can be no good in it. And they probably
-_have_ bought a wedding-ring. Oh, Roger, she does comfort me about Meg.
-She makes me feel the deeper things, the things conventions blind us to.
-She makes me feel that the great thing, the only thing, is to follow
-one's own light and that Meg did do that. And after all, you know,
-Roger, Jowett had George Eliot and Lewes to breakfast and they were
-never married."
-
-"Ha! ha! ha!" Oldmeadow laughed. He could not repress his bitter mirth.
-"Follow your light if there's breakfast with a clergyman at the end of
-it!" he cruelly suggested. Yet he was too much amused, while so
-incensed, for there to be much cruelty, and Mrs. Chadwick, gazing at him
-as if from under her twisted straw, murmured: "He _was_ a sort of
-clergyman, Roger; and if people do what _seems_ to them right, why
-should they be punished?"
-
-He saw it all. He heard it all, in her echoes. The potent influence had
-been poured through her, all the more irresistible for the appeal of
-Adrienne's peril. Adrienne, bereaved and dying; yet magnanimous, gentle
-and assured; always assured. How could Mrs. Chadwick's feathers and
-wedding-rings stand a chance against her? They had been swept away, or
-nearly away, and what Nancy had seen as a possible hope was now an
-accomplished fact. Mrs. Chadwick had been brought to feel about Meg as
-Adrienne felt about her, and Oldmeadow, for his part, was not sure that
-the game was worth the candle. There was something more than absurd in
-his poor friend's attempts to adjust herself to the new standards. They
-were pitiable and even a little unseemly. She began presently softly to
-weep. "Such a pretty baby it was, Roger. A lovely little creature--that
-was the first thing she said to me--'Oh, Mother Nell, it was such a
-pretty baby.' And all that she said this morning--when it was taken
-away--was: 'I wish Barney could have been in time to see our baby.' Oh,
-it is terrible, terrible, Roger, that he is not here! Her heart is
-broken by it. How can she ever forget that he left her alone at such a
-time. And she begged him not to go. She told me that she almost knelt to
-him."
-
-The tears, irrepressibly, had risen to Oldmeadow's eyes; but as Mrs.
-Chadwick's sentence meandered on, his thoughts were roughly jolted from
-their pity. "But I tell you that that is absolutely unfair!" he
-repeated, fixing his glass to look his protest the more firmly at her.
-"I tell you that I was there and saw it all. It wasn't for the baby. She
-was thinking of the baby as little as Barney was; less than he was. What
-she was thinking of was her power over Barney. She was determined that
-she should not seem to be put in the wrong by his going."
-
-Like the March Hare Mrs. Chadwick was wild yet imperturbable. "Of course
-she was determined. How could she be anything else? It did put her in
-the wrong. And it put Meg in the wrong. That's where we were so blind.
-Oh, I blame myself as much as anybody. But Barney is her husband; and he
-was with her and should have seen and felt. How could she beg him to
-stay for her danger when he would not stay for her love?"
-
-Yes; Adrienne had her very firmly. She had even imparted to her, when it
-came to the issue, something of coherency. She was building up, in
-Barney's absence, strange ramparts against him. Barney had dragged her
-in the dust and there she intended to drag him. Wasn't that it?
-Oldmeadow asked himself as he eyed his altered friend, muttering
-finally: "I'm every bit as responsible as Barney, if it comes to that. I
-upheld him, completely, in his decision. I do still. Adrienne may turn
-you all upside down; but she won't turn me; and I hope she won't turn
-Barney."
-
-"I think, Roger, that you might at all events remember that she's not
-out of danger," said Mrs. Chadwick. "She may die yet and give you no
-more trouble. You have never cared for her; I know that, and so does
-she; and I do think it's unfeeling of you to speak as you do when she's
-lying there above us. And she looks so lovely in bed," Mrs. Chadwick
-began to weep again. "I never saw such thick braids; like Marguerite in
-Faust. Her hands on the sheets so thin and white and her eyes enormous.
-I don't think even you could have the heart to jibe and laugh if you saw
-her."
-
-"I didn't laugh at Adrienne, you know," Oldmeadow reminded her, rising
-and buttoning his overcoat. "I laughed at you and Jowett. No; Adrienne
-is no laughing matter. But she won't die. I can assure you of that now.
-She's too much life in her to die. And though I'm very sorry for
-her--difficult as you may find it to believe--I shall reserve my pity
-for Barney."
-
-Barney needed all his pity and the sight of him on the following Sunday
-evening, as he appeared on his threshold, would have exorcised for
-Oldmeadow, if Mrs. Chadwick had not already done so, the memory of the
-pale, drowning face. He looked like a dog that has been beaten for a
-fault it cannot recognize. There was bewilderment in his eyes and
-acceptance, and a watchful humility. To see them there made Oldmeadow
-angry.
-
-Barney had sent a line to say that he was back; but his friend had been
-prepared not to see him. Once engulfed in the house of mourning it was
-but too likely that he would not emerge for many days. And besides, what
-would Barney have to say to him now? But here he was, with his hollow
-eyes and faded cheeks, and it was with an echo of his old boyish manner
-of dropping in when beset by some perplexity that, without speaking, he
-crossed the room and sank on the sofa by the fireplace. But he had not
-come to seek counsel or sustainment. Oldmeadow saw that, as, after he
-had offered cigarettes, which Barney refused, and lighted his own pipe,
-he walked to and fro and watched him while Barney watched the flames. He
-had not come with a purpose at all. It was, again, precisely like the
-unhappy dog who wanders forth aimlessly, guided merely by a dim yearning
-towards warmth and kindliness. Barney had come where he would be
-understood. But it was not because he believed himself to be
-misunderstood that he came.
-
-"I went to Coldbrooks, first, you know," he said presently, and with an
-effect of irrelevance. "I thought I'd find Mother there. So it was only
-on that Thursday night I got back here. None of the wires caught me."
-
-"I know," said Oldmeadow. "It was most unfortunate. But you couldn't
-have got back sooner, could you, once you'd gone on from Paris."
-
-"Not possibly. I went on from Paris that very night, you see. I caught
-the night express to the Riviera. They'd left Cannes as an address, but
-when I got there I found they'd moved on to San Remo. It was Tuesday
-before I found them. My one idea was to find them as soon as possible,
-of course. No; I suppose it couldn't be helped; once I'd gone."
-
-"And it was quite useless? You'd no chance with Meg at all?"
-
-"None whatever. Quite useless. Never was such a wild-goose chase. It was
-exactly as Adrienne had said."
-
-"Still it couldn't have been foreseen so securely by anyone but
-Adrienne. Many girls would have jumped at the chance."
-
-"Not if they'd had Adrienne to help them. We might have realized that.
-That's what armed Meg. I heard Adrienne in everything she said. Even
-Mother thinks Adrienne was right, now, you know, Roger. And it was all
-for Mother, wasn't it? that I went. That makes it all so particularly
-ironic. Only dear Mummy was never very strong at logic. She takes the
-line now that we're narrow-minded conventionalists, you and I, for
-thinking that a girl oughtn't to go off with a married man. I can't feel
-that, you know, Roger," said Barney in his listless tone. "I can't help
-feeling that Meg has done something shameful. You ought to have seen
-her! Positively smug! sitting there with that ass of a fellow in that
-damned Riviera hotel! I had the horridest feeling, too, that Meg had
-brought him rather than he her. I don't mean he doesn't care for her--he
-does; I'll say that for him. He's a stupid fellow, but honest; and he
-came outside and tried to tell me what he felt and how it would be all
-right and that he was going to devote his life to her. But I think he
-feels pretty sick, really. While Meg treated me as if I were a silly
-little boy. If anyone can carry the thing through, Meg will."
-
-"It won't prove her right because she carries it through, you know,"
-Oldmeadow observed.
-
-"No," said Barney, "but it will make us seem more wrong. Not that you
-have any responsibility in it, dear old boy. I did what I felt I must do
-and mine was the mistake. It's not only Mother who thinks I've wronged
-Adrienne," he went on after a moment, lifting his arms as though he
-felt a weight upon them and clasping them behind his head. "Even Nancy,
-though she was so sorry for me, made me feel that I'd done something
-very dreadful."
-
-"Nancy? How did you come to see Nancy?"
-
-"Why, at Coldbrooks. She's still there with Aunt Monica. That was just
-it. It was my going there first, seeing her first, that upset her so.
-She couldn't understand, till I could explain, how it came about. She
-was thinking of Adrienne, you see. And I, knowing nothing, had been
-thinking of Mother all the time. It was too late, then, to go back at
-once. The next train wasn't for three hours. So I had to stay."
-
-"And it was Nancy who had to tell you everything?"
-
-"Yes; Nancy," said Barney, staring at the ceiling. There was a note,
-now, of control in his voice and Oldmeadow knew that if he had said no
-word of what must be foremost in both their thoughts it was because he
-could not trust himself to speak of it. And he went on quickly, taking
-refuge from his invading emotion, "Aunt Monica wasn't there. I didn't
-even see Johnson. I went right through the house and into the garden and
-there was Nancy, planting something in the border. Everything looked so
-natural. I just went up to her and said 'Hello, Nancy,' and then, when
-she looked up at me, I thought she was going to faint. Poor little
-Nancy. I knew something terrible had happened from the way she looked at
-me."
-
-"Poor little Nancy. But I'm glad it was she who told you, Barney."
-
-"No one could have been sweeter," said Barney, talking on quickly. "She
-kept saying, 'Oh, you oughtn't to be here, Barney. You oughtn't to be
-here.' But no one could have been sweeter. We sat down on the old bench,
-you know, and she told me. That Adrienne had nearly died. That the baby
-was dead. I could hardly believe her, at first. I stared at her, I know,
-and I kept saying, 'What do you mean, Nancy?--what do you mean?' And she
-began to cry and I cried, too. Men do feel, Roger, all the same, even
-though they haven't the mother's claim to feel. I thought about our baby
-so much. I loved it, too. And now--to think it's dead; and that I never
-saw it; and that it's my fault"--his voice had shaken more and more; he
-had put his hand before his eyes, and, then, suddenly, he leaned forward
-and buried his head on the arm of the sofa.
-
-"My poor Barney! My dear boy!" Oldmeadow muttered. He came and sat down
-beside him; he laid his arm around his shoulders. "It's not your fault,"
-he said.
-
-"Oh, don't say that, Roger!" sobbed Barney. "It's no good trying to
-comfort me. I've broken her heart. She doesn't say so. She's too angelic
-to say it; but she lies there and looks it. My poor darling! My poor,
-courageous darling; what she has been through! It can't be helped. I
-must face it. I'm her husband. I ought to have understood. She
-supplicated me, and I rejected her, and the child is dead."
-
-"The child's death is a calamity for which no one can be held
-responsible unless it is Adrienne herself," said Oldmeadow. While Barney
-sobbed he was thinking intently, for this was a turning-point in
-Barney's destiny. He would remain in subjugation to Adrienne's
-conception of the wrong done her or he must be enabled to regain the
-sense of innocence to which he had every right. "She forced the
-situation on you. She chose to break rather than bend," he said. "Listen
-to me, Barney. I don't speak in any enmity to your wife; but listen to
-me and try to think it out. Don't you remember how you once said that
-your marriage couldn't be a mistake if you were able to see the defects
-as well as the beauty of the woman you love. Don't you remember that you
-said she'd have to learn a little from you for the much you'd have to
-learn from her. Nothing more reassured me than what you said that night.
-And I was reassured the other day by your firmness. It implies no
-disloyalty in you to see the defects now. It was power over you she
-wanted the other day and to see herself put in the right, before me; and
-to see me worsted, before you. You know it, Barney; you know it in your
-heart. And she knows it too. There was no failure of love in what you
-said. There was only failure of homage. You were right in opposing her.
-She was wrong in the issue she made. She was wrong from the first of the
-miserable affair in having concealed it from you. If you'd stayed behind
-as she wanted you to do, you'd have shown yourself a weakling and she'd
-have been further than ever from knowing herself in error. There is the
-truth; and the sooner you see it, the sooner she will."
-
-For some time after his friend had ended, Barney lay silent, his face
-still hidden. But his sobs had ceased. And his silence, at last, grew
-too long for any disclaimer to be possible to him. He had been brought,
-Oldmeadow knew it from the very rhythm of his breathing, to the
-passionless contemplation where alone truth is visible. And what he said
-at last was: "She'll never see it like that."
-
-"Oh, yes, she will," said Oldmeadow. And he remembered Nancy's wisdom.
-"If you hold to it firmly and tenderly and make her feel you love her
-while you make her feel you think her wrong."
-
-"She'll never see it," Barney repeated, and Oldmeadow now suspected, and
-with a deep uneasiness, that Barney might be seeing further than
-himself. "She can't."
-
-"You mean that she's incapable of thinking herself wrong?"
-
-"Yes, incapable," said Barney. "Because all she's conscious of is the
-wish to do right. And she is right so often, she is so good and
-beautiful, that it must be like that with her. She can break; but she
-can't bend."
-
-Oldmeadow was silent for a moment and Barney, on the arm of the sofa,
-was silent. "Of course," Oldmeadow then said, "the less you say about it
-the better. Things will take their place gradually."
-
-"I've not said anything about it," said Barney. "I've only thought of
-comforting and cherishing her. But it's not enough. I'll never say
-anything; but she'll know I'm keeping something back. She knows it
-already. I see that now. And I didn't know it till you put it to me."
-
-"She'll have to accept it; or to live with it unaccepted, then. You
-can't consider yourself a criminal to give her moral ease."
-
-"No," said Barney after a pause. "No; I can't do that. Though that's
-what Mummy wants me to do. But I can be horribly sorry."
-
-"Horribly sorry. Let the rest sink into the unspoken. When people love
-each other they can, I'm sure, live over any amount of unspoken things."
-
-"It hasn't been unspoken between you and me, though, has it, Roger?"
-said Barney, and he raised himself and got upon his feet as he said it.
-"There's the trouble. There's where I _am_ wrong. For she'd feel it an
-intolerable wrong if she knew that it hadn't been unspoken between you
-and me. And she'd be right. When people love each other such reticences
-and exclusions wrong their love."
-
-"But since you say she knows," Oldmeadow suggested after another moment.
-
-Barney stood staring out of the twilight window.
-
-"She doesn't know that I tell you," he said.
-
-"You've told me nothing," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Well, she doesn't know what I listen to, then," said Barney.
-
-Oldmeadow was again conscious of the deep uneasiness. "It's quite true
-I've no call to meddle in your affairs," he said. "The essential thing
-is that you love each other. Let rights and wrongs go hang."
-
-"You haven't meddled, Roger." Barney moved towards the door. "You've
-been in my affairs, and haven't been allowed to keep out. Yes. We love
-each other. But rights and wrongs never go hang with Adrienne."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-Oldmeadow did not see Barney again for some months. He met Eleanor
-Chadwick towards the end of April, in the park, he on his way to Mrs.
-Aldesey's, she, apparently, satisfying her country appetite for
-exercise, since she seemed to be walking fast and at random. He almost
-thought for a moment that she was going to pretend not to see him and
-hurry down a path that led away from his; but his resolute eye perhaps
-checked the impulse. She faltered and then came forward, holding out her
-hand and looking rather wildly about her, and she said that London was
-really suffocating, wasn't it?
-
-"You've been here for so long, haven't you," said Oldmeadow. "Or have
-you been here all this time? I've had no news of any of you, you see."
-
-"It's all been such a troubled, busy time, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick.
-"Yes, I've been here ever since. But, thank goodness, the doctors say
-she may be moved now, and she and I and Barney are going down to
-Devonshire next week. To Torquay. Such a dismal place, I think; but
-perhaps that's because so many of my relations have died there. I never
-have liked that red Devonshire soil. But the primroses will be out. That
-makes up a little."
-
-"I'm glad that Mrs. Barney is better. When will you all be back at
-Coldbrooks?"
-
-"In June, I hope. Yes; she is better. But so feeble, still; so frail.
-And quite, quite changed from her old bright self. It's all very
-depressing, Roger. Very depressing and wearing," said Mrs. Chadwick,
-opening her eyes very wide and staring before her in a way
-characteristic of her when she repressed tears. "Sometimes I hardly know
-how to keep up at all. For nothing cheers her. And Barney isn't really
-much help. He has very little power of fighting against depression."
-
-"You've all been too much shut up with each other, I'm afraid."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick still held her eyes widely opened. "I don't think it's
-that, Roger. Being alone wouldn't have helped us to be happier, after
-what's happened."
-
-"Being with other people might. You must get back to Coldbrooks as soon
-as possible and see Nancy and Mrs. Averil and your neighbours. That will
-help to change the current of your thoughts."
-
-"People don't forget so easily as that, Roger," Mrs. Chadwick murmured,
-and it was now with severity, as though she suspected him of triviality.
-"When something terrible has happened to people they are _in_ the
-current and Nancy and the neighbours are not going to change it. Poor
-Nancy; she feels it all as much as we do, I'm sure."
-
-And that Mrs. Chadwick thought of him as unfeeling he saw. She thought
-of him, too, with Barney, as criminal; as responsible for the
-catastrophe. The old phrase of presage floated back into his mind:
-"She'll spoil things." She had spoiled, for ever perhaps, this deepest,
-dearest relation of his life. What was Coldbrooks to become to him with
-Adrienne Toner in possession? He said, and he was unable to keep a
-certain dryness that must sound like lightness, from his voice: "You are
-in it but you needn't keep your heads under it, you know. That's what
-people tend to do when they shut themselves up with their misfortunes.
-You and Barney and Mrs. Barney, I suspect, are engaged in drowning each
-other. If one of you puts their head up the others pull it down."
-
-"I suppose you mean Adrienne does," said Mrs. Chadwick. He had not meant
-it at all; but now he felt sure that so, exactly, did it happen. Poor
-Mrs. Chadwick left to herself would have drifted to the shore by this
-time and Barney, at all events, would be swimming with his head up; it
-was Adrienne, of course, that kept them suffocating under the surface.
-"Well, I think it a pity you three should go off to Torquay alone," he
-evaded. "What's happening to the farm all this time?"
-
-"Nancy is seeing to it for Barney," said Mrs. Chadwick. "She understands
-those things so well. Barney would not dream of letting the farm come
-between him and Adrienne at a time like this. He wants to be with her of
-course."
-
-"Of course. All I mean is that I wish he could be with her at
-Coldbrooks. I suppose the doctor knows what's best, however."
-
-"I'm glad to hear you own that anybody can know what's best, Roger,
-except yourself," said Mrs. Chadwick with her singularly unprovocative
-severity. "Of course she must go to the sea and of course Barney and I
-must be with her. She has two excellent nurses; but I would never trust
-the best nurse for certain things. I remember so well when I was ill
-myself once and saw the nurse behind a screen, eating raspberry jam out
-of the pot with her finger. You can't trust anybody, really." And that
-was all he got out of Eleanor Chadwick. Adrienne had spoiled things.
-
-It was in June that he heard from Mrs. Averil that she and Nancy were in
-London for a few days staying with an old aunt in Eccleston Square. Mrs.
-Averil asked him to come to tea and he asked her and Nancy to do a play
-with him; but before these meetings took place he saw them both. It was
-at a Queen's Hall concert on Sunday afternoon that Mrs. Aldesey called
-his attention to his friends and, to his surprise, Oldmeadow saw that
-Barney was with them. They sat across the gangway at some little
-distance and his first impression of the three was that they were not
-happy.
-
-"Did you know he was in town?" asked Mrs. Aldesey. "How ill he looks. I
-suppose he was frightfully upset about the baby, poor fellow."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey knew nothing of the catastrophes that had followed the
-baby's death. He had instinctively avoided any reference to the latest
-progress of the Juggernaut.
-
-"She's much better now, you know," he said, and he wasn't aware that he
-was exonerating Barney. "And they're all back at Coldbrooks."
-
-"She's not at Coldbrooks," said Mrs. Aldesey. "She's well enough to pay
-visits and Lady Lumley told me she was coming down to them for this
-week-end. I wonder he hasn't gone with her."
-
-Oldmeadow was wondering too. There was something about Barney's attitude
-as he sat there beside his cousin, silent and absent-minded it seemed,
-listening as little to the music as he looked little at her, that he
-would rather Lydia Aldesey had not been there to observe. They had a
-curiously marital appearance, the young couple, or, rather, Barney had;
-the air of being safe with some one with whom no explanations were
-needed and for whom no appearances must be kept up; some one, even, with
-whom he was so identified that he was hardly conscious of her. Nancy was
-not so unconscious. Once, when Barney leaned over to look at the
-programme, she drew away a little; and Oldmeadow even fancied a slight
-constraint in her glance when, now and then, he spoke to her. Had
-Adrienne spoiled things there, too? Mrs. Averil next day, in Eccleston
-Square, enlightened him as to Barney's presence. "It's been most
-unfortunate. He had planned to come up to this concert for a long time.
-He wanted Nancy to hear the César Franck with him. And then it appeared
-that Adrienne had made an engagement for them with the Lumleys. He
-refused to go, I'm afraid, and she made an issue of it and, from what
-poor Eleanor told me, there was rather a row. So Adrienne has gone off
-alone and Barney is here till this evening. He's gone out now with Nancy
-to show her some pictures by a friend of his. It had all been arranged.
-So what were we to do about it, Roger?"
-
-"Do about it? Why just what you have done. Why shouldn't she go with
-him?"
-
-"Why indeed? Except that Adrienne has made the issue. It's awkward, of
-course, when you know there's been a row, to go on as if nothing had
-happened."
-
-Oldmeadow meditated. His friend's little face had been pinched by the
-family's distress when he had last seen it; it was clouded now by a
-closer, a more personal perplexity. "I suppose she made the issue on
-purpose so that Barney shouldn't come up," he said at length.
-
-"I really don't know. Perhaps it had been arranged first with the
-Lumleys. If it was to keep him from coming, that didn't come out. She
-wouldn't let it come out; not into the open; of course."
-
-"So things are going very badly. I'd imagined, with all Barney's
-contrition, that they might have worked out well."
-
-"They've worked out as badly, I'm afraid, as they could. He was full of
-contrition. He was as devoted as possible, when they came back in May.
-But nothing altered her unflagging melancholy. And I suppose what
-happened was that he got tired. Barney was always like that, from the
-time he was in the nursery. He'd go on being patient and good-tempered
-until, suddenly, everything would break down and he would sulk for days.
-It's when he's pushed too far. And she has pushed him too far. She's set
-them all against him."
-
-"Who is them?" Oldmeadow asked. "I saw, when we met in London, that Mrs.
-Chadwick actually had been brought to look upon Barney as a sort of
-miscreant and Adrienne as a martyr. Who else is there?"
-
-"Well, no one else except Palgrave and Barbara. Palgrave can be very
-exasperating, as you know, and he takes the attitude now that Barney has
-done Adrienne an irreparable injury. As you may imagine it isn't a
-pleasant life Barney leads among them all."
-
-"I see," said Oldmeadow. "I think I see it all. What happens now is that
-Barney more and more takes refuge with you and Nancy, and Adrienne more
-and more can't bear it."
-
-"That is precisely it, Roger," said Mrs. Averil. "And what are we to do?
-How can I shut my door against Barney? Yet it is troubling me more than
-I can say. We are forced to seem on his side and against her. And
-Adrienne has her eye upon them."
-
-"Let her keep it on them," said Oldmeadow in strong indignation. "And
-much good may it do her!"
-
-"Oh, it won't do her any good--nor us!" said Mrs. Averil. "She's sick
-with jealousy, Roger. Sick. I'm almost sorry for her when I see it and
-see her trying to hide it, and see it always, coming in by the back door
-when she shuts the front door on it--as it always does, you know. And
-Nancy sees it, of course; and is quite as sick as she is; and Barney, of
-course, remains as blind as a bat."
-
-"Well, as long as he remains blind--"
-
-"Yes. As long as he does. But Adrienne will make him see. She'll pick
-and pull at their friendship until Nancy will be forced into drawing
-back, and if she draws back Barney will see. What it's already come to
-is that she has to stand still, and smile, while Adrienne scratches her,
-lest Barney should see she's scratched; and once or twice of late I've
-had a suspicion that he has seen. It doesn't endear Nancy to Adrienne
-that Barney should scowl at her when he's caught her scratching."
-
-"What kind of scratches?" Oldmeadow asked, but Mrs. Averil had only time
-to say, "Oh, all kinds; she's wonderful at scratches," when the
-door-bell rang and Nancy, a moment after, came in.
-
-Nancy, if anything so fresh and neat could be so called, was looking
-rather dowdy, and he suspected that some self-effacing motive lay behind
-her choice of clothes.
-
-"Oh, Roger, Barney was so sorry to have to miss you," she said. And, at
-all events, whatever else Adrienne had spoiled, she had not spoiled
-Nancy's loving smile for him. "He had to catch the 4.45 to Coldbrooks,
-you know. There's a prize heifer arriving this evening and he must be
-there to welcome it. You must see his herd of Holsteins, Roger."
-Friesians were, at that date, still Holsteins.
-
-"I'd like to," said Oldmeadow. "But I don't know when I shall, for, to
-tell you the truth, I've not been asked to Coldbrooks this summer. The
-first time since I've known them."
-
-Nancy looked at him in silence.
-
-"You'll come to us, of course," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"Do you really think I'd better, all things considered?" Oldmeadow
-asked.
-
-"Why, of course you'd better. What possible reasons could there be for
-your not coming, except ones we don't accept?"
-
-"It won't seem to range us too much in a hostile camp?"
-
-"Not more than we're ranged already. Nancy and I are not going to give
-you up, my dear Roger, because Adrienne considers herself a martyr."
-
-"I hope not, indeed. But it makes my exclusion from Coldbrooks more
-marked, perhaps, if I go to you. I imagine, though I am so much in her
-black books, that poor Mrs. Chadwick doesn't want my exclusion to be
-marked."
-
-"You're quite right there. You are in her black books; but she doesn't
-want it marked; she'd like to have you, really, if Adrienne weren't
-there and if she didn't feel shy. And I really think it will make it
-easier for her if you come to us instead. It will tide it over a
-little. She'll be almost able to feel you are with them. After all, you
-do come to us, often."
-
-"And I'll go up with you to Coldbrooks as if nothing had happened? I
-confess I have a curiosity to see how Mrs. Barney takes me."
-
-"She's very good at taking things, you know," said Nancy.
-
-Mrs. Averil cast a glance upon him. "It may be really something of a
-relief to their minds, Roger," she said, "if you turn up as if nothing
-had happened. They are in need of distractions. They are all dreadfully
-on edge, though they won't own to it, about Meg. The case is coming on
-quite soon now. Mrs. Hayward has lost no time, and poor Eleanor only
-keeps up because Adrienne is there to hold her up."
-
-"Where is Meg? Do they hear from her?"
-
-"They hear from her constantly. She's still on the Continent. She writes
-very easily and confidently. I can't help imagining, all the same, that
-Adrienne is holding her up, too. She's written to Nancy and Nancy hasn't
-shown me her letters."
-
-"There is nothing to hide, Mother," said Nancy, and Oldmeadow had never
-seen her look so dejected. "Nothing at all, except that she's not as
-easy and confident as she wants to appear. Adrienne does hold her up.
-Poor Meg."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-The picture of Adrienne holding them up was spread before Oldmeadow's
-eyes on the hot July day when Mrs. Averil drove him up from the Little
-House to Coldbrooks. The shade of the great lime-tree on the lawn was
-like a canvas, only old Johnson, as he moved to and fro with tea-table,
-silver and strawberries, stepping from its cool green atmosphere into
-the framing sunshine. The Chadwick family, seated or lying in the shade,
-were all nearly as still as in a picture, and Adrienne was its centre.
-She sat in a high-backed wicker chair, her hands lying listlessly in her
-lap, a scarf about her shoulders, and in her black-veiled white, her
-wide, transparent hat, she was like a clouded moon. There was something
-even of daring, to Oldmeadow's imagination, in their approach across the
-sunny spaces. Her eyes had so rested upon them from the moment that they
-had driven up, that they might have been bold wayfarers challenging the
-magic of a Circe in her web. Palgrave, in his white flannels, lay
-stretched at her feet, and he had been reading aloud to her; Barbara and
-Mrs. Chadwick sat listening while they worked on either hand. Only
-Barney was removed, sitting at some little distance, his back half
-turned, a pipe between his teeth and his eyes on a magazine that lay
-upon his knee. But the influence, the magic, was upon him too. He was
-consciously removed.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick sprang up to greet them. "This is nice!" she cried, and
-her knitting trailed behind her as she came so that Barbara, laughing,
-stooped to catch and pick it up as she followed her; "I was expecting
-you! How nice and dear of you! On this hot day! I always think the very
-fishes must feel warm on a day like this! Or could they, do you
-think?--Dear Roger!" There was an evident altering in Mrs. Chadwick's
-manner towards him since the meeting in the Park. She was, with all her
-fluster, manifestly glad to see him.
-
-Palgrave had hoisted himself to his feet and now stood beside Adrienne,
-eyeing them as a faithful hound eyes suspicious visitors.
-
-"Isn't it lovely in the shade," Mrs. Chadwick continued, drawing them
-into it. "Adrienne darling, Aunt Monica after all. And we were afraid
-the heat might keep you away. I suppose the hill was very hot, Monica?"
-Adrienne was still, apparently, something of an invalid, for she did not
-rise to greet them. Neither did she speak as she held out her hand to
-each of them in turn, and while an enveloping smile dwelt fondly on Mrs.
-Averil, she made no attempt to smile at Oldmeadow.
-
-He found himself observing her with a sort of wonder. All the flaws and
-deformities of her maternity had fallen from her and she had the
-appearance almost of beauty. Yet he had never so little liked her face.
-Her dimly patterned features made him think of a Chinese picture he had
-once seen where, on a moth-wing background, pale chrysanthemums,
-mauvy-pink, a disk of carved jade with cord and tassel and a narrow
-ivory box softly spotted with darkness, conveyed in their seeming
-triviality an impression almost sinister of impersonality and magic.
-There was as little feeling in her face. It was like a mask.
-
-"Where's Nancy?" Barney asked. He had got up and joined them, giving
-Oldmeadow's hand, as they met, a curiously lifeless shake.
-
-"She had letters to write," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"Why, I thought we'd arranged she was to come up and walk round the farm
-after tea with me," said Barney and as he spoke Oldmeadow noted that
-Adrienne turned her head slowly, somewhat as she had done on the ominous
-morning in March, and rested her eyes upon him.
-
-"Oh, I'm so sorry," said Mrs. Averil cheerfully. "She must have
-misunderstood. She had these letters to finish for the post."
-
-Barbara was reconnoitring at the tea-table. "Strawberries!" she
-announced. "Who said they'd be over? Oh, what a shame of Nancy not to
-come! Roger, why aren't you staying here rather than with Aunt Monica,
-I'd like to know? Aren't we grand enough for you since she's had that
-bathroom put in!" Barbara had advanced to a lively flapperdom.
-
-"You see, by this plan, I get the bath with her and get you when she
-brings me up," Oldmeadow retorted.
-
-"And leave Nancy behind! I call it a shame when we're having the last
-strawberries--and you may have a bathroom with Aunt Monica, but her
-strawberries are over. Letters! Who ever heard of Nancy writing
-letters--except to you, Barney. She was always writing to you when you
-were living in London--before you married. And what screeds you used to
-send her--all about art!" said Barbara, and that her liveliness cast a
-spell of silence was apparent to everyone but herself.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick took Oldmeadow's arm and drew him aside. "You'll be able
-to come later and be quite with us, won't you, Roger?" she said
-"September is really a lovelier month, don't you think? Adrienne is
-going to take Palgrave and Barbara for a motor-trip in September. Won't
-it be lovely for them?" Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a swiftness that did
-not veil a sense of insecurity. "Barbara's never seen the Alps. They are
-going to the Tyrol."
-
-"If we don't have a European war by then," Oldmeadow suggested. "What is
-Barney going to do?"
-
-"Oh, Barney is going to the Barclay's in Scotland, to shoot. He loves
-that. A war, Roger? What do you mean? All those tiresome Serbians? Why,
-they won't go into the Tyrol, will they?"
-
-"Perhaps not the Tyrol; but they may make it difficult for other people
-to go there."
-
-"Do you hear what Roger is saying?" Mrs. Chadwick turned to her family.
-"That the Serbians may make war by September and that it might interfere
-with the trip. But I'm sure Sir Edward will quiet them. He always does.
-Though he is a Liberal, I've always felt him to be such a good man,"
-said Mrs. Chadwick, "and really patriotic. Simply sitting round a table
-with him cools their heads more than one would believe possible.
-Dreadfully violent people, I believe, killing their kings and queens and
-throwing them out of the window. I always think there's nothing in the
-world for controlling people's tempers like getting them to sit together
-round a table. I wonder why it is. Something to do with having your legs
-out of the way, perhaps. People don't look nearly so threatening if
-their legs are hidden, do they? My poor cousin, Fanny Jocelyn, used
-always to say that if any of the clergymen in Fred's diocese got very
-troublesome her one recipe was to ask them to lunch, or, if they were
-very bad, to dinner. But she had wonderful tact--that gift, you know,
-for seeming to care simply _immensely_ for the person she was talking
-to. Francis used to tell her that when she looked at you as if you were
-the only person in the world she loved she was really working out her
-next menu."
-
-"I'm afraid if war comes it won't be restricted to people, like Serbians
-and clergymen, who can be quieted by being asked to dinner," said
-Oldmeadow laughing. "We'll be fighting, too."
-
-"And who will we fight?" Palgrave inquired. After passing tea, he had
-resumed his place at Adrienne's feet. "Who has been getting in our way
-now?"
-
-"Don't you read the papers?" Oldmeadow asked him.
-
-"Not when I can avoid it," said Palgrave. "They'll be bellowing out the
-same old Jingo stuff on the slightest provocation, of course. As far as
-I can make out the Serbians are the most awful brutes and Russia is
-egging them on. But when it comes to a crime against humanity like war,
-every one is responsible."
-
-"Are you ready for strawberries, Aunt Monica," Barbara interposed. "If
-there is a war, I hope we may be in it so that I can do some of my first
-aid on real people at last."
-
-She was carrying strawberries now to Adrienne who, as she leaned down,
-took her gently by the wrist, and said some low-toned words to her. "I
-know, my angel. Horrid of me!" said Barbara. "But one can't take war
-seriously, can one!"
-
-"I can," said Mrs. Averil. "Too many of my friends had their sons and
-husbands killed in South Africa."
-
-"And it's human nature," said Mrs. Chadwick, eating her strawberries
-mournfully. "Like the poor: whom you have always with you, you know."
-
-"Human nature is altered already a good deal more than governments
-imagine," said Palgrave, "and they'll find themselves pretty well dished
-if they try to bring on a capitalist war now. The workers all over the
-world are beginning to see whose the hands are that pull the strings and
-they'll refuse to dance to their piping. They'll down weapons just as
-they've learned, at last, to down tools; and without them you can do
-nothing. That's the way human nature will end war."
-
-"A spirited plan, no doubt," said Oldmeadow, "and effective if all the
-workers came to be of the same mind simultaneously. But if those of one
-country downed weapons and those of another didn't, the first would get
-their throats cut for their pains."
-
-"It's easy to sneer," Palgrave retorted. "As a matter of principle, I'd
-rather have my throat cut by a hired ruffian than kill an innocent
-man--even if he did belong to a nation that happened to be cleverer and
-more efficient than my own. That's a crime, of course, that we can't
-forgive."
-
-"Don't talk such rot, Palgrave," Barney now remarked in a tone of
-apathetic disgust.
-
-"I beg your pardon," Palgrave sat up instantly, flushing all over his
-face. "I think it's truth and sanity."
-
-"It's not truth and sanity. It's rot and stupid rot," said Barney. "Some
-more tea, please, Barbara."
-
-"Calling names isn't argument," said Palgrave. "I could call names, too,
-if it came to that. It's calling names that is stupid. I merely happen
-to believe in what Christ said."
-
-"Oh, but, dear--Christ drove the money-lenders out of the Temple very,
-very roughly," Mrs. Chadwick interposed with the head-long irrelevance
-characteristic of her in such crises. "Thongs must hurt so much, mustn't
-they? He surely believed in punishing people who did wrong."
-
-"Which nation doesn't do wrong, Mummy? Which nation is a Christ with a
-right to punish another? It's farcical. And punishing isn't killing.
-Christ didn't kill malefactors."
-
-"The Gadarene swine," Mrs. Chadwick murmured. "They were killed. So
-painfully, too, poor things. I never could understand about that. I hope
-the Higher Criticism will manage to get rid of it, for it doesn't really
-seem kind. They had done no wrong at all and I've always been specially
-fond of pigs myself."
-
-"Ah, but you never saw a pig with a devil in it," Oldmeadow suggested,
-to which Mrs. Chadwick murmured, "I'm sure they seem to have devils in
-them, sometimes, poor dears, when they won't let themselves be caught.
-Do get some more cream, Barbara. It's really too hot for arguments,
-isn't it," and Mrs. Chadwick sighed with the relief of having rounded
-that dangerous corner.
-
-Barbara went away with the cream-jug and Johnson emerged bearing the
-afternoon post.
-
-"Ah. Letters. Good." Palgrave sat up to take his and Adrienne's share.
-"One for you, Adrienne; from Meg. Now we shall see what she says about
-meeting us in the Tyrol." His cheeks were still flushed and his eyes
-brilliant with anger. Though his words were for Adrienne his voice was
-for Barney, at whom he did not glance.
-
-Adrienne unfolded the foreign sheets, and held them so that Palgrave,
-leaning against her knee, could read with her.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick had grown crimson. She looked at Oldmeadow. "Dear Meg is
-having such an interesting time," she told him. "She and Eric are seeing
-all manner of delightful places and picking up some lovely bits of old
-furniture." Oldmeadow bowed assent. He had his eyes on Adrienne and he
-was wondering about Barbara.
-
-"What news is there, dear?" Mrs. Chadwick continued in the same badly
-controlled voice. Palgrave's face had clouded.
-
-"I'm afraid it may be bad news, Mother Nell," said Adrienne looking up.
-
-It was the first time Oldmeadow had heard her voice that afternoon and
-he could hardly have believed it the voice that had once reminded him of
-a blue ribbon. It was still slow, still deliberate and soft; but it had
-now the steely thrust and intention of a dagger.
-
-"It's this accursed war talk!" Palgrave exclaimed. "Eric evidently
-thinks it serious and he has to come home at once. What rotten luck."
-
-Adrienne handed the sheets to Mrs. Chadwick. "It will all have blown
-over by September," she said. "As Mother Nell says, we can trust Sir
-Edward to keep us out of anything so wicked as a war. I am so completely
-with you in all you say about the wickedness of war, Paladin, although I
-do not see its causes quite so simply, perhaps."
-
-It was the first time that Oldmeadow had heard the new name for her
-knight.
-
-"For my part," said Barney, casting a glance at the house, Barbara not
-having yet reappeared, "I shall be grateful to the war if it dishes your
-trip to the Tyrol. It's most unsuitable for Barbara."
-
-He did not look at his wife as he spoke. His hat brim pulled down over
-his eyes, he sat with folded arms and stared in front of him.
-
-"You find it unsuitable for one sister to meet another?" Adrienne
-inquired. Her eyes were on Barney, but Oldmeadow could not interpret
-their gaze.
-
-"Most unsuitable, to use no stronger word," said Barney, "while one
-sister is living with a man whose name she doesn't bear."
-
-"You mean to say," said Palgrave, sitting cross-legged at Adrienne's
-feet and grasping his ankles with both hands, "that Meg, until she's
-legally married, isn't fit for her little sister to associate with?"
-
-"Just what I do mean, Palgrave. Precisely what I do mean," said Barney,
-and his face, reddening, took on its rare but characteristic expression
-of sullen anger. "And I'll thank you--in my house, after all--to keep
-out of an argument that doesn't concern you."
-
-"Barney; Palgrave," murmured Mrs. Chadwick supplicatingly. Adrienne,
-not moving her eyes from her husband's face, laid her hand on Palgrave's
-shoulder.
-
-"It does concern me," said Palgrave, and he put up his hand and grasped
-Adrienne's. "Barbara's well-being concerns me as much as it does you;
-and your wife's happiness concerns me a good deal more. I can promise
-you that I wouldn't trouble your hospitality for another day if it
-weren't for her--and Mother. It's perfectly open to you, of course, to
-turn me out of my home whenever you like to make use of your legal
-privilege. But until I'm turned out I stay--for their sakes."
-
-"You young ass! You unmitigated young ass!" Barney snarled, springing to
-his feet. "All right, Mother. Don't bother. I'll leave you to your
-protector for the present. I only wish he were young enough to be given
-what he needs--a thorough good hiding. I'll go down and see Nancy. Don't
-expect me back to dinner."
-
-"Nancy is busy, my dear," poor Mrs. Averil, deeply flushing, interposed,
-while Palgrave, under his breath, yet audibly, murmured: "Truly
-Kiplingesque! Home and Hidings! Our Colonial history summed up!"
-
-"She would be here if she weren't busy," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"I won't bother her," said Barney. "I'll sit in the garden and read.
-It's more peaceful than being here."
-
-"Please tell dear Nancy that it's ten days at least since _I've_ seen
-her," said Adrienne, "and that I miss her and beg that she'll give me,
-sometime, a few of her spare moments."
-
-At that Barney stopped short, and looked at his wife. "No, Adrienne, I
-won't," he said with a startling directness. "I'll take no messages
-whatever from you to Nancy. Let Nancy alone--do you see? That's all I've
-got to ask of you. Let her alone. She and Aunt Monica are the only
-people you haven't set against me and I don't intend to quarrel with
-Nancy to please you, I promise you."
-
-Sitting motionless and upright, her hand laid on Palgrave's shoulder,
-her face as unalterable as a little mask, Adrienne received these
-well-aimed darts as a Saint Sebastian might have received the arrows.
-Barney stared hard at her for a moment, then turned his back and marched
-out into the sunlight and Oldmeadow, as he saw him go, felt that he
-witnessed the end, as he had, little more than a year ago, witnessed the
-beginning, of an epoch. What was there left to build on after such a
-scene? And what must have passed between husband and wife during their
-hours of intimacy to make it credible? Barney was not a brute.
-
-When Barney had turned through the entrance gates and
-disappeared--Adrienne's eyes dropped to Palgrave's. "I think I'll go in,
-Paladin," she said, and it was either with faintness or with the mere
-stillness of her rage. "I think I'll lie down for a little while."
-
-Palgrave had leaped to his feet and, as she rose, drew her hand within
-his arm, and Mrs. Chadwick, her eyes staring wide, hastened to her: but
-Adrienne gently put her away. "No, no, dearest Mother Nell. Paladin will
-help me. You must stay with Aunt Monica and Mr. Oldmeadow." Her hand
-rested for a moment on Mrs. Chadwick's shoulder and she looked into her
-eyes. "I'm so sorry, Mother Nell. I meant no harm."
-
-"Oh, my darling child! As if I did not know that!" Mrs. Chadwick moaned
-and, as Adrienne moved away, she turned as if half distraught to her two
-friends. "Oh, it's dreadful! dreadful!" she nearly wept. "Oh, how can he
-treat her so--before you all! It's breaking my heart!"
-
-Barbara came running out with the cream. "Great Scott!" she exclaimed,
-stopping short. "What's become of everybody?"
-
-"They've all gone, dear. Yes, we've all finished. No one wants any more
-strawberries. Take yours away, will you, dear, we want to have a little
-talk, Aunt Monica, Roger and I."
-
-"I suppose it's Barney again," said Barbara, standing still and gazing
-indignantly around her. "Where's Adrienne?"
-
-"She has gone to lie down, dear. Yes. Barney has been very unkind."
-
-"About my trip, I suppose? He's been too odious about my trip and it's
-only the other day he made Adrienne cry. What possible business is it of
-Barney's, I'd like to know? One would think he imagined that wives and
-sisters were a sort of chattel. Why mayn't I stay, Mother--if you're
-going to talk about my trip? Adrienne has explained everything to me and
-I think Meg was quite right and I'd do the same myself if I were in her
-place. So I'm perfectly able to understand."
-
-"I know, dear; I know; Adrienne is so wonderful. But don't say things
-like that, I beg of you, for it makes me very, very unhappy. And please
-run away for a little while, for we have other things to talk of. I'm
-afraid there may be no trip at all, Barbara; Meg may be coming home at
-once. The letters had news about it, and Eric has to go to the war--if
-there is a war, you see." Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a supplicatory note
-very unlike her usual placid if complaining authority.
-
-"But I'd like to hear about the letters, then. Do we really have to give
-up the trip? I'm sure it's Barney at the bottom of it. He's been trying
-to dish it from the first and I simply won't stand it from him."
-
-"It's not Barney at all, Barbara. You shall hear all that there is to
-hear. And you mustn't, really, forget that Barney is your elder brother
-and has some right to say what you should do--even though we mayn't
-agree with him."
-
-"No, he hasn't. Not an atom," Barbara declared. "If anyone has any
-right, except you, it's Adrienne, because she's a bigger, wiser person
-than any of us."
-
-"And since you've borne your testimony, Barbara," Oldmeadow suggested,
-"you might obey your mother and give us the benefit of your experience
-on an occasion when it's invited."
-
-"Oh, I know you're against Adrienne, Roger," said Barbara, but with a
-sulkiness that showed surrender. "I shan't force myself on you, I assure
-you, and girls of fifteen aren't quite the infants in arms you may
-imagine. If Adrienne weren't here to stand up for me I don't know where
-I'd be. Because, you know, you _are_ weak, Mother. Yes you are. You've
-been really wobbling like anything about my trip and trying to wriggle
-out of it whenever you had a loop-hole, and Adrienne thinks you're weak,
-I know, for she told me so, and said we must help you to be brave and
-strong and that you belonged to a generation that had its eyes tightly
-bandaged from birth. So there!" And delivering this effective shot,
-Barbara marched away, not forgetting to pick up her plate of
-strawberries as she passed the table.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick attempted to conceal her confusion by following her
-child's retreating figure with grave disapprobation and Oldmeadow seized
-the propitious moment to remark: "I can't help feeling that there's
-something to be said for Barney, all the same. His wife _has_ set you
-all against him, hasn't she? I suspect Barbara's right, too, my dear
-friend, and that in your heart of hearts you dislike this trip of hers
-as much as he does. Certainly Barbara isn't a very pleasing example of
-Adrienne's influence."
-
-"She is very naughty, very naughty and rebellious," poor Mrs. Chadwick
-murmured, twisting and untwisting her handkerchief. "I know I've not a
-strong character, but I never spoiled my children and dear Adrienne
-does, I feel, spoil Barbara by taking her so seriously and talking to
-her as if she were grown up, you know. I had an aunt who married at
-sixteen; but it didn't turn out at all happily. They quarrelled
-constantly and she had two sets of twins, poor thing--almost like a
-judgment, dear Mamma used to say. But of course Barbara is really too
-young to understand; and so I've told dear Adrienne. Not that she isn't
-perfectly frank about it. She's told me over and over again that
-weakness was my besetting danger and that I must stand up straight and
-let the winds of freedom blow away my cobwebs. So dear and original,
-always, you know. And of course I see her point of view and Barbara
-will, no doubt, be a bigger, finer person"--Mrs. Chadwick's voice
-trailed off in its echo. "But I don't agree with you, Roger; I don't
-agree with you at all!" she took up with sudden vehemence, "about the
-trip. I don't agree that my poor Meg is a leper to be avoided until a
-legal ceremony has been performed. I think that a cruel
-convention--cruel, base and cowardly. She must have suffered so much
-already. Nothing will give her so much courage as for us to be seen
-standing by her. Adrienne has explained all that most beautifully to
-Barbara. And how true love is the most sacred thing in life."
-
-"My dear friend, Meg isn't a leper, of course, and we all intend to
-stand by her. But it is certainly best that a young girl like Barbara
-shouldn't be asked to meet, or understand, or exonerate such difficult
-situations."
-
-"That's what I've tried to say to Eleanor," Mrs. Averil murmured.
-
-"And why not, Roger! Why not!" Mrs. Chadwick cried, surprisingly yet not
-convincingly aroused. "Nothing develops the character so much as facing
-and understanding difficulty. And as for exoneration--I don't agree with
-you, and Adrienne doesn't agree. You and Monica are conventionalists and
-we must live on a higher plane than convention. I'm sure I try to,
-though it's very hard sometimes, but the noblest things are hardest.
-There is nothing to exonerate. Meg was following her own light in doing
-what she did."
-
-"It's not a question of Meg, but of her situation," Oldmeadow returned.
-
-"And because of her situation, because she is so in need of help and
-loyalty, you ask that Barbara should draw back her skirts from her! Oh!
-I knew it!" cried Mrs. Chadwick, "I knew that you would feel like that!
-That is why I felt it would be happier if you were not here with
-Adrienne."
-
-"You need hardly tell me that," said Oldmeadow smiling. "But it's not a
-question of convention, except in so far as convention means right
-feeling and good taste. Meg, whatever her lights--and personally I don't
-believe that she followed them--has done something that involves pain
-and humiliation for all concerned with her, and whether she was or was
-not justified in doing it is a moral problem that a child shouldn't be
-asked to meet. Such problems should be kept from her until she is old
-enough to understand them."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's vehemence had only fictitiously sustained her. It
-dropped from her now and for a little while she sat silent, and the
-confusion of her heart was piteously revealed to her friend as she said
-at last, "If there _is_ a war, it will all settle itself, won't it, for
-then Barbara couldn't go. I don't try to wriggle out of it. That's most
-unfair and untrue. I've promised Adrienne and I agree with Adrienne
-about it. I can't explain it clearly, as she does; it's all quite, quite
-different when Adrienne explains it. She seems to hold me up and you and
-Monica pull me down--oh, yes, you do, Roger. Of course it would kill
-me--I know that I should die, if Barbara were to do what Meg has done;
-you mustn't think Adrienne _wants_ her to behave like that, you know.
-Adrienne only wants people to be brave and follow their light; but your
-light needn't be a married man, need it? And sometimes I think it isn't
-_really_ so serious--falling in love, you know. I'm sure I thought _I_
-was in love half a dozen times before Francis proposed. It's a question
-of seeing what's best for you all round, isn't it, and it can't be best
-if it's a married man, can it? Oh! I know I'm saying what Adrienne
-wouldn't like, now; because it sounds so worldly and as if I believed in
-the French way. But I don't at all. I think love's everything, too. Only
-it always seemed to me when I was a girl that love meant white satin and
-orange-blossoms; and my poor, poor Meg can never wear those now. I
-should feel miserable, quite miserable about her, of course, if Adrienne
-weren't here to make me see the big, real things instead of the little
-ones. And Barney has been so unkind. Sneering and scoffing at
-everything"--her voice quivered. "However, if there's a war, that will
-settle it. Barbara couldn't go if there was a war."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-
-The war thus had its uses to Mrs. Chadwick. Barbara did not go to the
-Tyrol. By the end of September Oldmeadow and Barney were in training,
-one on the Berkshire and one on the Wiltshire downs, and Meg was
-ambiguously restored to her family at Coldbrooks.
-
-Oldmeadow had not seen Barney for many days, when they met one afternoon
-at Paddington and travelled together as far as Didcot. They had the
-carriage to themselves and though Barney's demeanour was reticent there
-were many things about which, it was evident, he found it a relief to be
-communicative. It was from him that Oldmeadow learned of Meg's return.
-
-"She'll be in a pretty box, won't she, if Hayward is killed," he said,
-smoking his cigarette and not looking at his friend. "He's over there,
-you know, and for my part I think there's very little chance of any of
-them coming back alive."
-
-They both smoked in silence for a little while after this, contemplating
-the ordeal in which their country was involved rather than their own
-relation to it; but Oldmeadow's mind returned presently to Barney's
-difficulties and he asked him if it had been to see Hayward off that
-he'd just been up to London.
-
-Barney, at this, had a quiet sardonic laugh. "Good heavens, no," he
-said. "Hayward went in the first week and Adrienne and Palgrave went up
-with Meg to see him off. Even if I'd wanted to, I'd have been allowed to
-have no hand in that. Adrienne is seeing to it all. Lawyers, money, I
-don't know what. No; I went up to spend my leave with old Boyd at his
-place in Chelsea. I didn't want to go home. Home is the last place I
-want to be just now."
-
-Oldmeadow at this maintained a silence that could not pretend surprise
-and Barney continued in a moment. "Palgrave isn't coming in, you know."
-
-"You mean he's carrying out his pacifist ideas?"
-
-"If they are his," said Barney in his colourless yet sardonic voice.
-"Any ideas of Palgrave's are likely to be Adrienne's, you know. She got
-hold of him from the first."
-
-"Well, after all," Oldmeadow after another moment felt impelled to say,
-"She got hold of you, too. In the same way; by believing in herself and
-by understanding you. She thinks she's right."
-
-"Ha! ha!" laughed Barney and for a moment, an acutely uncomfortable one
-for Oldmeadow, he turned his eyes on his friend. "Thinks she's right!
-You needn't tell me that, Roger!"
-
-It had indeed, Oldmeadow felt, hardly been decent of him.
-
-"I know. Of course she would. But, all the same, people must be allowed
-to hold their own opinions."
-
-"Must they?" said Barney. "At a time like this? Adrienne must, of
-course; as a woman she doesn't come into it; she brings other people in,
-that is to say, and keeps out herself. Besides she's an American. But
-Palgrave shouldn't be allowed the choice. He's dishonouring us all--as
-Meg has done. Poor, foolish, wretched Mother! She's seeing it at last,
-though she won't allow herself to say it, or, rather, Adrienne won't
-allow her--" He checked himself.
-
-"Dishonour is a strong word, Barney. Palgrave is hardly more than a
-boy."
-
-"Jim Errington is a year younger than Palgrave, and Peter Layard six
-months. They're both in. I don't think nineteen is too young to
-dishonour your family. If Palgrave committed a murder, he'd be hanged.
-But it will no doubt come to conscription and then we'll see where he'll
-find himself. Herded in as a Tommy. All this talk of a few months is
-folly."
-
-"I know. Yes. Folly," said Oldmeadow absently. "Have you tried to have
-it out with Palgrave, Barney? If he only hears Adrienne's side what can
-you expect of him? If you leave them all to sink or swim without you,
-you mustn't blame Adrienne for steering as best she can."
-
-"Sink or swim without me!" Barney echoed. "Why they'd none of them
-listen to me. You saw well enough how it was with them that day in July
-when you came up. Adrienne is twice as strong as I am when it comes to
-anything like a struggle and she has them all firmly under her thumb.
-She steers because she intends to steer and intends I shan't. I've tried
-nothing with Palgrave, except to keep my hands off him. Mother's talked
-to him, and Meg's talked to him; but nothing does any good. Oh, yes; Meg
-hangs on Adrienne because she's got nothing else to hang to; but she's
-frightfully down on Palgrave all the same. They're all united against
-me, but they're not united among themselves by any means. It's not a
-peaceful family party at Coldbrooks, I promise you. Poor Mother spends
-most of her time shut up in her room crying."
-
-Barney offered no further information on this occasion and Oldmeadow
-asked for no more. It was from Mrs. Aldesey, some weeks later, that he
-heard that Eric Hayward had been killed. Mrs. Aldesey was his most
-punctual correspondent and her letters, full of pungent, apposite
-accounts of how the war was affecting London, the pleasantest
-experiences that came to him on the Berkshire downs, where, indeed, he
-did not find life unpleasant. Mrs. Aldesey made time for these long
-letters after tiring days spent among Belgian refugees and his sense of
-comradeship had been immensely deepened by the vast, new experience they
-were, from their different angles, sharing. It was difficult, on the
-soft October day, to dissociate the mere pleasure of reading her letter
-from the miserable news she gave. Yet he knew, stretched at ease after
-strenuous exercise, the canvas of his tent idly flapping above him and
-the sunlight falling across his feet, that it was very miserable news
-indeed and must miserably affect his friends at Coldbrooks. What was to
-become of poor Meg now? And after his mind had paused on poor Meg a pang
-of memory brought back the face of his setter John. Poor Hayward.
-
-"She must, of course, find some work at once," Mrs. Aldesey wrote. "The
-war does help to solve problems of this sort as nothing else before ever
-could. She must nurse, or drive an ambulance and perhaps by the time
-it's all over we'll have forgotten irrelevancies that happened so long
-ago. Sometimes it feels like that to me and I know I'm much too old to
-face the world that will have grown up out of the wreckage of the world
-I knew." Mrs. Aldesey, still, always spoke of herself as antique,
-relegated and on the shelf. Rather absurd of her, as her friend pointed
-out in his reply, when she was obviously one of the people who were
-going to make the new world. She was organizing the Belgians in the most
-remarkable manner.
-
-As to Coldbrooks he hesitated. He could hardly see himself writing to
-Mrs. Chadwick or to Meg. Of Nancy he felt a little shy. There would be
-too much to say to Nancy if he said anything and he allowed the
-anonymous calamity that had overtaken his friends to pass without
-comment or condolence. But after an interval of some weeks it was from
-Nancy herself that he heard. Nancy seemed always to be selected as the
-vehicle for other people's emergencies.
-
-"Dear Roger," she wrote. "You have heard how very unhappy we all are. It
-is dreadful to see poor Meg, and Aunt Eleanor makes it really worse for
-her. Meg wears mourning, like a widow, and she is terribly bitter about
-Palgrave, and about Adrienne, too. Doesn't that seem to you very strange
-and unjust? Adrienne is doing for Palgrave what she did for
-Meg--standing by him. It is all more unhappy than you can imagine.
-Palgrave is at New College, now, you know, and I'm writing, because Aunt
-Eleanor's one hope is that you may be able to talk to him. Kindly, you
-know, Roger; and not as if you thought him a criminal or a coward; that
-is worse than useless, naturally. Palgrave is very arrogant; but you
-know what a tender heart he really has and I am sure that he is very
-lonely and unhappy. So be kind and understanding, won't you? He really
-cares for you and trusts you more than he likes to show; and of course
-he would expect you to be against him."
-
-Oldmeadow was going into Oxford in a week's time and he wrote to
-Palgrave and asked him to give him tea. "I've got to talk to you, if
-you'll let me," he said, "but I shan't make myself a nuisance, I promise
-you. I only want to satisfy myself that you have thought everything out,
-and if you have I'll be able to tell your people that they must give up
-tormenting themselves and you about it. I shall like talking over your
-work with you, too, if I may, and renewing my own Oxford memories." So
-conciliatory, so affectionate (and he found it easy to be affectionate
-to poor Palgrave) was the tone of the letter that he had a swift reply.
-Palgrave would be very glad to see him.
-
-It was a melancholy, deserted Oxford into which Oldmeadow drove his
-little car on a late October afternoon. Most of the youths he saw were
-of a nondescript variety, a type to whom Oxford means scholastic
-opportunity and nothing more. There were dark-skinned lads from distant
-parts of the Empire looking, to Oldmeadow's eye, rather pitiful and
-doomed to disappointment, and a hurrying, absorbed little Jap had an
-almost empty Broad as a setting for his alien figure.
-
-Palgrave's name was freshly painted at the bottom of a staircase in the
-Garden Quad and Oldmeadow mounted to rooms that most delightfully
-overlooked the garden and its catalpa-tree.
-
-Palgrave was ready for him. The tea was laid and he stood at the table
-cutting a cake as Oldmeadow entered. But some one else, too, was ready,
-for there, in the window-seat, her gaze fixed on the waning golds and
-russets beneath, sat Adrienne Toner. Oldmeadow, very much and very
-disagreeably affected, paused at the door.
-
-"Come in, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne, and there was a strange, jaded
-eagerness in the gaze she fixed on him. "I've only come for tea. I have
-to go directly afterwards. I am staying in Oxford, now, you know. To be
-near Palgrave."
-
-"Meg's turned her out of Coldbrooks," Palgrave announced, standing
-still, over the tea-tray, his hands in his pockets while, with bent
-head, he looked from under his brows at Oldmeadow. "Meg, you understand;
-for whose sake she's gone through everything. We're pariahs together,
-now; she and I."
-
-"It's not quite true or fair to say that, Palgrave," said Adrienne,
-whose eyes had returned to the garden. "Meg hasn't turned me out. I felt
-it would be happier for her if I weren't there; and for your
-Mother--since they feel as they do about what has happened; and happier
-for you and me to be together. You can't be surprised at Meg. She is
-nearly beside herself with grief."
-
-Adrienne was very much altered. The magic of the lime-tree scene no
-longer lay about her. Her skin was sallow, her eyes sunken, her
-projecting mouth was at once stubborn, weary and relaxed. She had been
-almost beautiful on that July day and to-day she was definitely ugly.
-Oldmeadow saw that some intent inner preoccupation held her thoughts.
-
-"I _am_ surprised at her; very much surprised," said Palgrave, "though I
-might have warned you that Meg wasn't a person worth risking a great
-deal for. Oh, yes, she's nearly beside herself all right. She's lost the
-man she cared for and she can't, now, ever be made 'respectable.' Oh, I
-see further into Meg's grief than you do, my poor Adrienne. She's just
-as conventional and unheroic at heart as Mother; and that's what _she_
-minds--more than anything."
-
-Oldmeadow, sunken in the deep chair Palgrave had drawn for him to the
-table, watched the curious interchange, and after a pause, in her jaded
-voice, Adrienne from the window-seat commented: "I understand her rage
-and misery. It's because her grief is divided and spoiled and tainted
-like that that she is distracted."
-
-"Will you pour out tea?" Palgrave asked her gloomily. "You'll see
-anyone's side, always, except your own."
-
-To this Adrienne, rising and coming forward to the table, made no reply.
-She wore a dark dress that recalled to Oldmeadow the one in which he had
-first seen her; the short jacket tying across white in front and white
-ruffles falling about her neck and hands. A small, dark hat was bent
-down about her face.
-
-Strange, brooding face. What was she thinking of, Oldmeadow wondered, as
-he watched her hands, impeded by the falling ruffles, moving with the
-old, fumbling gestures among the tea-things; she had constantly to throw
-back the ruffles, and the tea-pot, after all, was too heavy for her. It
-slipped on one side as she lifted it and the hot tea poured over her
-hand. She kept her hold bravely and Oldmeadow rescued her.
-
-"How stupid I am!" she said, biting her lip.
-
-"You've scalded your hand," said Palgrave, eyeing her with his air no
-longer of rapturous but of gloomy devotion.
-
-They made Oldmeadow think of comrade political prisoners moving off
-together in a convoy to Siberia. There was something as bleak, as
-heavy, as uninspired in their aspect. He could not think that Palgrave
-could now catch much light or flame from such a companion. They would
-trudge through the snow; condemned, but together; to be together was the
-best thing, now, that life offered them.
-
-She said that the scald was nothing and asked to be trusted to go on
-with the tea, grasping the handle with resolution. Oldmeadow, however,
-standing beside her, insisted on filling the cups for her.
-
-"You can be allowed to put in the milk and sugar, you see," he said. He
-was aware, as he thus succoured and rallied her, of an influx of feeling
-like the feeling that came with the uncanny dreams. Here she was, and
-reality had caught her. She deserved to be caught, of course; tragic,
-meddling Pierrot. But his heart was heavy and gentle; as in his dreams.
-
-They sat round the table together. On the mantelpiece was a large,
-framed photograph of Adrienne; on the walls photographs of a Botticelli
-Madonna, a Mantegna from Padua and the da Vinci drawing for the Christ
-of the Last Supper. Seeing Oldmeadow's eyes on them Palgrave said:
-"Adrienne gave me those. And lots of the books."
-
-"And don't forget the beautiful cushions, Palgrave," said Adrienne, with
-a flicker of her old, contented playfulness. "I'm sure good cushions are
-the foundation of a successful study of philosophy."
-
-The cushions were certainly very good; and very beautiful, as Oldmeadow
-commented. "That gorgeous chair, too," said Palgrave. "It ought to make
-a Plato of me."
-
-It was curious, the sense they gave him of trusting him. Were they
-aware, if only sub-consciously, that he was feeling Adrienne, her
-follies and misdeeds thick upon her, ill-used? Or was it only that they
-had come down to such fundamental securities as were left to them and
-felt that with him, at all events, they were in the hands of an
-impartial judge?
-
-"It's a happy life Meg and Mother lead at Coldbrooks, as you may
-imagine," Palgrave took up the theme that preoccupied him. "They only
-see Nancy and Aunt Monica, of course. Barbara is at school and Barney,
-as you are probably aware, never comes near his disgraced sister. Would
-you believe it, Roger," Palgrave went on, while Oldmeadow saw that a
-dull colour crept up to Adrienne's face and neck as her husband was thus
-mentioned, "Meg blames Adrienne now for the whole affair! About Eric and
-herself! Actually! On the one hand Eric is her hero for whom she'll
-mourn for ever and on the other Adrienne is responsible for the fact
-that she's not 'respectable' and can't claim to be his widow. Oh, don't
-ask me how she contrives to work it out! Women like Meg don't need logic
-when they've a thong in their hands and want to use it. And Adrienne's
-shoulders are bared for the lash! God! It makes me fairly mad to think
-of it!"
-
-"Please, Palgrave!" Adrienne supplicated in a low voice. She did not
-eat. She had drunk her tea and sat looking down at her plate. "Don't
-think of it any more. Meg is very, very unhappy. We can hardly imagine
-what the misery and confusion of Meg's heart must be."
-
-"Oh, you'll make excuses for anyone, Adrienne! You're not a shining
-example of happiness either, if it comes to that. It's atrocious of Meg
-to treat you as she does. Atrocious of her to hold you responsible."
-
-"But I am responsible," said Adrienne, while the dull flush still dyed
-her face. "I've always said that I was responsible. It was I who
-persuaded them to go."
-
-"Yes. To go. Instead of staying and being lovers secretly. I know all
-about it. And no doubt Meg would rather it had been so now. And so would
-Mother!" Palgrave ground his teeth on a laugh. "That's where morality
-lands them! Pretty, isn't it!"
-
-A silence fell and then Adrienne rose and said that Mr. Jackson would be
-waiting for her. "He's coming at half-past five," she said, and, with
-his gloomy tenderness, Palgrave informed Oldmeadow that she was reading
-logic and Plato; "to keep up with me, you know."
-
-Adrienne, smiling faintly, laid her hand for a moment on his shoulder as
-she went past his chair. "Come in to-night, after dinner, and tell me
-what you decide," she said.
-
-"I'll have no news for you," Palgrave replied.
-
-Oldmeadow had gone to hold the door open for her and, as she paused
-there to give him her hand, he heard her murmur: "Will you come down
-with me?"
-
-"Let me see you to the bottom of the stair," he seized the intimation,
-and, as she went before him, she said, still in the low, purposeful
-voice, and he felt sure now that this had been her intention in coming
-to tea: "It's only so that you shan't think I'll oppose you. If you can
-persuade him, I shall not oppose it. I think he's right. But it's too
-hard. I mean, I hope you can persuade him that it's right to go."
-
-She had stepped out on to the threshold at the foot of the stairs and he
-paused behind her, astonished. "You want me to persuade him of what you
-think wrong?"
-
-She stood still looking out at the sunny quadrangle. "People must think
-for themselves. I don't know who is right or who is wrong. Perhaps I've
-influenced Palgrave. Perhaps he wouldn't have felt like this if it
-hadn't been for me. I don't know. But if you can make him feel it right
-to go, I shall be glad." She stepped out into the quadrangle.
-
-"You mean," said Oldmeadow, following her, and strangely moved, "that
-you'd rather have him killed than stay behind like this?"
-
-"It would be much happier for him, wouldn't it," she said. "If he could
-feel it right to go."
-
-They were under the arch of the Library, she still going slowly, before
-him, and Oldmeadow stopped her there. "Mrs. Barney, forgive me--may I
-ask you something?" He had put his hand on her shoulder and she paused
-and faced him. "It's something personal, and I've no right to be
-personal with you, as I know. But--have you been to see Barney at
-Tidworth?"
-
-As Oldmeadow spoke these Words, Adrienne turned away vehemently, and
-then stood still, as though arrested in her impulse of flight by an
-irresistible desire to listen. "Barney does not want to see me," she
-said, speaking with difficulty.
-
-"You think so," said Oldmeadow. "And he may think so. But you ought to
-see each other at a time like this. He may be ordered to France at any
-time now." He could not see her face.
-
-"Do you mean," she said, after a moment, keeping the rigidity of her
-listening poise, "that he won't come to say good-bye?"
-
-"I know nothing at all," said Oldmeadow. "I can only infer how far the
-mischief between you has gone. And I'm most frightfully sorry for it.
-I've been sorry for Barney; but now I'm sorry for you, too. I think
-you're being unfairly treated. But yours have been the mistakes, Mrs.
-Barney, and it's for you to take the first step."
-
-"Barney doesn't want to see me," she repeated, and she went on, while he
-heard, growing in her voice, the note of the old conviction: "He has
-made mistakes, too. He has treated me unfairly, too. I can't take the
-first step."
-
-"Don't you love him, then?" said Oldmeadow, and in his voice was the
-note of the old harshness.
-
-"Does he love me?" she retorted, turning now, with sudden fire, and
-fixing her eyes upon him. "Why should he think I want to see him if he
-doesn't want to see me? Why should I love, if he doesn't? Why should I
-sue to Barney?"
-
-"Oh," Oldmeadow almost groaned. "Don't take that line; don't, I beg of
-you. You're both young. And you've hurt him so. You've meant to hurt
-him; I've seen it! I've seen it, Mrs. Barney. If you'll put by your
-pride everything can grow again."
-
-"No! no! no!" she cried almost violently, and he saw that she was
-trembling. "Some things don't grow again! It's not like plants, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Some things are like living creatures; and they can die. They
-can die," she repeated, now walking rapidly away from him out into the
-large quadrangle with its grass plot cut across by the late sunshine. He
-followed her for a moment and he heard her say, as she went: "It's
-worse, far worse, not to mean to hurt. It's worse to care so little that
-you don't know when you are hurting."
-
-"No, it's not," said Oldmeadow. "That's only being stupid; not cruel."
-
-"It's not thinking that is cruel; it's not caring that is cruel," she
-repeated, passionately, half muttering the words, and whether with tears
-of fury he could not say.
-
-He stood still at the doorway. "Good-bye, then," he said. And not
-looking behind her, as she went out swiftly into New College Lane, she
-answered, still on the same note of passionate protest: "Good-bye, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Good-bye." He watched her small, dark figure hurry along in
-the shadow of the wall until the turning hid it from view.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-Palgrave, apparently, had formed no conjectures as to their conversation
-and was thinking still of Adrienne's wrongs rather than of his own
-situation. "Did you take her home?" he said. "I see you're sorry for
-her, Roger. It's really too abominable, you know. I really can't say
-before her what I think, I really can't say before you what I think of
-Barney's treatment of her; because I know you agree with him."
-
-Oldmeadow felt all the more able, shaken though he was by the interview
-below, to remember, because of it, what he thought. "If you mean that I
-don't consider Barney in the very least responsible for the death of the
-baby, I do agree with him," he said.
-
-"Apart from that, apart from the baby," said Palgrave, controlling his
-temper, it was evident, in his wish to keep the ear of the impartial
-judge, "though what the loss of a child means to a woman like Adrienne I
-don't believe you can guess; apart from whose was the responsibility, he
-ought to have seen, towards the end, at all events, if he'd eyes in his
-head and a heart in his breast, that all she asked was to forgive him
-and take him back. She was proud, of course. What woman of her power and
-significance wouldn't have been? She couldn't be the first to move. But
-Barney must have seen that her heart was breaking."
-
-"Well," said Oldmeadow, taking in, with some perplexity, this new
-presentation of Adrienne Toner; "what about his heart? She'd led it a
-pretty dance. And you forget that I don't consider she had anything to
-forgive him."
-
-"His heart!" Palgrave echoed scornfully, yet with a sorrowful scorn; "He
-mended his heart quick enough. Went and fell in love with Nancy, who
-only asks to be let alone."
-
-"He's always loved Nancy. She's always been like a sister to him.
-Adrienne has infected you with her groundless jealousy."
-
-"Groundless indeed!" Palgrave reached for his pipe and began to stuff it
-vindictively. "Nancy sees well enough, poor dear! She's had to keep him
-off by any device she could contrive. She's a good deal more than a
-sister to him, now. She's the only person in the world for him. You can
-call it jealousy if you like. That's only another name for a broken
-heart."
-
-"I don't know what Barney's feeling may be, Palgrave, but I do know, it
-was quite plain to me, that Adrienne was jealous long before she had any
-ground for jealousy. If Nancy's all Barney's got left now, it's simply
-because Adrienne has taken everything else from him. You don't seem to
-realize that Adrienne drove him from her with her airs of martyrdom.
-Took vengeance on him, too; what else was the plan for Barbara going
-abroad with you? I don't want to speak unkindly of her. It's quite true;
-I'm sorry for her. I've never liked her so well. But the reason is that
-she's beginning, I really believe, to find out that her own feet are of
-clay, while her mistake all along has been to imagine herself above
-ordinary humanity. All our feet are of clay, and we never get very far
-unless we are aware of the weakness in our structure and look out for a
-continual tendency to crumble. You don't get over it by pretending you
-don't need to walk and imagining you have wings instead of feet."
-
-Palgrave, drawing stiffly at his pipe during this little homily,
-listened, gloomily yet without resentment. "You see, where you make
-_your_ mistake--if you'll allow the youthful ass you consider me to say
-so--is that you've always imagined Adrienne to be a self-righteous prig
-who sets herself up above others. She doesn't; she doesn't," Palgrave
-repeated with conviction. "She'd accept the feet of clay if you'll grant
-her the heart of flame--for everybody; the wings--for everybody. There's
-your mistake, Roger. Adrienne believes that everybody has wings as well
-as herself; and the only difference she sees in people is that some have
-learned and some haven't how to use them. She may be mortal woman--bless
-her--and have made mistakes; but they're the mistakes of flame; not of
-earthiness."
-
-"You are not an ass, Palgrave," said Oldmeadow, after a moment. "You are
-wise in everything but experience; and you see deep. Suppose we come to
-a compromise. You've owned that Adrienne may make mistakes and I own
-that I may misjudge her. I see what you believe about her and I see why
-you believe it. I've seen her at her worst, no doubt, and to you she's
-been able to show only her best. So let it rest at that. What I came to
-talk about, you know, was you."
-
-"I know," said Palgrave, and he gave a deep sigh.
-
-"Be patient with me," said Oldmeadow. "After all, we belong to the same
-generation. You can't pretend that I'm an old fogey who's lost the
-inspirations of his youth and has marched so far down towards the grave
-that the new torches coming up over the horizon are hidden from him."
-
-"That's rather nice, you know, Roger," Palgrave smiled faintly. "No;
-you're not an old fogey. But all the same there's not much torch about
-you."
-
-"It's rather sad, isn't it," Oldmeadow mused, "that we should always
-seem to begin with torches and then to spend the rest of our lives in
-quenching them. It may be, you know, that we're only trying to hold them
-straight, so that the wind shan't blow them out. However!--you'll let me
-talk. That's the point."
-
-"Of course you may. You've been awfully decent," Palgrave murmured.
-
-"Well, then, it seems to me you're not seeing straight," said Oldmeadow.
-"It's not crude animal patriotism--as you'd put it--that's asked of you.
-It's a very delicate discrimination between ideals."
-
-"I know! I know!" said Palgrave. The traces of mental anguish were on
-his worn young face. He knocked the ashes out of his pipe and rose to
-lean against the mantelpiece." I don't suppose I can explain," he said,
-staring out at the sky. "I suppose that with me the crude animal thing
-is the personal inhibition. I can't do it. I'd rather, far, be killed
-than have to kill other men. That's the unreasoning part, the
-instinctive part, but it's a part of one's nature that I don't believe
-one can violate without violating one's very spirit. I've always been
-different, I know, from most fellows of my age and class. I've always
-hated sport--shooting and hunting. The fox, the stag, the partridge,
-have always spoiled it for me. Oh, I know they have to be killed--poor
-brutes! I know that; but I can't myself be the butcher."
-
-"You'll own, though, that there must be butchers," said Oldmeadow, after
-a little meditation. He felt himself in the presence of something
-delicate, distorted and beautiful. "And you'll own, won't you, when it
-comes to a war like this, when not only our national honour but our
-national existence is at stake, that some men must kill others. Isn't it
-then, baldly, that you profit, personally, by other people doing what
-you won't do? You'll eat spring lamb as long as there are butchers to
-kill the lamb for you, and you'll be an Englishman and take from England
-all that she has to give you--including Oxford and Coldbrooks--and let
-other men do the nasty work that makes the survival of England and
-Oxford and Coldbrooks possible. That's what it comes to, you know.
-That's all I ask you to look at squarely."
-
-"I know, I know," Palgrave repeated. He had looked at little else, poor
-boy. Oldmeadow saw that. "But that's where the delicate discrimination
-between ideals comes in, Roger. That's where I have to leave intuition,
-which says 'No,' and turn to reason. And the trouble is that for me
-reason says 'No,' too. Because humanity--all of it that counts--has
-outgrown war. That's what it comes to. It's a conflict between a
-national and an humanitarian ideal. There are enough of us in the world
-to stop war, if we all act together; and why, because others don't,
-should I not do what I feel right? Others may follow if only a few of us
-stand out. If no one stands out, no one will ever follow. And you can't
-kill England like that. England is more than men and institutions,"
-Palgrave still gazed at the sky. "It's an idea that will survive;
-perhaps the more truly in the spirit for perishing in the flesh, if it
-really came to that. Look at Greece. She's dead, if you like; yet what
-existing nation lives as truly? It is Grecian minds we think with and
-Grecian eyes we see with. It's Plato's conception of the just man being
-the truly happy man--even if the whole world's against him--that is the
-very meaning of our refusal to go with the world."
-
-"You'll never stop war by refusal so long as the majority of men still
-believe in it," said Oldmeadow. "There are not enough of you to stop it
-now. The time to stop it is before it comes; not while it's on. It's
-before it begins that you must bring the rest of humanity not to behave
-in ways that make it inevitable. I'm inclined to think that ideas can
-perish," he went on, as Palgrave, to this, made no reply, "as far as
-their earthly manifestation goes, that is, if enough men and
-institutions are destroyed. If Germany could conquer and administer
-England, I'm inclined to think the English idea would perish. And war
-need not be unspiritual. Killing our fellow-men need not mean hating
-them. There's less hatred in war, I imagine, than in some of the
-contests of peaceful civilian life. Put it fairly on the ground of
-humanitarianism, then, Palgrave; not of nationality. It's the whole
-world that is threatened by a hateful idea, by the triumph of all you
-most fear and detest, and unless we strive against it with all we are
-and have it seems to me that we fall short of our duty not only as
-Englishmen, but as humanitarians. Put it at that, Palgrave: would you
-really have had England stand by and not lift a finger when Belgium was
-invaded and France menaced?"
-
-Palgrave was not ready with his reply and he turned away while he looked
-for it and shuffled the papers on his desk with a nervous hand. "Yes, I
-would," he said at last. "Hateful as it is to have to say it--I would
-have stood by." He came back to his place at the mantelpiece and looked
-down at Oldmeadow as he spoke. "The choice, of course, is hateful; but I
-think we should have stood by and helped the sufferers and let France
-and Germany fight it out. It always comes back to them, doesn't it?
-They're always fighting it out; they always will, till they find it's no
-good and that they can't annihilate each other; which is what they both
-want to do. Oh, I've read too many of the young French neo-Catholics to
-be able to believe that the hateful idea was all on one side. Their
-ideals don't differ much, once you strip them of their theological
-tinsel, from those of the Germans. Germany happens to be the aggressor
-now; but if the militarist party in France had had the chance, they'd
-have struck as quickly."
-
-"The difference--and it's an immense one--is that the militarist party
-in France wouldn't have had the chance. The difference is that it
-doesn't govern and mould public opinion. It's not a menace to the world.
-It's only a sort of splendid pet, kept in a Zoo, for the delectation of
-a certain class and party. Whereas Germany's the _bona fide_ hungry
-tigress at large. What you really ask of England, Palgrave, is that she
-should be a Buddha and lie down and let the tigress, after finishing
-France, devour her, too. It really comes to that. Buddhism is the only
-logical basis for your position, and I don't believe, however sorry one
-may be for hungry tigresses, that the right way to deal with them is to
-let them eat you. The Christian philosophy of the incarnation is the
-true one. Matter does make a spiritual difference. It does make a
-difference, a real difference, that the ideal should be made flesh. It's
-important to the world, spiritually, that the man rather than the
-tigress should survive."
-
-"Christ gave his life," said Palgrave, after a moment.
-
-"I'm not speaking of historical personages; but of eternal truths," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-But he knew already that he spoke in vain. Palgrave had turned away his
-eyes again and on his sad young face he read the fixity of a fanatic
-idealism. He had not moved him, though he had troubled him. No one would
-move Palgrave. He doubted, now, whether Adrienne herself had had much
-influence over him. It was with the sense of pleading a lost cause that
-he said, presently, "Adrienne hopes you'll feel it right to go."
-
-Palgrave at this turned a profound gaze upon him. "I know it," he said.
-"Though she's never told me so. It's the weakness of her love, its
-yearning and tenderness, not its strength, that makes her want it.
-Because she knows it would be so much easier. But she can't go back on
-what she's meant to me. It's because of that, in part at all events,
-that I've been able to see steadily what I mean to myself. That's what
-she helps one to do, you know. Hold to yourself; your true, deep self.
-It's owing to her that I can only choose in one way--even if I can't
-defend it properly. It seems to come back to metaphysics, doesn't it?"
-
-"Like everything else," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Yes. Like everything else. It would take a four-years' course in Greats
-to argue it out, Roger. Come back to me--if you're here and I'm here
-then--and we'll see what we can make of it."
-
-"I will," said Oldmeadow, rising, for the room was growing dark. "And
-before that, I hope."
-
-"After all, you know," Palgrave observed, "England isn't in any danger
-of becoming Buddhistic; there's not much nihilism about her, is there,
-but hardly much Christianity, either. England has evolved all sorts of
-things besides Oxford and Coldbrooks. She's evolved industrialism and
-factory-towns."
-
-"I don't consider industrialism and factory-towns incompatible with
-Christianity, you know," Oldmeadow observed. "Good-bye, my dear boy."
-
-"Good-bye, Roger," Palgrave grasped his hand. "You've been most awfully
-kind."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-"Isn't it becoming to him, Mother? And how tall he looks!" said Nancy,
-holding Oldmeadow off in his khaki for displayal.
-
-He had only written a line of his failure and that he would come as soon
-as he could and see them all and tell in full of his interview with
-Palgrave. And he had motored over to The Little House this afternoon in
-early November.
-
-Nancy was showing an unexpected gaiety. "What a nice grilled-salmon
-colour you are, too," she said.
-
-He divined the self-protective instinct under the gaiety. Most of the
-women in England were being gayer and more talkative at this time, in
-order to keep up. Nancy was thin and white; but she was keeping up. And
-she had put on a charming dress to receive him in.
-
-"I've been grilled all right; out on the downs," he said. "But it's more
-like cold storage just now, with these frosts at night. Yes; the big
-cup, please. I'm famished for tea. Ah! that's something like! It smells
-like your rose outside. I sniffed it as I waited at the door. Wonderful
-for such a late blooming."
-
-"Isn't it," said Mrs. Averil. "And I only put it in last autumn. It's
-doing beautifully; but I've cherished it. And now tell us about
-Palgrave."
-
-He felt reluctant to tell about Palgrave. The impression that remained
-with him of Palgrave was that impression of beauty and distortion and he
-did not want to have to disentangle his feelings or to seem to put
-Palgrave in the wrong. It was so sweet, too, after the long, chilly
-drive over the empty uplands, to sit here and forget the war, although
-it was for scenes like this, for girls like Nancy, women like Mrs.
-Averil--with so much else--that the war was so worth fighting. He turned
-his thoughts back to the realities that underlay the happy appearances
-and was aware, as he forced himself to tell, of what must seem a note of
-advocacy in his voice. "He can't think differently, I'm afraid," he
-said. "It's self-sacrifice, not selfishness, that is moving him."
-
-"He can't think differently while Adrienne is living there," said Mrs.
-Averil. "He didn't tell you, I suppose, that she has now taken up her
-abode in Oxford in order to study philosophy with him?"
-
-He was rather uncomfortably aware of the disingenuousness that must now
-be made apparent in his avoidance of all mention of Adrienne.
-
-"I saw her," he said, and he knew that it was lamely. "She was there
-when I got there."
-
-"You saw her!" Mrs. Averil exclaimed. "But then, of course you didn't
-convince him. I might have known it. Of course she would not let you see
-him alone."
-
-"But she did let me see him alone. That was what she wanted. And she was
-there only in order to tell me what she wanted. She wants him to go."
-
-Mrs. Averil was eyeing him with such astonishment that he turned to
-Nancy with his explanations. But Mrs. Averil would not leave him to
-Nancy's sympathy. "It's rather late in the day for her to want him to
-go," she said. "She may be sorry for what she's done; but it's her
-work."
-
-"Well, she's sorry for her work. That's what it comes to. And I'm sorry
-for her," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Good heavens! The cleverness of that woman!" Mrs. Averil exclaimed. "If
-she can't be powerful, she'll be pitiful! She's worked on your feelings;
-I can see that, Roger. And I thought you, at least, were immune. Well;
-she does not work on mine. I am not in the least sorry for her."
-
-"She's being unfairly treated," said Oldmeadow. "It's grotesque that Meg
-should have turned upon her."
-
-"And Eleanor has, too, you know," said Mrs. Averil. "It's grotesque, if
-you like; but I see a grim justice in it. She made them do things and
-believe things that weren't natural to them and now she's lost her power
-and they see things as they are."
-
-"It's because she's failed that they've turned against her," said Nancy.
-"If she'd succeeded they would have gone on accepting what she told them
-and making her their idol."
-
-"Adrienne mustn't fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only justification
-for Adrienne is to be in the right. If the blood of Saint Januarius
-doesn't liquefy, why should you keep it in a shrine? She's a woman who
-has quarrelled with her husband and disgraced her sister and
-brother-in-law, and broken her mother-in-law's heart. You can't go on
-making an idol of a saint who behaves like that."
-
-"She never claimed worldly success," said Nancy. "She never told Meg to
-go so that she could get married afterwards; she never told Palgrave
-that war was wrong because it was easier not to fight."
-
-"Oh, yes, she did claim worldly success, really," said Mrs. Averil,
-while her eyes rested on her daughter with a tenderness that contrasted
-with her tone. "Her whole point was that if you were right
-spiritually--'poised' she called it, you remember--all those other
-things would be added unto you. I've heard her claim that if you were
-poised you could get anything you really wanted. I asked her once if I
-should find a ten-pound note under the sofa-cushion every morning after
-breakfast if I could get poised sufficiently!" Mrs. Averil laughed,
-still more dryly while she still maintained her tender gaze and Nancy
-said, smiling a little: "She might have put it there for you if she'd
-been sure you were poised."
-
-"Well, let us bury Adrienne for the present," said Mrs. Averil. "Tell
-Roger about your nursing plans. She may go to London, Roger, this
-winter, and I'm to be left alone."
-
-"You're to be left to take care of Aunt Eleanor, if I do go," said
-Nancy; and Mrs. Averil said that there must certainly be some one left
-to take care of poor Eleanor.
-
-Oldmeadow went up to Coldbrooks next morning. The first person he saw
-was old Johnson at the door and he remembered Eleanor Chadwick's griefs
-on his account. Nothing, now, could have been kept from Johnson and his
-face bore the marks of the family calamities. He was aged and whitened
-and his voice had armed itself, since the downfall of his grave,
-vicarious complacency, with solemn cadences.
-
-"Yes, sir. The ladies will be very glad to see you, sir. These are sad
-days for them--the family dispersed as it is."
-
-Johnson defined the situation as he felt that it could be most fittingly
-defined and Oldmeadow inwardly applauded his "dispersed."
-
-The drawing-room, into which Johnson ushered him, had, for the first
-time in his memory of it, a mournful air. It had always been shabby, and
-these were the same faded chintzes, the same worn rugs; but now,
-fireless and flowerless, it neither spoke nor smiled and, with the sense
-it gave of an outlived epoch, it was almost spectral. The photographs
-all looked like the photographs of dead people and the only similitude
-of life was the loud, silly ticking of the French clock on the
-mantelpiece; Mrs. Chadwick's cherished clock; one of her
-wedding-presents.
-
-"I'm afraid it's rather chilly, sir," said Johnson. "No one has sat here
-of an evening now for a long time." He put a match to the ranged logs,
-drew the blinds up farther so that the autumnal sunlight might more
-freely enter, and left him.
-
-Oldmeadow went to the window and turned over the magazines, a month old,
-that lay on a table there.
-
-He was standing so when Meg entered, and she had half the length of the
-room to traverse before they met. She was in black, in deep black; but
-more beautiful than he had ever seen her; her tossed auburn locks bound
-low on her forehead with a black ribbon, her white throat upright, her
-eyes hard with their readiness, their resource. Beautiful and
-distressing. It distressed him terribly to see that hardness in her
-eyes.
-
-"How do you do, Roger," she said, giving him her hand. "It's good to see
-you. Mother will be glad."
-
-They seated themselves on one of the capacious sofas and she questioned
-him quickly, competently, while the hard eyes seemed to measure him lest
-he measure her. It was almost the look of the _déclassée_ woman who
-forestalls withdrawal in an interlocutor. But, as he answered her
-quietly, his fond regard upon her, her defences began to fall. "It's the
-only life, a soldier's, isn't it?" she said. "At all times, really. But,
-at a time like this, anything else seems despicable, doesn't it;
-contemptibly smug and safe. The uniform is so becoming to you. You look
-a soldier already. One feels that men will trust and follow you. Didn't
-you burn with rage and shame, too, when, for those four days, it seemed
-we might not come in?"
-
-"I felt too sure we should come in, to burn with rage and shame," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-"Ah! but it was not so sure, I'm afraid," said Meg, and in her eyes, no
-longer hard, wild lights seemed to pass and repass. "I'm afraid that
-there are nearly enough fools and knaves in England to wreck us. Not
-quite enough, thank heaven! But, for those four days, Eric was terribly
-afraid. He was killed, you know, Roger, very splendidly, leading his
-men."
-
-"I know, Meg. My dear Meg," Oldmeadow murmured.
-
-"Oh! I don't regret it! I don't regret it!" Meg cried, while her colour
-rose and her young breast lifted. "It's the soldier's death! The
-consecrating, heroic death! He was ready. And deaths like that
-atone--for the others. He was not killed instantaneously, Roger."
-
-"I didn't know," said Oldmeadow, looking at her with a pitying, troubled
-gaze.
-
-"He lived for a day and night afterwards," said Meg, looking back,
-tearless. "They carried him to a barn. Only his man was with him. There
-was no one to dress his dreadful wound; no food. The man got him some
-water, at the risk of his own life. He was conscious until the end and
-he suffered terribly."
-
-Oldmeadow dropped his eyes before her fierce stare while, strangely,
-dimly, there passed through his mind the memory of the embarrassed,
-empty, handsome young face in the brougham and, again, the memory of his
-dog John. He had seen John die and his eyes of wistful appeal. So Eric
-Hayward's eyes might have looked as he lay in the barn dying.
-
-"Oh, Roger!" Meg said suddenly, seizing his hand. "Kill them! Kill them!
-Oh, revenge him! I was not with him! Think of it! I would have had no
-right to have been with him--had it been possible. I did not know till a
-week later. He was buried there. His man buried him."
-
-"My poor, poor child," said Oldmeadow, clasping her hands.
-
-But, at once, taking refuge from his pity and from her own desperate
-pain: "So you've seen Palgrave," she said. "And he isn't going. I knew
-it was useless. I told Mother it was useless--with that stranger--that
-American, with him. She has disgraced us all.--Wretched boy! Hateful
-woman!"
-
-"Meg, Meg; be soldierly. He wouldn't have spoken like that."
-
-"He never liked her! Never!" she cried. "I knew he didn't, even at the
-time she was flattering and cajoling us. I saw that she bewildered him
-and that he accepted her only because she was mine. How I loathe myself
-for having listened to her! How I loathe her! All that she ever wanted
-was power! Power over other people's lives! She'd commit any crime for
-that!"
-
-"You seem to me cruelly unfair," he said.
-
-"No! no! I'm not unfair! You know I'm not!" she cried. "You always saw
-the truth about her--from the very beginning. You never fell down and
-worshipped her, like the rest of us. And she knew that you were her
-enemy and warned us against you. Oh--why did Barney marry her!"
-
-"I never worshipped her; but I never thought her base and hateful."
-
-"You never knew her as I did; that was all. And I never knew her until I
-came back and found her doing to Palgrave what she had done to us.
-Paladin! Did you hear her call him Paladin? Always flattery! Always to
-make one think one was wonderful, important, mysterious! She forced us
-to go away, Roger. Sometimes I think it was hypnotism; that she uses her
-will-power consciously. We did not want to go. We did not want the
-divorce and the scandal."
-
-"What did you want, then, Meg?"
-
-She felt the gravity of his tone but, like a fierce Maenad, she snatched
-at the torch, not caring how it revealed her. "What of it! What if we
-had been secret lovers! Who would have known! Who would have been
-harmed! Some people go on for years and years. His wife loved another
-man. He had no one. Why should we have been pushed--such pitiful fools
-we were--into displaying our love to the world and being crushed by it!
-Oh, he was so loyal, so brave; but it made him very, very unhappy. Oh, I
-was cruel to him sometimes! I used to reproach him sometimes! Oh, Roger!
-Roger!--" She broke into wild tears and stumbled to her feet.
-
-As she reached the door, covering her face with her hands, her mother
-opened it and, meeting her on the threshold, Meg, with almost the effect
-of beating her aside with the other impediments to her rage and grief,
-pushed past her so that the knitting Mrs. Chadwick held was flung to the
-floor, the ball of khaki wool running rapidly away under a sofa and the
-socks and needles dangling at her feet.
-
-She stood looking down at them with a curious apathy and, as Oldmeadow
-went to help and greet her, he saw that as much as Meg was wild she was
-dulled and quiet.
-
-"Meg is so very, very violent," she said, as he disentangled the wool
-and restored her sock and ball to her. She spoke with listlessness
-rather than sympathy.
-
-"Poor child," said Oldmeadow. "One can hardly wonder at it. But it makes
-a wretched existence for you, I'm afraid. You and she oughtn't to be
-alone together."
-
-He drew her to a chair and, seating herself, her faded face and eyes
-that had lost their old look of surprise turned to the light, Mrs.
-Chadwick assented, "It's very fatiguing to live with, certainly.
-Sometimes I really think I must go away for a little while and have a
-change. Nancy would come and stay with Meg, you know. But I can't miss
-Barney's last weeks. He comes to us, now, again. And it might not be
-right to leave Meg. One must not think of oneself at a time like this,
-must one?" The knitting lay in her lap and she was twisting and
-untwisting her handkerchief after her old fashion; but her fingers
-moved slowly and without agitation and Oldmeadow saw that some spring of
-life in her had been broken.
-
-"The best plan would be that Meg should, as soon as possible, take up
-some work," he said, "and that you and Nancy should go away. Work is the
-only thing for Meg now. She'll dash herself to pieces down here; and you
-with her. There'll soon be plenty to do. Nursing and driving
-ambulances."
-
-"Nancy is going to nurse, you know," said Mrs. Chadwick. "But she won't
-go as long as we need her here. She has promised me that. I don't know
-what I should do without Nancy. I shouldn't care to be nursed by Meg
-myself, if I were a wounded soldier. She is so very restless and would
-probably forget quite simple things like giving one a handkerchief or
-seeing that hot-water-bottles were wrapped up before she put them to
-one's feet. A friend of mine--Amy Hatchard--such a pretty woman, though
-her hair was bright, bright red--and I never cared for that--had the
-soles of her feet nearly scorched off once by a careless nurse. Dear
-Nancy. I often think of Nancy now, Roger. I believe, you know, that if
-Adrienne had not come Nancy and Barney might have married. How happy we
-should all have been; though she has so little money."
-
-"I wish you could all think a little more kindly of Adrienne," said
-Oldmeadow after a silence. Mrs. Chadwick had begun to knit. "I must tell
-you that I myself feel differently about her."
-
-"Do you, Roger?" said Mrs. Chadwick, without surprise. "You have a very
-judicious and balanced mind, I know; even when you were hardly more
-than a boy Francis noticed it and said that he'd rather go by your
-opinion than by that of most of the men he knew. I always remembered
-that, afterwards. Till she came. And then I believed in her rather than
-in you. You thought us all far too fond of her from the very first. And
-now we have certainly changed. Meg is certainly very violent; much more
-violent than I could ever be.... I am sorry for Adrienne. I don't think
-she meant to do us any harm--as Meg believes."
-
-"She only meant to do you good, I am sure of it. I saw her in Oxford,
-let me tell you about it, when I went in to see Palgrave. She is very
-unhappy. She wants Palgrave to go. She wants him to feel it right to go.
-It's not she, really, who is keeping him back now."
-
-"My poor Palgrave. Meg is very unkind about him; very bitter and unkind;
-her own brother. But it was very wrong of Adrienne to go and set up
-housekeeping in Oxford near him. You must own that, Roger. She may not
-be keeping him back; but she is aiding and abetting him always. It made
-Barney even more miserable and disgusted than he was before. And it
-looks so very odd. Though I don't think that anyone could ever gossip
-about Adrienne. There is something about her that makes that
-impossible."
-
-"There certainly is. I am glad she is with Palgrave, poor boy."
-
-"I am glad you are sorry for him, Roger"--Mrs. Chadwick dropped a
-needle. "How clumsy I am. My fingers seem all to have turned to thumbs.
-Thank you so much. I try to make as many socks as I can for our poor
-men; fingering wool; not wheeling, which is so much rougher to the
-feet. I'm sure I'd rather march, and, if it came to that, die in
-fingering than in wheeling. Just as I've always felt, foolish as it may
-sound, that if I had to be drowned I'd rather it were in warm, soapy
-water than in cold salt. Not that one is very likely, ever, to drown in
-one's bath. But tell me about Adrienne and Palgrave, Roger, and what
-they said."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's discourse seemed, beforehand, to make anything he might
-have to tell irrelevant and, even while he tried to make her see what he
-had seen, he felt it to be a fruitless effort.
-
-There was indeed no enmity to plead against. Only a deep exhaustion.
-Adrienne had pressed too heavily on the spring and it was broken.
-
-"I'm sure she is very sorry to have made so much mischief, but she isn't
-what I thought her, Roger," she said, shaking her head, when he had
-finished. "I'm sorry for her, but I used to believe her to be a sort of
-saint and now I know that she is very far indeed from being one."
-
-"The mere fact of failure doesn't deprive you of sainthood," said
-Oldmeadow, remembering Nancy's plea. "You haven't less reason now than
-you had then for believing her one."
-
-But even with her broken spring Mrs. Chadwick had not lost all her
-shrewdness. It flickered in the sad eyes she lifted from the khaki sock.
-"Some kinds of failure do, Roger. That gift of healing, you remember;
-all she could do for people in that way; she has quite, quite lost it.
-That is a reason. It's that more than anything that has made me feel
-differently about her."
-
-"Lost it?" He felt strangely discomposed, little as the gift of healing
-had ever impressed him.
-
-"Quite," Mrs. Chadwick repeated. "I think it distressed her dreadfully
-herself. I think she counted upon it more than upon anything, perhaps
-without knowing she did. It must have made her seem so sure to herself,
-mustn't it? The first time was before the war, just a little after you
-were here that day in the summer--dear me, how long ago it seems; and I
-had one of my headaches, one of the worst I ever had. I was so
-dreadfully troubled, you know, about Barbara and Meg. And Adrienne came
-and sat by me as she used to and put her hand on my forehead; and I know
-it wasn't my lack of faith, for I quite believed it would get well; but
-instead of the peaceful feeling, it grew much worse; oh, _much_. As if
-red hot needles were darting through my eyes and an iron weight pressing
-down on my head. And such tumult and distress. I had to tell her. I had
-to ask her to take away her hand. Oh, she felt it very much, poor thing,
-and grew very white and said it must be because she was still not
-strong; not quite herself. But I knew then that it was because she was
-not _right_; not what I had thought her. I began to suspect, from that
-very moment, that I had been mistaken; because hypnotizing people isn't
-the same as being a saint, is it, Roger? and--I think you said so once,
-long ago; and that was all that she had done; hypnotized us all to think
-her good and wonderful. Later on, after Meg had come, I let her try once
-more, though it quite frightened me; she looked so strange. And!--oh,
-dear--it was dreadful. It distressed me dreadfully. She suddenly put her
-hands before her face and sat quite still and then she burst into tears
-and got up and ran out of the room, crying. It made me feel quite ill.
-And of course I knew there could be nothing saintly about a person who
-made you feel like that--who could feel like that themselves, and break
-down."
-
-"Even saints have their times of darkness and dryness," Oldmeadow found
-after a little time had passed. The picture she put before him hurt him.
-"It was an error of judgment to have believed her a saint because she
-could hypnotize you--if that was what it was; but the fact that she
-can't hypnotize you any longer--that she's too unhappy to have any power
-of that sort--doesn't prove she's not a saint. Of course she's not. Why
-should she be?"
-
-"I'm sure I don't know why she should be; but she used to behave as if
-she were one, didn't she? And when I saw that she wasn't one in that way
-I began to see that she wasn't in other ways, too. It was she who made
-me so unjust, so unkind to poor Barney. _She_ was so unjust and so
-unkind; and I never saw it till then. I was blind till then; though you
-saw very well, that day you came to Connaught Square, that it was a sort
-of spell she cast. It was a spell, Roger. The moment I saw her, after
-the baby's death, I forgot everything she'd done and felt I loved her
-again. She willed me to. So as to get power over me. Everything, always,
-with her, was to get power over other people's lives," said Mrs.
-Chadwick, and as he had, in the past, heard echoes of Adrienne in all
-she said, now he heard echoes of Meg, "It's by willing it, you know.
-Some people practise it like five-finger exercises. You have to sit
-quite still and shut your eyes and concentrate. Meg has heard how it's
-done. I don't pretend to understand; but that must have been her way.
-And she made poor Barney miserable and set me against him at once; you
-said so yourself, Roger, and blinded me to all the cruel things she did.
-It was to punish him, you know. To make him feel he was dreadfully wrong
-and she quite right; about Meg, and everything else; for you came in,
-too. It used to be so dreadful at Torquay. I knew it would be sad there;
-but I never guessed how sad it would be--with that horrid blue, blue
-sea. She used to sit, day after day, on the terrace of the house, and
-gaze and gaze at the sea and if Barney would come, so lovingly, and ask
-her what he could do for her and take her hand, oh, it was more and more
-mournful, the way she would look at him; that dreadful, loving look that
-didn't mean love at all, but only trying to break him down and make him
-_say_ that he was down. I begged Barney's pardon, Roger, for having
-treated him as I did. We treated him dreadfully, all of us; because she
-put him, always, in the wrong. Oh, no, Roger, I'm sorry for her, but
-she's a dangerous woman; or _was_ dangerous. For now she has lost it all
-and has become like everybody else; quite ordinary and unhappy."
-
-He felt, in the little silence that, again, followed, that he could
-hardly better this summing-up. That was precisely what poor Adrienne
-Toner had become; ordinary and unhappy. The two things she would have
-believed herself least capable of becoming. There was nothing to be
-gained in urging extenuating circumstances, especially since he was not
-sure that there were any. Mrs. Chadwick, at bottom, saw as clearly as he
-did. He asked her presently, leaving the theme of Adrienne, whether she
-would not seriously consider going away for a little while with Nancy.
-"Meg could go down to The Little House," he said.
-
-"Oh, no, she couldn't, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick, "she won't go
-anywhere. She'll hardly speak to Monica. She just sits out-of-doors, all
-day, wrapped in a cloak, in the corner of the garden, staring in front
-of her, and she pays not the slightest attention to anything I say. And
-at night, in her room, I hear her sobbing, sobbing, as if her heart
-would break. I can't think hardly of Eric any longer, Roger. Isn't it
-strange; but it's almost as if he were my son that had been killed. And
-Barney may be killed," the poor mother's lip and chin began to tremble.
-"And you, too, Roger. I don't know how we shall live through all that we
-must bear and I keep thinking of the foolish little things, like your
-having cold feet and wearing the same clothes day after day in those
-horrible trenches. He suffered it all, poor Eric. No, I can't think
-hardly of him. All the same," she sobbed, "my heart is broken when I
-remember that they can never be married now."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-"That's the way Mummy surprises one," said Barney as he and Oldmeadow
-went together through the Coldbrooks woods. "One feels her, usually,
-such a darling goose and then, suddenly, she shows one that she can be a
-heroine."
-
-Barney was going to France in two days' time and Oldmeadow within the
-fortnight, and the Coldbrooks good-byes had just been said. It had been
-poor Meg who had broken down and clung and cried. Mrs. Chadwick had, to
-the very last, talked with grave cheerfulness of Barney's next leave and
-given wise advice as if he had been merely leaving them for a rather
-perilous mountain-climbing feat. Oldmeadow could hardly believe her the
-same woman that he had seen ten days before.
-
-He was staying at The Little House and had come up on this afternoon of
-Barney's departure to join him at Coldbrooks and walk down with him.
-Barney had not yet seen or said good-bye to Nancy and her mother, and
-Oldmeadow had seized this, his only chance, of a talk with him. But, as
-they left the woods and began to climb the bare hill-side, Barney went
-on:
-
-"I've wanted a talk, too, Roger. I'm glad you managed this."
-
-"It doesn't rob anyone of you, does it," said Oldmeadow. "We'll get to
-Chelford in time to give you a good half-hour with them before your car
-comes for you."
-
-"That will be enough for Nancy," said Barney. "The less she sees of me,
-the better she's pleased. I've lots of things I want to say, Roger. Of
-course you understand that in every way it's a relief to be going out."
-
-"It settles things; or seems to settle them," said Oldmeadow. "They take
-another place at all events."
-
-"Yes; just that. They take another place. What difference does it make,
-after all, if a fellow has made a mess of his personal life when his
-personal life has ceased to count. I'm not talking mawkish sentiment
-when I say I hope I'll be killed--if I can be of some use first. I see
-no other way out of it. I'm sorry for Adrienne, after a fashion, for
-she's dished herself, too. We made a hopeless mistake in getting married
-and she knows it as well as I do; and when a man and woman don't love
-each other any longer it's the man's place to get out if he can."
-
-"It was about Adrienne I wanted to talk to you, Barney." For the first
-time in their long friendship Oldmeadow felt that he spoke to an equal.
-Barney had at last ceased to be a boy. "I've seen her, since seeing you
-that last time in the train."
-
-"Well?" Barney inquired, as Oldmeadow paused. "What have you got to say
-to me about Adrienne, Roger? You've not said very much, from the
-beginning; but everything you have said has been true and I've forgotten
-none of it. I'm the more inclined," and he smiled with a slight
-bitterness, "to listen to you now."
-
-"That's just the trouble," Oldmeadow muttered. "You've forgotten
-nothing. That's what I feel, with remorse. That it was I who helped to
-spoil things for you both, from the beginning. You'd not have seen her
-defects as you did if I hadn't shown them to you; and if you hadn't seen
-them you'd have adjusted yourselves to each other and have found them
-out together. She'd not have resented your finding them out in the
-normal course of your shared lives. It's been my opinion of her, in the
-background of both your minds, that has envenomed everything."
-
-Barney listened quietly. "Yes," he assented. "That's all true enough. As
-far as it goes. I mightn't have seen if you hadn't shown me. But I can't
-regret you did show me, for anything else would have been to have gone
-through life blind; as blind as Adrienne is herself. And it's because
-she can't stand being seen through that she revealed so much more; so
-much that you didn't see and that I had to find out for myself. What you
-saw was absurdity and inexperience; they're rather loveable defects; I
-think I accepted them from the beginning, because of all the other
-things I believed in her. You said, too, you remember, that she'd never
-know she was wrong. Well, it's worse than that. She'll never know she's
-wrong and she won't bear it that you should think her anything but
-right. She's rapacious. She's insatiable. Nothing but everything will
-satisfy her. You must be down on your knees, straight down, before her;
-and if you're not, she has no use for you. She turns to stone and you
-break your head and your heart against her. It's hatred Adrienne has
-felt for me, Roger, and I'm afraid I've felt it for her, too. She's done
-things and said things that I couldn't have believed her capable of;
-mean things; clever things; cruelly clever that get you right on the
-raw; things I can't forget. There's much more in her than you saw at the
-beginning. I was right rather than you about that; only they weren't
-the things I thought."
-
-Oldmeadow walked, cutting at the withered way-side grasses with his
-cane. Barney's short, slow sentences seemed to sting him as they came.
-He had to adjust himself to their smart; to adjust himself to the
-thought of this malignant Adrienne. Yet what he felt was not all
-surprise; he had foreseen, suspected, even this. "I know," he said at
-last; "I mean, I can see that it would happen just like that."
-
-"It did happen just like that," said Barney. "I don't claim to have been
-an angel or anything like one. I gave her as good as I got, or nearly,
-sometimes, no doubt. But I know that it wasn't my fault. I know it was
-Adrienne who spoiled everything."
-
-They had come out now on the upland road. The country dropped away
-beneath them wrapped in the dull mole-colour, the distant, dull
-ultramarines of the November afternoon. The smell of burning weeds was
-in the air and, in the west, a long, melancholy sheet of advancing
-rain-cloud hid the sun. Oldmeadow wondered if he and Barney would ever
-walk there together again, and his mind plunged deep into the past, the
-many years of friendship to which this loved country had been a
-background.
-
-"Barney," he said, "what I wanted to say is this: All that you feel is
-true; I'm sure of it. But other things are true, too. I've seen her and
-I've changed about her. If I was right before, I'm right now. She's been
-blind because she didn't know she could be broken. Well, she's beginning
-to break."
-
-"Is she?" said Barney, and his quiet was implacable. "I can quite
-imagine that, you know. Everyone, except poor Palgrave--all the rest of
-us, have found out that she's not the beautiful benignant being she
-thought she was, and that bewilders her and makes her pretty wretched,
-no doubt."
-
-Oldmeadow waited a moment. "I want you to see her," he said. "Don't be
-cruel. You are a little cruel, you know. It's because you are thinking
-of her abstractly; remembering only how she has hurt you. If you could
-see her, see how unhappy she is, you'd feel differently. That's what I
-want you to do. That's what I beg you to do, Barney."
-
-"I can't," said Barney after a moment. "That I can't do, Roger. It's
-over. She might want me back if she could get me back adoring her. It's
-only so she'd want me. But it's over. It's more than over. There's
-something else." Barney's face showed no change from its sad fixity.
-"You were right about that, too. It's Nancy I ought to have married.
-It's Nancy I love. And Adrienne knows it."
-
-At this there passed before Oldmeadow's mind the memory of the small,
-dark, hurrying figure, the memory of the words she had spoken: "Some
-things are like living creatures; and they can die. They can die."
-
-He felt rather sick. "In that case, how can you blame your wife?" he
-muttered. "Doesn't that explain it all?"
-
-"No, it doesn't explain it all." There was no fire of self-justification
-in Barney's voice. It was as fixed and sad as his face. "It was only
-after Adrienne made me so wretched I began to find it out. She was
-jealous of Nancy from the beginning, of course. But then she was jealous
-of everything that wasn't, every bit of it, hers. She had no reason for
-jealousy. No man was ever more in love than I was with Adrienne. Even
-now I don't feel for Nancy what I felt for her. It's something, I
-believe, one only feels once and if it burns out it burns out for ever.
-With Nancy, it's as if I had come home; and Adrienne and I were parted
-before I knew that I was turning to her."
-
-They had begun the final descent into Chelford and the wind now brought
-a fine rain against their faces. Neither spoke again until the grey
-roofs of the village came into sight at a turning of the road. "About
-money matters, Roger," Barney said. "Mother and Meg and Barbara. If you
-get through, and I don't, will you see to them for me? I've appointed
-you my trustee. I told Adrienne last summer that I couldn't take any of
-her money any longer, so that, of course, with my having thrown up the
-city job and taken on the farms, my affairs are in a bit of a mess. But
-I hope they'll be able to go on at Coldbrooks all right. Palgrave will
-have Coldbrooks if I don't come back, and perhaps you'll be able to
-prevent him handing it over to his Socialist friends."
-
-"Palgrave would be safely human if it came to taking care of his mother
-and sisters," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Would he?" said Barney. "I don't know."
-
-Across the village green the lights of The Little House shone at them.
-The curtains were still undrawn and, as they waited at the door, they
-could see Nancy in the drawing-room, sitting by the fire alone.
-
-"I want you to come in with me, please, Roger," said Barney. "Nancy
-hasn't felt it right to be very kind to me of late and she'll be able
-to be kinder if you are there. You'll know, you'll see if a chance comes
-for me to say what I want to say to her. You might leave us for a moment
-then."
-
-"You have hardly more than a half-hour, you know," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"One can say a good deal in a half-hour," Barney replied.
-
-Nancy had risen and, as they entered, she came forward, trying to smile
-and holding out her hand to each. But Oldmeadow was staying there. He
-was not going in half an hour. There was no reason why Nancy should give
-him her hand and Barney, quietly, took both her hands in his. "It's
-good-bye, then, Nancy, isn't it?" he said.
-
-They stood there in the firelight together, his dear young people, both
-so pale, both so fixedly looking at each other, and Nancy still tried to
-smile as she said, "It's dear of you to have come." But her face
-betrayed her. It was sick with the fear that, in conquering her own
-heart, she should hurt Barney's; Barney's, whom she might never see
-again. Oldmeadow went on to the fire and stood, his back to them,
-looking down at it.
-
-"Oh, no, it's not; not dear at all," Barney returned. "You knew I'd come
-to say good-bye, of course. Why haven't you been over to see me, you and
-Aunt Monica? I've asked you often enough."
-
-"You mustn't scold me to-day, Barney, since it's good-bye. We couldn't
-come," said Nancy.
-
-"It's never I who scold you. It's you who scold me. Not openly, I know,"
-said Barney, "but by implication; punish me, by implication. I quite
-understood why you haven't come. Well, I want things to be clear now.
-Roger's here, and I want to say them before him, because he's been in it
-all since the beginning. It's because of Adrienne you've never come; and
-changed so much in every way towards me."
-
-He had kept her hands till then, but Oldmeadow heard now that she drew
-away from him. For a moment she did not speak; and then it was not to
-answer him. "Have you said good-bye to her, Barney?"
-
-"No; I haven't," Barney answered. "I'm not going to say good-bye to
-Adrienne, Nancy. It must be plain to you by this time that Adrienne and
-I have parted. What did it all mean but that?"
-
-"It didn't mean that to her. She never dreamed it was meaning that,"
-said Nancy.
-
-"Well, she said it, often enough," Barney retorted.
-
-"Barney, please listen to me," said Nancy. "You must let me speak. She
-never dreamed it was meaning that. If she was unkind to you it was
-because she could not believe it would ever mean parting. She had
-started wrong; by holding you to blame; after the baby; when you and
-Roger so hurt her pride. And then she wasn't able to go back. She wasn't
-able to see it all so differently--just to get you back. It would have
-seemed wrong to her; a weakness, just because she longed so. And then,
-most of all, she believed you loved her enough to come of yourself."
-
-"I tried to," said Barney, in the sad, bitter voice of the hill-side
-talk with Oldmeadow. "You see, you don't know everything, Nancy, though
-you know so much. I tried to again and again."
-
-"Yes. I know you did. But only on your own terms. And by then I had come
-in. Oh, yes, I had, Barney. You didn't know it. It was long, long before
-you knew. But I knew it; and so did she and it was more than she could
-bear. What woman could bear it? I couldn't have, in her place." Tears
-were in Nancy's voice.
-
-"It's queer, Nancy," said Barney, "that--barring Palgrave, who doesn't
-count--you and Roger are the only two people she has left to stick up
-for her. Roger's just been saying all that to me, you know. The two she
-tried to crab whenever she got a chance. Well, say it's my fault, then.
-Say that I've been faithless to my wife and fallen in love with another
-woman. The fact is there, and you've said it now yourself. I don't love
-her any longer. I shall never love her again. And I love you. I love
-you, Nancy, and it's you I ought to have married; would have married, I
-believe, if I hadn't been a blinded fool. I love you, and I can say it
-now because this may be the end of everything. Don't let her spoil this,
-too. Nancy darling, look at me. Can't you consent to forget Adrienne for
-this one time, when we may never see each other again?"
-
-"I can't forget her! I can't forget her!" Nancy sobbed. "I mustn't.
-She's miserable. She hasn't stopped loving you. And she's your wife."
-
-"Do you want to make me hate her?"
-
-"Oh, Barney--that is cruel of you."
-
-There was a silence and in it Oldmeadow heard Barney's car draw up at
-the gate. He took out his watch. There were only a few more moments left
-them. Not turning to them he said. "It does her no good, you know, Nancy
-dear."
-
-"No. It does her no good," Barney repeated. "But forgive me. I was
-cruel. I don't hate her. I'm sorry for her. It's simply that we ought
-never to have married. Forget it, Nancy, and forget her. Don't let it
-be, then, that I love you and don't love my wife. Let it be in the old
-way. As if she'd never come. As if I'd come to say good-bye to my
-cousin; to my dearest friend on earth. Look at me. Give me your hands.
-It's your face I want to take with me."
-
-"Five minutes, Barney," Oldmeadow whispered, as he went past them. Nancy
-had given him her hands; she had lifted her face to his, and Barney's
-arms had closed around her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-Mrs. Averil was in the hall. "Give them another moment," he said. "I'm
-going outside."
-
-Tears were in his own eyes. He stepped out on to the flagged path of the
-little plot in front of the house where strips of turf and rose-beds ran
-between the house and the high wall. Between the clipped holly-trees at
-the gate he saw Barney's car, and its lights, the wall between, cast a
-deep shadow over the garden.
-
-The rain was falling thickly now and he stood, feeling it on his face,
-filled with a sense of appeasement, of accomplishment. They were
-together at last. It was not too late. At such a time, when all the
-world hung on the edge of an abyss, to be together for a moment might
-sum up more of real living than many happy years. They knew each other's
-hearts and what more could life give its creatures than that
-recognition.
-
-Suddenly, how he did not know, for there was no apparent movement and
-his eyes were fixed on the pallid sky, he became aware that a figure was
-leaning against the house in the shadow beside him. His eyes found it
-and it was familiar. Yet he could not believe his eyes.
-
-She was leaning back, her hands against the wall on either side, and he
-saw, with the upper layer of perception that so often blunts a violent
-emotion, that her feet were sunken in the mould of Mrs. Averil's
-rose-bed and that the cherished shoots of the new climbing rose were
-tangled in her clothes. The open window was but a step away.
-
-She had come since they had come. She had crept up. She had looked
-in--for how long?--and had fallen back, casting out her arms so that it
-might not be to the ground. Her eyes were closed; but she had heard and
-seen him. As he stood before her, aghast, unable to find a word, he
-heard her mutter: "Take me away, please."
-
-Barney's car blocked the egress of the gate and Barney might emerge at
-any moment. He leaned towards her and found that she was intricately
-caught in the rose. Her hat with its veil, her sleeve, her hair, were
-all entangled.
-
-Dumbly, patiently, she stood, while, with fumbling fingers and terror
-lest they should be heard within--Mrs. Averil's voice now reached him
-from the drawing-room--Oldmeadow released her and, his fingers deeply
-torn by the thorns, he was aware, in all the tumult of his thought, more
-than of the pain, of the wet fragrance of the roses that surrounded her.
-He shared what he felt to be her panic.
-
-She had come hoping to see Barney; she had come to say good-bye to
-Barney, who would not come to her; and his heart sickened for her at the
-shameful seeming of her plight. She knew now that it must be her hope
-never to see Barney again.
-
-There was a narrow passage, leading to the lawn and garden, between the
-house and the stable walls. Thickly grown with ivy, showing only a
-narrow opening above, where chimneys and gables cut against the sky, it
-was nearly as dark as a tunnel, and into this place of hiding he half
-led, half carried the unfortunate woman.
-
-With the darkness, the pungent smell of the wet ivy closed thickly,
-ominously about them. It was as if he and Adrienne Toner were buried
-there together. He heard a maid laugh far away and a boy passed on the
-green stridently whistling "Tipperary." It was like hearing, in the
-grave, the sounds of the upper world.
-
-Adrienne leaned against the wall. The ivy closing round her, nearly
-obliterated her, but he could dimly see the grey disk of her face,
-showing the unexpectedness of contour that reveals itself in the faces
-of the dead. The trivial features were erased and only a shape of grief
-remained, strangely august and emotionless.
-
-An eternity seemed to pass before the front door opened and Mrs.
-Averil's voice, steadied to a galvanized cheerfulness, came, half
-obliterated to a wordless rhythm. Barney's voice answered her, and his
-steps echoed on the flagged path. "Say good-bye to Roger for me if I
-don't see him on the road!" he called out from the gate. Then the car
-coughed, panted; the horn croaked out its cry and, above them, a shaft
-of light across the ivy, of which he had till then been unaware, flitted
-suddenly away, leaving the darkness more visible.
-
-He heard then that she was weeping.
-
-Putting his arm behind her, for the rain fell heavily and the ivy was
-drenched with it, he drew her forward and for a little while it was
-almost against his breast that she lay while her very heart dissolved
-itself in tears.
-
-She had come, he knew it all, with a breakdown of her pride, with a last
-wild hope and, perhaps, a longing to atone, believing that she might
-snatch a word somewhere with her husband, and find her way, at this
-last moment, back to the heart she had so alienated. She had seen all.
-She had heard all. He was sure of it. It had been as an outcast that he
-had found her leaning there. He understood her through and through and
-the tender heaviness that had already so often visited his heart flooded
-it to suffocation.
-
-Among her sobs, he heard her, at last, speaking to him. "Even Palgrave
-doesn't know. He told me--only this afternoon--that Barney was here. I
-thought I might find him. I was going to wait in the road. And when I
-got here there was no car and I was afraid that there was a mistake.
-That I had missed him. And I went up to the house; to the open window;
-and looked in; to see if he was there. It was not jealousy: not now. I
-did not mean to be an eavesdropper. But, when I saw them, I stayed and
-listened. It was not jealousy," she repeated. "It was because I had to
-know that there was no more hope."
-
-"Yes," said Oldmeadow gently, while, with long pauses, she spoke on and
-on; to the impartial judge, to the one sure refuge; and he said "Yes"
-again, gently, after she had finished; a long time after. She still half
-lay against his breast. He had never felt such an infinite tenderness
-towards any creature; not since his boyhood and his mother's death.
-
-She drew away from him at last. "Take me," she said. "There is a train;
-back to Oxford." She had ceased to weep. Her voice was hoarse and faint.
-
-"Did you walk up from the station? You're not fit to walk back. I can
-get a trap. There's a man just across the green."
-
-"No. Walking, please. I would be recognized. They might know me. I can
-walk. If you will help me."
-
-He drew her arm through his. "Lean on me," he said. "We'll go slowly."
-
-They went past the drawing-room windows and, softly opening, softly
-shutting, through the gate. The road, when it turned the corner, left
-the village behind; between its rarely placed trees, vague silhouettes
-against the sky that seemed of one texture with them, it showed its
-mournful pallor for only a little space before them; there was not
-enough light left in the sky to glimmer on its pools. The fields, on
-either side, vanished into obscurity. Pale cattle, once, over a hedge,
-put disconsolate heads and lowed and a garrulous dog, as they passed by,
-ran out from a way-side farm-yard, smelt at their heels, growled
-perfunctorily and, having satisfied his sense of duty, went back to his
-post. The sense of dumb emptiness was so complete that it was only after
-they had gone a long way that he knew that she was weeping and the soft,
-stifling sounds seemed only a part of nature's desolation.
-
-Her head bent down, she stumbled on, leaning on his arm, and from time
-to time she raised her handkerchief and pressed it to her mouth and
-nose. He did not say a word; nor did she.
-
-As he led her along, submissive to her doom, it was another feeling of
-accomplishment that overwhelmed him; the dark after the radiant; after
-Nancy and Barney, he and Adrienne. It was this, from their first
-meeting, that he had been destined to mean to her. She was his appointed
-victim. He had killed, as really as if with a knife, the girl whom he
-had seen at Coldbrooks, in the sunlight, on that Sunday morning in
-spring, knowing no doubts. She had then held the world in her hands and
-a guileless, untried heaven had filled her heart. Between her and this
-crushed and weeping woman there seemed no longer any bond; unless it was
-the strange aching that, in his heart, held them both together.
-
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat in Mrs. Aldesey's drawing-room and, the tea-table between
-them, Mrs. Aldesey poured out his tea. So it was, after three years,
-that they found each other. So it was, all over the world, Oldmeadow
-said to himself, that the tea-table, or its equivalent, reasserted
-itself in any interval where the kindly amenities of human intercourse
-could root themselves; though the world rocked and flames of anarchy
-rimmed its horizons.
-
-It was more real, he felt that now, to sit and look at Lydia over her
-tea than to parch on Eastern sands and shiver in Western trenches; from
-the mere fact that the one experience became a nightmare while the other
-was as natural as waking at dawn. Horrors became the dropped stitches of
-life; and though if there were too many of them they would destroy the
-stocking, the stocking itself was made up of tea-table talks and walks
-in the woods with Nancy. He had just come from Coldbrooks.
-
-So he put it, trivially, to himself, and he felt the need of clinging to
-triviality. The dropped stitches had been almost too much for him and
-the nightmare, at times, had seemed the only reality. At times he had
-known a final despair of life and even now he remembered that the worst
-might still come. One might be called upon to face the death of the
-whole order of civilization. Faith required one, perhaps, to recognize
-that the human spirit was bound up, finally, with no world order and
-unless one could face its destruction as one had to face the death of a
-loved individual, one was not secure of the spiritual order that
-transcended all mundane calamity. He believed, or hoped, that during
-these last three years, in Gallipoli, Egypt and Palestine, when, to the
-last fibre, he had felt his faiths tested, he had learned to be ready
-for the great relinquishment, should it be required of him; and it was
-therefore the easier to doff that consciousness, as he might have doffed
-a sword, and think of Lydia and of the order that still survived and
-that she still stood for.
-
-Lydia did not look the worse for the war; indeed she looked the better.
-She looked as if, in spite of long days in the hospital, she digested
-better and, in spite of air-raids, slept better, and as they talked,
-finding their way back to intimacy by the comparing of such
-superficialities, she told him that for years she hadn't been so strong
-or well. "Nothing is so good for you, I've found out, as to feel that
-you are being used; being used by something worth while. People like
-myself must keep still about our experiences, for we've had none that
-bear talking of. But even the others, even the people bereaved
-unspeakably, are strangely lifted up. And I believe that the populace
-enjoys the air-raids rather than the reverse; they give them a chance of
-feeling that they are enduring something, too; with good-humour and
-pluck. If anyone is pessimistic about the effect of war on average human
-nature, I should only ask them to come and talk to our men at the
-hospital. Of course, under it all, there's the ominous roar in one's
-ears all the time."
-
-"Do you mean the air-raids?" he asked her and, shaking her head,
-showing him that she, too, had seen with him and, he believed, with him
-accepted: "No; I mean the roar of nation after nation collapsing into
-the abyss. A sort of tumbril roar of civilization, Roger. And, for that,
-there's always the last resource of going gallantly to the guillotine.
-But all the same, I believe we shall pull through."
-
-It was the spring of 1918 and one needed faith to believe it. She asked
-him presently about his friends at Coldbrooks. He had gone to Coldbrooks
-for three days of his one week's leave. After this he went to France.
-
-"What changes for you there, poor Roger," said Mrs. Aldesey.
-
-"Yes. Terrible changes. Palgrave dead and Barney broken. Yet, do you
-know, it's not as sad as it was. Something's come back to it. Nancy sits
-by him and holds his hand and is his joy and comfort."
-
-"Will he recover?"
-
-"Not in the sense of being really mended. He'll go on crutches, always,
-if he gets up. But the doctors now hope that the injury to the back
-isn't permanent."
-
-"And Meg's married," said Mrs. Aldesey after a little pause. "Have you
-seen her?"
-
-"No. She runs a hospital in the country, at her husband's place, Nancy
-tells me; and is very happy."
-
-"Very. Has a fine boy, and is completely reinstated. It's a remarkable
-ending to the story, isn't it? She met him at the front, you know,
-driving her ambulance; and he has twice as much in him as poor Eric
-Hayward."
-
-"Remarkable. Yet Meg's a person who only needs her chance. She's the
-sort that always comes out on top."
-
-"Does it comfort her mother a little for all she's suffered to see her
-on top?"
-
-"It almost comically comforts her. All the same, Eleanor Chadwick has
-her depths. Nothing will ever comfort her for Palgrave's death."
-
-"I understand that," said Mrs. Aldesey. "Nothing could. How she must
-envy the happy mothers whose boys were killed at the front. To have
-one's boy die in prison as a conscientious objector must be the
-bitterest thing the war has given any mother to bear."
-
-"He was a dear boy," said Oldmeadow. "Heroically wrong-minded." He could
-hardly bear to think of Palgrave.
-
-"He wasn't alone, you know," said Mrs. Aldesey after a moment. Something
-was approaching that he would rather not have to speak of; a name he
-would so much rather not name. And, evading it, feebly, he said, "His
-mother got to him in time, I know."
-
-"Yes. But all the time. She went and lived near the prison. Adrienne
-Toner I mean."
-
-Her eyes were on him and he hoped that no readjustment of his features
-was visible. "Oh, yes. Nancy told me that," he said.
-
-"What's become of her, Roger?" Mrs. Aldesey asked. "Since Charlie was
-killed the Lumleys have lived in the country and I hardly see them. I
-haven't heard a word of her for years."
-
-He was keeping his eyes on her and he knew from her expression that he
-showed some strain or some distress.
-
-"Nor have I. Nancy said that they hadn't either. She went away, after
-Palgrave's death. Disappeared completely."
-
-"Nancy told you, of course, about the money; the little fortune she gave
-Palgrave, so that he could leave it to his mother?"
-
-"Oh, yes. Nancy wrote to me of that."
-
-"It was cleverly contrived, wasn't it. They are quite tied up to it,
-aren't they; whatever they may feel. No one could object to her giving a
-fortune to the boy she'd ruined. I admired that in her, I must confess;
-the way she managed it. And then her disappearance."
-
-"Very clever indeed," said Oldmeadow. "All that remains for her to do
-now is to manage to get killed. And that's easily managed. Perhaps she
-is killed."
-
-He did not intend that his voice should be emptier or dryer, yet Lydia
-looked at him with a closer attention.
-
-"Barney and Nancy could get married then," she said.
-
-"Yes. Exactly. They could get married."
-
-"That's what you want, isn't it, Roger?"
-
-"Want her to be killed, or them to be married?"
-
-"Well, as you say, so many people _are_ being killed. One more or less,
-if it's in such a good cause as their marriage--"
-
-"It's certainly a good cause. But I don't like the dilemma," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-He knew from the way she looked at him, discreet and disguised as her
-recognition was, that he was hiding something from her. Casting about
-his mind, in the distress that took the form of confusion, he could
-himself find nothing that he hid, or wished to hide, unless it was the
-end of Adrienne's story as Barney's wife. That wasn't for him to show;
-ever; to anyone.
-
-"Perhaps she's gone back to America," said Mrs. Aldesey presently,
-"California, you know. Or Chicago. She may very well be engaged in great
-enterprises out there that we never hear of. They'd be sure to be great,
-wouldn't they."
-
-"I suppose they would."
-
-"You saw her once more, didn't you, at the time you saw Palgrave," Mrs.
-Aldesey went on. "Lady Lumley told me of that. And how kind you had
-been. Adrienne had spoken of it. You were sorry for them both, I
-suppose; for her as well as for him, in spite of everything. Or did she
-merely take it for granted that the kindness to him extended to her?"
-
-"Not at all. It was for her too," said Oldmeadow, staring a little and
-gathering together, after this lapse of time that seemed so immense, his
-memories of that other tea-table set up in the chaos: Palgrave's
-tea-table on that distant day in Oxford. What was so confusing him was
-his consciousness that it hadn't been the last time he had seen
-Adrienne. "I was as sorry for her as for him," he went on. "Sorrier.
-There was so much more in her than I'd supposed. She was capable of
-intense suffering."
-
-"In losing her husband's affections, you mean? You never suspected her
-of being inhuman, surely? Lady Lumley blamed poor Barney for all that
-sad story. But, even from her account, I could see his side very
-plainly."
-
-"Perhaps I did think her inhuman. At all events I thought her
-invulnerable."
-
-"Yes. I remember. With all her absurdity you thought she had great
-power." Mrs. Aldesey looked at him thoughtfully. "And it was when you
-found she hadn't that you could be sorry for her."
-
-"Not at all," said Oldmeadow again. "I still think she has great power.
-People can have power and go to pieces."
-
-"Did she go to pieces? That day in Oxford? I can't imagine her in
-pieces, you know."
-
-He had a feeling of drawing back; or of drawing Adrienne back. "In the
-sense of being so unhappy, so obviously unhappy, over Palgrave," he
-said.
-
-He saw that Lydia would have liked to go on questioning, as, of course,
-it would have been perfectly natural for her to do. Was not Adrienne
-Toner and her absurdity one of their pet themes? Yet she desisted. She
-desisted and it was because she felt some change in him; some shrinking
-and some pain. "Well, let's hope that she is happy, now, or as happy as
-she can be, poor thing, doing great deeds in America," she said. And she
-turned the talk back to civilization and its danger.
-
-They talked a good deal about civilization during their last three days
-together. He wanted things, during these three days of mingled recovery
-and farewell, to be as happy as possible between him and his friend, for
-he knew that Lydia's heart was heavy, for him and not for civilization.
-The front to which he was going was more real to her, because it was
-much nearer, and his peril was more real than during his absence in
-distant climes. He felt himself that the French front, at this special
-time, would probably make an end of him and, for the first time since
-their early friendship, he knew conjecture as to his relation with
-Lydia; wondered, if it had not been for Mr. Aldesey in New York, whether
-Lydia might have been in love with him, and realized, with a curious
-sense of anxiety and responsibility, that her friendship for him now was
-the closest tie in her life. The war might to her, too, mean irreparable
-loss. And he was sorry that it was so; sorry to think that the easy,
-happy intercourse had this hidden depth of latent suffering.
-
-Lydia's feeling, and its implications, became the clearer to him when,
-on their last evening together, she said to him suddenly: "Perhaps
-you'll see her over there."
-
-He could not pretend not to know whom she meant, nor could he pretend to
-himself not to see that if it troubled Lydia that he should be sorry for
-Adrienne that could only be because she cared far more for him than he
-had ever guessed.
-
-He said, as easily as he could manage it, for the pressure of his
-realizations made him feel a little queer: "Not if she's in America."
-
-"Ah, but perhaps she's come back from America," said Mrs. Aldesey.
-"She's a great traveller. What will you do with her if you do find her?
-Bring her back to Barney?"
-
-"Hardly that," he said. "There'd be no point in bringing her back to
-Barney, would there?"
-
-"Well, then, what would you do with her?" Mrs. Aldesey smiled, as if
-with a return to their old light dealing with the theme, while, still in
-her nurse's coiffe and dress, she leaned back against her chair.
-
-"What would she do with me, rather, isn't it?" he asked. And he, too,
-tried to be light.
-
-"She'll be mended then, you think? Able to do things to people again?"
-
-"I'm not at all afraid of her, you know. She never did me any harm," he
-said.
-
-"Because you were as strong as she, you mean. She did other people harm,
-surely. You warned me once to keep away from her unless I wanted to lose
-my toes and fingers," Mrs. Aldesey still smiled. "She does make people
-lose things, doesn't she?"
-
-"Well, she makes them gain things, too. Fortunes for instance. Perhaps
-if I find her, she'll give me a fortune."
-
-"But that's only when she's ruined you," she reminded him.
-
-"And it's she who's ruined now," he felt bound to remind her; no longer
-lightly.
-
-Leaning back in her chair, her faded little face framed in white, Mrs.
-Aldesey looked at once younger yet more tired than he had ever seen her
-look and she sat for a little while silent; as if she had forgotten
-Adrienne Toner and were thinking only of their parting. But all her
-gaiety had fallen from her as she said at last: "I can be sorry for her,
-too; if she's really ruined. If she still loves him when he has ceased
-to care for her. Does she, do you think?"
-
-With the question he seemed to see a fire-lit room and lovers who had
-found each other and to smell wet roses. Lydia was coming too near; too
-near the other figure, outside the window, fallen back with outstretched
-arms against the roses. And again he felt himself softly, cautiously,
-disentangle the sleeve, the hair, felt himself draw Adrienne away into
-the darkness where the smell was now of wet ivy and where he could see
-only the shape of an accepting grief.
-
-"How could I know?" he said. "She was very unhappy when I last saw her.
-But three years have passed and people can mend in three years."
-
-"Especially in America," Mrs. Aldesey suggested. "It's a wonderful place
-for mending. Let's hope she's there. Let's hope that we shall never, any
-of us, ever hear of her again. That would be much the happiest thing,
-wouldn't it?"
-
-He was obliged to say that it would certainly be much the happiest
-thing; and he was too unhappy about Lydia to be able to feel angry with
-her. He knew how tired she must be when, for the first time in their
-long friendship, she must know that she was not pleasing him, yet not be
-able to help herself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-"Good Lord!" Oldmeadow heard himself groaning.
-
-Even as he took possession of his physical suffering he knew that there
-was satisfaction in suffering, at last, himself. Until now the worst
-part of war had been to see the sufferings of others. This was at last
-the real thing; but it was so mingled with acquiescence that it ceased
-to be the mere raw fact. "We're all together, now," he thought, and he
-felt himself, even as he groaned, lifted on a wave of beatitude.
-
-Until now he had not, as a consciousness, known anything. There was a
-shape in his memory, a mere immense black blot shot with fiery lights.
-It must symbolize the moment when the shell struck him, bending, in the
-trench, over his watch and his calculations. And after that there were
-detached visions, the ceiling of a train where he had swung in a hammock
-bed, looking up; clean sheets, miraculously clean and the face of a
-black-browed nurse who reminded him of Trixie. The smell of chloroform
-was over everything. It bound everything together so that days might
-have passed since the black blot and since he lay here, again in clean
-sheets, the sweet, thick smell closing round him and a raging thirst in
-his throat. He knew that he had just been carried in from the operating
-room and he groaned again "Good Lord," feeling the pain snatch as if
-with fangs and claws at his thigh and belly, and muttered, "Water!"
-
-Something sweet, but differently sweet from the smell, sharp, too, and
-insidious, touched his lips and opening them obediently, as a young bird
-opens its bill to the parent bird, he felt a swab passed round his
-parched mouth and saw the black-browed nurse. "Not water, yet, you
-know," she said. "This is lemon and glycerine and will help you
-wonderfully."
-
-He wanted to ask something about Paris and the long-distance gun firing
-on it every day and he seemed to see it over the edge of the trench, far
-away on the horizon of No-man's-land, a tiny city flaming far into the
-sky. But other words bubbled up and he heard himself crying: "Mother!
-Mother!" and remembered, stopping himself with an act of will, that they
-all said that when they were dying. But as he closed his eyes he felt
-her very near and knew that it would be sweet to die and find her.
-
-A long time must have passed. Was it days or only the time of daylight?
-It was night now and a shaded light shone from a recess behind him and
-thoughts, visions, memories raced through his mind. Nancy; Barney; he
-would never see them again, then: poor Lydia and civilization.
-"Civilization will see me out," he thought and he wondered if they had
-taken off the wings of the Flying Victory when they packed her.
-
-A rhythm was beating in his brain. Music was it? Something of Bach's? It
-gathered words to itself and shaped itself sentence by sentence into
-something he had heard? or read? Ah, he was glad to have found it.
-"Under the orders of your devoted officers you will march against the
-enemy or fall where you stand, facing the foe. To those who die I say:
-You will not die: you will enter living into immortality, and God will
-receive you into his bosom." He seemed to listen to the words as he
-lay, quietly smiling. But it was music after all for, as he listened,
-they merged into the "St. Matthew Passion." He had heard it, of course,
-with Lydia, at the Temple. But Lydia did not really care very much for
-Bach. She might care more for "Litanei." She had sung it standing beside
-him with foolish white roses over her ears. How unlike Lydia to wear
-those roses. And was it Lydia who stood there? A mental perplexity
-mingled with the physical pain and spoiled his peace. It was not
-Lydia's, that white face in the coffin with wet ivy behind it. What
-suffering was this that beat upon his heart? The music had faded all
-away and he saw faces everywhere, dying faces; and blood and terrible
-mutilations. All the suffering of the war, worse, far worse than the
-mere claws and fangs that tore at him. Dying boys choked out their
-breaths in agonies of conscious loneliness, yearning for faces they
-would never see again. Oh, how many he had seen die like that!
-Intolerable to watch them. And could one do nothing? "Cigarettes. Give
-them cigarettes," he tried to tell somebody. "And marmalade for
-breakfast; and phonographs, and then they will enter living into
-immortality"--No: he did not mean that. What did he mean? He could catch
-at nothing now. Thoughts were tossed and tumbled like the rubbish of
-wreckage from an inundated town on the deep currents of his anguish. A
-current that raced and seethed and carried him away. He saw it. Its
-breathless speed was like the fever in his blood. If it went faster he
-would lose his breath. Church-bells ringing on the banks lost theirs as
-he sped past so swiftly and made a trail of whining sound.--Effie!
-Effie! It was poor little Effie, drowning. He saw her wild, small face,
-battling. Bubbles boiled up about his cry.
-
-Suddenly the torrent was stilled. Without commotion, without tumult, it
-was stilled. There was a dam somewhere; it had stopped racing; he could
-get his breath. Still and slow; oh! it was delicious to feel that quiet
-hand on his forehead; his mother's hand, and to know that Effie was
-safe. He lay with closed eyes and saw a smooth waterfall sliding and
-curving with green grey depths into the lower currents of the stream. He
-remembered the stream well, now; one of his beloved French rivers; one
-of the smaller, sylvan rivers, too small for majesty; with silver
-poplars spaced against the sky on either bank and a small town, white
-and pink and pearly-grey, clear on the horizon. Tranquil sails were
-above him and the bells from the distant church-tower floated to him
-across the fields. Soundlessly, slowly, he felt himself borne into
-oblivion.
-
-The black-browed nurse was tending him next morning. "You are better,"
-she said, smiling at him. "You slept all night. No; it's a shame, but
-you mayn't have water yet." She put the lemon and glycerine to his lips.
-"The pain is easier, isn't it?"
-
-He said it was. He felt that he must not stir an inch so as to keep it
-easier, but he could not have stirred had he wanted to, for he was all
-tightly swathed and bandaged. He remembered something he wanted
-specially to ask: "Paris? They haven't got it yet?"
-
-"They'll never get it!" she smiled proudly. "Everything is going
-splendidly."
-
-The English surgeon was such a nice fellow. He had spectacles on a
-square-tipped nose and a square, chubby face; yet his hair was nearly
-white. Oldmeadow remembered, as if of days before the flood, that his
-name was a distinguished one. Perhaps it was morphia they gave him,
-after his wound was dressed, or perhaps he fainted. The day passed in a
-hot and broken stupor and at night the tides of fever rose again and
-carried him away. But, again, before he had lost his breath, before he
-had quite gone down into delirium, the quiet hand came and sent him,
-under sails, to sleep.
-
-Next day Oldmeadow knew, from the way the surgeon looked at him, that
-his case was grave. His face was grim as he bent over the dressing and
-he hurt horribly. They told him, when it was over, that he had been very
-brave, and, like a child, he was pleased that they should tell him so.
-But the pain was worse all day and the sense of the submerging fever
-imminent, and he lay with closed eyes and longed for the night that
-brought the hand. Hours, long hours passed before it came. Hours of
-sunlight when, behind his eyelids, he saw red, and hours of twilight
-when he saw mauve. Then, for a little while, it was a soft, dense grey
-he saw, like a bat's wing, and then the small light shone across his
-bed; he knew that the night had come, and felt, at last, the hand fall
-softly on his head.
-
-He lay for some time feeling the desired peace flow into him and then,
-through its satisfaction, another desire pushed up into his
-consciousness and he remembered that, more than about Paris, he had
-wanted to speak to the nurse about what she did for him and thank her.
-
-"It's you who make me sleep, isn't it," he said, lying with closed eyes
-under the soft yet insistent pressure. "I've never thanked you."
-
-She did not reply. She did not want him to talk. But he still wanted to.
-
-"I couldn't thank you last night," he said, "I can't keep hold of my
-thoughts. And when morning comes I seem to have forgotten everything
-about the night. You are the nurse who takes care of me in the daytime,
-too, aren't you?"
-
-Again, for a moment, there was no reply; and then a voice came. "No; I
-am the night nurse. Go to sleep now."
-
-It was a voice gentle, cold and soft, like snow. It was not an English
-voice and he had heard it before. Where had he heard it? Rooks were
-cawing and he saw a blue ribbon rolling, rolling out across a
-spring-tide landscape. This voice was not like a blue ribbon; it was
-like snow. Yet, when he turned his head under her hand, he looked round
-at Adrienne Toner.
-
-The first feeling that came uppermost in the medley that filled him at
-the sight of her was one of amused vexation. It was as if he went back
-to his beginnings with her, back to the rooks and the blue ribbon. "At
-it again!" was what he said to himself, and what he said aloud,
-absurdly, was: "Oh, come, now!"
-
-She did not lift her hand, but there was trouble on her face as she
-looked back at him. "I hoped you wouldn't see me, Mr. Oldmeadow," she
-said.
-
-He was reminded of Bacchus and the laying on of hands; but a classical
-analogy, even more ridiculous, came to him with her words. "Like Cupid
-and Psyche," he said. "The other way round. It's I who mustn't look."
-
-The trouble on her face became more marked and he saw that she imagined
-him to be delirious. He was not quite himself, certainly, or he would
-not have greeted Adrienne Toner thus, and he made an effort to be more
-decorous and rational as he said, "I'm very glad to see you again. Safe
-and sound: you know."
-
-She had always had a singular little face, but it had never looked so
-singular as now, seen from below with shadows from the light behind cast
-so oddly over it. The end of her nose jutted from a blue shadow and her
-eyes lay in deep hollows of blue. All that he was sure of in her
-expression was the gravity with which she made up her mind to humour
-him. "We want you to be safe and sound, too. Please shut your eyes and
-go to sleep."
-
-"All right; all right, Psyche," he murmured, and he knew it wasn't quite
-what he intended to say, yet in his flippancy he was taking refuge from
-something; from the flood of suffering that had broken over him the
-other night after he had seen that dead face with white roses over its
-ears. This queer face, half dissolved in blue and yellow, was not dead
-and the white coiffe came closely down about it. If he obeyed her he
-knew that she would keep the other faces away and he closed his eyes
-obediently and lay very still, seeing himself again as the good little
-boy being praised. This was Psyche; not Ariane. "Ariane ma soeur," he
-murmured. It was Ariane who had the white roses--or was it wet ivy? and
-after her face pressed all the other dying faces. "You'll keep them
-away, won't you?" he murmured, and he heard her say: "Yes; I'll keep
-them quite away," and, softly, a curtain of sleep fell before his eyes
-crossed by a thin drift of mythological figures.
-
-"I thought it was you who sent me to sleep," he said to the English
-nurse next day. He could hardly, in the morning light, believe it was
-not a dream.
-
-She smiled with an air of vicarious pride. "No indeed. I can't send
-people to sleep. It's our wonderful Mrs. Chadwick. She does a good deal
-more than put people to sleep. She cures people--oh, I wouldn't have
-believed it myself, till I saw it--who are at death's door. It's lucky
-for you and the others that we've got her here for a little while."
-
-"Where's here?" he asked after a moment.
-
-"Here's Boulogne. Didn't you know?"
-
-"I thought I heard the sea sometimes. It's for cases too bad, then, to
-be taken home. Get her here from where?"
-
-"From her hospital in the firing-line. Now that we're advancing at the
-front everything there is changed and she could come away for a little.
-Sir Kenneth's been begging her to come ever since he saw her. He knew
-she would work marvels here, too." The nice young nurse was exuberant in
-her darkness and rosiness with a Jewish streak of fervour in her lips
-and eyes. "It's a sort of rest for her," she added. "She's been badly
-wounded once. You can just see the scar, under her cap, on her forehead.
-And she nearly died of fever out in Salonika. She had a travelling
-ambulance there before she came to France."
-
-"It must be very restful for her," Oldmeadow remarked with a touch of
-his grim mirth, "if she has to sit up putting all your bad cases to
-sleep. Why haven't I heard of her and her hospital?"
-
-"It's not run in her name. It's an American hospital--she is
-American--called after her mother, I believe. The Pearl Ambulance is
-what it's called and everybody here knows about it; all of us nurses and
-doctors, I mean. Her organizing power is as wonderful as her cures; her
-influence over her staff. They all worship the ground she walks on."
-
-"Pearl, Pearl Toner," Oldmeadow was saying to himself. How complete, how
-perfect it was. And the nurse went on, delighted, evidently, to talk of
-an idol, and rather as if she were speaking of a special cure they had
-installed, a sort of Carrel treatment not to be found anywhere else:
-"Everything's been different since she came. It's almost miraculous to
-see what the mere touch of her hand can do. Matron says she wouldn't be
-surprised if it turned out she was a sort of nun and wore a hair shirt
-under her dress. Whatever she is, it makes one feel better and stronger
-just to see her and one would do anything for her just to have her smile
-at one. She has the most heavenly smile."
-
-It was all very familiar.
-
-"Ah, you haven't abandoned me after all, though I have found you out,"
-he said to Adrienne Toner that night.
-
-He was able at last to see her clearly as she came in, so softly that it
-was like a dream sliding into one's sleep. She was like a dream in her
-nurse's dress which, though so familiar on other women, seemed to
-isolate and make her strange. Her face was smaller than he had
-remembered it and had the curious look, docile yet stubborn, that one
-sees on the faces of dumb-mutes. She might have looked like that had
-she been deafened by the sound of so many bursting shells and lost the
-faculty of speech through doing much and saying nothing among scenes of
-horror. But she spoke to him, after all, as naturally as he spoke to
-her, saying, though with no touch of his lightness: "You mustn't talk,
-you know, if I come to make you sleep. Sir Kenneth wants sleep for you
-more than anything else."
-
-"I promise you to be good," said Oldmeadow. "But I'm really better,
-aren't I? and can talk a little first."
-
-"You are really better. But it will take a long time. A great deal of
-sleeping."
-
-"No one knew what had become of you," said Oldmeadow, and he remembered
-that he ought to be sorry that Adrienne Toner had not been killed.
-
-She hesitated, and then sat down beside him. He thought that she had
-been going to ask him something and then checked herself. "I can't let
-you talk," she said, and in her voice he heard the new authority; an
-authority gained by long submission to discipline.
-
-"Another night, then. We must talk another night," he murmured, closing
-his eyes, for he knew that he must not disobey her. All the same it was
-absurd that Adrienne Toner should be doing this for him; absurd but
-heavenly to feel her hand fall softly, like a warm, light bird, and
-brood upon his forehead.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-They never spoke of Coldbrooks, nor of Barney, nor of Palgrave; not
-once. Not once during all those nights that she sat beside him and made
-him sleep.
-
-He had heard from Coldbrooks, of course; letters came often now. And the
-dark young nurse had written for him since he could not yet write for
-himself. He had said no word of seeing Adrienne. Nor had he let them
-know how near to death he had been and, perhaps, still was. He would
-have liked to have seen Lydia and Nancy if he were to die; but most of
-all he wanted to be sure of not losing Adrienne. And he knew that were
-he to tell them, were they to come, Adrienne would go.
-
-She never spoke to him at all, he remembered--as getting stronger with
-every day, he pieced his memories of these nights together--unless he
-spoke to her; and she never smiled. And it came upon him one morning
-after he had read letters that brought so near the world from which she
-was now shut out, that she had, perhaps, never forgiven him. After all,
-though he could not see that he had been wrong, she had everything to
-forgive him and the thought made him restless. That night, for the first
-time, she volunteered a remark. His temperature had gone up a little. He
-must be very quiet and go to sleep directly.
-
-"Yes; I know," he said. "It's because of you. Things I want to say. I'm
-really so much better. We can't go on like this, can we," he said,
-looking up at her as she sat beside him. "Why, you might slip out of my
-life any day, and I might never hear of you again."
-
-She sat looking down at him, a little askance, though gentle still, if
-gentle was the word for her changed face. "That's what I mean to do,"
-she said.
-
-"Oh, but--" Oldmeadow actually, in his alarm and resentment, struggled
-up on an elbow--"that won't do. I want to see you, really see you, now
-that I'm myself again. I want to talk with you--now that I can talk
-coherently. I want to ask you; well, I won't ask it now." She had put
-out her hand, her small, potent hand, and quietly pressed him back, and
-down upon his pillow while her face took on its look of almost stern
-authority. "I'll be good. But promise me you'll not go without telling
-me. And haven't you questions to ask, too?"
-
-Her face kept its severity, but, as he found this last appeal, her eyes
-widened, darkened, looked, for a moment, almost frightened.
-
-"I know that Barney is safe," she said. "I have nothing to ask."
-
-"Well; no; I see." He felt that he had been guilty of a blunder and it
-made him fretful. "For me, then. Not for you. Promise me. I won't be
-good unless you promise me. You can't go off and leave me like that."
-
-With eyes still dilated, she contemplated this rebellion.
-
-"You must promise me something, then," she said after a moment.
-
-He felt proud, delighted, as if he had gained a victory over her.
-
-"Done. If it's not too hard. What is it?"
-
-"You won't write to anybody. You won't tell anybody that you've seen me.
-Only Lady Lumley knows that I am here. And she has promised not to tell.
-Probably, soon, I shall have left France for ever."
-
-"I won't tell. I won't write. I can keep secrets as well as Lady Lumley.
-She does keep them, you know. So it's a compact."
-
-"Yes. It's a compact. You'll never tell them; and I won't go without
-letting you know. I promise. Now go to sleep."
-
-She laid her hand on his forehead, but, for a little while, he heard her
-breathing deeply and quickly and the sense of his blundering stayed with
-him so that sleep was longer in coming.
-
-All the same he was much better next day. He was able to sit up and had
-the glory and excitement of a chop for his midday dinner. And when the
-pleasant hour of tea arrived it was Adrienne herself who came in
-carrying the little tray.
-
-He had not seen her in daylight before and his first feeling was one of
-alarm, for, if she were afoot like this, in daylight, must it not mean
-that she was soon to leave the hospital? He felt shy of her, too, for,
-altered as she was by night, the day showed her as far more altered.
-Whether she seemed much older or much younger he could not have said.
-The coiffe, covering her forehead, and bound under her chin in a way
-peculiar to her, left only, as it were, the means of expression visible.
-
-She sat down by the window and looked out, glancing round from time to
-time as he drank his tea and it was she who found the calm little
-sentences, about the latest news from the front, the crashing of
-Bulgaria, that carried them on until he had finished. When he had pushed
-down his tray she turned her chair and faced him, folding her hands
-together on her white apron, and she said, and he knew that she had come
-to say it, "What was it you wanted to ask me?"
-
-He had had, while she sat at the window, her profile with the jutting
-nose, and her face, as it turned upon him now, made him think suddenly
-of a seagull. Questing, lonely, with vigilant eyes, it seemed to have
-great spaces before it; to be flying forth into empty spaces and to an
-unseen goal.
-
-"Are you going away, then?" He had not dared, somehow, to ask her
-before. He felt now that he could not talk until he knew.
-
-"Not yet," she said. "But I shall be going soon. The hospital is
-emptying and my nights on duty are very short. I have, really, only you
-and two others to take care of. That's why I am up so early to-day. And
-you are so much better that we can have a little talk; if you have
-anything to ask me."
-
-"It's this, of course," said Oldmeadow. "It seems to me you ought to
-dislike me. I misunderstood you in many ways. And now I owe you my life.
-Before we part I want to thank you and to ask you to forgive me."
-
-Her eyes, seen in daylight, were of the colour of distance, of arctic
-distances. That had always been their colour, though he had never before
-identified it.
-
-"But there is nothing to thank me for," she said. "I am here to take
-care of people."
-
-"Even people who misunderstood you. Even people you dislike. I know."
-He flushed, feeling that he had been duly snubbed. "But though you take
-care of everyone, anyone may thank you, too, mayn't they?"
-
-"I don't dislike you, Mr. Oldmeadow," she said after a moment. "And you
-didn't misunderstand me."
-
-"Oh," he murmured, more abashed than before. "I think so. Not, perhaps,
-what you did; but what you were. I didn't see you as you really were.
-That's what I mean."
-
-The perplexity, which had grown, even, to amazement, had left her eyes
-and she was intently looking at him. "There is nothing for you to be
-sorry for," she said. "Nothing for me to forgive. You were always
-right."
-
-"Always right? I can't take that, you know," said Oldmeadow, deeply
-discomposed. "You were blind, of course, and more sure of yourself than
-any of us can safely afford to be; but I wasn't always right."
-
-"Always. Always," she repeated. "I was blinder than you knew. I was more
-sure of myself."
-
-He lay looking at her and she looked back at him, but with a look that
-invited neither argument not protest. It remained remote and vigilant.
-She might have been the seagull looking down and noting, as she flew
-onward, that the small figure on the beach so far below had ceased to be
-that of an assailant in its attitude. How remote she was, white strange,
-fleeting creature! How near she had been once! The memory of how near
-rushed over his mind. He had, despite the delirious visions of her
-stricken face, hardly thought at all, since really seeing her again, of
-that last time. Everything had fitted itself on, rather, to his earliest
-memories of her, tinged all of them, it was true, with a deeper meaning,
-but not till this moment consciously admitting it. It rushed in now,
-poignant with the recovered smell of wet, dark ivy, the recovered sound
-of her stifled sobs as she had stumbled, broken, beside him in the rain.
-And with the memory came the desire that she should again be near.
-
-"Tell me," he said, "what are you going to do? You said you might be
-leaving France for ever. Shall you go back to America?"
-
-"I don't think so. Not for a long time," she answered. "There will be
-things to do over here, out of France, for a great many years I
-imagine."
-
-He hesitated, then took a roundabout way. "And when I get home, if,
-owing to you, I ever get there, may I not tell them that you're safe and
-sound? It would be happier for them to know that, wouldn't it?"
-
-Her vigilance still dwelt upon him as though she suspected in this
-sudden change of subject some craft of approach, but she answered
-quietly:
-
-"No; I think it will be happier for them to forget me. They will be told
-if I die. I have arranged for that."
-
-"They can't very well forget you," said Oldmeadow after a moment. "They
-must always wonder."
-
-"I know." She glanced away and trouble came into her face. "I know. But
-as much as possible. You must not make me real again by telling them.
-You have promised. You care for them. You know what I mean."
-
-"Yes; I've promised. And I see what you mean. But," said Oldmeadow
-suddenly, and this, of course, was what he had been coming to. "I don't
-want to forget. I want you to stay real. You must let me know what
-becomes of you, always, please."
-
-Astonishment, now, effaced her trouble. "You? Why?" she asked.
-
-He smiled a little. "Well, because, if you'll let me say it, I'm fond of
-you. I feel responsible for you. I've been too deeply in your life,
-you've been too deeply in mine, for us to disappear from each other.
-Don't you remember," he said, and he found it with a sense of
-achievement, ridiculous as it might sound, "how I held the tea-pot for
-you? That's what I mean. You must let me go on holding it."
-
-But she could feel no amusement. She was pressing her hands tightly
-together in her lap, her eyes were wide and her astonishment, he seemed
-to see, almost brought tears to them. "Fond? You?" she said. "Of me? Oh,
-no, Mr. Oldmeadow, I can't believe that. You are sorry, I know. You are
-very sorry. But you can't be fond."
-
-"And why not?" said Oldmeadow, and he raised himself on his elbow the
-more directly to challenge her. "Why shouldn't I be fond of you, pray?
-You must swallow it, for it's the truth and I've a right to my own
-feelings, I hope."
-
-She put aside the playfulness in which his grim earnest veiled itself.
-"Because you saw. Because you know. All about me. From the first."
-
-"Well?" he questioned after a moment, still raised on his elbow but now
-with the grimness unalloyed. "What of it?"
-
-"You remember what I was. You remember what you saw. You would have
-saved them from me if you could; and you couldn't. How can you be fond
-of a person who has ruined all their lives?"
-
-"Upon my soul," said Oldmeadow laughing, his eyes on hers, "you talk as
-though you'd been a Lucrezia Borgia! What were you worse than an
-exalted, stubborn, rather conceited girl? Things went wrong, I know, and
-partly because of me. But it wasn't all your fault, I'll swear it. And
-if it was, it was your mistake; not your crime."
-
-"Oh, no, no, no," said Adrienne, and the compulsion of his feeling had
-brought a note of anguish to her voice. "It wasn't that. It was worse
-than that. Don't forget. Don't think you are fond of me because I can
-make you sleep. It's always been so; I see it now--the power I've had
-over people; the horrible power. For power is horrible unless one is
-good; unless one is using it for goodness."
-
-"Well, so you were," Oldmeadow muttered, falling back on his pillow, her
-vehemence, her strange passion, almost daunting him. "It's not because
-you make me go to sleep that I'm fond of you. What utter rubbish!"
-
-"It is! it is!" she repeated. "I've seen it happen too often. It always
-happens. It binds people to me. It makes them cling to me as if I could
-give them life. It makes them believe me to be a sort of saint!"
-
-"Well, if you can help them with it? You have helped them. The war's
-your great chance in that, you'll admit. No one can accuse you of trying
-to get power over people now."
-
-"Perhaps not. I'm not thinking of what I may be accused of, but of what
-happens."
-
-"It doesn't happen with me. I was fond of you--well, we won't go back to
-that. And you did use it for goodness. Power came by the way and you
-took it. Of course."
-
-"I thought I was using it for goodness. I thought I was good. That was
-the foundation of everything. We must go back, Mr. Oldmeadow. You don't
-see as I thought you did. You don't understand. I didn't mean to set
-myself up above other people. I thought they were good, too. I was happy
-in my goodness, and when they weren't happy it seemed to me they missed
-something I had and that it was a mistake that I could set right for
-them. I'm going back to the very beginning. Long before you ever knew
-me. Everything fell into my hand. I loved people, or thought I did, and
-if they didn't love me I thought it their mistake. That was the way it
-looked to me, for my whole life long, until you came. I couldn't
-understand at first, when you came. I couldn't see what you thought. I
-believed that I could make you love me, too, and when I saw, for you
-made it plain, that you disliked me, it seemed to me worse than mistake.
-I thought that you must be against goodness; dangerous; the way you
-pushed me back--back--and showed me always something I had not thought I
-meant at the bottom of everything I did. I felt that I wanted to turn
-away from you and to turn people who loved me away from you, lest you
-should infect them. And all the while, all the while I was trying to
-escape--the truth that you saw and that I didn't." She stopped for a
-moment while, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow stared at her. Her breath
-seemed to fail her, and she leaned forward and put her elbows on her
-knees and bent her forehead on her joined hands. "It came at last. You
-remember how it came," she said, and the passion of protest had fallen
-from her voice. She spoke with difficulty. "Partly through you, and,
-partly, through my failure; I had never failed before. My failure with
-Barney. My failure to keep him and to get him back. I couldn't believe
-it at first. I struggled and struggled. You saw me. Everything turned
-against me. It was as if the world had changed its shape and colour when
-I struggled against it. Everything went down. And when I felt I wasn't
-loved, when I felt myself going down, with all the rest, I became bad.
-Bad, bad," she repeated, and her voice, heavy with its slow reiteration,
-was like a clenched hand of penitence beating on a breast: "really bad
-at last, for I had not known before what I was and the truth was there,
-staring me in the face. I did dreadful things, then. Mean things; cruel,
-hateful things, shutting my eyes, stopping my ears, so that I should not
-see what I was doing. I ran about and crouched and hid--from myself; do
-you follow my meaning?--from God. And then at last, when I was stripped
-bare, I had to look at Him."
-
-She raised herself and leaned back in her chair. Her voice had trembled
-more and more with the intensity of the feeling that upheld her and she
-put her handkerchief to her lips and pressed it to them, looking across
-at him. And, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow looked back at her,
-motionless and silent.
-
-Was it sympathy, pity or tenderness that almost overwhelmed him as he
-gazed at her? He could not have said, though knowing that the unity that
-was in them both, the share of the eternal that upheld their lives,
-flowed out from his eyes into hers as he looked and from hers to his.
-They were near at last; near as it is rarely given to human beings to
-experience nearness, and the awe of such a partaking was perhaps the
-ground of all he felt.
-
-"You see," he said, and a long time had passed, "I was mistaken."
-
-She did not answer him. Perhaps she did not understand.
-
-"I never knew you were a person who could come to the truth like that,"
-he said.
-
-Still holding her handkerchief to her lips, she slightly shook her head.
-
-"Even you never thought that I was bad."
-
-"I thought everybody was bad," said Oldmeadow, "until they came to know
-that goodness doesn't lie in themselves. The reason you angered me so
-was that you didn't see you were like the rest of us. And only people
-capable of great goodness can know such an agony of self-recognition."
-
-"No," she repeated. "Everyone is not bad like me. You know that's not
-true. You know that some people, people you love--are not like that.
-They need no agony of recognition, for nothing could ever make them mean
-and cruel."
-
-He thought for a moment. "That's because you expected so much more of
-yourself; because you'd believed so much more, and were, of course, more
-wrong. Your crash was so much greater because your spiritual pride was
-so great. And I thought you were a person a crash would do for; that
-there'd be nothing left of you if you came a crash. That was my mistake;
-for see what there is left."
-
-She rose to her feet. His words seemed to press her too far. "You are
-kind," she said in a hurried voice. "I understand. You are so sorry.
-I've talked and talked. It's very thoughtless of me. I must go now."
-
-She came and took the tray, but he put his hand on her arm, detaining
-her. "You'll own you're not bad now? You'll own there's something real
-for me to be fond of? Wait. I want you to acknowledge it, to accept
-it--my fondness. Don't try to run away."
-
-She stood above him, holding the tray, while he kept his hold on her
-arm. "All I need to know," she said, after a moment, and she did not
-look at him, "is that no one is ever safe--unless they always remember."
-
-"That's it, of course," said Oldmeadow gravely, "and that you must die
-to live; and you did die. But you live now, really, and life comes
-through you again. Your gift, you know, of which you were so much afraid
-just now, lest it had enveigled me. Don't you see it? How can I put it
-for you? You had a sort of wholeness before. There must be wholeness of
-a sort if life is to come through; harmony of a sort, and faith. It
-wasn't an illusion even then. When you were shattered you lost your
-gift. The light can't shine through shattered things; and that was when
-you recognized that without God we are a nothingness; a nothingness and
-a restlessness mingled. You know. There are no words for it, though so
-many people have found it and tried to say it. I know, too, after a
-fashion. I've had crashes, too. But now your gift has come back, for you
-are whole again; built up on an entirely new principle. You see, it's
-another you I am fond of. You must believe in her, too. You do believe
-in her. If you didn't you could not have found your gift."
-
-She had stood quite still while he spoke, looking down, not at him but
-at the little tray between her hands, and he saw that she was near
-tears. Her voice was scarcely audible as she said: "Thank you." And she
-made an effort over herself to add: "What you say is true."
-
-"We must talk," said Oldmeadow. He felt extraordinarily happy. "There
-are so many things I want to ask you about." And he went on, his hand
-still on her arm, seeing that she struggled not to cry and helping her
-to recover: "You're not going away for some time, yet, I hope. Please
-don't. There'll soon be no need of hospitals of this sort, anywhere,
-will there? and you must manage to stay on here a little longer. I
-shan't get on if you go. You won't leave me just as you've saved me,
-will you, Mrs. Barney?"
-
-At the name, over-taxed as she was already, a pitiful colour flooded her
-face and before his blunder made visible his own blood answered hers,
-mounting hotly to his forehead. "Oh, I'm so sorry," he murmured,
-helpless and hating himself, while his hand dropped. She stood over him,
-holding herself there so as not to hurt him by the aspect of flight. She
-even, in a moment, forced herself to smile. It was the first smile he
-had seen on her face. "You've nothing to be sorry for, Mr. Oldmeadow,"
-she said, as she had said before. "You're very kind to me. I wish I
-could tell you how kind I feel you are." And as she turned away,
-carrying the tray, she added: "No; I won't go yet."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-He did not see her again for two days; and she did not even come at
-night. But he now kept possession of his new strength and slept without
-her help. The sense of happiness brooded upon him. He did not remember
-ever having felt so happy. His life was irradiated and enhanced as if by
-some supreme experience.
-
-It was already late afternoon when, on the second day, she appeared; but
-in this month of August his room was still filled with the reflection of
-the sunlight and the warm colour bathed her as she entered. She wore a
-blue cloak over her white linen dress and she had perhaps been walking,
-for there was a slight flush on her cheeks and a look almost of
-excitement in her eyes.
-
-She unfastened her cloak and put it aside and then, taking the chair
-near the window, clasping her hands, as before, in her lap, she said,
-without preamble and with a peculiar vehemence: "You hear often from
-Barney, don't you?"
-
-Oldmeadow felt himself colouring. "Only once, directly. It rather tires
-him to sit up, you know. But he's getting on wonderfully and the doctors
-think he'll soon be able to walk a little--with a crutch, of course."
-
-"But you do hear, constantly, from Nancy, don't you," said Adrienne,
-clasping and unclasping her hands but speaking with a steadiness he felt
-to be rehearsed. "He is at Coldbrooks, I know, and Nancy is with him,
-and his mother and Mrs. Averil. It all seems almost happy, doesn't it?
-as happy as it can be, now, with Palgrave dead and Barney shackled."
-
-Startled as he was by her directness Oldmeadow managed to meet it.
-
-"Yes; almost happy," he said. "I was with them before I came out this
-last time and felt that about them. Poor Mrs. Chadwick is a good deal
-changed; but even she is reviving."
-
-"She has had too much to bear," said Adrienne. "I saw her again, too, at
-the end, when she came to Palgrave. She can never forgive me. Meg is
-happy now, but she will never forgive me either. I wrought havoc in
-their lives, didn't I?"
-
-"Well, you or fate. I don't blame you for any of that, you know," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-"I don't say that I blame myself for it," said Adrienne. "I may have
-been right or I may have been wrong. I don't know. It is not in things
-like that that I was bad. But what we must face is that I wrought havoc;
-that if it hadn't been for me they might all, now, be really happy.
-Completely happy. If I had not been there Palgrave would not have been
-so sure of himself. And if I had not been there Nancy and Barney would
-have married."
-
-"I don't know," said Oldmeadow. "If Barney hadn't fallen in love with
-you he might very probably have fallen in love with some one else, not
-Nancy."
-
-"Perhaps, not probably," said Adrienne. "And if he had he would have
-stayed in love with her, for Barney is a faithful person. And it may
-have been because I was so completely the wrong person for him that he
-came to know so quickly that Nancy was completely the right one. What I
-feel is that anybody but Nancy would always have been, really, wrong.
-And now that he loves her but is shackled, there's only one thing more
-that can be done. I have often thought of it; I needn't tell you that.
-But, till now, I could never see my way. It's you who have shown it to
-me. In what you said the other day. It's wonderful the way you come into
-my life, Mr. Oldmeadow. You made me feel that I had a friend in you; a
-true, true friend. And I know what a friend Nancy and Barney have. So
-the way opens. We must set Barney free, Mr. Oldmeadow. He and Nancy must
-be free to marry. You and I can do it for them and only you and I."
-
-"What do you mean?" Oldmeadow murmured as, after her words, the silence
-had grown deep between them. He repeated, using now the name inevitably
-and forgetting the other day. "What do you mean, Mrs. Barney?"
-
-To-day she did not flush, but to-day there was a reason for her
-acceptance. It was, he saw in her next words, only as Barney's wife that
-she could help him.
-
-"He must divorce me," she said. "You and I could go away together and he
-could divorce me. Oh, I know, it's a dreadful thing to ask of you, his
-friend. I've thought of all that. Wait. Let me finish. I've thought of
-nothing else since the other day. It came to me in the night after you
-had been so wonderful to me; after that wonderful thing had happened to
-us. You felt it, too, I know. It was as if we had taken a sacrament
-together. I'm not a Christian. You know what I mean. We felt the deepest
-things together, didn't we. And it's because of that that I can ask
-this of you. No one else would understand. No one else would care for me
-enough, or for him. And then, you could explain it all to him and no one
-else could do that. You could explain that it had been to set him free.
-To set _me_ free. Because they'd have to think and believe it was for my
-sake, too, that you did it, wouldn't they? so as to have it really happy
-for them; so that it shouldn't hurt. When it was all over you could go
-and explain why you had done it. All we have to do, you know, is to stay
-in a hotel together; I bearing your name. It's very simple, really."
-
-He lay staring at her, overwhelmed. The tears had risen to his eyes as
-her beauty and her absurdity were thus revealed to him, and as she spoke
-of their sacrament; but amazement blurred all his faculties. He had
-never in his life been so amazed. And when he began to emerge, to take
-possession of himself again, it was only of her he could think; not of
-himself or Nancy and Barney. Only of her and of her beauty and
-absurdity.
-
-"Dear Mrs. Barney," he said at last, and he did not know what to say;
-"it's you who are wonderful, you alone. I'd do anything, anything for
-you that I could. Anything but this. Because, truly, this is
-impossible."
-
-"Why impossible?" she asked, and her voice was almost stern.
-
-"You can't smirch yourself like that." It was only one reason; but it
-was the first that came to him.
-
-"I?" she stared. "I don't think it is to be smirched. I shall know why I
-do it."
-
-"Other people won't know. Other people will think you smirched."
-
-"No one I care for. Everyone I care for will understand."
-
-"But to the world at large? Your name? Your reputation?" Oldmeadow
-protested. "Do they mean nothing to you?"
-
-A faintly bitter humour touched her lips. "You've always taken the side
-of the world in all our controversies, haven't you, Mr. Oldmeadow? and
-you were probably right and I was probably wrong; but not because of
-what the world would think. I know I'm right now, and those words: name:
-reputation--mean nothing to me. The world and I haven't much to do with
-each other. A divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and fever hospitals
-just as well as the most unsmirched woman of the world. I'm not likely
-to want to be presented at courts, am I? Don't think of me, please. It's
-not a question of me. Only of you. Will you do it?"
-
-"I couldn't possibly do it," said Oldmeadow, and he was still hardly
-taking her monstrous proposal seriously.
-
-"Why not?" she asked, scrutinizing him. "It's not that you mind about
-your name and reputation, is it?"
-
-"Not much. Perhaps not much," said Oldmeadow; "but about theirs. That's
-what you don't see. That it would be impossible for them. You don't see
-how unique you are; how unlike other people. Nancy and Barney couldn't
-marry on a fake. The only way out," said Oldmeadow, looking at her with
-an edge of ironic grimness in his contemplation, "if one were really to
-consider it, would be for you to marry me afterwards and for us to
-disappear."
-
-She gazed at him and he saw that she weighed the idea. "But you'd be
-shackled then," she said, and her thoughts were evidently clear. "It
-would mean, besides, that you would lose them."
-
-"As to being shackled," Oldmeadow, still grimly, met the difficulty,
-"that's of no moment. I'm the snuffy, snappy bachelor type, you
-remember, and I don't suppose I'd ever have married. As to losing them,
-I certainly should."
-
-"We mustn't think of it then," said Adrienne. "You and Barney and Nancy
-mustn't lose each other."
-
-"But we should in either way. I could hardly take up my friendship with
-them again after Barney had divorced you on account of me, even if you
-and I didn't marry. It would give the whole thing away, if it were
-possible for them to meet me again. As I say, they'd feel they had no
-right to their freedom on such a fake as that."
-
-"They couldn't feel really free unless some one had really committed
-adultery for their sakes?" Again Adrienne smiled with her faint
-bitterness and he wondered if a man and woman had ever before had a more
-astonishing conversation. "That seems to me to be asking for a little
-too much icing on your cake. Of course it couldn't be a nice, new, snowy
-wedding-cake; poor Mrs. Chadwick wouldn't like it at all, nor Mrs.
-Averil; but it would be the best we could do for them; and I should
-think that when people love each other and are the right people for each
-other they'd be thankful for any kind of cake. Even if it were a good
-deal burned around the edges," Adrienne finished, her slight bitterness
-evidently finding satisfaction in the simile.
-
-"But they wouldn't see it at all like that," said Oldmeadow, now with
-unalloyed gravity. "They'd see it as a cake they had stolen; a cake they
-had no right to. It's a question of the laws we live under. Not of
-personal, but of public integrity. They couldn't profit by a hoodwinked
-law. It's that that would spoil things for them. According to the law
-they'd have no right to their freedom. And, now that I am speaking
-seriously, it's that I feel, too. What you are asking of me, my dear
-friend, is no more nor less than a felony."
-
-She meditated, unmoved, still almost sternly, turning her eyes from him
-and leaning her elbow on the window-sill, her head upon her hand. "I
-see," she said at last. "For people who mind about the law, I see that
-it would spoil it. I don't mind. I think the law's there to force us to
-be kind and just to each other if we won't be by ourselves. If the law
-gets tied up in such a foolish knot as to say that people may sin to set
-other people free, but mayn't pretend to sin, I think we have a right to
-help it out and to make it do good against its own will. I don't mind
-the law; luckily for them. Because I won't go back from it now. I won't
-leave them there, loving each other but never knowing the fullness of
-love. I won't give up a thing I feel right because other people feel it
-wrong. So I must find somebody else."
-
-Oldmeadow looked at her in a culminated and wholly unpleasant
-astonishment. "Somebody else? Who could there be?"
-
-"You may well ask," Adrienne remarked, glancing round at him with a
-touch of mild asperity. "You are the only completely right person,
-because only you and I feel enough for them to do it for them. What I
-must do now is to find some one who would feel enough, just for me, to
-do it for me. It makes it more unfair for him, doesn't it. He'll have
-only the one friend to help. But on the other hand it will leave them
-without a scruple. They'd know from the beginning that with you and me
-it was a fake; but with him it might seem quite probable. Yes; it's
-strange; I had a letter from him only yesterday. I shouldn't have
-thought of him otherwise. I might have had to give up. But the more I
-think," Adrienne meditated intently, her head on her hand, her eyes
-turned on the prospect outside, "the more I seem to see that Hamilton
-Prentiss is the only other chance."
-
-"Hamilton Prentiss?" Oldmeadow echoed faintly.
-
-"You met him once," said Adrienne, looking round at him again. "But
-you've probably forgotten. At the dinner we gave, Barney and I, in
-London, so long ago. Tall, fair, distinguished looking. The son of my
-Californian friend; the one you and Mrs. Aldesey thought so tiresome."
-
-He felt himself colouring, but he could give little thought to the minor
-discomfiture, so deeply was his mind engaged with the major one.
-
-"Did we?" he said.
-
-"And you thought I didn't see it," said Adrienne. "It made me dreadfully
-angry with you both, though I didn't know I was angry; I thought I was
-only grieved. I behaved spitefully to Mrs. Aldesey that night, you will
-remember, though I didn't know I was spiteful. I did know, however, that
-she was separated from her husband"--again Adrienne looked, calmly,
-round at him--"and it was a lie I told Barney when I said I didn't.
-Sometimes I think that lie was the beginning of everything; that it was
-when I told it that I began to hide from myself. However--" She passed
-from the personal theme. "Yes; Hamilton is, I believe, big enough and
-beautiful and generous enough to do it."
-
-"Oh, he is, is he?" said Oldmeadow. "And I'm not, I take it. You're
-horribly unkind. But I don't want to talk about myself. What I want to
-talk about is you. You must drop this preposterous idea of yours. Really
-you must. You've had ideas like it before. Remember Meg; what a mess you
-made there. I told you then that you were wrong and I tell you you're
-wrong now. You must give it up. Do you see? We're always quarrelling,
-aren't we?"
-
-"But I don't at all know that I was wrong about Meg, Mr. Oldmeadow,"
-said Adrienne. "And if I was, it was because I didn't understand her. I
-do understand myself, and I don't agree that I'm wrong or that my plan
-is preposterous. You won't call it preposterous, I suppose, if it
-succeeds and makes Barney and Nancy happy. No; I'm not going to drop it.
-Nothing you could say could make me drop it. As for Hamilton, I don't
-set him above you; not in any way. It's only that you and he have
-different lights. I know why you can't do this. You've shown me why. And
-I wouldn't for anything not have you follow your own light."
-
-"And you seriously mean," cried Oldmeadow, "that you'd ask this young
-fellow--I remember him perfectly and I'm sure he's capable of any degree
-of ingenuousness--you'd ask him to go about with you as though he were
-your husband? Why, for one thing, he'd be sure to fall head over heels
-in love with you, and where would you be then?"
-
-Adrienne examined him. "But from the point of view of hoodwinking, that
-would be all to the good, wouldn't it?" she inquired; "though
-unfortunate for Hamilton. He won't, however," she went on, her dreadful
-lucidity revealing to him the hopelessness of any protest he might still
-have found to make. "There's a very lovely girl out in California he's
-devoted to; a young poetess. He'll have to write to her about it first,
-of course; Hamilton's at the front now, you see; and I must write to his
-mother. She and Carola Brown are very near each other and will talk it
-out together and I feel sure they will see it as I do. They'll see it as
-something big I'm asking them to do for me--to set me free. I'm sure I
-can count on Gertrude and I'm sure Hamilton can count on Carola. She's a
-very rare, strong spirit."
-
-Oldmeadow, suddenly, was feeling exhausted, and a clutch of hysterical
-laughter, as she spoke these last words, held his throat for a moment.
-He laid his head back on his pillow and closed his eyes, while he saw
-Adrienne and Hamilton Prentiss wandering by the banks of a French river
-where poplars stood against a silver sky. He knew that he had accepted
-nothing when he said at last: "Shall we talk about it another time?
-To-morrow? I mean, don't take any steps, will you, until we've talked.
-Don't write to your beautiful, big friend."
-
-"You always make fun of me a little, don't you," said Adrienne
-tranquilly. She seemed aware of some further deep discomposure in him
-and willing, though not comprehending it, to meet it with friendly
-tolerance. "If he is big and beautiful, why shouldn't I say it? But I
-won't write until we've talked again. It can't be, anyway, until the war
-is over. And I've had already to wait for four years."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-She might feel that he had cruelly failed her; but when she came at the
-same hour next day it was evident to him from her demeanour that she
-imagined him resigned, if not converted, to her alternative plan. She
-carried a bunch of late roses and said that she had been having a lovely
-drive with a dear old friend from Denver, who had managed to get to
-Boulogne to see her.
-
-"Your friends all come from such distant places," said Oldmeadow with a
-pretended fretfulness that veiled an indescribable restlessness.
-"California, Denver, Chicago. They have, all of them, an implacably
-remote sound, as if they were carrying you, already, off to other
-planets."
-
-"Well, it doesn't take so long, really, to get to any of them," said
-Adrienne, placing the roses in a glass of water by his side, a close,
-funny little bunch, red roses in the middle and white ones all round.
-She had taken off her cloak and laid a newspaper down on the little
-table, seating herself, then, in the window and keeping in her hands a
-pocket-book that, in its flatness and length and the way she held it,
-reminded him of the little blue and grey fan of the dinner-party where
-she had told her first lie. His mind was emptied of thought. Only
-pictures crossed it, pictures of Adrienne and the tall, fair youth with
-the ingenuous eyes, wandering by the French river; and, again, Adrienne
-on that night, now as distant as California, when, with her fan and
-pearl-wreathed hair, she had met his persiflage with her rebuking
-imperturbability. But under the pictures a sense of violent tension made
-his breathing shallow. He fixed his eyes on the pocket-book and wondered
-how she had nursed people with those ineffectual-looking hands.
-
-"Where were you trained for nursing?" he asked her suddenly. "Out here?
-or in England?"
-
-"In England. In Oxford. Before Palgrave was taken," said Adrienne. "I
-gave up my philosophy very soon for that. I worked in a hospital there."
-
-"And how came you to go out to Salonika? Tell me about it. And about
-your hospital here," he went on with a growing sense of keeping
-something off. "It's your own hospital I hear, and wonderfully run. Sir
-Kenneth was talking to me about you this morning."
-
-"What a fine person he is," said Adrienne. "Yes, he came to see us and
-liked the way it was done." She was pleased, he saw, to tell him
-anything he chose to ask about. She told him about her hospital and of
-all its adventures--they had been under fire so often that it had become
-an everyday event; and about how admirable a staff she had
-organized--"rare, devoted people"--and about their wounded, their
-desperately wounded _poilus_ and how they came to love them all. He
-remembered, as she talked, that she was rich; even richer than he had
-thought, since she could leave a fortune to Palgrave and yet equip
-hospitals in France and in Salonika. She told him about Salonika, too.
-It had been a fever hospital there and the misery and suffering had
-seemed worse than the suffering here in France. Yes; she had caught the
-fever herself and had nearly died.
-
-She had no gift for the apt or vivid word. Her nature had been revealed
-to him as barbarous, or sublime, in its unconventionality, yet it
-expressed itself only in the medium of trite convention. But his time of
-jibbing at her platitudes was long since passed. He listened, rather,
-with a tender, if superficial interest, seeing her heroic little figure
-moving, unconcerned, among pestilences and bombardments. "It's not only
-what you tell me," he said, when she had brought her recital up to date.
-"I heard so much from Sir Kenneth. You are one of the great people of
-the war."
-
-"Am I?" she said. That, too, unfeignedly, left her unconcerned.
-
-"You've the gift of leadership. The gift for big things generally."
-
-She nodded. "I'm only fit for big things."
-
-"Only? How do you mean?"
-
-"Little ones are more difficult, aren't they. My feet get tangled in
-them. To be fit for daily life and all the tangles; that's the real
-test, isn't it? That's just the kind of thing you see so clearly, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Big things and the people who do them are just the kind of
-things you see through."
-
-"Oh, but you misunderstood me--or misunderstand," said Oldmeadow. "Big
-things are the condition of life; the little things can only be built up
-on them. One must fight wars and save the world before one can set up
-one's tea-tables." He remembered having thought of something like this
-at Lydia's tea-table. "Tea-tables are important, I know, and the things
-that happen round them. But if one can nurse a ward of typhus patients
-single-handed one must be forgiven for letting the tea-pot slip. Really
-I never imagined you capable of all you've done."
-
-"I always thought I was capable of anything," said Adrienne smiling
-slightly, her eyes meeting his in a tranquil partaking of the jest, that
-must be at her expense. "You helped me to find that out about
-myself--with all the rest. And I was right enough in thinking that I
-could face things and lead people. But I wasn't capable of the most
-important things. I wasn't capable of being a wise and happy wife. I
-wasn't even capable of being truthful in drawing-rooms when other women
-made me angry. But I can go on battle-fields and found hospitals and
-tend the sick and dying. Shells and pestilences"--her smile was
-gone--"if people knew how trivial they are--compared to seeing your
-husband look at you with hatred."
-
-She had turned her eyes away as she was thus betrayed into revealing the
-old bitternesses of her heart and he dropped his to the little
-pocket-book that now lay still between her hands. The feeling in her
-voice, the suffering it revealed to him, with the bitterness, woke an
-unendurable feeling in himself. He did not clearly see what the test was
-to which he put himself; but he knew that what he must say to her was
-the most difficult thing he had ever had to say; and he found it only
-after the silence had grown long.
-
-"Mrs. Barney--everything has changed, hasn't it; you've changed; I've
-changed; Barney may have changed. It was only, after all, a moment of
-miserable misunderstanding between you. He never really knew what you
-were feeling. He thought you didn't care for him any longer, when,
-really, you were finding out how much you cared. Don't you think,
-before you take final decisions, that you ought to see Barney again?
-Don't you think you ought to give him another chance? I could arrange it
-all for you, when I got home."
-
-The flood of colour, deep and sick, had mounted to her face, masking it
-strangely, painfully, to where the white linen cut across her brow and
-bound her chin. And, almost supplicatingly, since he saw that she could
-not speak, he murmured: "You can be a wise and happy wife now; and he
-loved you so dearly."
-
-She did not lift her eyes. She sat there, looking down, tightly holding
-the pocket-book in her lap.
-
-"Let me tell him, when I get home, that I've seen you again," he
-supplicated. "Let me arrange a meeting."
-
-Slowly, not lifting her eyes, she shook her head and he heard her, just
-heard her say: "It's not pride. Don't think that."
-
-"No; no; I know it's not. Good heavens, I couldn't think it that. You
-feel it's no good. You feel that his heart is occupied. It is. I can't
-pretend to hide from you that it is. But your place in it was supreme.
-There would be no unfairness if you took it again. Nancy would be the
-first person to want you to take it. You know that that is true of
-Nancy."
-
-"I know. I heard her plead for me," said Adrienne.
-
-The sentence fell, soft and trenchant; and he remembered, in the silence
-that followed, what she had heard. He drew a long breath, feeling half
-suffocated. But he had met his test. It was inevitable, he knew it now,
-that she should say "Barney and I are parted for ever."
-
-Silence dropped again between them. He did not know what was passing
-behind its curtain and whether bitterness or only grief was in her
-heart.
-
-He lay, drawing the slow, careful breaths of his recovery, and saw her
-presently put out her hand and take up her _New York Herald_ and unfold
-it. She looked down the columns unseeingly; but the little feint of
-interest helped her.
-
-Slowly the colour faded from her face and it was as if the curtain
-lifted when, laying the paper down, she said, and he knew that she was
-finding words to comfort him: "Really everything is quite clear before
-me now. I shall write at once to Hamilton, and to his mother. If he
-agrees, if they all agree, he and I can go away very soon I think.
-Afterwards, I shall stay over here. I've quite made up my mind to that.
-There'll be so much to do; for years and years; for all one's lifetime.
-Ways will open. When one is big," she smiled the smile at once so gentle
-and so bitter, "and has plenty of money, ways always do. I'm a
-_déracinée_ creature; I never had any roots, you know; and I can't do
-better, I'm sure, than to make soil for the uprooted people to grow in
-again. That's what's most needed now, isn't it? Soil. It's the
-fundamental things of life, its bare possibilities, that have been so
-terribly destroyed over here. America has, still, more soil than she can
-use, and since I'm an American, and a rich one, my best plan is to use
-America, in my fortune and my person, for Europe. Because I love them
-both and because they both need each other."
-
-She had quite recovered herself Her face had found again its pale, fawn
-tints and she was looking at him with her quietest contemplation while
-he, in silence, lay looking at her.
-
-"It's not about the things I shall do that I'm perplexed, ever," she
-went on. "But I'm sometimes perplexed about myself. I sometimes wish I
-were a Roman Catholic. In an order of some kind. Under direction. To put
-oneself in the hands of a wise director, it must be so peaceful. Like
-French friends I have; such wise, fine women; so poised and so secure. I
-often envy them. But that can't be for me."
-
-She must feel in his silence now the quality of some extreme emotion,
-and that she believed it to be pity was evident to him as she went on,
-seeking to comfort him; and troubled by his trouble: "You mustn't be
-sorry. I am not unhappy. I am a happy person. Do you remember that
-Sunday morning at Coldbrooks, long ago? How I said to Mother--to Mrs.
-Chadwick--that I had no doubts? You thought me fatuous. I dimly saw that
-you thought me fatuous. But it's still true of me. I must tell you, so
-that you shan't think I'm unhappy. I've been, it seems to me, through
-everything since then. I've had doubts--every doubt: of myself; of life;
-of all the things I trusted. Doubt at last, when the dreadful darknesses
-came--Barney's hatred, Palgrave's death--of God. We've never spoken of
-Palgrave, have we? I was with him, you had heard, and at the very end it
-was he who helped me rather than I him. He held me up. When he was dying
-he held me up. He made me promise him that I would not kill myself--for
-he guessed what I was thinking; he made me promise to go on. And he
-saved me. The light began to come back to me while I sat beside him
-after he had died."
-
-She had not looked at him while she spoke, but down at her hands that,
-trembling, turned and returned the little pocket-book. And controlling
-her voice as she sought to control the trembling of her hands, she said:
-"Perhaps it is always like that. When one confesses one's sin and hates
-it in oneself, even if it is still there, tempting one, the light begins
-to come back. After that it came more and more. What you call my gift is
-part of it. Isn't it strange that I should have had that gift when I was
-so blind? But what you said was true. I had a sort of wholeness then,
-because I was blind. And now that I see, it's a better wholeness and a
-safer gift. That is what I wanted to say, really. To explain, so that
-you shan't be sorry. No one who can find that light can be unhappy. It
-comes to me now, always, when I need it. I can make it shine in other
-people--as Palgrave made it shine in me. Love does it. Isn't it
-wonderful that it should be so? Nothing else is real beside it. Nothing
-is real without it. And when it happens, when one feels it come through
-and shine further, it is more, far more, than happiness."
-
-All the while that she had spoken, pale, and with her trembling hands,
-he had lain looking at her in silence, a silence that was dividing him,
-as if by a vast chasm, from all his former life.
-
-He and Adrienne stood on one side of this chasm, and, while it seemed to
-widen with a dizzying rapidity, he saw that on the other stood Barney,
-Nancy, Coldbrooks, and Lydia--poor Lydia--and that they were being borne
-away from him for ever. He saw nothing before him but Adrienne; and for
-how long was he to keep her? That was his supreme risk; but he could
-not allay it or step back to the further brink. It was his very life
-that had fallen in two while she had spoken and without the sense of
-choice; though he dimly saw that, in the restlessness and urgency of the
-hours since he had seen her last, the choice had been preparing.
-
-He was taking the only step possible for him to take on the narrow
-foothold of the present when he said, in a voice so quiet that she might
-even be unaware of his seeming gross irrelevance, "Do you know, about
-your plan--for Barney and Nancy--I've been thinking it over and I've
-decided that it must be I, not Hamilton."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Her eyes met his for a long time before he realized that she might find
-not only irrelevance but even irreverence. She had shown him her very
-soul and he had answered with this announcement. Of course it had been
-because of what she told him that he had seen at last his own necessity;
-but he could not tell her that.
-
-"I'm not sorry for you," he said. "I envy you. You are one of the few
-really happy people in the world."
-
-"But I'd quite given that idea up, Mr. Oldmeadow," she said. "What has
-made you change?"
-
-He saw the trouble in her face, the suspicion of her power and its
-compulsion over the lives of others. He took the bull by the horns.
-
-"You, of course. I can't pretend that it's anything else. I want to do
-it for you and with you."
-
-"But it's for Barney and Nancy that it's to be done," she said, and her
-gravity had deepened. "It's just the same for them--and you explained
-yesterday that it would spoil it for them."
-
-"It may spoil it somewhat," said Oldmeadow, contemplating her with a
-curious tranquillity; she was now all that was left him in life to
-contemplate; and she was all he needed. "But it won't prevent it. I
-still think it a wrong thing to do. I still think it a felony. But,
-since I can't turn you from it, what I've come to see is that it's, as
-you said, for you and me, who care for them, to do. It's not right, not
-decent or becoming, that anyone who doesn't even know them should be
-asked to do such a thing."
-
-"But Hamilton wouldn't do it for them," she said. "It would be for me he
-would do it. And he wouldn't think it a felony."
-
-"All the more reason that his innocence shouldn't be taken advantage of.
-I can't stand by and see it done. It's for my friends the felony will be
-committed and it's I who will bear the burden for them. As to his doing
-it for you, I know you better than he possibly can know you, and care
-for you more than he possibly can. If you're determined on committing a
-crime, I'll share the responsibility with you."
-
-"I know you care more. You are a wonderful friend. You are my best
-friend in the world." She gazed at him and he saw that for once he had
-troubled and perplexed her. "And it's wonderful of you to say you'll do
-it. But Hamilton won't feel it a burden; not as you will; and for him to
-do it won't spoil it for them. If you do it, it will spoil it for them.
-You said so. And how can I let you do a thing you feel so wrong for my
-sake?"
-
-"You'll have to. I won't have Hamilton sacrificed in order that their
-cake shall have no burnt edges. They'll have to pay something for it in
-social and moral discomfort. It would be nothing to the discomfort of
-Miss Brown, would it? I shall be able to put it clearly to Barney when I
-write and tell him that it's for your sake as well as his and that he
-and Nancy, who have never sought anything or hoped for anything, are in
-no way involved by our misdemeanour. I won't emphasize to Barney what I
-feel about that side of it. He's pretty ingenuous, too. It will be a
-less tidy happiness they'll have to put up with. That's all it comes to,
-as far as they are concerned."
-
-She was looking at him with the trouble and perplexity and she said:
-
-"They'll have to pay in far more than social and moral discomfort."
-
-"Well? In what way? How?" he challenged her.
-
-"You said they'd lose you."
-
-"Only, if you married me," he reminded her.
-
-But she remembered more accurately. "No. They'd lose you anyway. You
-said so. You said that if they could ever see you again it would make it
-too blatantly a fake. And it's true. I see it now. How could you turn up
-quietly, as if nothing had happened, after Barney had divorced me with
-you as co-respondent? There's Lady Cockerell," said Adrienne, and,
-though she was so grave, so troubled, it was with a touch of mild
-malice. "There's Mr. Bodman and Johnson, to say nothing of Mrs. Chadwick
-and Nancy's mother. No, I really don't see you facing them all at
-Coldbrooks after we'd come out in the 'Daily Mail' with head-lines and
-pictures."
-
-Her lucidity could indeed disconcert him when it sharpened itself like
-this with the apt use of his vocabulary. He had to stop to think.
-
-"There won't, at all events, be pictures," he paused by the triviality
-to remark. "We shan't appear. It will be an hotel over here and the case
-will be undefended. We needn't, really, consider all that too closely.
-At the worst, if they do lose me, it's not a devastating loss. They'll
-have each other."
-
-"Ah, but who will you have?" Adrienne inquired. "Hamilton will have
-Carola and they will have each other. But who will you have?"
-
-He lay and looked at her. There was only one answer to that question
-and he could not make it. He was aware of the insufficiency of his
-substitute. "I'd have your friendship," he said.
-
-"You have that now," said Adrienne. "And though I'm so your friend, I'll
-be leaving you, soon, probably for ever. We'll probably never meet
-again, Mr. Oldmeadow. Our paths lie so apart, don't they? My friendship
-will do you very little good."
-
-Her words cut into him, but he kept a brave countenance. "I'd have the
-joy of knowing I'd done something worth while for you. How easily I
-might have died here, if it hadn't been for you. My life is yours in a
-sense and I want you to use it rather than Hamilton's. I have my work,
-you know; lots of things I'm interested in to go back to some day. As
-you remarked, a divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and in the same way
-a co-respondent can write articles and go to concerts."
-
-"I know. I know what a fine, big life you have," she murmured, and the
-trouble on her face had deepened. "But how can I take it from you? A
-felony? How can I let you do, for my sake, something you feel to be so
-wrong?"
-
-"Give it up then," said Oldmeadow. And if he had found it difficult to
-make his plea for Barney a little while before, how much more difficult
-he found it to say this, and to mean it, now. "Give it up. That's your
-choice, and your only choice. You owe that to me. Indeed you do. To give
-it up or to accept me as your companion in iniquity. I'm not going to
-pretend I don't think it iniquity to give you ease. You're not a person
-who needs ease. And I can do without it, too. For your sake. So there
-you have it."
-
-"Not quite. Not quite," she really almost pleaded. "I couldn't ask it of
-Hamilton if he felt about it in the least little way as you do. And
-Carola doesn't care a bit about the law either. She's an Imagist, you
-know."--Adrienne offered this fact as if it would help to elucidate
-Carola's complaisances. "She's written some very original poetry. If it
-were Hamilton no one would lose anything, and Barney and Nancy would be
-free. Indeed, indeed I can't give it up when it's all there, before me,
-with everything to gain and nothing to lose for anybody, if it's
-Hamilton."
-
-"Then it must be me, you see," said Oldmeadow. "And I shan't talk to you
-about the iniquity again, I promise you. I've made my protest and
-civilization must get on as best it can. You're a terrible person, you
-know"--he smiled a little at her, finding the banter so that she should
-not guess at the commotion of his heart. "But I like you just as you
-are. Now where shall we go?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-He could not have believed that it would be so delicious to live with
-Adrienne Toner.
-
-Even at the moment when he had known that he loved her, he had been,
-though filled with the sense of a present heaven, as aware as ever of
-the discrepancies between them, and during the three months that
-separated them, he at Cannes, she nursing in Paris, he knew many doubts;
-never of his love, but of what it was making him do and of where it was
-going to lead them. He couldn't for the life of him imagine what was to
-become of them if his hopes were fulfilled, for he hardly saw himself
-following her off to Central Europe--it was to Serbia, her letters
-informed him, that her thoughts were turning--nor saw them established
-in London under the astonished gaze of Lydia Aldesey.
-
-She had selected Lyons as their place of meeting, because of the work
-for the _rapatriés_ that she wished to inspect there, and from the
-moment that he saw her descend from the Paris express, dressed in dark
-civilian clothes and carrying, with such an air of competence, her rug
-and dressing-case, all doubts were allayed and all restlessness
-dispelled.
-
-He had arrived the day before and had found an old-fashioned hotel with
-spacious rooms overlooking the Saône, and, as they drove to it on that
-November evening, she expressed herself, scrutinizing him with a
-professional eye, as dissatisfied with his recovery.
-
-It was because of the restlessness, of course, that he had not got as
-well as he should have, and he knew that he must, in the stress of
-feeling that now beset him, look strangely, and he promised her, feeling
-that he spoke the truth, that now that he had his nurse again complete
-recovery would be only a matter of days.
-
-"I want you to see our view," he said to her when the porter had carried
-up her little box and they were left alone in the brocaded and gilded
-salon that separated their rooms; "I chose this place for the view; it's
-the loveliest in Lyons, I think."
-
-There was still a little twilight, and standing at the window they
-looked down at the lighted quai with its double row of lofty plane-trees
-and across the jade-green Saône at St. Jean, the grey cathedral, and at
-the beautiful white _archevêché_ glimmering in a soft, dimmed atmosphere
-that made him think of London.
-
-"There's a horrible modern cathedral up on the hill," he said; "but we
-don't need to see it. We need only see the river and the _archevêché_
-and St. Jean. And in the mornings there's a market below, a mile of it,
-all under huge mushroom-coloured umbrellas; flowers and cheeses and
-every kind of country produce. I think you'll like it here."
-
-"I like it very much. I think it's beautiful," said Adrienne. "I like
-our room, too," and she turned and looked up at the painted ceiling and
-round at the consoles and mirrors, inlaid tables and richly curved,
-brocaded chairs. "Isn't it splendid."
-
-"Madame Récamier is said to have lived here," Oldmeadow told her. "And
-this is said to have been her room."
-
-"And now it's mine," said Adrienne, smiling slightly as though she
-found the juxtaposition amusing.
-
-Already the stealing sense of deliciousness was breathing over him. The
-very way in which she said, "our room," was part of it. Even the way in
-which she said that made him feel the peace, comfort, and charm of a
-shared life as he had never before felt it. And the sense grew and grew
-on that first evening.
-
-It was delicious to hear the waiters address her as Madame, and to know
-that it was his madame they imagined her to be, when he sat opposite to
-her at their little table in the dining-room. She wore a grey dress now
-and, with her quiet, her calm glances cast about her, might indeed have
-been the veritable Madame Oldmeadow inscribed at the _bureau_. If they
-had the aspect of a devoted, long-mated couple, it was because of her
-calm. But she would have been as unperturbed, he felt sure, had she been
-stopping there under her own name instead of his and looked upon as his
-well-established mistress. Situations would never embarrass her as long
-as she knew what she was doing with them. That night when she gave him
-her hand at bedtime she said, looking at him with the affectionate,
-professional eyes: "I'll come and put you to sleep if you need me; be
-sure to let me know."
-
-But he had no need to call her. He slept as soundly as though she sat
-beside him with her hand upon his brow.
-
-So the mirage of conjugal felicity was evoked about him.
-
-She poured out his coffee for him in the morning wearing a silk
-_négligé_ edged with fur, and said, as they buttered their rolls, that
-they must buy some honey for their breakfasts. She said, too, that they
-must do a great deal of sight-seeing in the afternoons. "There is so
-much to be seen in Lyons. And I shall finish with my _rapatrié_ work in
-the mornings." He asked if he might not come with her to the _rapatrié_
-work, but was told that he was not yet strong enough for more than one
-walk in the day. "In our evenings, after tea," she went on, "I thought
-perhaps you'd like to study Dante a little with me. My Dante is getting
-so rusty and I've brought a very fine edition. Are you good at Italian?"
-
-He said he wasn't, but would love to read Dante with her.
-
-"And we must get a piano," she finished, "and have music after dinner.
-It will be a wonderful holiday for me."
-
-So the days fell at once into a series of rituals. He saw that she had
-always mapped them out conscientiously, as Mrs. Toner had doubtlessly
-taught her to do, careful of the treasure of time--as Mrs. Toner would
-have said--entrusted to each soul by life. So, no doubt, Adrienne would
-put it still. And what he would, in first knowing her, have found part
-of her absurdity, he found now part of her charm.
-
-That was what it all came back to. He saw, reconstructing their past,
-that from the beginning she had had her deep charm for him.
-
-It was the trivial word for the great fact; the compulsion of
-personality; the overflow of vitality; the secret at once of the saint
-and of the successful music-hall singer. Her own absorption in life was
-so intense that it communicated itself. Her confidence was so secure
-that it begot confidence. Her power was implicit in all she did. It was
-not only the _rapatriés_ she dealt with, as, at the first, she had dealt
-with the wounded. She dealt as successfully and as accurately with the
-little things of life. Honey was on their breakfast-table; flowers on
-the consoles; music on the piano. The gilded hotel salon became a home.
-
-She was still, in demeanour, the cultured, travelled American, equipped
-always, for their walks, with a guide-book or history, from which she
-often read to him as they paused to lean on the parapets of the splendid
-quais. There were few salient facts in the history of the potent city
-that were not imparted to him; and with anyone else what a bore it would
-have been to have to listen! But he was more than content that she
-should tell him about the Romans or Richelieu. It was everything to him
-to feel that they shared it all, from the honey to Richelieu.
-
-And with all the intimacy went the extreme reserve.
-
-She had showed him, when it was necessary for their understanding as
-friends, the centre of her life; yet she remained, while so gentle, so
-absorbed, and even loving, as remote, as inaccessible, as he had felt
-her to be on those first days in the hospital. She never referred to her
-own personal situation not to any emotion connected with it. She never
-referred to herself or expressed a taste or an opinion touched with
-personal ardour. He did not know what she was really feeling, ever.
-Though, when he looked at her, sitting opposite him in her grey and
-addressed by the assiduities of the waiters, he could imagine that he
-was living with a wife, he could imagine more often that he was living
-with a nun. Her control and her selflessness were cloistral. He could
-not think her in any need of a director.
-
-They walked one afternoon along the Quai des Brotteaux, returning from
-the park of the Tête d'Or, where they had wandered on the gravel under
-the tall, melancholy trees and fed the deer. The ugly yet magnificent
-city was spread before them in one of its most splendid aspects,
-climbing steeply, on the further banks of the Rhône, to the cliff-like
-heights of the Croix Rousse and marching, as it followed the grandiose
-curve of the river, into a sunset sky where the cupola of the Hospice
-hung like a dark bubble against the gold and the Alps, not visible from
-the river level, seemed yet to manifest themselves in the illumined
-clouds ranged high above the horizon.
-
-Ten days of their appointed fortnight had now passed and while Oldmeadow
-kept a half unseeing yet appraising eye upon the turbulent glories of
-the river, he was wondering when and how he should make his revelation
-and his appeal. If her reserve made it more difficult to imagine, her
-intimacy did not make it more easy. It was because she was so intimate
-that she had remained so unaware. For all his self-command he felt sure
-that in any other circumstances she could not, for these ten days, have
-remained so blind.
-
-Here she walked beside him, the Madame Oldmeadow of the hotel, looking
-before her as she walked and thinking, he would have wagered, not of him
-but of Serbia.
-
-She wore a beautifully adjusted little costume, conveying in its sober
-darkness the impression of richness and simplicity that her clothes had
-always given him. Fur was turned up about her ears and a small hat of
-fur and velvet was turned down over her eyes as she had always worn her
-hats. The straight fringe of gold showed under its brim and under the
-gold were those calm, those questing, melancholy eyes.
-
-Or perhaps--he carried further his rueful reverie--she was thinking
-about the date of the Hospice. He had the guide-book in his pocket.
-
-"Isn't it jolly?" he suggested, as she looked up at him, indicating the
-prospect spread before them and adding, since he knew that his English
-instinct for boyish understatement still puzzled her: "Like a great,
-grim queen in shabby clothes; raised on such a throne and crowned with
-such jewels that one feels her glorious rather than ugly."
-
-Adrienne studied the shabby queen attentively and then looked back at
-him. Perhaps something dwelling in his eyes, something for her only and
-not at all for Lyons, caught her more special attention, for she said
-suddenly, and so unexpectedly that, with a sort of terror, he felt that
-his crisis might be coming: "You've been very dear to me, Mr. Oldmeadow,
-in all our time here. I feel it to have been a great privilege, you
-know; a great opportunity."
-
-"Really? In what way?" He could at all events keep his voice quiet and
-light. "I thought it had been you who made all the opportunities."
-
-"Oh, no. I never make any of the opportunities I am thinking of," said
-Adrienne. "I only know how to take them. It isn't only that you are more
-widely and deeply cultured than I am--though your Italian accent isn't
-good!"--she smiled; "but I always feel that you see far more in
-everything than I do, even when you seem to be seeing less. I have to go
-carefully and pick up fact by fact, while you see things in a sort of
-vision and they are all related as they enter your mind. That's where my
-privilege comes in. You make me share your vision sometimes. You have
-the artistic mind, and I am not really artistic at all--though Mother
-always wanted that for me more than anything; with all that goes with
-it."
-
-She was speaking of herself--though it was only in order to express more
-exactly her gratitude, and, as he walked beside her, he was filled with
-the mingled hope and terror. After all he had still four more days of
-her. It would be terrible to spoil them.
-
-"No; you aren't artistic," he agreed. "And I don't know that I am,
-either. Whether I am or not, I feel mine to have been the opportunity
-and the privilege."
-
-"I can't understand that at all," she said, with her patent candour.
-
-"It may be part of the artistic temperament to feel things one can't
-understand. Though I do understand why I feel it," he added.
-
-"And it's part of the artistic temperament not to try"--Adrienne turned
-their theme to its more impersonal aspect. "Never to try to enjoy
-anything that you don't enjoy naturally. I don't believe I ever enjoy
-any of the artistic things quite naturally. I've always been trained to
-enjoy and I've always tried to enjoy; because I thought it was right to
-try. But since I've been here with you I've come to feel that what I've
-enjoyed has been my own effort and my mastery of the mere study, and I
-seem to feel that it might be as well to give up trying and training and
-fall back on the things that come naturally; scenery artists would think
-sentimental, and babies; and patriotic songs." She smiled a little as
-she found her list. But she was grave, too, thinking it out and adding
-another to her discovered futilities.
-
-"It may be as well to limit your attention to the sentimental scenery
-and the babies, since you've so many other things to do with it," he
-acquiesced. "We come back to big people again, you see; they haven't
-time to be artistic; don't need to be."
-
-"Ah, but it's not a question of time at all," said Adrienne, and he
-remembered that long ago, from the very first, he had said that she
-wasn't stupid. "It's a question of how you're born. That's a thing I
-would never have admitted in my old days, you know. I would never have
-admitted that any human soul was really shut out from anything. Perhaps
-we're not, any of us, if we are to have all eternity to grow in. But as
-far as this life is concerned I see quite clearly now that some people
-are shut out from all sorts of things, and that the sort of mistake I
-made in my old time was in thinking that anyone who had the will could
-force eternity into any given fragment of our temporal life. I did do a
-little philosophy, you see! That's what I mean and you understand, I
-know. All the same I wish I weren't one of the shut-out people. I wish I
-were artistic. I'd have liked to have that side of life to meet people
-with. I sometimes think that one doesn't get far with people, really, if
-all that one has to give are the fundamental things like the care of
-their minds and bodies. One goes deep, of course; but one doesn't go
-far. You can do something for them; but there's nothing, afterwards,
-that they can do _with_ you; and it makes it rather lonely in a
-way--when one has time to be lonely."
-
-He did not know, indeed, whether she saw the beauty of the scene spread
-before them as they walked, and he was remembering, with a sort of
-tranced tenderness, the flower-wreathed shepherdess and her crook; and
-Mrs. Toner with her lilies and seagulls. But why should she see beauty
-when she made it? It was all that he could see in her now.
-
-"What you can do for them afterwards is to pour out their coffee for
-them in the most enhancing way," he suggested, "and make sight-seeing a
-pleasure, and arrange flowers and place chairs and tables so that a
-hotel salon becomes loveable. If you find the person to whom you can
-give the fundamental things and do all sorts of homely things with
-afterwards, why be lonely? We are very happy together, aren't we? We get
-a great deal out of each other. I can speak for myself, at all events;
-and you've just told me that I give something, too. So why should you go
-off to Central Europe next week? Why not go back with me to the South,"
-he finished, "and wander about together enjoying, quite naturally, the
-sentimental scenery?"
-
-He held his breath after he had thus spoken, wondering with intensity,
-while he felt his heartbeats, what she would make of it. He knew what he
-could make of it, seizing his opportunity on the instant, if only she
-would recognize the meaning that underlay the easy words. And framed in
-the little hat on the background of transfigured Lyons, Adrienne's face
-was turned towards him and, after he had made his suggestion, she
-studied him in silence for what seemed to him a long lapse of time. Then
-she said, overwhelmingly:
-
-"That's perfectly lovely of you, Mr. Oldmeadow."
-
-"Not at all; not perfectly lovely at all," he stammered as he
-contradicted her and he heard that his voice sounded angry. "It's what I
-want. I want it very much."
-
-"Yes. I know you do. And that's what's so lovely," said Adrienne. "I
-know you want it. You are sorry for me all the time. And you want to
-cheer me up. Because you feel I've lost so much. But, you know; you
-remember; I told you the truth that time. I don't need cheering. I'm not
-unhappy. One can be lonely without being unhappy."
-
-"I'm not sorry for you," poor Oldmeadow rejoined, still in the angry
-voice. "I'm not thinking of you at all. I'm thinking of myself. I'm
-lonely, too, and I am unhappy, even if you aren't."
-
-She stopped short in her walk. He saw in her eyes the swift, almost
-diagnosing solicitude that measured his need and her own capacity. It
-was as though his temperature had gone up alarmingly.
-
-"Dear Mr. Oldmeadow," she said; and then she faltered; she paused. She
-no longer found her remedies easily. "It's because you are separated
-from your own life," she did find. "It's because all this is so bitter
-to you; what you are doing now--how could I not understand?--and the
-war, that has torn us all. But when it's over, when you can go home
-again and take up your own big life-work and find your own roots,
-happiness will come back; I'm sure of it. We are all unhappy sometimes,
-aren't we? We must be; with our minds and hearts. Our troubled minds;
-our lonely hearts. But you know as well as I do, dear Mr. Oldmeadow,
-that our souls can find the way out."
-
-Her nature expressed itself in platitudes; yet sometimes she had
-phrases, rising from her heart as if from a fountain fed by unseen
-altitudes, that shook him in their very wording. "Our troubled minds.
-Our lonely hearts," echoed in his ears while, bending his head
-downwards, he muttered stubbornly: "My soul can't, without you."
-
-She still stood, not moving forward, her eyes raised to his. "Please
-don't say that," she murmured, and he heard the trouble in her voice.
-"It can't be so, except for this time that you are away from everybody.
-You have so many things to live for. So many people near you. You are
-such a big, rare person. It's what I was afraid of, you know. It happens
-so often with me; that people feel that. But you can't really need me
-any longer."
-
-He said nothing, still not raising his eyes to hers, and she went on
-after a moment. "And I have so many things to live for, too. You've
-never really thought about that side of my life, I know. Why should you?
-You think of any woman's life--isn't it true?--as not seriously
-important except on its domestic side. And you know how important I
-think that. But it isn't so with me, you see. I have no hearth and I
-have no home; I have only my big, big life and it's more important than
-you could believe unless you could see it all. When I'm in it it takes
-all my mind and all my strength and I'm bound to it, yes, just as
-finally, just as irrevocably as a wife who loves is bound by her
-marriage vows; because I love it. Do you see? They are waiting for me
-now. They need me now. There are starving people, dying people; and
-confusion; terrible confusion. I have a gift for all that. I can deal
-with it. Those are just the things I can deal with. And I mustn't put it
-off any longer--when our time is up. I must leave you, my dear, dear
-friend, however much I'd love to stay."
-
-She was speaking at last with ardour, and about herself. And what she
-said was true. He had never thought about her work except in the sense
-that he thought her a saint and knew that saints did good deeds. That
-she was needed, sorely needed, by the starving and dying, was a fact,
-now that it was put before him, silencing and even shaming him. It gave
-him, too, a new fear. If she had her blindness, he had his. His hopes
-and fears, after all, were all that he had to think of; she had the
-destinies of thousands. He remembered Sir Kenneth's tone in speaking of
-her; its deep respect. Not the respect of the man for the
-tender-hearted, merciful woman; but the respect of a professional expert
-for another expert; respect for the proved organizer and leader of men.
-
-"I have been stupid," he said after a moment. "It's true that I've been
-thinking about you solely in relation to myself. Would you really love
-to stay? If it wasn't for your work? It would be some comfort to believe
-that."
-
-"Of course I'd love to stay," she said, eagerly scanning his face. "I'd
-love to travel with you--to pour out your coffee in Avignon, Nîmes,
-Cannes--anywhere you liked. I'd love our happy time here to go on and
-on. If life could be like that; if I didn't want other things more. You
-remember how Blake saw it all:
-
- 'He who bends to himself a joy
- Doth the winged life destroy.'
-
-I mustn't try to bend and keep this lovely time. I must let it fly--and
-bless it as it goes. And so it will bless me."
-
-She seldom made quotations nowadays. For this one he felt a gratitude
-such as his life had rarely known.
-
-"It's been a joy to you, too, then?"
-
-"Of course it has," said Adrienne smiling at him and turning at last
-towards the bridge that they must cross. "It's been one of the most
-beautiful things that has ever happened to me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat at the inlaid table in the gilded salon on the afternoon
-of the last day. He had two letters to write, for, as he had put off
-speaking to Adrienne till their last evening, so he had put off writing
-to Barney and to Lydia Aldesey till this last afternoon, and he saw now
-how difficult it would be to write coherently while his thoughts
-stretched themselves forward to those few hours of the night when his
-fate would be decided.
-
-Adrienne had gone out. She had written her short communication to Barney
-and brought it in with its envelope and laid it before him, asking him
-in the voice that, again, made him think of snow: "Is that quite right?"
-
-It was, quite, he told her, after glancing through it swiftly. It
-stated, in the most colourless terms, the facts that Barney was to take
-to his solicitor. "Quite right," he repeated, looking up at her. "Are
-you going out? Will you post it?--or shall I?"
-
-"Will you post it with yours? Yes. I must go out. But I'll try to be
-back by tea-time. It's very disappointing; our last afternoon. But that
-poor woman from Roubaix--the one with consumption up at the Croix
-Rousse--is dying. They've sent for me. All the little children, you
-remember I told you. I'm going to wire to Joséphine and ask her if she
-can come down and look after them for a little while."
-
-"Joséphine?" he questioned. He had, till now, entirely forgotten
-Joséphine. Adrienne told him that she was with her parents in a
-provincial town. "They lost their only son and are very sad. Fine, brave
-old people. He is a baker, the old father, and makes the most wonderful
-bread. I went to see them last summer."
-
-Their packing was done and the room denuded; the men had taken away the
-piano that morning. He had his letters to write; so there was really no
-reason why she should not go. And there was, besides, nothing that they
-had to say to each other, except the one thing he had to say.
-
-The silence that overtakes parting friends on a station platform had
-overtaken them since the morning, though, at lunch, Adrienne had talked
-with some persistence of her immediate plans and prospects and about the
-unit of doctors and nurses who were to meet her in Italy. There was no
-reason why she should not go, and he would even rather she did. He would
-rather see no more of her until evening when everything but the one
-thing would be over and done with. And so he was left with his letters,
-leaning his elbows on the table over the hotel paper and staring out at
-the Saône and the white _archevêché_.
-
-Both letters were difficult to write; but beside the one to Lydia, the
-one to Barney was easy. Barney, after all, was to gain everything from
-what he had to tell him, and Lydia was to lose; how much was Lydia to
-lose? He recalled their last evening together and its revelations and
-saw that the old laughing presage was now more than fulfilled. Lydia was
-to lose more than her toes and fingers; in any case. Even if he returned
-to her alone, she cared for him too much not to feel, always, the shadow
-of his crippled heart; his heart not only crippled, but occupied, so
-occupied that friendships, however near, became, in a sense,
-irrelevancies. And if he returned with Adrienne--but could he return
-with Adrienne? What kind of a life could he and Adrienne lead in
-London?--even if Lydia's door, generously, was opened to them, as he
-believed it would be--knowing her generous.
-
-He laid down his pen and fixed his eyes on the river and he tried to see
-Lydia and Adrienne together. But it was a useless effort. From this
-strange haven of the Lyons hotel where he had spent the happiest
-fortnight of his life, he could not see himself into any future with
-familiar features. He could only see himself and Adrienne, alone, at
-hotels. To attempt to place her in Lydia's generous drawing-room was to
-measure more accurately than he had yet measured it the abyss that
-separated him from his former life. If it could be spanned; if Adrienne
-could be placed there, on the background of eighteenth-century fans and
-old glass, she became a clipped and tethered seagull in a garden,
-awkward, irrelevant, melancholy. Lydia might cease to find her
-third-rate and absurd; but she wouldn't know what to do with her any
-more than she would have known what to do with the seagull. So what, if
-Adrienne became his wife, remained of his friendship with Lydia?
-
-He put aside the unresolved perplexity and took Barney first.
-
-"My dear Barney," he wrote,--"I don't think that the letter Adrienne has
-written to you will surprise you as much as this letter of mine. You
-will understand from hers that she wishes to free herself and to free
-you. You will understand that that is my wish, too. She only tells you
-that she has been staying here with me, for a fortnight, as my wife;
-that's for your solicitor; you will read between the lines and know that
-it seemed worth while to both of us to make the necessary sacrifice in
-order to gain so much for you and for her. I hope that you and my dear
-Nancy will feel that we are justified, and that you will take your
-happiness as bravely as we secure it for you. You'll know that our step
-hasn't been taken lightly.
-
-"But, now, dear Barney, comes my absolutely personal contribution. It is
-a contribution, for it will make you and Nancy happier to know that I
-have as much to gain as you and she. I have fallen in love with Adrienne
-and I hope that I may win her consent to be my wife. Yes, dear Barney,
-unbelievable as it will look to you, there it is; and she dreams of it
-as little as you could have dreamed of it. I met her again, as her
-letter informs you, at the Boulogne hospital. She asked me to say
-nothing about our meeting. She wanted to disappear out of your lives.
-She saved my life, I think, and I saw a great deal of her. What I found
-in her that I had not seen before I need not say.
-
-"My great difficulty, my burden and perplexity now, lie in the fact that
-she has no trace of feeling for me that might give me hope. We became,
-at Boulogne, the best of friends; such friends that this plan suggested
-itself to her; and we remain, after our fortnight here, the best of
-friends; and that is all. Yet I have hope, unjustified and groundless
-though it may be, and had I not had it from the beginning I couldn't
-have entered upon the enterprise; not even for you and Nancy. From one
-point of view it's possible that you may feel that I've entered upon it
-in spite of you and Nancy. You may feel inclined to repudiate and disown
-the whole affair and to remain unaware of it. In that case it would come
-down to an appeal from me to you to carry it through for my sake. But
-from another point of view it makes it easier for you; easier for you to
-accept, since my hope gives integrity to the situation. That's another
-thing that decided me. If it had been mere sham I don't think I could
-have undertaken it. Adrienne felt none of my scruples on this score. She
-walked over legal and conventional commandments like a saint over hot
-ploughshares. But I haven't her immunities. I should have felt myself
-badly scorched, and felt that I'd scorched you and Nancy, if my hope
-hadn't given everything its character of _bona fides_.
-
-"Dear Barney, dear Nancy, please forgive me if I've been selfish. It
-hasn't all been selfishness, that I promise you; it was in hopes for
-you, too; and I have to face sacrifices. The worst of them will be that
-if Adrienne takes me I'll have to lose you. You can measure the depth of
-my feeling for her from the fact that I can make such sacrifices.
-Perhaps you'll feel that even if she doesn't take me I'll have to lose
-you. I hope not. I hope, in that case, that mitigations and refuges will
-be found for me and that some day you'll perhaps be able to make a
-corner in your lives where I may creep and feel my wounds less aching.
-In any case, after Adrienne, you are the creatures dearest to me in the
-world and I am always and for ever your devoted friend,
-
- ROGER."
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now Lydia. There was no use in thinking about it. The plunge must be
-taken.
-
-"My dear Lydia," he wrote,--"I have fallen in love with Adrienne Toner.
-I feel that with such a friend as you it's better to begin with the
-bomb-shell. She doesn't know it, and if we are here in this Lyons hotel
-together, it's only, she imagines, because she wishes to set Barney free
-and that I've undertaken, for her sake and for Barney's, a repugnant
-task. It is a repugnant task, in spite of what it may mean to me of
-happiness. I hate it for her, and for Barney and for myself. But since
-she was determined on it and since, if it wasn't I it was to be another
-friend, and since I have fallen in love with her, I saw that it was only
-decent that the co-respondent in the case should be the man who married
-her afterwards. For I hope to become her husband, and I haven't one jot
-of ground for my hope. We are studying Dante together, and she shows me
-the sights of Lyons. She is just the same. Yet completely altered.
-
-"I don't know whether you'll feel you can ever see me again, with or
-without her. I don't want to cast myself too heavily on your compassion,
-so I'll only remind you that even if I return to England alone I shall
-probably have to lose Nancy and Barney and that you will be my only
-refuge. It will be the culmination of my misfortunes if I have to lose
-you.
-
-"Dear Lydia, I am always your devoted
-
- "ROGER"
-
- * * * * *
-
-But he hadn't lost her. He knew he hadn't lost her; in any case. And the
-taste of what he did was sharp and bitter to him, for she was generous
-and loyal and he had cut off her very limbs. When he had addressed and
-stamped the letters he went downstairs, and, for the sense of greater
-finality, carried them to the post instead of dropping them into the
-hotel-box.
-
-He had almost the sense of disembodiment as he returned to the empty and
-dismantled room. He seemed to have become a mere consciousness suspended
-between two states of being. The past was gone. He had dropped it into
-the post-box. And he saw no future. He felt, for the moment, no hopes.
-At the moment it seemed absurd to think that Adrienne could ever love
-him. He tried to picture Coldbrooks and Somer's Place when the
-bomb-shell struck them. Would Barney show Nancy the letter? Nancy would
-be pale, aghast, silent. Barney would have to wait for days, perhaps,
-before saying to her: "But, after all, it's for their sakes, too, Nancy
-dear. See what Roger says." Mrs. Averil would cast up her hands and cry
-"That woman!"--but, perhaps, with as much admiration as repudiation, and
-Meg, if she were summoned to the scene of confusion, would say, "So
-she's got hold of Roger, too." Funnily enough it was the dear March
-Hare, he felt sure, who would be the first one to stretch out a hand
-towards the tarnished freedom. "After all, you know," he could hear her
-murmuring, "it would be much _nicer_ for Barney and Nancy to be married,
-wouldn't it? And Adrienne wasn't a Christian, you know, so probably the
-first marriage doesn't _really_ count. We mustn't be conventional,
-Monica." Yes, perhaps it would go like that at Coldbrooks. But at
-Somer's Place Lydia would sit among her fans and glass and wish that
-they had never seen Adrienne Toner.
-
-He paced up and down before the windows and he had never been so lonely
-in his life. He was so lonely that he became aware at last that his mere
-negative state was passing into a positive and that grief at the
-severance of old ties had become fear of losing Adrienne. The fear and
-the loneliness seemed actualized when, at five, the waiter appeared
-bearing the tea-tray on his shoulder. He had never had tea alone before
-in this strange, foreign room. Adrienne always made a complicated and
-charming ritual of the occasion, boiling the water on their own little
-spirit-kettle and measuring the tea from her own caddy--the very same
-kettle and caddy, she told him, that had accompanied herself and her
-mother on all their travels. And to see the cups and bread and butter
-and not to have her there, added a poignant taste of abandonment to his
-loneliness.
-
-She kept the kettle in her room and when the boy was gone he softly
-opened the door and went in. It would keep his heart up to have the
-water boiling in readiness for her arrival. He recognized, as he stood,
-then, and looked about him, that his instinct had also been that of
-taking refuge. In her room he could more closely recover the sense of
-her presence.
-
-She had finished all the essentials of her packing and her box stood
-with its lid open ready for the last disposals. Yet the room seemed
-still full of her personality. He noted it all gazing around him with
-eyes almost those of a solemn little boy permitted to glance in at a
-Christmas-tree.
-
-Her dressing-table, improvised from the mantelpiece, was neatly laid out
-with small, worn, costly, and immaculate appurtenances. He moved forward
-and looked at them, not touching. The initials intertwined on the backs
-of the ivory brushes were her girlish ones: A. T. She had discarded,
-long since, no doubt, her wedding toilet set.
-
-If he became her husband, the thought crossed his mind and quickened his
-heart, he might brush her hair for her, that wonderful golden hair,
-before many months were over.
-
-Near the ivory hand-glass stood two photographs in a folding frame of
-faded blue leather. He stooped to look and saw that one was of Mrs. and
-the other certainly of Mr. Toner, in their early days. Remote,
-mysterious and alien, their formally directed eyes looked back at him
-and in the father's ingenuous young countenance, surmounted by a roll of
-hair that was provincial without being exactly rural, the chin resting
-upon a large, peculiar collar, he could strangely retrace Adrienne's
-wide brow and steadfast light-filled eyes. Mrs. Toner wore a ruffled
-dress and of her face little remained distinct but the dark
-gaze--forceful and ambiguously gentle.
-
-The room was full of the fragrance that was not a fragrance and that
-had, long ago, reminded him of Fuller's earth. A pair of small blue
-satin _mules_ stood under a chair near the bed.
-
-Only after he had withdrawn, gently closing the door behind him, did he
-realize that he had forgotten the kettle and then he felt that he could
-not go back again. A moment after the boy returned with a note, sent, by
-hand, he was informed, from the Croix Rousse.
-
-"I am so dreadfully sorry, so disappointed," he read. "Our last
-afternoon, but I can't get away yet. Don't wait dinner for me, if I
-should be late, even for that. I won't be very late, I promise, and we
-will have our evening."
-
-The note had no address. He rushed forth and down to find the messenger
-gone. Had he only known where to seek her in the vast, high, melancholy
-district of the Croix Rousse he would have gone to join her. His sense
-of loneliness was almost a panic.
-
-Of course, he tried to fix his mind on that realization, as he went back
-to the salon, her rapatriés had no doubt preoccupied her mind, from the
-first, quite as much as their own situation. She had spoken to him in
-especial of this family and of their sorrows. One child they had left
-dead at Evian and the mother, on the eve of their return to their
-Northern home, had become too desperately ill to travel. "Such dear,
-good, _gentle_ people," he recalled her saying. No; he must not repine.
-After all he had only the one thing to say to her; and the evening would
-be long enough for that.
-
-It was nearly seven when he heard her quick footstep outside. When she
-entered, the brim of her little hat, in the electric light, cast a sharp
-shadow over her eyes, but he saw at once that she had been crying.
-
-She came in so quickly that he had not time to rise and, going to him,
-behind his chair, she put her hands on his shoulders and pressed him
-down, saying: "I'm so sorry to have left you all alone."
-
-It was astonishingly comforting to have her put these fraternal hands
-upon him like this. She had never done it before. Yet there was a salty
-smart in her words to him. What else did she intend to do but leave him
-all alone for always?
-
-"I'm dreadfully lonely, I confess," he said, "and I see that you're
-dreadfully tired."
-
-She went round to the other side of the table and sat down, not looking
-at him and said, in a low voice: "Oh--the seas--the seas of misery."
-
-"You are completely worn out," he said. He was not thinking so much of
-the seas of misery as of his few remaining hours. Were they to be
-spoiled by her fatigue?
-
-"No; not worn out. Not at all worn out," said Adrienne, stretching her
-arms along the table in front of her as she sat, and though she had wept
-he could see something of ardour, of a strength renewed, in the lines of
-her pallid lips. "I've sat quite still all afternoon. I've been with
-him. She died soon after I got there. At the end she was talking about
-the little girl's grave at Evian. I was able to comfort her about that.
-She was so afraid it would not be tended. That it would have no flowers.
-Joséphine will go to Evian afterwards and see about it. There are always
-dear nuns to do those things. There was a nun with her to-day. That was
-the greatest comfort of all; and the priest who came. But I was with the
-father and the five poor little children; so frightened and miserable. I
-could not leave them, you see. He talked and talked and talked. It
-helped him to talk and tell me about their home and how they had had
-everything so nice and bright. Linen, a garden, a goat and fowls. Oh, if
-only she could have seen her home again! That was what he kept saying
-and saying. They were full of hope when they got to Evian. He told me
-how the children sang at dawn when the train panted up the mountain
-among the golden trees. Like birds, he said, and _Vive la France_! They
-all believed they were to be safe and happy. _Et, Madame, c'était notre
-calvaire qui commencait alors seulement._"
-
-She spoke, not really thinking of him, he saw, absorbed still in the
-suffering she had just left, measuring her power against such problems
-and the worse ones to which she was travelling to-morrow.
-
-"Joséphine will be with them, I hope," she went on presently, "in three
-or four days. She will help them to get home and then she will come back
-and go to see about the grave at Evian. Joséphine is a tower of strength
-for me."
-
-Her eyes were raised to him now, and, as they rested, he saw the
-compunction, the solicitude, with which they had met him on her
-entrance, return to them. "I'm not so very late, am I?" she said,
-rising. "I'll take off my hat and be ready in a moment."
-
-"Don't hurry," said Oldmeadow.
-
-She was tired, more tired than she knew. During dinner she hardly spoke,
-and, finding the resolve suddenly, he said, as they came back to their
-salon: "Do you know what you must do now. Go and lie down and rest for
-an hour. Until nine. It's not unselfishness. I'd rather have half of you
-to talk to for our last talk, than none of you at all."
-
-"How dear of you," she said. She looked at him with gratitude and,
-still, with the compunction. "It would be a great rest. It would be
-better for our talk. I can go to sleep at once, you know. Like
-Napoleon," she added with a flicker of her playfulness.
-
-When she had gone into her room Oldmeadow went out and walked along the
-quai. The night was dark and dimmed with fog, but there was a moon and
-as he walked he watched it glimmer on the windows of St. Jean. He seemed
-to see the august form of the cathedral through a watery element and the
-grey and silver patterns of the glass were like the scales of some vast
-fish. A sort of whale waiting to swallow up the Jonah that was himself,
-he reflected, and, leaning his elbows on the parapet of the quai, the
-analogy carried him further and he saw the cathedral like a symbol of
-Adrienne's life--her "big, big" life--looming there before him,
-becoming, as the moon rose higher, more and more visible in its austere
-and menacing majesty. What was his love to measure itself against such a
-vocation?--for that was what it came to, as she had said. She was as
-involved, as harnessed, as passionately preoccupied as a Saint Theresa.
-How could he be fitted in with Serbia and all the hordes of human need
-and wretchedness that he saw her sailing forward to succour? He knew a
-discouragement deeper than any he had felt, for he was not a doctor and
-his physical strength was crippled by his wounds; and, shaking his
-shoulders in the chilly November air, he turned his back on the
-cathedral and leaned against the parapet to look up through leafless
-branches where the plane tassels still hung, at the lighted windows of
-the hotel; their hotel, where the room, still theirs, waited for them.
-He felt himself take refuge in the banal lights. After all, she wasn't
-really a Saint Theresa. There was human misery everywhere to succour.
-Couldn't she, after a winter in Serbia, found crêches and visit slums in
-London? The masculine scepticism she had detected in him had its
-justification. Women weren't meant to go on, once the world's crisis
-past, doing feats of heroism; they weren't meant for austere careers
-that gave no leisure and no home. The trivial yet radiant vision of
-intimacy rose again before him. She slept there above him and he was
-guarding her slumber. He would always watch over her and guard her. He
-would follow her round the world, if need be, and brush her hair for her
-in Serbia or California.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-The gilt clock on the mantelpiece pointed to nine, but when he went to
-Adrienne's door and listened there was no sound within her room, and his
-heart sank as he wondered if she might not sleep on, in her fatigue,
-sleep past all possible hour for their colloquy. Yet he did not feel
-that he could go in and wake her. The analogy of the cathedral loomed
-before him. It would be like waking Saint Theresa.
-
-He walked up and down the empty, glittering salon; walked and walked
-until the clock struck ten. Desperation nerved him then and he went
-again to her door and knocked.
-
-With hardly a pause her voice answered him; yet he knew that he had
-awakened her and it echoed for him with the pathos of so many past
-scenes of emergency when it must so have answered a summons from
-oblivion: "Coming, coming." Among bombings, he reflected; and sudden
-terrible influxes of dying men from the front.
-
-"Coming," he heard her repeat, on a note of dismay. She had sprung up,
-turned on her light and seen the hour.
-
-He was reminded vividly, as he saw her enter--and it was as if a great
-interval of time had separated them--of his first meeting with her. She
-was so changed; but now as then she was more composed than anyone he had
-ever met.
-
-But it was of much more than the first meeting that the pale, still face
-reminded him. His dreams were in it; the dream where she had come to
-him along the terrace, lifting her hand in the moonlight; and the dream
-of horror when he had again and again pushed it down to drown.
-
-"I'm so ashamed," she said, and he saw that it was with an effort she
-smiled. The traces of her weeping were now, after her sleep, far more
-visible, ageing her, yet making her, too, look younger; like a child
-with swollen lids and lips. "I didn't know I was so tired. I slept and
-slept. I didn't stir until I heard your knock. Never mind. We'll talk
-till midnight."
-
-She was very sorry for him.
-
-She sat down at the table and under the electric chandelier her braided
-hair showed itself all ruffled and disarranged. She had on her dark
-travelling dress and she had thrust her feet into the pale blue satin
-_mules_. The disparity of costume in one so accurate, her air of
-readiness for the morrow, made him feel her transitoriness almost more
-than her presence, though his sense of that pressed upon him with a
-stifling imminence. Even though she sat there the room kept its look of
-desolate, glittering emptiness and more than their shared life in it he
-remembered the far places from which she had come and to which she was
-going. It was as if she had just arrived and were pausing for the night
-_en route_.
-
-As he had seen them years ago, so he saw again the monster engines
-crossing the prairies at night and flying illumined pennons of smoke
-against the sky as they bore her away from blue seas, golden sands, a
-land where the good and gifted lurked behind every bush; and before her
-stretched the shining rails, miles and miles of them, running through
-ruin and desolation, that were to bear her ever onwards into the
-darkness. This was what life had brought her to. She had been only a
-sojourner among them at Coldbrooks. The linked life of order and family
-affection had cast her forth and he saw her, for ever now, unless he
-could rescue her, with only hotels to live in and only the chaos she was
-to mould, to live for. She seemed already, as she sat there under the
-light with her ruffled hair, to be sitting in the train that was to bear
-her from him.
-
-"I think you owe me till midnight, at least," he said. He had not sat
-down. He stood at some little distance from her leaning, his arms
-folded, against a gilded and inlaid console. "We've lots of things to
-talk about."
-
-"Have we?" Adrienne asked, smiling gently, but as if she humoured an
-extravagance. "We'll be together, certainly, even if we don't talk much.
-But I have some things to say, too."
-
-She had dropped her eyes to her hands which lay, lightly crossed, on the
-table before her, and she seemed to reflect how best to begin. "It's
-about Nancy and Barney," she said. "I wanted, before we part, to talk to
-you a little about them. There are things that trouble me and you are
-the only person with whom I can keep in touch. You will know how I shall
-be longing to hear, everything. You'll let me know at once, won't you?"
-
-"At once," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"There might be delays and difficulties," Adrienne went on. "I shall be
-very troubled until all that is clear. And then the money. You know
-about the money? Barney isn't well off and he was worse off after I'd
-come and gone. I tried to arrange that as best I could. Palgrave
-understood and entered into all my feelings."
-
-"Yes; I'd heard. You arranged it all very cleverly," said Oldmeadow.
-
-He moved away now and, at the other end of the room, his back to her,
-came to a standstill, while his eyes dwelt on a large gilt-framed
-engraving that hung there; some former Salon triumph; a festive,
-spring-tide scene where young women in bustles and bonnets offered sugar
-to race-horses in a meadow, admired by young men in silk hats.
-
-"Do you think this may make a difficulty?" Adrienne asked. "Make him
-more reluctant to take what is to come to him? It's Mrs. Chadwick's now,
-you know."
-
-"You've arranged it all so well," said Oldmeadow, noting the gardenias
-in the young men's button-holes, "that I don't think they can get away
-from it."
-
-"But will they hate it dreadfully?" she insisted, and he felt that her
-voice in its added urgency protested, though unconsciously, against his
-distance; "I seem to see that they might. If they can't take it as a
-sign of accepted love, won't they hate it?"
-
-"Well," said Oldmeadow, trying to reflect, though his mind was far from
-Barney and Nancy, "dear Eleanor Chadwick doesn't mind taking it,
-whatever it's a sign of. And since it will come to Barney through her, I
-don't think there'll be enough personality left hanging about it to hurt
-much."
-
-"I wish they could take it as a sign of accepted love," Adrienne
-murmured.
-
-"Perhaps they will," he said. "I'll do my best that they shall, I
-promise you."
-
-It was one thing to promise it and another to know his hope that it
-might be a promise never to be redeemed. The cross-currents in his own
-thought made him light-headed as he stood there, his back to her, and
-examined the glossy creatures in the meadow. "Do you think it will all
-take a long time?" Adrienne added, after a little pause. "Will they be
-able to marry in six or eight months, say?"
-
-"It depends on how soon Barney takes action. Say about a year," he
-suggested. "They'd wait a little first, wouldn't they?"
-
-"I hope not. They've waited so long already. I hope it will be as soon
-as possible. I shall feel so much more peaceful when I hear they're
-married. Could you, perhaps, make them see that, too?"
-
-And again he promised. "I'll make them see everything I can."
-
-He turned to her at last. She sat, her face still downcast in its
-shadow, while the light glittered on her wreaths of hair. Her hands
-still lay before her on the table, and the light fell on her
-wedding-ring. Perhaps she was looking at the ring.
-
-"It all depends on something else," he heard himself say suddenly.
-
-She turned her head and looked round at him. His attitude, his distance
-from her, drew her attention rather than his words, for she repeated
-mildly: "On something else?"
-
-"Whether I can keep those promises, you know," said Oldmeadow. "Yes, it
-all depends on something else. That's what I want to talk to you about."
-
-He hardly knew what he was saying as he approached the table and pushed
-the brocaded chair, companion to the one in which she sat, a little
-from its place. He leaned on its back and looked down at her hands and
-Adrienne kept her eyes on him, attentive rather than perplexed.
-
-"May I talk to you about it now?" he asked. "It's something quite
-different."
-
-"Oh, do," said Adrienne. She drew her hands into her lap and sat
-upright, in readiness. And, suddenly, as he was silent, she added:
-"About yourself? I've been forgetting that, haven't I? I've only been
-thinking of my side. You have quite other plans, perhaps. Perhaps you're
-not going back to England for ever so long. Is it an appointment?"
-
-"No; not an appointment," he muttered, still looking down, at the table
-now, since her hands were no longer there. "But perhaps I shan't be
-going back for a long time. I hope not."
-
-"Oh," she murmured. And now he had perplexed her. After what he had just
-promised her, his hope must perplex and even trouble her. "Do tell me,"
-she said.
-
-"It's something I want to ask you," said Oldmeadow--"And it will
-astonish you. You may find it hard to forgive; because I've meant to ask
-it from the beginning; from our deciding to go away together. As far
-back as the time in the hospital."
-
-"But you may ask anything. Anything at all," she almost urged upon him.
-"After what I've asked you--you have every right. If there's anything I
-can do in the wide, wide world for you--oh! you know how glad and proud
-I should be. As for forgiveness"--he heard the smile in her voice, she
-was troubled, yet tranquil, too--"you're forgiven in advance."
-
-"Am I? Wait and see." He, too, tried to smile, as he used the tag; but
-it was a mechanical smile and he felt his heart knocking against the
-chair-back as he went on: "Because I haven't done what you asked me to
-do as you asked me to do it. I haven't done it from the motive you
-supposed. It's been for Barney and for Nancy and for you; but it's been
-most of all for myself." He screwed his glass into his eye as he spoke
-with a gesture as mechanical as the smile had been and he looked at her
-at last, thus brought nearer. "I want you not to go on to-morrow." It
-was the first, the evident, the most palpable desire that rose to his
-lips. "I want you never to go on again, alone. If you can't stay with
-me, I want you to let me follow you. When the time comes I want you to
-marry me. I love you."
-
-The light as it fell on her seemed suddenly strange, almost portentous
-in its brilliancy. Or was it her stillness, as she sat and gazed at him
-after he had spoken the words, that was strange and portentous? It was
-as if they arrested the currents of her being and she sat tranced,
-frozen into the fixed shape of an astonishment too deep for emotion. Her
-eyes did not alter in their gentleness; but the gentleness became tragic
-and pitiful, like the inappropriate calm on the mask of a dead face at
-Pompeii, fixed in an eternal unreadiness by the engulfing lava.
-
-She put up her hand at last and pushed back her hair. With her forehead
-bared she became more like the photograph of her father. When she spoke
-her voice was slow and feeble, like the voice of a person dangerously
-ill. "I don't understand you."
-
-"Try to," said Oldmeadow. "You must begin far back."
-
-She still kept her hand pressed upon her hair. "You don't mean that it's
-the conventionally honourable thing to do? Oh, no; you don't mean that?"
-Her face in its effort to understand was appalled.
-
-"No; I don't mean anything conventional," he returned. "I'm thinking
-only of you. Of my love. I'll come with you to Serbia to-morrow--if
-you'll let me. I could kneel and worship you as you sit there."
-
-"Oh," she more feebly murmured. She sank back in her chair.
-
-"My darling, my saint," said Oldmeadow, gazing at her; "if you must
-leave me, you'll take that with you; that the man who destroyed you is
-your lover; that you are dearer to him than anything on earth."
-
-"Oh," she murmured again, and she put her hands before her face. Her
-eyes were hidden; she had spoken no word of reproach and he could not
-keep himself from her. He knelt beside her, grasping the chair across,
-behind her. She was so near that he could have laid his head upon her
-breast. "Don't leave me," he heard his pleading voice, but she seemed so
-much nearer than his own voice; "or let me come. Everything shall be as
-you wish and when you wish. Tell me that you care, too; or that you can
-come to care. Tell me that you can think of me as your husband."
-
-She was there, with her hidden eyes, within his arms, and inevitably
-they closed around her, and though he heard her murmur, "Please, please,
-please," he could not relinquish her. She was free and he was free.
-They had cut themselves off from the world. They were alone in the
-strange city; in the strange, bright, hallucinated room; and he knew
-from the ache and rapture of her nearness how he had craved it.
-
-But, gently, he heard her say again, "Please," and gently she put him
-from her and he saw her face, and her eyes full of grief and gentleness.
-"Forgive me," she said.
-
-"My darling. For what?" he almost groaned. "Don't say you're going to
-break my heart."
-
-She kept her hand on his breast, holding him from her while she looked
-into his eyes. "It is so beautiful to be loved," she said, and her voice
-was still the slow, feeble voice of exhaustion. "Even when one has no
-right to be. Don't misunderstand. Even when one may not love back; not
-in that way. Forgive me; not in that way; my dearest friend."
-
-"Why mayn't you love back? Why not in that way? If it's beautiful, why
-mayn't you?"
-
-"Sit there, will you? Yes; keep my hand. How weak I've been, and cruel.
-It can't be. Don't you know? Haven't you seen? It has always been for
-him. He must be free; but I can never be free."
-
-"Oh, no. No. That's impossible," Oldmeadow said, leaning towards her
-across the table and keeping her hand in both of his. "I can't stand
-that. I could stand your work, your vocation, better. But not Barney,
-who loves another woman. That's impossible."
-
-"But it is so," she said, softly, looking at him. "Really it is so."
-
-"No, no," Oldmeadow repeated, and he raised her hand to his lips and
-kept it there, a talisman against the menace of her words. "He lost
-you. He's gone. I've found you and you care for me. You can't hide from
-me that you care for me. Just now. For those moments. You were mine."
-
-"No," she repeated. "I was weak and cruel, but I was not yours."
-
-She had been incredibly near so short a time ago before. Now, looking at
-him, with her difficult breaths and gentle, inflexible eyes, she was
-incredibly remote. "I am his, only his," she said. "I love him and I
-shall always love him. It makes no difference. He loves Nancy, but it
-makes no difference. He is my husband. The father of my baby."
-
-She tried to speak on steadily while she thus gave him the truth that
-ended all his hope; but the desperate emotion with which he received it
-made real and overpowering to her her outlived yet living sorrow. With
-all that she must relinquish laid bare to her in the passion of his eyes
-she could measure all that she had lost, as she had, perhaps, till then,
-never measured it. "Don't you know?" she said. "Don't you see? My heart
-is broken, broken, broken."
-
-She put her head down on her arms as she said the words and he heard her
-bitter weeping.
-
-He knew, as he listened, that it was all over with him. Dimly, in the
-terrible suffering that wrenched at him, he received his further
-revelation of the nature already nearer him than any in the world. Her
-strength would be in all she did and felt. She had loved Barney and she
-would always love him. Her marriage had been to her an ultimate and
-indissoluble experience. That was why she had been so blind. She could
-not have thought of herself as a woman to be again loved and wooed.
-
-Her hair lay against his hands, still holding hers, and he found himself
-stroking it, without tenderness or solicitude it seemed. It seemed to be
-only automatically that his fingers passed across it, while he noted its
-warmth and fineness and bright, lovely colour, remembering that he had
-thought it at the first her one indubitable beauty.
-
-They sat there thus for a long time. The gilt clock paused, choked, then
-in a voice of hurrying, hoarsened silver rang out eleven strokes.
-Footsteps passed and faded up the corridor; doors closed. A tramway on
-the quai clashed and clanged, came to a noisy standstill, and moved on
-again with a rattling of cables and raucous blasts from a horn; and in
-the profound silence that followed he seemed to hear the deep old river
-flowing.
-
-"Really, you see, it's broken," said Adrienne. She had ceased to weep,
-but she still leaned forward, her head upon her folded arms. "You saw it
-happen," she said. "That night when you found me in the rain."
-
-"I've seen everything happen to you, haven't I?" said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Yes," she assented. "Everything. And I've made you suffer, too. Isn't
-that strange; everybody who comes near me I make suffer."
-
-"Well, in different ways," he said. "Some because you are near and
-others because you won't be."
-
-His voice was colourless. His hand still passed across her hair.
-
-"Don't you see," she said, after a moment, "that it couldn't have been.
-Try to see that and to accept it. Not you and me. Not Barney's friend
-and Barney's wife. In every way it couldn't have done, really. It makes
-no difference for me. I'm a _déracinée_, as I said. A wanderer. But what
-would have become of you, all full of roots as you are? You can live it
-down without me. You never could have with. And how could you have
-wandered with me? For that must be my life."
-
-"You know, it's no good trying to comfort me," said Oldmeadow. "What I
-feel is that any roots I have are in you."
-
-"They will grow again. The others will grow again."
-
-"I don't want others, darling," said Oldmeadow. "You see, my heart is
-broken, too."
-
-She lifted her head at last and he saw her marred and ravaged face.
-
-"It can't be helped," he tried to smile at her. "You weren't there to be
-recognized when I first met you and now that you are there, I've come
-too late. I believe that if I'd come before Barney, you'd have loved me.
-It's my only comfort."
-
-"Who can say," said Adrienne. Her gaze, as she looked at him, was deep
-with the mystery of her acceptance. "Perhaps. It seems to me all this
-was needed to bring us where we are--enmity and bitterness and grief.
-And my love for Barney, too. Let me tell you. It's in the past that I
-think of him. As if he were dead. It's something over; done with for
-ever; yet something always there. How can one be a mother and forget?
-Even when he is Nancy's husband and when she is a mother, I shall not
-cease to feel myself his wife. Perhaps you think that strange, after Meg
-and what I believed right for her. But it is quite clear to me, and
-simple. It isn't a thing of laws and commandments; only of our own
-hearts. If we can love again, we may. But for me it would be impossible.
-With me everything was involved. I couldn't, ever, be twice a wife."
-
-Silence fell between them.
-
-"I'll see about the little girl's grave," said Oldmeadow suddenly. He
-did not know what had made him think of it. Perhaps something that had
-gone on echoing in him after she had spoken of her maternity. "I'll go
-to Evian to-morrow. It will spare Joséphine the journey and give me
-something to do. You'll tell me the name and give me the directions
-before you go."
-
-Tears filled her eyes as she looked at him; but they did not fall. They
-could need no controlling. The springs of weeping must be nearly
-drained. "Thank you," she said, and she looked away, seeming to think
-intently.
-
-It was now too late for the tramways. They had ceased to crash and
-rattle by, but a sound of belated singing passed along the quais,
-melancholy in its induced and extravagant mirth.
-
-The horrible sense of human suffering that had beaten in upon him at the
-hospital, pressed again upon his heart. He saw himself departing next
-day to find the abandoned grave and he saw himself standing beside her
-train and measuring along the shining rails the vast distances that were
-to bear her away for ever.
-
-"That's the worst," he said. "You're suffering too. I must see you go
-away and know that you are unhappy. I must think of you as unhappy. With
-a broken heart."
-
-Her eyes, after she had thanked him, had been fixed in the intent
-reverie. She, too, perhaps, had been seeing those tides of misery, the
-sea of which she had spoken, breaking in tragic waves for ever; so
-unchanged by all the alleviations that love or mercy could bring; and it
-was perhaps with despair that she saw herself as one with it. Her eyes
-as she turned them on him were full of distance and of depth and, with
-sickening grief, he felt that a woman with a broken heart could do
-nothing more for herself or for him.
-
-But her thought, whatever the voids of darkness it had visited, drew
-nearer and nearer to his need as she looked at him. Something of her own
-strong vigilance was in the look, bringing the seagull to his mind. The
-seagull caught and battered by the waves, with sodden wings, half
-dragged down, yet summoning its strength to rise from the submerging
-sea.
-
-"But you can be happy with a broken heart," she said. Their hands had
-fallen apart long since. She stretched out hers now and took his in her
-small, firm grasp.
-
-"Can you?" he asked.
-
-"You mustn't think of me like this," she said, and it was as if she read
-his thoughts and their imagery. "I went down, I know; like drowning.
-Sometimes the waves break over you and pull you down, and there seems
-nothing else in all the world but yourself and what you've suffered. But
-it doesn't last. Something brings you up again."
-
-Something had brought her up again now. His darkness. His misery. It was
-as if he saw her spread her wings and saw her eyes measuring, for them
-both, the spaces of sea and sky.
-
-He remembered a picture in a book he had loved as a little boy: little
-Diamond held to the breast of the North Wind as she flies forth in her
-streaming hair against a sky of stars. So he felt himself lying on her
-breast and lifted with her.
-
-"I've told you how happy I can be. It's all true," she said. "It's all
-there. The light, the peace, the strength. I shall find them. And so
-will you."
-
-"Shall I?" he questioned gently. "Without you?"
-
-"Yes. Without me. You will find them. But you won't be without me," said
-Adrienne.
-
-Already she was finding them. He knew that, for, as she looked at him,
-he felt an influence passing from her to him like the laying of her hand
-upon his brow. But it was closer than that. It was to her breast that
-her eyes held him while, in a long silence, the compulsion of her faith
-flowed into him. First quietness; then peace; then a lifting radiance.
-
-"Promise me," he heard her say.
-
-He did not know what it was he must promise, but he seemed to feel it
-all without knowing and he said: "I promise."
-
-She rose and stood above him. "You mustn't regret. You mustn't want."
-
-She laid her hands upon his shoulders as she spoke and looked down at
-him, so austere, so radiant. "Anything else would have spoiled it. We
-were only meant to find each other like this and then to part."
-
-"I'll be good," said Oldmeadow. It was like saying one's prayers at
-one's mother's knees and his lips found the child-like formula.
-
-"We must part," said Adrienne. "I have my life and you have yours and
-they take different ways. But you won't be without me, I won't be
-without you. How can we be, when we will never, never forget each other
-and our love?"
-
-He looked up at her. He had put out his hands and they grasped her dress
-as a donor in a votive altarpiece grasps the Madonna's healing garment.
-It was not, he knew, to keep her. It was rather in an accepting
-relinquishment that he held her thus for their last communion, receiving
-through touch and sight and hearing her final benison.
-
-"I will think of you every day, until I die," she said. "I will pray for
-you every day. Dear friend--dearest friend--God bless and keep you."
-
-She had stooped to him and for a transcending moment he was taken into
-her strong, life-giving embrace. The climax of his life was come as he
-felt her arms close round him and her kiss upon his forehead. And as she
-held him thus he believed all that she had said and all for which she
-could have found no words. That he should find the light and more and
-more feel their unity in it: that the thought of her would be strength
-to him always; as the thought of him and of his love would be strength
-to her.
-
-After she had gone, he sat for a long time bathed in the sense of her
-life, and tasting, for that span of time, her own security of eternal
-goodness.
-
-THE END
-
-
-Typographical error was corrected by the etext transcriber:
-
-"Adriennes mustn't fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only
-justification for Adriennes is to be in the right. => "Adrienne mustn't
-fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only justification for Adrienne is
-to be in the right. {pg 241}
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="364" height="550" alt="bookcover" title="" />
-</p>
-
-<p class="cb">ADRIENNE TONER</p>
-
-<div class="boxx">
-<div class="boxx1">
-<h1>ADRIENNE TONER<br />
-<i>A Novel</i></h1>
-<hr />
-<p class="cbb">BY<br />
-ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK<br />
-(Mrs. Basil de Sélincourt)<br />
-<br />
-<small>AUTHOR OF “CHRISTMAS ROSES, AND OTHER STORIES,†“TANTEâ€<br />
-“FRANKLIN KANE,†“THE ENCOUNTER,†ETC.</small></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/colophon.png" width="135" height="184" alt="colophon" title="" />
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="cbb">BOSTON AND NEW YORK<br />
-HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY<br />
-<span class="eng">The Riverside Press Cambridge</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="c">
-COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY ANNE DOUGLAS DE SÉLINCOURT<br />
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED<br />
-<br />
-THIRD IMPRESSION, MAY, 1922<br />
-<br /><br />
-<span class="eng">The Riverside Press</span><br />
-CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS<br />
-PRINTED IN THE U . S . A.</p>
-
-<p><a name="page_001" id="page_001"></a>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><a name="page_002" id="page_002"></a>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="c">
-<a href="#PART_I"><b>PART I</b></a><br />
-<a href="#CHAPTER_I-a"><b>CHAPTER: I, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_II-a"><b>II, </b></a><br />
-<a href="#CHAPTER_III-a"><b>III, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_IV-a"><b>IV, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_V-a"><b>V, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_VI-a"><b>VI, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_VII-a"><b>VII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII-a"><b>VIII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_IX-a"><b>IX, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_X-a"><b>X, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XI-a"><b>XI, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XII-a"><b>XII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII-a"><b>XIII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV-a"><b>XIV, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XV-a"><b>XV, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI-a"><b>XVI, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII-a"><b>XVII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII-a"><b>XVIII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX-a"><b>XIX, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XX-a"><b>XX, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXI-a"><b>XXI, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXII-a"><b>XXII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII-a"><b>XXIII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV-a"><b>XXIV, </b></a><br />
-<a href="#PART_II"><b>PART II</b></a><br />
-<a href="#CHAPTER_I-b"><b>CHAPTER: I, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_II-b"><b>II, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_III-b"><b>III, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_IV-b"><b>IV, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_V-b"><b>V, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_VI-b"><b>VI, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_VII-b"><b>VII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII-b"><b>VIII, </b></a>
-<a href="#CHAPTER_IX-b"><b>IX</b></a></p>
-
-<p><a name="page_003" id="page_003"></a></p>
-
-<h2>ADRIENNE TONER<br />
-<a name="PART_I" id="PART_I"></a>PART I</h2>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_I-a" id="CHAPTER_I-a"></a>CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">“C<small>OME</small> down to Coldbrooks next week-end, will you, Roger?†said Barney
-Chadwick. He had been wandering around the room, pausing once to glance
-at the César Franck on the piano and once at the window to look down at
-the Thames, and his voice now, though desultory in intention, betrayed
-to his friend preoccupation and even anxiety. “There is going to be an
-interesting girl with us: American; very original and charming.â€</p>
-
-<p>Roger Oldmeadow sat at his writing-bureau in the window, and his high
-dark head was silhouetted against the sky. It had power and even beauty,
-with moments of brooding melancholy; but the type to which it most
-conformed was that of the clever, cantankerous London bachelor; and if
-he sometimes looked what he was, the scholar who had taken a double
-first at Balliol and gave brain and sinew to an eminent review, he
-looked more often what he was not, a caustic, cautious solicitor,
-clean-shaved and meticulously neat, with the crisp bow at his collar,
-single eyeglass, and thin, wry smile.</p>
-
-<p>There was a cogitative kindness in his eyes and a latent irony on his
-lips as he now scrutinized Barney Chadwick, who had come finally to lean
-against the<a name="page_004" id="page_004"></a> mantelpiece, and it was difficult before Roger Oldmeadow’s
-gaze at such moments not to feel that you were giving yourself away.
-This was evidently what Barney was trying not to feel, or, at all
-events, not to show. He tapped his cigarette-end, fixing his eyes upon
-it and frowning a little. He had ruffled his brown hair with the nervous
-hand passed through it during his ramble, but ruffled or sleek Barney
-could never look anything but perfection, just as, whether he smiled or
-frowned, he could never look anything but charming. In his spring-tide
-grey, with a streak of white inside his waistcoat and a tie of petunia
-silk that matched his socks, he was a pleasant figure of fashion; and he
-was more than that; more than the mere London youth of 1913, who danced
-the tango and cultivated Post-Impressionism and the Russian ballet. He
-was perhaps not much more; but his difference, if slight, made him
-noticeable. It came back, no doubt, to the fact of charm. He was radiant
-yet reserved; confident yet shy. He had a slight stammer, and his smile
-seemed to ask you to help him out. His boyhood, at twenty-nine, still
-survived in his narrow face, clumsy in feature and delicate in contour,
-with long jaw, high temples and brown eyes, half sweet, half sleepy. The
-red came easily to his brown cheek, and he had the sensitive, stubborn
-lips of the little boy at the preparatory school whom Oldmeadow had met
-and befriended now many years ago.</p>
-
-<p>In Oldmeadow’s eyes he had always remained the “little Barney†he had
-then christened him&mdash;even Barney’s mother had almost forgotten that his
-real name was Eustace&mdash;and he could not but know that Barney depended
-upon him more than upon<a name="page_005" id="page_005"></a> anyone in the world. To Barney his negations
-were more potent than other people’s affirmations, and though he had
-sometimes said indignantly, “You leave one nothing to agree about,
-Roger, except Plato and Church-music,†he was never really happy or
-secure in his rebellions from what he felt or suspected to be
-Oldmeadow’s tastes and judgments. Oldmeadow had seen him through many
-admirations, not only for books and pictures, but for original girls.
-Barney thought that he liked the unusual. He was a devotee of the
-ballet, and had in his rooms cushions and curtains from the Omega shop
-and a drawing by Wyndham Lewis. But Oldmeadow knew that he really
-preferred the photograph of a Burne-Jones, a survival from Oxford days,
-that still bravely, and irrelevantly, hung opposite it, and he waited to
-see the Wyndham Lewis replaced by a later portent. Barney could remain
-stubbornly faithful to old devotions, but he was easily drawn into new
-orbits; and it was a new star, evidently, that he had come to describe
-and justify.</p>
-
-<p>“What have I to do with charming American girls?†Oldmeadow inquired,
-turning his eyes on the blurred prospect of factory-chimneys and
-warehouses that the farther waterside of Chelsea affords. One had to go
-to the window and look out to see the grey and silver river flowing, in
-the placidity that revealed so little power. Oldmeadow lived in a flat
-on the Embankment; but he was not an admirer of Chelsea, just as he was
-not an admirer of Whistler nor&mdash;and Barney had always suspected it&mdash;of
-Burne-Jones. His flat gave him, at a reasonable cost, fresh air,
-boiling-hot water and a walk in Battersea Park; these, with his piano,
-were his fundamental<a name="page_006" id="page_006"></a> needs; though he owned, for the mean little stream
-it was, that the Thames could look pretty enough by morning sunlight
-and&mdash;like any river&mdash;magical under stars. After Plato and Bach,
-Oldmeadow’s passions were the rivers of France.</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll have something to do with you,†said Barney, and he seemed
-pleased with the retort. “I met her at the Lumleys. They think her the
-marvel of the age.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that doesn’t endear her to me,†said Oldmeadow. “And I don’t like
-Americans.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Come, you’re not quite so hide-bound as all that,†said Barney, vexed.
-“What about Mrs. Aldesey? I’ve heard you say she’s the most charming
-woman you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Except Nancy,†Oldmeadow amended.</p>
-
-<p>“No one could call Nancy a charming woman,†said Barney, looking a
-little more vexed. “She’s a dear, of course; but she’s a mere girl. What
-do you know about Americans, anyway&mdash;except Mrs. Aldesey?â€</p>
-
-<p>“What she tells me about them&mdash;the ones she doesn’t know,†said
-Oldmeadow, leaning back in his chair with a laugh. “But I own that I’m
-merely prejudiced. Tell me about your young lady, and why you want her
-to have something to do with me. Is she a reformer of some sort?â€</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a wonderful person, really,†said Barney, availing himself with
-eagerness of his opportunity. “Not a reformer. Only a sort of mixture of
-saint and fairy-princess. She cured Charlie Lumley of insomnia, three
-years ago, at Saint Moritz. Nothing psychic or theatrical, you know.
-Just sat by him and smiled&mdash;she’s a most extraordinary smile&mdash;<a name="page_007" id="page_007"></a>and laid
-her hand on his head. He’d not slept for nights and went off like a
-lamb. Lady Lumley almost cries when she tells about it. They thought
-Charlie might lose his mind if he went on not sleeping.â€</p>
-
-<p>“My word! She’s a Christian Science lady? A medium? What?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Call her what you like. You’ll see. She does believe in spiritual
-forces. It’s not only that. She’s quite lovely. In every way. Nancy and
-Meg will worship her. The Lumley girls do.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow’s thoughts were already dwelling in rueful surmise on Nancy.
-He had always thought her the nicest young creature he had ever known,
-nicer even than Barney; and he had always wanted them to marry. She was
-Barney’s second cousin, and she and her mother lived near the Chadwicks
-in Gloucestershire.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Nancy will worship her, will she? She must be all right, then.
-What’s her name?†he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Barney had given up trying to be desultory, and his conscious firmness
-was now not lost upon his friend as he answered, stammering a little,
-“Adrienne. Adrienne Toner.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Why Adrienne?†Oldmeadow mildly inquired. “Has she French blood?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not that I know of. It’s a pretty name, I think, Adrienne. One hears
-more inane names given to girls every day. Her mother loved France&mdash;just
-as you do, Roger. Adrienne was born in Paris, I think.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a very pretty name,†said Oldmeadow, noting Barney’s already
-familiar use of it. “Though it sounds more like an actress’s than a
-saint’s.â€</p>
-
-<p>“There was something dramatic about the mother,<a name="page_008" id="page_008"></a> I fancy,†said Barney,
-sustained, evidently, by his own detachment. “A romantic, rather absurd,
-but very loveable person. Adrienne worshipped her and, naturally, can’t
-see the absurdity. She died out in California. On a boat,†said Barney
-stammering again, over the <i>b</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“On a boat?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Awfully funny. But touching, too. That’s what she wanted, when she
-died: the sea and sky about her. They carried her on her yacht&mdash;doctors,
-nurses, all the retinue&mdash;and sailed far out from shore. It’s beautiful,
-too, in a way you know, to be able to do that sort of thing quite simply
-and unself-consciously. Adrienne sat beside her, and they smiled at each
-other and held hands until the end.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow played with his penholder. He was disconcerted; and most of
-all by the derivative emotion in Barney’s voice. They had gone far,
-then, already, the young people. Nancy could have not the ghost of a
-chance. And the nature of what touched Barney left him singularly dry.
-He was unable to credit so much simplicity or unself-consciousness. He
-coughed shortly, and after a decently respectful interval inquired: “Is
-Miss Toner very wealthy?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, very,†said Barney, relapsing now into a slight sulkiness. “At
-least, perhaps not very, as rich Americans go. She gave away a lot of
-her fortune, I know, when her mother died. She founded a place for
-children&mdash;a convalescent home, or crèche&mdash;out in California. And she did
-something in Chicago, too.â€</p>
-
-<p>And Miss Toner had evidently done something in<a name="page_009" id="page_009"></a> London at the Lumleys’.
-It couldn’t be helped about Nancy, and if the American girl was pretty
-and, for all her nonsense, well-bred, it might not be a bad thing, since
-there was so much money. The Chadwicks were not at all well off, and
-Coldbrooks was only kept going by Mrs. Chadwick’s economies and Barney’s
-labours at his uncle’s stock-broking firm in the city. Oldmeadow could
-see Eleanor Chadwick’s so ingenuous yet so practical eye fixed on Miss
-Toner’s gold, and he, too, could fix his. Miss Toner sounded benevolent,
-and it was probable that her presence as mistress of Coldbrooks would be
-of benefit to all Barney’s relatives. All the same, she sounded as
-irrelevant in his life as the Wyndham Lewis.</p>
-
-<p>“Adrienne Toner,†he heard himself repeating aloud, for he had a trick,
-caught, no doubt, from his long loneliness, of relapsing into
-absent-minded and audible meditations. The cadence of it worried him. It
-was an absurd name. “You know each other pretty well already, it seems,â€
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; it’s extraordinary how one seems to know her. One doesn’t have any
-formalities to get through with her, as it were,†said Barney. “Either
-you are there, or you are not there.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Either on the yacht, or not on the yacht, eh?†Oldmeadow reached out
-for his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“Put it like that if you choose. It’s awfully jolly to be on the yacht,
-I can tell you. It <i>is</i> like a voyage, a great adventure, to know her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And what’s it like to be off the yacht? Suppose I’m not there? Suppose
-she doesn’t like me?†Oldmeadow suggested. “What am I to talk to her
-about&mdash;of course I’ll come, if you really want me.<a name="page_010" id="page_010"></a> But she frightens me
-a little, I confess. I’m not an adventurous person.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But neither am I, you know!†Barney exclaimed, “and that’s just what
-she does to you: makes you adventurous. She’ll be immensely interested
-in you, of course. You can talk to her about anything. It was down at a
-week-end at the Lumleys’ I first met her, and there were some tremendous
-big-wigs there, political, you know, and literary, and all that sort of
-thing; and she had them all around her. She’d have frightened me, too,
-if I hadn’t seen at once that she took to me and wouldn’t mind my being
-just ordinary. She likes everybody; that’s just it. She takes to
-everybody, big and little. She’s just like sunshine,†Barney stammered a
-little over his <i>s</i>’s. “That’s what she makes one think of straight off;
-shining on everything.â€</p>
-
-<p>“On the clean and the unclean. I see,†said Oldmeadow. “I feel it in my
-bones that I shall come into the unclean category with her. But it’ll do
-me the more good to have her shine on me.<a name="page_011" id="page_011"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_II-a" id="CHAPTER_II-a"></a>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">R<small>OGER</small> O<small>LDMEADOW</small> went to have tea with Mrs. Aldesey next afternoon. She
-was, after the Chadwicks, his nearest friend, and his relation to the
-Chadwicks was one of affection rather than affinity. They had been
-extraordinarily kind to him since the time that he had befriended Barney
-at the preparatory school, hiding, under his grim jocularities, the
-bewilderment of a boy’s first great bereavement. His love for his mother
-had been an idolatry, and his childhood had been haunted by her
-ill-health. She died when he was thirteen, and in some ways he knew
-that, even now, he had never got over it. His unfortunate and frustrated
-love-affair in early manhood had been, when all was said and done, a
-trivial grief compared to it. Coldbrooks had become, after that, his
-only home, for he had lost his father as a very little boy, and the
-whole family had left the country parsonage and been thrown on the
-mercies of an uncle and aunt who lived in a grim provincial town.
-Oldmeadow’s most vivid impression of home was the high back bedroom
-where the worn carpet was cold to the feet and the fire a sulky spot of
-red, and the windows looked out over smoky chimney-pots. Here his
-stricken mother lay in bed with her cherished cat beside her and read
-aloud to him. There was always a difficulty about feeding poor Effie,
-Aunt Aggie declaring that cats should live below stairs and on mice; and
-Roger, at midday dinner, became adroit at slipping bits of meat from<a name="page_012" id="page_012"></a>
-his plate into a paper held in his lap and carried triumphantly to his
-mother’s room afterwards. “Oh, darling, you <i>oughtn’t</i> to,†she would
-say with her loving, girlish smile, and he would reply, “But I went
-without, Mummy; so it’s quite all right.†His two little sisters were
-kept in the nursery, as they were noisy, high-spirited children, and
-tired their mother too much. Roger was her companion, her comrade; her
-only comrade in the world, really, beside Effie. It had been Mrs.
-Chadwick who had saved Effie from the lethal chamber after her
-mistress’s death. Roger never spoke about his mother, but he did speak
-about Effie when she was thus threatened, and he had never forgotten,
-never, never, Mrs. Chadwick’s eager cry of, “But bring her here, my dear
-Roger. I <i>like</i> idle cats! Bring her here, and I promise you that we’ll
-make her happy. Animals are <i>so</i> happy at Coldbrooks.†To see Effie
-cherished, petted, occupying the best chairs during all the years that
-followed, had been to see his mother, in this flickering little ghost,
-remembered in the only way he could have borne to see her explicitly
-remembered, and it was because of Effie that he had most deeply loved
-Coldbrooks. It remained always his refuge during a cheerless and
-harassed youth, when, with his two forceful, black-browed sisters to
-settle in life, he had felt himself pant and strain under the harness.
-He was fonder of them than they of him, for they were hard, cheerful
-young women, inheriting harshness of feature and manner from their
-father, with their father’s black eyes. It was from his mother that
-Oldmeadow had his melancholy blue ones, and he had never again met his
-mother’s tenderness.<a name="page_013" id="page_013"></a></p>
-
-<p>Both sisters were now settled, one in India and one, very prosperously,
-in London; but he seldom turned for tea into Cadogan Gardens and
-Trixie’s brisk Chippendale drawing-room; though Cadogan Gardens was
-obviously more convenient than Somer’s Place, where, on the other side
-of the park, Mrs. Aldesey lived. He had whims, and did not know whether
-it was because he more disliked her husband or her butler that he went
-so seldom to see Trixie. Her husband was jovial and familiar, and the
-butler had a face like a rancid ham and a surreptitious manner. One had
-always to be encountered at the door, and the other was too often in the
-drawing-room, and Trixie was vexatiously satisfied with both; Trixie
-also had four turbulent, intelligent children, in whom complacent
-parental theories of uncontrol manifested themselves unpleasantly, and
-altogether she was too much hedged in by obstacles to be tempting; even
-had she been tempting in herself. Intercourse with Trixie, when it did
-take place, consisted usually of hard-hearted banter. She bantered him a
-great deal about Mrs. Aldesey, who, she averred, snubbed her. Not that
-Trixie minded being snubbed by anybody.</p>
-
-<p>It was a pleasant walk across the park on this spring day when the
-crocuses were fully out in the grass, white, purple and gold, and the
-trees just scantly stitched with green, and, as always, it was with a
-slight elation that he approached his friend. However dull or jaded
-oneself or the day, the thought of her cheered one as did the thought of
-tea. She made him think of her own China tea. She suggested delicate
-ceremoniousness. Though familiar, there was always an aroma of
-unexpectedness<a name="page_014" id="page_014"></a> about her; a slight, sweet shock of oddity and surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Aldesey was unlike the traditional London American. She was neither
-rich nor beautiful nor noticeably well-dressed. One became gradually
-aware, after some time spent in her company, that her clothes,
-soft-tinted and silken, were pleasing, as were her other appurtenances;
-the narrow front of her little house, painted freshly in white and green
-and barred by boxes of yellow wallflower; the serenely unfashionable
-water-colours of Italy, painted by her mother, on the staircase; and her
-drawing-room, grey-green and primrose-yellow, with eighteenth-century
-fans, of which she had a collection, displayed in cabinets, and good old
-glass.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Aldesey herself, behind her tea-table, very faded, very thin, with
-what the French term a <i>souffreteux</i> little face&mdash;an air of just not
-having taken drugs to make her sleep, but of having certainly taken
-tabloids to make her digest&mdash;seemed already to belong to a passing order
-of things; an order still sustained, if lightly, by stays, and keeping a
-prayer-book as punctually in use as a card-case.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow owed her, if indirectly, to the Chadwicks, as he owed so much,
-even if it was entirely on his own merits that he had won her regard.
-They had met, years ago, in France; an entirely chance encounter, and
-probably a futureless one, had it not been for the presence in the hotel
-at Amboise of the Lumleys. They both slightly knew the Lumleys, and the
-Lumleys and the Chadwicks were old friends. So it had come about; and if
-he associated Mrs. Aldesey with tea, he associated her also with perfect
-omelettes and the Loire. He had liked her at once<a name="page_015" id="page_015"></a> so much, that, had it
-not been for an always unseen yet never-repudiated husband in New York,
-he would certainly, at the beginning, have fallen in love with her. But
-the unrepudiated husband made as much a part of Mrs. Aldesey’s
-environment as her stays and her prayer-book. The barrier was so evident
-that one did not even reflect on what one might have done had it not
-been there; and indeed, Mrs. Aldesey, he now seemed, after many pleasant
-years of friendship, to recognize, for all the sense of sweetness and
-exhilaration she gave him, had not enough substance to rouse or sustain
-his heart. She was, like the tea again, all savour.</p>
-
-<p>She lifted to-day her attentive blue eyes&mdash;with age they would become
-shrewd&mdash;and gave him her fine little hand, blue-veined and ornamented
-with pearls and diamonds in old settings. She wore long earrings and a
-high, transparent collar of net and lace. Her earrings and her
-elaborately dressed hair, fair and faded, seemed as much a part of her
-personality as her eyes, her delicate nose and her small, slightly
-puckered mouth that dragged provocatively and prettily at one corner
-when she smiled. Oldmeadow sometimes wondered if she were happy; but
-never because of anything she said or did.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to hear about some people called Toner,†he said, dropping into
-the easy-chair on the opposite side of the tea-table. It was almost
-always thus that he and Mrs. Aldesey met. He rarely dined out. “I’m
-rather perturbed. I think that Barney&mdash;you remember young Chadwick&mdash;is
-going to marry a Miss Toner&mdash;a Miss Adrienne Toner. And I hope you’ll
-have something to her advantage to tell me. As you know, I’m devoted to
-Barney and his family.<a name="page_016" id="page_016"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know. The Lumleys’ Chadwicks. I remember perfectly. The dear boy with
-the innocent eyes and sulky mouth. Why don’t you bring him to see me?
-He’s dancing the tango in all his spare moments, I suppose, and doesn’t
-care about old ladies.†Mrs. Aldesey was not much over forty, but always
-thus alluded to herself. “Toner,†she took up, pouring out his tea. “Why
-perturbed? Do you know anything against them? Americans, you mean. We
-poor expatriates are always seen as keepers to so many curious
-brethren.&mdash;Toner. <i>Celà ne me dit rien</i>.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know nothing against them except that Mrs. Toner, the girl’s mother,
-died, by arrangement, out at sea, on her yacht&mdash;in sunlight. Does that
-say anything? People don’t do that in America, do they, as a rule? A
-very opulent lady, I inferred.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear!†Mrs. Aldesey now ejaculated, as if enlightened. “Can it be?
-Do you mean, I wonder, the preposterous Mrs. Toner, of whom, fifteen
-years ago, I had a glimpse, and used to hear vague rumours? She wandered
-about the world. She dressed in the Empire period: Queen Louise of
-Prussia, white gauze bound beneath her chin. She had a harp, and warbled
-to monarchs. She had an astral body, and a Yogi and a yacht and
-everything handsome about her. The typical spiritual <i>cabotine</i> of our
-epoch&mdash;though I’m sure they must always have existed. Of course it must
-be she. No one else could have died like that. Has she died, poor woman?
-On a yacht. Out at sea. In sunlight. How uncomfortable!â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, she’s dead,†said Oldmeadow resignedly. “Yes; it’s she, evidently.
-And her daughter is coming down to Coldbrooks this week-end. I’m afraid<a name="page_017" id="page_017"></a>
-that unless Barney has too many rivals, he’ll certainly marry her. But
-what you say leads me to infer that he will have rivals and to hope they
-may be successful. She will, no doubt, marry a prince.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Something Italian, perhaps. Quite a small fortune will do that.
-Certainly your nice Barney wouldn’t have been at all Mrs. Toner’s
-<i>affaire</i>. The girl on her own may think differently, for your Barney
-is, I remember, very engaging, and has a way with him. I don’t know
-anything about the girl. I didn’t know there was one. There’s no reason
-why she may not be charming. Our wonderful people have the gift of
-picking up experience in a generation and make excellent princesses.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But she’s that sort, you think. The sort that marries princes and has
-no traditions. Where did they come from? Do you know that?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t an idea. Yet, stay. Was it not tooth-paste?&mdash;Toner’s Peerless
-Tooth-Paste. Obsolete; yet I seem to see, reminiscently, in far-away
-nursery days, the picture of a respectable old gentleman with
-side-whiskers, on a tube. A pretty pink glazed tube with a gilt top to
-it. Perhaps it’s that. Since it was Toner’s it would be the father’s
-side; not the warbling mother’s. Well, many of us might wish for as
-unambiguous an origin nowadays. And, in America, we did all sorts of
-useful things when we first, all of us, came over in the Mayflower!â€
-said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow gazed upon his friend with an ironically receptive eye. “Have
-they ever known anyone decent? Anyone like yourself? I don’t mean over
-here. I mean in America.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No one like me, I imagine; if I’m decent. Mrs.<a name="page_018" id="page_018"></a> Toner essayed a season
-in New York one winter, and it was then I had my glimpse of her, at the
-opera, in the Queen Louise dress. A pretty woman, dark, with a sort of
-soulful and eminently respectable coquetry about her; surrounded by
-swarms of devotees&mdash;all male, to me unknown; and with something in a
-turban that I took to be a Yogi in the background. She only tried the
-one winter. She knew what she wanted and where she couldn’t get it. We
-are very dry in New York&mdash;such of us as survive. Very little moved by
-warblings or astral bodies or millions. As you intimate, she’ll have
-done much better over here. You <i>are</i> a strange mixture of materialism
-and ingenuousness, you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s only that we have fewer Mrs. Toners to amuse us and more to do
-with millions than you have,†said Oldmeadow; but Mrs. Aldesey, shaking
-her head with a certain sadness, said that it wasn’t as simple as all
-that.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you seen her? Have you seen Adrienne?†she took up presently,
-making him his second cup of tea. “Is she pretty? Is he very much in
-love?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going down to Coldbrooks on Saturday to see her,†said Oldmeadow,
-“and I gather that it’s not to subject her to any test that Barney wants
-me; it’s to subject me, rather. He’s quite sure of her. He thinks she’s
-irresistible. He merely wants to make assurance doubly sure by seeing me
-bowled over. I don’t know whether she’s pretty. She has powers,
-apparently, that make her independent of physical attractions. She lays
-her hands on people’s heads and cures them. She cured Charlie Lumley of
-insomnia at Saint Moritz three years ago.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Aldesey, at this, looked at him for some<a name="page_019" id="page_019"></a> moments in silence.
-“Yes,†she assented, and in her pause she seemed to have recognized and
-placed a familiar object. “Yes. She would. That’s just what Mrs. Toner’s
-daughter would do. I hope she doesn’t warble, too. Laying on hands is
-better than warbling.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I see you think it hopeless,†said Oldmeadow, pushing back his chair
-and yielding, as he thrust his hands into his pockets and stretched out
-his legs, to an avowed chagrin. “What a pity it is! A thousand pities.
-They are such dear, good, simple people, and Barney, though he doesn’t
-know it, is as simple as any of them. What will become of them with this
-overwhelming cuckoo in their nest.â€</p>
-
-<p>At this Mrs. Aldesey became serious. “I don’t think it hopeless at all.
-You misunderstand me. Isn’t the fact that he’s in love with her
-reassuring in itself? He may be simple, but he’s a delicate, discerning
-creature, and he couldn’t fall in love with some one merely pretentious
-and absurd. She may be charming. I can perfectly imagine her as
-charming, and there’s no harm in laying on hands; there may be good.
-Don’t be narrow, Roger. Don’t go down there feeling dry.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I am narrow, and I do feel dry; horribly dry,†said Oldmeadow. “How
-could the child of such a mother, and of tooth-paste, be charming? Don’t
-try specious consolation, now, after having more than justified all my
-suspicions.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m malicious, not specious; and I can’t resist having my fling. But
-you mustn’t be narrow and take me <i>au pied de la lettre</i>. I assert that
-she may be charming. I assert that I can see it all working out most
-happily. She’ll lay her hands on them and<a name="page_020" id="page_020"></a> they’ll love her. What I
-really want to say is this: don’t try to set Barney against her. He’ll
-marry her all the same and never forgive you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ah; there we have the truth of it. But Barney would always forgive me,â€
-said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“Well then, she won’t. And you’d lose him just as surely. And she’ll
-know. Let me warn you of that. She’ll know perfectly.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll keep my hands off her,†said Oldmeadow, “if she doesn’t try to lay
-hers on me.<a name="page_021" id="page_021"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_III-a" id="CHAPTER_III-a"></a>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">T<small>HE</small> Chadwicks all had a certain sulkiness in their charming looks, and
-where in Barney it mingled with sweetness, in Palgrave, his younger
-brother, it mingled with brilliancy. It was Palgrave who, at the
-station, met the family friend and counsellor in the shabby, inexpensive
-family car. He was still a mere boy, home from Marlborough for the
-Easter holidays; fond of Oldmeadow, as all the Chadwicks were; but more
-resentful of his predominance than Barney and more indifferent to his
-brotherly solicitude. He had Barney’s long, narrow face and Barney’s
-eyes and lips; but the former were proud and the latter petulant.
-To-day, as he sat beside him in the car, Oldmeadow was aware of
-something at once fixed and vibrating in his bearing. He wanted to say
-something, and he had resolved to be silent. During their last encounter
-at Coldbrooks, he and Oldmeadow had had a long, antagonistic political
-discussion, and Palgrave’s resentment still, no doubt, survived.</p>
-
-<p>Coldbrooks lay among the lower Cotswolds, three miles from the station,
-and near the station was the village of Chelford where Nancy Averil and
-her mother lived. Nancy was at Coldbrooks; Aunt Monica&mdash;she was called
-aunt by the Chadwick children, though she and Mrs. Chadwick were first
-cousins&mdash;was away. So Palgrave informed him. But he did not speak again
-until the chill, green curve of arable hill-side was climbed and a
-stretch of wind-swept country lay before them. Then suddenly<a name="page_022" id="page_022"></a> he
-volunteered: “The American girl is at Coldbrooks.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Is she? When did she come?†Somehow Oldmeadow had expected the
-later train for Miss Toner.</p>
-
-<p>“Yesterday. She and Barney came down together in her car.â€</p>
-
-<p>“So you’ve welcomed her already,†said Oldmeadow, curious of the
-expression on the boy’s face. “How does she fit into Coldbrooks? Does
-she like you all and do you like her?â€</p>
-
-<p>For a moment Palgrave was silent. “You mean it makes a difference
-whether we do or not?†he then inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that I meant that. Though if people come into your life it
-does make a difference.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And is she going to come into our lives?†Palgrave asked, and Oldmeadow
-felt pressure of some sort behind the question. “That’s what I mean. Has
-Barney told you? He’s said nothing to us. Not even to Mother.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Has Barney told me he’s going to marry her? No; he hasn’t. But it’s
-evident he hopes to. Perhaps it depends on whether she likes Coldbrooks
-and Coldbrooks likes her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, it doesn’t. It doesn’t depend on anything at all except whether
-she likes Barney,†said Palgrave. “She’s the sort of person who doesn’t
-depend on anything or anybody except herself. She cuts through
-circumstance like a knife through cheese. And if she’s not going to take
-him I wish she’d never come,†he added, frowning and turning, under the
-peak of his cap, his jewel-like eyes upon his companion. “It’s a case of
-all or nothing with a<a name="page_023" id="page_023"></a> person like that. It’s too disturbing&mdash;just for a
-glimpse.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow felt himself disconcerted. Oddly enough, for the boy was
-capricious and extravagant, Palgrave’s opinion had more weight with him
-than Barney’s. Barney, for one thing, was sexually susceptible and
-Palgrave was not. Though so young, Oldmeadow felt him already of a
-poetic temperament, passionate in mind and cold in blood.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s so charming? You can’t bear to lose her now you’ve seen her?†he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know about charming. No; I don’t think her charming. At least
-not if you mean something little by the word. She’s disturbing. She
-changes everything.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But if she stays she’ll be more disturbing. She’ll change more.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I shan’t mind that! I shan’t mind change,†Palgrave declared. “If
-it’s her change and she’s there to see it through.†And, relapsing to
-muteness, he bent to his brakes and they slid down among the woods of
-Coldbrooks.</p>
-
-<p>For the life of him and with the best will in the world, he couldn’t
-make it out. That was Oldmeadow’s first impression as, among the
-familiar group gathered in the hall about the tea-table, Miss Toner was
-at last made manifest to him. She was, he felt sure, in his first shrewd
-glance at her, merely what Lydia Aldesey would have placed as a
-third-rate American girl, and her origins in commercial enterprise were
-eminently appropriate.</p>
-
-<p>She got up to meet him, as if recognizing in him some special
-significance or, indeed, as it might be her ingenuous habit to do in
-meeting any older person.<a name="page_024" id="page_024"></a> But he was not so much older if it came to
-that; for, after he had met the direct and dwelling gaze of her large,
-light eyes, the second impression was that she was by no means so young
-as Barney had led him to expect. She was certainly as old as Barney.</p>
-
-<p>There were none of the obvious marks of wealth upon her. She wore a
-dark-blue dress tying on the breast over white. She was small in stature
-and, in manner, composed beyond anything he had ever encountered. With
-an irony, kindly enough, yet big, he knew, with unfavourable inferences,
-he even recognized, reconstructing the moment in the light of those that
-followed, that in rising to meet him as he was named to her, it had
-been, rather than in shyness or girlishness, in the wish to welcome him
-and draw him the more happily into a group she had already made her own.</p>
-
-<p>They were all sitting round the plentiful table, set with home-made
-loaves and cakes, jams and butter, and a Leeds bowl of primroses; Miss
-Toner just across from him, Barney on one side of her&mdash;his was an air of
-tranquil ecstasy&mdash;and little Barbara on the other, and they all seemed
-to emanate a new radiance; almost, thought Oldmeadow, with an
-irritability that was still genial, like innocent savages on a remote
-seashore gathered with intent eyes and parted lips round the newly
-disembarked Christopher Columbus. Mrs. Chadwick, confused, as usual,
-among her tea-cups, sending hasty relays of sugar after the unsugared or
-recalling those sugared in error, specially suggested the simile. She
-could, indeed, hardly think of her tea. Her wide, startled gaze turned
-incessantly on the new-comer and to Oldmeadow, for all his nearly filial
-affection, the<a name="page_025" id="page_025"></a> eyes of Eleanor Chadwick looked like nothing in the
-world so much as those of the March Hare in Tenniel’s evocation of the
-endearing creature. Unlike her children, she was fair, with a thin,
-high, ridiculously distinguished nose; but her mouth and chin had
-Barney’s irresolution and sweetness, and her untidy locks Meg’s beauty.
-Meg was a beauty in every way, rose, pearl and russet, a Romney touched
-with pride and daring, and the most sophisticated of all the Chadwicks;
-yet she, too, brooded, half merrily, half sombrely, on Miss Toner, her
-elbows on the table for the better contemplation. Palgrave’s absorption
-was manifest; but he did not brood. He held his head high, frowned and,
-for the most part, looked out of the window.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow sat between Palgrave and Nancy and it was with Nancy that the
-magic ended. Nancy did not share in the radiance. She smiled and was
-very busy cutting the bread and butter; but she was pale; not puzzled,
-but preoccupied. Poor darling Nancy; always his special pet; to him
-always the dearest and most loveable of girls. Not at all a Romney. With
-her pale, fresh face, dark hair and beautiful hands she suggested,
-rather, a country lady of the seventeenth century painted by Vandyck. A
-rural Vandyck who might have kept a devout and merry journal, surprising
-later generations by its mixture of ingenuousness and wisdom. Her lips
-were meditative, and her grey eyes nearly closed when she smiled in a
-way that gave to her gaiety and extraordinary sweetness and intimacy.
-Nancy always looked as if she loved you when she smiled at you; and
-indeed she did love you. She had spent her life among people she loved
-and if she could not be intimate she was remote and silent.<a name="page_026" id="page_026"></a></p>
-
-<p>But there was no hope for Nancy. He saw that finally, as he drank his
-tea in silence and looked across the primroses at the marvel of the age.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner’s was an insignificant little head, if indeed it could be
-called little, since it was too large for her body, and her way of
-dressing her hair in wide braids, pinned round it and projecting over
-the ears, added to the top-heavy effect. The hair was her only
-indubitable beauty, fine and fair and sparkling like the palest, purest
-metal. It was cut in a light fringe across a projecting forehead and her
-mouth and chin projected, too; so that, as he termed it to himself, it
-was a squashed-in face, ugly in structure, the small nose, from its
-depressed bridge, jutting forward in profile, the lips, in profile, flat
-yet prominent. Nevertheless he owned, studying her over his tea-cup,
-that the features, ugly, even trivial in detail, had in their assemblage
-something of unexpected force. Her tranquil smile had potency and he
-suddenly became aware of her flat, gentle voice, infrequent, yet oddly
-dominating. Sensitive as he was to voices, he saw it as a bland, blue
-ribbon rolled out among broken counters of colour, and listened to its
-sound before he listened to what it said. All the other voices went up
-and down; all the others half said things and let them drop or trail.
-She said things to the end: when the ribbon began it was unrolled; and
-it seemed, always, to make a silence in which it could be watched.</p>
-
-<p>“We went up high into the sunlight,†she said, “and one saw nothing but
-snow and sky. The bells were ringing on the mountains beneath; one heard
-no other sound. I have never forgotten the moment. It seemed an
-inspiration of joy and peace and strength.<a name="page_027" id="page_027"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve walked so much in the Alps, haven’t you, Roger?†said Mrs.
-Chadwick. “Miss Toner has motored over every pass.â€</p>
-
-<p>“In the French Alps. I don’t like Switzerland,†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“I think I love the mountains everywhere,†said Miss Toner, “when they
-go so high into the sky and have the sun and snow on their summits. But
-I love the mountains of Savoy and Jura best.â€</p>
-
-<p>It vexed him that she should. She was a person to stay in and prefer
-Switzerland. “Joy and peace and strength,†echoed in his ears and with
-the words, rudely, and irrelevantly, the image of the pink glazed tube
-with the gilt stopper. Miss Toner’s teeth were as white as they were
-benignant.</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I could see those flowers,†said Mrs. Chadwick. “I’ve only been
-to Vevey in the summer; oh, years and years ago. So dull. Fields of
-flowers. You’ve seen them, too, of course, Roger. All the things we grow
-with such pains. My Saint Brigid anemones never really do&mdash;though what I
-put in of leaf-mould!â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll see anemones, fields of them, in the Alpine meadows; and violets
-and lilies; the little lilies of Saint Bruno that look like freesias. I
-love them best of all,†the bland, blue ribbon unrolled. “You shall go
-with me some day, Mrs. Chadwick. We’ll go together.†And, smiling at her
-as if they had, already, a happy secret between them, Miss Toner
-continued: “We’ll go this very summer, if you will. We’ll motor all the
-way. I’ll come and get you here. For a whole month you shall forget that
-you’ve ever had a family to bring up or a house to take care of or
-anemones that won’t grow properly&mdash;even in leaf-mould.<a name="page_028" id="page_028"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes, as they rested on her hostess, seemed to impart more than her
-words. They imparted something to Oldmeadow. He had not before
-conjectured that Eleanor Chadwick might be bored or tired, nor realized
-that since Barbara’s birth, fourteen years ago, she had not left
-Coldbrooks except to go to London for a week’s shopping, or to stay with
-friends in the English country. He had taken Eleanor Chadwick’s life for
-granted. It seemed Miss Toner’s function not to take things that could
-be changed for granted. It was easy to do that of course, when you had a
-large banking account behind you; and yet he felt that Miss Toner would
-have had the faculty of altering accepted standards, even had she been
-materially unequipped. She and Mrs. Chadwick continued to look at each
-other for a moment and the older woman, half bashfully, seemed, with
-what softness, compelled to a tacit confession. She’d never known before
-that she was tired. Springs of adventure and girlishness within her were
-perhaps unsealed by Miss Toner’s gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“And where do the rest of us come in!†Barney ejaculated. He was so
-happy in the triumph of his beloved that his eyes, their sleepiness
-banished, were almost as brilliant as Palgrave’s.</p>
-
-<p>“But you’re always coming in with Mrs. Chadwick,†said Miss Toner. She
-looked at him, if with a touch of tender humour, exactly as she looked
-at his mother; but then she looked at them both as if they were precious
-to her. “I don’t want you to come in at all for that month. I want her
-to forget you ever existed. There ought to be waters of Lethe for
-everyone every now and then, even in this life. We come out, after the
-plunge into forgetfulness, far<a name="page_029" id="page_029"></a> brighter and stronger and with a
-renovated self to love the better with. Afterwards&mdash;after she’s had her
-dip&mdash;you’ll all come in, if you want to, with me. I’ll get a car big
-enough. You, too, Miss Averil; and Mr. Oldmeadow; though he and Barney
-and Palgrave may have to take turns sitting on the portmanteaus.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Barney†and “Palgrave†already. Her unpretentious mastery alarmed
-almost as much as it amused him. He thanked her, with his dry smile,
-saying that he really preferred to see the Alps on his legs and asked,
-to temper the possible acerbity, “Do you drive yourself?†for it seemed
-in keeping with his picture of her as an invading providence that she
-should with her own hand conduct the car of fate. He could see her,
-somehow, taking the hairpin curves on the Galibier.</p>
-
-<p>But Miss Toner said she did not drive. “One can’t see flowers if one
-drives oneself; and it would hurt dear Macfarlane’s feelings so.
-Macfarlane is my chauffeur and he’s been with me for years; from the
-time we first began to have motors, my mother and I, out in California.
-Apart from that, I should like it, I think, with the sense of risk and
-venture it must give. I like the sense of high adventure&mdash;of ‘Childe
-Roland to the dark tower came’; don’t you, Palgrave? It’s life, isn’t
-it? The pulse of life. Danger and venture and conquest. And then
-resting, on the heights, while one hears the bells beneath one.â€</p>
-
-<p>This, thought Oldmeadow, as he adjusted his glass the better to examine
-Miss Toner, must prove itself too much, even for Palgrave to swallow.
-But Palgrave swallowed it without a tremor. His eyes on hers he
-answered: “Yes, I feel life like that, too.<a name="page_030" id="page_030"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear!†sighed Mrs. Chadwick, and Oldmeadow blessed her antidote to
-the suffocating sweetness: “I’m afraid I don’t! I don’t think I know
-anything about risks and dangers; or about conquest either. I’m sure
-I’ve never conquered anything; though I have been dreadfully afraid of
-ill-tempered servants&mdash;if that counts, and never let them see it.
-Barbara had such an odious nurse. She tried, simply, to keep me out of
-the nursery; but she didn’t succeed. And there was a Scotch cook once,
-with red hair&mdash;that so often goes with a bad temper, doesn’t it? Do you
-remember, Barney?&mdash;your dear father had to go down to the kitchen when
-she was found lying quite, quite drunk under the table. But cooks and
-nurses can’t be called risks&mdash;and I’ve never cared for hunting.â€</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner was quietly laughing, and indeed everybody laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Mrs. Chadwick,†she said. And then she added: “How can a mother
-say she has not known risks and dangers? I think you’ve thought only of
-other people for all your life and never seen yourself at all. Alpine
-passes aren’t needed to prove people’s courage and endurance.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow now saw, from the sudden alarm and perplexity of Mrs.
-Chadwick’s expression, that she was wondering if the marvellous guest
-alluded to the perils of child-birth. Perhaps she did. She was ready, he
-imagined, to allude to anything.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right about her never having seen herself,†said Palgrave,
-nodding across at Miss Toner. “She never has. She’s incapable of
-self-analysis.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But she’s precious sharp when it comes to analysing other people,
-aren’t you, Mummy dear!†said Barney.<a name="page_031" id="page_031"></a></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think she is,†said Meg. “I think Mummy sees people rather as
-she sees flowers; things to be fed and staked and protected.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’re always crabbing Mummy, Meg. It’s a shame!&mdash;Isn’t it a shame,
-Mummy dear!†Barbara protested, and Barney tempered the apparent
-criticism&mdash;peacemaker as he usually was&mdash;with: “But you have to
-understand flowers jolly well to make them grow. And we do her credit,
-don’t we!â€</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner looked from one to the other as they spoke, with her clear,
-benignant, comprehending gaze, and Mrs. Chadwick stared with her March
-Hare ingenuousness that had its full share, too, of March Hare
-shrewdness. She undertook no self-justification, commenting merely, in
-the pause that followed Barney’s contribution: “I don’t know what you
-mean by self-analysis unless it’s thinking about yourself and mothers
-certainly haven’t much time for that. You’re quite right there, my
-dear,†she nodded at Miss Toner, adding in a tone intended specially for
-her: “But young people often exaggerate things that are quite, quite
-simple when they come.<a name="page_032" id="page_032"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_IV-a" id="CHAPTER_IV-a"></a>CHAPTER IV</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">“C<small>OME</small> out and have a stroll,†said Oldmeadow to Nancy. Tea was over and
-a primrose-coloured sunset filled the sky. They walked up and down the
-gravelled terrace before the house.</p>
-
-<p>Coldbrooks stood high, yet encircled by still higher stretches of bare
-or wooded upland. Its walled garden, where vegetable beds and lines of
-cordon apple-trees were pleasingly diversified by the herbaceous borders
-that ran beneath the walls, lay behind it; most of the bedroom windows
-looked down into the garden. Before it, to the south, lawns and meadows
-dropped to a lake fed by the brooks that gave the place its name. Beyond
-the lake were lower copses, tinkling now with the musical run of water
-and climbing softly on either side, so that from the terrace one had a
-vast curved space of sky before one. The sun was setting over the woods.</p>
-
-<p>It was Barney’s grandfather, enriched by large shipping enterprises in
-Liverpool, who had bought the pleasant old house, half farm, half manor,
-and Barney’s father had married the daughter of a local squire. But the
-family fortunes were much dwindled, and though Barney still nursed the
-project of returning one day to farm his own land there was little
-prospect of such a happy restoration. In spite of the Russian ballet and
-London portents, he was fonder, far, of Coldbrooks than of all of them
-put together. But he could afford neither time nor money for hunting,
-and his home was his only for week-ends and holidays. It was the most
-loveable of homes,<a name="page_033" id="page_033"></a> more stately without than within, built of grey-gold
-Cotswold stone with beautiful stone chimneys and mullioned windows and
-three gables facing the southern sky. Within, everything was rather bare
-and shabby. There was no central heating, and no bathrooms. The
-tiger-skin that lay on the stone flags of the hall had lost all its
-hair. The piano rattled and wheezed in many of its notes. The patterns
-of the drawing-room chintzes were faded to a mere dim rosy riot, and
-stuffing protruded from the angles of the leather arm-chairs in the
-smoking-room. But it was, all the same, a delightful house to stay in.
-Eleanor Chadwick’s shrewdness showed itself in her housekeeping. She
-knew what were the essentials. There was always a blazing fire in one’s
-bedroom in the evening and the hottest of water with one’s bath in the
-morning. Under the faded chintz, every chair in the drawing-room was
-comfortable. The toast was always crisp; the tea always made with
-boiling water; the servants cheerful. Mrs. Chadwick had a great gift
-with servants. She could reprove with extreme plaintiveness, yet never
-wound a susceptibility, and the servants’ hall, as she often remarked
-with justice, was smarter and prettier than the drawing-room. Johnson,
-the old butler, had been at Coldbrooks since before her marriage, and
-the grey-haired parlourmaid had come with her when she had come as a
-bride. These familiar faces added depth to the sense of intimacy that
-was the gift of Coldbrooks. Oldmeadow loved the place as much as any of
-the Chadwicks did, and was as much at home in it.</p>
-
-<p>“There is a blackcap,†said Nancy, “down in the copse. I felt sure I
-heard one this morning.<a name="page_034" id="page_034"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“So it is,†said Oldmeadow. They paused to listen.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the happiest of all,†said Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>He had been wondering about Nancy ever since he had come. It was not her
-voice, gentle and meditative, that told him now she was unhappy. It was
-rather in contrast to the bird’s clear ecstasy that he felt the
-heaviness of her heart.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s wilder than the thrush and blackbird, isn’t it?†he said. “Less
-conscious. The thrush is always listening to himself, I feel. Do you
-want to go to the Alps with Miss Toner, Nancy?â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy would not see Miss Toner as an angelic being and he wanted to know
-how she did see her. The others, it was evident, thought her angelic by
-a sort of group suggestion. She thought herself so, to begin with; snow,
-flowers, bells and all the rest of it; and they, ingenuous creatures,
-saw the mango-tree rising to heaven as the calm-eyed Yogi willed they
-should. But Nancy did not see the mango-tree. She was outside the group
-consciousness&mdash;with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no!†she now said quickly; and she added: “I don’t mean that I
-don’t like her. It’s only that I don’t know her. How can she want us?
-She came only yesterday.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But, you see, she means you to know her. And when she’s known she
-couldn’t imagine that anyone wouldn’t like her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think she’s conceited, if you mean that, Roger.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Conceit,†he rejoined, “may be of an order so monstrous that it loses
-all pettiness. You’ve seen more of her than I have, of course.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I think she’s good. She wants to do good. She<a name="page_035" id="page_035"></a> wants to make people
-happy; and she does,†said Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“By taking them about in motors, you mean.â€</p>
-
-<p>“In every way. She’s always thinking about pleasing them. In big and
-little ways. Aunt Eleanor loves her already. They had a long talk last
-night in Aunt Eleanor’s room. She’s given Meg the most beautiful little
-pendant&mdash;pearl and amethyst, an old Italian setting. She had it on last
-night and Meg said how lovely it was and she simply lifted it off her
-own neck and put it around Meg’s. Meg had to keep it. She gave it in
-such a way that one would have to keep it.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Rather useful, mustn’t it be, to have pendants so plentifully about you
-that you can hand them out to the first young lady who takes a fancy to
-them? Has she given you anything, Nancy?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure she would. But I shall be more careful than Meg was.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps Meg will practise carelessness, since it’s so remunerative.
-What has she given Palgrave? He seems absorbed.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it wonderful,†said Nancy. “It’s wonderful for Palgrave, you
-know, Roger, because he is rather sad and bitter, really, just now; and
-I think she will make him much happier. They went off to the woods
-together directly after breakfast.â€</p>
-
-<p>“What’s he sad and bitter about? You mean his socialism and all the rest
-of it?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; and religion. You remember; when you were here at Christmas.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I remember that he was very foolish and made me lose my temper. Is
-there a chance of Miss Toner turning him into a good capitalist and
-churchman?<a name="page_036" id="page_036"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy smiled, but very faintly. “It’s serious, you know, Roger.â€</p>
-
-<p>“What she’s done to them already, you mean?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. What she’s done already. She had Meg, after lunch, in her room.
-Meg looked quite different when she came out. It’s very strange, Roger.
-It’s as if she’d changed them all. I almost feel,†Nancy looked round at
-the happy house and up at the tranquil elms where the rooks were noisily
-preparing for bed, “as if nothing could be the same again, since she’s
-come.†Her clear profile revealed little of the trouble in her heart.
-They had not named Barney; but he must be named.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s white magic,†said Oldmeadow. “You and I will keep our heads, my
-dear. We don’t want to be changed, do we? What has she done to Barney?
-He is in love with her, of course.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,†said Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>He had never been sure before that she was in love with Barney. She was
-nine years younger and had been a child during years of his manhood.
-Oldmeadow had thought it in his own fond imagination only that the link
-between them was so close. But now he knew what Nancy herself, perhaps,
-had hardly known till then. The colour did not rise in her cheek, but
-through her voice, through her bearing, went a subtle steadying of
-herself. “Of course he is in love with her,†she repeated and he felt
-that she forced herself to face the truth.</p>
-
-<p>They stopped at the end of the terrace. A little path turned aside
-towards the copse and the grass beneath the trees was scattered with the
-pale radiance of primroses. Nancy seemed to look at the flowers, but she
-sought no refuge in comment on<a name="page_037" id="page_037"></a> them; and as they looked in silence,
-while the rooks, circling and cawing above, settled on their nests, a
-sense of arrested time came to Oldmeadow, and a phrase of music,
-blissful in its sadness, where gentle German words went to a gentle
-German strain, passed through his mind. Something of Schubert’s&mdash;Young
-Love&mdash;First Grief. It seemed to pierce to him from the young girl’s
-heart and he knew that he would never forget and that Nancy would never
-forget the moment; the rooks; the primroses; the limpid sky. The
-blackcap’s flitting melody had ceased.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think she may make him happy?†he asked. It was sweet to him to
-know that she had no need of a refuge from him. She could take counsel
-with him as candidly as if there had been no tacit avowal between them.
-She looked round at him as they went on walking and he saw pain and
-perplexity in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think, Roger?†she said. “Can she?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, might she, if Barney is stupid enough?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t feel he would have to be stupid to be happy with her, Roger.
-You are not fair to her. What I wonder is whether he will be strong
-enough not to be quite swept away.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You think she’ll overpower him? Leave him with no mind of his own?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Something like that perhaps. Because she’s very strong. And she is so
-different. Everything in her is different. She has nothing&mdash;nothing with
-us, or we with her. We haven’t done the same things or seen the same
-sights or thought the same thoughts. I hardly feel as if the trees could
-look the same to her<a name="page_038" id="page_038"></a> as they do to us or the birds sound the same. And
-she’ll want such different things.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps she’ll want his things,†Oldmeadow mused. “She seems to like
-them quite immensely already.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but only because she’s going to do something to them,†said Nancy.
-“Only because she’s going to change them. I don’t think she’d like
-anything she could do nothing for.â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy had quite grown up. She had seen further than he had. He felt her
-quiet comment big with intuitive wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>“You see deep, my dear,†he said. “There’s something portentous in your
-picture, you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“There is something portentous about her, Roger. That is just what I
-feel. That is just what troubles me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She may be portentous, in relation to us, and what she may do to us,â€
-said Oldmeadow, “but I’m convinced, for all her marvels, that she’s a
-very ordinary young person. Don’t let us magnify her. If she’s not
-magnified she won’t work so many marvels. They’re largely an affair, I’m
-sure of it, of motors and pendants. She’s ordinary. That’s what I take
-my stand on.â€</p>
-
-<p>“If she’s ordinary, why do you feel, too, that she’ll sweep Barney
-away?†Nancy was not at all convinced by his demonstration.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, because he’s in love with her. That’s all. Her only menace is in
-her difference; her complacency. What it comes to, I suppose, is that we
-must hope, if they’re to be happy, that he’ll like her things.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; but what it comes to then, Roger, is that we shall lose Barney,â€
-Nancy said.<a name="page_039" id="page_039"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_V-a" id="CHAPTER_V-a"></a>CHAPTER V</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">M<small>ISS</small> T<small>ONER</small> did not come down to breakfast next morning and Oldmeadow was
-conscious of a feeling of disproportionate relief at not finding her in
-the big, bare, panelled dining-room where a portrait of Mrs. Chadwick in
-court dress presided over one wall and Meg and Barney played with
-rabbits, against an imitation Gainsborough background, on another. Both
-pictures were an affliction to Barney; but to Mrs. Chadwick’s eye they
-left nothing to be desired in beauty, and, when Barney was not there to
-protest, she would still fondly point out the length of eyelash that the
-artist had so faithfully captured in the two children.</p>
-
-<p>The sense of change and foreboding that he and Nancy, with differences,
-had recognized in their talk, must have haunted Oldmeadow’s slumbers,
-for he had dreamed of Miss Toner, coming towards him along the terrace,
-in white, as she had been at dinner, with the beautiful pearls she had
-worn, lifting her hand and saying as the rooks cawed overhead&mdash;for the
-rooks cawed though the moon was brightly shining: “I can hear them,
-too.â€</p>
-
-<p>There had been nothing to suggest such a dream in her demeanour at
-dinner; nothing portentous, that is. Simple for all her competence,
-girlish for all the splendour of her white array, she had spoken little,
-looking at them all, and listening, gravely sometimes, but with a
-pervading gentleness; and once or twice he had found her eyes on his;
-those large, light eyes, dispassionately and impersonally<a name="page_040" id="page_040"></a> benignant,
-giving him, with their suggestion of seeing around but also very far
-beyond you, a curious sense of space. Once or twice he had felt himself
-a little at a loss as he met their gaze&mdash;it had endeared her to him the
-less that she should almost discompose him&mdash;and he had felt anew the
-presence of power in her ugly little face and even of beauty in her
-colourless skin, her colourless yet so living eyes, and her crown of
-wondrous gold. It had been, no doubt, this element of aesthetic
-significance, merging with Nancy’s words, that had built up the figure
-of his dream; for so he had seen her, grey and white and gold in the
-unearthly light, while the rooks cawed overhead.</p>
-
-<p>His friends this morning, though they were all talking of her, possessed
-in their gaiety and lightness of heart an exorcising quality. So much
-gaiety and lightness couldn’t be quenched or quelled&mdash;if that was what
-Miss Toner’s influence menaced. Between them all they would manage to
-quench and quell Miss Toner, rather, and he recovered his sense of her
-fundamental absurdity as he felt anew their instinctive and
-unself-conscious wisdom.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it odd, Roger, she hardly knows England at all,†said Mrs.
-Chadwick, as he finished his porridge, made his tea at the side-table,
-and took his place beside her. “She’s been so little here, although she
-seems to have travelled everywhere and lived everywhere.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Except in her own country,†Oldmeadow ventured the surmise, but
-urbanely, for Barney sat opposite him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but she’s travelled there, too, immensely,†said Barney. “She’s
-really spent most of her life in America, I think, Mother. She has a
-little sort of<a name="page_041" id="page_041"></a> bungalow on the coast in California, orange-trees and
-roses and all the rest of it; a fairy-tale place; and a house in the
-mountains in New England, high up among the pine-woods.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And a private train, I suppose, to carry her from one to the other.
-What splendid pearls,†said Oldmeadow, buttering his toast. “Haven’t you
-asked for them yet, Meg?â€</p>
-
-<p>Meg was not easily embarrassed. “Not yet,†she said. “I’m waiting for
-them, though. Meanwhile this is pretty, isn’t it?†The pendant hung on
-her breast.</p>
-
-<p>“I believe she would give Meg her pearls, or any of us. I believe she’d
-give <i>anything</i> to <i>anyone</i>,†sighed Mrs. Chadwick. “She doesn’t seem to
-think about money or things of that sort, material things you know, at
-all. I do wish I could get the map of America straight. All being in
-those uneven squares, like Turkish Delight, makes it so difficult. One
-can’t remember which lump is which&mdash;though Texas, in my geography, was
-pale green. The nice tinned things come from California, don’t they? And
-New England is near Boston&mdash;the hub of the universe, that dear, droll
-Oliver Wendell Holmes used to call it. I suppose they <i>are</i> very clever
-there. She has been wonderfully educated. There’s nothing she doesn’t
-seem to have learned. And her maid adores her, Roger. I was talking to
-her just now. Such a nice French woman with quite beautiful dark eyes,
-but very melancholy; we make a mistake, I believe, in imagining that the
-French are a gay people. I always think that’s such a good sign. So kind
-about my dreadful accent.â€</p>
-
-<p>“A good sign to have your maid like you, Mummy,<a name="page_042" id="page_042"></a> or to have melancholy
-eyes?†Meg inquired. “I think she’s a rather ill-tempered looking woman.
-But of course anybody would adore Adrienne. She’s an angel of patience,
-I’m sure. I never met such an angel. We don’t grow them here,†said Meg,
-while Barney’s triumphant eyes said: “I told you so,†to Oldmeadow
-across the table.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast, in the sunlight on the terrace, Mrs. Chadwick confided
-her hopes to him. “She really is an angel, Roger. I never met anyone in
-the least like her. So good, and gifted, too, and all that money. Only
-think what it would mean for dear Barney. He could take back the farm;
-the lease falls in next year, and come back here to live.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You think she cares for him?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; indeed I do. She cares for us all, already, as you can see. But I
-believe it’s because she’s adopting us all, as her family. And she said
-to me yesterday that she disapproved so much of our English way of
-turning out mothers and thought families ought to love each other and
-live together, young and old. That’s from being so much in France,
-perhaps. I told her <i>I</i> shouldn’t have liked it at all if old Mrs.
-Chadwick had wanted to come and live with Francis and me. She was such a
-masterful old lady, Roger, very Low Church, and quite dreadfully jealous
-of Francis. And eldest sons should inherit, of course, or what would
-become of estates? My dear father used always to say that the greatness
-of England was founded on landed estates. I told her that. But she
-looked at me quite gravely as if she hardly understood when I tried to
-explain&mdash;it all goes in with Waterloo being won on the fields of Eton,
-doesn’t it? It’s quite curious the feeling of<a name="page_043" id="page_043"></a> restfulness she gives me,
-about Barney&mdash;a sort of Nunc Dimittis feeling, you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Only she doesn’t want you to depart. Well, that’s certainly all to the
-good and let’s hope England’s greatness won’t suffer from the
-irregularity. Has she told you much about her life? her people?â€
-Oldmeadow asked. He could not find it in his heart to shadow such
-ingenuous contentment. And after all what was there to say against Miss
-Toner, except that she would change things?</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a great deal. Everything I asked; for I thought it best, quite
-casually you know, to find out what I could. Not people of any position,
-you know, Roger, though I think her mother was better in that way than
-her father; for <i>his</i> father made tooth-paste. It’s from the tooth-paste
-all the money comes. But it’s always puzzling about Americans, isn’t it?
-And it doesn’t really make any difference, once they’re over here, does
-it?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not if they’ve got the money,†he could not suppress; it was for his
-own personal enjoyment and Mrs. Chadwick cloudlessly concurred: “No, not
-if they have the money. And she has, you see. And besides that she’s
-good and gifted and has had such a wonderful education. Her mother died
-five years ago. She showed me two pictures of her. A beautiful woman;
-very artistic-looking. Rather one’s idea of Corinne, though Corinne was
-really Madame de Staël, I believe; and she was very plain.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Was she dressed like Queen Louise of Prussia; coming down the steps,
-you know, in the Empire dress with white bound round her head?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; she was. How did you know, Roger? Extremely picturesque; but quite
-a lady, too. At<a name="page_044" id="page_044"></a> leastâ€&mdash;Mrs. Chadwick hesitated, perplexed between
-kindliness and candour&mdash;“almost.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I heard about her from Mrs. Aldesey. You remember my American friend.
-She didn’t know her, but had seen her years ago in New York in that
-romantic costume.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick felt perhaps the slight irony in his voice, for she
-rejoined, though not at all provocatively: “Why shouldn’t people look
-romantic if they can? I should think Mrs. Toner had a much more romantic
-life than Mrs. Aldesey. <i>She’s</i> gone on just as we have, hasn’t she,
-seeing always the same people; and being conventional. Whereas Adrienne
-and her mother seem to have known everyone strange and interesting
-wherever they went; great scientists and thinkers, you know; and poets
-and pianists. Adrienne told me that her mother always seemed to her to
-have great wings and that’s just what I felt about her when I looked at
-her. She’d flown everywhere.†As she spoke Miss Toner appeared upon the
-doorstep.</p>
-
-<p>Although it was Sunday she had not varied her dress, which was still the
-simple dress of dim, dark-blue; but over it she wore a silk jacket, and
-a straw hat trimmed with a lighter shade of blue was tied, in
-summer-like fashion, beneath her chin. She carried a sunshade and a
-small basket filled with letters.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick, both hands outstretched, went to meet her. Oldmeadow had
-never before seen her kiss an acquaintance of two days’ standing. “I do
-hope you slept well, my dear,†she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,†said Miss Toner, including Oldmeadow in her smile. “Except
-for a little while when I woke up and lay awake and couldn’t get the<a name="page_045" id="page_045"></a>
-cawing of your rooks out of my mind. I seemed to hear them going on and
-on.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear! How unfortunate! But surely they weren’t cawing in the
-night!†cried Mrs. Chadwick, and Miss Toner, laughing and holding her
-still by the hands, turned to tell Barney, who closely followed her,
-that his mother was really afraid, because she had thought of rooks in
-the night, that their Coldbrooks birds had actually been inhospitable
-enough to keep her awake with their cawings. Meg and Barbara and Nancy
-had all now emerged and there was much laughter and explanation.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, Mummy thinks you might work miracles&mdash;even among the rooks,â€
-said Barney, while Oldmeadow testily meditated on his own discomfort. It
-might have been mere coincidence, or it might&mdash;he must admit it&mdash;have
-been Miss Toner’s thoughts travelling into his dream or his dream
-troubling her thoughts; of the two last alternatives he didn’t know
-which he disliked the more.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s time to get ready for church, children,†said Mrs. Chadwick, when,
-after much merriment at her expense, the rooks and their occult
-misdemeanours were disposed of. “Where is Palgrave? I do hope he won’t
-miss again. It does so hurt dear Mr. Bodman’s feelings. Are you coming
-with us, my dear?†she asked Miss Toner.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner, smiling upon them all, her sunshade open on her shoulder,
-said that if they did not mind she did not think she would come. “I only
-go to church when friends get married or their babies christened,†she
-said, “or something of that sort. I was never brought up to it, you see.
-Mother never went.<a name="page_046" id="page_046"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick’s March Hare eyes dwelt on her. “You aren’t a
-Churchwoman?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear, no!†said Miss Toner, and the very suggestion seemed to amuse
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick hesitated: “A Dissenter?†she ventured. “There are so many
-sects in America I’ve heard. Though I met a very charming American
-bishop once.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No&mdash;not a Dissenter; if you mean by that a Presbyterian or a Methodist
-or a Swedenborgian,†said Miss Toner, shaking her head.</p>
-
-<p>Palgrave had now joined them and stood on the step above her. She smiled
-round and up at him.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick, her distress alleviated yet her perplexity deepened,
-ventured further: “You are a Christian, I hope, dear?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, not at all,†said Miss Toner gravely now and very kindly. “Not in
-any orthodox way, I mean. Not in any way that an American bishop or your
-Mr. Bodman would acknowledge. I recognize Christ as a great teacher, as
-a great human soul; one of the very greatest; gone on before. But I
-don’t divide the human from the divine in the way the churches do;
-creeds mean nothing to me, and I’d rather say my prayers out of doors on
-a day like this, in the sunlight, than in any church. I feel nearer God
-alone in His great world, than in any church built with human hands. But
-we must all follow our own light.†She spoke in her flat, soft voice,
-gravely but very simply; and she looked affectionately at her hostess as
-she added: “You wouldn’t want me to come with you from mere conformity.â€</p>
-
-<p>Poor Mrs. Chadwick, standing, her brood about her, in the sweet Sabbath
-sunlight, had to Oldmeadow<a name="page_047" id="page_047"></a>’s eye an almost comically arrested air. How
-was a creedless, churchless mistress of Coldbrooks to be fitted in to
-her happy vision of Barney’s future? What would the village say to a
-squiress who never went to church and who said her prayers in the
-sunlight alone? “But, of course, better alone,†he seemed to hear her
-cogitate, “than that anyone should see her doing such a very curious
-thing.†And aloud she did murmur: “Of course not; of course not, dear.
-And if you go into the little arbour down by the lake no one will
-disturb you, I’m sure. Must it be quite in the open? Mere conformity is
-such a shallow thing. But all the same I should like the rector to come
-and talk things over with you. He’s such a good man and very, very
-broad-minded. He brings science so often into his sermons&mdash;sometimes I
-think the people don’t quite follow it all; and only the other day he
-said to me, about modern unrest and scepticism:</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">‘There is more faith in honest doubt,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Believe me, than in half the creeds.’<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="nind">Mamma met Lord Tennyson once and felt him to be a deeply religious
-man&mdash;though rather ill-tempered; he was really very rude to her, I
-always thought, and I do so dislike rudeness.&mdash;And travelling about so
-much, dear, you probably had so little teaching.â€</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner’s eyes were incapable of irony and they only deepened now in
-benevolence as they rested on her hostess. “But I haven’t any doubts,â€
-she said, shaking her head and smiling: “No doubts at all. You reach the
-truth through your church and I reach it through nature and love and
-life. And the beautiful thing is that it’s the same truth, really;<a name="page_048" id="page_048"></a> the
-same beautiful truth that God loves us all, and that we are all the
-children of God. I should be very pleased to meet your rector, of
-course, because I like meeting anyone who is good and true. But I was
-taught. My mother taught me always. And she was the freest, wisest soul
-I have ever known.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll stay with you,†said Palgrave suddenly from his place on the step
-above her. His eyes, over her shoulder, had met Oldmeadow’s and perhaps
-what he saw in the old friend’s face determined his testimony. “Church
-means nothing to me, either; and less than nothing. I’m not so
-charitable as you are, and don’t think all roads lead to truth. Some
-lead away, I think. You know perfectly well, Mummy, that the dear old
-rector is a regular duffer and you slept all through the sermon the last
-time I went; you did, really! I was too amused to sleep. He was trying
-to explain original sin without mentioning Adam or Eve or the Garden of
-Eden. It was most endearing! Like some one trying to avoid the eye of an
-old acquaintance whom they’d come to the conclusion they really must
-cut! I do so like the idea of Adam and Eve becoming unsuitable
-acquaintances for the enlightened clergy!â€</p>
-
-<p>“There is no sin,†said Miss Toner. Barney was not quite comfortable;
-Oldmeadow saw that. He kicked about in the gravel, a little flushed, and
-when, once or twice, the old family friend met his eye, it was quickly
-averted. “God is Good; and everything else is mortal
-mind&mdash;mistake&mdash;illusion.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You are a sound Platonist, Miss Toner,†Oldmeadow observed, and his
-kindness hardly cloaked his irony.</p>
-
-<p>“Am I?†she said. When she looked at one she<a name="page_049" id="page_049"></a> never averted her eyes.
-She looked until she had seen all that she wished to see. “I am not fond
-of metaphysics.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Socrates defined sin as ignorance, you know, and in a sense it may be.
-All the same,†said Oldmeadow, and he felt that they were all listening
-and that in the eyes of his old friends it was more than unlikely that
-he would get the better of Miss Toner&mdash;“there’s mortal mind to be
-accounted for, isn’t there, and why it gets us continually into such a
-mess. Whatever name you call it by, there is something that does get us
-into a mess and mightn’t it be a wholesome discipline to hear it
-denounced once a week?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not by some one more ignorant than I am!†said Miss Toner, laughing
-gently. “I’ll go to church for love of Mrs. Chadwick, but not for the
-sake of the discipline!â€</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Bodman never denounces. Roger is giving you quite a wrong idea,â€
-said Mrs. Chadwick. She had stood looking from one to the other,
-distressed and bewildered, and she now prepared to leave them. “And
-Palgrave is very, very unjust. Of course you must not come, dear. It
-would make me quite unhappy. But Mr. Bodman is not a duffer. If Palgrave
-feels like that he must certainly stay away. Perhaps you can teach him
-to be more charitable. It’s easy to see the mote in our neighbour’s
-eye.†Mrs. Chadwick’s voice slightly trembled. She had been much moved
-by her son’s defection.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Mummy, you’re not going to say <i>I’m</i> a duffer!†Palgrave passed
-an affectionately bantering arm round her shoulders. “Dufferism isn’t
-<i>my</i> beam!<a name="page_050" id="page_050"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>But very sadly Mrs. Chadwick drew away, saying as she turned into the
-house: “No; that isn’t your beam. But pride may be, Palgrave. Spiritual
-pride.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow remained standing in the sunlight with Miss Toner and the two
-young men. The girls had followed Mrs. Chadwick, Meg casting a laughing
-glance of appreciation at him as she went. Religious scruples would
-never keep Meg from church if she had a pretty spring dress to wear.</p>
-
-<p>“After all,†he carried on, mildly, the altercation&mdash;if that was what it
-was between him and Miss Toner&mdash;“good Platonists as we may be, we
-haven’t reached the stage of Divine Contemplation yet and things do
-happen that are difficult to account for, if sin is nothing more
-positive than illusion and mistake. All the forms of <i>ôte-toi que je m’y
-mette</i>. All the forms of jealousy and malice. Deliberate cruelties.
-History is full of horrors, isn’t it? There’s a jealousy of goodness in
-the human heart, as well as a love. The betrayal of Christ by Judas is
-symbolic.â€</p>
-
-<p>He had screwed his eyeglass into his eye the better to see Miss Toner
-and looked very much like a solicitor trying to coax dry facts out of a
-romantic client. And in the transparent shadow of her hat Miss Toner,
-with her incomparable composure, gave him all her attention.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t account. I don’t account for anything. Do you?†she said. “I
-only feel and know. But even the dreadful things, the things that seem
-to us so dreadful&mdash;isn’t it always ignorance? Ignorance of what is
-really good and happy&mdash;and the illusion of a separate self? When we are
-all, really, one. All, really, together.†She held out her arms, her
-little<a name="page_051" id="page_051"></a> basket hanging from her wrist. “And if we feel that at last, and
-know it, those dreadful things can’t happen any more.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Your ‘if’ is the standing problem of metaphysics and ethics. Why don’t
-we feel and know it? That’s the question? And since we most of us, for
-most of the time, don’t feel and know it, don’t we keep closer to the
-truth if we accept the traditional phraseology and admit that there’s
-something in the texture of life, something in ourselves, that tempts
-us, or impedes us, or crushes us, and call it sin&mdash;evil?â€</p>
-
-<p>He was looking at her, still with his latent irony though kindly enough
-indeed, and he had, as he looked, an intuition about her. She had never
-been tempted, she had never been impeded, she had never been crushed.
-That was her power. She was, in a fashion, sinless. It was as if she had
-been hypnotized in infancy to be good. And while the fact made her in
-one sense so savourless, it made her in another so significant. She
-would go much further than most people in any direction she wanted to go
-simply because she was not aware of obstacles and had no inhibitions.</p>
-
-<p>“Call it what you like,†said Miss Toner. She still smiled&mdash;but more
-gravely. Barney had ceased to stroll and kick. He had come to a
-standstill beside them, and, his hands in his pockets, his eyes fixed on
-his beloved, showed himself as completely reassured. Palgrave still
-stood on the step above her and seemed to watch the snowy, piled-up
-clouds that adorned the tranquil sky. “I feel it a mistake to make
-unreal things seem real by giving them big names. We become afraid of
-them and fear is what<a name="page_052" id="page_052"></a> impedes us most of all in life. For so many
-generations humanity has seen ghosts in the evening mists and taken its
-indigestion for the promptings of a demon. We’ve got away from all that
-now, Mr. Oldmeadow. We see that mists are mists and indigestion
-indigestion, and that there aren’t such things as ghosts and demons.
-We’ve come out, all together, hand in hand, on the Open Road and we
-don’t want, ever any more, to be reminded, even, of the Dark Ages.â€</p>
-
-<p>Before her fluency, Oldmeadow felt himself grow less kindly. “You grant
-there have been dark ages, then? I count that a concession. Things may
-not be evil now, but they were once.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not a concession at all,†said Miss Toner. “Only an explanation of what
-has happened&mdash;an explanation of what you call the mess, Mr. Oldmeadow.â€</p>
-
-<p>“So that when we find ourselves misbehaving to one another as we march
-along the Open Road, we may know it’s only indigestion and take a pill.â€</p>
-
-<p>She didn’t like badinage. That, at all events, was evident to him, even
-in her imperturbability. She took it calmly&mdash;not lightly; and if she was
-not already beginning to dislike him, it was because disliking people
-was a reality she didn’t recognize. “We don’t misbehave if we are on the
-Open Road,†she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you’re falling back now on good old-fashioned theology,â€
-Oldmeadow retorted. “The sheep, saved and well-behaved, keeping to the
-road, and the goats&mdash;all those who misbehave and stray&mdash;classed with the
-evening mists.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No,†said Miss Toner eyeing him, “I don’t class<a name="page_053" id="page_053"></a> them with the evening
-mists; I class them with the sick, whom we must be kind to and take care
-of.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick was now emerging in her new spring hat, which was not very
-successful and gave emphasis to her general air of strain. Meg’s hat was
-very successful, as Meg’s hats always were; and if Nancy’s did not shine
-beside it, it was, at all events, exceedingly becoming to her. Nancy’s
-eyes went to Barney. Barney, in the past, had been very appreciative of
-becoming hats. But he had no eyes for Nancy now. He had drawn Miss Toner
-aside and Oldmeadow heard their colloquy:</p>
-
-<p>“Would you rather I didn’t go?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather, always, you followed your light, dear friend.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I do like going here, you know. It seems to belong with it all&mdash;and
-Mummy can’t bear our not going.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It makes your dear mother happy. It all means love to you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not only thatâ€&mdash;Oldmeadow imagined that Barney blushed, and he heard
-his stammer: “I don’t know what I believe about everything; but the
-service goes much deeper than anything I could think for myself.†Their
-voices dropped. All that came further to Oldmeadow was from Miss Toner:
-“It makes you nearer than if you stayed.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Confound her ineffability!†he thought. “It rests with her, then,
-whether he should go or stay.â€</p>
-
-<p>It certainly did. Barney moved away with them all, leaving Palgrave to
-the more evident form of proximity.</p>
-
-<p>“You know,†Mrs. Chadwick murmured to Oldmeadow as they went, between
-the primroses, down<a name="page_054" id="page_054"></a> the little path and through a wicket-gate that led
-to the village&mdash;“you know, Roger, it’s <i>quite</i> possible that they may
-say their prayers together. It’s like Quakers, isn’t it&mdash;or Moravians;
-or whoever those curious people are who are buried standing up&mdash;so
-dismal and uncomfortable, I always think. But it’s better that Palgrave
-should say his prayers with some one, and somewhere, isn’t it, than that
-he shouldn’t say them at all?<a name="page_055" id="page_055"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VI-a" id="CHAPTER_VI-a"></a>CHAPTER VI</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">“M<small>OTHER’S</small> got the most poisonous headache,†said Meg. “I don’t think
-she’ll be able to come down to tea.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had joined Oldmeadow on the rickety old bench where he sat reading
-and smoking in a sunny corner of the garden. A band of golden
-wallflowers behind them exhaled the deep fragrance that he always
-associated with spring and Sunday and Coldbrooks, and the old stone wall
-behind the flowers exhaled a warmth that was like a fragrance.</p>
-
-<p>“Adrienne is with her,†Meg added. She had seated herself and put her
-elbows on her knees and her chin in her hands as though she intended a
-solid talk.</p>
-
-<p>“Will that be likely to help her head?†Oldmeadow inquired. “I should
-say not, if she’s going to continue the discourse of this morning.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Did you think all that rather silly?†Meg inquired, tapping her smart
-toes on the ground and watching them. “You looked as if you did. But
-then you usually do look as though you thought most things and people
-silly. I didn’t&mdash;I mean, not in her. I quite saw what you did; at least
-I think so. But she can say things that would be silly in other people.
-Now Palgrave is silly. There’s just the difference. Is it because he
-always feels he’s scoring off somebody and she doesn’t?†Meg was
-evidently capable, for all her devotion, of dispassionate inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s certainly more secure than Palgrave,†said<a name="page_056" id="page_056"></a> Oldmeadow. “But I
-feel that’s only because she’s less intelligent. Palgrave is aware,
-keenly, of a critical and probably hostile world; and Miss Toner is
-unaware of everything except her own benevolence, and the need for it.â€</p>
-
-<p>Meg meditated. Then she laughed. “You <i>are</i> spiteful, Roger. Oh&mdash;I don’t
-mean about Adrienne in particular. But you always see the weak spots in
-people, first go. It’s rather jolly, all the same, if you come to think
-it over, to be like that. Perhaps that’s all she is aware of; but it
-takes you a good way&mdash;wanting to help people and seeing how they can be
-helped.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; it does take you a good way. I don’t deny that Miss Toner will go
-far.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And make us go too far, perhaps?†Meg mused. “Well, I’m quite ready for
-a move. I think we’re all rather stodgy, really, down here. And up in
-London, too, if it comes to that. I’m rather disappointed in London, you
-know, Roger, and what it does for one. Just a different kind of sheep,
-it seems to me, from the kind we are in the country; noisy skipping
-sheep instead of silent, slow ones. But they all follow each other about
-in just the same way. And what one likes is to see someone who isn’t
-following.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; that’s true, certainly,†Oldmeadow conceded. “Miss Toner isn’t a
-sheep. She’s the sort of person who sets the sheep moving. I’m not so
-sure that she knows where she is going, all the same.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You mean&mdash;Be careful; don’t you?†said Meg, looking up at him sideways
-with her handsome eyes. “I’m not such a sheep myself, when it comes to
-that, you know, Roger. I look before I leap&mdash;even after Adrienne,†she
-laughed; and Oldmeadow, looking<a name="page_057" id="page_057"></a> back at her, laughed too&mdash;pleased with
-her, yet a little disconcerted by what she revealed of experience.</p>
-
-<p>“The reason I like her so awfully,†Meg went on&mdash;while he reflected
-that, after all, she was now twenty-five&mdash;“and it’s a good thing I do,
-isn’t it, since it’s evident she’s going to take Barney; but the reason
-is that she’s so interested in one. More than anyone I ever knew&mdash;far
-and far away. Of course Mother’s interested; but it’s <i>for</i> one; <i>about</i>
-one; not <i>in</i> one, as it were. And then darling old Mummy isn’t exactly
-intelligent, is she; or only in such unexpected spots that it’s never
-much good to one; one can never count on it beforehand. Whereas Adrienne
-is so interested in you that she makes you feel more interested in
-yourself than you ever dreamed you could feel. Do you know what I mean?
-Is it because she’s American, do you think? English people aren’t
-interested in themselves, off their own bat, perhaps; or in other people
-either! I don’t mean we’re not selfish all right!†Meg laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Selfish and yet impersonal,†Oldmeadow mused. “With less of our social
-consciousness in use, with more of it locked up in automatism,
-possibly.â€</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing locked up in Adrienne; absolutely nothing,†Meg
-declared. “It’s all there&mdash;out in the shop-window. And it’s a big window
-too, even though some of the hats and scarves, so to speak, may strike
-us as funny. But, seriously, what is it about her, do you think? How can
-she care so much?&mdash;about everybody?â€</p>
-
-<p>He remembered Nancy’s diagnosis. “Not about everybody. Only about people
-she can do something for. You’ll find she won’t care about me.<a name="page_058" id="page_058"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Why should she? You don’t care for her. Why should she waste herself on
-people who don’t need her?†Meg’s friendliness of glance did not
-preclude a certain hardness.</p>
-
-<p>“Why indeed? It could never occur to her, of course, that she might need
-somebody. I don’t mean that spitefully. She is strong. She doesn’t
-need.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Exactly. Like you,†said Meg. “She’s quite right to pay no attention to
-the other strong people. For of course you are very strong, Roger, and
-frightfully clever; and good, too. Only one has to be cleverer, no
-doubt, than we are to see your goodness as easily as Adrienne’s. It’s
-the shop-window again. She shows her goodness all the time; and you
-don’t.â€â€™</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow knocked the ashes out of his pipe and felt for his
-tobacco-pouch. “I show my spite. No; you mustn’t count me among the
-good. I suppose your mother’s headache came on this morning after she
-found out that Miss Toner doesn’t go to church.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it was that. You saw that she was thinking about it all
-through the service, didn’t you?†said Meg. “And once, poor lamb, she
-said, ‘Have mercy upon us, miserable sinners’ instead of Amen. Did you
-notice? It will bother her frightfully, of course. But after all it’s
-not so bad as if Adrienne were a Dissenter and wanted to go to chapel!
-Mummy in her heart of hearts would much rather you were a pagan than a
-Dissenter. I don’t think it will make a bit of difference really. So
-long as she gives money to the church, and is nice to the village
-people. Mother will get over it,†said Meg.</p>
-
-<p>He thought so too. His own jocose phrase returned to him. As long as the
-money was there it<a name="page_059" id="page_059"></a> didn’t make any difference. But Meg’s security on
-that score interested him. With all her devotion to the new friend she
-struck him, fundamentally, as less kind than Nancy, who had none. But
-that, no doubt, was because Meg, fundamentally, was hard and Nancy
-loving. It was because of Miss Toner’s interest in herself that Meg was
-devoted. “You’re so sure, then, that she’s going to take Barney?†he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Quite sure,†said Meg. “Surer than he is. Surer than she is. She’s in
-love with him all right; more than she knows herself, poor dear. No
-doubt she thinks she’s making up her mind and choosing. Weighing Barney
-in the balance and counting up his virtues. But it’s all decided
-already; and not by his virtues; it never is,†said Meg, again with her
-air of unexpected experience. “It’s something much more important than
-virtues; it’s the thickness of his eyelashes and the way his teeth show
-when he smiles, and all his pretty ways and habits. Things like that.
-She loves looking at him and more than that, even, she loves having him
-look at her. I have an idea that she’s not had people very much in love
-with her before; not people with eyelashes and teeth like Barney. In
-spite of all her money. And she’s getting on, too. She’s as old as
-Barney, you know. It’s the one, real romance that’s ever come to her,
-poor dear. Funny you don’t see it. Men don’t see that sort of thing I
-suppose. But she <i>couldn’t</i> give Barney up now, simply. It’s because of
-that, you knowâ€&mdash;Meg glanced behind them and lowered her voice&mdash;“that
-she doesn’t like Nancy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t like Nancy!†Oldmeadow’s instant indignation was in his voice.
-“What has Nancy to do with it?<a name="page_060" id="page_060"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“She might have had a great deal, poor darling little Nancy; and it’s
-that Adrienne feels. She felt it at once. I saw she did; that Nancy and
-Barney had been very near each other; that there was an affinity, a
-sympathy, call it what you like, that would have led to something more.
-It wouldn’t have done at all, of course; at least I suppose not. They
-knew each other too well; and, until the last year or two, she’s been
-too young for him. And then, above all, she’s hardly any money. But all
-the same, if he hadn’t come across Adrienne and been bowled over like
-this, Barney would have fallen in love with Nancy. She’s getting to be
-so lovely looking, for one thing, isn’t she? And Barney’s so susceptible
-to looks. He was falling in love with her last winter and she knew it as
-well as I did. It’s rather rotten luck for Nancy because I’m afraid she
-cares; but then women do have rotten luck about love affairs,†said Meg,
-now sombrely. “The dice are loaded against them every time.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow sat smoking in silence for some moments, making no effort to
-master his strong resentment; taking, rather, full possession of its
-implications. “Somewhat of a flaw in your angel you must admit,†he said
-presently. “She doesn’t like people who are as strong as she is and she
-doesn’t like people who might have been loved instead of herself. It
-narrows the scale of her benevolence, you know. It makes her look
-perilously like a jealous prig, and a prig without any excuse for
-jealousy into the bargain.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Temper, Roger,†Meg observed, casting her hard, friendly glance round
-at him; “I know you think there’s no one quite to match Nancy; and I<a name="page_061" id="page_061"></a>
-think you’re not far wrong. She’s the straightest, sweetest-tempered
-girl who ever stepped on two feet. But all the same Adrienne isn’t a
-prig, and if she’s jealous she can’t help herself. She <i>wants</i> to love
-Nancy; she thinks she does love her; she’ll always be heavenly to her.
-She can do a lot for Nancy, you know. She will do a lot for her, even if
-Nancy holds her off. But she wishes frightfully that she was old and
-ugly. She wishes that Barney weren’t so fond of her without thinking
-about her. She’s jealous and she can’t help herself&mdash;like all the rest
-of us!†Meg laughed grimly. “When it comes to that we’re none of us
-angels.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was tea-time and the dear old gong sounded balmily from the house. As
-they went along the path the rooks again were cawing overhead and dimly,
-like the hint of evening in the air, he remembered his dream and the
-sense of menace. “You know, it’s not like all the rest of you,†he said.
-“It’s not like Nancy, for instance. Nancy wouldn’t dislike a person
-because she was jealous of them. In fact I don’t believe Nancy could be
-jealous. She’d only be hurt.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s rather a question of degree, that, isn’t it?†said Meg. “In one
-form of it you’re poisoned and in the other you’re cut with a knife; and
-the latter is the prettier way of suffering; doesn’t make you come out
-in a rash and feel sick. Nancy is cut with the knife; and if she’s not
-jealous in the ugly sense, she dislikes Adrienne all right.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Why should she like her?†Oldmeadow retorted, and Meg’s simile seemed
-to cut into him, too. “She doesn’t need her money or her interest or her
-love. She doesn’t dislike her. She merely wishes she were somewhere
-else&mdash;as I do.<a name="page_062" id="page_062"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>The garden path led straight into the house. One entered a sort of
-lobby, where coats and hats and rackets and gardening baskets were kept,
-and from the lobby went into the hall. Tea was, as always, laid there
-and Mrs. Chadwick, as Meg and Oldmeadow came in, was descending the
-staircase at the further end, leaning on Adrienne Toner’s arm.</p>
-
-<p>“You see. She’s done it!†Meg murmured. She seemed to bear him no
-ill-will for his expressed aversion. “I never knew one of Mother’s
-headaches go so quickly.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I expect she’d rather have stayed quietly upstairs,†said Oldmeadow;
-“she looks puzzled. As if she didn’t know what had happened to her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Like a rabbit when it comes out of the conjuror’s hat,†said the
-irreverent daughter.</p>
-
-<p>That was precisely what poor Eleanor Chadwick did look like and for the
-moment his mind was diverted by amusement at her appearance from its
-bitter preoccupation. Mrs. Chadwick was the rabbit and Miss Toner was
-the conjuror indeed; bland and secure and holding her trophy in a firm
-but gentle grasp. Not until they were all seated did Barney and Nancy
-appear and then it was evident to him that if Miss Toner were jealous of
-Nancy she did not fear her, for it was she who had arranged the walk
-from which the young couple had just returned.</p>
-
-<p>“Was it lovely?†she asked Barney, as he took the place beside her. “Oh,
-I do wish I could have come; but I knew your Mother needed me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“The primroses are simply ripping in the wood,†said Barney.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy carried a large bunch of primroses.</p>
-
-<p>“Ripping,†said Miss Toner, laughing gently.<a name="page_063" id="page_063"></a></p>
-
-<p>“How absurd of you, Barney. Could anything be less ripping than
-primroses? How beautiful they are and what a lovely bunch. One sees that
-Miss Averil loves them from the way she has picked them.†If she did not
-call Nancy by her Christian name it was, Oldmeadow knew, not her but
-Nancy’s fault.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy still stood beside the table and from the fact of standing, while
-all the rest of them were seated, from the fact of being called Miss
-Averil, she seemed, for the moment, oddly an outsider; as if she hardly
-belonged to the circle of which Miss Toner was the centre. “Do come and
-sit near us,†said Miss Toner. “For I had to miss you, too, you see, as
-well as the primroses.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’d crowd you there,†said Nancy, smiling. “I’ll sit here near Aunt
-Eleanor.†From something in her eyes Oldmeadow felt suddenly sure that
-not till now had she realized that it had not, really, been her and
-Barney’s walk. She offered the primroses to Mrs. Chadwick as she took
-the chair beside her, saying, “They’ll fill your white bowl in the
-morning-room, Aunt Eleanor.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I say; but I meant those for Adrienne, Nancy!†Barney exclaimed,
-and as he did so Meg’s eyes met Oldmeadow’s over the household loaf.
-“She didn’t see them in the wood, so she ought to have them. Mummy is
-suffocated with primroses already.â€</p>
-
-<p>But Nancy showed no rash and only an acute Meg could have guessed a cut
-as she answered: “I’ll pick another bunch to-morrow for Miss Toner,
-Barney. They’ll be fresher to take to London. These are really Aunt
-Eleanor’s. I always fill that bowl for her.<a name="page_064" id="page_064"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VII-a" id="CHAPTER_VII-a"></a>CHAPTER VII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">“I <small>DO</small> so want a talk with you, Roger,†Mrs. Chadwick murmured to him
-when tea was over. The dining-room opened at one end of the hall and the
-drawing-room at the other and the morning-room, Mrs. Chadwick’s special
-retreat, into which she now drew him, was tucked in behind the
-dining-room and looked out at an angle of the garden wall and at the
-dove-cot that stood there. Mrs. Chadwick’s doves were usually fluttering
-about the window and even, when it was open, entering the room, where
-she sometimes fondly fed them, causing thereby much distress of mind to
-Turner, the good old parlourmaid. A pleasant little fire was burning
-there and, after placing her primroses in the white bowl, Mrs. Chadwick
-drew her chair to it, casting a glance, as she did so, up at the large
-portrait of her husband in hunting dress that hung above the
-mantelpiece. It was painted with the same glib unintelligence as the
-dining-room portraits, but the painter had been unable to miss entirely
-the whimsical daring of the eyes or to bring into conformity with his
-own standard of good looks the charm of the irregular and narrow face.
-Francis Chadwick had been an impulsive, idle, endearing man, and,
-remaining always in love with his wife, had fondly cherished all her
-absurdities. Since his death poor Mrs. Chadwick had been perplexed by
-her effort to associate with gravity and inspiration one who had always
-been a laughing incentive to inconsequence. Oldmeadow reflected, as he,
-too, looked up at him, that Francis Chadwick would neither have needed
-nor have liked Miss Toner.<a name="page_065" id="page_065"></a></p>
-
-<p>“It’s so very, very strange, Roger, I really must tell you,†Mrs.
-Chadwick said. Her hair, still bright and abundant, was very untidy. She
-had evidently not brushed it since rising from her sofa. “I had one of
-my dreadful headaches, you know. It came on at church this morning and I
-really couldn’t attend to Mr. Bodman at all. Perhaps you saw.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I heard. Yes. Miss Toner had disturbed you a good deal.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I did feel so bewildered and unhappy about it all,†said Mrs. Chadwick,
-fixing her blue eyes upon the family friend. Eleanor Chadwick’s eyes
-could show the uncanny ingenuousness and the uncanny wisdom of a baby’s.
-“Nothing so innocent or so sharp was ever seen outside a perambulator,â€
-her husband had once said of them. “About her, you know, Roger,†she
-continued, “and Barney and Palgrave. The influence. I could not bear
-them to lose their faith in the church of their fathers.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No,†said Oldmeadow. “But you must be prepared to see it shift a good
-deal. Faiths have to shift nowadays if they’re to stand.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well. Yes. I know what you mean, Roger. But it isn’t a question of
-shifting, is it? I’m very broad. I’ve always been all for breadth. And
-the broader you are the firmer you ought to be, oughtn’t you?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Miss Toner’s broad and firm,†Oldmeadow suggested. “I never saw
-anyone more so.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But in such a queer way, Roger. Like saying one’s prayers out of doors
-and thinking oneself as good as Christ. Oh, it all made me perfectly
-wretched and after lunch my head was so bad that I went and lay down in
-the dark; and it raged, simply. Oh, dear, I thought; this means a day
-and night of misery.<a name="page_066" id="page_066"></a> They go on like that once they begin. Mamma used
-to have them in precisely the same way. Absolutely incapacitating. I can
-never see how anybody can deny heredity. That’s another point, Roger.
-I’ve always accepted evolution. I gave up Adam and Eve long ago; gave
-them up as white and good-looking, I mean; because we must have begun
-<i>somewhere</i>, mustn’t we? And Darwin was such a good man; though you
-remember he came not to care anything at all about music. That may mean
-a great deal, if one could think it all out; it’s the most religious of
-the arts, isn’t it? But there’s no end to thinking things out!†Mrs.
-Chadwick pressed her hand against her forehead, closing her eyes for a
-moment. “And Adrienne is very musical.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You were at your headache,†Oldmeadow reminded her. It was customary in
-the family circle thus to shepherd Mrs. Chadwick’s straying thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know. But it all hangs together. Heredity and Mamma and my
-headaches; and Adrienne’s mother, who was musical, too, and played on a
-harp. Well, it was raging and I was lying there, when there came a
-little rap at the door. I knew at once who it was and she asked in such
-a gentle voice if she might come in. It’s a very soothing voice, isn’t
-it? But do you know I felt for a moment quite frightened, as if I simply
-couldn’t see her. But I had to say yes, and she came in so softly and
-sat down beside me and said: ‘I used to help Mother, sometimes, with her
-headaches. May I help you?’ She didn’t want to talk about things, as I’d
-feared. Such a relief it was. So I said: ‘Oh, do my dear,’ and she laid
-her hand on my forehead and said: ‘You will soon feel better. It will
-soon quite pass away.’ And then not another<a name="page_067" id="page_067"></a> word. Only sitting there in
-the dark, with her hand on my forehead. And do you know, Roger, almost
-at once the pain began to melt away. You know how a dish of junket melts
-after you cut into it. It was like that. ‘Junket, junket,’ I seemed to
-hear myself saying; and such a feeling of peace and contentment. And
-before I knew anything more I fell into the most delicious sleep and
-slept till now, just before tea. She was sitting there still, in the
-dark beside me and I said: ‘Oh, my dear, to think of your having stayed
-in on this lovely afternoon!’ But she went to pull up the blinds and
-said that she loved sitting quietly in the dark with some one she cared
-for, sleeping. ‘I think souls come very close together, then,’ she said.
-Wasn’t it beautiful of her, Roger? Like astral bodies, you know, and
-auras and things of that sort. She <i>is</i> beautiful. I made up my mind to
-that, then. She gives me such a feeling of trust. How can one help it?
-It’s like what one reads of Roman Catholic saints and people in the
-Bible. The gift of healing. The laying on of hands. We don’t seem to
-have any of them and we can’t count <i>her</i>, since she doesn’t believe in
-the church. But if only they’d give up the Pope, I don’t see why we
-shouldn’t accept their saints; such dear, good people, most of them. And
-the Pope is quite an excellent man just now, I believe. But isn’t it
-very strange, Roger? For a person who can do that to one can’t be
-irreligious, can they?â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick’s eye was now fixed upon him, less wistfully and more
-intently, and he knew that something was expected of him.</p>
-
-<p>“Hypnotic doctors can do it, you know. You needn’t be a saint to do it,â€
-he said. “Though I<a name="page_068" id="page_068"></a> suppose you must have some power of concentration
-that implies faith. However,†he had to say all his thought, though most
-of it would be wasted upon poor Eleanor Chadwick, “Miss Toner is
-anything but irreligious. You may be sure of that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You feel it, too, Roger. I’m so, so glad.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But her religion is not as your religion,†he had to warn her, “nor her
-ways your ways. You must be prepared to have the children unsettled;
-everyone of them; because she has great power and is far more religious
-than most people. She believes in her creed and acts on it. You must
-give the children their heads. It’s no good trying to circumvent or
-oppose them.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But they mustn’t do wrong things, Roger. How can I give them their
-heads if it’s to do wrong things? I don’t know what Mamma would have
-said to their not going to church&mdash;especially in the country. She would
-have thought it very wrong, simply. Sinful and dangerous.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly that,†Oldmeadow smiled. “Even in the country. You don’t think
-Miss Toner does wrong things. If they take up Miss Toner’s creed instead
-of going to church, they won’t come to much harm. The principal thing is
-that there should be something to take up. After all,†he was reassuring
-himself as well as Mrs. Chadwick, “it hasn’t hurt her. It’s made her a
-little foolish; but it hasn’t hurt her. And your children will never be
-foolish. They’ll get all the good of it and, perhaps, be able to combine
-it with going to church.</p>
-
-<p>“Foolish, Roger?†Mrs. Chadwick, relieved of her headache, but not of
-her perplexity, gazed wanly at him. “You think Adrienne foolish?<a name="page_069" id="page_069"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“A little. Now and then. You mustn’t accept anything she says to you
-just because she can cure you of a headache.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But how can you say foolish, Roger? She’s had a most wonderful
-education?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Everything that makes her surer of herself and makes other people surer
-of her puts her in more danger of being foolish. One can be too sure of
-oneself. Unless one is a saint&mdash;and even then. And though I don’t think
-she’s irreligious I don’t think she’s a saint. Not by any means.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see how anyone can be more of one, nowadays, Roger. She heals
-people and she says prayers, and she is always good and gentle and never
-thinks of herself. I’m sure I can’t think what you want more.â€</p>
-
-<p>A touch of plaintiveness and even of protest had come into Mrs.
-Chadwick’s voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps what I want is less,†he laughed. “Perhaps she’s too much of a
-saint for my taste. I think she’s a little too much of one for your
-taste, really&mdash;if you were to be quite candid with yourself. Has she
-spoken to you at all about Barney? Are you quite sure you’ll have to
-reckon with her for yourself and the children?â€</p>
-
-<p>At this Mrs. Chadwick showed a frank alarm. “Oh, quite, quite sure!†she
-said. “She couldn’t be so lovely to us all if she didn’t mean to take
-him! Why do you ask, Roger? You haven’t any reason for thinking she
-won’t?â€</p>
-
-<p>“None whatever. Quite the contrary.†He didn’t want to put poor Mrs.
-Chadwick to the cruel test of declaring whether she would rather have
-the children go to church and lose Miss Toner and all her money<a name="page_070" id="page_070"></a> or have
-them stay away and keep Miss Toner. After all such a test was not to be
-asked of her. Miss Toner wanted people to follow their own light. “I
-only wondered if she talked to you about him. Asked any girlish leading
-questions.â€</p>
-
-<p>“None, none whatever,†said Mrs. Chadwick. “But I feel that’s because
-she thinks she knows him far better than I do and that he’s told her
-everything already. It’s rather hard to be a mother, Roger. For of
-course, though she is so much better and cleverer than I am, I feel sure
-that no one understands Barney as I do.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She’d be a little cleverer still if she could see that, wouldn’t she?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t know. Girls never do. I was just the same when I was
-engaged to Francis. Even now I can’t think that old Mrs. Chadwick really
-understood him as I did. It’s very puzzling, isn’t it? Very difficult to
-see things from other people’s point of view. When she pulled up the
-blind this afternoon, she told me that Nancy and Barney were down in the
-copse and she seemed pleased.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, did she?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I told her that they’d always been like brother and sister, for I was
-just a little afraid, you know, that she might imagine Barney had ever
-cared about Nancy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I see. You think she wouldn’t like that?â€</p>
-
-<p>“What woman would, Roger?†And he imagined that Mrs. Chadwick, for all
-her folly, was cleverer than Miss Toner guessed, as she added: “And then
-she told me that she’d made Barney go without her. She wanted me to see,
-you know, that it depended on her. That’s another reason why I feel sure
-she is going to take him.<a name="page_071" id="page_071"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VIII-a" id="CHAPTER_VIII-a"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">H<small>E</small> sat, for the first time, next Miss Toner that night at dinner and
-Nancy sat across from them next Barney. Nancy was pale, and now that he
-could scrutinize her he imagined that the walk had been more of an
-ordeal than a pleasure. Barney, no doubt, with the merciless blindness
-of his state, had talked to her all the time of Adrienne. But Nancy
-would not have minded that. She was of the type that hides its cut for
-ever and may become aunt and guardian-angel to the other woman’s
-children. It had not been Barney’s preoccupation that had so drained her
-of warmth and colour, but its character, its object. Her grey eyes had
-the considering look with which they might have measured the height of a
-difficult hedge in hunting, and, resting on Oldmeadow once or twice,
-seemed to tell him that the walk had shown her more clearly than ever
-that, if Barney married Miss Toner, they must lose him. He felt sure
-that she had lain down since tea with a headache to which had come no
-ministering angel.</p>
-
-<p>She and Barney did not talk to each other now, for he had eyes and ears
-only for Miss Toner. At any former time they would have kept up the
-happiest interchange, and Oldmeadow would have seen Nancy’s eyelashes
-close together as she smiled her loving smile. There was a dim family
-likeness between her face and Barney’s, for both were long and narrow,
-and both had the singular sweetness in the very structure of the smile.
-But where Barney was<a name="page_072" id="page_072"></a> clumsy, Nancy was clear, and her skin was as fair
-as his was brown. To the fond onlooker at both, they were destined mates
-and only an insufferable accident had parted them.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy was as much a part of the Coldbrooks country as the primroses and
-the blackcaps in the woods. Her life had risen from the familiar soil to
-the familiar sky, as preordained to fitness, as ordered by instinct and
-condition as theirs, and from her security of type she had gained not
-lost in savour. The time that unfinished types must give to growing
-conscious roots and building conscious nests, Nancy had all free for
-spontaneities of flight and song. Beside her, to his hostile eye, Miss
-Toner was as a wide-spread water-weed, floating, rootless and scentless,
-upon chance currents: A creature of surfaces, of caprice and hazard. If
-the multiplicity of her information constituted mental wealth, its
-impersonality constituted mental poverty. She was as well furnished and
-as deadening as a catalogue, and as he listened to her, receiving an
-impression of continual, considered movings-on, earnest pursuits, across
-half the globe, of further experience, he saw her small, questing figure
-on a background of railways, giant lines stretching forth across plain
-and mountain, climbing, tunnelling, curving; stopping at great capitals,
-and passing on again to glitter on their endless way under the sun and
-moon. That was what he seemed to see as Miss Toner talked: and
-sleeping-berths and wardrobe-boxes and luxurious suites in vast hotels.</p>
-
-<p>She wore again her white dress, contrasting in its richness of texture
-with the simplicity of her daytime blue, and, rather stupidly, an
-artificial white<a name="page_073" id="page_073"></a> rose had been placed, in her braids, over each ear.
-Her pearls were her only other ornament, and her pearls, he supposed,
-were surprising.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow was aware, in his close proximity to her, while she ate beside
-him with a meticulous nicety that made the manners of the rest of them,
-by contrast, seem a little casual and slovenly, of the discomfort that
-had visited him in his dream. Yet the feeling she evoked was not all
-discomfort. It was as if from her mere physical presence he were
-subjected to some force that had in its compulsion a dim, conjectural
-charm. It was for this reason no doubt that he seemed to be aware of
-everything about her. Her hands were small and white, but had no beauty
-of form or gesture. She moved them slowly and without grace, rather like
-a young child handling unfamiliar objects in a kindergarten, and this in
-spite of the singular perfection of her table manners. She could have
-made little use of them, ever, in games of skill or in any art requiring
-swift accuracy and firmness. It was as if her mind, overtrained in
-receptivity and retentiveness, had only dull tentacles to spare for her
-finger-tips. He was aware of these hands beside him all through dinner
-and their fumbling deliberation brought to him, again and again, a
-mingled annoyance, and satisfaction. There was something positive and
-characteristic about her scentlessness, for if she smelt of anything it
-was of Fuller’s Earth&mdash;a funny, chalky smell&mdash;and beside Meg, who
-foolishly washed liquid powder over her silvery skin, Miss Toner’s
-colourlessness was sallow. She had hardly talked at all the night
-before, but to-night she talked continuously. It was Meg who questioned
-her, and Mrs.<a name="page_074" id="page_074"></a> Chadwick, and Oldmeadow guessed that his ingenuous
-friend, still perplexed by his use of the word foolish, was drawing out
-and displaying her future daughter-in-law for his benefit.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner and her mother had been to Russia, to India, to China and
-Japan. They had visited Stevenson’s grave at Vailima and in describing
-it she quoted “Under the wide and starry sky.†They had studied every
-temple in Greece and Sicily and talked of the higher education with
-ladies in Turkish harems. “But it was always Paris we came back to,†she
-said, “when we were not at home. Home was, and is, a great many places:
-California and Chicago&mdash;where my father’s people live, and New England.
-But Paris was, after it, closest to our hearts. Yes, we knew a great
-many French people; but it was for study rather than friendship we went
-there. It is such a treasure-house of culture. Mother worked very hard
-at French diction for several winters. She had lessons from Mademoiselle
-Jouffert&mdash;you know perhaps&mdash;though she has not acted for so many years
-now. Our friendship with her was a great privilege, for she was a rare
-and noble woman and had a glorious gift. Phèdre was her favourite rôle
-and I shall never forget her rendering of it:</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Ariane ma sœur! de quel amour blessée<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Vous mourûtes aux bords où vous fûtes laissée!<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="nind">She taught Mother to recite Phèdre’s great speeches with such fire and
-passion. There could hardly be a better training for French,†said Miss
-Toner, repeating the lines with a curious placidity and perfection. “I
-preferred Mademoiselle Jouffert’s rendering to Bernhardt’s. Her Phèdre
-was, with all the fire, more tender and womanly.<a name="page_075" id="page_075"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Do you care about Racine?†Oldmeadow asked her, while the lines rang in
-his ears&mdash;rather as in his dream the rooks’ cawing had done&mdash;with an
-evocative sadness that hung, irrelevantly, about their speaker. “It’s
-not easy for our English ears to hear the fire and passion, is it; but
-they are there.â€</p>
-
-<p>“He is very perfect and accomplished,†said Miss Toner. “But I always
-feel him small beside our Shakespeare. He lacks heart, doesn’t he?â€</p>
-
-<p>“There’s heart in those lines you’ve just recited.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,†said Miss Toner. “Those lines are certainly very beautiful. It’s
-the mere music of them, I think. They make me feel&mdash;†she paused. It was
-unlike her to pause and he wondered what she made of Ariane, off her own
-bat, without Mademoiselle Jouffert to help her.</p>
-
-<p>“They make you feel?†he questioned.</p>
-
-<p>“They are so sad&mdash;so terribly melancholy. The sound of them. They make
-me want to cry when I hear them. But I think it’s the sound; for their
-meaning makes me indignant. There is such weakness in them; such
-acceptance of destiny. I want to revolt and protest, too&mdash;for women. She
-should not have died.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow involuntarily glanced across at Nancy. She was looking at Miss
-Toner and if she had been pale before, she was paler now. Nancy would
-never think of herself in connection with Ariane and tragic grief; yet
-something in the lines, something in Miss Toner’s disavowal of their
-applicability, had touched the hidden cut. And, once again, it was Meg’s
-eyes that met his, showing him that what he saw she saw, too. Barney saw
-nothing.<a name="page_076" id="page_076"></a> All his solicitude was for Miss Toner in her imaginary plight.
-“I’m sure you never would!†he exclaimed. “Never die, I mean!â€</p>
-
-<p>“You think Miss Toner would have come to terms with Bacchus,†Oldmeadow
-suggested. He didn’t want to take it out of Barney, though he was vexed
-with him, nor to take it out of Miss Toner, either. He only wanted to
-toss and twist the theme and make it gay where Miss Toner made it
-solemn.</p>
-
-<p>“Come to terms with Bacchus!†Barney quite stared, taken aback by the
-irreverence. “Why should she! She’d have found somebody more worth while
-than either of the ruffians.â€</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner smiled over at him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure that if Bacchus had been fortunate enough to meet Miss Toner
-she’d have converted him to total abstinence in a jiffy and made a model
-husband of him. He was a fine, exhilarating fellow; no ruffian at all;
-quite worth reforming.†Oldmeadow, as he thus embroidered his theme, was
-indulging in his own peculiar form of mirth.</p>
-
-<p>He saw Miss Toner laying her hand on the head of Bacchus; Miss Toner
-very picturesque on the rugged sea-shore in her white and pearls and
-roses, and Bacchus dazed and penitent, his very leopards tamed to a
-cat-like docility. His laugh was visible rather than audible and that
-Miss Toner had never before been the subject of such mirth was evident
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>She met whatever she saw or guessed of irreverence, however, as
-composedly as she would have met Bacchus; perhaps already, he reflected,
-she was beginning to think of him in the light of an undesirable
-wine-bibber. Perhaps even, she was beginning<a name="page_077" id="page_077"></a> to think of him as a
-ruffian. He didn’t mind in the least, so long as he succeeded in keeping
-off her solemnity.</p>
-
-<p>“I should have been quite willing to try and reform him,†she said;
-“though it takes much longer than a jiffy to reform people, Mr.
-Oldmeadow; but I shouldn’t have been willing to marry him. There are
-other things in life, aren’t there, than love-stories&mdash;even for women.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Bravo!†said Oldmeadow. He felt as well as uttered it. She wasn’t being
-solemn, and she had returned his shuttlecock smartly. “But are there?â€
-he went on. He had adjusted his eyeglass for a clearer confrontation of
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner’s large eyes, enlarged still further by the glass, met his,
-not solemnly, but with a considering gravity.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a sceptic, Mr. Oldmeadow,†she observed. “A satirist. Do you
-find that satire and scepticism take you very far in reading human
-hearts?â€</p>
-
-<p>“There’s one for you, Roger!†cried Barney.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow kept his gaze fixed on Miss Toner. “You think that Ariane
-might prefer Infant Welfare work or Charity Organization to a
-love-story?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not those necessarily.†She returned his gaze. “Though I have known
-very fine big people who did prefer them. But they are not the only
-alternatives to love-stories.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I am sceptical,†said Oldmeadow. “I am, if you like, satirical. I don’t
-believe there are any alternatives to love-stories; only palliatives to
-disappointment.â€</p>
-
-<p><a name="page_078" id="page_078"></a>Barney leaned forward: “Adrienne, you see, doesn’t accept that
-old-fashioned, sentimentalizing division of the sexes. She doesn’t
-accept the merely love-story, hearth-side rôle for women.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well,†Oldmeadow played with his fork, smiling with the wryness
-that accompanied his reluctant sincerities, “I don’t divide the sexes as
-far as love-stories are concerned. We are all in the same boat. For us,
-too, Barney, it’s love-story or palliative. You don’t agree? If you were
-disappointed in love? Hunting? Farming? Politics? Post-Impressionism?
-Would any of them fill the gap?â€</p>
-
-<p>It wasn’t at all the line he had intended the talk to take. He knew that
-as he glanced across at Nancy. Saying nothing, as if its subject could
-not concern her, and with a dim little smile, she listened, and he knew
-that for her, though she wouldn’t die of it, there would be only
-palliatives. If only Barney, confound him, hadn’t been so charming.</p>
-
-<p>Barney did not know how to answer the last assault, and, boyishly,
-looked across at his beloved for succour. She gave it instantly.</p>
-
-<p>“Sadness, sorrow, tragedy, even, isn’t despair,†she said. “Barney, I
-believe, if sorrow overtook him, would mould the rough clay of his
-occupation to some higher beauty than the beauty he’d lost. To lie down
-and die; to resign oneself to palliatives. Oh, no. That’s not the
-destiny of the human soul.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Roger’s pulling your leg, Barney, as usual,†Palgrave put in
-scornfully. He had been listening with his elbows on the table, his eyes
-on the table-cloth. “He knows as well as I do that there’s only one
-love. The sort you’re all talking about&mdash;the Theseus and Ariane
-affair&mdash;is merely an ebullition of youth and as soon as nature has
-perpetuated the<a name="page_079" id="page_079"></a> species by means of it, it settles down, if there’s any
-reality under the ebullition, to grow into the other&mdash;the divine love;
-the love of the soul for the Good, the True and the Beautiful,†Palgrave
-declared, growing very red as he said it.</p>
-
-<p>“Really&mdash;my dear child!†Mrs. Chadwick murmured. She had never heard
-such themes broached at her table and glanced nervously up at old
-Johnson to see if he had followed. “That is a very, very materialistic
-view!â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow at this began to laugh, audibly as well as visibly, and
-Palgrave, as their eyes met in a glance of communicated comedy, could
-not withhold an answering smile. But Barney’s face showed that he
-preferred to see Palgrave’s interpretation as materialistic and even
-Miss Toner looked thoughtfully at her champion.</p>
-
-<p>“But we need the symbol of youth and nature,†she suggested. “The divine
-love, yes, Palgrave, is the only real one; but then all love is divine
-and human love sometimes brings the deepest revelation of all. Browning
-saw that so wonderfully.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Browning, my dear!†Palgrave returned with a curious mingling of
-devotion, intimacy and aloofness, “Browning never got nearer God than a
-woman’s breast!â€</p>
-
-<p>At this, almost desperately, Mrs. Chadwick broke in: “Did you ever see
-our Ellen Terry act, Adrienne? I liked her much better than Madame
-Bernhardt who had such a very artificial face, I think. I can’t imagine
-her as Rosalind, can you? While Miss Terry was a perfect Rosalind. I met
-her once with Henry Irving at a garden-party in London and she was as
-charming off as on the stage and I’m sure I can’t see<a name="page_080" id="page_080"></a> why anybody
-should wish to act Phèdre&mdash;poor, uncontrolled creature. Rhubarb-tart,
-dear, and custard? or wine-jelly and cream? How beautifully you speak
-French. How many languages do you speak?†Mrs. Chadwick earnestly
-inquired, still turning the helm firmly away from the unbecoming topic.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner kept her head very creditably and, very tactfully, at once
-accepted her hostess’s hint. “Rhubarb-tart, please, dear Mrs. Chadwick.
-Not so very many, really. My German has never been good; though French
-and Italian I do know well, and enough Spanish for Don Quixote. But,â€
-she went on, while Mrs. Chadwick looked gratefully at her, “Mother and I
-were always working. We never wasted any of our precious hours together.
-She couldn’t bear the thought of <i>missing</i> anything in life; and she
-missed very little, I think. Music, poetry, painting&mdash;all the
-treasure-houses of the human spirit&mdash;were open to her. And what she won
-and made her own, she gave out again with greater radiance. How I wish
-you could all have known her!†said Miss Toner, looking round at them
-with an unaccustomed touch of wistfulness. “She was radiance
-personified. She never let unhappiness <i>rest</i> on her. I remember once,
-when she had had a cruel blow from a person she loved and trusted&mdash;in
-the middle of her sadness she looked at me and saw how sad she was
-making me; and she sprang up and seized my hands and cried: ‘Let’s
-dance! Let’s dance and dance and dance!’ And we did, up and down the
-terrace&mdash;it was at San Remo&mdash;she in her white dress, with the blue sky
-and sea and the orange-trees all in bloom. I can see her now. And<a name="page_081" id="page_081"></a> then
-she rushed to get music, her harp, and flowers and fruit, to take to an
-invalid friend, and we spent the afternoon with her, mother surpassing
-herself in charm and witchery. She was always like that. She would have
-found something, oh, very beautiful, to make from her sorrow if Theseus
-had abandoned her! But no one,†said Miss Toner, looking round at
-Oldmeadow, now with a mild playfulness, “could ever have abandoned
-Mother.â€</p>
-
-<p>There was something to Oldmeadow appealing in her playfulness; her
-confidence, when it took on this final grace, was really touching. For
-Mrs. Toner the light-giver he knew that he had conceived a rooted
-aversion. And he wondered if she would go on, over the rhubarb-tart, to
-tell, after the dancing on the terrace, of the death at sea. But he was
-spared that.</p>
-
-<p>“And your father died when you were very young, didn’t he, dear?†said
-Mrs. Chadwick, fearful of the reference to Theseus. “I think your mother
-must often have been so very lonely; away from home for such a great
-part of the time and with so few relatives.â€</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner shook her head. “We were always together, she and I, so we
-could never, either of us, be lonely. And wherever we went she made
-friends. People were always so much more than mere people to her. She
-saw them always, at once, high and low, prince and peasant, as souls,
-and they felt it always, and opened to her. Then, until I was quite big,
-we had my lovely grandmother. Mother came from Maine and it was such a
-joy to go and stay there with Grandma. It was a very simple little home.
-It was always high thinking and plain living, with Grandma; and though,
-when she married and became<a name="page_082" id="page_082"></a> rich, Mother showered beautiful things upon
-her, Grandma stayed always in the little house, doing for her poor
-neighbours, as she had always done, and dusting her parlour&mdash;a real New
-England parlour&mdash;and making her own griddle cakes&mdash;such wonderful cakes
-she made! I was fifteen when she died; but the tie was so close and
-spiritual that she did not seem gone away from us.<a name="page_083" id="page_083"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_IX-a" id="CHAPTER_IX-a"></a>CHAPTER IX</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">“R<small>ATHER</small> nice to think that there are so many good and innocent people in
-the world, isn’t it,†Barney remarked, when he, Palgrave and Oldmeadow
-were left to their wine and cigars. It was evident that he would have
-preferred to omit the masculine interlude, but Oldmeadow was resolved on
-the respite. She had touched him because she was so unaware; but he was
-weary and disconcerted. How could Barney be unaware? And was he?
-Altogether? His comment seemed to suggest a suspicion that Miss Toner’s
-flow might have aroused irony or require justification.</p>
-
-<p>“Miss Toner and her mother seem to have found the noble and the gifted
-under every bush,†he remarked, and he was not sure that he wished to
-avoid irony though he knew that he did wish to conceal it from Barney.
-“It’s very good and innocent to be able to do that; but one may keep
-one’s goodness at the risk of one’s discrimination. Not that Miss Toner
-is at all stupid.â€</p>
-
-<p>Palgrave neither smoked nor drank. He had again leaned his elbows on the
-table and his head on his fists, but, while Oldmeadow spoke, he lifted
-and kept his gaze on him. “You don’t like her,†he said suddenly. He and
-Oldmeadow had, irrepressibly, over Mrs. Chadwick’s conception of
-materialism, interchanged their smile at dinner; but since the morning
-Oldmeadow had known that Palgrave suspected him of indifference, perhaps
-even hostility, towards the new-comer. “Why don’t you like her?<a name="page_084" id="page_084"></a>†the
-boy went on and with a growing resentment as his suspicions found voice.
-“She <i>isn’t</i> stupid; that’s just it. She’s good and noble and innocent;
-and gifted, too. Why should we pretend to be too sophisticated to
-recognize such beauty when we meet it? Why should we be ashamed of
-beauty&mdash;afraid of it?â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney, flushing deeply, looked down into his wine-glass.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Palgrave, I don’t understand you,†said Oldmeadow. But he did.
-He seemed to hear the loud beating of Palgrave’s heart. “I don’t dislike
-Miss Toner. How should I? I don’t know her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You do know her. That’s an evasion. It’s all there. She can’t be seen
-without being known. It’s all there; at once. I don’t know why you don’t
-like her. It’s what I want to know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Drop it, Palgrave,†Barney muttered. “Let Roger alone. He and Adrienne
-get on very well together. It’s no good forcing things.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not forcing anything. It’s Roger who forces his scepticism and his
-satire on us,†Palgrave declared.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry to have displeased you,†said Oldmeadow with a slight
-severity. “I am unaware of having displayed my disagreeable qualities
-more than is usual with me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not. What rot, Palgrave! Roger is always disagreeable, bless
-him!†Barney declared with a forced laugh. “Adrienne understands him
-perfectly. As he says: she isn’t stupid.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, all right. I’m sorry,†Palgrave rose, thrusting his hands in his
-pockets and looking down at the two as he stood above them. He hesitated
-and then<a name="page_085" id="page_085"></a> went on: “All I know is that for the first time in my
-life&mdash;the very first time, mind you&mdash;all the things we are told about in
-religion, all the things we read about in poetry, the things we’re
-supposed to care for and live by, have been made real to me&mdash;outside of
-books and churches. What do we ever see of them at home here, with dear
-Mummy and the girls? What do we ever talk of, all of us&mdash;but the
-everlasting round&mdash;hunting, gardening, cricket, hay; village treats and
-village charities. A lot of chatter about people&mdash;What a rotter
-So-and-so is; and How perfectly sweet somebody else: and a little about
-politics&mdash;Why doesn’t somebody shoot Lloyd George?&mdash;and How wicked Home
-Rulers are. That’s about all it amounts to. Oh, I know we’re not as
-stupid as we sound. <i>She</i> sees that. We can feel things and see things
-though we express ourselves like savages. But we’re too comfortable to
-think; that’s what’s the trouble with us. We don’t want to change; and
-thought means change. And we’re shy; idiotically shy; afraid to express
-anything as it really comes to us; so that I sometimes wonder if things
-will go on coming; if we shan’t become like the Chinese&mdash;a sort of
-<i>objet d’art</i> set of people, living by rote, in a rut. Well. That’s all
-I mean. With her one isn’t ashamed or afraid to know and say what one
-feels. With her one wants to feel more. And I, for one, reverence her
-and am grateful to her for having made beauty and goodness real to me.â€
-Having so delivered himself, Palgrave, who had, after his deep flush,
-become pale, turned away and marched out of the room.</p>
-
-<p>The older men sat silent for a moment, Oldmeadow continuing to smoke and
-Barney turning<a name="page_086" id="page_086"></a> the stem of his wine-glass in his fingers. “I’m awfully
-sorry,†he said at last. “I can’t think what’s got into the boy. He’s in
-rather a moil just now, I fancy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a dear boy,†said Oldmeadow. “There’s any amount of truth in what
-he says. He’s at an age when one sees these things, if one is ever going
-to see them. I hope he’ll run straight. He ought to amount to
-something.â€</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what Adrienne says,†said Barney. “She says he’s a poet. You
-think, too, then, that we’re all in such a rut; living Chinese lives;
-automata?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the problem of civilization, isn’t it, to combine automatism with
-freedom. Without a rut to walk in you reach nowhere&mdash;if we’re to walk
-together. And yet we must manage to ramble, too; individuals must;
-that’s what it comes to, I suppose. Individuals must take the risk of
-rambling and alter the line of the rut for the others. Palgrave may be a
-rambler. But I hope he won’t go too far afield.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You do like her, Roger, don’t you?†said Barney suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>It had had to come. Oldmeadow knew that, as the depth of silence fell
-about them. It was inevitable between them, of course. Yet he wished it
-might have been avoided, since now it must be too late. He pressed out
-the glow of his cigar and leaned his arms on the table, not looking at
-his friend while he meditated, and he said finally&mdash;and it might seem,
-he knew, another evasion&mdash;“Look here, Barney, I must tell you something.
-You know how much I care about Nancy. Well, that’s the trouble. It’s
-Nancy I wanted you to marry.<a name="page_087" id="page_087"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney had held himself ready and a deep, involuntary sigh of relief, or
-of postponed suspense, now escaped him. “I see. I didn’t realize that,â€
-he said. And how he hoped, poor Barney! it was all there was to realize!
-“Of course I’m very fond of Nancy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You realize, of course, how fond she is of you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well; yes; of course. We’re both awfully good pals,†said Barney,
-confused.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what Palgrave would call speaking like a savage, Barney. Own to
-it that if Miss Toner hadn’t appeared upon the scene you could have
-hoped to make Nancy your wife. I don’t say you made love to her or
-misled her in any way. I’m sure you never meant to at any rate. But the
-fact remains that you were both so fond of each other that you would
-certainly have married. So you’ll understand that when I come down here
-and find Miss Toner installed as tutelary goddess over you all, what I’m
-mainly conscious of is grief for my dear little relegated nymph.â€</p>
-
-<p>Still deeply flushed, but still feeling his relief, Barney turned his
-wine-glass and murmured: “I see. I quite understand. Yes; I should have
-been in love with her, I own. I nearly was, last winter. As to her being
-in love with me, that’s a different matter. I’ve no reason to think she
-was in love. It would just be a difference of degree, with Nancy,
-wouldn’t it; she loves us all so much, and she’s really such a child,
-still. Of course that’s what she seems to me now, since Adrienne’s come;
-just a darling child.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so. But you understand what I feel, too. I feel her much more
-than a darling child, and it’s difficult for me to like anybody who has
-dispossessed<a name="page_088" id="page_088"></a> her. I perfectly recognize Miss Toner’s remarkable
-qualities and hope to count myself among her friends one day; but, being
-a satirist and a sceptic, I rebel instinctively against goddesses of
-whatever brand. Nymphs are good enough for me; and I can’t help wishing,
-irrepressibly, that nymphs had remained good enough for you, my dear
-boy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t a question of nymphs; it isn’t a question of goddesses,â€
-Barney said, glancing up now at his friend. “I’m awfully sorry about
-Nancy; but of course she’ll find some one far better than I am; she’s
-such a dear. You’re not quite straight with me, Roger. I don’t see
-Adrienne as a goddess at all; I’m not like Palgrave, a silly boy, bowled
-over. It’s something quite different she does to me. She makes me feel
-safe; safe and happy in a way I never imagined possible. It’s like
-having the sunlight fall about one; it’s like life, new life, to be with
-her. She’s not a goddess; but she’s the woman it would break my heart to
-part with. I never met such loveliness.â€</p>
-
-<p>“My dear boy,†Oldmeadow murmured. He still leaned on the table and he
-still looked down. “I do wish you every happiness, as you know.†He was
-deeply touched and Barney’s quiet words troubled him as he had not
-before been troubled.</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks. I know you do. I know you care for my happiness. And I can’t
-imagine anything coming into my life that would make a difference to us.
-That’s just it.†Barney paused. “It won’t, will it, Roger?â€</p>
-
-<p>The crisis was again upon them. Oldmeadow did not look up as he said:
-“That depends on her, doesn’t it?â€</p>
-
-<p>“No; it depends on you,†Barney quickly replied.<a name="page_089" id="page_089"></a></p>
-
-<p>“She likes you, quite immensely, already. She says you make her think of
-one of Meredith’s dry, deep-hearted heroes,†Barney gave a slightly
-awkward laugh, deprecating the homage as he offered it. “She says you
-are the soul of truth. There’s no reason, none whatever, why you
-shouldn’t be the best of friends, as far as she is concerned. It’s all
-she asks.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all I ask, of course.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know. But if you don’t meet her half-way? Sometimes I do see
-what Palgrave means. Sometimes you misunderstand her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Very likely. It takes time really to understand people, doesn’t it.â€</p>
-
-<p>But poor Barney was embarked and could not but push on. “As just now,
-you know, about finding nobility behind every bush and paying for one’s
-goodness by losing one’s discrimination. There are deep realities and
-superficial realities, aren’t there, and she sees the deep ones first.
-It’s more than that. Palgrave says she makes reality. He didn’t say it
-to me, because I don’t think he feels me to be worthy of her. He said it
-to Mother, and puzzled her by it. But I know what he means. It’s because
-of that he feels her to be a sort of saint. Do be straight with me,
-Roger. Say what you really think. I’d rather know; much. You’ve never
-kept things from me before,†Barney added in a sudden burst of boyish
-distress.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Barney,†Oldmeadow murmured.</p>
-
-<p>It had to come, then. He pushed back his chair and turned in it, resting
-an arm on the table; and he passed his hand over his head and kept it
-there while he stared for a moment hard at the ceiling.<a name="page_090" id="page_090"></a></p>
-
-<p>“I think you’ve made a mistake,†he then said.</p>
-
-<p>“A mistake?†Barney faltered blushing. It was not anger; it was pain,
-simple, boyish pain that thus confessed itself.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; a mistake,†Oldmeadow repeated, not looking at him, “and since I
-fear it’s gone too far to be mended, I think it would have been better
-if you’d not pressed me, my dear boy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean? I’d rather know, you see,†Barney murmured, after a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mean about the goodness, or the power,†said Oldmeadow. “She is
-good, and she has power; but that’s in part, I feel, because she has no
-inhibitions&mdash;no doubts. To know reality we must do more than blow
-soap-bubbles with it. It must break us to be known. She’s never been
-broken. Perhaps she never will be. And in that case she’ll go on blind.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney was silent for a moment, and that it was not as bad as he had
-feared it might be was apparent from the attempted calm with which he
-asked, presently: “Why shouldn’t you be blind to evil and absurdity if
-you can see much further than most people into goodness? Perhaps one
-must be one-sided to go far.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps. But it’s dangerous to be one-sided&mdash;to oneself and others. And
-does she see further? That’s the question. Doesn’t she tend, rather, to
-accept as first-rate what you incline to find second? You’re less strong
-than she is, Barney, and less good, no doubt. But you can’t deny that
-you’re less blind. So what you must ask yourself is whether you can be
-sure of being happy with a wife who’ll never doubt herself and who’ll
-not see absurdity where you<a name="page_091" id="page_091"></a> see it. Put it at that. Will you be happy
-with her?â€</p>
-
-<p>He was, he knew, justified of Miss Toner’s commendation, for truth
-between friends could go no further and, in the silence, while he
-sickened for his friend, he felt it searching Barney’s heart. How it
-searched, how many echoes it found awaiting it, was proved by the
-prolongation of the silence.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you exaggerate,†said Barney at length, and in the words
-Oldmeadow read his refusal to examine further the truths revealed to
-him. “You see all the defects and none of the beauty. It can’t be a
-mistake if I can see both. She’ll learn a little from me, that’s what it
-comes to, for all the lot I’ll have to learn from her. I’ll be happy
-with her if I’m worthy of her. What it comes to, you see, as I said at
-the beginning, is that I can’t be happy without her.†He rose and
-Oldmeadow, rising also, knew that they closed upon an unresolved
-discord. Yet these final words of Barney’s pleased him so much that he
-could not leave it quite at that.</p>
-
-<p>“Mine may be the mistake, after all,†he said. “Only you must give me
-time to find it out. I began by telling you I couldn’t be really
-dispassionate; and I feel much better for our talk, if that’s any
-satisfaction to you. If you can learn from each other and see the truth
-together, you’ll be happy. You’re right there, Barney. That is what it
-comes to.†They moved towards the door. “Try not to dislike me for my
-truth too much,†he added.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear old fellow,†Barney muttered. He laid his hand for a moment on
-his friend’s shoulder, standing back for him to pass first. “Nothing can
-ever alter things between you and me.â€</p>
-
-<p>But things were altered already.<a name="page_092" id="page_092"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_X-a" id="CHAPTER_X-a"></a>CHAPTER X</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">P<small>ALGRAVE</small> had not gone to the drawing-room, and that, at all events, was
-a comfort. A wood fire burned on the hearth and near it Nancy was
-holding wool for Mrs. Chadwick to wind. Barbara had been sent to bed and
-Meg and Miss Toner sat on the sofa hand in hand. Even in the pressure of
-his distress and anxiety Oldmeadow could but be aware of amusement at
-seeing Meg thus. It had, of course, been Miss Toner who had taken her
-hand. But no one else could have taken it. No one else could have been
-allowed to go on holding it placidly before on-lookers of whose mirthful
-impressions Meg must be well aware. She didn’t mind in the least. That
-was what Miss Toner had done to her. She enjoyed having her hand held by
-anyone so much interested in her.</p>
-
-<p>Barney walked to the fireplace and stood before it. He had no faculty
-for concealing his emotions and the painful ones through which he had
-just passed were visible on his sensitive face.</p>
-
-<p>“Give us a song, Meg,†Oldmeadow suggested. He did not care for Meg’s
-singing, which conveyed, in a rich, sweet medium, a mingled fervour and
-shallowness of feeling. But to hear her sing would be better than to see
-her holding Miss Toner’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>Barney crossed at once to the seat Meg vacated and dropped down into it,
-no doubt thanking his friend for what he imagined to be a display of
-tact, and Oldmeadow saw the quiet, firm look that flowed over and took
-possession of him. Miss Toner knew,<a name="page_093" id="page_093"></a> of course, that Barney had been
-having painful emotions; and she probably knew that they had been caused
-by the dry, deep-hearted Meredithian hero. But after the long look she
-did not speak to him. She sat in her pearls and whiteness and gave
-careful attention to the music.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow accompanied Meg, tolerantly, and a trifle humorously, throwing
-a touch of mockery into his part. Meg’s preference to-night seemed to be
-for gardens; Gardens of Sleep; Gardens of Love; God’s Gardens. “What a
-wretch you are, Roger,†she said, when she had finished. “You despise
-feeling.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I was wallowing in it,†Oldmeadow returned. “Did I stint
-you?â€</p>
-
-<p>“No; you helped me to wallow. That’s why you’re such a wretch. Always
-showing one that one is wallowing when one thinks one’s soaring. It’s
-your turn, now, Adrienne. Let’s see if he’ll manage to make fun of you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Does Miss Toner sing, too? Now do you know, Meg,†said Oldmeadow,
-keeping up the friendly banter, “I’m sure she doesn’t sing the sort of
-rubbish you do.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I think they’re beautiful songs,†Mrs. Chadwick murmured from her wool,
-“and I think Roger played them most beautifully. Why should you say he
-is making fun of you, Meg?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Because he makes you think something’s beautiful that he thinks
-rubbish, Mummy. Come along, Adrienne. You will, won’t you? I expect my
-voice sounds all wrong to you. I’ve had no proper training.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a very lovely voice, Meg, used in a poor<a name="page_094" id="page_094"></a> cause,†said Miss Toner
-smiling. “And it is badly placed. I think I could help you there. I’ve
-no voice at all, but I have been taught how to sing. It would be more to
-the point, though, if Mr. Oldmeadow were to play to us, for I hear that
-he is an accomplished musician.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m really anything but accomplished,†said Oldmeadow; “but I can play
-accompaniments cleverly. Do sing to us. I know you’ll give us something
-worth accompanying.â€</p>
-
-<p>Miss Toner rose and came to the piano with her complete and unassuming
-confidence. She turned the pages of the music piled there and asked him
-if he cared for Schubert’s songs. Yes; she was a watch wound to go
-accurately and she could rely on herself, always, to the last tick. Even
-if she knew&mdash;and he was sure she knew&mdash;that he had been undermining her,
-she would never show a shadow or a tremor; and she would always know
-what was the best music. Only, as she selected “Litanei†and placed it
-before him, he felt that over him, also, flowed the quiet, firm look.</p>
-
-<p>“Litanei†was one of his favourites in a composer he loved, and, as she
-sang there above him, he found the song emerging unharmed from her
-interpretation. It was as she had said&mdash;no voice to speak of; the
-dryest, flattest little thread of sound; and no feeling, either (what a
-relief after Meg!), except the feeling for scrupulous accuracy. Yet her
-singing was what he found in her to like best. It was disciplined; it
-accepted its own limits; it fulfilled an order. There was no desecration
-of the heavenly song, for, intelligently after all, she made no attempt
-upon its heart.<a name="page_095" id="page_095"></a></p>
-
-<p>When she had finished, she looked down at him. They were removed by half
-the length of the room from the fireside group. The lamps were behind
-them. Only the candles set in the piano-rack illumined Miss Toner; and
-while the white roses over her ears struck him anew as foolish, her eyes
-anew struck him as powerful.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you. That was a pleasure,†he said.</p>
-
-<p>It was a pleasure. It was almost a link. He had found a ground to meet
-her on. He saw himself in the future accompanying Barney’s wife. He
-need, then, so seldom talk to her. But, alas! she stepped at once from
-the safe frame of art.</p>
-
-<p>“If we can rise from loss to feel like that, if we can lift our sorrows
-like that, we need never turn to palliatives, need we, Mr. Oldmeadow?â€
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>Stupidity, complacency, or power, whatever it was, it completely
-disenchanted him. It left him also bereft of repartee. What he fell back
-upon, as he looked up at her and then down at the keys again, was a mere
-schoolboy mutter of “Come now!â€</p>
-
-<p>After all a schoolboy mutter best expressed what he felt. She was not
-accustomed to having her ministrations met with such mutters and she did
-not like it. That was apparent to him as she turned away and went back
-to the sofa and Barney. She had again tried him and again found him
-wanting.</p>
-
-<p class="cb">. . . . .
-. . . . .
-. . . . .
-. . . . .
-. . . . .
-. . . . .
-. . . . .</p>
-
-<p>Barney and Miss Toner left in her motor next morning shortly after
-breakfast, and though with his friend Oldmeadow had no further exchange,
-he had, with Miss Toner, a curious encounter that was, he felt sure, a
-direct result of her impressions of the night before. They met in the
-dining-room a few<a name="page_096" id="page_096"></a> moments before breakfast, and as she entered, wearing
-already her motoring hat, closely bound round her face with a veil, he
-was aware that she looked, if that were possible, more composed than he
-had ever seen her. He felt sure that she had waited for her opportunity,
-and had followed him downstairs, knowing that she would find him alone;
-and he realized then that she was more composed, because she had an
-intention or, rather, since it was more definite, a determination.
-Determination in her involved no effort: it imparted, merely, the added
-calm of an assured aim.</p>
-
-<p>She gave him her hand and said good morning with the same air of
-scrupulous accuracy that she had given to the rendering of “Litanei†and
-then, standing before the fire, her hands clasped behind her, her eyes
-raised to his, she said: “Mr. Oldmeadow, I want to say something to
-you.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was the gentle little voice, unaltered, yet he knew that he was in
-for something he would very much rather have avoided; something with
-anybody else unimaginable, but with her, he saw it now, quite
-inevitable. Yet he tried, even at this last moment, to avoid it and
-said, adjusting his eyeglass and moving to the sideboard: “But not
-before we’ve had our tea, surely. Can’t I get you some? Will you trust
-me to pour it out?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks; I take coffee&mdash;not tea,†said Miss Toner from her place at the
-fire, “and neither has been brought in yet.â€</p>
-
-<p>He had just perceived, to his discomfiture, that they had not. There was
-nothing for it but to turn from the ungarnished sideboard and face her
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s about Barney, Mr. Oldmeadow,†Miss Toner<a name="page_097" id="page_097"></a> said, unmoved by his
-patent evasion. “It’s because I know you love Barney and care for his
-happiness. And it’s because I hope that you and I are to be friends, and
-friendship can only be built on truth. Try to trust more; will you?
-That’s all I want to say. Try to trust. You will be happier if you do
-and make other people happier.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow had never experienced such an assault upon his personality,
-and he met it gagged and bound, for, assuredly, this was to be Barney’s
-wife. A slow flush mounted to his face.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid I seem very strange and unconventional to you,†Adrienne
-Toner went on. “You’ve lived in a world where people don’t care enough
-for each other to say the real things. They must be felt if they’ve to
-be said, mustn’t they? Yet you do care for people. I have seen that,
-watching you here; and you care for real things. It’s a crust of caution
-and convention that is about you. You are afraid of expression. You are
-afraid of feeling. You are afraid of being taken in and of wasting
-yourself. Don’t be afraid, Mr. Oldmeadow. We never lose ourselves by
-trusting. We never lose ourselves by giving. It’s a realer self that
-comes. And with you, I see it clearly, if you let the crust grow
-thicker, it will shut life and light and joy away from you; and when
-light cannot visit our hearts, they wither within us. That is your
-danger. I want to be your friend, so I must say the truth to you.â€</p>
-
-<p>He knew, though he had to struggle not to laugh, that he was very angry
-and that he must not show anger; though it would really be better to
-show that than his intense amusement; and it took him a moment, during
-which they confronted each other, to<a name="page_098" id="page_098"></a> find words; dry, donnish words;
-words of caution and convention. They were the only ones he had
-available for the situation. “My dear young lady,†he said, “you take
-too much upon yourself.â€</p>
-
-<p>She was not in the least disconcerted. She met his eyes steadily. “You
-mean that I am presumptuous, Mr. Oldmeadow?â€</p>
-
-<p>“You take too much upon yourself,†he repeated. “As you say, I hope we
-may be friends.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Is that really all, Mr. Oldmeadow?†she said, looking at him with such
-a depth of thoughtfulness that he could not for the life of him make out
-whether she found him odious or merely pitiful.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; that’s really all,†he returned.</p>
-
-<p>The dining-room was very bright and the little blue figure before the
-fire was very still. The moment fixed itself deep in his consciousness
-with that impression of stillness and brightness. It was an
-uncomfortable impression. Her little face, uplifted to his, absurd, yet
-not uncharming, was, in its still force, almost ominous.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry,†was all she said, and she turned and went forward to greet
-Mrs. Chadwick.<a name="page_099" id="page_099"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XI-a" id="CHAPTER_XI-a"></a>CHAPTER XI</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">I<small>T</small> was a soft June day and Oldmeadow was strolling about Mrs. Averil’s
-garden admiring her herbaceous borders. It was a day that smelt of
-ripening strawberries, of warm grass and roses, and the air was full of
-a medley of bird voices, thrushes and blackbirds, sweet as grass and
-strawberries, and the bubbling rattle of the chaffinch as happy as the
-sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne Toner was Mrs. Chadwick now, and she and Eleanor Chadwick and
-Barney were motoring together in the French Alps. Coldbrooks was empty,
-and he had come to stay with Nancy and her mother.</p>
-
-<p>They lived in a small stone house with a Jacobean front that looked,
-over a stone wall, at Chelford Green, and had behind it a delightfully
-unexpected length of lawn and orchard and kitchen-garden, all enclosed
-by higher walls and presided over by a noble cedar. Seen from the garden
-The Little House was merely mid-Victorian, but the modern additions were
-masked by climbing roses and a great magnolia-tree opened its
-lemon-scented cups at the highest bedroom windows. The morning-room was
-in the modern part, and from one of its windows, presently, Mrs. Averil
-emerged, opening her sunshade as she crossed the grass to join her
-guest. She wore a white straw garden hat, tipping over her eyes and
-tying, behind, over her thick knot of hair, in a manner that always
-recalled to Oldmeadow a lady out of Trollope. Her face was pale, like
-Nancy’s, and her eyes grey; but rather than blackcaps and primroses she<a name="page_100" id="page_100"></a>
-suggested lace tippets and porcelain tea-sets, and though it was from
-her Nancy had her pretty trick of closing her eyes when she smiled, Mrs.
-Averil’s smile was cogitative and impersonal, and in her always
-temperate mirth there was an edge of grimness.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Roger, I want to hear what you thought about the wedding,†she
-said. She had not gone to church that morning with Nancy and it was, he
-knew, because she wanted an interchange of frank impressions. She had
-been prevented from attending Miss Toner’s London nuptials by a touch of
-influenza and, as she now went on to say, she had got little from Nancy,
-who had no eye for pageants and performances. “Eleanor was so absorbed,â€
-she went on, “in the fact that the Bishop had indigestion and had, at
-her suggestion, taken magnesia with his breakfast, that I could not get
-much else out of her. She seemed to have seen the Bishop’s symptoms
-rather than Adrienne and Barney. Now from you I expect all the relevant
-details.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you call it a detail, Nancy was lovely,†said Oldmeadow. “She
-looked like a silver-birch in her white and green.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And pearls,†said Mrs. Averil. “You noticed, of course, the necklaces
-Adrienne gave them; quite the gift of a princess, yet so innocent and
-unobtrusive looking, too. She has great taste in such matters. Did she
-look well? Eleanor did say that she, like the Bishop, was very pale.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She was pale; but not a bit nervous. She rather looked as if she had
-been married every day of her life. Nothing ever puts her out, you know.
-She was very grave and benign; but she wasn’t an imposing<a name="page_101" id="page_101"></a> bride and the
-wreath of orange-blossoms aged her. Nancy and Meg and Barbara and the
-Lumley girl aged her, too. She must be older than Barney.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; she is. A year older. But she’s the sort of woman who will wear,â€
-said Mrs. Averil, pausing before a bed of rose-trees to snip off a
-fading flower. “She’ll not look very differently at fifty, you know; and
-her hair is the sort that may never turn grey. I can see her at seventy
-with those big golden braids and all her teeth. There’s something very
-indestructible about her. Like a doll made of white leather compared to
-one made of porcelain. She’ll last and last,†said Mrs. Averil. “She’ll
-outlast us all. Barney was radiant, of course.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. But he <i>was</i> nervous; like a little boy frightened by the
-splendour of his Christmas-tree. He looked as though he were arm in arm
-with the Christmas-tree itself as he came down the nave. A rather dumpy
-little Christmas-tree, but exquisitely lighted and garnished.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he ought to be radiant,†Mrs. Averil observed. “With all that
-money, it’s an extremely good match for him. The fact of her being
-nobody in particular makes no difference, really, since she’s an
-American. And she has, I gather, no tiresome relations to come
-bothering.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She’s very unencumbered, certainly. There’s something altogether very
-solitary about her,†Oldmeadow agreed, watching Mrs. Averil snip off the
-withered roses. “I felt that even as she came down the nave on Barney’s
-arm. It’s not a bit about the money he’s radiant,†he added.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know. Of course not. That was only my own gross satisfaction
-expressing itself. He’s as in<a name="page_102" id="page_102"></a> love as it’s possible to be. And with
-every good reason.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You took to her as much as they all did, then?â€</p>
-
-<p>“That would be rather difficult, wouldn’t it? And Barney’s reasons would
-hardly be those of a dry old aunt. She was very nice and kind to Nancy
-and me and she’s evidently going to do everything for them. Barbara’s
-already, you know, been sent to that admirable school that was too
-expensive for Eleanor; riding and singing and all the rest of it. And
-Meg’s been given a perfect trousseau of fine clothes for her London
-season. Naturally I don’t feel very critically towards her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you? Well, if she weren’t a princess distributing largess,
-wouldn’t you? After all, she’s not given Nancy a trousseau. So why be
-mute with an old friend?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but she’s given her the pearls,†said Mrs. Averil. “Nancy couldn’t
-but accept a bridesmaid’s gift. And she would give her a trousseau if
-she wanted it and would take it. However, I’ll own, though decency
-should keep me mute, that I should find myself a little bored if I had
-to see too much of her. I’m an everyday person and I like to talk about
-everyday things.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I can hear her asking you, in answer to that, if there is anything more
-everyday than the human soul. I wish I could have seen you <i>aux prises</i>
-with her,†Oldmeadow remarked. “Did she come down here? Did she like
-your drawing-room and garden?â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Averil’s drawing-room and garden lay very near her heart. Eleanor
-Chadwick sometimes accused her of caring more about her china and her<a name="page_103" id="page_103"></a>
-roses than about anything else in the world except Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think she saw them; not what I call see,†Mrs. Averil now said.
-“Oh, yes; she came several times and recognized, very appreciatively,
-the periods of my Queen Anne furniture and my Lowestoft. Beyond their
-period I don’t think she went. She said the garden was old-world,†Mrs.
-Averil added, looking about her and twirling her parasol on her
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“She would,†Oldmeadow agreed. “That’s just what she would call it. And
-she’d call you a true, deep-hearted woman and Nancy a gifted girl. How
-do she and Nancy hit it off? It’s that I want most of all to hear
-about.â€</p>
-
-<p>“They haven’t much in common, have they?†said Mrs. Averil. “She’s never
-hunted and doesn’t, I imagine, know a wren from a hedge-sparrow. She
-<i>does</i> know a skylark when she hears one, for she said ‘Hail to thee,
-blithe spirit’ while one was singing. But I felt, somehow, it was like
-the Queen Anne and the Lowestoft&mdash;a question of the label.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow at this began to laugh with an open and indulged mirth. He and
-Mrs. Averil, at all events, saw eye to eye. “If you’d tie the correct
-label to the hedge-sparrow she’d know that, too,†he said. “Poor girl.
-The trouble with her isn’t that she doesn’t know the birds, but that she
-wouldn’t know the poets, either, without their labels. It’s a mind made
-up of labels. No; I don’t think it likely that Nancy, who hasn’t a label
-about her, will get much out of her&mdash;beyond necklaces.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I wish Nancy <i>had</i> a few labels,†said Mrs. Averil. “I wish she could
-have travelled and studied as Miss<a name="page_104" id="page_104"></a> Toner&mdash;Adrienne that is&mdash;has done.
-She is such a little ignoramus. Adrienne may bore you and me, but Nancy
-will never interest anyone&mdash;except you and me.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was always amusing to Oldmeadow, if a little sardonically so, to note
-that any conception of himself as a possible suitor for Nancy had never
-entered Mrs. Averil’s mind. As a friend he was everything a mother could
-desire; as a match for Nancy almost unimaginable. Well, he could not
-give a wife even one hunter and he never had had any intention of
-falling in love with his dear nymph; yet that other people might not do
-so was a suggestion he repudiated with warmth.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh; in love, yes,†Mrs. Averil agreed. “I don’t deny that she’s very
-loveable and I hope she may marry well. But that’s not the same thing as
-being interesting, is it? A man may be in love with a woman who doesn’t
-interest him.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I dispute that statement.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure dear Eleanor never interested her husband&mdash;devoted to the day
-of his death as he was. There’s something in my idea. To be interesting
-one must offer something new. If Nancy had been interesting to Barney
-she would now, I think, have been in Adrienne’s place. Not that it would
-have been a marriage to be desired for either of them.â€</p>
-
-<p>So he and Mrs. Averil had been thinking the same thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“And you contend that if Nancy had been to China and read Goethe and
-Dante in the originals he’d have been interested? I think he was quite
-sufficiently interested and that if Miss Toner hadn’t come barging into
-our lives he’d have known he was in love.<a name="page_105" id="page_105"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Going to China is a figure of speech and stands for all the things she
-hasn’t got and doesn’t know. My poor little Nancy. All the same, <i>she</i>
-isn’t a bore!†said Mrs. Averil with as near an approach to acerbity as
-she could show.</p>
-
-<p>“No; she isn’t a bore. The things she knows have to be found out, by
-degrees, through living with her. Barney hasn’t been to China, either,
-so, according to your theory, Nancy didn’t find him interesting.â€</p>
-
-<p>At this Mrs. Averil’s eyes met his and, after a moment of contemplation,
-they yielded up to him the secret they saw to be shared. “If only it
-were the same for women! But they don’t need the new. She’s young.
-She’ll get over it. I don’t believe in broken hearts. All the same,â€
-Mrs. Averil stopped in their walk, ostensibly to examine the growth of a
-fine pink lupin, “it hasn’t endeared Adrienne to me. I’m too
-<i>terre-à-terre</i>, about that, too, not to feel vexation, on Nancy’s
-account. And what I’m afraid of is that she knows she’s not endeared to
-me. That she guesses. She’s a bore; but she’s not a bit stupid, you
-know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t think she’s spiteful?†Oldmeadow suggested after a moment,
-while Mrs. Averil still examined her lupin.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear me, no! I wish she could be! It’s that smooth surface of hers
-that’s so tiresome. She’s not spiteful. But she’s human. She’ll want to
-keep Barney away and Nancy will be hurt.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Want to keep him away when she’s got him so completely?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Something of that sort. I felt it once or twice.â€</p>
-
-<p>“My first instinct about her was right, then,†said<a name="page_106" id="page_106"></a> Oldmeadow. “She’s a
-bore and an interloper, and she’ll spoil things.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, perhaps not. She’ll mend some things. Have you heard about Captain
-Hayward?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean that stupid, big, tawny fellow? What about him?â€</p>
-
-<p>“You may well ask. I’ve been spoken to about him and Meg by more than
-one person. They are making themselves conspicuous, and it’s been going
-on for some time.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t mean that Meg’s in love with him?â€</p>
-
-<p>“He’s in love with her, at all events, and, as you know, he’s a married
-man. I questioned Nancy, who was with Meg for a few weeks in London, and
-she owns that Meg’s unhappy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And they’re seeing each other in London now?†Oldmeadow was deeply
-discomposed.</p>
-
-<p>“No. He’s away just now. And Meg is going to meet the bridal party in
-Paris at the end of July. Nancy feels that when Meg gets back under
-Adrienne’s influence there’ll be nothing to fear.â€</p>
-
-<p>“We depend on her, then, so much, already,†he murmured. He was
-reviewing, hastily, his last impressions of Meg and they were not
-reassuring. The only thing that was reassuring was to reflect on his
-impressions of Adrienne. “Grandma’s parlour†returned to him with its
-assurance of deep security. Above everything else Adrienne was
-respectable.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. That’s just it,†Mrs. Averil agreed. “We depend on her. And I feel
-we’re going to depend more and more. She’s the sort of person who mends
-things. So we mustn’t think of what she spoils.â€</p>
-
-<p>What Adrienne Toner had spoiled was, however, to be made very plain next
-morning both to Nancy<a name="page_107" id="page_107"></a>’s old friend and to her mother. Beside her plate
-at breakfast was a letter addressed in Barney’s evident hand, a letter
-in a narrow envelope stamped with the name of a French hotel and
-showing, over the address, an engraving of peaks against the sky. Nancy
-met the occasion with perfect readiness, saying as she looked at the
-letter, waiting to open it till she had made the tea&mdash;Nancy always made
-the tea in the morning while her mother sat behind the bacon and eggs at
-the other end of the table&mdash;“How nice; from Barney. Now we shall have
-news of them.â€</p>
-
-<p>Nothing less like an Ariane could be imagined than Nancy as she stood
-there in her pink dress above the pink, white and gold tea-cups. One
-might have supposed from her demeanour that a letter from Barney was but
-a happy incident in a happy day. But, when she dropped into her chair
-and read, it was evident that she was not prepared for what she found.
-She read steadily, in silence, while Oldmeadow cut bread at the
-sideboard and Mrs. Averil distributed her viands, and, when the last
-page was reached, they both could not fail to see that Nancy was
-blushing, blushing so deeply that, as she thus felt herself betray her
-emotion, tears came thickly into her downcast eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have my tea now, dear,†said Mrs. Averil. “Will you wait a little
-longer, Roger?†She tided Nancy over.</p>
-
-<p>But Nancy was soon afloat. “The letter is for us all,†she said. “Do
-read it aloud, Roger, while I have my breakfast.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney’s letters, in the past, had, probably, always been shared and
-Nancy was evidently determined that her own discomposure was not to
-introduce<a name="page_108" id="page_108"></a> a new precedent. Oldmeadow took up the sheets and read.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">Dearest Nancy</span>,&mdash;How I wish you were with us up here. It’s the most
-fantastically lovely place. One feels as if one could sail off into it.
-I dug up some roots of saxifrage for your wall yesterday, such pretty
-pink stuff. It’s gone off in a box wrapped in damp moss and I hope will
-reach you safely. A horrid, vandal thing to do; but for you and Aunt
-Monica I felt it justified, and there are such masses of it. I saw a
-snow-bunting yesterday, much higher up than the saxifrage; such a jolly,
-composed little fellow on a field of snow. The birds would drive you
-absolutely mad, except that you’re such a sensible young person you’d no
-doubt keep your head even when you saw a pair of golden eagles, as we
-did, floating over a ravine. I walked around the Lac d’Annecy this
-morning, before breakfast, and did wish you were with me. I thought of
-our bird-walks at dawn last summer. There were two or three darling
-warblers singing, kinds we haven’t got at home; and black redstarts and
-a peregrine falcon high in the air. I could write all day if I’d the
-time, about the birds and flowers. You remember Adrienne telling us that
-afternoon when she first came to Coldbrooks about the flowers. But I
-mustn’t go on now. We’re stopping for tea in a little valley among the
-mountains with flowers thick all around us and I’ve only time to give
-our news to you and Aunt Monica and to send our love. Mother is
-extremely fit and jolly, though rather scared at the hairpin curves;
-Adrienne has to hold her hand. I’m too happy for words and feel as if
-I’d grown wings. How is Chummie<a name="page_109" id="page_109"></a>’s foot? Did the liniment help? Those
-traps are beastly things. I feel just as you do about the rabbits.
-Adrienne reads aloud to us in the evenings; a man called Claudel;
-awfully stiff French to follow but rather beautiful. I think you’d like
-him. Not a bit like Racine! Best love to you and Aunt Monica. Here’s
-Adrienne, who wants to have her say.â€</p>
-
-<p>Had it been written in compunction for <i>Ariane aux bords laissée</i>? or,
-rather, in a happy reversion to sheer spontaneity, a turning, without
-any self-consciousness, to the comrade of the bird-walks who would,
-after all, best feel with him about snow-buntings and redstarts?
-Oldmeadow paused for the surmise, not looking up, before he went on from
-Barney’s neat, firm script to his wife’s large, clear clumsy hand.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“<span class="smcap">Dearest Nancy</span>,†ran the postscript, and it had been at the
-postscript, Oldmeadow now could gauge, that Nancy had first found
-herself unprepared. “I, too, am thinking of you, with Barney. It is
-a great joy to feel that where, he says, I’ve given him golden
-eagles and snow-buntings he’s given me&mdash;among so many other dear,
-wonderful people&mdash;a Nancy. I get the best of the bargain, don’t I?
-I can’t see much of the birds for looking at the peaks&mdash;<i>my</i> peaks,
-so familiar yet, always, so new again. ‘Stern daughters of the
-voice of God’ that they are. Radiantly white against a cloudless
-sky we find them to-day. Barney’s profile is beautiful against
-them&mdash;but his nose is badly sun-burned! <i>All</i> our noses are
-sun-burned! That’s what one pays for flying among the Alps.</p>
-
-<p>“Mother Nell&mdash;we’ve decided that that’s what<a name="page_110" id="page_110"></a> I’m to call
-her&mdash;looks ten years younger all the same, as I knew she would. We
-talk of you all so often&mdash;of you and Meg and Palgrave and Barbara,
-and half a dozen times a day Barney wishes that one or the other of
-you were with us to see this or that. It’s specially you for the
-birds I notice. You must take me for some bird-walks at dawn some
-day and teach me to know all your lovely English songsters.... Dear
-little Cousin-Sister, I send you my love with his and, with him,
-hold you warmly in my heart. Will ‘Aunt Monica’ accept my
-affectionate and admiring homages?</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Yours ever&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <br />
-“<span class="smcap">Adrienne</span>â€</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow had not expected that she could write such a human letter; yet
-it explained Nancy’s blush. Barney’s spontaneous affection she could
-have faced, but she had not been able to face his wife’s determined
-tenderness. Adrienne had meant it well, no doubt&mdash;Oldmeadow gazed on
-after he had finished, but she had no business to mean so well, no
-business to thrust herself, in this community of intimacy, into what was
-Barney’s place alone. There was more in it, he knew, with Meg and Mrs.
-Averil to help him, than the quite successful playfulness. She was to be
-more intimate than Barney, that was what it came to; more, much more
-tender if Barney was to be allowed intimacy and tenderness. That was
-really what she intended Nancy to see, and that Barney had no place at
-all where she, Adrienne, did not also belong.</p>
-
-<p>“Very sweet; very sweet and pretty,†Mrs. Averil’s voice broke in, and
-he realized that he had allowed<a name="page_111" id="page_111"></a> himself to drop into a grim and
-tactless reverie; “I didn’t know she had such a sense of humour.
-Sun-burned noses and ‘Stern daughters of the voice of God.’ Well done. I
-didn’t think Adrienne would ever look as low as noses. They must be
-having a delightful tour. I know black redstarts. There was one that
-used to wake me every morning at four, one summer, in Normandy, with the
-most foolish, creaking song; just outside my window. Give Barney my love
-when you write and return my niece’s affectionate and admiring homages.
-Mother Nell. I shouldn’t care to be called Mother Nell somehow.â€</p>
-
-<p>So Mrs. Averil’s vexation expressed itself and so she floated Nancy
-along. But Nancy, long since, had pulled herself together and was able
-to look at Oldmeadow, while her lashes closed together in her own smile,
-and to say that she’d almost be willing to lose her nose for the sake of
-hearing the new warblers. Mrs. Averil opened her “Times†and over
-marmalade Nancy and Oldmeadow planned the trip that they would take some
-day, when their ship came in, the three of them, a bird-trip to the
-French Alps.<a name="page_112" id="page_112"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XII-a" id="CHAPTER_XII-a"></a>CHAPTER XII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">O<small>LDMEADOW</small> sat beside Adrienne Chadwick and knew that from the other end
-of the room, where he talked to Mrs. Aldesey, Barney’s eyes were on
-them, though he tried to keep them off. It was the first dinner-party
-the young couple had given since they had come up to town, for though
-they were established at Coldbrooks in the communal family life Adrienne
-seemed to find to her taste, and though Barney had at once immersed
-himself in country pursuits, they had taken and furnished this large
-house in Connaught Square and it was, apparently, settled that the
-winter months were to be spent in London. How that was to be combined
-with farming at Coldbrooks, or whether Barney intended to take a header
-into politics and felt a London house, big enough for entertaining, part
-of the programme, Oldmeadow hadn’t an idea, and for the rather sinister
-reason that he had hardly laid his eyes on Barney since his return from
-his wedding-journey. Even though asked to tea once or twice, while,
-established in an hotel, they were finding and furnishing the house, he
-had never found them alone and either Barney had made no opportunity, or
-his wife had seen to it that none should be made, for having a
-<i>tête-à-tête</i> with his old friend.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow could not associate Barney with ambitions, either social or
-political, nor, he was bound to say, as he looked round the
-dinner-table, where Adrienne sat at one end with Lord Lumley and Barney
-at the other with Lady Lumley, could one infer<a name="page_113" id="page_113"></a> from its disparate and
-irrelevant elements any such ambitions in Adrienne. He had taken Mrs.
-Aldesey down and had felt her at moments to be almost too resourceful,
-her air of graceful skill in keeping the ball rolling seeming too much
-to emphasize its tendency to drop. Without Mrs. Aldesey, without
-Meg&mdash;vividly engaged at one corner with a fair young American&mdash;without
-himself, for he had aided and abetted Lydia to the best of his ability,
-the dinner would have been a dull one and he was not sure that even
-their enterprise had redeemed it. Adrienne had not any air of fearing
-dullness or of being in need of assistance. Oldmeadow saw that the blue
-ribbon was frequently unrolled and that, as always, it made a silence in
-which it could be watched. Lord Lumley, his handsome, official head bent
-in an attitude of chivalrous devotion, watched earnestly, and the fair
-young American paused in the midst of whatever he might be saying to Meg
-to take almost reverent note; but Oldmeadow fancied more than once that
-he caught startled eyes fixed upon it, especially when there emerged a
-lustrous loop of quotation:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Never doubted clouds would break,&mdash;â€<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The silence for that had been so general that even Barney, far away, and
-protected by Mrs. Aldesey, was aware of it.</p>
-
-<p>“How wonderfully he <i>wears</i>, doesn’t he, dear old Browning,†said Mrs.
-Aldesey, and in the glance that Barney cast upon her was an oddly
-mingled gratitude and worry. The fair young American, he was very fair
-and had clear, charming eyes, finished<a name="page_114" id="page_114"></a> the verse in a low voice to Meg
-and Meg looked at him affectionately the while. He was evidently one of
-Adrienne’s appurtenances.</p>
-
-<p>It was a dull dinner. Pretty, festive Mrs. Pope and young Mr. Haviland,
-reputed to be a wit and one of Meg’s young men as Mrs. Pope was one of
-Barney’s young women, would not with any eagerness again attend a board
-where the hostess quoted Browning and didn’t know better than to send
-you down, the first with a stern young socialist who sat silent for the
-most part and frowned when addressed, and the second with a jocular,
-middle-aged lady from California, the mother, Oldmeadow gathered, of the
-clear-eyed youth, from whose ample bosom Mr. Haviland’s subtle arrows
-glanced aside leaving him helplessly exposed to the stout bludgeonings
-of her humour. Adrienne paused once or twice in her conversation to
-smile approval upon her compatriot and to draw Lord Lumley’s attention
-to her special brand of merriment, good Lord Lumley adjusting his
-glasses obediently to take it in.</p>
-
-<p>And now they were all assembled in the drawing-room. Like everything
-about Adrienne, it was simple and rather splendid. Barney had wisely
-kept his modernities for his own study and it was a pity, Oldmeadow
-reflected, that Adrienne had not kept for her own boudoir the large
-portrait of herself that hung over the mantelpiece, since it was a note
-more irrelevant than any Post Impressionist could have been and cast a
-shade of surmise over the taste displayed in the Chippendale furniture
-and the Chinese screens.</p>
-
-<p>“Rather sweet, isn’t it; pastoral and girlish, you know,†Barney had
-suggested tentatively as Mrs.<a name="page_115" id="page_115"></a> Aldesey had placed herself before it.
-“Done in Paris a good many years ago; the man was very much the fashion
-then. Adrienne was only sixteen. It’s an extraordinarily perfect
-likeness still, isn’t it?â€</p>
-
-<p>To which Mrs. Aldesey, all old lace and exquisite evasion, had murmured,
-her lorgnette uplifted: “Quite dear and ingenuous. Such a relief after
-your arid Cubists. What would they make of Mrs. Barney <i>en bergère</i>, I’d
-like to know? A jumble of packing-cases with something twisted in a
-corner to signify a bleat.â€</p>
-
-<p>For the picture, painted with glib assurance and abounding in pink and
-azure, portrayed Adrienne dressed as a shepherdess and carrying a
-flower-wreathed crook.</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne, to-night at all events, was looking very unlike the
-shepherdess, but that might be because of the approaches of her
-maternity. Mrs. Chadwick, when he had last been at Coldbrooks, had told
-him that the baby was expected in May and that Adrienne was wonderful
-about it, dedicating herself to its perfection in thought and deed with
-every conscious hour.</p>
-
-<p>“If only I’d thought about my babies before they came like that, who
-knows what they might have turned out!†she had surmised. “But I was
-very silly, I’m afraid, and the only thing I really did think of was how
-I should dress them. I’ve always loved butcher’s-blue linen for children
-and I must say that mine did look very nice in it. For everyday, you
-know.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow found it extremely difficult to think of Adrienne as a mother;
-it was much easier to think of her as a shepherdess. Such solidities of
-experience<a name="page_116" id="page_116"></a> gave her even a certain pathos in his eyes, though he was in
-no whit dislodged from his hostility to her. She was as mild, as
-satisfied, apparently, with herself and with existence, as ever, yet her
-eyes and lips expressed fatigue and a purely physical sadness that was
-uncharacteristic, and it was uncharacteristic that she should be rather
-thickly powdered.</p>
-
-<p>They had not really met since the morning of her adjuration to him at
-Coldbrooks and he wondered if she remembered that little scene as
-vividly as he did. She would be very magnanimous did she not remember it
-unpleasantly; and he could imagine her as very magnanimous; yet from the
-fact that she had kept Barney from him he could not believe that she was
-feeling magnanimously.</p>
-
-<p>She watched Barney and Mrs. Aldesey now, as they stood before her
-portrait, and he fancied that the sadness in her eyes, whatever might be
-its cause, deepened a little. When she turned them on him it was with an
-effect of being patiently ready for him. Perhaps, really, she had been
-more patient than pleased all evening.</p>
-
-<p>“So you are settled here for the winter?†he said. “Have you and Barney
-any plans? I’ve hardly seen anything of him of late.â€</p>
-
-<p>“We have been so very, very busy, you know,†said Adrienne, as if quite
-accepting his right to an explanation.</p>
-
-<p>She was dressed in pale blue and wore, with her pearl necklace, a little
-wreath of pearls in her hair. In her hands she turned, as they talked, a
-small eighteenth-century fan painted in pink and grey and blue, and he
-was aware, as he had been at Coldbrooks,<a name="page_117" id="page_117"></a> of those slow and rather
-fumbling movements.</p>
-
-<p>“We couldn’t well ask friends,†she went on, “even the dearest, to come
-and sit on rolls of carpet with us while we drank our tea, could we?
-We’ve kept our squalor for the family circle. Meg’s been with us; so
-dear and helpful; but only Meg and a flying visit once or twice from
-Mother Nell. Nancy couldn’t come. But nothing, it seems, will tear Nancy
-from hunting. I feel that strange and rather sad; the absorption of a
-fine young life in such primitiveness.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well; it’s not her only interest, you know,†said Oldmeadow, very
-determined not to allow himself vexation. “Nancy is a creature of such
-deep country roots. Not the kind that grow in London.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know,†said Adrienne. “And it is just those roots that I want to
-prevent my Barney’s growing. Roots like that tie people to routine;
-convention; acceptance. I want Barney to find a wider, freer life. I
-hope he will go into politics. If we have left Coldbrooks and the dear
-people there for these winter months it’s because I feel he will be
-better able to form opinions here than in the country. I saw quite well,
-there, that people didn’t form opinions; only accepted traditions. I
-want Barney to be free of tradition and to form opinions for himself. He
-has none now,†she smiled.</p>
-
-<p>She had been clear before, and secure; but he felt now the added weight
-of her matronly authority. He felt, too, that, while ready for him and,
-perhaps, benevolently disposed, she was far more indifferent to his
-impressions than she had been at Coldbrooks. She had possessed Barney
-before; but how much<a name="page_118" id="page_118"></a> more deeply she possessed him now and how much
-more definitely she saw what she intended to do with him.</p>
-
-<p>“You must equip him with your opinions,†said Oldmeadow, and his voice
-was a good match for hers in benevolence. “I know that you have so many
-well-formed ones.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no; never that,†said Adrienne. “That’s how country vegetables are
-grown; first in frames and then in plots; all guided and controlled. He
-must find his own opinions; quite for himself; quite freely of
-influence. That is the rock upon which Democracy is founded. Nothing is
-more arresting to development than living by other people’s opinions.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But we must get our opinions from somebody and somewhere. The danger of
-democracy is that we don’t grow them at all; merely catch them, like
-influenza, from a mob. Not that I disbelieve in democracy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you, Mr. Oldmeadow?†She turned her little fan and smiled on him.
-“You believe in liberty, equality, fraternity? That surprises me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Democracy isn’t incompatible with recognizing that other people are
-wiser than oneself and letting them guide us; quite the contrary. Why
-surprised? Have I seemed so autocratic?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It would surprise me very much to learn that you believed in equality,
-to start with that aloneâ€; Adrienne smiled on.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I own that I don’t believe in people who have no capacity for
-opinions being impowered to act as if they had. That’s the fallacy
-that’s playing the mischief with us, all over the world.<a name="page_119" id="page_119"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“They never will have opinions worth having unless they are given the
-liberty to look for them. You don’t believe in liberty, either, when you
-say that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No; not for everybody. Some of our brothers are too young and others
-too stupid to be trusted with it.â€</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll take it for themselves if you don’t trust them with it,†said
-Adrienne, and he was again aware that though she might be absurd she, at
-all events, was not stupid. “All that we can do in life is to trust, and
-help, and open doors. Only experience teaches. People must follow their
-own lights.â€</p>
-
-<p>He moved forward another pawn, and though he did not find her stupid he
-was not taking her seriously. “Most people have no lights to follow.
-It’s a choice for them between following other people’s or resenting and
-trampling on them. That, again, is what we can see happening all over
-the world.â€</p>
-
-<p>“So it is, you must own, just as I thought; you don’t even believe in
-fraternity,†said Adrienne, and she continued to smile her weary,
-tranquil smile upon him; “for we cannot feel towards men as towards
-brothers, and trust them, unless we believe that the light shines into
-each human soul.â€</p>
-
-<p>He saw now that unless they went much deeper, deeper than he could be
-willing, ever, to go with Adrienne Toner, he must submit to letting
-himself appear as worsted. He knew where he believed the roots of trust
-to grow and he did not intend, no never, to say to Adrienne Toner that
-only through the love of God could one at once distrust and love the
-species to which one belonged. He could have shuddered at the thought of
-what she would certainly have found to say about God.<a name="page_120" id="page_120"></a></p>
-
-<p>“You’ve got all sorts of brothers here to-night, haven’t you,†he
-remarked, putting aside the abstract theme and adjusting his glass.
-“Some of them look as though they didn’t recognize the relationship.
-Where did you find our young socialist over there in the corner? He
-looks very menacing. Most of the socialists I’ve known have been the
-mildest of men.â€</p>
-
-<p>“He is a friend of Palgrave’s. Palgrave brought him to see me. Oh, I’m
-so glad&mdash;Gertrude is going to take care of him. She always sees at once
-if anyone looks lonely. That’s all right, then.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow was not so sure it was as he observed the eye with which Mr.
-Besley measured the beaming advance of the lady from California.</p>
-
-<p>“I wonder if you would like my dear old friend, Mrs. Prentiss,†Adrienne
-continued, watching her method with Mr. Besley. “The Laughing
-Philosopher, Mother used to call her. She is a very rare, strong soul.
-That is her son, talking to Lady Lumley. He’s been studying architecture
-in Paris for the past three years. A radiant person. Mrs. Prentiss runs
-a settlement in San Francisco and has a brilliant literary and artistic
-salon. She is a real force in the life of our country.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Why should you question my appreciation of rarity and strength? I can
-see that she is very kind and that if anybody can melt Mr. Besley she
-will.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Gertrude would have melted Diogenes,†said Adrienne with a fond
-assurance that, though it took the form of playfulness, lacked its
-substance. “I hope they will find each other, for he is rare and strong,
-too. What he needs is warmth and happiness. He makes me think of Shelley
-when he talks.<a name="page_121" id="page_121"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“He’s too well up in statistics to make me think of Shelley,†Oldmeadow
-commented. Barney, he saw, from his place beside Mrs. Aldesey at the
-other end of the room, was still watching them, pleased now, it was
-evident, by the appearance of friendly, drifting converse they
-presented. “He’s not altogether unknown to me for we often, in our
-review, get our windows broken by his stones; well-thrown, too. He’s
-very able. So you thought it might do the British Empire good to face
-him? Well, I suppose it may.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Which are the British Empire?†asked Adrienne. “You. To begin with.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no. Count me out. I’m only a snappy, snuffy scribbler. Good old
-Lord Lumley, of course, with all his vast, well-governed provinces
-shimmering in the Indian sun behind him. And Sir Archibald, who talks so
-loudly in the House. Palgrave didn’t bring him, I’ll be bound.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No. Lady Lumley brought him. He and Lord Lumley are certainly more than
-odds and ends.†She had an air of making no attempt to meet his
-badinage, if it was that, but of mildly walking past it. “They are, both
-of them, rather splendid people, in spite of their limitations. They’ve
-accepted tradition, you see, instead of growing opinion. That is their
-only trouble. I was afraid you were going to say Mr. Haviland. He is
-certainly an odd and end.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Haviland and Mrs. Pope had found each other and were indulging in
-mirthful repartee in the back drawing-room. “I feel safe with Lord
-Lumley and Sir Archibald,†Adrienne added.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d certainly rather trust myself in their hands than in Mr. Besley’s.
-I’d almost rather trust myself in the hands of Mr. Haviland.<a name="page_122" id="page_122"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that they would, at least, keep you comfortable and that Mr.
-Besley wouldn’t.†She, too, had her forms of repartee.</p>
-
-<p>“I expect it’s just what I do mean,†he assented. “If Mr. Besley and his
-friends had their way, I for instance, and workers of my type, would
-soon, I suspect, have to forego our tobacco and our chamber-music. We’re
-only marketable in a comfortable world. And there are more comfortable
-people, I maintain, under Lord Lumley, than there would be under Mr.
-Besley.â€</p>
-
-<p>“‘Heartily know, when half-gods go, the gods arrive,’†said Adrienne.
-“All revolutions must begin by burning away the evil and the refuse. Not
-that I am a revolutionist, or even a socialist.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t separate good from evil by burning,†he said. “You burn them
-both. That’s what the French did in their lamentable bonfire, for which
-they’ve been paying in poorer brains and poorer blood ever since. We
-don’t want revolutions. All we want is slow, good-tempered reform.
-Revolutions are always ill-tempered, aren’t they, and nothing worth
-doing was ever done in an ill-temper. You are making me very didactic.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but I prefer that so much to persiflage,†said Adrienne, with her
-tranquillity. “And I am glad to hear what you really believe. But it is
-sad to me that you should see no ardour or glory in anything. With all
-its excesses and errors, I have always felt the French Revolution to be
-a sublime expression of the human spirit.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It might have been; if they could only have kept their
-heads&mdash;metaphorically as well as literally. But the glory and ardour
-were too mixed with<a name="page_123" id="page_123"></a> hatred and ignorance. I’m afraid I do tend to
-distrust those states of feeling. They tend so easily to
-self-deception.â€</p>
-
-<p>She was looking at him, quietly and attentively, and he was, for the
-first time since their initial meeting, perhaps, feeling quite
-benevolently towards her; quite as the British Empire might feel towards
-a subject race. It was, therefore, the more difficult to feel anything
-but exasperation when she said, having, evidently, summed up her
-impressions and found her verdict: “Yes. You distrust them. We always
-come back to that, don’t we? You distrust yourself, too. So that, when
-you tell me what you believe, you can only do it in the form of making
-fun of my beliefs. I feel about you, Mr. Oldmeadow, what I felt that
-morning when I tried to come near you and you wouldn’t let me. I feel it
-more the more I see you; and it makes me sad. It isn’t only that you
-distrust ardour and glory, all the sunlight and splendour of life; but
-you are afraid of them; afraid to open your heart to trust. You shut
-your door upon the sunlight and take up your caustic pen; and you don’t
-see how the shadows fall about you.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was indeed a dusty tumble from the quite civilized pavement of their
-interchange, and it was unfortunate that upon his moment of
-discomfiture, when he saw himself as trying to clap the dust off his
-knees and shoulders in time to be presentable, Barney and Mrs. Aldesey
-should have chosen to approach them. Barney, no doubt, imagined it a
-propitious moment in which to display to Mrs. Aldesey his wife’s and his
-friend’s amity.</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne was perfectly composed. She had borne her testimony and, again,
-done her best for him,<a name="page_124" id="page_124"></a> pointing out to him that the first step towards
-enfranchisement was to open his door to the sunlight that she could so
-bountifully supply. She turned a clear, competent eye upon her husband
-and his companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, dear, and what have you and Roger been so deep in?†Barney
-inquired, looking down at her with a fondness in which, all the same,
-Oldmeadow detected the anxiety that had hovered in his eye all evening.
-“You’ve seemed frightfully deep.â€</p>
-
-<p>“We have been,†said Adrienne, looking up at him. “In liberty, equality
-and fraternity; all the things I believe in and that Mr. Oldmeadow
-doesn’t. I can’t imagine how he gets on at all, he believes in so few
-things. It must be such a sad, dim, groping world to live in when there
-are no stars above to look at and no hands below to hold.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, you see,†said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile, “his
-ancestors didn’t sign the Declaration of Independence.â€</p>
-
-<p>“We don’t need ancestors to do that,†Adrienne smiled back. “All of us
-sign it for ourselves&mdash;all of us who have accepted our birthright and
-taken the gifts that our great, modern, deep-hearted world hold out to
-us. You are an American, Mrs. Aldesey, so you find it easy to believe in
-freedom, don’t you?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Very easy; for myself; but not for other people,†Mrs. Aldesey replied
-and Oldmeadow saw at once, with an added discomfort, that she
-underestimated, because of Adrienne’s absurdity, Adrienne’s
-intelligence. “But then the very name of any abstraction&mdash;freedom,
-humanity, what you will&mdash;has always made me feel, at once, dreadfully
-sleepy.<a name="page_125" id="page_125"></a> It’s not ever having had my mind trained, Mrs. Barney. Now
-yours was, beautifully, I can see.â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne looked up at her, for Mrs. Aldesey, her lace about her
-shoulders, her lorgnette in her hands, had not seated herself, and it
-was further evident to Oldmeadow that she weighed Mrs. Aldesey more
-correctly than Mrs. Aldesey weighed her. “Very carefully, if not
-beautifully,†she said. “Have I made you sleepy already? But I don’t
-want to go on talking about abstractions. I want to talk about Mr.
-Oldmeadow. The truth is, Barney,†and her voice, as she again turned her
-eyes on her husband, had again the form but not the substance of gaiety,
-“the truth is that he’s a lonely, lonely bachelor and that we ought to
-arrange a marriage for him, you and I. Since he doesn’t believe in
-freedom, he won’t mind having a marriage arranged, will he?&mdash;if we can
-find a rare, sweet, gifted girl.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney had become red. “Roger’s been teasing you, darling. Nobody
-believes in freedom more. Don’t let him take you in. He’s an awful old
-humbug with his Socratic method. He upsets you before you know where you
-are. He’s always been like that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; hasn’t he,†Mrs. Aldesey murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“But he hasn’t upset me at all,†said Adrienne. “I grant that he was
-trying to, that he was doing his very best to give me a tumble; but I
-quite see through him and he doesn’t conceal himself from me in the very
-least. He doesn’t really believe in freedom, however much he may have
-taken <i>you</i> in, Barney; he’d think it wholesome, of course, that you
-should believe in it. That’s his idea, you see; to give people what he
-thinks wholesome; to choose for them. It’s the lack of faith all
-through. But the reason is that<a name="page_126" id="page_126"></a> he’s lonely; dreadfully lonely, and
-because of that he’s grown to be, as he says, snappy and snuffy; so that
-we must borrow a page from his book and find what is wholesome for him.
-I know all the symptoms so well. I’ve had friends just like that. It’s a
-starved heart and having nobody to be fonder of than anyone else; no one
-near at all. He must be happily married as soon as possible. A happy
-marriage is the best gift of life, isn’t it, Mrs. Aldesey? If we haven’t
-known that we haven’t known our best selves, have we?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It may be; we mayn’t have,†said Mrs. Aldesey, cheerfully; but she was
-not liking it. “I can’t say. Am I to have a hand in choosing his bride?
-I know his tastes, I think. We’re quite old friends, you see.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No one who doesn’t believe in freedom for other people may help to
-choose her,†said Adrienne, with a curious blitheness. “That’s why he
-mayn’t choose her himself. We must go quite away to find her; away from
-ceilings and conventions and out into the sunlight. I don’t believe
-happiness is found under ceilings. And it’s what we all need more than
-anything else. Even tobacco and chamber-music don’t make you a bit
-happy, do they, Mr. Oldmeadow? and if one isn’t happy one can’t know
-anything about anything. Not really.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Alas!†sighed Mrs. Aldesey, keeping up her end, but not very
-successfully, while Barney fixed his eyes upon his wife. “And I thought
-I’d found it this evening, under this ceiling. Well, I shall cherish my
-illusion, since you tell me it’s only that, and thank you for it, Mrs.
-Barney. The Lumleys are going to give me a lift and I see that their car
-has been announced.<a name="page_127" id="page_127"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Stay on a bit, Roger,†Barney murmured, as the Lumleys approached.
-“I’ve seen nothing of you for ages.â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne rose to greet her parting guests.</p>
-
-<p>“Darling Adrienne, good-night. It’s been perfectly delightful, your
-little party,†said Lady Lumley, who was large, light and easily
-pleased; an English equivalent of the lady from California, but without
-the sprightliness. “Your dear young Mr. Prentiss is a treasure. He’s
-been telling me about Sicilian temples. We <i>must</i> get there one day.
-Mrs. Prentiss says they will come to us for a week-end before they go.
-How extraordinarily interesting she is. Don’t forget that you are coming
-on the fifteenth.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I shall get up a headache, first thing!†Lord Lumley stated in a loud,
-jocular whisper, reverting to a favourite jest on Adrienne’s powers.
-“That’s the thing to go in for, eh? I won’t let Charlie cut me out this
-time. Not a night’s sleep till you come!â€</p>
-
-<p>“Go in for as many as you like, dear Lord Lumley,†said Adrienne,
-smiling her assurance of being able to deal with a series.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night, Mrs. Barney,†said Mrs. Aldesey. “Leave me a little
-standing-room under the stars, won’t you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“There’s always standing-room under the stars,†said Adrienne. “We don’t
-exclude each other there.â€</p>
-
-<p>The party showed no other signs of breaking up. The Laughing Philosopher
-had melted, or, at all events, mastered Mr. Besley, and talked to him
-with, now and again, a maternal hand laid on his knee. Mr. Haviland and
-Mrs. Pope still laughed in the back drawing-room, Meg and Mr. Prentiss
-had<a name="page_128" id="page_128"></a> come together again and Sir Archibald was engaged with a pretty
-girl. After looking around upon them all, Adrienne, with the appearance
-of a deeper fatigue, sank back upon her sofa.</p>
-
-<p>“You know, darling,†Barney smiled candidly upon his wife, “you rather
-put your foot in it just now. Mrs. Aldesey’s marriage isn’t happy. I
-ought to have warned you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean not happy, Barney?†Adrienne looked up at him. “Isn’t
-Mr. Aldesey dead?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all dead. She left him some years ago, didn’t she, Roger? He
-lives in New York. It’s altogether a failure.â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne looked down at her fan. “I didn’t know. But one can’t avoid
-speaking of success sometimes, even to failures.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not. Another time you will know.â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne seemed to meditate, but without compunction. “That was what she
-meant, then, by saying she believed in freedom for herself but not for
-other people.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Meant? How do you mean? She was joking.â€</p>
-
-<p>“If she left him. It was she who left him?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know anything about it,†Barney spoke now with definite
-vexation and Oldmeadow, in his corner of the sofa, his arms folded, his
-eyes on the cornice, gave him no help. “Except that, yes, certainly;
-it’s she who left him. She’s not a deserted wife. Anything but.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s only Mr. Aldesey who is the deserted husband,†Adrienne turned her
-fan and kept her eyes on it. “It’s only he who can’t be free. Forgive me
-if she’s a special friend of yours, Mr. Oldmeadow; but it explains. I
-felt something so brittle, so unreal in<a name="page_129" id="page_129"></a> her, charming and gracious as
-she is. It is so very wrong for a woman to do that, I think.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Wrong?†Barney echoed, staring at Oldmeadow while this firm hand was
-laid upon his Egeria. “What the dickens do you mean, darling? She is a
-special friend of Roger’s. You don’t surely mean to say a woman must,
-under all circumstances, stick to a man she doesn’t love?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Anything but that, Barney. I think that she should leave him and set
-him free. It’s quite plain to me that if a wife will not live with her
-husband it is her duty to divorce him. Then, at any rate, he can try for
-happiness again.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Divorce him, my dear child!†Barney was trying to keep up appearances
-but the note of marital severity came through and as it sounded Adrienne
-raised her eyes to his: “It’s not so easy as all that! Aldesey, whatever
-his faults, may have given her no cause to divorce him, and I take it
-you’ll not suggest that Mrs. Aldesey should give him cause to divorce
-her.â€</p>
-
-<p>On her sofa, more pallid under her powder, more sunken than before, and
-with the queer squashed-in look emphasized, Adrienne kept steady eyes
-uplifted to her husband. “Not at all, dear Barney,†she returned and
-Oldmeadow, though hardened against the pathos of her physical
-disability, saw that she spoke with difficulty, “but I think that you
-confuse the real with the conventional wrong. Mrs. Aldesey would not
-care to face any unconventionality; that is quite apparent. She would
-draw her skirts aside from any conventional wrong-doing. But the real
-wrong she would be blind to; the wrong of keeping anyone bound in the
-emptiness you have<a name="page_130" id="page_130"></a> made for them. Setting free is not so strange and
-terrible a matter as you seem to imagine. It’s quite easy for brave,
-unshackled people.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I must really be off,†Oldmeadow now seized the occasion to
-declare. “I believe, as a matter of fact, that Mr. Aldesey lives very
-contentedly in New York, collecting French prints and giving excellent
-dinners. Anything open and scandalous would be as distasteful to him as
-to his wife. They are, both of them, happier apart; that’s all it comes
-to. So you must read your lessons, even by proxy, to more authentic
-misdemeanants, Mrs. Barney. All right, Barney. Don’t come down. I’ll
-hope to see you both again quite soon.â€</p>
-
-<p>So he got away, concealing as best he might, his sense of tingling
-anger. But it died away to a sense of chill as he walked down Park Lane.
-Was not Barney unhappy, already? What did she say to him when she got
-him to herself? He felt sure that she had never bargained for a husband
-who could look at her with ill-temper.<a name="page_131" id="page_131"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XIII-a" id="CHAPTER_XIII-a"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">“R<small>OGER</small>, see here, I’ve only come to say one word&mdash;about the absurd
-little-matter of last night. Only one; and then we’ll never speak of it
-again,†said poor Barney.</p>
-
-<p>He had come as soon as the very next day&mdash;to exonerate, not to
-apologize; that was evident at once. Oldmeadow had not long to wait
-before learning what she had said to him when she got him to herself,
-nor long to wait before realizing that if Barney had been unhappy last
-night he thought himself happy to-day.</p>
-
-<p>“Really, my dear boy,†he said, “it’s not worth talking about.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but we must talk about it,†said Barney. He was red and spoke
-quickly. “It upset her frightfully; it made her perfectly miserable. She
-cried for hours, Roger,†Barney’s voice dropped to a haggard note. “You
-know, though she bears up so marvellously, she’s ill. She doesn’t admit
-illness and that makes it harder for her, because it simply bewilders
-her when she finds herself on edge like this and her body refusing to
-obey her. The baby is coming in May, you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know, my dear Barney. The evening was very fatiguing for her. I saw
-it all I think. I noticed from the beginning how tired she looked.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Horribly tired. Horribly fatiguing. I’m glad you saw it. For that’s
-really what I came to explain. She was tired to begin with and Mrs.
-Aldesey put her on edge. I think I saw that myself at <a name="page_132" id="page_132"></a>dinner&mdash;and, oh,
-before that; on the day we had tea with her, when we first came up, in
-November&mdash;Adrienne felt then that Mrs. Aldesey didn’t understand or care
-for her. You know she is so full of love and sympathy for everybody
-herself that she is literally sickened when she is treated in that
-artificial, worldly way. And you know, Roger, Mrs. Aldesey <i>is</i>
-artificial and worldly.â€</p>
-
-<p>That was how she had put it to Barney, of course. But Oldmeadow saw
-further than Mrs. Aldesey and her artificiality. He saw a dishevelled
-and weeping Adrienne stricken to the heart by the sense of threatened
-foundations, aghast by what she had seen in her husband’s eyes; and he
-was aware, even while he resented having it put upon Lydia, of a
-curious, reluctant pity for the pale, weeping figure. Lydia had,
-obviously, displeased her; but Lydia had been the mere occasion; she
-could have dealt easily enough with Lydia. It had been the revelation
-that Barney could oppose her, could almost, for a moment, dislike her,
-that had set her universe rocking. Her first taste of reality, then. The
-thought came rather grimly, with the pity. After all it was their best
-chance of happiness; that she should learn to accept herself as a person
-who could be opposed, even disliked, in flashes, while still loved. He
-had sat silent while he thought, one of his silences which, when he
-emerged from them, he often recognized as over-long. Barney must have
-felt the weight of all he did not say when all that he found to say was:
-“What it comes to, doesn’t it, is that they neither of them take much to
-each other. Lydia is certainly conventional.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but Lady Lumley is conventional, too,<a name="page_133" id="page_133"></a>†said Barney with an
-irrepressible air of checkmate. “Hordes of conventional people adore
-Adrienne. It’s a question of the heart. There are people who are
-conventional without being worldly. It’s worldliness that stifles
-Adrienne. It’s what she was saying last night: ‘They have only ceilings;
-I must have the sky.’ Not that she thinks <i>you</i> worldly, dear old boy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you try to interpret me to her kindly,†said Oldmeadow, smiling.
-Even at the moment when Barney, all innocently, was revealing to him
-Adrienne’s tactics, the fragments of her vocabulary imbedded in his
-speech were affording him amusement. “You must try and persuade her that
-I’ve quite a fondness for the sky myself, and even published a volume of
-verse in my youth.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I do. Of course I do,†said Barney eagerly. “And I gave her your poems,
-long ago. She loved them. It’s your sardonic pessimism she doesn’t
-understand&mdash;in anyone who could have written like that when they were
-young. She never met anything like it before in her life. And the way
-you never seem to take anything seriously. It makes her dreadfully sorry
-for you, even while she finds it so hard to accept in anyone she cares
-for&mdash;because she really does so care for you, Rogerâ€&mdash;there was a note
-of appeal in Barney’s voice&mdash;“and does so long to find a way out for
-you. It was a joke, of course; but all the same we’ve often wished you
-could find the right woman to marry.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney, as he had done last night, grew very red again, so that it was
-apparent to Oldmeadow that not only the marriage but the woman&mdash;the
-rare, gifted girl&mdash;had been discussed between him and his wife.<a name="page_134" id="page_134"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Adrienne thinks everyone ought to be married, you see,†he tried to
-pass it off. “Since we are so happy ourselves.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I see,†said Oldmeadow. “There’s another thing you must try to persuade
-her of: that I’m not at all <i>un jeune homme à marier</i>, and that if I
-ever seek a companion it will probably be some one like myself, some one
-sardonic and pessimistic. If I fixed my affections on the lovely girl,
-you see, it isn’t likely they’d be reciprocated.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, butâ€&mdash;Barney’s eagerness again out-stepped his
-discretion&mdash;“wouldn’t the question of money count there, Roger? If she
-had plenty of money, you know, or you had; enough for both; and a place
-in the country? Of course, it’s all fairy-tale; but Adrienne is a
-fairy-tale person; material things don’t count with her at all. She
-waves them away and wants other people to wave them away, too. What she
-always says is: ‘What does my money <i>mean</i> unless it’s to open doors for
-people I love?’ She’s starting that young Besley, you know, just because
-of Palgrave; setting him up as editor of a little review&mdash;rotten it is,
-I think&mdash;but Adrienne says people must follow their own lights. And it’s
-just that; she’d love to open doors for you, if it could make you
-happy.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow at this, after a moment of receptivity, began to laugh softly;
-but the humour of the situation grew upon him until he at last threw
-back his head and indulged in open and prolonged mirth. Barney watched
-him bashfully. “You’re not angry, I see,†he ventured. “You don’t think
-it most awful cheek, I mean?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I think it is most awful cheek; but I’m not angry;<a name="page_135" id="page_135"></a> not a bit,†said
-Oldmeadow. “Fairy-godmothers are nothing if not cheeky; are they? Oh, I
-know you meant your, not her, cheek. But it’s the fault of the
-fairy-godmother, all the same, and you must convince her that I’m not in
-love with anybody, and that if ever I am she’ll have to content herself
-with my small earnings and a flat in Chelsea.â€</p>
-
-<p>So he jested; but, when his friend was gone, he realized that he was a
-little angry all the same and he feared that his mirth had not been able
-to conceal from Barney that what he really found it was confounded
-impudence. Barney’s face had worn, as he departed, the look of mingled
-gratitude and worry and Barney must feel, as well as he felt, that their
-interview hadn’t really cleared up anything&mdash;except his own readiness to
-overlook the absurdities of Barney’s wife. What became more and more
-clear to himself was that unless he could enable Adrienne to enroll his
-name on her banner she would part him from Barney and that her very
-benevolence was a method. The more he thought of it the more
-uncomfortable he felt, and his inner restlessness became at length an
-impulse urging him out to take counsel or, rather, seek solace, with the
-friend from whom Adrienne could never part him. He would go and have tea
-with Lydia Aldesey and with the more eagerness from the fact that he was
-aware of a slight dissatisfaction in regard to Lydia. She had not
-altogether pleased him last night. She had put herself in the wrong; she
-had blundered; she hadn’t behaved with the skill and tact requisite; and
-to elicit from her a confession of ineptitude would make his sense of
-solace the more secure.</p>
-
-<p>The day was a very different day from the one in<a name="page_136" id="page_136"></a> April when he had
-first gone to ask Mrs. Aldesey for information about people called
-Toner. It was early February, dull and cold and damp. No rain was
-falling, but the trees were thick with moisture and Oldmeadow had his
-hands deep in his pockets and the collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears. As he crossed the Serpentine, an electric brougham passed him,
-going slowly, and he had a glimpse within it, short but very vivid, of
-Adrienne, Meg, and Captain Hayward.</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne, wearing a small arrangement of black velvet that came down
-over her brows, was holding Meg’s hand and, while she spoke, was looking
-steadily at her, her face as white as that of a Pierrot. Meg listened,
-gloomily it seemed, and Captain Hayward’s handsome countenance, turned
-for refuge towards the window, showed an extreme embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>They passed and Oldmeadow pursued his way, filled with a disagreeable
-astonishment though, absurdly, his mind was at first occupied only in an
-attempt to recover a submerged memory that Captain Hayward’s demeanour
-suggested. It came at last in an emancipating flash and he saw again,
-after how many years, the golden-brown head of his rather silly setter,
-John, turned aside in shy yet dignified repudiation, that still, by a
-dim, sick smile, attempted to conceal distress and to enter into the
-spirit of the game&mdash;as a kitten was held up for his contemplation. A
-kitten was a very inadequate analogy, no doubt, for the theme of
-Adrienne’s discourse; yet Captain Hayward’s reaction to a situation for
-which he found himself entirely unprepared was markedly like John’s. And
-he, like John, had<a name="page_137" id="page_137"></a> known that the game was meant to be at his expense.
-John and Captain Hayward got Oldmeadow out of the park before he had
-taken full possession of his astonishment and could ask himself why, if
-Adrienne were engaged in rescuing Meg from her illicit attachment, she
-should do it in the company of the young man. Yet, strangely enough, he
-felt, as he walked, a growing sense of reassurance. For an emergency
-like this, after all, given amenable subjects, Adrienne was the right
-person. He hadn’t dreamed it to be such an emergency; but since it was,
-Adrienne would pull them through. As she would have laid her hand on the
-head of Bacchus and reformed him, so she would lay it on the head of
-Captain Hayward.<a name="page_138" id="page_138"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XIV-a" id="CHAPTER_XIV-a"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">T<small>HE</small> incident put Mrs. Aldesey quite out of his mind, and it was not till
-he stood on her doorstep and rang her bell that he remembered his
-grievance against her and realized that it had been made more definite
-by this glimpse of Adrienne’s significance. That his friend was prepared
-for him was evident at his first glance; she had even, he saw, been
-expecting him, for she broke out at once with: “Oh, my dear Roger&mdash;what
-<i>are</i> you going to do with her?â€</p>
-
-<p>He was actually pleased to find himself putting her, with some grimness,
-in her place. “What is she going to do with us? you mean. You underrate
-Mrs. Barney’s capacity, let me tell you, my dear friend.â€</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Aldesey was not easily quelled. “Underrate her! Not I! She’s a
-Juggernaut if ever there was one. Her capacity is immense. She’ll roll
-on and she’ll crush flat. That poor Barney! She is as blind as a
-Juggernaut, but <i>he</i> will come to see&mdash;alas! he is seeing
-already&mdash;though you and I danced round him with veils and cymbals&mdash;that
-people won’t stand being pelted with platitudes from soup to dessert.
-The Lumleys will, of course; it’s their natural diet; though even they
-like their platitudes served with a touch of <i>sauce piquante</i>; but
-Rosamund Pope told me that she felt black and blue all over and Cuthbert
-Haviland&mdash;malicious toad&mdash;imitates her already to perfection: dreadful
-little voice, dreadful little smile, dreadful little quotations and all.
-It will be one of his London<a name="page_139" id="page_139"></a> gags. That shepherdess! My dear Roger,
-don’t pretend to me that <i>you</i> don’t see it!â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow, sunken in the chair opposite her, surveyed her over his
-clasped hands with an air of discouragement.</p>
-
-<p>“What I’m most seeing at the moment is that she’s made you angry,†he
-remarked. “If what you say were all the truth, why should she make you
-angry? She’s not as blind as a Juggernaut. That’s where you made your
-mistake. She’ll only crush the people who don’t lie down before her. She
-knows perfectly well where she is going&mdash;and over whom. So be careful,
-that is my advice, and keep out of her way; unless you want to lose a
-toe or a finger.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Aldesey showed, at this, that he had arrested her. In spite of the
-element of truth in Adrienne’s verdict upon her he knew her to be, when
-veils and cymbals were cast aside, a sincere and gallant creature. She
-did not attempt to hide from him now and, after a moment of mutual
-contemplation, she laughed a little, with not unreal mirth and said: “I
-suppose I am angry. I suppose I’m even spiteful. It’s her patronage, you
-know. Her suffocating superiority. To have to stand there, for his sake,
-and <i>take</i> it! You overrate her, Roger. No woman not abysmally stupid
-could say the things she says.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Your mistake again. She’s able to say them because she’s never met
-irony or criticism. She’s not stupid,†he found his old verdict. “Only
-absurd. You know, you gave yourself away to her. You showed her what you
-thought of her. You patronized <i>her</i>.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Is <i>no</i> retaliation permitted?†Mrs. Aldesey moaned. “Must one accept
-it all? Be scourged with the stars and Browning and then bow one’s head
-to<a name="page_140" id="page_140"></a> her caresses? After all, Barney is your friend, not mine, and it’s
-as your friend that I’ve tried to be decent to his wife. But she hates
-me like poison. She gave herself away, too, you know. I liked the way
-she excluded me from her prospects for your welfare. And of course she
-knew my marriage wasn’t a happy one.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think that she did. No; I don’t think so. You <i>are</i> poison to
-her&mdash;cold poison,†said Oldmeadow. “Don’t imagine for a moment she
-didn’t see that you were dancing about him with veils and cymbals. She
-didn’t give herself away, for she had nothing to conceal. She was candid
-and you weren’t. She didn’t pretend that you were under the stars with
-her; while you kept up appearances.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But what’s to become of your Barney if we don’t keep them up!†Mrs.
-Aldesey cried. “Is he to be allowed to see that nobody can stand
-her&mdash;except people he can’t stand? He’ll have to live, then, with Mrs.
-and Mr. Prentiss. Did you try to talk to Mrs. Prentiss? Do you know that
-she told me that death was ‘perfectly sublime’?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps it is. Perhaps she’ll find it so. They all seem to think well
-of death, out in Californiaâ€&mdash;Oldmeadow allowed himself to relax from
-his admonitory severity. “Mrs. Prentiss isn’t as silly as she seems, I
-expect. And you exaggerate Barney’s sensitiveness. He’d get on very well
-with Mrs. Prentiss if you weren’t there to show him you found her a
-bore. He has a very simple side and we must hope it may become simpler.
-The only chance for Barney, I see it more and more, is that we should
-efface ourselves as much as possible. The people who find the Prentisses
-a bore, I mean. And it won’t be difficult<a name="page_141" id="page_141"></a> for us to do that. She will
-see to it that we are effaced. Only, of course, it’s a grief. I’m so
-fond of himâ€; and as Oldmeadow stretched forth his legs and put his
-hands in his pockets there drifted across his mind, in a thin, sharp,
-knife-like stroke, the memory of Barney&mdash;tall eighteen-year-old
-Barney&mdash;with dear old Effie, luxuriously upturned in his arms, being
-softly scratched&mdash;Barney’s hand with a cat was that of an expert&mdash;and
-told that she was the best and most beautiful of cats.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a great shame,†said Mrs. Aldesey; “I’ve been thinking my spiteful
-thoughts, too, instead of sympathizing with you. Of course, if it’s any
-consolation to you, one usually does lose one’s friends when they marry.
-But it needn’t have been as bad as this. What a thousand pities he
-couldn’t have fallen in love with a nice girl of his own kind. You
-couldn’t do anything about it when you went down in the spring?â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow had never said anything to Mrs. Aldesey about his hopes for
-Nancy. He had a secretive instinct for keeping his friendships in
-compartments and discussed only those portions that overflowed.
-“Nothing,†he said. “And the mischief was that I went down hostile, as
-you warned me against doing. Barney saw at once that I didn’t care for
-her; and she saw it at once. He even forced a sort of expression of
-opinion from me and I know now that it’s always glooming there at the
-back of his mind when he sees me. It was quite useless. Once he’d fallen
-under her spell it was all up with him. She has her singular power and,
-for a man in love with her, her singular charm. Even I, you know,
-understand that.<a name="page_142" id="page_142"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Aldesey contemplated him. “I confess I can’t,†she said. “She is so
-desperately usual. I’ve seen her everywhere, ever since I can remember.
-Attending lectures at the Sorbonne; listening to Wagner at Bayreuth;
-having dresses tried on at Worth’s; sitting in the halls of a hundred
-European hotels. She is the most unescapable form of the American woman;
-only not <i>du peuple</i> because of the money and opportunity that has also
-extirpated everything racy, provincial and individual.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,†said Oldmeadow. He mused, his hands clasped behind his
-head. “She’s given me all sorts of new insights.†His eyes, after his
-wont, were on the cornice and his friend’s contemplation, relaxed a
-little from its alert responsiveness, allowed itself a certain
-conjectural softness as she watched him. “I feel,†he went on, “since
-knowing her, that I understand America, her America, better than you do.
-You’re engaged in avoiding rather than in understanding it, aren’t you?
-What you underrate, what Americans of your type don’t see&mdash;because, as
-you say, it’s so oppressively usual&mdash;is the power of her type. If it is
-a type; if she is as ordinary as you say. It’s something bred into them
-by the American assumption of the fundamental rightness of life; a
-confidence unknown before in the history of the world. An individual,
-not an institutional or social, confidence. They do, actually, seem to
-take their stand on the very universe itself. Whereas the rest of us
-have always had churches or classes to uphold us. They have all the
-absurdities and crudities of mere individualism. They have all the
-illusions of their ignorance. Yet I sometimes imagine, after I’ve seen
-her, that it’s a power we haven’t in the<a name="page_143" id="page_143"></a> least taken into our
-reckoning. Isn’t it the only racial thing that America has produced&mdash;the
-only thing that makes them a race? It makes them independent of us, when
-we’ve always imagined, in our complacency, that they were dependent. It
-enables them to take what we have to give, but to do with it what they,
-not we, think best. And by Jove, who knows how far it will carry them!
-Not you, my dear Lydia. You’ll stay where you are&mdash;with us.â€</p>
-
-<p>His eyes had come back and down to her, and her gaze resumed its
-alertness and showed him that she found the picture he drew disquieting.
-“You mean it’s a new kind of civilization that will menace ours?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not a civilization; that’s just what it’s not. It’s a state of
-mind. Perhaps it will menace us. Perhaps it does. We’ve underrated it;
-of that I’m sure; and underrated power is always dangerous. It will be
-faith without experience against experience without faith. What we must
-try for, if we’re not to be worsted, is to have both&mdash;to keep experience
-and to keep faith, too. Only so shall we be able to hold our own against
-Mrs. Barney. And even so we shan’t be able to prevent her doing things
-to us&mdash;and for us. She’ll do things for us that we can’t do for
-ourselves.†His mind reverted to the faces of the brougham. “In that way
-she’s bound to worst us. We’ll have to accept things from her.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow’s eyes had gone back to the cornice and, in the silence that
-followed, Mrs. Aldesey, as she sat with folded arms, played absently
-with the lace ruffle at her wrist. The lace was an heirloom, like her
-rings, and the contemplation of them may have afforded her some
-sustainment. “She’s made you feel all that, then,†she remarked. “With
-her<a name="page_144" id="page_144"></a> crook and her hat and her rose-wreathed lamb. If such a sardonic
-old lion as you does really grow bodeful before the rose-wreathed lamb
-there is, I own, reason to fear for the future. I’m glad I’m growing
-old. It would hurt me to see her cutting your claws.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she won’t hurt us!†Oldmeadow smiled at her. “It’s rather we who
-will hurt her&mdash;by refusing to lie down with her lamb. If that’s any
-comfort to you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not in the least. I’m not being malicious. You don’t call it hurt,
-then, to be effaced?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Smothered in rose-leaves, eh?†he suggested. “It would be suffocating
-rather than suffering. She does give me that feeling. But you’ll make
-her suffer&mdash;you have, you know&mdash;rather than she you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I really don’t know about that,†said Mrs. Aldesey. “You make me quite
-uncomfortable, Roger. You make me superstitious. She’s done that to me
-already. I refuse to take her seriously, but I shall avoid her. That’s
-what it comes to. Like not giving the new moon a chance to look at you
-over your left shoulder.<a name="page_145" id="page_145"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XV-a" id="CHAPTER_XV-a"></a>CHAPTER XV</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">O<small>N</small> a morning in early March Oldmeadow found, among the letters waiting
-for him on his breakfast-table, one from Nancy. Nancy and he, with all
-their fondness, seldom wrote to each other and he was aware, on seeing
-her writing, of the presage of something disagreeable that the
-unexpected often brings.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“Dear Roger,†he read, and in his first glance he saw his presage
-fulfilled. “We are in great trouble. Aunt Eleanor has asked me to
-write because she is too ill and it is to me as well as to her that
-Meg has written and she wants you to see Barney at once. Here are
-Meg’s letters. She has gone away with Captain Hayward. Aunt Eleanor
-and Mother think that Barney may be able to persuade Adrienne to
-bring her back. No one else, we feel convinced, will have any
-influence with her. Do anything, anything you can, dear Roger.
-Mother and I are almost frightened for Aunt Eleanor. She walks
-about wringing her hands and crying, and she goes up to Meg’s room
-and opens the door and looks in&mdash;as if she could not believe she
-would not find her there. It is heart-breaking to see her. We
-depend on you, dear Roger.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Yours ever&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <br />
-“<span class="smcap">Nancy</span>.â€</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Good Lord!†Oldmeadow muttered while, in lightning flashes, there
-passed across his mind the face of John the setter and a Pierrot’s face,
-white<a name="page_146" id="page_146"></a> under a low line of black velvet. He took up Meg’s letters,
-written from a Paris hotel.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“<span class="smcap">Darling Mother</span>, I know it will make you frightfully miserable and
-I can’t forgive myself for that; but it had to be. Eric and I cared
-too much and it wasn’t life at all, going on as we were apart. Try,
-darling Mother, to see it as we do see things nowadays. Adrienne
-will explain it all&mdash;and you must believe her. You know what a
-saint she is and she has been with us in it all, understanding
-everything and helping us to be straight. Everything will come
-right. Iris Hayward will set Eric free, of course; she doesn’t care
-one bit for him and has made him frightfully unhappy ever since
-they married, and she wants to marry some one else herself&mdash;only of
-course she’d never be brave enough to do it this way. When Eric is
-free, we will marry at once and come home, and, you will see, there
-are so many sensible people nowadays; we shall not have a bad time
-at all. Everything will come right, I’m sure; and even if it
-didn’t, in that conventional way&mdash;I could not give him up. No one
-will ever love me as he does.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Your devoted child&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <br />
-“<span class="smcap">Meg</span>.â€</p></div>
-
-<p>That was the first: the second ran:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>“<span class="smcap">Dearest Nancy</span>,&mdash;I know you’ll think it frightfully wrong; you are
-such an old-fashioned little dear and you told me often enough that
-I oughtn’t to see so much of Eric. Only of course that couldn’t
-have prepared you for this and I expect Aunt Monica won’t let you
-come and stay with us for ages. Never mind; when you marry, you’ll
-see, I’m sure.<a name="page_147" id="page_147"></a> Love is the <i>only</i> thing, really. But I should hate
-to feel I’d lost you and I’m sure I haven’t. I want to ask you,
-Nancy dear, to do all you can to make Mother <i>take</i> it. I feel,
-just because you will think it so wrong, that you may be more good
-to her than Adrienne&mdash;who doesn’t think it wrong at all&mdash;at least
-not in Mother’s way. It would be frightfully unfair if Mother
-blamed Adrienne. She did all she could to show us where we stood
-and to make us play the game, and it would be pretty hard luck if
-people were to be down on her now because we <i>have</i> played it. We
-might have been really rotters if it hadn’t been for Adrienne;
-cheats and hypocrites, I mean; stealing our happiness. I know
-Adrienne can bring Barney round. It’s only Mother who troubles me,
-just because she is such a child that it’s almost impossible to
-make her see reason. She doesn’t recognize right and wrong unless
-they’re in the boxes she’s accustomed to. Everything is in a box
-for poor, darling old Mummy. But I mustn’t go on. Be the dear old
-pal you always have and help me out as well as you can.</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“Your loving&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <br />
-“<span class="smcap">Meg</span>.â€</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Good Lord,†Oldmeadow muttered once more. He pushed back his chair and
-rose from the table in the bright spring sunlight. He had the feeling,
-almost paternal, of disgrace and a public stripping. He saw Eleanor
-Chadwick stopping at Meg’s door to look in at the forsaken room,
-distraught in her grief and incomprehension. He saw Nancy’s pale,
-troubled face and Monica Averil’s, pinched and dry in its sober dismay.
-And then again, lighted by a<a name="page_148" id="page_148"></a> flare at once tawdry and menacing, the
-face of Adrienne Toner, the intruder, the insufferable meddler and
-destroyer, a Pierrot among fire-works that had, at last, set fire to the
-house. He found a taxi on the Embankment and drove to Connaught Square.
-Freshly decorated with window-boxes, the pleasant, spacious house had a
-specially smiling air of welcome, but the butler’s demeanour told him
-that something of the calamity had already penetrated. Adrienne, if she
-had not heard before, would have had her letters; Barney, who had been
-kept in the dark, would have been enlightened, and the irrepressible
-exclamations that must have passed between them seemed dimly reflected
-on the man’s formal countenance. Mrs. Chadwick, he told Oldmeadow, was
-breakfasting upstairs with Mr. Chadwick, and he ushered him into
-Barney’s study.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow waited for some time among the Post Impressionist pictures,
-one of which remained for ever afterwards vividly fixed in his memory of
-the moment; a chaotic yet determined picture; featureless yet, as it
-were, conveying through its unrecognizable elements the meaning of a
-grin. And, as he stood in the centre of the room and looked away from
-the derisive canvas, he saw on Barney’s desk photographs of Adrienne,
-three photographs of her; one as a child, a sickly looking but beaming
-child; one in early girlhood, singularly childlike still; and one in her
-bridal dress of only the other day, it seemed, mild and radiant in her
-unbecoming veil and wreath.</p>
-
-<p>It was Barney who came to him. Poor Barney. He was more piteously boyish
-than ever before to his friend’s eye; so beautifully arrayed, all in
-readiness<a name="page_149" id="page_149"></a> for a happy London day with his angel, so pale, so haggard
-and perplexed. “Look here, Roger,†were his first words, “do you mind
-coming upstairs to Adrienne’s room? She’s not dressed yet; not very
-well, you know. You’ve heard, then, too?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve just heard from Nancy. Why upstairs? I’d rather not. We’d better
-talk this over alone, Barney. All the more if your wife isn’t well.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; yes; I know. I told her it would be better. But she insists.â€</p>
-
-<p>The effect of a general misery Barney gave was heightened now by his
-unhappy flush. “She doesn’t want us to talk it over without her, you
-see. She comes into it all too much. From Nancy, did you say? What’s
-Nancy got to do with this odious affair?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Only what Meg has put upon her&mdash;to interpret her as kindly as she can
-to your mother. Here are the letters. I’d really rather not go
-upstairs.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know you’ll hold Adrienne responsible&mdash;partly at least. She expects
-that. She knows that I do, too; she’s quite prepared. I only heard half
-an hour ago and of course it knocked me up frightfully. Meg! My little
-sister! Why she’s hardly more than a child!â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid she’s a good deal more than a child. I’m afraid we can’t
-hold Meg to be not responsible, though, obviously, she’d never have
-taken such a step unaided and unabetted. Just read these letters,
-Barney; it won’t take a moment to decide what’s best to be done. I’ll go
-down to your mother and you must be off, at once, to Paris, and see if
-you can fetch Meg back.â€</p>
-
-<p>But after Barney, with a hesitating hand and an<a name="page_150" id="page_150"></a> uncertain glance, had
-taken the letters and begun to read them, the door was opened with
-decorous deliberation and Adrienne’s French maid appeared, the tall,
-sallow, capable-looking woman whom Oldmeadow remembered having seen at
-Coldbrooks a year ago.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame requests that <i>ces Messieurs</i> should come up at once; she awaits
-them,†Joséphine announced in unemphatic but curiously potent accents.
-Adrienne’s potency, indeed, was of a sort that flowed through all her
-agents and Oldmeadow thought that he detected, in the melancholy gaze
-bent upon Barney, reprobation for his failure to attain the standard set
-for him by a devotion wholehearted and reverential. Mrs. Chadwick, he
-remembered, had said that Adrienne’s maid adored her.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes. We’re coming at once, Joséphine,†said Barney. Reading the
-letters as he went, he moved to the door and Oldmeadow found himself,
-perforce, following.</p>
-
-<p>He had not yet visited the morning-room and even before his eyes rested
-on Adrienne they saw, hanging above her head where she sat on a little
-sofa, a full-length portrait of Mrs. Toner; in white, standing against a
-stone balustrade and holding lilies; seagulls above her and a background
-of blue sea.</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne was also in white, but she wore over her long, loose dress a
-little jacket of pink silk edged with swan’s down and the lace cap
-falling about her neck was rosetted with pink ribbon. It was curious to
-see her in this almost frivolous array, recalling the shepherdess, when
-her face expressed, for the<a name="page_151" id="page_151"></a> first time in his experience of her, an
-anger and an agitation all the more apparent for its control. She was
-pale yet flushed, odd streaks of colour running up from her throat and
-dying in the pallor of her cheeks. Her condition had evidently much
-affected her complexion and her nose, through its layer of powder,
-showed a pinched and reddened tint. It made Oldmeadow uncomfortable to
-look at her; her mask of calm was held at such a cost; she was at once
-so determinedly herself and so helplessly altered; and it was not with
-an automatic courtesy only that he went up to her and held out his hand.
-An impulse of irrelevant yet irrepressible pity stirred him.</p>
-
-<p>She had fixed her eyes on him as he entered, but now looking at her
-husband and not moving, she said: “I do not think you want to take my
-hand, Mr. Oldmeadow. You will think me a criminal too, as Barney does.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Darling! Don’t talk such nonsense!†Barney cried. “I haven’t blamed
-you, not by a word. I know you’ve done what you think right. Look,
-darling; Roger has had these letters. Just read them. You see what Meg
-writes&mdash;there&mdash;to Nancy&mdash;about your having done all you could to keep
-them straight. You haven’t been fair to yourself in talking to me just
-now.â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne, without speaking, took the letters and Oldmeadow moved away to
-the window and stood looking down at the little garden at the back of
-the house where a tall almond-tree delicately and vividly bloomed
-against the pale spring sky. He heard behind him the flicker of the fire
-in the grate, the pacing of Barney’s footsteps as he walked up<a name="page_152" id="page_152"></a> and
-down, and the even turning of the pages in Adrienne’s hands. Then he
-heard her say: “Meg contradicts nothing that I have said to you, Barney.
-She writes bravely and truly; as I knew that she would write.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney stopped in his pacing. “But darling; what she says about
-straightness?†It was feeble of Barney and he must know it. Feeble of
-him even to think that Adrienne might wish to avail herself of the
-loophole or that she considered herself in any need of a shield.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t misunderstand so much as that, Barney,†she said. “Meg and I
-mean but one thing by straightness; and that is truth. That was the way
-I tried to help them; it is the only way in which I can ever help
-people. I showed them the truth and kept it before their eyes when they
-were in danger of forgetting it. I said to them that if they were to be
-worthy of their love they must be brave enough to make sacrifices for
-it. I did not hide from them that there would be sacrifices&mdash;if that is
-what you mean.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not what I mean, darling! Of course it’s not!†broke from poor
-Barney almost in a wail. “Didn’t you try at all to dissuade them? Didn’t
-you show them that it was desperate, and ruinous, and wrong? Didn’t you
-tell Meg that it would break Mother’s heart!â€</p>
-
-<p>The blue ribbon was again unrolled and Oldmeadow, listening with rising
-exasperation, heard that the sound of her own solemn cadences sustained
-her. “I don’t think anything in life is desperate or ruinous or wrong,
-Barney, except turning away from one’s own light. Meg met a reality and<a name="page_153" id="page_153"></a>
-was brave enough to face it. I regret, deeply, that it came to her
-tragically, not happily; but happiness can grow from tragedy if we are
-brave and true and Meg is brave and true in her love. It won’t break
-your mother’s heart. Hers is a small, but not such a feeble, heart as
-that. I believe that the experience may strengthen and ennoble her. She
-has led too sheltered a life.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow at this turned from the window and met Barney’s miserable
-eyes. “There’s really no reason for my staying on, Barney,†he said, and
-his voice as well as his look excluded Adrienne from their interchange.
-“I’ll take the 1.45 to Coldbrooks. What shall I tell your mother? That
-you’ve gone to Paris this morning?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that I’ve gone to Paris. That I’ll do my best, you know. That I
-hope to bring Meg back. Tell her to keep up her courage. It’ll only be a
-day or two after all, and we may be able to hush it up.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow,†said Adrienne in a grave, commanding tone. It was
-impossible before it to march out of the room and shut the door, though
-that was what his forcibly arrested attitude showed that he wished to
-do. “You as well as Barney must hear my protest,†said Adrienne, and she
-fixed her sombre eyes upon him. “Meg is with the man she loves. In the
-eyes of heaven he is her husband. It would be real as contrasted with
-conventional disgrace were she to leave him now. She will not leave him.
-I know her better than you do. I ask youâ€&mdash;her gaze now turned on
-Barney&mdash;“I desire you, not to go to her on such an unworthy errand.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But, Adrienne,†Barney, flushed and hesitating,<a name="page_154" id="page_154"></a> pleaded, “it’s for
-Mother’s sake. Mother’s too old to be enlarged like that&mdash;that’s really
-nonsense, you know, darling. You see what Nancy says. They are
-frightened about her. It’s not only convention. It’s a terrible mistake
-Meg’s made and she may be feeling it now and only too glad to have the
-way made easy for her to come back. I promise you to be as gentle as
-possible. I won’t reproach her in any way. I’ll tell her that we’re all
-only waiting to forgive her and take her back.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Forgive her, Barney? For what? It is only in the eyes of the world that
-she has done wrong and I have lifted her above that fear. Convention
-does not weigh for a moment with me beside the realities of the human
-heart; nor would it with you, Barney, if it were not for the influence
-of Mr. Oldmeadow. I have warned you before; it is easy to be
-worldly-wise and cynical and to keep to the broad road; it is easy to be
-safe. But withering lies that way: withering and imprisonment, and&mdash;â€</p>
-
-<p>“Come, come, Mrs. Barney,†Oldmeadow interposed, addressing her for the
-first time and acidly laughing. “Really we haven’t time for sermons. You
-oughtn’t to have obliged me to come up if you wanted to influence Barney
-all by yourself. He sees quite clearly for himself the rights and the
-wrongs of this affair, as it happens. If I were to preach for a moment
-in my turn I might ask you how it was that you didn’t see that it was
-your duty to tell Meg’s mother and brother how things were going and let
-them judge. You’re not as wise as you imagine&mdash;far from it. Some things
-you can’t judge at all. Meg and Hayward aren’t people of enough
-importance to have a right to break laws; that<a name="page_155" id="page_155"></a>’s all that it comes to;
-there’s nothing to be gained by their breaking laws; not only for other
-people, but for themselves. They’re neither of them capable of being
-happy in the ambiguous sort of life they’d have to lead. There’s a
-reality you didn’t see at all in your haste to flout convention. Barney
-could have dealt with Hayward, and Meg could have been packed off to the
-country and kept there till she’d learned to think a little more about
-other people’s hearts and a little less about her own. What business had
-you, after all, to have secrets from your husband and to plot with the
-two young fools behind his back? Isn’t Meg his sister rather than
-yours?†His bitterness betrayed him and conscious hostility rose in him,
-answering the menace that measured him in her eyes. “What business had
-you, a new-comer among us, to think yourself capable of managing all
-their lives and to set yourself up above them all in wisdom? You take
-too much upon yourselfâ€; his lips found the old phrase: “Really you do.
-It’s been your mistake from the beginning.â€</p>
-
-<p>He could not have believed that a face so framed for gentleness could
-show itself at once so calm and so convulsed. He knew that something had
-happened to her that had never happened to her before in her life. She
-kept her eyes steadily on him and he wondered if she were not reciting
-some incantation, some exorcism, derived from the seagulled lady above
-her: Power in Repose&mdash;Power in Love&mdash;Power in Light. Her mouth and eyes
-and nostrils were dark on her pallor and he felt that she held back all
-the natural currents of her being in order to face and quell him with
-the supernatural.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind all that, Roger,†Barney was<a name="page_156" id="page_156"></a> sickly murmuring. “I don’t
-feel like that. I know Adrienne didn’t for a moment mean to deceive me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“We will mind it, Barney,†said Adrienne, breathing with difficulty. “I
-had, Mr. Oldmeadow, the business, first, of loyalty to another human
-soul who, in the crisis of its destiny, confided in me. I have been
-nearer Meg than any of you have guessed, from my first meeting with her.
-You were all blind. I saw at once that she was tossed and tormented. I
-am nearer, far nearer her, than her brother and mother. In them she
-would never have dreamed of confiding and she came to me because she
-felt that in me she would find reality and in them mere formulas. I do
-not look upon women as chattels to be handed about by their male
-relatives and locked up if they do not love according to rule and
-precedent. I look upon them as the equals of men in every respect, as
-free as men to shape their lives and to direct their destinies. You
-speak a mediæval language, Mr. Oldmeadow. The world, our great, modern,
-deep-hearted world, has outstripped you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Darling,†Barney forestalled, breathlessly, as she paused, any reply
-that Oldmeadow might have been tempted to make, “don’t mind if Roger
-speaks harshly. He’s like that and no one cares for us more. He doesn’t
-mean conventionality at all, or anything mediæval. You don’t understand
-him. He puts his finger on the spot about Meg and Hayward. It’s exactly
-as he says; they’re not of enough importance to have a right to break
-laws. If you could have confided in me, it would have been better; you
-must own that. We’d have given Meg a chance to pull herself together.
-We’d have sent Hayward about his business. It’s a question, as Roger
-says, of your<a name="page_157" id="page_157"></a> wisdom; of your knowledge of the world. You didn’t
-understand them. They’re neither of them idealists like you. They can’t
-be happy doing what you might be big enough to do. Just because they’re
-not big. Try to take it in, darling. And we really needn’t go on talking
-about it any longer, need we? It isn’t a question of influence. All we
-have to decide on is what’s to be done. Roger must go to Mother and tell
-her I’m starting this morning to try and fetch Meg back. Imagine Mother
-with a divorce case on! It would kill her, simply. That’s all. Isn’t it,
-Roger?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow,†said Adrienne, again. She rose as she spoke. As
-he saw her stand before them, her approaching maternity dominated for a
-moment all his impressions of her. Veiled and masked adroitly as it was,
-its very uncouthness curiously became her. Her head, for once, looked
-small. Like an archaic statue, straight and short and thick, her altered
-form had dignity and amplitude and her face, heavy with its menace, hard
-with its control, might have been that of some austere and threatening
-priestess of fruitfulness.</p>
-
-<p>“Barney, wait,†she said. Her arms hung straight beside her, but she
-slightly lifted a hand as she spoke and Oldmeadow noted that it was
-tightly clenched. “It is I, not your friend, whom you must question as
-to what it is right that you should do. I do not consent to his reading
-of my unwisdom and unworthiness. I ask you not to consent to it. I ask
-you again not to go. I ask you again to respect my judgment rather than
-his.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Darling,†the unfortunate husband supplicated; “it’s not because it’s
-Roger’s judgment. You know<a name="page_158" id="page_158"></a> it’s what I felt right myself&mdash;from the
-moment you told me what had happened. You say people must follow their
-own light. It <i>is</i> my light. I must do what Mother asks and try to bring
-Meg back.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It is not your light, Barney. It is craft and caution and fear. More
-than that, do you not see, must I make plain to you what it is you do to
-me in going? You insult me. You treat what I have believed right for Meg
-to do as a crime from which she must be rescued. You drag me in the dust
-with her. Understand me, Barneyâ€&mdash;the streaks of colour deepened on her
-neck, her breath came thickly&mdash;“if you go, you drag me in the dust.â€</p>
-
-<p>“How can it drag you in the dust, Mrs. Barney, if Meg wants to come
-back?†Oldmeadow interposed in the tone of a caustic doctor addressing a
-malingering patient. “We’re not talking of crimes; only of follies.
-Come; be reasonable. Don’t make it so painful for Barney to do what’s
-his plain duty. You’re not a child. You have, I hope, courage enough and
-humour enough to own that you can make mistakes&mdash;like other people.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes, Adrienne, that’s just it,†broke painfully from Barney, and,
-as he seized the clue thus presented to him, Adrienne turned her head
-slowly, with an ominous stillness, and again rested her eyes upon him.
-“It’s childish, you know, darling. It’s not like you. And of course I
-understand why; and Roger does. You’re not yourself; you’re
-over-strained and off-balance and I’m so frightfully sorry all this has
-fallen upon you at such a time. I don’t want to oppose you in anything,
-darling&mdash;do try to believe me. Only you must give me the credit for my
-own convictions. I do feel I must go. I do feel<a name="page_159" id="page_159"></a> Roger must take that
-message to Mother. After all, darling,†and now in no need of helping
-clues he found his own and the irrepressible note of grief vibrated in
-his voice, “you do owe me something, don’t you? You do owe us all
-something&mdash;to make up, I mean. Because, without you, Meg would never
-have behaved like this and disgraced us all. Oh&mdash;I don’t mean to
-reproach you!â€</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye then, I’m off,†said Oldmeadow. “I’m very sorry you made me
-come up. Good-bye, Mrs. Barney.†She had not spoken, nor moved, nor
-turned her eyes from Barney’s face.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye. Thanks so much, Roger.†Barney followed him, with a quickness
-to match his own, to the door. But Adrienne, this time, did not call him
-back. She remained standing stock-still in front of her sofa.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell Mother I’m off,†said Barney, grasping his hand. “Tell her she’ll
-hear at once, as soon as I know anything. Thanks so awfully,†he
-repeated. “You’ve been a great help.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was unfortunate, perhaps, that Barney should say that, Oldmeadow
-reflected as he sped down the stairs. “But she’s met reality at last,â€
-he muttered, wondering how she and Barney faced each other above and
-hearing again the words that must echo so strangely in her ears:
-“Disgraced us all.†And, mingled with his grim satisfaction, was, again,
-the sense of irrelevant and reluctant pity.<a name="page_160" id="page_160"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XVI-a" id="CHAPTER_XVI-a"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">I<small>T</small> was Saturday and he had to wire to Mrs. Aldesey that he could not go
-with her next day to the Queen’s Hall concert they had planned to hear
-together.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy was waiting for him at the station in her own little pony-cart and
-as he got in she said: “Is Barney gone?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; he’ll have gone by now,†said Oldmeadow and, as he said it, he
-felt a sudden sense of relief and clarity. The essential thing, he saw
-it as he answered Nancy’s question, was that he should be able to say
-that Barney had gone. And he knew that if he hadn’t been there to back
-him up, he wouldn’t have gone. So that was all right, wasn’t it?</p>
-
-<p>As he had sped past the sun-swept country the reluctant pity had
-struggled in him, striving, unsuccessfully, to free itself from the
-implications of that horrid word: “Disgraced.†It was Adrienne who had
-disgraced them; that was what Barney’s phrase had really meant, though
-he hadn’t intended it to mean it. She, the stranger, the new-comer, had
-disgraced them. And it was true. Yet he wished Barney hadn’t stumbled on
-the phrase&mdash;just because she was a stranger and a new-comer. And Barney
-would never have found it had he not been there. But now came the sense
-of relief. If he hadn’t been there, Barney wouldn’t have gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Aunt Eleanor is longing to see you,†said Nancy. “Her one hope, you
-know, is that he may bring Meg back.†Nancy’s eyes had a strained look,
-as though she had lain awake all night.<a name="page_161" id="page_161"></a></p>
-
-<p>“You think she may come back?â€</p>
-
-<p>He felt, himself, unable to form any conjectures as to what Meg was
-likely to do. What she had done was so strangely unlike her.</p>
-
-<p>“Not if it means leaving Captain Hayward for good,†said Nancy. “But
-Aunt Eleanor and Mother both think that she may be willing to come till
-they can marry.â€</p>
-
-<p>“That’s better than nothing, isn’t it,†said Oldmeadow, and Nancy then
-surprised him by saying, as she looked round at him: “I don’t want her
-to come back.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t want her to come back? But you wanted Barney to go?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He had to go. Just so that everything might be done. So that it
-might be put before her. And to satisfy Aunt Eleanor. But, don’t you
-see, Roger, it would really make it far more difficult for Aunt Eleanor
-to have her here. What would she do with her?&mdash;since she won’t give up
-Captain Hayward? She can love Meg and grieve and yearn over her now. But
-if she were here she couldn’t. It would be all grief and bitterness.â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy had evidently been thinking to some purpose during her sleepless
-night and he owned that her conclusion was the sound one. What
-disconcerted him was her assurance that Meg would not leave her lover.
-After Adrienne, Nancy was likely to have the most authentic impressions
-of Meg’s attitude; and, as they drove towards Chelford, he was further
-disconcerted by hearing her murmur, half to herself: “It would be silly
-to leave him now, wouldn’t it.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not if she’s sorry and frightened at what she<a name="page_162" id="page_162"></a>’s done,†he protested.
-“After all the man’s got a wife who may be glad to have him back.â€</p>
-
-<p>But Nancy said: “I don’t think she would. I think she’ll be glad not to
-have him back. Meg may be frightened; but I don’t believe she’ll be
-sorry; yet.â€</p>
-
-<p>He meditated, somewhat gloomily, as they drove, on the unexpectedness of
-the younger generation. He had never thought of Nancy as belonging, in
-any but the chronological sense, to that category; yet here she was,
-accepting, if not condoning, the rebellion against law and morality.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Averil had driven down to the Little House where she was to be
-picked up and, as they turned the corner to the Green, they saw her
-waiting at the gate, her furs turned up around her ears, her neat little
-face pinched and dry, as he had known that he would find it, and showing
-a secure if controlled indignation, rather than Nancy’s sad perplexity.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Roger, you find us in a pleasant predicament,†she observed as
-Oldmeadow settled the rug around her knees. “Somehow one never thinks of
-things like this happening in one’s own family. Village girls misbehave
-and people in the next county run away sometimes with other people’s
-wives; but one never expects such adventures to come walking in to one’s
-own breakfast-table.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Disagreeable things do have a way of happening at breakfast-time, don’t
-they,†Oldmeadow assented. The comfort of Mrs. Averil was that even on
-her death-bed she would treat her own funeral lightly: “I wonder it
-remains such a comfortable meal, all the same.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you’ve had lunch on the train,†said Mrs. Averil. “Will you
-believe it? Poor Eleanor<a name="page_163" id="page_163"></a> was worrying about that this morning. She’s
-got some coffee and sandwiches waiting for you, in case you haven’t. I’m
-so thankful you’ve come. It will help her. Poor dear. She’s begun to
-think of all the other things now. Of what people will say and how they
-will hear. Lady Cockerell is very much on her mind. You know what a
-meddlesome gossip she is, and only the other day Eleanor snubbed her
-when she was criticizing Barbara’s new school. The thought of her is
-disturbing her dreadfully now.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose these leech-bites do help to alleviate the pain of the real
-wound,†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“Not in the least. They envenom it,†Mrs. Averil replied. “I’d like to
-strangle Lady Cockerell myself before the news reaches her.â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy drove on, her eyes fixed on the pony’s ears. “I don’t believe
-people will talk nearly as much as you and Aunt Eleanor imagine,†she
-now remarked. “I’ve told her so; and so must you, Mother.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You are admirable with her, Nancy. Far better than I am. I sit grimly
-swallowing my curses, or wringing my hands. Neither wringing nor cursing
-is much good, I suppose.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit of good. It’s better she should think of what people say than
-of Meg; but when it comes to agonizing over them I believe the truth is
-that people nowadays <i>do</i> get over it; far more than they used to;
-especially if Aunt Eleanor can show them that <i>she</i> gets over it.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But she can’t get over it, my dear child!†said Mrs. Averil, gazing at
-her daughter in a certain alarm. “How can one get over disgrace like
-that or lift one’s head again&mdash;unless one is an Adrienne Toner! Oh, when
-I think of that woman and of what<a name="page_164" id="page_164"></a> she’s done! For she is responsible
-for it all! Every bit of it. Meg was a good girl, at heart; always. In
-spite of that silly liquid powder. And so I tell Eleanor. Adrienne is
-responsible for it all.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t, Mother; that’s not my line at all,†said Nancy. “I tell her
-that what Meg says is true.†Nancy touched the pony with the whip. “If
-it hadn’t been for Adrienne she might have done much worse.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Really, my dear!†Mrs. Averil murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Nancy,†Oldmeadow protested; “that was a retrospective threat of
-Meg’s. Without Adrienne she’d never have considered such an
-adventure&mdash;or its worse alternative. Encourage your aunt to curse
-Adrienne. Your Mother’s instinct is sound there.â€</p>
-
-<p>But Nancy shook her head. “I don’t know, Roger,†she said. “Perhaps Meg
-would have considered the alternative. Girls do consider all sorts of
-things nowadays that Mother and Aunt Eleanor, in their girlhood, would
-have thought simply wicked. They <i>are</i> wicked; but not simply. That’s
-the difference between now and then. And don’t you think that it’s
-better for Meg and Captain Hayward to go away so that they can be
-married than to be, as she says, really rotters; than to be, as she
-says, cheats and hypocrites and steal their happiness?â€</p>
-
-<p>“My dear child!†Mrs. Averil again murmured, while Oldmeadow, finding
-it, after all, a comfort to have a grown-up Nancy to discuss it with,
-said, “My contention is that, left to herself, Meg would have thought
-them both wicked.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps,†Nancy said again; “but even old-fashioned girls did things
-they knew to be wicked<a name="page_165" id="page_165"></a> sometimes. The difference Adrienne has made is
-that Meg doesn’t think herself wicked at all. She thinks herself rather
-noble. And that’s what I mean about Aunt Eleanor. It will comfort her if
-she can feel a little as Adrienne feels&mdash;that Meg isn’t one bit the
-worse, morally, for what she’s done.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Are you trying to persuade us that Meg isn’t guilty, my dear?†Mrs.
-Averil inquired dryly. “Are you trying to persuade us that Adrienne has
-done us all a service? You surely can’t deny that she’s behaved
-atrociously, and first and foremost, to Barney. Barney could have known
-nothing about it, and can you conceive a woman keeping such a thing from
-her husband?â€</p>
-
-<p>But Nancy was feeling the pressure of her own realizations and was not
-to be scolded out of them. “If Meg is guilty, and doesn’t know it, she
-will suffer dreadfully when she finds out, won’t she? It all depends on
-whether she has deceived herself or not, doesn’t it? I’m not justifying
-her or Adrienne, Mother; only trying to see the truth about them. How
-could Adrienne tell Barney when it was Meg’s secret? We may feel it
-wrong; but she thought she was justified.†The colour rose in Nancy’s
-cheek as she named Barney, but she kept her tired eyes on her mother and
-added, “I don’t believe it was easy for her to keep it from him.â€</p>
-
-<p>“My dear, anything is easy for her that flatters her self-importance!â€
-cried Mrs. Averil impatiently. “I’ll own, if you like, that she’s more
-fool than knave&mdash;as Meg may be; though Meg never struck me as a fool.
-Things haven’t changed so much since my young days as all that; it’s
-mainly a matter of names. If girls who behave like Meg find it
-pleasanter<a name="page_166" id="page_166"></a> to be called fools than knaves, they are welcome to the
-alternative. Noble they never were nor will be, whatever the fashion.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow did not want the sandwiches, so, as soon as they reached
-Coldbrooks, he was led upstairs to Mrs. Chadwick’s room. He found his
-poor friend lying on the sofa, the blinds drawn down and a wet
-handkerchief on her forehead. She burst out crying as he entered.
-Oldmeadow sat down beside her and took her hand and, as he listened to
-her sobs, felt that he need not trouble to pity Adrienne.</p>
-
-<p>“What I cannot, cannot understand, Roger,†she was at last able to say,
-and he realized that it was of Adrienne, not Meg, that she was speaking,
-“is how she can bear to treat us so. We all loved and trusted her. You
-know how I loved her, Roger. I felt Meg as safe in her hands as in my
-own. Oh, that wicked, wicked man! I hardly know him by sight. That makes
-it all so much more dreadful. All I do know is that his wife is a
-daughter of poor Evelyn Madderley, who broke her back out hunting.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe there’s much harm in him, you know,†Oldmeadow
-suggested. “And I believe that he is sincerely devoted to Meg.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Harm, Roger!†poor Mrs. Chadwick wailed, “when he is a married man and
-Meg only a girl! Oh, if there is harm in anything there is in that!
-Running away with a girl and ruining her life! Barney will make him feel
-what he has done. Barney <i>has</i> gone?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, he’s gone, and I am sure we can rely on him to speak his mind to
-Hayward.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t you think he may bring Meg back, Roger? Nancy says I must not
-set my mind on it;<a name="page_167" id="page_167"></a> but don’t you think she may be repenting already? My
-poor little Meg! She was hot-tempered and could speak very crossly if
-she was thwarted; but I think of her incessantly as she was when she was
-a tiny child. Self-willed; but so sweet and coaxing in her ways, with
-beautiful golden hair and those dark eyes. I always thought of Meg, with
-her beauty, as sure to marry happily; near us, I hopedâ€&mdash;Mrs. Chadwick
-began to sob again. “And now!&mdash;Will he find them in Paris? Will they not
-have moved on?â€</p>
-
-<p>“In any case he’ll be able to follow them up. I don’t imagine they’ll
-think of hiding.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No; I’m afraid they won’t. That is the worst of it! They won’t hide and
-every one will come to know and then what good will there be in her
-coming back! If only I’d had her presented last year, Roger! She can
-never go to court now,†Mrs. Chadwick wept, none the less piteously for
-her triviality. “To think that Francis’s daughter cannot go to court!
-She would have looked so beautiful, with my pearls and the feathers. The
-feathers are becoming to so few girls. Nancy could not wear them nearly
-so well. Nancy can go and my daughter can’t!â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think the lack of feathers will weigh seriously upon Meg’s
-future, my dear friend.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but it’s what they stand for, Roger, that will weigh!†Mrs.
-Chadwick, even in her grief, retained her shrewdness. “It’s easy to
-laugh at the feathers, but you might really as well laugh at
-wedding-rings! To think that Francis’s daughter is travelling about with
-a man and without a wedding-ring! Or do you suppose they’ll have thought
-of it and bought one? It would be a lie, of course; but don’t you think
-that a lie would be justifiable under the circumstances?<a name="page_168" id="page_168"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think it really makes any difference, until they can come home
-and be married.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose she must marry him now&mdash;if they won’t hide&mdash;and will be proud
-of what they’ve done; she seems quite proud of it!&mdash;everyone will hear,
-so that they will have to marry. Oh&mdash;I don’t know what to hope or what
-to fear! How can you expect me to have tea, Nancy!†she wept, as Nancy
-entered carrying the little tray. “It’s so good of you, my dear, but how
-can I eat?&mdash;I can hardly face the servants, Roger. They will all hear.
-And Meg was always such a pet of Johnson’s; his favourite of all my
-children. He used to give her very rich, unwholesome things in the
-pantry and once, when her father punished her for disobeying him and put
-her in the corner, in the drawing-room, one day, after lunch, Johnson
-nearly dropped the coffee, when he came in. It upset him dreadfully and
-he would hardly speak to Francis for a week afterwards. I know he will
-think it all our fault, when he hears, now. And so it is, for having
-trusted to a stranger. I can’t drink tea, Nancy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, you can, for Meg’s sake, Aunt Eleanor, and eat some tea-cake,
-too,†said Nancy. “If you aren’t brave for her, who will be. And you
-can’t be brave unless you eat. I remember so well, when I was little,
-Uncle Francis saying that when it came to the pinch you were the bravest
-woman he knew. You’ll see, darling; it will all come out better than you
-fear. Johnson and all of us will help you to make it come out better.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She is such a comfort to me, Roger,†said Mrs. Chadwick with a summoned
-smile. “Somehow, when I see her, I feel that things <i>will</i> come out
-better.<a name="page_169" id="page_169"></a> <i>You</i> will have to go to court, dear, next spring. We can’t
-have none of our girls going. And you shall wear my pearls.†Mrs.
-Chadwick’s tears fell, but she took up the tea-cup.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy more and more was striking Oldmeadow as the wisest person in the
-house. He walked with her on the terrace after tea; it was an old custom
-of his and Nancy’s to step outside then, whatever the weather, and have
-a few turns. This was a clear, chill evening and Nancy had wrapped a
-woollen scarf closely round her neck and shoulders. Her chin was sunken
-in its folds as she held it together on her breast, and with her dropped
-profile, her sad, meditative eyes, it was as if she saw a clue and, far
-more clearly than he did, knew where they all stood.</p>
-
-<p>“Adrienne was bitterly opposed to Barney’s going,†he said. “She seemed
-unable to grasp the fact that she herself had been in error.â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy turned her eyes on him. “Did Barney tell you she was bitterly
-opposed?â€</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t tell me. I was with them. It was most unfortunate. She
-insisted on my coming up.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, dear,†said Nancy. She even stopped for a moment to face him with
-her dismay. “Yes, I see,†she then said, walking on, “she would.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Why would she? Unless she was sure of getting her own way? The only
-point in having me up was to show me that she could always get her own
-way with Barney.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Of course. And to make it quite clear to herself, too. She’s not afraid
-of you, Roger. She’s not afraid of anything but Barney.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think she had any reason to be afraid of<a name="page_170" id="page_170"></a> him this morning. He
-was badly upset, of course. But if I hadn’t gone up, I imagine she’d
-have kept him from going. And you own that that would have been a pity,
-don’t you?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Oh, yes. He had to go,†said Nancy, absently. And she added. “Were
-you very rough and scornful?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Rough and scornful? I don’t think so. I think I kept my temper very
-well, considering all things. I showed her pretty clearly, I suppose,
-that I considered her a meddling ass. I don’t suppose she’ll forgive me
-easily for that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you can’t wonder at it, can you?†said Nancy. “Especially if she
-suspects that you made Barney consider her one, too.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s necessary, isn’t it, that she should be made to suspect it
-herself? I don’t wonder at her not forgiving me for showing her up
-before Barney, and upholding him against her, but I do wonder that one
-can never make her see she’s wrong. It’s that that’s so really monstrous
-about her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think that anyone can ever make us see we are wrong unless they
-love us?†Nancy asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Barney loves her,†said Oldmeadow after a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; but he’s afraid of her, too, isn’t he? He’d never have quite the
-courage to try and make her see, would he?&mdash;off his own bat I mean. He’d
-never really have quite the courage to see, himself, how wrong she was,
-unless he were angry. And to have anyone who is angry with you trying to
-make you see, only pushes you further and further back into yourself,
-doesn’t it, and away from seeing?â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve grown very wise in the secrets of the<a name="page_171" id="page_171"></a> human heart, my dear,â€
-Oldmeadow observed. “It’s true. He hasn’t courage with her&mdash;unless some
-one is there to give it to him. But, you know, I don’t think she’d
-forgive him if he had. I don’t think she’d forgive anyone who made her
-see.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,†Nancy pondered. “I don’t love her, yet I feel as if I
-understood her; better, perhaps, than you do. I think she’s good, you
-know. I mean, I think she might be good, if she could ever see.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She’s too stupid ever, really, to see,†said Oldmeadow, and it was with
-impatience. “She’s encased in self-love like a rhinoceros in its hide.
-One can’t penetrate anywhere. You say she’s afraid of Barney and I can’t
-imagine what you mean by that. It’s true, when I’m by, she’s afraid of
-losing his admiration. But that’s not being afraid of him.â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy still pondered; but not, now, in any perplexity. “She’s afraid
-because she cares so much. She’s afraid because she <i>can</i> care so much.
-It’s difficult to explain; but I feel as if I understood her. She’s
-never cared so much before for just one other person. It’s always been
-for people altogether; and because she was doing something for them. But
-Barney does something for her. He makes her happy. Perhaps she never
-knew before what it was to be really happy. You know, she didn’t give me
-the feeling of a really happy person. It’s something quite, quite new
-for her. It makes her feel uncertain of herself and almost bewildered
-sometimes. Oh, I’m sure of it the more I think of it. And you know,
-sometimes,†Nancy turned her deep, sweet eyes on him, “I feel very sorry
-for her, Roger. I can’t help it; although I don’t love her at all.<a name="page_172" id="page_172"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Yes. It must be true. Though he had seen Adrienne’s vanity rather than
-her love. Nancy and Meg were united in their assurance and that must be,
-he saw, because they both, in their so different ways, knew what it was
-to care; to care so much that you were frightened. It was strange that
-the pang of pity that came with his new perception should be for
-Adrienne rather than for his dear little Nancy herself. Nancy had
-suffered, he knew, and her life was perhaps permanently scarred; yet,
-clear-eyed and unduped, he saw her as mistress of the very fate that had
-maimed her. Whereas Adrienne was blindfolded; a creature swayed and
-surrounded by forces of which she was unaware.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy had deepened his sense of perplexity, his sense of taking refuge
-from something, and what it was came fully upon him that night when he
-was at last alone. Meg and her misdemeanour sank into a mere background
-for the image of the cold, convulsed face that he had seen that morning.
-Almost angrily he felt himself pushing it back, pushing it down, as if
-he pushed it down to drown, and again and again it re-emerged to look at
-him.</p>
-
-<p>He fell asleep at last; but as, a year ago, on the first night of his
-meeting with her, he had dreamed of her, so to-night he dreamed again.</p>
-
-<p>He did not see her, but she was in some dreadful plight and the sense of
-her panic and bewilderment broke upon him in shocks of suffering. He
-could not see her, but he was aware of her, horribly aware. All remained
-a broken, baffled confusion, but it was as though, unable to shape and
-assert itself, he yet felt her very being wrestling with extinction.</p>
-
-<p>The sharpness had gone out of the sunlight next<a name="page_173" id="page_173"></a> day and Mrs. Chadwick
-consented to come and sit with them in the warmest corner of the garden,
-the corner where, a year ago, Oldmeadow remembered, Meg had sat with him
-and explained to him the secret of Adrienne’s power. Pitifully, with
-swollen eyes and trembling fingers, Mrs. Chadwick resumed her
-interrupted stocking while Oldmeadow read aloud from a Sunday paper the
-leading article on the critical situation in Ireland. “I suppose every
-one in London will be talking about Ulster and Sir Edward Carson, won’t
-they?†said Mrs. Chadwick, and it was evident that she derived a dim
-comfort from the thought. The situation in Ireland, Oldmeadow reflected,
-had, at all events, been of so much service.</p>
-
-<p>Upon this quiet scene there broke suddenly the sound of a motor’s horn
-and a motor’s wheels turned into the front entrance.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick dropped her stocking and laid her hand on Nancy’s arm.
-“Dear Aunt Eleanor&mdash;you know he couldn’t possibly be back yet,†said
-Nancy. “And if it’s anyone to call, Johnson knows you’re not at home.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Lady Cockerell is capable of anything. She might sit down in the hall
-and wait. She must have heard by now,†poor Mrs. Chadwick murmured.
-“That married girl of hers in London must have written. With the
-projecting teeth.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll soon get rid of her, if it’s really she,†said Mrs. Averil; but
-she had hardly risen when the door at the back of the house opened and
-they saw Johnson usher forth a hurrying female figure, obviously not
-Lady Cockerell’s; a figure so encumbered by its motoring wraps, so
-swathed in veils, that only Mrs.<a name="page_174" id="page_174"></a> Chadwick’s ejaculation enlightened
-Oldmeadow as to its identity.</p>
-
-<p>“Joséphine!†cried Mrs. Chadwick and then, between the narrow framing of
-purple gauze, he recognized the dramatic, melancholy eyes and pale,
-pinched lips of Adrienne’s maid.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Madame! Madame!†Joséphine was exclaiming as she came towards them
-down the path. Her face wore the terrible intensity of expression so
-alien to the British countenance. “Oh, Madame! Madame!†she repeated.
-They had all risen and stood to await her. “He is dead! The little child
-is dead! And she is alone. Monsieur left her yesterday. Quite, quite
-alone, and her child born dead.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick faced her in pallid stupefaction.</p>
-
-<p>“The baby, Aunt Eleanor,†said Nancy, for she looked indeed as if she
-had not understood. “Barney’s baby. It has been born and it is dead.
-Oh&mdash;poor Barney. And poor, poor Adrienne.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, dead!†Joséphine, regardless of all but her exhaustion and her
-grief, dropped down into one of the garden-chairs and put her hands
-before her face. “Born dead last night. A beautiful little boy. The
-doctors could not save it and fear for her life. They will not let me
-stay with her. Only the doctors and the nurses&mdash;strangers&mdash;are with
-her.†Joséphine was sobbing. “Ah, it was not right to leave her so.
-Already she was ill. It could be seen that already she was very ill when
-Monsieur left her. I came to her when he was gone. She did not say a
-word to me. She tried to smile. <i>Mais j’ai bien vu qu’elle avait la mort
-dans l’âme.</i>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Good heavens,†Mrs. Chadwick murmured, while Joséphine, now, let her
-tears flow unchecked.<a name="page_175" id="page_175"></a> “She is alone and Barney has left her! Oh, this
-is terrible! At such a time!â€</p>
-
-<p>“He had to go, Aunt Eleanor. You know he had to go. We will send for him
-at once,†said Nancy, and Joséphine, catching the words, sobbed on in
-her woe and her resentment: “But where to send for him? No one knows
-where to send. The doctors sent a wire yesterday, at once, when she was
-taken ill; to the Paris hotel. But no answer came. He must have left
-Paris. That is why I have come. No telegrams for Sunday. No trains in
-time. I took the car. The doctor said, Yes, it was well that I should
-come. Some one who cares for Madame should return with me. If she is to
-die she must not die alone.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But she shall not die!†cried Mrs. Chadwick with sudden and surprising
-energy. “Oh, the poor baby! It might have lived had I been there. No
-doctor, no nurse, can understand like a mother. And I shall be able to
-help with Adrienne. I must go. I must go at once. Mademoiselle will see
-that you have something to eat and drink, my poor Joséphine, and then
-you and I will return together. It will not take me a moment to get
-ready.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It will be the best thing for them all,†Oldmeadow murmured to Mrs.
-Averil, as, taking Joséphine’s arm, Mrs. Chadwick hurried her along the
-path. “And I’ll go with them.â€</p>
-
-<p>A little later, while Mrs. Chadwick made ready above and Joséphine, in
-the hall, ate the meal that Johnson had brought for her, Oldmeadow and
-Nancy stood outside near the empty waiting car.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll wire to you at once, of course, how she is,†he said. Adrienne had
-put Meg out of all their<a name="page_176" id="page_176"></a> thoughts. “But it’s rather grotesque,†he
-added, “if poor Barney is to be blamed.â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy stood and looked before her, wrapped, as she had been the day
-before, in her woollen scarf. “Roger,†she said after a moment, “no one
-can be blamed; yet, if she dies, I shall feel that we have killed her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Killed her! What nonsense, my dear! What do you mean?†He spoke angrily
-because something in his heart, shaken by his dream, echoed her. The
-dreaming had now revealed itself as definitely uncanny. What had he to
-do with Adrienne Toner that his sub-consciousness should be aware of her
-extremity?</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t explain,†said Nancy. “We couldn’t help it. It’s even all her
-fault. But she never asked to come to us. She never sought us out. She
-had her life and we had ours. It was we who sought her and drew her in
-and worshipped her. She never hid what she was; never in the least
-little way. It was for what she was, because she was so different and
-believed so in herself, that Barney loved her. And now because she has
-gone on believing in herself, we have struck her down.â€</p>
-
-<p>The rooks were cawing overhead and Oldmeadow was remembering his dream
-of a year ago, how Adrienne had come to him along the terrace saying, as
-she lifted her hand: “I can hear them, too.†They had drawn her in. Yet
-she had loved their life. She had wanted to understand it and to be part
-of it. He wished he could get the pale, streaked, drowning face out of
-his mind. “It’s generous of you, my dear child,†he said, “to say ‘we.’
-You mean ‘you.’ If anyone struck her down it was I.<a name="page_177" id="page_177"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“You spoke for us all, Roger. And you only spoke for us. You were always
-outside. I count myself with them. I can’t separate myself from them. I
-received her love&mdash;with them all.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Did you?†he looked at her. “I don’t think so, Nancy.â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy did not pretend not to understand. “I know,†she said. “But I’m
-part of it. And she tried to love me.<a name="page_178" id="page_178"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XVII-a" id="CHAPTER_XVII-a"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">O<small>LDMEADOW</small> sat in Barney’s study, Mrs. Chadwick beside him. It was
-Tuesday and the only news of Barney had been a letter to his mother,
-from Paris, where he had not found Meg, and two wires from the South of
-France, one to Oldmeadow and one to his wife, saying that he had found
-Meg and was returning alone. He had not, it was evident, received the
-doctor’s messages.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow had not seen his old friend since the Sunday night when he had
-left her and Joséphine in Connaught Square, and in his first glance at
-her this morning he saw that for her, too, Adrienne’s peril had actually
-effaced Meg’s predicament. It had done more. Faint and feeble as she
-must be, scarcely able to take possession of her returning life and, as
-Mrs. Chadwick told him, not yet out of danger, Adrienne had already
-drawn her mother-in-law back into the circle of her influence.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, Roger,†she said, sitting there on the absurdly incongruous
-background of the Post Impressionist pictures and tightly squeezing her
-handkerchief first in one hand and then in the other, “You see, when one
-is with her one <i>has</i> to trust her. I don’t know why it is, but almost
-at once I felt all my bitterness against her die quite away. I knew,
-whatever she had done, that she believed it to be right; to be really
-<i>best</i> for Meg, you know. And oh, Roger, Barney has hurt her so
-terribly! She can’t speak of him without crying. I never saw her cry
-before. I never imagined Adrienne crying. She<a name="page_179" id="page_179"></a> feels, she can’t help
-feeling, that it is because of that they have lost their baby.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow ordered with difficulty his astonished and indignant thoughts.
-“That is absolutely unfair to Barney,†he said. “I was with them. No one
-could have been gentler or more patient.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know you were with them. It would seem like that to you, Roger,
-because you are a man and men still think of women as a sort of chattel.
-That’s how it looks to Adrienne. So much more independence, you know,
-than we ever had.&mdash;Oh, I don’t say it’s a good thing! I feel that we are
-weaker and need guidance.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Chattels? Where do chattels come in here? She said that to you. Barney
-merely pleaded with her so that he could do what you wanted him to do.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know&mdash;I know, Roger. Don’t get angry. But if I had been here and seen
-her I should have known that he must not go. I should have seen that she
-was in danger. A woman would have understood. No; you didn’t treat
-Adrienne like a chattel; no one could treat Adrienne like one. It was
-poor little Meg I meant. I see now how wrong it was to think of taking
-her from the man she loves; when she <i>has</i> gone, you know, so that
-everyone must know and there can be no good in it. And they probably
-<i>have</i> bought a wedding-ring. Oh, Roger, she does comfort me about Meg.
-She makes me feel the deeper things, the things conventions blind us to.
-She makes me feel that the great thing, the only thing, is to follow
-one’s own light and that Meg did do that. And after all, you know,
-Roger, Jowett had George Eliot and Lewes to breakfast and they were
-never married.<a name="page_180" id="page_180"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! ha! ha!†Oldmeadow laughed. He could not repress his bitter mirth.
-“Follow your light if there’s breakfast with a clergyman at the end of
-it!†he cruelly suggested. Yet he was too much amused, while so
-incensed, for there to be much cruelty, and Mrs. Chadwick, gazing at him
-as if from under her twisted straw, murmured: “He <i>was</i> a sort of
-clergyman, Roger; and if people do what <i>seems</i> to them right, why
-should they be punished?â€</p>
-
-<p>He saw it all. He heard it all, in her echoes. The potent influence had
-been poured through her, all the more irresistible for the appeal of
-Adrienne’s peril. Adrienne, bereaved and dying; yet magnanimous, gentle
-and assured; always assured. How could Mrs. Chadwick’s feathers and
-wedding-rings stand a chance against her? They had been swept away, or
-nearly away, and what Nancy had seen as a possible hope was now an
-accomplished fact. Mrs. Chadwick had been brought to feel about Meg as
-Adrienne felt about her, and Oldmeadow, for his part, was not sure that
-the game was worth the candle. There was something more than absurd in
-his poor friend’s attempts to adjust herself to the new standards. They
-were pitiable and even a little unseemly. She began presently softly to
-weep. “Such a pretty baby it was, Roger. A lovely little creature&mdash;that
-was the first thing she said to me&mdash;‘Oh, Mother Nell, it was such a
-pretty baby.’ And all that she said this morning&mdash;when it was taken
-away&mdash;was: ‘I wish Barney could have been in time to see our baby.’ Oh,
-it is terrible, terrible, Roger, that he is not here! Her heart is
-broken by it. How can she ever forget that he left her alone at such a
-time. And she begged him not to go. She told me that she almost knelt to
-him.<a name="page_181" id="page_181"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>The tears, irrepressibly, had risen to Oldmeadow’s eyes; but as Mrs.
-Chadwick’s sentence meandered on, his thoughts were roughly jolted from
-their pity. “But I tell you that that is absolutely unfair!†he
-repeated, fixing his glass to look his protest the more firmly at her.
-“I tell you that I was there and saw it all. It wasn’t for the baby. She
-was thinking of the baby as little as Barney was; less than he was. What
-she was thinking of was her power over Barney. She was determined that
-she should not seem to be put in the wrong by his going.â€</p>
-
-<p>Like the March Hare Mrs. Chadwick was wild yet imperturbable. “Of course
-she was determined. How could she be anything else? It did put her in
-the wrong. And it put Meg in the wrong. That’s where we were so blind.
-Oh, I blame myself as much as anybody. But Barney is her husband; and he
-was with her and should have seen and felt. How could she beg him to
-stay for her danger when he would not stay for her love?â€</p>
-
-<p>Yes; Adrienne had her very firmly. She had even imparted to her, when it
-came to the issue, something of coherency. She was building up, in
-Barney’s absence, strange ramparts against him. Barney had dragged her
-in the dust and there she intended to drag him. Wasn’t that it?
-Oldmeadow asked himself as he eyed his altered friend, muttering
-finally: “I’m every bit as responsible as Barney, if it comes to that. I
-upheld him, completely, in his decision. I do still. Adrienne may turn
-you all upside down; but she won’t turn me; and I hope she won’t turn
-Barney.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I think, Roger, that you might at all events remember that she’s not
-out of danger,†said Mrs.<a name="page_182" id="page_182"></a> Chadwick. “She may die yet and give you no
-more trouble. You have never cared for her; I know that, and so does
-she; and I do think it’s unfeeling of you to speak as you do when she’s
-lying there above us. And she looks so lovely in bed,†Mrs. Chadwick
-began to weep again. “I never saw such thick braids; like Marguerite in
-Faust. Her hands on the sheets so thin and white and her eyes enormous.
-I don’t think even you could have the heart to jibe and laugh if you saw
-her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t laugh at Adrienne, you know,†Oldmeadow reminded her, rising
-and buttoning his overcoat. “I laughed at you and Jowett. No; Adrienne
-is no laughing matter. But she won’t die. I can assure you of that now.
-She’s too much life in her to die. And though I’m very sorry for
-her&mdash;difficult as you may find it to believe&mdash;I shall reserve my pity
-for Barney.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney needed all his pity and the sight of him on the following Sunday
-evening, as he appeared on his threshold, would have exorcised for
-Oldmeadow, if Mrs. Chadwick had not already done so, the memory of the
-pale, drowning face. He looked like a dog that has been beaten for a
-fault it cannot recognize. There was bewilderment in his eyes and
-acceptance, and a watchful humility. To see them there made Oldmeadow
-angry.</p>
-
-<p>Barney had sent a line to say that he was back; but his friend had been
-prepared not to see him. Once engulfed in the house of mourning it was
-but too likely that he would not emerge for many days. And besides, what
-would Barney have to say to him now? But here he was, with his hollow
-eyes and faded cheeks, and it was with an echo of his old boyish<a name="page_183" id="page_183"></a> manner
-of dropping in when beset by some perplexity that, without speaking, he
-crossed the room and sank on the sofa by the fireplace. But he had not
-come to seek counsel or sustainment. Oldmeadow saw that, as, after he
-had offered cigarettes, which Barney refused, and lighted his own pipe,
-he walked to and fro and watched him while Barney watched the flames. He
-had not come with a purpose at all. It was, again, precisely like the
-unhappy dog who wanders forth aimlessly, guided merely by a dim yearning
-towards warmth and kindliness. Barney had come where he would be
-understood. But it was not because he believed himself to be
-misunderstood that he came.</p>
-
-<p>“I went to Coldbrooks, first, you know,†he said presently, and with an
-effect of irrelevance. “I thought I’d find Mother there. So it was only
-on that Thursday night I got back here. None of the wires caught me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know,†said Oldmeadow. “It was most unfortunate. But you couldn’t
-have got back sooner, could you, once you’d gone on from Paris.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not possibly. I went on from Paris that very night, you see. I caught
-the night express to the Riviera. They’d left Cannes as an address, but
-when I got there I found they’d moved on to San Remo. It was Tuesday
-before I found them. My one idea was to find them as soon as possible,
-of course. No; I suppose it couldn’t be helped; once I’d gone.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And it was quite useless? You’d no chance with Meg at all?â€</p>
-
-<p>“None whatever. Quite useless. Never was such a wild-goose chase. It was
-exactly as Adrienne had said.<a name="page_184" id="page_184"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Still it couldn’t have been foreseen so securely by anyone but
-Adrienne. Many girls would have jumped at the chance.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not if they’d had Adrienne to help them. We might have realized that.
-That’s what armed Meg. I heard Adrienne in everything she said. Even
-Mother thinks Adrienne was right, now, you know, Roger. And it was all
-for Mother, wasn’t it? that I went. That makes it all so particularly
-ironic. Only dear Mummy was never very strong at logic. She takes the
-line now that we’re narrow-minded conventionalists, you and I, for
-thinking that a girl oughtn’t to go off with a married man. I can’t feel
-that, you know, Roger,†said Barney in his listless tone. “I can’t help
-feeling that Meg has done something shameful. You ought to have seen
-her! Positively smug! sitting there with that ass of a fellow in that
-damned Riviera hotel! I had the horridest feeling, too, that Meg had
-brought him rather than he her. I don’t mean he doesn’t care for her&mdash;he
-does; I’ll say that for him. He’s a stupid fellow, but honest; and he
-came outside and tried to tell me what he felt and how it would be all
-right and that he was going to devote his life to her. But I think he
-feels pretty sick, really. While Meg treated me as if I were a silly
-little boy. If anyone can carry the thing through, Meg will.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It won’t prove her right because she carries it through, you know,â€
-Oldmeadow observed.</p>
-
-<p>“No,†said Barney, “but it will make us seem more wrong. Not that you
-have any responsibility in it, dear old boy. I did what I felt I must do
-and mine was the mistake. It’s not only Mother who thinks I’ve wronged
-Adrienne,†he went on after a<a name="page_185" id="page_185"></a> moment, lifting his arms as though he
-felt a weight upon them and clasping them behind his head. “Even Nancy,
-though she was so sorry for me, made me feel that I’d done something
-very dreadful.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy? How did you come to see Nancy?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Why, at Coldbrooks. She’s still there with Aunt Monica. That was just
-it. It was my going there first, seeing her first, that upset her so.
-She couldn’t understand, till I could explain, how it came about. She
-was thinking of Adrienne, you see. And I, knowing nothing, had been
-thinking of Mother all the time. It was too late, then, to go back at
-once. The next train wasn’t for three hours. So I had to stay.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And it was Nancy who had to tell you everything?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; Nancy,†said Barney, staring at the ceiling. There was a note,
-now, of control in his voice and Oldmeadow knew that if he had said no
-word of what must be foremost in both their thoughts it was because he
-could not trust himself to speak of it. And he went on quickly, taking
-refuge from his invading emotion, “Aunt Monica wasn’t there. I didn’t
-even see Johnson. I went right through the house and into the garden and
-there was Nancy, planting something in the border. Everything looked so
-natural. I just went up to her and said ‘Hello, Nancy,’ and then, when
-she looked up at me, I thought she was going to faint. Poor little
-Nancy. I knew something terrible had happened from the way she looked at
-me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Poor little Nancy. But I’m glad it was she who told you, Barney.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No one could have been sweeter,†said Barney,<a name="page_186" id="page_186"></a> talking on quickly. “She
-kept saying, ‘Oh, you oughtn’t to be here, Barney. You oughtn’t to be
-here.’ But no one could have been sweeter. We sat down on the old bench,
-you know, and she told me. That Adrienne had nearly died. That the baby
-was dead. I could hardly believe her, at first. I stared at her, I know,
-and I kept saying, ‘What do you mean, Nancy?&mdash;what do you mean?’ And she
-began to cry and I cried, too. Men do feel, Roger, all the same, even
-though they haven’t the mother’s claim to feel. I thought about our baby
-so much. I loved it, too. And now&mdash;to think it’s dead; and that I never
-saw it; and that it’s my faultâ€&mdash;his voice had shaken more and more; he
-had put his hand before his eyes, and, then, suddenly, he leaned forward
-and buried his head on the arm of the sofa.</p>
-
-<p>“My poor Barney! My dear boy!†Oldmeadow muttered. He came and sat down
-beside him; he laid his arm around his shoulders. “It’s not your fault,â€
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t say that, Roger!†sobbed Barney. “It’s no good trying to
-comfort me. I’ve broken her heart. She doesn’t say so. She’s too angelic
-to say it; but she lies there and looks it. My poor darling! My poor,
-courageous darling; what she has been through! It can’t be helped. I
-must face it. I’m her husband. I ought to have understood. She
-supplicated me, and I rejected her, and the child is dead.â€</p>
-
-<p>“The child’s death is a calamity for which no one can be held
-responsible unless it is Adrienne herself,†said Oldmeadow. While Barney
-sobbed he was thinking intently, for this was a turning-point in
-Barney’s destiny. He would remain in subjugation<a name="page_187" id="page_187"></a> to Adrienne’s
-conception of the wrong done her or he must be enabled to regain the
-sense of innocence to which he had every right. “She forced the
-situation on you. She chose to break rather than bend,†he said. “Listen
-to me, Barney. I don’t speak in any enmity to your wife; but listen to
-me and try to think it out. Don’t you remember how you once said that
-your marriage couldn’t be a mistake if you were able to see the defects
-as well as the beauty of the woman you love. Don’t you remember that you
-said she’d have to learn a little from you for the much you’d have to
-learn from her. Nothing more reassured me than what you said that night.
-And I was reassured the other day by your firmness. It implies no
-disloyalty in you to see the defects now. It was power over you she
-wanted the other day and to see herself put in the right, before me; and
-to see me worsted, before you. You know it, Barney; you know it in your
-heart. And she knows it too. There was no failure of love in what you
-said. There was only failure of homage. You were right in opposing her.
-She was wrong in the issue she made. She was wrong from the first of the
-miserable affair in having concealed it from you. If you’d stayed behind
-as she wanted you to do, you’d have shown yourself a weakling and she’d
-have been further than ever from knowing herself in error. There is the
-truth; and the sooner you see it, the sooner she will.â€</p>
-
-<p>For some time after his friend had ended, Barney lay silent, his face
-still hidden. But his sobs had ceased. And his silence, at last, grew
-too long for any disclaimer to be possible to him. He had been brought,
-Oldmeadow knew it from the very rhythm<a name="page_188" id="page_188"></a> of his breathing, to the
-passionless contemplation where alone truth is visible. And what he said
-at last was: “She’ll never see it like that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, she will,†said Oldmeadow. And he remembered Nancy’s wisdom.
-“If you hold to it firmly and tenderly and make her feel you love her
-while you make her feel you think her wrong.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll never see it,†Barney repeated, and Oldmeadow now suspected, and
-with a deep uneasiness, that Barney might be seeing further than
-himself. “She can’t.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You mean that she’s incapable of thinking herself wrong?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, incapable,†said Barney. “Because all she’s conscious of is the
-wish to do right. And she is right so often, she is so good and
-beautiful, that it must be like that with her. She can break; but she
-can’t bend.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow was silent for a moment and Barney, on the arm of the sofa,
-was silent. “Of course,†Oldmeadow then said, “the less you say about it
-the better. Things will take their place gradually.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve not said anything about it,†said Barney. “I’ve only thought of
-comforting and cherishing her. But it’s not enough. I’ll never say
-anything; but she’ll know I’m keeping something back. She knows it
-already. I see that now. And I didn’t know it till you put it to me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll have to accept it; or to live with it unaccepted, then. You
-can’t consider yourself a criminal to give her moral ease.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No,†said Barney after a pause. “No; I can’t do that. Though that’s
-what Mummy wants me to do. But I can be horribly sorry.<a name="page_189" id="page_189"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Horribly sorry. Let the rest sink into the unspoken. When people love
-each other they can, I’m sure, live over any amount of unspoken things.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It hasn’t been unspoken between you and me, though, has it, Roger?â€
-said Barney, and he raised himself and got upon his feet as he said it.
-“There’s the trouble. There’s where I <i>am</i> wrong. For she’d feel it an
-intolerable wrong if she knew that it hadn’t been unspoken between you
-and me. And she’d be right. When people love each other such reticences
-and exclusions wrong their love.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But since you say she knows,†Oldmeadow suggested after another moment.</p>
-
-<p>Barney stood staring out of the twilight window.</p>
-
-<p>“She doesn’t know that I tell you,†he said.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve told me nothing,†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she doesn’t know what I listen to, then,†said Barney.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow was again conscious of the deep uneasiness. “It’s quite true
-I’ve no call to meddle in your affairs,†he said. “The essential thing
-is that you love each other. Let rights and wrongs go hang.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t meddled, Roger.†Barney moved towards the door. “You’ve
-been in my affairs, and haven’t been allowed to keep out. Yes. We love
-each other. But rights and wrongs never go hang with Adrienne.<a name="page_190" id="page_190"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII-a" id="CHAPTER_XVIII-a"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">O<small>LDMEADOW</small> did not see Barney again for some months. He met Eleanor
-Chadwick towards the end of April, in the park, he on his way to Mrs.
-Aldesey’s, she, apparently, satisfying her country appetite for
-exercise, since she seemed to be walking fast and at random. He almost
-thought for a moment that she was going to pretend not to see him and
-hurry down a path that led away from his; but his resolute eye perhaps
-checked the impulse. She faltered and then came forward, holding out her
-hand and looking rather wildly about her, and she said that London was
-really suffocating, wasn’t it?</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve been here for so long, haven’t you,†said Oldmeadow. “Or have
-you been here all this time? I’ve had no news of any of you, you see.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all been such a troubled, busy time, Roger,†said Mrs. Chadwick.
-“Yes, I’ve been here ever since. But, thank goodness, the doctors say
-she may be moved now, and she and I and Barney are going down to
-Devonshire next week. To Torquay. Such a dismal place, I think; but
-perhaps that’s because so many of my relations have died there. I never
-have liked that red Devonshire soil. But the primroses will be out. That
-makes up a little.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad that Mrs. Barney is better. When will you all be back at
-Coldbrooks?â€</p>
-
-<p>“In June, I hope. Yes; she is better. But so feeble, still; so frail.
-And quite, quite changed from her old bright self. It’s all very
-depressing, Roger. Very depressing and wearing,†said Mrs. Chadwick,<a name="page_191" id="page_191"></a>
-opening her eyes very wide and staring before her in a way
-characteristic of her when she repressed tears. “Sometimes I hardly know
-how to keep up at all. For nothing cheers her. And Barney isn’t really
-much help. He has very little power of fighting against depression.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve all been too much shut up with each other, I’m afraid.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick still held her eyes widely opened. “I don’t think it’s
-that, Roger. Being alone wouldn’t have helped us to be happier, after
-what’s happened.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Being with other people might. You must get back to Coldbrooks as soon
-as possible and see Nancy and Mrs. Averil and your neighbours. That will
-help to change the current of your thoughts.â€</p>
-
-<p>“People don’t forget so easily as that, Roger,†Mrs. Chadwick murmured,
-and it was now with severity, as though she suspected him of triviality.
-“When something terrible has happened to people they are <i>in</i> the
-current and Nancy and the neighbours are not going to change it. Poor
-Nancy; she feels it all as much as we do, I’m sure.â€</p>
-
-<p>And that Mrs. Chadwick thought of him as unfeeling he saw. She thought
-of him, too, with Barney, as criminal; as responsible for the
-catastrophe. The old phrase of presage floated back into his mind:
-“She’ll spoil things.†She had spoiled, for ever perhaps, this deepest,
-dearest relation of his life. What was Coldbrooks to become to him with
-Adrienne Toner in possession? He said, and he was unable to keep a
-certain dryness that must sound like lightness, from his voice: “You are
-in it but you needn’t keep your heads under it, you know.<a name="page_192" id="page_192"></a> That’s what
-people tend to do when they shut themselves up with their misfortunes.
-You and Barney and Mrs. Barney, I suspect, are engaged in drowning each
-other. If one of you puts their head up the others pull it down.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you mean Adrienne does,†said Mrs. Chadwick. He had not meant
-it at all; but now he felt sure that so, exactly, did it happen. Poor
-Mrs. Chadwick left to herself would have drifted to the shore by this
-time and Barney, at all events, would be swimming with his head up; it
-was Adrienne, of course, that kept them suffocating under the surface.
-“Well, I think it a pity you three should go off to Torquay alone,†he
-evaded. “What’s happening to the farm all this time?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy is seeing to it for Barney,†said Mrs. Chadwick. “She understands
-those things so well. Barney would not dream of letting the farm come
-between him and Adrienne at a time like this. He wants to be with her of
-course.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Of course. All I mean is that I wish he could be with her at
-Coldbrooks. I suppose the doctor knows what’s best, however.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad to hear you own that anybody can know what’s best, Roger,
-except yourself,†said Mrs. Chadwick with her singularly unprovocative
-severity. “Of course she must go to the sea and of course Barney and I
-must be with her. She has two excellent nurses; but I would never trust
-the best nurse for certain things. I remember so well when I was ill
-myself once and saw the nurse behind a screen, eating raspberry jam out
-of the pot with her finger. You can’t trust anybody, really.†And that
-was all he got out of Eleanor Chadwick. Adrienne had spoiled things.<a name="page_193" id="page_193"></a></p>
-
-<p>It was in June that he heard from Mrs. Averil that she and Nancy were in
-London for a few days staying with an old aunt in Eccleston Square. Mrs.
-Averil asked him to come to tea and he asked her and Nancy to do a play
-with him; but before these meetings took place he saw them both. It was
-at a Queen’s Hall concert on Sunday afternoon that Mrs. Aldesey called
-his attention to his friends and, to his surprise, Oldmeadow saw that
-Barney was with them. They sat across the gangway at some little
-distance and his first impression of the three was that they were not
-happy.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you know he was in town?†asked Mrs. Aldesey. “How ill he looks. I
-suppose he was frightfully upset about the baby, poor fellow.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Aldesey knew nothing of the catastrophes that had followed the
-baby’s death. He had instinctively avoided any reference to the latest
-progress of the Juggernaut.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s much better now, you know,†he said, and he wasn’t aware that he
-was exonerating Barney. “And they’re all back at Coldbrooks.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She’s not at Coldbrooks,†said Mrs. Aldesey. “She’s well enough to pay
-visits and Lady Lumley told me she was coming down to them for this
-week-end. I wonder he hasn’t gone with her.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow was wondering too. There was something about Barney’s attitude
-as he sat there beside his cousin, silent and absent-minded it seemed,
-listening as little to the music as he looked little at her, that he
-would rather Lydia Aldesey had not been there to observe. They had a
-curiously marital appearance, the young couple, or, rather, Barney had;
-the air of being safe with some one with whom no<a name="page_194" id="page_194"></a> explanations were
-needed and for whom no appearances must be kept up; some one, even, with
-whom he was so identified that he was hardly conscious of her. Nancy was
-not so unconscious. Once, when Barney leaned over to look at the
-programme, she drew away a little; and Oldmeadow even fancied a slight
-constraint in her glance when, now and then, he spoke to her. Had
-Adrienne spoiled things there, too? Mrs. Averil next day, in Eccleston
-Square, enlightened him as to Barney’s presence. “It’s been most
-unfortunate. He had planned to come up to this concert for a long time.
-He wanted Nancy to hear the César Franck with him. And then it appeared
-that Adrienne had made an engagement for them with the Lumleys. He
-refused to go, I’m afraid, and she made an issue of it and, from what
-poor Eleanor told me, there was rather a row. So Adrienne has gone off
-alone and Barney is here till this evening. He’s gone out now with Nancy
-to show her some pictures by a friend of his. It had all been arranged.
-So what were we to do about it, Roger?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Do about it? Why just what you have done. Why shouldn’t she go with
-him?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Why indeed? Except that Adrienne has made the issue. It’s awkward, of
-course, when you know there’s been a row, to go on as if nothing had
-happened.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow meditated. His friend’s little face had been pinched by the
-family’s distress when he had last seen it; it was clouded now by a
-closer, a more personal perplexity. “I suppose she made the issue on
-purpose so that Barney shouldn’t come up,†he said at length.<a name="page_195" id="page_195"></a></p>
-
-<p>“I really don’t know. Perhaps it had been arranged first with the
-Lumleys. If it was to keep him from coming, that didn’t come out. She
-wouldn’t let it come out; not into the open; of course.â€</p>
-
-<p>“So things are going very badly. I’d imagined, with all Barney’s
-contrition, that they might have worked out well.â€</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve worked out as badly, I’m afraid, as they could. He was full of
-contrition. He was as devoted as possible, when they came back in May.
-But nothing altered her unflagging melancholy. And I suppose what
-happened was that he got tired. Barney was always like that, from the
-time he was in the nursery. He’d go on being patient and good-tempered
-until, suddenly, everything would break down and he would sulk for days.
-It’s when he’s pushed too far. And she has pushed him too far. She’s set
-them all against him.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Who is them?†Oldmeadow asked. “I saw, when we met in London, that Mrs.
-Chadwick actually had been brought to look upon Barney as a sort of
-miscreant and Adrienne as a martyr. Who else is there?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, no one else except Palgrave and Barbara. Palgrave can be very
-exasperating, as you know, and he takes the attitude now that Barney has
-done Adrienne an irreparable injury. As you may imagine it isn’t a
-pleasant life Barney leads among them all.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I see,†said Oldmeadow. “I think I see it all. What happens now is that
-Barney more and more takes refuge with you and Nancy, and Adrienne more
-and more can’t bear it.<a name="page_196" id="page_196"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“That is precisely it, Roger,†said Mrs. Averil. “And what are we to do?
-How can I shut my door against Barney? Yet it is troubling me more than
-I can say. We are forced to seem on his side and against her. And
-Adrienne has her eye upon them.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Let her keep it on them,†said Oldmeadow in strong indignation. “And
-much good may it do her!â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it won’t do her any good&mdash;nor us!†said Mrs. Averil. “She’s sick
-with jealousy, Roger. Sick. I’m almost sorry for her when I see it and
-see her trying to hide it, and see it always, coming in by the back door
-when she shuts the front door on it&mdash;as it always does, you know. And
-Nancy sees it, of course; and is quite as sick as she is; and Barney, of
-course, remains as blind as a bat.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, as long as he remains blind&mdash;â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. As long as he does. But Adrienne will make him see. She’ll pick
-and pull at their friendship until Nancy will be forced into drawing
-back, and if she draws back Barney will see. What it’s already come to
-is that she has to stand still, and smile, while Adrienne scratches her,
-lest Barney should see she’s scratched; and once or twice of late I’ve
-had a suspicion that he has seen. It doesn’t endear Nancy to Adrienne
-that Barney should scowl at her when he’s caught her scratching.â€</p>
-
-<p>“What kind of scratches?†Oldmeadow asked, but Mrs. Averil had only time
-to say, “Oh, all kinds; she’s wonderful at scratches,†when the
-door-bell rang and Nancy, a moment after, came in.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy, if anything so fresh and neat could be so called, was looking
-rather dowdy, and he suspected that some self-effacing motive lay behind
-her choice of clothes.<a name="page_197" id="page_197"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Roger, Barney was so sorry to have to miss you,†she said. And, at
-all events, whatever else Adrienne had spoiled, she had not spoiled
-Nancy’s loving smile for him. “He had to catch the 4.45 to Coldbrooks,
-you know. There’s a prize heifer arriving this evening and he must be
-there to welcome it. You must see his herd of Holsteins, Roger.â€
-Friesians were, at that date, still Holsteins.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to,†said Oldmeadow. “But I don’t know when I shall, for, to
-tell you the truth, I’ve not been asked to Coldbrooks this summer. The
-first time since I’ve known them.â€</p>
-
-<p>Nancy looked at him in silence.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll come to us, of course,†said Mrs. Averil.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really think I’d better, all things considered?†Oldmeadow
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course you’d better. What possible reasons could there be for
-your not coming, except ones we don’t accept?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It won’t seem to range us too much in a hostile camp?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not more than we’re ranged already. Nancy and I are not going to give
-you up, my dear Roger, because Adrienne considers herself a martyr.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not, indeed. But it makes my exclusion from Coldbrooks more
-marked, perhaps, if I go to you. I imagine, though I am so much in her
-black books, that poor Mrs. Chadwick doesn’t want my exclusion to be
-marked.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’re quite right there. You are in her black books; but she doesn’t
-want it marked; she’d like to have you, really, if Adrienne weren’t
-there and if she didn’t feel shy. And I really think it will make it
-easier for her if you come to us instead. It will<a name="page_198" id="page_198"></a> tide it over a
-little. She’ll be almost able to feel you are with them. After all, you
-do come to us, often.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And I’ll go up with you to Coldbrooks as if nothing had happened? I
-confess I have a curiosity to see how Mrs. Barney takes me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She’s very good at taking things, you know,†said Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Averil cast a glance upon him. “It may be really something of a
-relief to their minds, Roger,†she said, “if you turn up as if nothing
-had happened. They are in need of distractions. They are all dreadfully
-on edge, though they won’t own to it, about Meg. The case is coming on
-quite soon now. Mrs. Hayward has lost no time, and poor Eleanor only
-keeps up because Adrienne is there to hold her up.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Where is Meg? Do they hear from her?â€</p>
-
-<p>“They hear from her constantly. She’s still on the Continent. She writes
-very easily and confidently. I can’t help imagining, all the same, that
-Adrienne is holding her up, too. She’s written to Nancy and Nancy hasn’t
-shown me her letters.â€</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothing to hide, Mother,†said Nancy, and Oldmeadow had never
-seen her look so dejected. “Nothing at all, except that she’s not as
-easy and confident as she wants to appear. Adrienne does hold her up.
-Poor Meg.<a name="page_199" id="page_199"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XIX-a" id="CHAPTER_XIX-a"></a>CHAPTER XIX</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">T<small>HE</small> picture of Adrienne holding them up was spread before Oldmeadow’s
-eyes on the hot July day when Mrs. Averil drove him up from the Little
-House to Coldbrooks. The shade of the great lime-tree on the lawn was
-like a canvas, only old Johnson, as he moved to and fro with tea-table,
-silver and strawberries, stepping from its cool green atmosphere into
-the framing sunshine. The Chadwick family, seated or lying in the shade,
-were all nearly as still as in a picture, and Adrienne was its centre.
-She sat in a high-backed wicker chair, her hands lying listlessly in her
-lap, a scarf about her shoulders, and in her black-veiled white, her
-wide, transparent hat, she was like a clouded moon. There was something
-even of daring, to Oldmeadow’s imagination, in their approach across the
-sunny spaces. Her eyes had so rested upon them from the moment that they
-had driven up, that they might have been bold wayfarers challenging the
-magic of a Circe in her web. Palgrave, in his white flannels, lay
-stretched at her feet, and he had been reading aloud to her; Barbara and
-Mrs. Chadwick sat listening while they worked on either hand. Only
-Barney was removed, sitting at some little distance, his back half
-turned, a pipe between his teeth and his eyes on a magazine that lay
-upon his knee. But the influence, the magic, was upon him too. He was
-consciously removed.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick sprang up to greet them. “This is nice!†she cried, and
-her knitting trailed behind<a name="page_200" id="page_200"></a> her as she came so that Barbara, laughing,
-stooped to catch and pick it up as she followed her; “I was expecting
-you! How nice and dear of you! On this hot day! I always think the very
-fishes must feel warm on a day like this! Or could they, do you
-think?&mdash;Dear Roger!†There was an evident altering in Mrs. Chadwick’s
-manner towards him since the meeting in the Park. She was, with all her
-fluster, manifestly glad to see him.</p>
-
-<p>Palgrave had hoisted himself to his feet and now stood beside Adrienne,
-eyeing them as a faithful hound eyes suspicious visitors.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it lovely in the shade,†Mrs. Chadwick continued, drawing them
-into it. “Adrienne darling, Aunt Monica after all. And we were afraid
-the heat might keep you away. I suppose the hill was very hot, Monica?â€
-Adrienne was still, apparently, something of an invalid, for she did not
-rise to greet them. Neither did she speak as she held out her hand to
-each of them in turn, and while an enveloping smile dwelt fondly on Mrs.
-Averil, she made no attempt to smile at Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>He found himself observing her with a sort of wonder. All the flaws and
-deformities of her maternity had fallen from her and she had the
-appearance almost of beauty. Yet he had never so little liked her face.
-Her dimly patterned features made him think of a Chinese picture he had
-once seen where, on a moth-wing background, pale chrysanthemums,
-mauvy-pink, a disk of carved jade with cord and tassel and a narrow
-ivory box softly spotted with darkness, conveyed in their seeming
-triviality an impression almost sinister of impersonality and magic.
-There was as little feeling in her face. It was like a mask.<a name="page_201" id="page_201"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Nancy?†Barney asked. He had got up and joined them, giving
-Oldmeadow’s hand, as they met, a curiously lifeless shake.</p>
-
-<p>“She had letters to write,†said Mrs. Averil.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I thought we’d arranged she was to come up and walk round the farm
-after tea with me,†said Barney and as he spoke Oldmeadow noted that
-Adrienne turned her head slowly, somewhat as she had done on the ominous
-morning in March, and rested her eyes upon him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’m so sorry,†said Mrs. Averil cheerfully. “She must have
-misunderstood. She had these letters to finish for the post.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barbara was reconnoitring at the tea-table. “Strawberries!†she
-announced. “Who said they’d be over? Oh, what a shame of Nancy not to
-come! Roger, why aren’t you staying here rather than with Aunt Monica,
-I’d like to know? Aren’t we grand enough for you since she’s had that
-bathroom put in!†Barbara had advanced to a lively flapperdom.</p>
-
-<p>“You see, by this plan, I get the bath with her and get you when she
-brings me up,†Oldmeadow retorted.</p>
-
-<p>“And leave Nancy behind! I call it a shame when we’re having the last
-strawberries&mdash;and you may have a bathroom with Aunt Monica, but her
-strawberries are over. Letters! Who ever heard of Nancy writing
-letters&mdash;except to you, Barney. She was always writing to you when you
-were living in London&mdash;before you married. And what screeds you used to
-send her&mdash;all about art!†said Barbara, and that her liveliness cast a
-spell of silence was apparent to everyone but herself.<a name="page_202" id="page_202"></a></p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick took Oldmeadow’s arm and drew him aside. “You’ll be able
-to come later and be quite with us, won’t you, Roger?†she said
-“September is really a lovelier month, don’t you think? Adrienne is
-going to take Palgrave and Barbara for a motor-trip in September. Won’t
-it be lovely for them?†Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a swiftness that did
-not veil a sense of insecurity. “Barbara’s never seen the Alps. They are
-going to the Tyrol.â€</p>
-
-<p>“If we don’t have a European war by then,†Oldmeadow suggested. “What is
-Barney going to do?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Barney is going to the Barclay’s in Scotland, to shoot. He loves
-that. A war, Roger? What do you mean? All those tiresome Serbians? Why,
-they won’t go into the Tyrol, will they?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not the Tyrol; but they may make it difficult for other people
-to go there.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Do you hear what Roger is saying?†Mrs. Chadwick turned to her family.
-“That the Serbians may make war by September and that it might interfere
-with the trip. But I’m sure Sir Edward will quiet them. He always does.
-Though he is a Liberal, I’ve always felt him to be such a good man,â€
-said Mrs. Chadwick, “and really patriotic. Simply sitting round a table
-with him cools their heads more than one would believe possible.
-Dreadfully violent people, I believe, killing their kings and queens and
-throwing them out of the window. I always think there’s nothing in the
-world for controlling people’s tempers like getting them to sit together
-round a table. I wonder why it is. Something to do with having your legs
-out of the way, perhaps. People don’t look nearly so<a name="page_203" id="page_203"></a> threatening if
-their legs are hidden, do they? My poor cousin, Fanny Jocelyn, used
-always to say that if any of the clergymen in Fred’s diocese got very
-troublesome her one recipe was to ask them to lunch, or, if they were
-very bad, to dinner. But she had wonderful tact&mdash;that gift, you know,
-for seeming to care simply <i>immensely</i> for the person she was talking
-to. Francis used to tell her that when she looked at you as if you were
-the only person in the world she loved she was really working out her
-next menu.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid if war comes it won’t be restricted to people, like Serbians
-and clergymen, who can be quieted by being asked to dinner,†said
-Oldmeadow laughing. “We’ll be fighting, too.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And who will we fight?†Palgrave inquired. After passing tea, he had
-resumed his place at Adrienne’s feet. “Who has been getting in our way
-now?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you read the papers?†Oldmeadow asked him.</p>
-
-<p>“Not when I can avoid it,†said Palgrave. “They’ll be bellowing out the
-same old Jingo stuff on the slightest provocation, of course. As far as
-I can make out the Serbians are the most awful brutes and Russia is
-egging them on. But when it comes to a crime against humanity like war,
-every one is responsible.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Are you ready for strawberries, Aunt Monica,†Barbara interposed. “If
-there is a war, I hope we may be in it so that I can do some of my first
-aid on real people at last.â€</p>
-
-<p>She was carrying strawberries now to Adrienne who, as she leaned down,
-took her gently by the<a name="page_204" id="page_204"></a> wrist, and said some low-toned words to her. “I
-know, my angel. Horrid of me!†said Barbara. “But one can’t take war
-seriously, can one!â€</p>
-
-<p>“I can,†said Mrs. Averil. “Too many of my friends had their sons and
-husbands killed in South Africa.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And it’s human nature,†said Mrs. Chadwick, eating her strawberries
-mournfully. “Like the poor: whom you have always with you, you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Human nature is altered already a good deal more than governments
-imagine,†said Palgrave, “and they’ll find themselves pretty well dished
-if they try to bring on a capitalist war now. The workers all over the
-world are beginning to see whose the hands are that pull the strings and
-they’ll refuse to dance to their piping. They’ll down weapons just as
-they’ve learned, at last, to down tools; and without them you can do
-nothing. That’s the way human nature will end war.â€</p>
-
-<p>“A spirited plan, no doubt,†said Oldmeadow, “and effective if all the
-workers came to be of the same mind simultaneously. But if those of one
-country downed weapons and those of another didn’t, the first would get
-their throats cut for their pains.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s easy to sneer,†Palgrave retorted. “As a matter of principle, I’d
-rather have my throat cut by a hired ruffian than kill an innocent
-man&mdash;even if he did belong to a nation that happened to be cleverer and
-more efficient than my own. That’s a crime, of course, that we can’t
-forgive.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t talk such rot, Palgrave,†Barney now remarked in a tone of
-apathetic disgust.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon,†Palgrave sat up instantly,<a name="page_205" id="page_205"></a> flushing all over his
-face. “I think it’s truth and sanity.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not truth and sanity. It’s rot and stupid rot,†said Barney. “Some
-more tea, please, Barbara.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Calling names isn’t argument,†said Palgrave. “I could call names, too,
-if it came to that. It’s calling names that is stupid. I merely happen
-to believe in what Christ said.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but, dear&mdash;Christ drove the money-lenders out of the Temple very,
-very roughly,†Mrs. Chadwick interposed with the head-long irrelevance
-characteristic of her in such crises. “Thongs must hurt so much, mustn’t
-they? He surely believed in punishing people who did wrong.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Which nation doesn’t do wrong, Mummy? Which nation is a Christ with a
-right to punish another? It’s farcical. And punishing isn’t killing.
-Christ didn’t kill malefactors.â€</p>
-
-<p>“The Gadarene swine,†Mrs. Chadwick murmured. “They were killed. So
-painfully, too, poor things. I never could understand about that. I hope
-the Higher Criticism will manage to get rid of it, for it doesn’t really
-seem kind. They had done no wrong at all and I’ve always been specially
-fond of pigs myself.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but you never saw a pig with a devil in it,†Oldmeadow suggested,
-to which Mrs. Chadwick murmured, “I’m sure they seem to have devils in
-them, sometimes, poor dears, when they won’t let themselves be caught.
-Do get some more cream, Barbara. It’s really too hot for arguments,
-isn’t it,†and Mrs. Chadwick sighed with the relief of having rounded
-that dangerous corner.<a name="page_206" id="page_206"></a></p>
-
-<p>Barbara went away with the cream-jug and Johnson emerged bearing the
-afternoon post.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah. Letters. Good.†Palgrave sat up to take his and Adrienne’s share.
-“One for you, Adrienne; from Meg. Now we shall see what she says about
-meeting us in the Tyrol.†His cheeks were still flushed and his eyes
-brilliant with anger. Though his words were for Adrienne his voice was
-for Barney, at whom he did not glance.</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne unfolded the foreign sheets, and held them so that Palgrave,
-leaning against her knee, could read with her.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick had grown crimson. She looked at Oldmeadow. “Dear Meg is
-having such an interesting time,†she told him. “She and Eric are seeing
-all manner of delightful places and picking up some lovely bits of old
-furniture.†Oldmeadow bowed assent. He had his eyes on Adrienne and he
-was wondering about Barbara.</p>
-
-<p>“What news is there, dear?†Mrs. Chadwick continued in the same badly
-controlled voice. Palgrave’s face had clouded.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid it may be bad news, Mother Nell,†said Adrienne looking up.</p>
-
-<p>It was the first time Oldmeadow had heard her voice that afternoon and
-he could hardly have believed it the voice that had once reminded him of
-a blue ribbon. It was still slow, still deliberate and soft; but it had
-now the steely thrust and intention of a dagger.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s this accursed war talk!†Palgrave exclaimed. “Eric evidently
-thinks it serious and he has to come home at once. What rotten luck.â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne handed the sheets to Mrs. Chadwick.<a name="page_207" id="page_207"></a> “It will all have blown
-over by September,†she said. “As Mother Nell says, we can trust Sir
-Edward to keep us out of anything so wicked as a war. I am so completely
-with you in all you say about the wickedness of war, Paladin, although I
-do not see its causes quite so simply, perhaps.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was the first time that Oldmeadow had heard the new name for her
-knight.</p>
-
-<p>“For my part,†said Barney, casting a glance at the house, Barbara not
-having yet reappeared, “I shall be grateful to the war if it dishes your
-trip to the Tyrol. It’s most unsuitable for Barbara.â€</p>
-
-<p>He did not look at his wife as he spoke. His hat brim pulled down over
-his eyes, he sat with folded arms and stared in front of him.</p>
-
-<p>“You find it unsuitable for one sister to meet another?†Adrienne
-inquired. Her eyes were on Barney, but Oldmeadow could not interpret
-their gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“Most unsuitable, to use no stronger word,†said Barney, “while one
-sister is living with a man whose name she doesn’t bear.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You mean to say,†said Palgrave, sitting cross-legged at Adrienne’s
-feet and grasping his ankles with both hands, “that Meg, until she’s
-legally married, isn’t fit for her little sister to associate with?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Just what I do mean, Palgrave. Precisely what I do mean,†said Barney,
-and his face, reddening, took on its rare but characteristic expression
-of sullen anger. “And I’ll thank you&mdash;in my house, after all&mdash;to keep
-out of an argument that doesn’t concern you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Barney; Palgrave,†murmured Mrs. Chadwick<a name="page_208" id="page_208"></a> supplicatingly. Adrienne,
-not moving her eyes from her husband’s face, laid her hand on Palgrave’s
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“It does concern me,†said Palgrave, and he put up his hand and grasped
-Adrienne’s. “Barbara’s well-being concerns me as much as it does you;
-and your wife’s happiness concerns me a good deal more. I can promise
-you that I wouldn’t trouble your hospitality for another day if it
-weren’t for her&mdash;and Mother. It’s perfectly open to you, of course, to
-turn me out of my home whenever you like to make use of your legal
-privilege. But until I’m turned out I stay&mdash;for their sakes.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You young ass! You unmitigated young ass!†Barney snarled, springing to
-his feet. “All right, Mother. Don’t bother. I’ll leave you to your
-protector for the present. I only wish he were young enough to be given
-what he needs&mdash;a thorough good hiding. I’ll go down and see Nancy. Don’t
-expect me back to dinner.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy is busy, my dear,†poor Mrs. Averil, deeply flushing, interposed,
-while Palgrave, under his breath, yet audibly, murmured: “Truly
-Kiplingesque! Home and Hidings! Our Colonial history summed up!â€</p>
-
-<p>“She would be here if she weren’t busy,†said Mrs. Averil.</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t bother her,†said Barney. “I’ll sit in the garden and read.
-It’s more peaceful than being here.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Please tell dear Nancy that it’s ten days at least since <i>I’ve</i> seen
-her,†said Adrienne, “and that I miss her and beg that she’ll give me,
-sometime, a few of her spare moments.<a name="page_209" id="page_209"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>At that Barney stopped short, and looked at his wife. “No, Adrienne, I
-won’t,†he said with a startling directness. “I’ll take no messages
-whatever from you to Nancy. Let Nancy alone&mdash;do you see? That’s all I’ve
-got to ask of you. Let her alone. She and Aunt Monica are the only
-people you haven’t set against me and I don’t intend to quarrel with
-Nancy to please you, I promise you.â€</p>
-
-<p>Sitting motionless and upright, her hand laid on Palgrave’s shoulder,
-her face as unalterable as a little mask, Adrienne received these
-well-aimed darts as a Saint Sebastian might have received the arrows.
-Barney stared hard at her for a moment, then turned his back and marched
-out into the sunlight and Oldmeadow, as he saw him go, felt that he
-witnessed the end, as he had, little more than a year ago, witnessed the
-beginning, of an epoch. What was there left to build on after such a
-scene? And what must have passed between husband and wife during their
-hours of intimacy to make it credible? Barney was not a brute.</p>
-
-<p>When Barney had turned through the entrance gates and
-disappeared&mdash;Adrienne’s eyes dropped to Palgrave’s. “I think I’ll go in,
-Paladin,†she said, and it was either with faintness or with the mere
-stillness of her rage. “I think I’ll lie down for a little while.â€</p>
-
-<p>Palgrave had leaped to his feet and, as she rose, drew her hand within
-his arm, and Mrs. Chadwick, her eyes staring wide, hastened to her: but
-Adrienne gently put her away. “No, no, dearest Mother Nell. Paladin will
-help me. You must stay with Aunt Monica and Mr. Oldmeadow.†Her hand
-rested for a moment on Mrs. Chadwick’s shoulder and she<a name="page_210" id="page_210"></a> looked into her
-eyes. “I’m so sorry, Mother Nell. I meant no harm.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my darling child! As if I did not know that!†Mrs. Chadwick moaned
-and, as Adrienne moved away, she turned as if half distraught to her two
-friends. “Oh, it’s dreadful! dreadful!†she nearly wept. “Oh, how can he
-treat her so&mdash;before you all! It’s breaking my heart!â€</p>
-
-<p>Barbara came running out with the cream. “Great Scott!†she exclaimed,
-stopping short. “What’s become of everybody?â€</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve all gone, dear. Yes, we’ve all finished. No one wants any more
-strawberries. Take yours away, will you, dear, we want to have a little
-talk, Aunt Monica, Roger and I.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose it’s Barney again,†said Barbara, standing still and gazing
-indignantly around her. “Where’s Adrienne?â€</p>
-
-<p>“She has gone to lie down, dear. Yes. Barney has been very unkind.â€</p>
-
-<p>“About my trip, I suppose? He’s been too odious about my trip and it’s
-only the other day he made Adrienne cry. What possible business is it of
-Barney’s, I’d like to know? One would think he imagined that wives and
-sisters were a sort of chattel. Why mayn’t I stay, Mother&mdash;if you’re
-going to talk about my trip? Adrienne has explained everything to me and
-I think Meg was quite right and I’d do the same myself if I were in her
-place. So I’m perfectly able to understand.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know, dear; I know; Adrienne is so wonderful. But don’t say things
-like that, I beg of you, for it makes me very, very unhappy. And please
-run away for a little while, for we have other things to talk of.<a name="page_211" id="page_211"></a> I’m
-afraid there may be no trip at all, Barbara; Meg may be coming home at
-once. The letters had news about it, and Eric has to go to the war&mdash;if
-there is a war, you see.†Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a supplicatory note
-very unlike her usual placid if complaining authority.</p>
-
-<p>“But I’d like to hear about the letters, then. Do we really have to give
-up the trip? I’m sure it’s Barney at the bottom of it. He’s been trying
-to dish it from the first and I simply won’t stand it from him.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not Barney at all, Barbara. You shall hear all that there is to
-hear. And you mustn’t, really, forget that Barney is your elder brother
-and has some right to say what you should do&mdash;even though we mayn’t
-agree with him.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No, he hasn’t. Not an atom,†Barbara declared. “If anyone has any
-right, except you, it’s Adrienne, because she’s a bigger, wiser person
-than any of us.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And since you’ve borne your testimony, Barbara,†Oldmeadow suggested,
-“you might obey your mother and give us the benefit of your experience
-on an occasion when it’s invited.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know you’re against Adrienne, Roger,†said Barbara, but with a
-sulkiness that showed surrender. “I shan’t force myself on you, I assure
-you, and girls of fifteen aren’t quite the infants in arms you may
-imagine. If Adrienne weren’t here to stand up for me I don’t know where
-I’d be. Because, you know, you <i>are</i> weak, Mother. Yes you are. You’ve
-been really wobbling like anything about my trip and trying to wriggle
-out of it whenever you had a loop-hole, and Adrienne thinks you’re weak,
-I know, for she told me so, and said we must help<a name="page_212" id="page_212"></a> you to be brave and
-strong and that you belonged to a generation that had its eyes tightly
-bandaged from birth. So there!†And delivering this effective shot,
-Barbara marched away, not forgetting to pick up her plate of
-strawberries as she passed the table.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick attempted to conceal her confusion by following her
-child’s retreating figure with grave disapprobation and Oldmeadow seized
-the propitious moment to remark: “I can’t help feeling that there’s
-something to be said for Barney, all the same. His wife <i>has</i> set you
-all against him, hasn’t she? I suspect Barbara’s right, too, my dear
-friend, and that in your heart of hearts you dislike this trip of hers
-as much as he does. Certainly Barbara isn’t a very pleasing example of
-Adrienne’s influence.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She is very naughty, very naughty and rebellious,†poor Mrs. Chadwick
-murmured, twisting and untwisting her handkerchief. “I know I’ve not a
-strong character, but I never spoiled my children and dear Adrienne
-does, I feel, spoil Barbara by taking her so seriously and talking to
-her as if she were grown up, you know. I had an aunt who married at
-sixteen; but it didn’t turn out at all happily. They quarrelled
-constantly and she had two sets of twins, poor thing&mdash;almost like a
-judgment, dear Mamma used to say. But of course Barbara is really too
-young to understand; and so I’ve told dear Adrienne. Not that she isn’t
-perfectly frank about it. She’s told me over and over again that
-weakness was my besetting danger and that I must stand up straight and
-let the winds of freedom blow away my cobwebs. So dear and original,
-always, you know. And of course I see her point of<a name="page_213" id="page_213"></a> view and Barbara
-will, no doubt, be a bigger, finer personâ€&mdash;Mrs. Chadwick’s voice
-trailed off in its echo. “But I don’t agree with you, Roger; I don’t
-agree with you at all!†she took up with sudden vehemence, “about the
-trip. I don’t agree that my poor Meg is a leper to be avoided until a
-legal ceremony has been performed. I think that a cruel
-convention&mdash;cruel, base and cowardly. She must have suffered so much
-already. Nothing will give her so much courage as for us to be seen
-standing by her. Adrienne has explained all that most beautifully to
-Barbara. And how true love is the most sacred thing in life.â€</p>
-
-<p>“My dear friend, Meg isn’t a leper, of course, and we all intend to
-stand by her. But it is certainly best that a young girl like Barbara
-shouldn’t be asked to meet, or understand, or exonerate such difficult
-situations.â€</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I’ve tried to say to Eleanor,†Mrs. Averil murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“And why not, Roger! Why not!†Mrs. Chadwick cried, surprisingly yet not
-convincingly aroused. “Nothing develops the character so much as facing
-and understanding difficulty. And as for exoneration&mdash;I don’t agree with
-you, and Adrienne doesn’t agree. You and Monica are conventionalists and
-we must live on a higher plane than convention. I’m sure I try to,
-though it’s very hard sometimes, but the noblest things are hardest.
-There is nothing to exonerate. Meg was following her own light in doing
-what she did.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not a question of Meg, but of her situation,†Oldmeadow returned.</p>
-
-<p>“And because of her situation, because she is so in<a name="page_214" id="page_214"></a> need of help and
-loyalty, you ask that Barbara should draw back her skirts from her! Oh!
-I knew it!†cried Mrs. Chadwick, “I knew that you would feel like that!
-That is why I felt it would be happier if you were not here with
-Adrienne.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You need hardly tell me that,†said Oldmeadow smiling. “But it’s not a
-question of convention, except in so far as convention means right
-feeling and good taste. Meg, whatever her lights&mdash;and personally I don’t
-believe that she followed them&mdash;has done something that involves pain
-and humiliation for all concerned with her, and whether she was or was
-not justified in doing it is a moral problem that a child shouldn’t be
-asked to meet. Such problems should be kept from her until she is old
-enough to understand them.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick’s vehemence had only fictitiously sustained her. It
-dropped from her now and for a little while she sat silent, and the
-confusion of her heart was piteously revealed to her friend as she said
-at last, “If there <i>is</i> a war, it will all settle itself, won’t it, for
-then Barbara couldn’t go. I don’t try to wriggle out of it. That’s most
-unfair and untrue. I’ve promised Adrienne and I agree with Adrienne
-about it. I can’t explain it clearly, as she does; it’s all quite, quite
-different when Adrienne explains it. She seems to hold me up and you and
-Monica pull me down&mdash;oh, yes, you do, Roger. Of course it would kill
-me&mdash;I know that I should die, if Barbara were to do what Meg has done;
-you mustn’t think Adrienne <i>wants</i> her to behave like that, you know.
-Adrienne only wants people to be brave and follow their light; but your
-light needn’t be a married man, need it? And sometimes I think it isn’t
-<i>really</i> so<a name="page_215" id="page_215"></a> serious&mdash;falling in love, you know. I’m sure I thought <i>I</i>
-was in love half a dozen times before Francis proposed. It’s a question
-of seeing what’s best for you all round, isn’t it, and it can’t be best
-if it’s a married man, can it? Oh! I know I’m saying what Adrienne
-wouldn’t like, now; because it sounds so worldly and as if I believed in
-the French way. But I don’t at all. I think love’s everything, too. Only
-it always seemed to me when I was a girl that love meant white satin and
-orange-blossoms; and my poor, poor Meg can never wear those now. I
-should feel miserable, quite miserable about her, of course, if Adrienne
-weren’t here to make me see the big, real things instead of the little
-ones. And Barney has been so unkind. Sneering and scoffing at
-everythingâ€&mdash;her voice quivered. “However, if there’s a war, that will
-settle it. Barbara couldn’t go if there was a war.<a name="page_216" id="page_216"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XX-a" id="CHAPTER_XX-a"></a>CHAPTER XX</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">T<small>HE</small> war thus had its uses to Mrs. Chadwick. Barbara did not go to the
-Tyrol. By the end of September Oldmeadow and Barney were in training,
-one on the Berkshire and one on the Wiltshire downs, and Meg was
-ambiguously restored to her family at Coldbrooks.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow had not seen Barney for many days, when they met one afternoon
-at Paddington and travelled together as far as Didcot. They had the
-carriage to themselves and though Barney’s demeanour was reticent there
-were many things about which, it was evident, he found it a relief to be
-communicative. It was from him that Oldmeadow learned of Meg’s return.</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll be in a pretty box, won’t she, if Hayward is killed,†he said,
-smoking his cigarette and not looking at his friend. “He’s over there,
-you know, and for my part I think there’s very little chance of any of
-them coming back alive.â€</p>
-
-<p>They both smoked in silence for a little while after this, contemplating
-the ordeal in which their country was involved rather than their own
-relation to it; but Oldmeadow’s mind returned presently to Barney’s
-difficulties and he asked him if it had been to see Hayward off that
-he’d just been up to London.</p>
-
-<p>Barney, at this, had a quiet sardonic laugh. “Good heavens, no,†he
-said. “Hayward went in the first week and Adrienne and Palgrave went up
-with Meg to see him off. Even if I’d wanted to, I’d have been allowed to
-have no hand in that.<a name="page_217" id="page_217"></a> Adrienne is seeing to it all. Lawyers, money, I
-don’t know what. No; I went up to spend my leave with old Boyd at his
-place in Chelsea. I didn’t want to go home. Home is the last place I
-want to be just now.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow at this maintained a silence that could not pretend surprise
-and Barney continued in a moment. “Palgrave isn’t coming in, you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You mean he’s carrying out his pacifist ideas?â€</p>
-
-<p>“If they are his,†said Barney in his colourless yet sardonic voice.
-“Any ideas of Palgrave’s are likely to be Adrienne’s, you know. She got
-hold of him from the first.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, after all,†Oldmeadow after another moment felt impelled to say,
-“She got hold of you, too. In the same way; by believing in herself and
-by understanding you. She thinks she’s right.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! ha!†laughed Barney and for a moment, an acutely uncomfortable one
-for Oldmeadow, he turned his eyes on his friend. “Thinks she’s right!
-You needn’t tell me that, Roger!â€</p>
-
-<p>It had indeed, Oldmeadow felt, hardly been decent of him.</p>
-
-<p>“I know. Of course she would. But, all the same, people must be allowed
-to hold their own opinions.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Must they?†said Barney. “At a time like this? Adrienne must, of
-course; as a woman she doesn’t come into it; she brings other people in,
-that is to say, and keeps out herself. Besides she’s an American. But
-Palgrave shouldn’t be allowed the choice. He’s dishonouring us all&mdash;as
-Meg has done. Poor, foolish, wretched Mother! She’s seeing it at last,
-though she won’t allow herself to say it, or, rather, Adrienne won’t
-allow her&mdash;†He checked himself.<a name="page_218" id="page_218"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Dishonour is a strong word, Barney. Palgrave is hardly more than a
-boy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Jim Errington is a year younger than Palgrave, and Peter Layard six
-months. They’re both in. I don’t think nineteen is too young to
-dishonour your family. If Palgrave committed a murder, he’d be hanged.
-But it will no doubt come to conscription and then we’ll see where he’ll
-find himself. Herded in as a Tommy. All this talk of a few months is
-folly.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know. Yes. Folly,†said Oldmeadow absently. “Have you tried to have
-it out with Palgrave, Barney? If he only hears Adrienne’s side what can
-you expect of him? If you leave them all to sink or swim without you,
-you mustn’t blame Adrienne for steering as best she can.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Sink or swim without me!†Barney echoed. “Why they’d none of them
-listen to me. You saw well enough how it was with them that day in July
-when you came up. Adrienne is twice as strong as I am when it comes to
-anything like a struggle and she has them all firmly under her thumb.
-She steers because she intends to steer and intends I shan’t. I’ve tried
-nothing with Palgrave, except to keep my hands off him. Mother’s talked
-to him, and Meg’s talked to him; but nothing does any good. Oh, yes; Meg
-hangs on Adrienne because she’s got nothing else to hang to; but she’s
-frightfully down on Palgrave all the same. They’re all united against
-me, but they’re not united among themselves by any means. It’s not a
-peaceful family party at Coldbrooks, I promise you. Poor Mother spends
-most of her time shut up in her room crying.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney offered no further information on this<a name="page_219" id="page_219"></a> occasion and Oldmeadow
-asked for no more. It was from Mrs. Aldesey, some weeks later, that he
-heard that Eric Hayward had been killed. Mrs. Aldesey was his most
-punctual correspondent and her letters, full of pungent, apposite
-accounts of how the war was affecting London, the pleasantest
-experiences that came to him on the Berkshire downs, where, indeed, he
-did not find life unpleasant. Mrs. Aldesey made time for these long
-letters after tiring days spent among Belgian refugees and his sense of
-comradeship had been immensely deepened by the vast, new experience they
-were, from their different angles, sharing. It was difficult, on the
-soft October day, to dissociate the mere pleasure of reading her letter
-from the miserable news she gave. Yet he knew, stretched at ease after
-strenuous exercise, the canvas of his tent idly flapping above him and
-the sunlight falling across his feet, that it was very miserable news
-indeed and must miserably affect his friends at Coldbrooks. What was to
-become of poor Meg now? And after his mind had paused on poor Meg a pang
-of memory brought back the face of his setter John. Poor Hayward.</p>
-
-<p>“She must, of course, find some work at once,†Mrs. Aldesey wrote. “The
-war does help to solve problems of this sort as nothing else before ever
-could. She must nurse, or drive an ambulance and perhaps by the time
-it’s all over we’ll have forgotten irrelevancies that happened so long
-ago. Sometimes it feels like that to me and I know I’m much too old to
-face the world that will have grown up out of the wreckage of the world
-I knew.†Mrs. Aldesey, still, always spoke of herself as antique,
-relegated and on the shelf. Rather absurd of her, as her friend pointed<a name="page_220" id="page_220"></a>
-out in his reply, when she was obviously one of the people who were
-going to make the new world. She was organizing the Belgians in the most
-remarkable manner.</p>
-
-<p>As to Coldbrooks he hesitated. He could hardly see himself writing to
-Mrs. Chadwick or to Meg. Of Nancy he felt a little shy. There would be
-too much to say to Nancy if he said anything and he allowed the
-anonymous calamity that had overtaken his friends to pass without
-comment or condolence. But after an interval of some weeks it was from
-Nancy herself that he heard. Nancy seemed always to be selected as the
-vehicle for other people’s emergencies.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Roger,†she wrote. “You have heard how very unhappy we all are. It
-is dreadful to see poor Meg, and Aunt Eleanor makes it really worse for
-her. Meg wears mourning, like a widow, and she is terribly bitter about
-Palgrave, and about Adrienne, too. Doesn’t that seem to you very strange
-and unjust? Adrienne is doing for Palgrave what she did for
-Meg&mdash;standing by him. It is all more unhappy than you can imagine.
-Palgrave is at New College, now, you know, and I’m writing, because Aunt
-Eleanor’s one hope is that you may be able to talk to him. Kindly, you
-know, Roger; and not as if you thought him a criminal or a coward; that
-is worse than useless, naturally. Palgrave is very arrogant; but you
-know what a tender heart he really has and I am sure that he is very
-lonely and unhappy. So be kind and understanding, won’t you? He really
-cares for you and trusts you more than he likes to show; and of course
-he would expect you to be against him.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow was going into Oxford in a week<a name="page_221" id="page_221"></a>’s time and he wrote to
-Palgrave and asked him to give him tea. “I’ve got to talk to you, if
-you’ll let me,†he said, “but I shan’t make myself a nuisance, I promise
-you. I only want to satisfy myself that you have thought everything out,
-and if you have I’ll be able to tell your people that they must give up
-tormenting themselves and you about it. I shall like talking over your
-work with you, too, if I may, and renewing my own Oxford memories.†So
-conciliatory, so affectionate (and he found it easy to be affectionate
-to poor Palgrave) was the tone of the letter that he had a swift reply.
-Palgrave would be very glad to see him.</p>
-
-<p>It was a melancholy, deserted Oxford into which Oldmeadow drove his
-little car on a late October afternoon. Most of the youths he saw were
-of a nondescript variety, a type to whom Oxford means scholastic
-opportunity and nothing more. There were dark-skinned lads from distant
-parts of the Empire looking, to Oldmeadow’s eye, rather pitiful and
-doomed to disappointment, and a hurrying, absorbed little Jap had an
-almost empty Broad as a setting for his alien figure.</p>
-
-<p>Palgrave’s name was freshly painted at the bottom of a staircase in the
-Garden Quad and Oldmeadow mounted to rooms that most delightfully
-overlooked the garden and its catalpa-tree.</p>
-
-<p>Palgrave was ready for him. The tea was laid and he stood at the table
-cutting a cake as Oldmeadow entered. But some one else, too, was ready,
-for there, in the window-seat, her gaze fixed on the waning golds and
-russets beneath, sat Adrienne Toner. Oldmeadow, very much and very
-disagreeably affected, paused at the door.<a name="page_222" id="page_222"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Come in, Mr. Oldmeadow,†said Adrienne, and there was a strange, jaded
-eagerness in the gaze she fixed on him. “I’ve only come for tea. I have
-to go directly afterwards. I am staying in Oxford, now, you know. To be
-near Palgrave.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Meg’s turned her out of Coldbrooks,†Palgrave announced, standing
-still, over the tea-tray, his hands in his pockets while, with bent
-head, he looked from under his brows at Oldmeadow. “Meg, you understand;
-for whose sake she’s gone through everything. We’re pariahs together,
-now; she and I.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not quite true or fair to say that, Palgrave,†said Adrienne,
-whose eyes had returned to the garden. “Meg hasn’t turned me out. I felt
-it would be happier for her if I weren’t there; and for your
-Mother&mdash;since they feel as they do about what has happened; and happier
-for you and me to be together. You can’t be surprised at Meg. She is
-nearly beside herself with grief.â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne was very much altered. The magic of the lime-tree scene no
-longer lay about her. Her skin was sallow, her eyes sunken, her
-projecting mouth was at once stubborn, weary and relaxed. She had been
-almost beautiful on that July day and to-day she was definitely ugly.
-Oldmeadow saw that some intent inner preoccupation held her thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“I <i>am</i> surprised at her; very much surprised,†said Palgrave, “though I
-might have warned you that Meg wasn’t a person worth risking a great
-deal for. Oh, yes, she’s nearly beside herself all right. She’s lost the
-man she cared for and she can’t, now, ever be made ‘respectable.’ Oh, I
-see further into Meg’s grief than you do, my poor Adrienne. She<a name="page_223" id="page_223"></a>’s just
-as conventional and unheroic at heart as Mother; and that’s what <i>she</i>
-minds&mdash;more than anything.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow, sunken in the deep chair Palgrave had drawn for him to the
-table, watched the curious interchange, and after a pause, in her jaded
-voice, Adrienne from the window-seat commented: “I understand her rage
-and misery. It’s because her grief is divided and spoiled and tainted
-like that that she is distracted.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Will you pour out tea?†Palgrave asked her gloomily. “You’ll see
-anyone’s side, always, except your own.â€</p>
-
-<p>To this Adrienne, rising and coming forward to the table, made no reply.
-She wore a dark dress that recalled to Oldmeadow the one in which he had
-first seen her; the short jacket tying across white in front and white
-ruffles falling about her neck and hands. A small, dark hat was bent
-down about her face.</p>
-
-<p>Strange, brooding face. What was she thinking of, Oldmeadow wondered, as
-he watched her hands, impeded by the falling ruffles, moving with the
-old, fumbling gestures among the tea-things; she had constantly to throw
-back the ruffles, and the tea-pot, after all, was too heavy for her. It
-slipped on one side as she lifted it and the hot tea poured over her
-hand. She kept her hold bravely and Oldmeadow rescued her.</p>
-
-<p>“How stupid I am!†she said, biting her lip.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve scalded your hand,†said Palgrave, eyeing her with his air no
-longer of rapturous but of gloomy devotion.</p>
-
-<p>They made Oldmeadow think of comrade political prisoners moving off
-together in a convoy to<a name="page_224" id="page_224"></a> Siberia. There was something as bleak, as
-heavy, as uninspired in their aspect. He could not think that Palgrave
-could now catch much light or flame from such a companion. They would
-trudge through the snow; condemned, but together; to be together was the
-best thing, now, that life offered them.</p>
-
-<p>She said that the scald was nothing and asked to be trusted to go on
-with the tea, grasping the handle with resolution. Oldmeadow, however,
-standing beside her, insisted on filling the cups for her.</p>
-
-<p>“You can be allowed to put in the milk and sugar, you see,†he said. He
-was aware, as he thus succoured and rallied her, of an influx of feeling
-like the feeling that came with the uncanny dreams. Here she was, and
-reality had caught her. She deserved to be caught, of course; tragic,
-meddling Pierrot. But his heart was heavy and gentle; as in his dreams.</p>
-
-<p>They sat round the table together. On the mantelpiece was a large,
-framed photograph of Adrienne; on the walls photographs of a Botticelli
-Madonna, a Mantegna from Padua and the da Vinci drawing for the Christ
-of the Last Supper. Seeing Oldmeadow’s eyes on them Palgrave said:
-“Adrienne gave me those. And lots of the books.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t forget the beautiful cushions, Palgrave,†said Adrienne, with
-a flicker of her old, contented playfulness. “I’m sure good cushions are
-the foundation of a successful study of philosophy.â€</p>
-
-<p>The cushions were certainly very good; and very beautiful, as Oldmeadow
-commented. “That gorgeous chair, too,†said Palgrave. “It ought to make
-a Plato of me.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was curious, the sense they gave him of trusting<a name="page_225" id="page_225"></a> him. Were they
-aware, if only sub-consciously, that he was feeling Adrienne, her
-follies and misdeeds thick upon her, ill-used? Or was it only that they
-had come down to such fundamental securities as were left to them and
-felt that with him, at all events, they were in the hands of an
-impartial judge?</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a happy life Meg and Mother lead at Coldbrooks, as you may
-imagine,†Palgrave took up the theme that preoccupied him. “They only
-see Nancy and Aunt Monica, of course. Barbara is at school and Barney,
-as you are probably aware, never comes near his disgraced sister. Would
-you believe it, Roger,†Palgrave went on, while Oldmeadow saw that a
-dull colour crept up to Adrienne’s face and neck as her husband was thus
-mentioned, “Meg blames Adrienne now for the whole affair! About Eric and
-herself! Actually! On the one hand Eric is her hero for whom she’ll
-mourn for ever and on the other Adrienne is responsible for the fact
-that she’s not ‘respectable’ and can’t claim to be his widow. Oh, don’t
-ask me how she contrives to work it out! Women like Meg don’t need logic
-when they’ve a thong in their hands and want to use it. And Adrienne’s
-shoulders are bared for the lash! God! It makes me fairly mad to think
-of it!â€</p>
-
-<p>“Please, Palgrave!†Adrienne supplicated in a low voice. She did not
-eat. She had drunk her tea and sat looking down at her plate. “Don’t
-think of it any more. Meg is very, very unhappy. We can hardly imagine
-what the misery and confusion of Meg’s heart must be.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you’ll make excuses for anyone, Adrienne! You’re not a shining
-example of happiness either, if<a name="page_226" id="page_226"></a> it comes to that. It’s atrocious of Meg
-to treat you as she does. Atrocious of her to hold you responsible.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But I am responsible,†said Adrienne, while the dull flush still dyed
-her face. “I’ve always said that I was responsible. It was I who
-persuaded them to go.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. To go. Instead of staying and being lovers secretly. I know all
-about it. And no doubt Meg would rather it had been so now. And so would
-Mother!†Palgrave ground his teeth on a laugh. “That’s where morality
-lands them! Pretty, isn’t it!â€</p>
-
-<p>A silence fell and then Adrienne rose and said that Mr. Jackson would be
-waiting for her. “He’s coming at half-past five,†she said, and, with
-his gloomy tenderness, Palgrave informed Oldmeadow that she was reading
-logic and Plato; “to keep up with me, you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne, smiling faintly, laid her hand for a moment on his shoulder as
-she went past his chair. “Come in to-night, after dinner, and tell me
-what you decide,†she said.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll have no news for you,†Palgrave replied.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow had gone to hold the door open for her and, as she paused
-there to give him her hand, he heard her murmur: “Will you come down
-with me?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Let me see you to the bottom of the stair,†he seized the intimation,
-and, as she went before him, she said, still in the low, purposeful
-voice, and he felt sure now that this had been her intention in coming
-to tea: “It’s only so that you shan’t think I’ll oppose you. If you can
-persuade him, I shall not<a name="page_227" id="page_227"></a> oppose it. I think he’s right. But it’s too
-hard. I mean, I hope you can persuade him that it’s right to go.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had stepped out on to the threshold at the foot of the stairs and he
-paused behind her, astonished. “You want me to persuade him of what you
-think wrong?â€</p>
-
-<p>She stood still looking out at the sunny quadrangle. “People must think
-for themselves. I don’t know who is right or who is wrong. Perhaps I’ve
-influenced Palgrave. Perhaps he wouldn’t have felt like this if it
-hadn’t been for me. I don’t know. But if you can make him feel it right
-to go, I shall be glad.†She stepped out into the quadrangle.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean,†said Oldmeadow, following her, and strangely moved, “that
-you’d rather have him killed than stay behind like this?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It would be much happier for him, wouldn’t it,†she said. “If he could
-feel it right to go.â€</p>
-
-<p>They were under the arch of the Library, she still going slowly, before
-him, and Oldmeadow stopped her there. “Mrs. Barney, forgive me&mdash;may I
-ask you something?†He had put his hand on her shoulder and she paused
-and faced him. “It’s something personal, and I’ve no right to be
-personal with you, as I know. But&mdash;have you been to see Barney at
-Tidworth?â€</p>
-
-<p>As Oldmeadow spoke these Words, Adrienne turned away vehemently, and
-then stood still, as though arrested in her impulse of flight by an
-irresistible desire to listen. “Barney does not want to see me,†she
-said, speaking with difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>“You think so,†said Oldmeadow. “And he may think so. But you ought to
-see each other at a time<a name="page_228" id="page_228"></a> like this. He may be ordered to France at any
-time now.†He could not see her face.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean,†she said, after a moment, keeping the rigidity of her
-listening poise, “that he won’t come to say good-bye?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know nothing at all,†said Oldmeadow. “I can only infer how far the
-mischief between you has gone. And I’m most frightfully sorry for it.
-I’ve been sorry for Barney; but now I’m sorry for you, too. I think
-you’re being unfairly treated. But yours have been the mistakes, Mrs.
-Barney, and it’s for you to take the first step.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Barney doesn’t want to see me,†she repeated, and she went on, while he
-heard, growing in her voice, the note of the old conviction: “He has
-made mistakes, too. He has treated me unfairly, too. I can’t take the
-first step.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you love him, then?†said Oldmeadow, and in his voice was the
-note of the old harshness.</p>
-
-<p>“Does he love me?†she retorted, turning now, with sudden fire, and
-fixing her eyes upon him. “Why should he think I want to see him if he
-doesn’t want to see me? Why should I love, if he doesn’t? Why should I
-sue to Barney?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,†Oldmeadow almost groaned. “Don’t take that line; don’t, I beg of
-you. You’re both young. And you’ve hurt him so. You’ve meant to hurt
-him; I’ve seen it! I’ve seen it, Mrs. Barney. If you’ll put by your
-pride everything can grow again.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! no!†she cried almost violently, and he saw that she was
-trembling. “Some things don’t grow again! It’s not like plants, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Some things are like living creatures; and they can die. They
-can die,†she repeated, now walking rapidly<a name="page_229" id="page_229"></a> away from him out into the
-large quadrangle with its grass plot cut across by the late sunshine. He
-followed her for a moment and he heard her say, as she went: “It’s
-worse, far worse, not to mean to hurt. It’s worse to care so little that
-you don’t know when you are hurting.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No, it’s not,†said Oldmeadow. “That’s only being stupid; not cruel.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not thinking that is cruel; it’s not caring that is cruel,†she
-repeated, passionately, half muttering the words, and whether with tears
-of fury he could not say.</p>
-
-<p>He stood still at the doorway. “Good-bye, then,†he said. And not
-looking behind her, as she went out swiftly into New College Lane, she
-answered, still on the same note of passionate protest: “Good-bye, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Good-bye.†He watched her small, dark figure hurry along in
-the shadow of the wall until the turning hid it from view.<a name="page_230" id="page_230"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXI-a" id="CHAPTER_XXI-a"></a>CHAPTER XXI</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">P<small>ALGRAVE</small>, apparently, had formed no conjectures as to their conversation
-and was thinking still of Adrienne’s wrongs rather than of his own
-situation. “Did you take her home?†he said. “I see you’re sorry for
-her, Roger. It’s really too abominable, you know. I really can’t say
-before her what I think, I really can’t say before you what I think of
-Barney’s treatment of her; because I know you agree with him.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow felt all the more able, shaken though he was by the interview
-below, to remember, because of it, what he thought. “If you mean that I
-don’t consider Barney in the very least responsible for the death of the
-baby, I do agree with him,†he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Apart from that, apart from the baby,†said Palgrave, controlling his
-temper, it was evident, in his wish to keep the ear of the impartial
-judge, “though what the loss of a child means to a woman like Adrienne I
-don’t believe you can guess; apart from whose was the responsibility, he
-ought to have seen, towards the end, at all events, if he’d eyes in his
-head and a heart in his breast, that all she asked was to forgive him
-and take him back. She was proud, of course. What woman of her power and
-significance wouldn’t have been? She couldn’t be the first to move. But
-Barney must have seen that her heart was breaking.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well,†said Oldmeadow, taking in, with some perplexity, this new
-presentation of Adrienne<a name="page_231" id="page_231"></a> Toner; “what about his heart? She’d led it a
-pretty dance. And you forget that I don’t consider she had anything to
-forgive him.â€</p>
-
-<p>“His heart!†Palgrave echoed scornfully, yet with a sorrowful scorn; “He
-mended his heart quick enough. Went and fell in love with Nancy, who
-only asks to be let alone.â€</p>
-
-<p>“He’s always loved Nancy. She’s always been like a sister to him.
-Adrienne has infected you with her groundless jealousy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Groundless indeed!†Palgrave reached for his pipe and began to stuff it
-vindictively. “Nancy sees well enough, poor dear! She’s had to keep him
-off by any device she could contrive. She’s a good deal more than a
-sister to him, now. She’s the only person in the world for him. You can
-call it jealousy if you like. That’s only another name for a broken
-heart.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what Barney’s feeling may be, Palgrave, but I do know, it
-was quite plain to me, that Adrienne was jealous long before she had any
-ground for jealousy. If Nancy’s all Barney’s got left now, it’s simply
-because Adrienne has taken everything else from him. You don’t seem to
-realize that Adrienne drove him from her with her airs of martyrdom.
-Took vengeance on him, too; what else was the plan for Barbara going
-abroad with you? I don’t want to speak unkindly of her. It’s quite true;
-I’m sorry for her. I’ve never liked her so well. But the reason is that
-she’s beginning, I really believe, to find out that her own feet are of
-clay, while her mistake all along has been to imagine herself above
-ordinary humanity. All our feet are of clay, and we never get very far
-unless we are aware<a name="page_232" id="page_232"></a> of the weakness in our structure and look out for a
-continual tendency to crumble. You don’t get over it by pretending you
-don’t need to walk and imagining you have wings instead of feet.â€</p>
-
-<p>Palgrave, drawing stiffly at his pipe during this little homily,
-listened, gloomily yet without resentment. “You see, where you make
-<i>your</i> mistake&mdash;if you’ll allow the youthful ass you consider me to say
-so&mdash;is that you’ve always imagined Adrienne to be a self-righteous prig
-who sets herself up above others. She doesn’t; she doesn’t,†Palgrave
-repeated with conviction. “She’d accept the feet of clay if you’ll grant
-her the heart of flame&mdash;for everybody; the wings&mdash;for everybody. There’s
-your mistake, Roger. Adrienne believes that everybody has wings as well
-as herself; and the only difference she sees in people is that some have
-learned and some haven’t how to use them. She may be mortal woman&mdash;bless
-her&mdash;and have made mistakes; but they’re the mistakes of flame; not of
-earthiness.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You are not an ass, Palgrave,†said Oldmeadow, after a moment. “You are
-wise in everything but experience; and you see deep. Suppose we come to
-a compromise. You’ve owned that Adrienne may make mistakes and I own
-that I may misjudge her. I see what you believe about her and I see why
-you believe it. I’ve seen her at her worst, no doubt, and to you she’s
-been able to show only her best. So let it rest at that. What I came to
-talk about, you know, was you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know,†said Palgrave, and he gave a deep sigh.</p>
-
-<p>“Be patient with me,†said Oldmeadow. “After all, we belong to the same
-generation. You can<a name="page_233" id="page_233"></a>’t pretend that I’m an old fogey who’s lost the
-inspirations of his youth and has marched so far down towards the grave
-that the new torches coming up over the horizon are hidden from him.â€</p>
-
-<p>“That’s rather nice, you know, Roger,†Palgrave smiled faintly. “No;
-you’re not an old fogey. But all the same there’s not much torch about
-you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s rather sad, isn’t it,†Oldmeadow mused, “that we should always
-seem to begin with torches and then to spend the rest of our lives in
-quenching them. It may be, you know, that we’re only trying to hold them
-straight, so that the wind shan’t blow them out. However!&mdash;you’ll let me
-talk. That’s the point.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you may. You’ve been awfully decent,†Palgrave murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, it seems to me you’re not seeing straight,†said Oldmeadow.
-“It’s not crude animal patriotism&mdash;as you’d put it&mdash;that’s asked of you.
-It’s a very delicate discrimination between ideals.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know! I know!†said Palgrave. The traces of mental anguish were on
-his worn young face. He knocked the ashes out of his pipe and rose to
-lean against the mantelpiece.†I don’t suppose I can explain,†he said,
-staring out at the sky. “I suppose that with me the crude animal thing
-is the personal inhibition. I can’t do it. I’d rather, far, be killed
-than have to kill other men. That’s the unreasoning part, the
-instinctive part, but it’s a part of one’s nature that I don’t believe
-one can violate without violating one’s very spirit. I’ve always been
-different, I know, from most fellows of my age and class. I’ve always
-hated sport&mdash;shooting and hunting. The fox, the stag, the partridge,
-have always spoiled<a name="page_234" id="page_234"></a> it for me. Oh, I know they have to be killed&mdash;poor
-brutes! I know that; but I can’t myself be the butcher.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll own, though, that there must be butchers,†said Oldmeadow, after
-a little meditation. He felt himself in the presence of something
-delicate, distorted and beautiful. “And you’ll own, won’t you, when it
-comes to a war like this, when not only our national honour but our
-national existence is at stake, that some men must kill others. Isn’t it
-then, baldly, that you profit, personally, by other people doing what
-you won’t do? You’ll eat spring lamb as long as there are butchers to
-kill the lamb for you, and you’ll be an Englishman and take from England
-all that she has to give you&mdash;including Oxford and Coldbrooks&mdash;and let
-other men do the nasty work that makes the survival of England and
-Oxford and Coldbrooks possible. That’s what it comes to, you know.
-That’s all I ask you to look at squarely.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know, I know,†Palgrave repeated. He had looked at little else, poor
-boy. Oldmeadow saw that. “But that’s where the delicate discrimination
-between ideals comes in, Roger. That’s where I have to leave intuition,
-which says ‘No,’ and turn to reason. And the trouble is that for me
-reason says ‘No,’ too. Because humanity&mdash;all of it that counts&mdash;has
-outgrown war. That’s what it comes to. It’s a conflict between a
-national and an humanitarian ideal. There are enough of us in the world
-to stop war, if we all act together; and why, because others don’t,
-should I not do what I feel right? Others may follow if only a few of us
-stand out. If no one stands out, no one will ever follow. And you can’t
-kill England like that. England is more than<a name="page_235" id="page_235"></a> men and institutions,â€
-Palgrave still gazed at the sky. “It’s an idea that will survive;
-perhaps the more truly in the spirit for perishing in the flesh, if it
-really came to that. Look at Greece. She’s dead, if you like; yet what
-existing nation lives as truly? It is Grecian minds we think with and
-Grecian eyes we see with. It’s Plato’s conception of the just man being
-the truly happy man&mdash;even if the whole world’s against him&mdash;that is the
-very meaning of our refusal to go with the world.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll never stop war by refusal so long as the majority of men still
-believe in it,†said Oldmeadow. “There are not enough of you to stop it
-now. The time to stop it is before it comes; not while it’s on. It’s
-before it begins that you must bring the rest of humanity not to behave
-in ways that make it inevitable. I’m inclined to think that ideas can
-perish,†he went on, as Palgrave, to this, made no reply, “as far as
-their earthly manifestation goes, that is, if enough men and
-institutions are destroyed. If Germany could conquer and administer
-England, I’m inclined to think the English idea would perish. And war
-need not be unspiritual. Killing our fellow-men need not mean hating
-them. There’s less hatred in war, I imagine, than in some of the
-contests of peaceful civilian life. Put it fairly on the ground of
-humanitarianism, then, Palgrave; not of nationality. It’s the whole
-world that is threatened by a hateful idea, by the triumph of all you
-most fear and detest, and unless we strive against it with all we are
-and have it seems to me that we fall short of our duty not only as
-Englishmen, but as humanitarians. Put it at that, Palgrave: would you
-really have had England stand by and not lift a finger when Belgium was
-invaded and France menaced?<a name="page_236" id="page_236"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Palgrave was not ready with his reply and he turned away while he looked
-for it and shuffled the papers on his desk with a nervous hand. “Yes, I
-would,†he said at last. “Hateful as it is to have to say it&mdash;I would
-have stood by.†He came back to his place at the mantelpiece and looked
-down at Oldmeadow as he spoke. “The choice, of course, is hateful; but I
-think we should have stood by and helped the sufferers and let France
-and Germany fight it out. It always comes back to them, doesn’t it?
-They’re always fighting it out; they always will, till they find it’s no
-good and that they can’t annihilate each other; which is what they both
-want to do. Oh, I’ve read too many of the young French neo-Catholics to
-be able to believe that the hateful idea was all on one side. Their
-ideals don’t differ much, once you strip them of their theological
-tinsel, from those of the Germans. Germany happens to be the aggressor
-now; but if the militarist party in France had had the chance, they’d
-have struck as quickly.â€</p>
-
-<p>“The difference&mdash;and it’s an immense one&mdash;is that the militarist party
-in France wouldn’t have had the chance. The difference is that it
-doesn’t govern and mould public opinion. It’s not a menace to the world.
-It’s only a sort of splendid pet, kept in a Zoo, for the delectation of
-a certain class and party. Whereas Germany’s the <i>bona fide</i> hungry
-tigress at large. What you really ask of England, Palgrave, is that she
-should be a Buddha and lie down and let the tigress, after finishing
-France, devour her, too. It really comes to that. Buddhism is the only
-logical basis for your position, and I don’t believe, however sorry one
-may be for hungry<a name="page_237" id="page_237"></a> tigresses, that the right way to deal with them is to
-let them eat you. The Christian philosophy of the incarnation is the
-true one. Matter does make a spiritual difference. It does make a
-difference, a real difference, that the ideal should be made flesh. It’s
-important to the world, spiritually, that the man rather than the
-tigress should survive.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Christ gave his life,†said Palgrave, after a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not speaking of historical personages; but of eternal truths,†said
-Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>But he knew already that he spoke in vain. Palgrave had turned away his
-eyes again and on his sad young face he read the fixity of a fanatic
-idealism. He had not moved him, though he had troubled him. No one would
-move Palgrave. He doubted, now, whether Adrienne herself had had much
-influence over him. It was with the sense of pleading a lost cause that
-he said, presently, “Adrienne hopes you’ll feel it right to go.â€</p>
-
-<p>Palgrave at this turned a profound gaze upon him. “I know it,†he said.
-“Though she’s never told me so. It’s the weakness of her love, its
-yearning and tenderness, not its strength, that makes her want it.
-Because she knows it would be so much easier. But she can’t go back on
-what she’s meant to me. It’s because of that, in part at all events,
-that I’ve been able to see steadily what I mean to myself. That’s what
-she helps one to do, you know. Hold to yourself; your true, deep self.
-It’s owing to her that I can only choose in one way&mdash;even if I can’t
-defend it properly. It seems to come back to metaphysics, doesn’t it?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Like everything else,†said Oldmeadow.<a name="page_238" id="page_238"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Like everything else. It would take a four-years’ course in Greats
-to argue it out, Roger. Come back to me&mdash;if you’re here and I’m here
-then&mdash;and we’ll see what we can make of it.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I will,†said Oldmeadow, rising, for the room was growing dark. “And
-before that, I hope.â€</p>
-
-<p>“After all, you know,†Palgrave observed, “England isn’t in any danger
-of becoming Buddhistic; there’s not much nihilism about her, is there,
-but hardly much Christianity, either. England has evolved all sorts of
-things besides Oxford and Coldbrooks. She’s evolved industrialism and
-factory-towns.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t consider industrialism and factory-towns incompatible with
-Christianity, you know,†Oldmeadow observed. “Good-bye, my dear boy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Good-bye, Roger,†Palgrave grasped his hand. “You’ve been most awfully
-kind.<a name="page_239" id="page_239"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXII-a" id="CHAPTER_XXII-a"></a>CHAPTER XXII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">“I<small>SN’T</small> it becoming to him, Mother? And how tall he looks!†said Nancy,
-holding Oldmeadow off in his khaki for displayal.</p>
-
-<p>He had only written a line of his failure and that he would come as soon
-as he could and see them all and tell in full of his interview with
-Palgrave. And he had motored over to The Little House this afternoon in
-early November.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy was showing an unexpected gaiety. “What a nice grilled-salmon
-colour you are, too,†she said.</p>
-
-<p>He divined the self-protective instinct under the gaiety. Most of the
-women in England were being gayer and more talkative at this time, in
-order to keep up. Nancy was thin and white; but she was keeping up. And
-she had put on a charming dress to receive him in.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been grilled all right; out on the downs,†he said. “But it’s more
-like cold storage just now, with these frosts at night. Yes; the big
-cup, please. I’m famished for tea. Ah! that’s something like! It smells
-like your rose outside. I sniffed it as I waited at the door. Wonderful
-for such a late blooming.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it,†said Mrs. Averil. “And I only put it in last autumn. It’s
-doing beautifully; but I’ve cherished it. And now tell us about
-Palgrave.â€</p>
-
-<p>He felt reluctant to tell about Palgrave. The impression that remained
-with him of Palgrave was that impression of beauty and distortion and he
-did<a name="page_240" id="page_240"></a> not want to have to disentangle his feelings or to seem to put
-Palgrave in the wrong. It was so sweet, too, after the long, chilly
-drive over the empty uplands, to sit here and forget the war, although
-it was for scenes like this, for girls like Nancy, women like Mrs.
-Averil&mdash;with so much else&mdash;that the war was so worth fighting. He turned
-his thoughts back to the realities that underlay the happy appearances
-and was aware, as he forced himself to tell, of what must seem a note of
-advocacy in his voice. “He can’t think differently, I’m afraid,†he
-said. “It’s self-sacrifice, not selfishness, that is moving him.â€</p>
-
-<p>“He can’t think differently while Adrienne is living there,†said Mrs.
-Averil. “He didn’t tell you, I suppose, that she has now taken up her
-abode in Oxford in order to study philosophy with him?â€</p>
-
-<p>He was rather uncomfortably aware of the disingenuousness that must now
-be made apparent in his avoidance of all mention of Adrienne.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw her,†he said, and he knew that it was lamely. “She was there
-when I got there.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You saw her!†Mrs. Averil exclaimed. “But then, of course you didn’t
-convince him. I might have known it. Of course she would not let you see
-him alone.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But she did let me see him alone. That was what she wanted. And she was
-there only in order to tell me what she wanted. She wants him to go.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Averil was eyeing him with such astonishment that he turned to
-Nancy with his explanations. But Mrs. Averil would not leave him to
-Nancy’s sympathy. “It’s rather late in the day for her to want him to
-go,†she said. “She may be sorry for what she’s done; but it’s her
-work.<a name="page_241" id="page_241"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she’s sorry for her work. That’s what it comes to. And I’m sorry
-for her,†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“Good heavens! The cleverness of that woman!†Mrs. Averil exclaimed. “If
-she can’t be powerful, she’ll be pitiful! She’s worked on your feelings;
-I can see that, Roger. And I thought you, at least, were immune. Well;
-she does not work on mine. I am not in the least sorry for her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She’s being unfairly treated,†said Oldmeadow. “It’s grotesque that Meg
-should have turned upon her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And Eleanor has, too, you know,†said Mrs. Averil. “It’s grotesque, if
-you like; but I see a grim justice in it. She made them do things and
-believe things that weren’t natural to them and now she’s lost her power
-and they see things as they are.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s because she’s failed that they’ve turned against her,†said Nancy.
-“If she’d succeeded they would have gone on accepting what she told them
-and making her their idol.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Adrienne mustn’t fail,†said Mrs. Averil dryly. “The only justification
-for Adrienne is to be in the right. If the blood of Saint Januarius
-doesn’t liquefy, why should you keep it in a shrine? She’s a woman who
-has quarrelled with her husband and disgraced her sister and
-brother-in-law, and broken her mother-in-law’s heart. You can’t go on
-making an idol of a saint who behaves like that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She never claimed worldly success,†said Nancy. “She never told Meg to
-go so that she could get married afterwards; she never told Palgrave
-that war was wrong because it was easier not to fight.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, she did claim worldly success, really,†said Mrs. Averil,
-while her eyes rested on her<a name="page_242" id="page_242"></a> daughter with a tenderness that contrasted
-with her tone. “Her whole point was that if you were right
-spiritually&mdash;‘poised’ she called it, you remember&mdash;all those other
-things would be added unto you. I’ve heard her claim that if you were
-poised you could get anything you really wanted. I asked her once if I
-should find a ten-pound note under the sofa-cushion every morning after
-breakfast if I could get poised sufficiently!†Mrs. Averil laughed,
-still more dryly while she still maintained her tender gaze and Nancy
-said, smiling a little: “She might have put it there for you if she’d
-been sure you were poised.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, let us bury Adrienne for the present,†said Mrs. Averil. “Tell
-Roger about your nursing plans. She may go to London, Roger, this
-winter, and I’m to be left alone.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’re to be left to take care of Aunt Eleanor, if I do go,†said
-Nancy; and Mrs. Averil said that there must certainly be some one left
-to take care of poor Eleanor.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow went up to Coldbrooks next morning. The first person he saw
-was old Johnson at the door and he remembered Eleanor Chadwick’s griefs
-on his account. Nothing, now, could have been kept from Johnson and his
-face bore the marks of the family calamities. He was aged and whitened
-and his voice had armed itself, since the downfall of his grave,
-vicarious complacency, with solemn cadences.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. The ladies will be very glad to see you, sir. These are sad
-days for them&mdash;the family dispersed as it is.â€</p>
-
-<p>Johnson defined the situation as he felt that it could be most fittingly
-defined and Oldmeadow inwardly applauded his “dispersed.<a name="page_243" id="page_243"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>The drawing-room, into which Johnson ushered him, had, for the first
-time in his memory of it, a mournful air. It had always been shabby, and
-these were the same faded chintzes, the same worn rugs; but now,
-fireless and flowerless, it neither spoke nor smiled and, with the sense
-it gave of an outlived epoch, it was almost spectral. The photographs
-all looked like the photographs of dead people and the only similitude
-of life was the loud, silly ticking of the French clock on the
-mantelpiece; Mrs. Chadwick’s cherished clock; one of her
-wedding-presents.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid it’s rather chilly, sir,†said Johnson. “No one has sat here
-of an evening now for a long time.†He put a match to the ranged logs,
-drew the blinds up farther so that the autumnal sunlight might more
-freely enter, and left him.</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow went to the window and turned over the magazines, a month old,
-that lay on a table there.</p>
-
-<p>He was standing so when Meg entered, and she had half the length of the
-room to traverse before they met. She was in black, in deep black; but
-more beautiful than he had ever seen her; her tossed auburn locks bound
-low on her forehead with a black ribbon, her white throat upright, her
-eyes hard with their readiness, their resource. Beautiful and
-distressing. It distressed him terribly to see that hardness in her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you do, Roger,†she said, giving him her hand. “It’s good to see
-you. Mother will be glad.â€</p>
-
-<p>They seated themselves on one of the capacious sofas and she questioned
-him quickly, competently, while the hard eyes seemed to measure him lest
-he<a name="page_244" id="page_244"></a> measure her. It was almost the look of the <i>déclassée</i> woman who
-forestalls withdrawal in an interlocutor. But, as he answered her
-quietly, his fond regard upon her, her defences began to fall. “It’s the
-only life, a soldier’s, isn’t it?†she said. “At all times, really. But,
-at a time like this, anything else seems despicable, doesn’t it;
-contemptibly smug and safe. The uniform is so becoming to you. You look
-a soldier already. One feels that men will trust and follow you. Didn’t
-you burn with rage and shame, too, when, for those four days, it seemed
-we might not come in?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I felt too sure we should come in, to burn with rage and shame,†said
-Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! but it was not so sure, I’m afraid,†said Meg, and in her eyes, no
-longer hard, wild lights seemed to pass and repass. “I’m afraid that
-there are nearly enough fools and knaves in England to wreck us. Not
-quite enough, thank heaven! But, for those four days, Eric was terribly
-afraid. He was killed, you know, Roger, very splendidly, leading his
-men.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know, Meg. My dear Meg,†Oldmeadow murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! I don’t regret it! I don’t regret it!†Meg cried, while her colour
-rose and her young breast lifted. “It’s the soldier’s death! The
-consecrating, heroic death! He was ready. And deaths like that
-atone&mdash;for the others. He was not killed instantaneously, Roger.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t know,†said Oldmeadow, looking at her with a pitying, troubled
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“He lived for a day and night afterwards,†said Meg, looking back,
-tearless. “They carried him to<a name="page_245" id="page_245"></a> a barn. Only his man was with him. There
-was no one to dress his dreadful wound; no food. The man got him some
-water, at the risk of his own life. He was conscious until the end and
-he suffered terribly.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow dropped his eyes before her fierce stare while, strangely,
-dimly, there passed through his mind the memory of the embarrassed,
-empty, handsome young face in the brougham and, again, the memory of his
-dog John. He had seen John die and his eyes of wistful appeal. So Eric
-Hayward’s eyes might have looked as he lay in the barn dying.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Roger!†Meg said suddenly, seizing his hand. “Kill them! Kill them!
-Oh, revenge him! I was not with him! Think of it! I would have had no
-right to have been with him&mdash;had it been possible. I did not know till a
-week later. He was buried there. His man buried him.â€</p>
-
-<p>“My poor, poor child,†said Oldmeadow, clasping her hands.</p>
-
-<p>But, at once, taking refuge from his pity and from her own desperate
-pain: “So you’ve seen Palgrave,†she said. “And he isn’t going. I knew
-it was useless. I told Mother it was useless&mdash;with that stranger&mdash;that
-American, with him. She has disgraced us all.&mdash;Wretched boy! Hateful
-woman!â€</p>
-
-<p>“Meg, Meg; be soldierly. He wouldn’t have spoken like that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“He never liked her! Never!†she cried. “I knew he didn’t, even at the
-time she was flattering and cajoling us. I saw that she bewildered him
-and that he accepted her only because she was mine. How I loathe myself
-for having listened to her! How I loathe her! All that she ever wanted
-was<a name="page_246" id="page_246"></a> power! Power over other people’s lives! She’d commit any crime for
-that!â€</p>
-
-<p>“You seem to me cruelly unfair,†he said.</p>
-
-<p>“No! no! I’m not unfair! You know I’m not!†she cried. “You always saw
-the truth about her&mdash;from the very beginning. You never fell down and
-worshipped her, like the rest of us. And she knew that you were her
-enemy and warned us against you. Oh&mdash;why did Barney marry her!â€</p>
-
-<p>“I never worshipped her; but I never thought her base and hateful.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You never knew her as I did; that was all. And I never knew her until I
-came back and found her doing to Palgrave what she had done to us.
-Paladin! Did you hear her call him Paladin? Always flattery! Always to
-make one think one was wonderful, important, mysterious! She forced us
-to go away, Roger. Sometimes I think it was hypnotism; that she uses her
-will-power consciously. We did not want to go. We did not want the
-divorce and the scandal.â€</p>
-
-<p>“What did you want, then, Meg?â€</p>
-
-<p>She felt the gravity of his tone but, like a fierce Maenad, she snatched
-at the torch, not caring how it revealed her. “What of it! What if we
-had been secret lovers! Who would have known! Who would have been
-harmed! Some people go on for years and years. His wife loved another
-man. He had no one. Why should we have been pushed&mdash;such pitiful fools
-we were&mdash;into displaying our love to the world and being crushed by it!
-Oh, he was so loyal, so brave; but it made him very, very unhappy. Oh, I
-was cruel to him sometimes! I used to reproach him sometimes! Oh, Roger!
-Roger!&mdash;<a name="page_247" id="page_247"></a>†She broke into wild tears and stumbled to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>As she reached the door, covering her face with her hands, her mother
-opened it and, meeting her on the threshold, Meg, with almost the effect
-of beating her aside with the other impediments to her rage and grief,
-pushed past her so that the knitting Mrs. Chadwick held was flung to the
-floor, the ball of khaki wool running rapidly away under a sofa and the
-socks and needles dangling at her feet.</p>
-
-<p>She stood looking down at them with a curious apathy and, as Oldmeadow
-went to help and greet her, he saw that as much as Meg was wild she was
-dulled and quiet.</p>
-
-<p>“Meg is so very, very violent,†she said, as he disentangled the wool
-and restored her sock and ball to her. She spoke with listlessness
-rather than sympathy.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor child,†said Oldmeadow. “One can hardly wonder at it. But it makes
-a wretched existence for you, I’m afraid. You and she oughtn’t to be
-alone together.â€</p>
-
-<p>He drew her to a chair and, seating herself, her faded face and eyes
-that had lost their old look of surprise turned to the light, Mrs.
-Chadwick assented, “It’s very fatiguing to live with, certainly.
-Sometimes I really think I must go away for a little while and have a
-change. Nancy would come and stay with Meg, you know. But I can’t miss
-Barney’s last weeks. He comes to us, now, again. And it might not be
-right to leave Meg. One must not think of oneself at a time like this,
-must one?†The knitting lay in her lap and she was twisting and
-untwisting her handkerchief after her old fashion; but<a name="page_248" id="page_248"></a> her fingers
-moved slowly and without agitation and Oldmeadow saw that some spring of
-life in her had been broken.</p>
-
-<p>“The best plan would be that Meg should, as soon as possible, take up
-some work,†he said, “and that you and Nancy should go away. Work is the
-only thing for Meg now. She’ll dash herself to pieces down here; and you
-with her. There’ll soon be plenty to do. Nursing and driving
-ambulances.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy is going to nurse, you know,†said Mrs. Chadwick. “But she won’t
-go as long as we need her here. She has promised me that. I don’t know
-what I should do without Nancy. I shouldn’t care to be nursed by Meg
-myself, if I were a wounded soldier. She is so very restless and would
-probably forget quite simple things like giving one a handkerchief or
-seeing that hot-water-bottles were wrapped up before she put them to
-one’s feet. A friend of mine&mdash;Amy Hatchard&mdash;such a pretty woman, though
-her hair was bright, bright red&mdash;and I never cared for that&mdash;had the
-soles of her feet nearly scorched off once by a careless nurse. Dear
-Nancy. I often think of Nancy now, Roger. I believe, you know, that if
-Adrienne had not come Nancy and Barney might have married. How happy we
-should all have been; though she has so little money.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I wish you could all think a little more kindly of Adrienne,†said
-Oldmeadow after a silence. Mrs. Chadwick had begun to knit. “I must tell
-you that I myself feel differently about her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Do you, Roger?†said Mrs. Chadwick, without surprise. “You have a very
-judicious and balanced mind, I know; even when you were hardly more<a name="page_249" id="page_249"></a>
-than a boy Francis noticed it and said that he’d rather go by your
-opinion than by that of most of the men he knew. I always remembered
-that, afterwards. Till she came. And then I believed in her rather than
-in you. You thought us all far too fond of her from the very first. And
-now we have certainly changed. Meg is certainly very violent; much more
-violent than I could ever be.... I am sorry for Adrienne. I don’t think
-she meant to do us any harm&mdash;as Meg believes.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She only meant to do you good, I am sure of it. I saw her in Oxford,
-let me tell you about it, when I went in to see Palgrave. She is very
-unhappy. She wants Palgrave to go. She wants him to feel it right to go.
-It’s not she, really, who is keeping him back now.â€</p>
-
-<p>“My poor Palgrave. Meg is very unkind about him; very bitter and unkind;
-her own brother. But it was very wrong of Adrienne to go and set up
-housekeeping in Oxford near him. You must own that, Roger. She may not
-be keeping him back; but she is aiding and abetting him always. It made
-Barney even more miserable and disgusted than he was before. And it
-looks so very odd. Though I don’t think that anyone could ever gossip
-about Adrienne. There is something about her that makes that
-impossible.â€</p>
-
-<p>“There certainly is. I am glad she is with Palgrave, poor boy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I am glad you are sorry for him, Rogerâ€&mdash;Mrs. Chadwick dropped a
-needle. “How clumsy I am. My fingers seem all to have turned to thumbs.
-Thank you so much. I try to make as many socks as I can for our poor
-men; fingering wool; not<a name="page_250" id="page_250"></a> wheeling, which is so much rougher to the
-feet. I’m sure I’d rather march, and, if it came to that, die in
-fingering than in wheeling. Just as I’ve always felt, foolish as it may
-sound, that if I had to be drowned I’d rather it were in warm, soapy
-water than in cold salt. Not that one is very likely, ever, to drown in
-one’s bath. But tell me about Adrienne and Palgrave, Roger, and what
-they said.â€</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Chadwick’s discourse seemed, beforehand, to make anything he might
-have to tell irrelevant and, even while he tried to make her see what he
-had seen, he felt it to be a fruitless effort.</p>
-
-<p>There was indeed no enmity to plead against. Only a deep exhaustion.
-Adrienne had pressed too heavily on the spring and it was broken.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure she is very sorry to have made so much mischief, but she isn’t
-what I thought her, Roger,†she said, shaking her head, when he had
-finished. “I’m sorry for her, but I used to believe her to be a sort of
-saint and now I know that she is very far indeed from being one.â€</p>
-
-<p>“The mere fact of failure doesn’t deprive you of sainthood,†said
-Oldmeadow, remembering Nancy’s plea. “You haven’t less reason now than
-you had then for believing her one.â€</p>
-
-<p>But even with her broken spring Mrs. Chadwick had not lost all her
-shrewdness. It flickered in the sad eyes she lifted from the khaki sock.
-“Some kinds of failure do, Roger. That gift of healing, you remember;
-all she could do for people in that way; she has quite, quite lost it.
-That is a reason. It’s that more than anything that has made me feel
-differently about her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Lost it?†He felt strangely discomposed, little as the gift of healing
-had ever impressed him.<a name="page_251" id="page_251"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Quite,†Mrs. Chadwick repeated. “I think it distressed her dreadfully
-herself. I think she counted upon it more than upon anything, perhaps
-without knowing she did. It must have made her seem so sure to herself,
-mustn’t it? The first time was before the war, just a little after you
-were here that day in the summer&mdash;dear me, how long ago it seems; and I
-had one of my headaches, one of the worst I ever had. I was so
-dreadfully troubled, you know, about Barbara and Meg. And Adrienne came
-and sat by me as she used to and put her hand on my forehead; and I know
-it wasn’t my lack of faith, for I quite believed it would get well; but
-instead of the peaceful feeling, it grew much worse; oh, <i>much</i>. As if
-red hot needles were darting through my eyes and an iron weight pressing
-down on my head. And such tumult and distress. I had to tell her. I had
-to ask her to take away her hand. Oh, she felt it very much, poor thing,
-and grew very white and said it must be because she was still not
-strong; not quite herself. But I knew then that it was because she was
-not <i>right</i>; not what I had thought her. I began to suspect, from that
-very moment, that I had been mistaken; because hypnotizing people isn’t
-the same as being a saint, is it, Roger? and&mdash;I think you said so once,
-long ago; and that was all that she had done; hypnotized us all to think
-her good and wonderful. Later on, after Meg had come, I let her try once
-more, though it quite frightened me; she looked so strange. And!&mdash;oh,
-dear&mdash;it was dreadful. It distressed me dreadfully. She suddenly put her
-hands before her face and sat quite still and then she burst into tears
-and got up and ran out of the room, crying. It made me<a name="page_252" id="page_252"></a> feel quite ill.
-And of course I knew there could be nothing saintly about a person who
-made you feel like that&mdash;who could feel like that themselves, and break
-down.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Even saints have their times of darkness and dryness,†Oldmeadow found
-after a little time had passed. The picture she put before him hurt him.
-“It was an error of judgment to have believed her a saint because she
-could hypnotize you&mdash;if that was what it was; but the fact that she
-can’t hypnotize you any longer&mdash;that she’s too unhappy to have any power
-of that sort&mdash;doesn’t prove she’s not a saint. Of course she’s not. Why
-should she be?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I don’t know why she should be; but she used to behave as if
-she were one, didn’t she? And when I saw that she wasn’t one in that way
-I began to see that she wasn’t in other ways, too. It was she who made
-me so unjust, so unkind to poor Barney. <i>She</i> was so unjust and so
-unkind; and I never saw it till then. I was blind till then; though you
-saw very well, that day you came to Connaught Square, that it was a sort
-of spell she cast. It was a spell, Roger. The moment I saw her, after
-the baby’s death, I forgot everything she’d done and felt I loved her
-again. She willed me to. So as to get power over me. Everything, always,
-with her, was to get power over other people’s lives,†said Mrs.
-Chadwick, and as he had, in the past, heard echoes of Adrienne in all
-she said, now he heard echoes of Meg, “It’s by willing it, you know.
-Some people practise it like five-finger exercises. You have to sit
-quite still and shut your eyes and concentrate. Meg has heard how it’s
-done. I don’t pretend<a name="page_253" id="page_253"></a> to understand; but that must have been her way.
-And she made poor Barney miserable and set me against him at once; you
-said so yourself, Roger, and blinded me to all the cruel things she did.
-It was to punish him, you know. To make him feel he was dreadfully wrong
-and she quite right; about Meg, and everything else; for you came in,
-too. It used to be so dreadful at Torquay. I knew it would be sad there;
-but I never guessed how sad it would be&mdash;with that horrid blue, blue
-sea. She used to sit, day after day, on the terrace of the house, and
-gaze and gaze at the sea and if Barney would come, so lovingly, and ask
-her what he could do for her and take her hand, oh, it was more and more
-mournful, the way she would look at him; that dreadful, loving look that
-didn’t mean love at all, but only trying to break him down and make him
-<i>say</i> that he was down. I begged Barney’s pardon, Roger, for having
-treated him as I did. We treated him dreadfully, all of us; because she
-put him, always, in the wrong. Oh, no, Roger, I’m sorry for her, but
-she’s a dangerous woman; or <i>was</i> dangerous. For now she has lost it all
-and has become like everybody else; quite ordinary and unhappy.â€</p>
-
-<p>He felt, in the little silence that, again, followed, that he could
-hardly better this summing-up. That was precisely what poor Adrienne
-Toner had become; ordinary and unhappy. The two things she would have
-believed herself least capable of becoming. There was nothing to be
-gained in urging extenuating circumstances, especially since he was not
-sure that there were any. Mrs. Chadwick, at bottom, saw as clearly as he
-did. He asked her presently, leaving the theme of Adrienne, whether<a name="page_254" id="page_254"></a> she
-would not seriously consider going away for a little while with Nancy.
-“Meg could go down to The Little House,†he said.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, she couldn’t, Roger,†said Mrs. Chadwick, “she won’t go
-anywhere. She’ll hardly speak to Monica. She just sits out-of-doors, all
-day, wrapped in a cloak, in the corner of the garden, staring in front
-of her, and she pays not the slightest attention to anything I say. And
-at night, in her room, I hear her sobbing, sobbing, as if her heart
-would break. I can’t think hardly of Eric any longer, Roger. Isn’t it
-strange; but it’s almost as if he were my son that had been killed. And
-Barney may be killed,†the poor mother’s lip and chin began to tremble.
-“And you, too, Roger. I don’t know how we shall live through all that we
-must bear and I keep thinking of the foolish little things, like your
-having cold feet and wearing the same clothes day after day in those
-horrible trenches. He suffered it all, poor Eric. No, I can’t think
-hardly of him. All the same,†she sobbed, “my heart is broken when I
-remember that they can never be married now.<a name="page_255" id="page_255"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII-a" id="CHAPTER_XXIII-a"></a>CHAPTER XXIII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">“T<small>HAT’S</small> the way Mummy surprises one,†said Barney as he and Oldmeadow
-went together through the Coldbrooks woods. “One feels her, usually,
-such a darling goose and then, suddenly, she shows one that she can be a
-heroine.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney was going to France in two days’ time and Oldmeadow within the
-fortnight, and the Coldbrooks good-byes had just been said. It had been
-poor Meg who had broken down and clung and cried. Mrs. Chadwick had, to
-the very last, talked with grave cheerfulness of Barney’s next leave and
-given wise advice as if he had been merely leaving them for a rather
-perilous mountain-climbing feat. Oldmeadow could hardly believe her the
-same woman that he had seen ten days before.</p>
-
-<p>He was staying at The Little House and had come up on this afternoon of
-Barney’s departure to join him at Coldbrooks and walk down with him.
-Barney had not yet seen or said good-bye to Nancy and her mother, and
-Oldmeadow had seized this, his only chance, of a talk with him. But, as
-they left the woods and began to climb the bare hill-side, Barney went
-on:</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve wanted a talk, too, Roger. I’m glad you managed this.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t rob anyone of you, does it,†said Oldmeadow. “We’ll get to
-Chelford in time to give you a good half-hour with them before your car
-comes for you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“That will be enough for Nancy,†said Barney.<a name="page_256" id="page_256"></a> “The less she sees of me,
-the better she’s pleased. I’ve lots of things I want to say, Roger. Of
-course you understand that in every way it’s a relief to be going out.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It settles things; or seems to settle them,†said Oldmeadow. “They take
-another place at all events.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; just that. They take another place. What difference does it make,
-after all, if a fellow has made a mess of his personal life when his
-personal life has ceased to count. I’m not talking mawkish sentiment
-when I say I hope I’ll be killed&mdash;if I can be of some use first. I see
-no other way out of it. I’m sorry for Adrienne, after a fashion, for
-she’s dished herself, too. We made a hopeless mistake in getting married
-and she knows it as well as I do; and when a man and woman don’t love
-each other any longer it’s the man’s place to get out if he can.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It was about Adrienne I wanted to talk to you, Barney.†For the first
-time in their long friendship Oldmeadow felt that he spoke to an equal.
-Barney had at last ceased to be a boy. “I’ve seen her, since seeing you
-that last time in the train.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well?†Barney inquired, as Oldmeadow paused. “What have you got to say
-to me about Adrienne, Roger? You’ve not said very much, from the
-beginning; but everything you have said has been true and I’ve forgotten
-none of it. I’m the more inclined,†and he smiled with a slight
-bitterness, “to listen to you now.â€</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just the trouble,†Oldmeadow muttered. “You’ve forgotten
-nothing. That’s what I feel, with remorse. That it was I who helped to
-spoil things for you both, from the beginning. You’d not have<a name="page_257" id="page_257"></a> seen her
-defects as you did if I hadn’t shown them to you; and if you hadn’t seen
-them you’d have adjusted yourselves to each other and have found them
-out together. She’d not have resented your finding them out in the
-normal course of your shared lives. It’s been my opinion of her, in the
-background of both your minds, that has envenomed everything.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney listened quietly. “Yes,†he assented. “That’s all true enough. As
-far as it goes. I mightn’t have seen if you hadn’t shown me. But I can’t
-regret you did show me, for anything else would have been to have gone
-through life blind; as blind as Adrienne is herself. And it’s because
-she can’t stand being seen through that she revealed so much more; so
-much that you didn’t see and that I had to find out for myself. What you
-saw was absurdity and inexperience; they’re rather loveable defects; I
-think I accepted them from the beginning, because of all the other
-things I believed in her. You said, too, you remember, that she’d never
-know she was wrong. Well, it’s worse than that. She’ll never know she’s
-wrong and she won’t bear it that you should think her anything but
-right. She’s rapacious. She’s insatiable. Nothing but everything will
-satisfy her. You must be down on your knees, straight down, before her;
-and if you’re not, she has no use for you. She turns to stone and you
-break your head and your heart against her. It’s hatred Adrienne has
-felt for me, Roger, and I’m afraid I’ve felt it for her, too. She’s done
-things and said things that I couldn’t have believed her capable of;
-mean things; clever things; cruelly clever that get you right on the
-raw; things I can’t forget. There’s much more in her than you saw at the
-beginning.<a name="page_258" id="page_258"></a> I was right rather than you about that; only they weren’t
-the things I thought.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow walked, cutting at the withered way-side grasses with his
-cane. Barney’s short, slow sentences seemed to sting him as they came.
-He had to adjust himself to their smart; to adjust himself to the
-thought of this malignant Adrienne. Yet what he felt was not all
-surprise; he had foreseen, suspected, even this. “I know,†he said at
-last; “I mean, I can see that it would happen just like that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It did happen just like that,†said Barney. “I don’t claim to have been
-an angel or anything like one. I gave her as good as I got, or nearly,
-sometimes, no doubt. But I know that it wasn’t my fault. I know it was
-Adrienne who spoiled everything.â€</p>
-
-<p>They had come out now on the upland road. The country dropped away
-beneath them wrapped in the dull mole-colour, the distant, dull
-ultramarines of the November afternoon. The smell of burning weeds was
-in the air and, in the west, a long, melancholy sheet of advancing
-rain-cloud hid the sun. Oldmeadow wondered if he and Barney would ever
-walk there together again, and his mind plunged deep into the past, the
-many years of friendship to which this loved country had been a
-background.</p>
-
-<p>“Barney,†he said, “what I wanted to say is this: All that you feel is
-true; I’m sure of it. But other things are true, too. I’ve seen her and
-I’ve changed about her. If I was right before, I’m right now. She’s been
-blind because she didn’t know she could be broken. Well, she’s beginning
-to break.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Is she?†said Barney, and his quiet was implacable. “I can quite
-imagine that, you know.<a name="page_259" id="page_259"></a> Everyone, except poor Palgrave&mdash;all the rest of
-us, have found out that she’s not the beautiful benignant being she
-thought she was, and that bewilders her and makes her pretty wretched,
-no doubt.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow waited a moment. “I want you to see her,†he said. “Don’t be
-cruel. You are a little cruel, you know. It’s because you are thinking
-of her abstractly; remembering only how she has hurt you. If you could
-see her, see how unhappy she is, you’d feel differently. That’s what I
-want you to do. That’s what I beg you to do, Barney.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t,†said Barney after a moment. “That I can’t do, Roger. It’s
-over. She might want me back if she could get me back adoring her. It’s
-only so she’d want me. But it’s over. It’s more than over. There’s
-something else.†Barney’s face showed no change from its sad fixity.
-“You were right about that, too. It’s Nancy I ought to have married.
-It’s Nancy I love. And Adrienne knows it.â€</p>
-
-<p>At this there passed before Oldmeadow’s mind the memory of the small,
-dark, hurrying figure, the memory of the words she had spoken: “Some
-things are like living creatures; and they can die. They can die.â€</p>
-
-<p>He felt rather sick. “In that case, how can you blame your wife?†he
-muttered. “Doesn’t that explain it all?â€</p>
-
-<p>“No, it doesn’t explain it all.†There was no fire of self-justification
-in Barney’s voice. It was as fixed and sad as his face. “It was only
-after Adrienne made me so wretched I began to find it out. She was
-jealous of Nancy from the beginning, of course. But then she was jealous
-of everything that wasn’t, every bit of it, hers. She had no reason for<a name="page_260" id="page_260"></a>
-jealousy. No man was ever more in love than I was with Adrienne. Even
-now I don’t feel for Nancy what I felt for her. It’s something, I
-believe, one only feels once and if it burns out it burns out for ever.
-With Nancy, it’s as if I had come home; and Adrienne and I were parted
-before I knew that I was turning to her.â€</p>
-
-<p>They had begun the final descent into Chelford and the wind now brought
-a fine rain against their faces. Neither spoke again until the grey
-roofs of the village came into sight at a turning of the road. “About
-money matters, Roger,†Barney said. “Mother and Meg and Barbara. If you
-get through, and I don’t, will you see to them for me? I’ve appointed
-you my trustee. I told Adrienne last summer that I couldn’t take any of
-her money any longer, so that, of course, with my having thrown up the
-city job and taken on the farms, my affairs are in a bit of a mess. But
-I hope they’ll be able to go on at Coldbrooks all right. Palgrave will
-have Coldbrooks if I don’t come back, and perhaps you’ll be able to
-prevent him handing it over to his Socialist friends.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Palgrave would be safely human if it came to taking care of his mother
-and sisters,†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“Would he?†said Barney. “I don’t know.â€</p>
-
-<p>Across the village green the lights of The Little House shone at them.
-The curtains were still undrawn and, as they waited at the door, they
-could see Nancy in the drawing-room, sitting by the fire alone.</p>
-
-<p>“I want you to come in with me, please, Roger,†said Barney. “Nancy
-hasn’t felt it right to be<a name="page_261" id="page_261"></a> very kind to me of late and she’ll be able
-to be kinder if you are there. You’ll know, you’ll see if a chance comes
-for me to say what I want to say to her. You might leave us for a moment
-then.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You have hardly more than a half-hour, you know,†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“One can say a good deal in a half-hour,†Barney replied.</p>
-
-<p>Nancy had risen and, as they entered, she came forward, trying to smile
-and holding out her hand to each. But Oldmeadow was staying there. He
-was not going in half an hour. There was no reason why Nancy should give
-him her hand and Barney, quietly, took both her hands in his. “It’s
-good-bye, then, Nancy, isn’t it?†he said.</p>
-
-<p>They stood there in the firelight together, his dear young people, both
-so pale, both so fixedly looking at each other, and Nancy still tried to
-smile as she said, “It’s dear of you to have come.†But her face
-betrayed her. It was sick with the fear that, in conquering her own
-heart, she should hurt Barney’s; Barney’s, whom she might never see
-again. Oldmeadow went on to the fire and stood, his back to them,
-looking down at it.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, it’s not; not dear at all,†Barney returned. “You knew I’d come
-to say good-bye, of course. Why haven’t you been over to see me, you and
-Aunt Monica? I’ve asked you often enough.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You mustn’t scold me to-day, Barney, since it’s good-bye. We couldn’t
-come,†said Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s never I who scold you. It’s you who scold me. Not openly, I know,â€
-said Barney, “but by implication; punish me, by implication. I quite
-understood why you haven’t come. Well, I want<a name="page_262" id="page_262"></a> things to be clear now.
-Roger’s here, and I want to say them before him, because he’s been in it
-all since the beginning. It’s because of Adrienne you’ve never come; and
-changed so much in every way towards me.â€</p>
-
-<p>He had kept her hands till then, but Oldmeadow heard now that she drew
-away from him. For a moment she did not speak; and then it was not to
-answer him. “Have you said good-bye to her, Barney?â€</p>
-
-<p>“No; I haven’t,†Barney answered. “I’m not going to say good-bye to
-Adrienne, Nancy. It must be plain to you by this time that Adrienne and
-I have parted. What did it all mean but that?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It didn’t mean that to her. She never dreamed it was meaning that,â€
-said Nancy.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she said it, often enough,†Barney retorted.</p>
-
-<p>“Barney, please listen to me,†said Nancy. “You must let me speak. She
-never dreamed it was meaning that. If she was unkind to you it was
-because she could not believe it would ever mean parting. She had
-started wrong; by holding you to blame; after the baby; when you and
-Roger so hurt her pride. And then she wasn’t able to go back. She wasn’t
-able to see it all so differently&mdash;just to get you back. It would have
-seemed wrong to her; a weakness, just because she longed so. And then,
-most of all, she believed you loved her enough to come of yourself.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I tried to,†said Barney, in the sad, bitter voice of the hill-side
-talk with Oldmeadow. “You see, you don’t know everything, Nancy, though
-you know so much. I tried to again and again.<a name="page_263" id="page_263"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I know you did. But only on your own terms. And by then I had come
-in. Oh, yes, I had, Barney. You didn’t know it. It was long, long before
-you knew. But I knew it; and so did she and it was more than she could
-bear. What woman could bear it? I couldn’t have, in her place.†Tears
-were in Nancy’s voice.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s queer, Nancy,†said Barney, “that&mdash;barring Palgrave, who doesn’t
-count&mdash;you and Roger are the only two people she has left to stick up
-for her. Roger’s just been saying all that to me, you know. The two she
-tried to crab whenever she got a chance. Well, say it’s my fault, then.
-Say that I’ve been faithless to my wife and fallen in love with another
-woman. The fact is there, and you’ve said it now yourself. I don’t love
-her any longer. I shall never love her again. And I love you. I love
-you, Nancy, and it’s you I ought to have married; would have married, I
-believe, if I hadn’t been a blinded fool. I love you, and I can say it
-now because this may be the end of everything. Don’t let her spoil this,
-too. Nancy darling, look at me. Can’t you consent to forget Adrienne for
-this one time, when we may never see each other again?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t forget her! I can’t forget her!†Nancy sobbed. “I mustn’t.
-She’s miserable. She hasn’t stopped loving you. And she’s your wife.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Do you want to make me hate her?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Barney&mdash;that is cruel of you.â€</p>
-
-<p>There was a silence and in it Oldmeadow heard Barney’s car draw up at
-the gate. He took out his watch. There were only a few more moments left
-them. Not turning to them he said. “It does her no good, you know, Nancy
-dear.<a name="page_264" id="page_264"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“No. It does her no good,†Barney repeated. “But forgive me. I was
-cruel. I don’t hate her. I’m sorry for her. It’s simply that we ought
-never to have married. Forget it, Nancy, and forget her. Don’t let it
-be, then, that I love you and don’t love my wife. Let it be in the old
-way. As if she’d never come. As if I’d come to say good-bye to my
-cousin; to my dearest friend on earth. Look at me. Give me your hands.
-It’s your face I want to take with me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Five minutes, Barney,†Oldmeadow whispered, as he went past them. Nancy
-had given him her hands; she had lifted her face to his, and Barney’s
-arms had closed around her.<a name="page_265" id="page_265"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV-a" id="CHAPTER_XXIV-a"></a>CHAPTER XXIV</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">M<small>RS</small>. A<small>VERIL</small> was in the hall. “Give them another moment,†he said. “I’m
-going outside.â€</p>
-
-<p>Tears were in his own eyes. He stepped out on to the flagged path of the
-little plot in front of the house where strips of turf and rose-beds ran
-between the house and the high wall. Between the clipped holly-trees at
-the gate he saw Barney’s car, and its lights, the wall between, cast a
-deep shadow over the garden.</p>
-
-<p>The rain was falling thickly now and he stood, feeling it on his face,
-filled with a sense of appeasement, of accomplishment. They were
-together at last. It was not too late. At such a time, when all the
-world hung on the edge of an abyss, to be together for a moment might
-sum up more of real living than many happy years. They knew each other’s
-hearts and what more could life give its creatures than that
-recognition.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, how he did not know, for there was no apparent movement and
-his eyes were fixed on the pallid sky, he became aware that a figure was
-leaning against the house in the shadow beside him. His eyes found it
-and it was familiar. Yet he could not believe his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>She was leaning back, her hands against the wall on either side, and he
-saw, with the upper layer of perception that so often blunts a violent
-emotion, that her feet were sunken in the mould of Mrs. Averil’s
-rose-bed and that the cherished shoots of<a name="page_266" id="page_266"></a> the new climbing rose were
-tangled in her clothes. The open window was but a step away.</p>
-
-<p>She had come since they had come. She had crept up. She had looked
-in&mdash;for how long?&mdash;and had fallen back, casting out her arms so that it
-might not be to the ground. Her eyes were closed; but she had heard and
-seen him. As he stood before her, aghast, unable to find a word, he
-heard her mutter: “Take me away, please.â€</p>
-
-<p>Barney’s car blocked the egress of the gate and Barney might emerge at
-any moment. He leaned towards her and found that she was intricately
-caught in the rose. Her hat with its veil, her sleeve, her hair, were
-all entangled.</p>
-
-<p>Dumbly, patiently, she stood, while, with fumbling fingers and terror
-lest they should be heard within&mdash;Mrs. Averil’s voice now reached him
-from the drawing-room&mdash;Oldmeadow released her and, his fingers deeply
-torn by the thorns, he was aware, in all the tumult of his thought, more
-than of the pain, of the wet fragrance of the roses that surrounded her.
-He shared what he felt to be her panic.</p>
-
-<p>She had come hoping to see Barney; she had come to say good-bye to
-Barney, who would not come to her; and his heart sickened for her at the
-shameful seeming of her plight. She knew now that it must be her hope
-never to see Barney again.</p>
-
-<p>There was a narrow passage, leading to the lawn and garden, between the
-house and the stable walls. Thickly grown with ivy, showing only a
-narrow opening above, where chimneys and gables cut against the sky, it
-was nearly as dark as a tunnel, and into this place of hiding he half
-led, half carried the unfortunate woman.<a name="page_267" id="page_267"></a></p>
-
-<p>With the darkness, the pungent smell of the wet ivy closed thickly,
-ominously about them. It was as if he and Adrienne Toner were buried
-there together. He heard a maid laugh far away and a boy passed on the
-green stridently whistling “Tipperary.†It was like hearing, in the
-grave, the sounds of the upper world.</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne leaned against the wall. The ivy closing round her, nearly
-obliterated her, but he could dimly see the grey disk of her face,
-showing the unexpectedness of contour that reveals itself in the faces
-of the dead. The trivial features were erased and only a shape of grief
-remained, strangely august and emotionless.</p>
-
-<p>An eternity seemed to pass before the front door opened and Mrs.
-Averil’s voice, steadied to a galvanized cheerfulness, came, half
-obliterated to a wordless rhythm. Barney’s voice answered her, and his
-steps echoed on the flagged path. “Say good-bye to Roger for me if I
-don’t see him on the road!†he called out from the gate. Then the car
-coughed, panted; the horn croaked out its cry and, above them, a shaft
-of light across the ivy, of which he had till then been unaware, flitted
-suddenly away, leaving the darkness more visible.</p>
-
-<p>He heard then that she was weeping.</p>
-
-<p>Putting his arm behind her, for the rain fell heavily and the ivy was
-drenched with it, he drew her forward and for a little while it was
-almost against his breast that she lay while her very heart dissolved
-itself in tears.</p>
-
-<p>She had come, he knew it all, with a breakdown of her pride, with a last
-wild hope and, perhaps, a longing to atone, believing that she might
-snatch<a name="page_268" id="page_268"></a> a word somewhere with her husband, and find her way, at this
-last moment, back to the heart she had so alienated. She had seen all.
-She had heard all. He was sure of it. It had been as an outcast that he
-had found her leaning there. He understood her through and through and
-the tender heaviness that had already so often visited his heart flooded
-it to suffocation.</p>
-
-<p>Among her sobs, he heard her, at last, speaking to him. “Even Palgrave
-doesn’t know. He told me&mdash;only this afternoon&mdash;that Barney was here. I
-thought I might find him. I was going to wait in the road. And when I
-got here there was no car and I was afraid that there was a mistake.
-That I had missed him. And I went up to the house; to the open window;
-and looked in; to see if he was there. It was not jealousy: not now. I
-did not mean to be an eavesdropper. But, when I saw them, I stayed and
-listened. It was not jealousy,†she repeated. “It was because I had to
-know that there was no more hope.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,†said Oldmeadow gently, while, with long pauses, she spoke on and
-on; to the impartial judge, to the one sure refuge; and he said “Yesâ€
-again, gently, after she had finished; a long time after. She still half
-lay against his breast. He had never felt such an infinite tenderness
-towards any creature; not since his boyhood and his mother’s death.</p>
-
-<p>She drew away from him at last. “Take me,†she said. “There is a train;
-back to Oxford.†She had ceased to weep. Her voice was hoarse and faint.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you walk up from the station? You’re not fit to walk back. I can
-get a trap. There’s a man just across the green.<a name="page_269" id="page_269"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“No. Walking, please. I would be recognized. They might know me. I can
-walk. If you will help me.â€</p>
-
-<p>He drew her arm through his. “Lean on me,†he said. “We’ll go slowly.â€</p>
-
-<p>They went past the drawing-room windows and, softly opening, softly
-shutting, through the gate. The road, when it turned the corner, left
-the village behind; between its rarely placed trees, vague silhouettes
-against the sky that seemed of one texture with them, it showed its
-mournful pallor for only a little space before them; there was not
-enough light left in the sky to glimmer on its pools. The fields, on
-either side, vanished into obscurity. Pale cattle, once, over a hedge,
-put disconsolate heads and lowed and a garrulous dog, as they passed by,
-ran out from a way-side farm-yard, smelt at their heels, growled
-perfunctorily and, having satisfied his sense of duty, went back to his
-post. The sense of dumb emptiness was so complete that it was only after
-they had gone a long way that he knew that she was weeping and the soft,
-stifling sounds seemed only a part of nature’s desolation.</p>
-
-<p>Her head bent down, she stumbled on, leaning on his arm, and from time
-to time she raised her handkerchief and pressed it to her mouth and
-nose. He did not say a word; nor did she.</p>
-
-<p>As he led her along, submissive to her doom, it was another feeling of
-accomplishment that overwhelmed him; the dark after the radiant; after
-Nancy and Barney, he and Adrienne. It was this, from their first
-meeting, that he had been destined to mean to her. She was his appointed
-victim. He had killed, as really as if with a knife, the girl whom<a name="page_270" id="page_270"></a> he
-had seen at Coldbrooks, in the sunlight, on that Sunday morning in
-spring, knowing no doubts. She had then held the world in her hands and
-a guileless, untried heaven had filled her heart. Between her and this
-crushed and weeping woman there seemed no longer any bond; unless it was
-the strange aching that, in his heart, held them both together.<a name="page_271" id="page_271"></a></p>
-
-<p><a name="page_272" id="page_272"></a>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><a name="page_273" id="page_273"></a></p>
-
-<h2><a name="PART_II" id="PART_II"></a>PART II</h2>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_I-b" id="CHAPTER_I-b"></a>CHAPTER I</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">O<small>LDMEADOW</small> sat in Mrs. Aldesey’s drawing-room and, the tea-table between
-them, Mrs. Aldesey poured out his tea. So it was, after three years,
-that they found each other. So it was, all over the world, Oldmeadow
-said to himself, that the tea-table, or its equivalent, reasserted
-itself in any interval where the kindly amenities of human intercourse
-could root themselves; though the world rocked and flames of anarchy
-rimmed its horizons.</p>
-
-<p>It was more real, he felt that now, to sit and look at Lydia over her
-tea than to parch on Eastern sands and shiver in Western trenches; from
-the mere fact that the one experience became a nightmare while the other
-was as natural as waking at dawn. Horrors became the dropped stitches of
-life; and though if there were too many of them they would destroy the
-stocking, the stocking itself was made up of tea-table talks and walks
-in the woods with Nancy. He had just come from Coldbrooks.</p>
-
-<p>So he put it, trivially, to himself, and he felt the need of clinging to
-triviality. The dropped stitches had been almost too much for him and
-the nightmare, at times, had seemed the only reality. At times he had
-known a final despair of life and even now he remembered that the worst
-might still come. One might be called upon to face the death of the
-whole order of civilization. Faith required one, perhaps, to recognize
-that the human spirit was bound<a name="page_274" id="page_274"></a> up, finally, with no world order and
-unless one could face its destruction as one had to face the death of a
-loved individual, one was not secure of the spiritual order that
-transcended all mundane calamity. He believed, or hoped, that during
-these last three years, in Gallipoli, Egypt and Palestine, when, to the
-last fibre, he had felt his faiths tested, he had learned to be ready
-for the great relinquishment, should it be required of him; and it was
-therefore the easier to doff that consciousness, as he might have doffed
-a sword, and think of Lydia and of the order that still survived and
-that she still stood for.</p>
-
-<p>Lydia did not look the worse for the war; indeed she looked the better.
-She looked as if, in spite of long days in the hospital, she digested
-better and, in spite of air-raids, slept better, and as they talked,
-finding their way back to intimacy by the comparing of such
-superficialities, she told him that for years she hadn’t been so strong
-or well. “Nothing is so good for you, I’ve found out, as to feel that
-you are being used; being used by something worth while. People like
-myself must keep still about our experiences, for we’ve had none that
-bear talking of. But even the others, even the people bereaved
-unspeakably, are strangely lifted up. And I believe that the populace
-enjoys the air-raids rather than the reverse; they give them a chance of
-feeling that they are enduring something, too; with good-humour and
-pluck. If anyone is pessimistic about the effect of war on average human
-nature, I should only ask them to come and talk to our men at the
-hospital. Of course, under it all, there’s the ominous roar in one’s
-ears all the time.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean the air-raids?†he asked her and,<a name="page_275" id="page_275"></a> shaking her head,
-showing him that she, too, had seen with him and, he believed, with him
-accepted: “No; I mean the roar of nation after nation collapsing into
-the abyss. A sort of tumbril roar of civilization, Roger. And, for that,
-there’s always the last resource of going gallantly to the guillotine.
-But all the same, I believe we shall pull through.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was the spring of 1918 and one needed faith to believe it. She asked
-him presently about his friends at Coldbrooks. He had gone to Coldbrooks
-for three days of his one week’s leave. After this he went to France.</p>
-
-<p>“What changes for you there, poor Roger,†said Mrs. Aldesey.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Terrible changes. Palgrave dead and Barney broken. Yet, do you
-know, it’s not as sad as it was. Something’s come back to it. Nancy sits
-by him and holds his hand and is his joy and comfort.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Will he recover?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not in the sense of being really mended. He’ll go on crutches, always,
-if he gets up. But the doctors now hope that the injury to the back
-isn’t permanent.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And Meg’s married,†said Mrs. Aldesey after a little pause. “Have you
-seen her?â€</p>
-
-<p>“No. She runs a hospital in the country, at her husband’s place, Nancy
-tells me; and is very happy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Very. Has a fine boy, and is completely reinstated. It’s a remarkable
-ending to the story, isn’t it? She met him at the front, you know,
-driving her ambulance; and he has twice as much in him as poor Eric
-Hayward.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Remarkable. Yet Meg’s a person who only<a name="page_276" id="page_276"></a> needs her chance. She’s the
-sort that always comes out on top.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Does it comfort her mother a little for all she’s suffered to see her
-on top?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It almost comically comforts her. All the same, Eleanor Chadwick has
-her depths. Nothing will ever comfort her for Palgrave’s death.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I understand that,†said Mrs. Aldesey. “Nothing could. How she must
-envy the happy mothers whose boys were killed at the front. To have
-one’s boy die in prison as a conscientious objector must be the
-bitterest thing the war has given any mother to bear.â€</p>
-
-<p>“He was a dear boy,†said Oldmeadow. “Heroically wrong-minded.†He could
-hardly bear to think of Palgrave.</p>
-
-<p>“He wasn’t alone, you know,†said Mrs. Aldesey after a moment. Something
-was approaching that he would rather not have to speak of; a name he
-would so much rather not name. And, evading it, feebly, he said, “His
-mother got to him in time, I know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. But all the time. She went and lived near the prison. Adrienne
-Toner I mean.â€</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes were on him and he hoped that no readjustment of his features
-was visible. “Oh, yes. Nancy told me that,†he said.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s become of her, Roger?†Mrs. Aldesey asked. “Since Charlie was
-killed the Lumleys have lived in the country and I hardly see them. I
-haven’t heard a word of her for years.â€</p>
-
-<p>He was keeping his eyes on her and he knew from her expression that he
-showed some strain or some distress.<a name="page_277" id="page_277"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Nor have I. Nancy said that they hadn’t either. She went away, after
-Palgrave’s death. Disappeared completely.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Nancy told you, of course, about the money; the little fortune she gave
-Palgrave, so that he could leave it to his mother?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes. Nancy wrote to me of that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It was cleverly contrived, wasn’t it. They are quite tied up to it,
-aren’t they; whatever they may feel. No one could object to her giving a
-fortune to the boy she’d ruined. I admired that in her, I must confess;
-the way she managed it. And then her disappearance.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Very clever indeed,†said Oldmeadow. “All that remains for her to do
-now is to manage to get killed. And that’s easily managed. Perhaps she
-is killed.â€</p>
-
-<p>He did not intend that his voice should be emptier or dryer, yet Lydia
-looked at him with a closer attention.</p>
-
-<p>“Barney and Nancy could get married then,†she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Exactly. They could get married.â€</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what you want, isn’t it, Roger?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Want her to be killed, or them to be married?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, as you say, so many people <i>are</i> being killed. One more or less,
-if it’s in such a good cause as their marriage&mdash;â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s certainly a good cause. But I don’t like the dilemma,†said
-Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>He knew from the way she looked at him, discreet and disguised as her
-recognition was, that he was hiding something from her. Casting about
-his mind, in the distress that took the form of confusion, he<a name="page_278" id="page_278"></a> could
-himself find nothing that he hid, or wished to hide, unless it was the
-end of Adrienne’s story as Barney’s wife. That wasn’t for him to show;
-ever; to anyone.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps she’s gone back to America,†said Mrs. Aldesey presently,
-“California, you know. Or Chicago. She may very well be engaged in great
-enterprises out there that we never hear of. They’d be sure to be great,
-wouldn’t they.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose they would.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You saw her once more, didn’t you, at the time you saw Palgrave,†Mrs.
-Aldesey went on. “Lady Lumley told me of that. And how kind you had
-been. Adrienne had spoken of it. You were sorry for them both, I
-suppose; for her as well as for him, in spite of everything. Or did she
-merely take it for granted that the kindness to him extended to her?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all. It was for her too,†said Oldmeadow, staring a little and
-gathering together, after this lapse of time that seemed so immense, his
-memories of that other tea-table set up in the chaos: Palgrave’s
-tea-table on that distant day in Oxford. What was so confusing him was
-his consciousness that it hadn’t been the last time he had seen
-Adrienne. “I was as sorry for her as for him,†he went on. “Sorrier.
-There was so much more in her than I’d supposed. She was capable of
-intense suffering.â€</p>
-
-<p>“In losing her husband’s affections, you mean? You never suspected her
-of being inhuman, surely? Lady Lumley blamed poor Barney for all that
-sad story. But, even from her account, I could see his side very
-plainly.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I did think her inhuman. At all events I thought her
-invulnerable.<a name="page_279" id="page_279"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I remember. With all her absurdity you thought she had great
-power.†Mrs. Aldesey looked at him thoughtfully. “And it was when you
-found she hadn’t that you could be sorry for her.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all,†said Oldmeadow again. “I still think she has great power.
-People can have power and go to pieces.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Did she go to pieces? That day in Oxford? I can’t imagine her in
-pieces, you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>He had a feeling of drawing back; or of drawing Adrienne back. “In the
-sense of being so unhappy, so obviously unhappy, over Palgrave,†he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>He saw that Lydia would have liked to go on questioning, as, of course,
-it would have been perfectly natural for her to do. Was not Adrienne
-Toner and her absurdity one of their pet themes? Yet she desisted. She
-desisted and it was because she felt some change in him; some shrinking
-and some pain. “Well, let’s hope that she is happy, now, or as happy as
-she can be, poor thing, doing great deeds in America,†she said. And she
-turned the talk back to civilization and its danger.</p>
-
-<p>They talked a good deal about civilization during their last three days
-together. He wanted things, during these three days of mingled recovery
-and farewell, to be as happy as possible between him and his friend, for
-he knew that Lydia’s heart was heavy, for him and not for civilization.
-The front to which he was going was more real to her, because it was
-much nearer, and his peril was more real than during his absence in
-distant climes. He felt himself that the French front, at this special
-time, would probably make an end of him and, for the first time since
-their early friendship, he knew conjecture as to his<a name="page_280" id="page_280"></a> relation with
-Lydia; wondered, if it had not been for Mr. Aldesey in New York, whether
-Lydia might have been in love with him, and realized, with a curious
-sense of anxiety and responsibility, that her friendship for him now was
-the closest tie in her life. The war might to her, too, mean irreparable
-loss. And he was sorry that it was so; sorry to think that the easy,
-happy intercourse had this hidden depth of latent suffering.</p>
-
-<p>Lydia’s feeling, and its implications, became the clearer to him when,
-on their last evening together, she said to him suddenly: “Perhaps
-you’ll see her over there.â€</p>
-
-<p>He could not pretend not to know whom she meant, nor could he pretend to
-himself not to see that if it troubled Lydia that he should be sorry for
-Adrienne that could only be because she cared far more for him than he
-had ever guessed.</p>
-
-<p>He said, as easily as he could manage it, for the pressure of his
-realizations made him feel a little queer: “Not if she’s in America.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but perhaps she’s come back from America,†said Mrs. Aldesey.
-“She’s a great traveller. What will you do with her if you do find her?
-Bring her back to Barney?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly that,†he said. “There’d be no point in bringing her back to
-Barney, would there?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, what would you do with her?†Mrs. Aldesey smiled, as if
-with a return to their old light dealing with the theme, while, still in
-her nurse’s coiffe and dress, she leaned back against her chair.</p>
-
-<p>“What would she do with me, rather, isn’t it?†he asked. And he, too,
-tried to be light.<a name="page_281" id="page_281"></a></p>
-
-<p>“She’ll be mended then, you think? Able to do things to people again?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not at all afraid of her, you know. She never did me any harm,†he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>“Because you were as strong as she, you mean. She did other people harm,
-surely. You warned me once to keep away from her unless I wanted to lose
-my toes and fingers,†Mrs. Aldesey still smiled. “She does make people
-lose things, doesn’t she?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she makes them gain things, too. Fortunes for instance. Perhaps
-if I find her, she’ll give me a fortune.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But that’s only when she’s ruined you,†she reminded him.</p>
-
-<p>“And it’s she who’s ruined now,†he felt bound to remind her; no longer
-lightly.</p>
-
-<p>Leaning back in her chair, her faded little face framed in white, Mrs.
-Aldesey looked at once younger yet more tired than he had ever seen her
-look and she sat for a little while silent; as if she had forgotten
-Adrienne Toner and were thinking only of their parting. But all her
-gaiety had fallen from her as she said at last: “I can be sorry for her,
-too; if she’s really ruined. If she still loves him when he has ceased
-to care for her. Does she, do you think?â€</p>
-
-<p>With the question he seemed to see a fire-lit room and lovers who had
-found each other and to smell wet roses. Lydia was coming too near; too
-near the other figure, outside the window, fallen back with outstretched
-arms against the roses. And again he felt himself softly, cautiously,
-disentangle the sleeve, the hair, felt himself draw Adrienne away into
-the darkness where the smell was now of wet ivy and where he could see
-only the shape of an accepting grief.<a name="page_282" id="page_282"></a></p>
-
-<p>“How could I know?†he said. “She was very unhappy when I last saw her.
-But three years have passed and people can mend in three years.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Especially in America,†Mrs. Aldesey suggested. “It’s a wonderful place
-for mending. Let’s hope she’s there. Let’s hope that we shall never, any
-of us, ever hear of her again. That would be much the happiest thing,
-wouldn’t it?â€</p>
-
-<p>He was obliged to say that it would certainly be much the happiest
-thing; and he was too unhappy about Lydia to be able to feel angry with
-her. He knew how tired she must be when, for the first time in their
-long friendship, she must know that she was not pleasing him, yet not be
-able to help herself.<a name="page_283" id="page_283"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_II-b" id="CHAPTER_II-b"></a>CHAPTER II</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">“G<small>OOD</small> L<small>ORD</small>!†Oldmeadow heard himself groaning.</p>
-
-<p>Even as he took possession of his physical suffering he knew that there
-was satisfaction in suffering, at last, himself. Until now the worst
-part of war had been to see the sufferings of others. This was at last
-the real thing; but it was so mingled with acquiescence that it ceased
-to be the mere raw fact. “We’re all together, now,†he thought, and he
-felt himself, even as he groaned, lifted on a wave of beatitude.</p>
-
-<p>Until now he had not, as a consciousness, known anything. There was a
-shape in his memory, a mere immense black blot shot with fiery lights.
-It must symbolize the moment when the shell struck him, bending, in the
-trench, over his watch and his calculations. And after that there were
-detached visions, the ceiling of a train where he had swung in a hammock
-bed, looking up; clean sheets, miraculously clean and the face of a
-black-browed nurse who reminded him of Trixie. The smell of chloroform
-was over everything. It bound everything together so that days might
-have passed since the black blot and since he lay here, again in clean
-sheets, the sweet, thick smell closing round him and a raging thirst in
-his throat. He knew that he had just been carried in from the operating
-room and he groaned again “Good Lord,†feeling the pain snatch as if
-with fangs and claws at his thigh and belly, and muttered, “Water!â€</p>
-
-<p>Something sweet, but differently sweet from the<a name="page_284" id="page_284"></a> smell, sharp, too, and
-insidious, touched his lips and opening them obediently, as a young bird
-opens its bill to the parent bird, he felt a swab passed round his
-parched mouth and saw the black-browed nurse. “Not water, yet, you
-know,†she said. “This is lemon and glycerine and will help you
-wonderfully.â€</p>
-
-<p>He wanted to ask something about Paris and the long-distance gun firing
-on it every day and he seemed to see it over the edge of the trench, far
-away on the horizon of No-man’s-land, a tiny city flaming far into the
-sky. But other words bubbled up and he heard himself crying: “Mother!
-Mother!†and remembered, stopping himself with an act of will, that they
-all said that when they were dying. But as he closed his eyes he felt
-her very near and knew that it would be sweet to die and find her.</p>
-
-<p>A long time must have passed. Was it days or only the time of daylight?
-It was night now and a shaded light shone from a recess behind him and
-thoughts, visions, memories raced through his mind. Nancy; Barney; he
-would never see them again, then: poor Lydia and civilization.
-“Civilization will see me out,†he thought and he wondered if they had
-taken off the wings of the Flying Victory when they packed her.</p>
-
-<p>A rhythm was beating in his brain. Music was it? Something of Bach’s? It
-gathered words to itself and shaped itself sentence by sentence into
-something he had heard? or read? Ah, he was glad to have found it.
-“Under the orders of your devoted officers you will march against the
-enemy or fall where you stand, facing the foe. To those who die I say:
-You will not die: you will enter living into immortality, and God will
-receive you into his<a name="page_285" id="page_285"></a> bosom.†He seemed to listen to the words as he
-lay, quietly smiling. But it was music after all for, as he listened,
-they merged into the “St. Matthew Passion.†He had heard it, of course,
-with Lydia, at the Temple. But Lydia did not really care very much for
-Bach. She might care more for “Litanei.†She had sung it standing beside
-him with foolish white roses over her ears. How unlike Lydia to wear
-those roses. And was it Lydia who stood there? A mental perplexity
-mingled with the physical pain and spoiled his peace. It was not
-Lydia’s, that white face in the coffin with wet ivy behind it. What
-suffering was this that beat upon his heart? The music had faded all
-away and he saw faces everywhere, dying faces; and blood and terrible
-mutilations. All the suffering of the war, worse, far worse than the
-mere claws and fangs that tore at him. Dying boys choked out their
-breaths in agonies of conscious loneliness, yearning for faces they
-would never see again. Oh, how many he had seen die like that!
-Intolerable to watch them. And could one do nothing? “Cigarettes. Give
-them cigarettes,†he tried to tell somebody. “And marmalade for
-breakfast; and phonographs, and then they will enter living into
-immortalityâ€&mdash;No: he did not mean that. What did he mean? He could catch
-at nothing now. Thoughts were tossed and tumbled like the rubbish of
-wreckage from an inundated town on the deep currents of his anguish. A
-current that raced and seethed and carried him away. He saw it. Its
-breathless speed was like the fever in his blood. If it went faster he
-would lose his breath. Church-bells ringing on the banks lost theirs as
-he sped past so swiftly and made a trail of whining<a name="page_286" id="page_286"></a> sound.&mdash;Effie!
-Effie! It was poor little Effie, drowning. He saw her wild, small face,
-battling. Bubbles boiled up about his cry.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the torrent was stilled. Without commotion, without tumult, it
-was stilled. There was a dam somewhere; it had stopped racing; he could
-get his breath. Still and slow; oh! it was delicious to feel that quiet
-hand on his forehead; his mother’s hand, and to know that Effie was
-safe. He lay with closed eyes and saw a smooth waterfall sliding and
-curving with green grey depths into the lower currents of the stream. He
-remembered the stream well, now; one of his beloved French rivers; one
-of the smaller, sylvan rivers, too small for majesty; with silver
-poplars spaced against the sky on either bank and a small town, white
-and pink and pearly-grey, clear on the horizon. Tranquil sails were
-above him and the bells from the distant church-tower floated to him
-across the fields. Soundlessly, slowly, he felt himself borne into
-oblivion.</p>
-
-<p>The black-browed nurse was tending him next morning. “You are better,â€
-she said, smiling at him. “You slept all night. No; it’s a shame, but
-you mayn’t have water yet.†She put the lemon and glycerine to his lips.
-“The pain is easier, isn’t it?â€</p>
-
-<p>He said it was. He felt that he must not stir an inch so as to keep it
-easier, but he could not have stirred had he wanted to, for he was all
-tightly swathed and bandaged. He remembered something he wanted
-specially to ask: “Paris? They haven’t got it yet?â€</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll never get it!†she smiled proudly. “Everything is going
-splendidly.<a name="page_287" id="page_287"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>The English surgeon was such a nice fellow. He had spectacles on a
-square-tipped nose and a square, chubby face; yet his hair was nearly
-white. Oldmeadow remembered, as if of days before the flood, that his
-name was a distinguished one. Perhaps it was morphia they gave him,
-after his wound was dressed, or perhaps he fainted. The day passed in a
-hot and broken stupor and at night the tides of fever rose again and
-carried him away. But, again, before he had lost his breath, before he
-had quite gone down into delirium, the quiet hand came and sent him,
-under sails, to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Next day Oldmeadow knew, from the way the surgeon looked at him, that
-his case was grave. His face was grim as he bent over the dressing and
-he hurt horribly. They told him, when it was over, that he had been very
-brave, and, like a child, he was pleased that they should tell him so.
-But the pain was worse all day and the sense of the submerging fever
-imminent, and he lay with closed eyes and longed for the night that
-brought the hand. Hours, long hours passed before it came. Hours of
-sunlight when, behind his eyelids, he saw red, and hours of twilight
-when he saw mauve. Then, for a little while, it was a soft, dense grey
-he saw, like a bat’s wing, and then the small light shone across his
-bed; he knew that the night had come, and felt, at last, the hand fall
-softly on his head.</p>
-
-<p>He lay for some time feeling the desired peace flow into him and then,
-through its satisfaction, another desire pushed up into his
-consciousness and he remembered that, more than about Paris, he had
-wanted to speak to the nurse about what she did for him and thank her.<a name="page_288" id="page_288"></a></p>
-
-<p>“It’s you who make me sleep, isn’t it,†he said, lying with closed eyes
-under the soft yet insistent pressure. “I’ve never thanked you.â€</p>
-
-<p>She did not reply. She did not want him to talk. But he still wanted to.</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t thank you last night,†he said, “I can’t keep hold of my
-thoughts. And when morning comes I seem to have forgotten everything
-about the night. You are the nurse who takes care of me in the daytime,
-too, aren’t you?â€</p>
-
-<p>Again, for a moment, there was no reply; and then a voice came. “No; I
-am the night nurse. Go to sleep now.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was a voice gentle, cold and soft, like snow. It was not an English
-voice and he had heard it before. Where had he heard it? Rooks were
-cawing and he saw a blue ribbon rolling, rolling out across a
-spring-tide landscape. This voice was not like a blue ribbon; it was
-like snow. Yet, when he turned his head under her hand, he looked round
-at Adrienne Toner.</p>
-
-<p>The first feeling that came uppermost in the medley that filled him at
-the sight of her was one of amused vexation. It was as if he went back
-to his beginnings with her, back to the rooks and the blue ribbon. “At
-it again!†was what he said to himself, and what he said aloud,
-absurdly, was: “Oh, come, now!â€</p>
-
-<p>She did not lift her hand, but there was trouble on her face as she
-looked back at him. “I hoped you wouldn’t see me, Mr. Oldmeadow,†she
-said.</p>
-
-<p>He was reminded of Bacchus and the laying on of hands; but a classical
-analogy, even more ridiculous, came to him with her words. “Like Cupid
-and<a name="page_289" id="page_289"></a> Psyche,†he said. “The other way round. It’s I who mustn’t look.â€</p>
-
-<p>The trouble on her face became more marked and he saw that she imagined
-him to be delirious. He was not quite himself, certainly, or he would
-not have greeted Adrienne Toner thus, and he made an effort to be more
-decorous and rational as he said, “I’m very glad to see you again. Safe
-and sound: you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had always had a singular little face, but it had never looked so
-singular as now, seen from below with shadows from the light behind cast
-so oddly over it. The end of her nose jutted from a blue shadow and her
-eyes lay in deep hollows of blue. All that he was sure of in her
-expression was the gravity with which she made up her mind to humour
-him. “We want you to be safe and sound, too. Please shut your eyes and
-go to sleep.â€</p>
-
-<p>“All right; all right, Psyche,†he murmured, and he knew it wasn’t quite
-what he intended to say, yet in his flippancy he was taking refuge from
-something; from the flood of suffering that had broken over him the
-other night after he had seen that dead face with white roses over its
-ears. This queer face, half dissolved in blue and yellow, was not dead
-and the white coiffe came closely down about it. If he obeyed her he
-knew that she would keep the other faces away and he closed his eyes
-obediently and lay very still, seeing himself again as the good little
-boy being praised. This was Psyche; not Ariane. “Ariane ma sœur,†he
-murmured. It was Ariane who had the white roses&mdash;or was it wet ivy? and
-after her face pressed all the other dying faces. “You’ll keep them
-away, won’t you?†he murmured,<a name="page_290" id="page_290"></a> and he heard her say: “Yes; I’ll keep
-them quite away,†and, softly, a curtain of sleep fell before his eyes
-crossed by a thin drift of mythological figures.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought it was you who sent me to sleep,†he said to the English
-nurse next day. He could hardly, in the morning light, believe it was
-not a dream.</p>
-
-<p>She smiled with an air of vicarious pride. “No indeed. I can’t send
-people to sleep. It’s our wonderful Mrs. Chadwick. She does a good deal
-more than put people to sleep. She cures people&mdash;oh, I wouldn’t have
-believed it myself, till I saw it&mdash;who are at death’s door. It’s lucky
-for you and the others that we’ve got her here for a little while.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s here?†he asked after a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s Boulogne. Didn’t you know?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I heard the sea sometimes. It’s for cases too bad, then, to
-be taken home. Get her here from where?â€</p>
-
-<p>“From her hospital in the firing-line. Now that we’re advancing at the
-front everything there is changed and she could come away for a little.
-Sir Kenneth’s been begging her to come ever since he saw her. He knew
-she would work marvels here, too.†The nice young nurse was exuberant in
-her darkness and rosiness with a Jewish streak of fervour in her lips
-and eyes. “It’s a sort of rest for her,†she added. “She’s been badly
-wounded once. You can just see the scar, under her cap, on her forehead.
-And she nearly died of fever out in Salonika. She had a travelling
-ambulance there before she came to France.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It must be very restful for her,†Oldmeadow remarked with a touch of
-his grim mirth, “if she<a name="page_291" id="page_291"></a> has to sit up putting all your bad cases to
-sleep. Why haven’t I heard of her and her hospital?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not run in her name. It’s an American hospital&mdash;she is
-American&mdash;called after her mother, I believe. The Pearl Ambulance is
-what it’s called and everybody here knows about it; all of us nurses and
-doctors, I mean. Her organizing power is as wonderful as her cures; her
-influence over her staff. They all worship the ground she walks on.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Pearl, Pearl Toner,†Oldmeadow was saying to himself. How complete, how
-perfect it was. And the nurse went on, delighted, evidently, to talk of
-an idol, and rather as if she were speaking of a special cure they had
-installed, a sort of Carrel treatment not to be found anywhere else:
-“Everything’s been different since she came. It’s almost miraculous to
-see what the mere touch of her hand can do. Matron says she wouldn’t be
-surprised if it turned out she was a sort of nun and wore a hair shirt
-under her dress. Whatever she is, it makes one feel better and stronger
-just to see her and one would do anything for her just to have her smile
-at one. She has the most heavenly smile.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was all very familiar.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, you haven’t abandoned me after all, though I have found you out,â€
-he said to Adrienne Toner that night.</p>
-
-<p>He was able at last to see her clearly as she came in, so softly that it
-was like a dream sliding into one’s sleep. She was like a dream in her
-nurse’s dress which, though so familiar on other women, seemed to
-isolate and make her strange. Her face was smaller than he had
-remembered it and had the curious look, docile yet stubborn, that one
-sees on<a name="page_292" id="page_292"></a> the faces of dumb-mutes. She might have looked like that had
-she been deafened by the sound of so many bursting shells and lost the
-faculty of speech through doing much and saying nothing among scenes of
-horror. But she spoke to him, after all, as naturally as he spoke to
-her, saying, though with no touch of his lightness: “You mustn’t talk,
-you know, if I come to make you sleep. Sir Kenneth wants sleep for you
-more than anything else.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I promise you to be good,†said Oldmeadow. “But I’m really better,
-aren’t I? and can talk a little first.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You are really better. But it will take a long time. A great deal of
-sleeping.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No one knew what had become of you,†said Oldmeadow, and he remembered
-that he ought to be sorry that Adrienne Toner had not been killed.</p>
-
-<p>She hesitated, and then sat down beside him. He thought that she had
-been going to ask him something and then checked herself. “I can’t let
-you talk,†she said, and in her voice he heard the new authority; an
-authority gained by long submission to discipline.</p>
-
-<p>“Another night, then. We must talk another night,†he murmured, closing
-his eyes, for he knew that he must not disobey her. All the same it was
-absurd that Adrienne Toner should be doing this for him; absurd but
-heavenly to feel her hand fall softly, like a warm, light bird, and
-brood upon his forehead.<a name="page_293" id="page_293"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_III-b" id="CHAPTER_III-b"></a>CHAPTER III</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">T<small>HEY</small> never spoke of Coldbrooks, nor of Barney, nor of Palgrave; not
-once. Not once during all those nights that she sat beside him and made
-him sleep.</p>
-
-<p>He had heard from Coldbrooks, of course; letters came often now. And the
-dark young nurse had written for him since he could not yet write for
-himself. He had said no word of seeing Adrienne. Nor had he let them
-know how near to death he had been and, perhaps, still was. He would
-have liked to have seen Lydia and Nancy if he were to die; but most of
-all he wanted to be sure of not losing Adrienne. And he knew that were
-he to tell them, were they to come, Adrienne would go.</p>
-
-<p>She never spoke to him at all, he remembered&mdash;as getting stronger with
-every day, he pieced his memories of these nights together&mdash;unless he
-spoke to her; and she never smiled. And it came upon him one morning
-after he had read letters that brought so near the world from which she
-was now shut out, that she had, perhaps, never forgiven him. After all,
-though he could not see that he had been wrong, she had everything to
-forgive him and the thought made him restless. That night, for the first
-time, she volunteered a remark. His temperature had gone up a little. He
-must be very quiet and go to sleep directly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I know,†he said. “It’s because of you. Things I want to say. I’m
-really so much better. We can’t go on like this, can we,†he said,
-looking<a name="page_294" id="page_294"></a> up at her as she sat beside him. “Why, you might slip out of my
-life any day, and I might never hear of you again.â€</p>
-
-<p>She sat looking down at him, a little askance, though gentle still, if
-gentle was the word for her changed face. “That’s what I mean to do,â€
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but&mdash;†Oldmeadow actually, in his alarm and resentment, struggled
-up on an elbow&mdash;“that won’t do. I want to see you, really see you, now
-that I’m myself again. I want to talk with you&mdash;now that I can talk
-coherently. I want to ask you; well, I won’t ask it now.†She had put
-out her hand, her small, potent hand, and quietly pressed him back, and
-down upon his pillow while her face took on its look of almost stern
-authority. “I’ll be good. But promise me you’ll not go without telling
-me. And haven’t you questions to ask, too?â€</p>
-
-<p>Her face kept its severity, but, as he found this last appeal, her eyes
-widened, darkened, looked, for a moment, almost frightened.</p>
-
-<p>“I know that Barney is safe,†she said. “I have nothing to ask.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well; no; I see.†He felt that he had been guilty of a blunder and it
-made him fretful. “For me, then. Not for you. Promise me. I won’t be
-good unless you promise me. You can’t go off and leave me like that.â€</p>
-
-<p>With eyes still dilated, she contemplated this rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>“You must promise me something, then,†she said after a moment.</p>
-
-<p>He felt proud, delighted, as if he had gained a victory over her.<a name="page_295" id="page_295"></a></p>
-
-<p>“Done. If it’s not too hard. What is it?â€</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t write to anybody. You won’t tell anybody that you’ve seen me.
-Only Lady Lumley knows that I am here. And she has promised not to tell.
-Probably, soon, I shall have left France for ever.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t tell. I won’t write. I can keep secrets as well as Lady Lumley.
-She does keep them, you know. So it’s a compact.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. It’s a compact. You’ll never tell them; and I won’t go without
-letting you know. I promise. Now go to sleep.â€</p>
-
-<p>She laid her hand on his forehead, but, for a little while, he heard her
-breathing deeply and quickly and the sense of his blundering stayed with
-him so that sleep was longer in coming.</p>
-
-<p>All the same he was much better next day. He was able to sit up and had
-the glory and excitement of a chop for his midday dinner. And when the
-pleasant hour of tea arrived it was Adrienne herself who came in
-carrying the little tray.</p>
-
-<p>He had not seen her in daylight before and his first feeling was one of
-alarm, for, if she were afoot like this, in daylight, must it not mean
-that she was soon to leave the hospital? He felt shy of her, too, for,
-altered as she was by night, the day showed her as far more altered.
-Whether she seemed much older or much younger he could not have said.
-The coiffe, covering her forehead, and bound under her chin in a way
-peculiar to her, left only, as it were, the means of expression visible.</p>
-
-<p>She sat down by the window and looked out, glancing round from time to
-time as he drank his tea and it was she who found the calm little
-sentences,<a name="page_296" id="page_296"></a> about the latest news from the front, the crashing of
-Bulgaria, that carried them on until he had finished. When he had pushed
-down his tray she turned her chair and faced him, folding her hands
-together on her white apron, and she said, and he knew that she had come
-to say it, “What was it you wanted to ask me?â€</p>
-
-<p>He had had, while she sat at the window, her profile with the jutting
-nose, and her face, as it turned upon him now, made him think suddenly
-of a seagull. Questing, lonely, with vigilant eyes, it seemed to have
-great spaces before it; to be flying forth into empty spaces and to an
-unseen goal.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going away, then?†He had not dared, somehow, to ask her
-before. He felt now that he could not talk until he knew.</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet,†she said. “But I shall be going soon. The hospital is
-emptying and my nights on duty are very short. I have, really, only you
-and two others to take care of. That’s why I am up so early to-day. And
-you are so much better that we can have a little talk; if you have
-anything to ask me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It’s this, of course,†said Oldmeadow. “It seems to me you ought to
-dislike me. I misunderstood you in many ways. And now I owe you my life.
-Before we part I want to thank you and to ask you to forgive me.â€</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes, seen in daylight, were of the colour of distance, of arctic
-distances. That had always been their colour, though he had never before
-identified it.</p>
-
-<p>“But there is nothing to thank me for,†she said. “I am here to take
-care of people.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Even people who misunderstood you. Even<a name="page_297" id="page_297"></a> people you dislike. I know.â€
-He flushed, feeling that he had been duly snubbed. “But though you take
-care of everyone, anyone may thank you, too, mayn’t they?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t dislike you, Mr. Oldmeadow,†she said after a moment. “And you
-didn’t misunderstand me.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,†he murmured, more abashed than before. “I think so. Not, perhaps,
-what you did; but what you were. I didn’t see you as you really were.
-That’s what I mean.â€</p>
-
-<p>The perplexity, which had grown, even, to amazement, had left her eyes
-and she was intently looking at him. “There is nothing for you to be
-sorry for,†she said. “Nothing for me to forgive. You were always
-right.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Always right? I can’t take that, you know,†said Oldmeadow, deeply
-discomposed. “You were blind, of course, and more sure of yourself than
-any of us can safely afford to be; but I wasn’t always right.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Always. Always,†she repeated. “I was blinder than you knew. I was more
-sure of myself.â€</p>
-
-<p>He lay looking at her and she looked back at him, but with a look that
-invited neither argument not protest. It remained remote and vigilant.
-She might have been the seagull looking down and noting, as she flew
-onward, that the small figure on the beach so far below had ceased to be
-that of an assailant in its attitude. How remote she was, white strange,
-fleeting creature! How near she had been once! The memory of how near
-rushed over his mind. He had, despite the delirious visions of her
-stricken face, hardly thought at all, since really seeing<a name="page_298" id="page_298"></a> her again, of
-that last time. Everything had fitted itself on, rather, to his earliest
-memories of her, tinged all of them, it was true, with a deeper meaning,
-but not till this moment consciously admitting it. It rushed in now,
-poignant with the recovered smell of wet, dark ivy, the recovered sound
-of her stifled sobs as she had stumbled, broken, beside him in the rain.
-And with the memory came the desire that she should again be near.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell me,†he said, “what are you going to do? You said you might be
-leaving France for ever. Shall you go back to America?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so. Not for a long time,†she answered. “There will be
-things to do over here, out of France, for a great many years I
-imagine.â€</p>
-
-<p>He hesitated, then took a roundabout way. “And when I get home, if,
-owing to you, I ever get there, may I not tell them that you’re safe and
-sound? It would be happier for them to know that, wouldn’t it?â€</p>
-
-<p>Her vigilance still dwelt upon him as though she suspected in this
-sudden change of subject some craft of approach, but she answered
-quietly:</p>
-
-<p>“No; I think it will be happier for them to forget me. They will be told
-if I die. I have arranged for that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“They can’t very well forget you,†said Oldmeadow after a moment. “They
-must always wonder.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know.†She glanced away and trouble came into her face. “I know. But
-as much as possible. You must not make me real again by telling them.
-You have promised. You care for them. You know what I mean.<a name="page_299" id="page_299"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I’ve promised. And I see what you mean. But,†said Oldmeadow
-suddenly, and this, of course, was what he had been coming to. “I don’t
-want to forget. I want you to stay real. You must let me know what
-becomes of you, always, please.â€</p>
-
-<p>Astonishment, now, effaced her trouble. “You? Why?†she asked.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled a little. “Well, because, if you’ll let me say it, I’m fond of
-you. I feel responsible for you. I’ve been too deeply in your life,
-you’ve been too deeply in mine, for us to disappear from each other.
-Don’t you remember,†he said, and he found it with a sense of
-achievement, ridiculous as it might sound, “how I held the tea-pot for
-you? That’s what I mean. You must let me go on holding it.â€</p>
-
-<p>But she could feel no amusement. She was pressing her hands tightly
-together in her lap, her eyes were wide and her astonishment, he seemed
-to see, almost brought tears to them. “Fond? You?†she said. “Of me? Oh,
-no, Mr. Oldmeadow, I can’t believe that. You are sorry, I know. You are
-very sorry. But you can’t be fond.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And why not?†said Oldmeadow, and he raised himself on his elbow the
-more directly to challenge her. “Why shouldn’t I be fond of you, pray?
-You must swallow it, for it’s the truth and I’ve a right to my own
-feelings, I hope.â€</p>
-
-<p>She put aside the playfulness in which his grim earnest veiled itself.
-“Because you saw. Because you know. All about me. From the first.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well?†he questioned after a moment, still raised on his elbow but now
-with the grimness unalloyed. “What of it?<a name="page_300" id="page_300"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“You remember what I was. You remember what you saw. You would have
-saved them from me if you could; and you couldn’t. How can you be fond
-of a person who has ruined all their lives?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my soul,†said Oldmeadow laughing, his eyes on hers, “you talk as
-though you’d been a Lucrezia Borgia! What were you worse than an
-exalted, stubborn, rather conceited girl? Things went wrong, I know, and
-partly because of me. But it wasn’t all your fault, I’ll swear it. And
-if it was, it was your mistake; not your crime.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, no, no,†said Adrienne, and the compulsion of his feeling had
-brought a note of anguish to her voice. “It wasn’t that. It was worse
-than that. Don’t forget. Don’t think you are fond of me because I can
-make you sleep. It’s always been so; I see it now&mdash;the power I’ve had
-over people; the horrible power. For power is horrible unless one is
-good; unless one is using it for goodness.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, so you were,†Oldmeadow muttered, falling back on his pillow, her
-vehemence, her strange passion, almost daunting him. “It’s not because
-you make me go to sleep that I’m fond of you. What utter rubbish!â€</p>
-
-<p>“It is! it is!†she repeated. “I’ve seen it happen too often. It always
-happens. It binds people to me. It makes them cling to me as if I could
-give them life. It makes them believe me to be a sort of saint!â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you can help them with it? You have helped them. The war’s
-your great chance in that, you’ll admit. No one can accuse you of trying
-to get power over people now.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not. I’m not thinking of what I may be accused of, but of what
-happens.<a name="page_301" id="page_301"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“It doesn’t happen with me. I was fond of you&mdash;well, we won’t go back to
-that. And you did use it for goodness. Power came by the way and you
-took it. Of course.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I was using it for goodness. I thought I was good. That was
-the foundation of everything. We must go back, Mr. Oldmeadow. You don’t
-see as I thought you did. You don’t understand. I didn’t mean to set
-myself up above other people. I thought they were good, too. I was happy
-in my goodness, and when they weren’t happy it seemed to me they missed
-something I had and that it was a mistake that I could set right for
-them. I’m going back to the very beginning. Long before you ever knew
-me. Everything fell into my hand. I loved people, or thought I did, and
-if they didn’t love me I thought it their mistake. That was the way it
-looked to me, for my whole life long, until you came. I couldn’t
-understand at first, when you came. I couldn’t see what you thought. I
-believed that I could make you love me, too, and when I saw, for you
-made it plain, that you disliked me, it seemed to me worse than mistake.
-I thought that you must be against goodness; dangerous; the way you
-pushed me back&mdash;back&mdash;and showed me always something I had not thought I
-meant at the bottom of everything I did. I felt that I wanted to turn
-away from you and to turn people who loved me away from you, lest you
-should infect them. And all the while, all the while I was trying to
-escape&mdash;the truth that you saw and that I didn’t.†She stopped for a
-moment while, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow stared at her. Her breath
-seemed to fail her, and she leaned forward and put her elbows<a name="page_302" id="page_302"></a> on her
-knees and bent her forehead on her joined hands. “It came at last. You
-remember how it came,†she said, and the passion of protest had fallen
-from her voice. She spoke with difficulty. “Partly through you, and,
-partly, through my failure; I had never failed before. My failure with
-Barney. My failure to keep him and to get him back. I couldn’t believe
-it at first. I struggled and struggled. You saw me. Everything turned
-against me. It was as if the world had changed its shape and colour when
-I struggled against it. Everything went down. And when I felt I wasn’t
-loved, when I felt myself going down, with all the rest, I became bad.
-Bad, bad,†she repeated, and her voice, heavy with its slow reiteration,
-was like a clenched hand of penitence beating on a breast: “really bad
-at last, for I had not known before what I was and the truth was there,
-staring me in the face. I did dreadful things, then. Mean things; cruel,
-hateful things, shutting my eyes, stopping my ears, so that I should not
-see what I was doing. I ran about and crouched and hid&mdash;from myself; do
-you follow my meaning?&mdash;from God. And then at last, when I was stripped
-bare, I had to look at Him.â€</p>
-
-<p>She raised herself and leaned back in her chair. Her voice had trembled
-more and more with the intensity of the feeling that upheld her and she
-put her handkerchief to her lips and pressed it to them, looking across
-at him. And, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow looked back at her,
-motionless and silent.</p>
-
-<p>Was it sympathy, pity or tenderness that almost overwhelmed him as he
-gazed at her? He could not have said, though knowing that the unity that
-was<a name="page_303" id="page_303"></a> in them both, the share of the eternal that upheld their lives,
-flowed out from his eyes into hers as he looked and from hers to his.
-They were near at last; near as it is rarely given to human beings to
-experience nearness, and the awe of such a partaking was perhaps the
-ground of all he felt.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,†he said, and a long time had passed, “I was mistaken.â€</p>
-
-<p>She did not answer him. Perhaps she did not understand.</p>
-
-<p>“I never knew you were a person who could come to the truth like that,â€
-he said.</p>
-
-<p>Still holding her handkerchief to her lips, she slightly shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>“Even you never thought that I was bad.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I thought everybody was bad,†said Oldmeadow, “until they came to know
-that goodness doesn’t lie in themselves. The reason you angered me so
-was that you didn’t see you were like the rest of us. And only people
-capable of great goodness can know such an agony of self-recognition.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No,†she repeated. “Everyone is not bad like me. You know that’s not
-true. You know that some people, people you love&mdash;are not like that.
-They need no agony of recognition, for nothing could ever make them mean
-and cruel.â€</p>
-
-<p>He thought for a moment. “That’s because you expected so much more of
-yourself; because you’d believed so much more, and were, of course, more
-wrong. Your crash was so much greater because your spiritual pride was
-so great. And I thought you were a person a crash would do for; that
-there’d be nothing left of you if you came a crash. That was my mistake;
-for see what there is left.<a name="page_304" id="page_304"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>She rose to her feet. His words seemed to press her too far. “You are
-kind,†she said in a hurried voice. “I understand. You are so sorry.
-I’ve talked and talked. It’s very thoughtless of me. I must go now.â€</p>
-
-<p>She came and took the tray, but he put his hand on her arm, detaining
-her. “You’ll own you’re not bad now? You’ll own there’s something real
-for me to be fond of? Wait. I want you to acknowledge it, to accept
-it&mdash;my fondness. Don’t try to run away.â€</p>
-
-<p>She stood above him, holding the tray, while he kept his hold on her
-arm. “All I need to know,†she said, after a moment, and she did not
-look at him, “is that no one is ever safe&mdash;unless they always remember.â€</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it, of course,†said Oldmeadow gravely, “and that you must die
-to live; and you did die. But you live now, really, and life comes
-through you again. Your gift, you know, of which you were so much afraid
-just now, lest it had enveigled me. Don’t you see it? How can I put it
-for you? You had a sort of wholeness before. There must be wholeness of
-a sort if life is to come through; harmony of a sort, and faith. It
-wasn’t an illusion even then. When you were shattered you lost your
-gift. The light can’t shine through shattered things; and that was when
-you recognized that without God we are a nothingness; a nothingness and
-a restlessness mingled. You know. There are no words for it, though so
-many people have found it and tried to say it. I know, too, after a
-fashion. I’ve had crashes, too. But now your gift has come back, for you
-are whole again; built up on an entirely new<a name="page_305" id="page_305"></a> principle. You see, it’s
-another you I am fond of. You must believe in her, too. You do believe
-in her. If you didn’t you could not have found your gift.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had stood quite still while he spoke, looking down, not at him but
-at the little tray between her hands, and he saw that she was near
-tears. Her voice was scarcely audible as she said: “Thank you.†And she
-made an effort over herself to add: “What you say is true.â€</p>
-
-<p>“We must talk,†said Oldmeadow. He felt extraordinarily happy. “There
-are so many things I want to ask you about.†And he went on, his hand
-still on her arm, seeing that she struggled not to cry and helping her
-to recover: “You’re not going away for some time, yet, I hope. Please
-don’t. There’ll soon be no need of hospitals of this sort, anywhere,
-will there? and you must manage to stay on here a little longer. I
-shan’t get on if you go. You won’t leave me just as you’ve saved me,
-will you, Mrs. Barney?â€</p>
-
-<p>At the name, over-taxed as she was already, a pitiful colour flooded her
-face and before his blunder made visible his own blood answered hers,
-mounting hotly to his forehead. “Oh, I’m so sorry,†he murmured,
-helpless and hating himself, while his hand dropped. She stood over him,
-holding herself there so as not to hurt him by the aspect of flight. She
-even, in a moment, forced herself to smile. It was the first smile he
-had seen on her face. “You’ve nothing to be sorry for, Mr. Oldmeadow,â€
-she said, as she had said before. “You’re very kind to me. I wish I
-could tell you how kind I feel you are.†And as she turned away,
-carrying the tray, she added: “No; I won’t go yet.<a name="page_306" id="page_306"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_IV-b" id="CHAPTER_IV-b"></a>CHAPTER IV</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">H<small>E</small> did not see her again for two days; and she did not even come at
-night. But he now kept possession of his new strength and slept without
-her help. The sense of happiness brooded upon him. He did not remember
-ever having felt so happy. His life was irradiated and enhanced as if by
-some supreme experience.</p>
-
-<p>It was already late afternoon when, on the second day, she appeared; but
-in this month of August his room was still filled with the reflection of
-the sunlight and the warm colour bathed her as she entered. She wore a
-blue cloak over her white linen dress and she had perhaps been walking,
-for there was a slight flush on her cheeks and a look almost of
-excitement in her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>She unfastened her cloak and put it aside and then, taking the chair
-near the window, clasping her hands, as before, in her lap, she said,
-without preamble and with a peculiar vehemence: “You hear often from
-Barney, don’t you?â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow felt himself colouring. “Only once, directly. It rather tires
-him to sit up, you know. But he’s getting on wonderfully and the doctors
-think he’ll soon be able to walk a little&mdash;with a crutch, of course.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But you do hear, constantly, from Nancy, don’t you,†said Adrienne,
-clasping and unclasping her hands but speaking with a steadiness he felt
-to be rehearsed. “He is at Coldbrooks, I know, and Nancy is with him,
-and his mother and Mrs. Averil.<a name="page_307" id="page_307"></a> It all seems almost happy, doesn’t it?
-as happy as it can be, now, with Palgrave dead and Barney shackled.â€</p>
-
-<p>Startled as he was by her directness Oldmeadow managed to meet it.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; almost happy,†he said. “I was with them before I came out this
-last time and felt that about them. Poor Mrs. Chadwick is a good deal
-changed; but even she is reviving.â€</p>
-
-<p>“She has had too much to bear,†said Adrienne. “I saw her again, too, at
-the end, when she came to Palgrave. She can never forgive me. Meg is
-happy now, but she will never forgive me either. I wrought havoc in
-their lives, didn’t I?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you or fate. I don’t blame you for any of that, you know,†said
-Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t say that I blame myself for it,†said Adrienne. “I may have
-been right or I may have been wrong. I don’t know. It is not in things
-like that that I was bad. But what we must face is that I wrought havoc;
-that if it hadn’t been for me they might all, now, be really happy.
-Completely happy. If I had not been there Palgrave would not have been
-so sure of himself. And if I had not been there Nancy and Barney would
-have married.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,†said Oldmeadow. “If Barney hadn’t fallen in love with
-you he might very probably have fallen in love with some one else, not
-Nancy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps, not probably,†said Adrienne. “And if he had he would have
-stayed in love with her, for Barney is a faithful person. And it may
-have been because I was so completely the wrong person for him that he
-came to know so quickly that Nancy<a name="page_308" id="page_308"></a> was completely the right one. What I
-feel is that anybody but Nancy would always have been, really, wrong.
-And now that he loves her but is shackled, there’s only one thing more
-that can be done. I have often thought of it; I needn’t tell you that.
-But, till now, I could never see my way. It’s you who have shown it to
-me. In what you said the other day. It’s wonderful the way you come into
-my life, Mr. Oldmeadow. You made me feel that I had a friend in you; a
-true, true friend. And I know what a friend Nancy and Barney have. So
-the way opens. We must set Barney free, Mr. Oldmeadow. He and Nancy must
-be free to marry. You and I can do it for them and only you and I.â€</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?†Oldmeadow murmured as, after her words, the silence
-had grown deep between them. He repeated, using now the name inevitably
-and forgetting the other day. “What do you mean, Mrs. Barney?â€</p>
-
-<p>To-day she did not flush, but to-day there was a reason for her
-acceptance. It was, he saw in her next words, only as Barney’s wife that
-she could help him.</p>
-
-<p>“He must divorce me,†she said. “You and I could go away together and he
-could divorce me. Oh, I know, it’s a dreadful thing to ask of you, his
-friend. I’ve thought of all that. Wait. Let me finish. I’ve thought of
-nothing else since the other day. It came to me in the night after you
-had been so wonderful to me; after that wonderful thing had happened to
-us. You felt it, too, I know. It was as if we had taken a sacrament
-together. I’m not a Christian. You know what I mean. We felt the deepest
-things together, didn’t we. And it’s because<a name="page_309" id="page_309"></a> of that that I can ask
-this of you. No one else would understand. No one else would care for me
-enough, or for him. And then, you could explain it all to him and no one
-else could do that. You could explain that it had been to set him free.
-To set <i>me</i> free. Because they’d have to think and believe it was for my
-sake, too, that you did it, wouldn’t they? so as to have it really happy
-for them; so that it shouldn’t hurt. When it was all over you could go
-and explain why you had done it. All we have to do, you know, is to stay
-in a hotel together; I bearing your name. It’s very simple, really.â€</p>
-
-<p>He lay staring at her, overwhelmed. The tears had risen to his eyes as
-her beauty and her absurdity were thus revealed to him, and as she spoke
-of their sacrament; but amazement blurred all his faculties. He had
-never in his life been so amazed. And when he began to emerge, to take
-possession of himself again, it was only of her he could think; not of
-himself or Nancy and Barney. Only of her and of her beauty and
-absurdity.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Mrs. Barney,†he said at last, and he did not know what to say;
-“it’s you who are wonderful, you alone. I’d do anything, anything for
-you that I could. Anything but this. Because, truly, this is
-impossible.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Why impossible?†she asked, and her voice was almost stern.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t smirch yourself like that.†It was only one reason; but it
-was the first that came to him.</p>
-
-<p>“I?†she stared. “I don’t think it is to be smirched. I shall know why I
-do it.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Other people won’t know. Other people will think you smirched.<a name="page_310" id="page_310"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“No one I care for. Everyone I care for will understand.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But to the world at large? Your name? Your reputation?†Oldmeadow
-protested. “Do they mean nothing to you?â€</p>
-
-<p>A faintly bitter humour touched her lips. “You’ve always taken the side
-of the world in all our controversies, haven’t you, Mr. Oldmeadow? and
-you were probably right and I was probably wrong; but not because of
-what the world would think. I know I’m right now, and those words: name:
-reputation&mdash;mean nothing to me. The world and I haven’t much to do with
-each other. A divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and fever hospitals
-just as well as the most unsmirched woman of the world. I’m not likely
-to want to be presented at courts, am I? Don’t think of me, please. It’s
-not a question of me. Only of you. Will you do it?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t possibly do it,†said Oldmeadow, and he was still hardly
-taking her monstrous proposal seriously.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?†she asked, scrutinizing him. “It’s not that you mind about
-your name and reputation, is it?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not much. Perhaps not much,†said Oldmeadow; “but about theirs. That’s
-what you don’t see. That it would be impossible for them. You don’t see
-how unique you are; how unlike other people. Nancy and Barney couldn’t
-marry on a fake. The only way out,†said Oldmeadow, looking at her with
-an edge of ironic grimness in his contemplation, “if one were really to
-consider it, would be for you to marry me afterwards and for us to
-disappear.<a name="page_311" id="page_311"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>She gazed at him and he saw that she weighed the idea. “But you’d be
-shackled then,†she said, and her thoughts were evidently clear. “It
-would mean, besides, that you would lose them.â€</p>
-
-<p>“As to being shackled,†Oldmeadow, still grimly, met the difficulty,
-“that’s of no moment. I’m the snuffy, snappy bachelor type, you
-remember, and I don’t suppose I’d ever have married. As to losing them,
-I certainly should.â€</p>
-
-<p>“We mustn’t think of it then,†said Adrienne. “You and Barney and Nancy
-mustn’t lose each other.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But we should in either way. I could hardly take up my friendship with
-them again after Barney had divorced you on account of me, even if you
-and I didn’t marry. It would give the whole thing away, if it were
-possible for them to meet me again. As I say, they’d feel they had no
-right to their freedom on such a fake as that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“They couldn’t feel really free unless some one had really committed
-adultery for their sakes?†Again Adrienne smiled with her faint
-bitterness and he wondered if a man and woman had ever before had a more
-astonishing conversation. “That seems to me to be asking for a little
-too much icing on your cake. Of course it couldn’t be a nice, new, snowy
-wedding-cake; poor Mrs. Chadwick wouldn’t like it at all, nor Mrs.
-Averil; but it would be the best we could do for them; and I should
-think that when people love each other and are the right people for each
-other they’d be thankful for any kind of cake. Even if it were a good
-deal burned around the edges,†Adrienne finished, her slight bitterness
-evidently finding satisfaction in the simile.<a name="page_312" id="page_312"></a></p>
-
-<p>“But they wouldn’t see it at all like that,†said Oldmeadow, now with
-unalloyed gravity. “They’d see it as a cake they had stolen; a cake they
-had no right to. It’s a question of the laws we live under. Not of
-personal, but of public integrity. They couldn’t profit by a hoodwinked
-law. It’s that that would spoil things for them. According to the law
-they’d have no right to their freedom. And, now that I am speaking
-seriously, it’s that I feel, too. What you are asking of me, my dear
-friend, is no more nor less than a felony.â€</p>
-
-<p>She meditated, unmoved, still almost sternly, turning her eyes from him
-and leaning her elbow on the window-sill, her head upon her hand. “I
-see,†she said at last. “For people who mind about the law, I see that
-it would spoil it. I don’t mind. I think the law’s there to force us to
-be kind and just to each other if we won’t be by ourselves. If the law
-gets tied up in such a foolish knot as to say that people may sin to set
-other people free, but mayn’t pretend to sin, I think we have a right to
-help it out and to make it do good against its own will. I don’t mind
-the law; luckily for them. Because I won’t go back from it now. I won’t
-leave them there, loving each other but never knowing the fullness of
-love. I won’t give up a thing I feel right because other people feel it
-wrong. So I must find somebody else.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow looked at her in a culminated and wholly unpleasant
-astonishment. “Somebody else? Who could there be?â€</p>
-
-<p>“You may well ask,†Adrienne remarked, glancing round at him with a
-touch of mild asperity. “You are the only completely right person,
-because<a name="page_313" id="page_313"></a> only you and I feel enough for them to do it for them. What I
-must do now is to find some one who would feel enough, just for me, to
-do it for me. It makes it more unfair for him, doesn’t it. He’ll have
-only the one friend to help. But on the other hand it will leave them
-without a scruple. They’d know from the beginning that with you and me
-it was a fake; but with him it might seem quite probable. Yes; it’s
-strange; I had a letter from him only yesterday. I shouldn’t have
-thought of him otherwise. I might have had to give up. But the more I
-think,†Adrienne meditated intently, her head on her hand, her eyes
-turned on the prospect outside, “the more I seem to see that Hamilton
-Prentiss is the only other chance.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Hamilton Prentiss?†Oldmeadow echoed faintly.</p>
-
-<p>“You met him once,†said Adrienne, looking round at him again. “But
-you’ve probably forgotten. At the dinner we gave, Barney and I, in
-London, so long ago. Tall, fair, distinguished looking. The son of my
-Californian friend; the one you and Mrs. Aldesey thought so tiresome.â€</p>
-
-<p>He felt himself colouring, but he could give little thought to the minor
-discomfiture, so deeply was his mind engaged with the major one.</p>
-
-<p>“Did we?†he said.</p>
-
-<p>“And you thought I didn’t see it,†said Adrienne. “It made me dreadfully
-angry with you both, though I didn’t know I was angry; I thought I was
-only grieved. I behaved spitefully to Mrs. Aldesey that night, you will
-remember, though I didn’t know I was spiteful. I did know, however, that
-she was separated from her husbandâ€&mdash;again Adrienne looked, calmly,
-round at him&mdash;“and it was<a name="page_314" id="page_314"></a> a lie I told Barney when I said I didn’t.
-Sometimes I think that lie was the beginning of everything; that it was
-when I told it that I began to hide from myself. However&mdash;†She passed
-from the personal theme. “Yes; Hamilton is, I believe, big enough and
-beautiful and generous enough to do it.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he is, is he?†said Oldmeadow. “And I’m not, I take it. You’re
-horribly unkind. But I don’t want to talk about myself. What I want to
-talk about is you. You must drop this preposterous idea of yours. Really
-you must. You’ve had ideas like it before. Remember Meg; what a mess you
-made there. I told you then that you were wrong and I tell you you’re
-wrong now. You must give it up. Do you see? We’re always quarrelling,
-aren’t we?â€</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t at all know that I was wrong about Meg, Mr. Oldmeadow,â€
-said Adrienne. “And if I was, it was because I didn’t understand her. I
-do understand myself, and I don’t agree that I’m wrong or that my plan
-is preposterous. You won’t call it preposterous, I suppose, if it
-succeeds and makes Barney and Nancy happy. No; I’m not going to drop it.
-Nothing you could say could make me drop it. As for Hamilton, I don’t
-set him above you; not in any way. It’s only that you and he have
-different lights. I know why you can’t do this. You’ve shown me why. And
-I wouldn’t for anything not have you follow your own light.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And you seriously mean,†cried Oldmeadow, “that you’d ask this young
-fellow&mdash;I remember him perfectly and I’m sure he’s capable of any degree
-of ingenuousness&mdash;you’d ask him to go about with you as though he were
-your husband?<a name="page_315" id="page_315"></a> Why, for one thing, he’d be sure to fall head over heels
-in love with you, and where would you be then?â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne examined him. “But from the point of view of hoodwinking, that
-would be all to the good, wouldn’t it?†she inquired; “though
-unfortunate for Hamilton. He won’t, however,†she went on, her dreadful
-lucidity revealing to him the hopelessness of any protest he might still
-have found to make. “There’s a very lovely girl out in California he’s
-devoted to; a young poetess. He’ll have to write to her about it first,
-of course; Hamilton’s at the front now, you see; and I must write to his
-mother. She and Carola Brown are very near each other and will talk it
-out together and I feel sure they will see it as I do. They’ll see it as
-something big I’m asking them to do for me&mdash;to set me free. I’m sure I
-can count on Gertrude and I’m sure Hamilton can count on Carola. She’s a
-very rare, strong spirit.â€</p>
-
-<p>Oldmeadow, suddenly, was feeling exhausted, and a clutch of hysterical
-laughter, as she spoke these last words, held his throat for a moment.
-He laid his head back on his pillow and closed his eyes, while he saw
-Adrienne and Hamilton Prentiss wandering by the banks of a French river
-where poplars stood against a silver sky. He knew that he had accepted
-nothing when he said at last: “Shall we talk about it another time?
-To-morrow? I mean, don’t take any steps, will you, until we’ve talked.
-Don’t write to your beautiful, big friend.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You always make fun of me a little, don’t you,†said Adrienne
-tranquilly. She seemed aware of some further deep discomposure in him
-and willing,<a name="page_316" id="page_316"></a> though not comprehending it, to meet it with friendly
-tolerance. “If he is big and beautiful, why shouldn’t I say it? But I
-won’t write until we’ve talked again. It can’t be, anyway, until the war
-is over. And I’ve had already to wait for four years.<a name="page_317" id="page_317"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_V-b" id="CHAPTER_V-b"></a>CHAPTER V</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">S<small>HE</small> might feel that he had cruelly failed her; but when she came at the
-same hour next day it was evident to him from her demeanour that she
-imagined him resigned, if not converted, to her alternative plan. She
-carried a bunch of late roses and said that she had been having a lovely
-drive with a dear old friend from Denver, who had managed to get to
-Boulogne to see her.</p>
-
-<p>“Your friends all come from such distant places,†said Oldmeadow with a
-pretended fretfulness that veiled an indescribable restlessness.
-“California, Denver, Chicago. They have, all of them, an implacably
-remote sound, as if they were carrying you, already, off to other
-planets.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it doesn’t take so long, really, to get to any of them,†said
-Adrienne, placing the roses in a glass of water by his side, a close,
-funny little bunch, red roses in the middle and white ones all round.
-She had taken off her cloak and laid a newspaper down on the little
-table, seating herself, then, in the window and keeping in her hands a
-pocket-book that, in its flatness and length and the way she held it,
-reminded him of the little blue and grey fan of the dinner-party where
-she had told her first lie. His mind was emptied of thought. Only
-pictures crossed it, pictures of Adrienne and the tall, fair youth with
-the ingenuous eyes, wandering by the French river; and, again, Adrienne
-on that night, now as distant as California, when, with her fan and
-pearl-wreathed hair, she had met his persiflage with<a name="page_318" id="page_318"></a> her rebuking
-imperturbability. But under the pictures a sense of violent tension made
-his breathing shallow. He fixed his eyes on the pocket-book and wondered
-how she had nursed people with those ineffectual-looking hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Where were you trained for nursing?†he asked her suddenly. “Out here?
-or in England?â€</p>
-
-<p>“In England. In Oxford. Before Palgrave was taken,†said Adrienne. “I
-gave up my philosophy very soon for that. I worked in a hospital there.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And how came you to go out to Salonika? Tell me about it. And about
-your hospital here,†he went on with a growing sense of keeping
-something off. “It’s your own hospital I hear, and wonderfully run. Sir
-Kenneth was talking to me about you this morning.â€</p>
-
-<p>“What a fine person he is,†said Adrienne. “Yes, he came to see us and
-liked the way it was done.†She was pleased, he saw, to tell him
-anything he chose to ask about. She told him about her hospital and of
-all its adventures&mdash;they had been under fire so often that it had become
-an everyday event; and about how admirable a staff she had
-organized&mdash;“rare, devoted peopleâ€&mdash;and about their wounded, their
-desperately wounded <i>poilus</i> and how they came to love them all. He
-remembered, as she talked, that she was rich; even richer than he had
-thought, since she could leave a fortune to Palgrave and yet equip
-hospitals in France and in Salonika. She told him about Salonika, too.
-It had been a fever hospital there and the misery and suffering had
-seemed worse than the suffering here in France. Yes; she had caught the
-fever herself and had nearly died.<a name="page_319" id="page_319"></a></p>
-
-<p>She had no gift for the apt or vivid word. Her nature had been revealed
-to him as barbarous, or sublime, in its unconventionality, yet it
-expressed itself only in the medium of trite convention. But his time of
-jibbing at her platitudes was long since passed. He listened, rather,
-with a tender, if superficial interest, seeing her heroic little figure
-moving, unconcerned, among pestilences and bombardments. “It’s not only
-what you tell me,†he said, when she had brought her recital up to date.
-“I heard so much from Sir Kenneth. You are one of the great people of
-the war.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Am I?†she said. That, too, unfeignedly, left her unconcerned.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve the gift of leadership. The gift for big things generally.â€</p>
-
-<p>She nodded. “I’m only fit for big things.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Only? How do you mean?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Little ones are more difficult, aren’t they. My feet get tangled in
-them. To be fit for daily life and all the tangles; that’s the real
-test, isn’t it? That’s just the kind of thing you see so clearly, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Big things and the people who do them are just the kind of
-things you see through.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but you misunderstood me&mdash;or misunderstand,†said Oldmeadow. “Big
-things are the condition of life; the little things can only be built up
-on them. One must fight wars and save the world before one can set up
-one’s tea-tables.†He remembered having thought of something like this
-at Lydia’s tea-table. “Tea-tables are important, I know, and the things
-that happen round them. But if one can nurse a ward of typhus patients
-single-handed one must be forgiven for letting the tea-pot<a name="page_320" id="page_320"></a> slip. Really
-I never imagined you capable of all you’ve done.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I always thought I was capable of anything,†said Adrienne smiling
-slightly, her eyes meeting his in a tranquil partaking of the jest, that
-must be at her expense. “You helped me to find that out about
-myself&mdash;with all the rest. And I was right enough in thinking that I
-could face things and lead people. But I wasn’t capable of the most
-important things. I wasn’t capable of being a wise and happy wife. I
-wasn’t even capable of being truthful in drawing-rooms when other women
-made me angry. But I can go on battle-fields and found hospitals and
-tend the sick and dying. Shells and pestilencesâ€&mdash;her smile was
-gone&mdash;“if people knew how trivial they are&mdash;compared to seeing your
-husband look at you with hatred.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had turned her eyes away as she was thus betrayed into revealing the
-old bitternesses of her heart and he dropped his to the little
-pocket-book that now lay still between her hands. The feeling in her
-voice, the suffering it revealed to him, with the bitterness, woke an
-unendurable feeling in himself. He did not clearly see what the test was
-to which he put himself; but he knew that what he must say to her was
-the most difficult thing he had ever had to say; and he found it only
-after the silence had grown long.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. Barney&mdash;everything has changed, hasn’t it; you’ve changed; I’ve
-changed; Barney may have changed. It was only, after all, a moment of
-miserable misunderstanding between you. He never really knew what you
-were feeling. He thought you didn’t care for him any longer, when,
-really, you<a name="page_321" id="page_321"></a> were finding out how much you cared. Don’t you think,
-before you take final decisions, that you ought to see Barney again?
-Don’t you think you ought to give him another chance? I could arrange it
-all for you, when I got home.â€</p>
-
-<p>The flood of colour, deep and sick, had mounted to her face, masking it
-strangely, painfully, to where the white linen cut across her brow and
-bound her chin. And, almost supplicatingly, since he saw that she could
-not speak, he murmured: “You can be a wise and happy wife now; and he
-loved you so dearly.â€</p>
-
-<p>She did not lift her eyes. She sat there, looking down, tightly holding
-the pocket-book in her lap.</p>
-
-<p>“Let me tell him, when I get home, that I’ve seen you again,†he
-supplicated. “Let me arrange a meeting.â€</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, not lifting her eyes, she shook her head and he heard her, just
-heard her say: “It’s not pride. Don’t think that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No; no; I know it’s not. Good heavens, I couldn’t think it that. You
-feel it’s no good. You feel that his heart is occupied. It is. I can’t
-pretend to hide from you that it is. But your place in it was supreme.
-There would be no unfairness if you took it again. Nancy would be the
-first person to want you to take it. You know that that is true of
-Nancy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know. I heard her plead for me,†said Adrienne.</p>
-
-<p>The sentence fell, soft and trenchant; and he remembered, in the silence
-that followed, what she had heard. He drew a long breath, feeling half
-suffocated. But he had met his test. It was inevitable,<a name="page_322" id="page_322"></a> he knew it now,
-that she should say “Barney and I are parted for ever.â€</p>
-
-<p>Silence dropped again between them. He did not know what was passing
-behind its curtain and whether bitterness or only grief was in her
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>He lay, drawing the slow, careful breaths of his recovery, and saw her
-presently put out her hand and take up her <i>New York Herald</i> and unfold
-it. She looked down the columns unseeingly; but the little feint of
-interest helped her.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the colour faded from her face and it was as if the curtain
-lifted when, laying the paper down, she said, and he knew that she was
-finding words to comfort him: “Really everything is quite clear before
-me now. I shall write at once to Hamilton, and to his mother. If he
-agrees, if they all agree, he and I can go away very soon I think.
-Afterwards, I shall stay over here. I’ve quite made up my mind to that.
-There’ll be so much to do; for years and years; for all one’s lifetime.
-Ways will open. When one is big,†she smiled the smile at once so gentle
-and so bitter, “and has plenty of money, ways always do. I’m a
-<i>déracinée</i> creature; I never had any roots, you know; and I can’t do
-better, I’m sure, than to make soil for the uprooted people to grow in
-again. That’s what’s most needed now, isn’t it? Soil. It’s the
-fundamental things of life, its bare possibilities, that have been so
-terribly destroyed over here. America has, still, more soil than she can
-use, and since I’m an American, and a rich one, my best plan is to use
-America, in my fortune and my person, for Europe. Because I love them
-both and because they both need each other.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had quite recovered herself Her face had<a name="page_323" id="page_323"></a> found again its pale, fawn
-tints and she was looking at him with her quietest contemplation while
-he, in silence, lay looking at her.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not about the things I shall do that I’m perplexed, ever,†she
-went on. “But I’m sometimes perplexed about myself. I sometimes wish I
-were a Roman Catholic. In an order of some kind. Under direction. To put
-oneself in the hands of a wise director, it must be so peaceful. Like
-French friends I have; such wise, fine women; so poised and so secure. I
-often envy them. But that can’t be for me.â€</p>
-
-<p>She must feel in his silence now the quality of some extreme emotion,
-and that she believed it to be pity was evident to him as she went on,
-seeking to comfort him; and troubled by his trouble: “You mustn’t be
-sorry. I am not unhappy. I am a happy person. Do you remember that
-Sunday morning at Coldbrooks, long ago? How I said to Mother&mdash;to Mrs.
-Chadwick&mdash;that I had no doubts? You thought me fatuous. I dimly saw that
-you thought me fatuous. But it’s still true of me. I must tell you, so
-that you shan’t think I’m unhappy. I’ve been, it seems to me, through
-everything since then. I’ve had doubts&mdash;every doubt: of myself; of life;
-of all the things I trusted. Doubt at last, when the dreadful darknesses
-came&mdash;Barney’s hatred, Palgrave’s death&mdash;of God. We’ve never spoken of
-Palgrave, have we? I was with him, you had heard, and at the very end it
-was he who helped me rather than I him. He held me up. When he was dying
-he held me up. He made me promise him that I would not kill myself&mdash;for
-he guessed what I was thinking; he made me promise to go on. And he
-saved<a name="page_324" id="page_324"></a> me. The light began to come back to me while I sat beside him
-after he had died.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had not looked at him while she spoke, but down at her hands that,
-trembling, turned and returned the little pocket-book. And controlling
-her voice as she sought to control the trembling of her hands, she said:
-“Perhaps it is always like that. When one confesses one’s sin and hates
-it in oneself, even if it is still there, tempting one, the light begins
-to come back. After that it came more and more. What you call my gift is
-part of it. Isn’t it strange that I should have had that gift when I was
-so blind? But what you said was true. I had a sort of wholeness then,
-because I was blind. And now that I see, it’s a better wholeness and a
-safer gift. That is what I wanted to say, really. To explain, so that
-you shan’t be sorry. No one who can find that light can be unhappy. It
-comes to me now, always, when I need it. I can make it shine in other
-people&mdash;as Palgrave made it shine in me. Love does it. Isn’t it
-wonderful that it should be so? Nothing else is real beside it. Nothing
-is real without it. And when it happens, when one feels it come through
-and shine further, it is more, far more, than happiness.â€</p>
-
-<p>All the while that she had spoken, pale, and with her trembling hands,
-he had lain looking at her in silence, a silence that was dividing him,
-as if by a vast chasm, from all his former life.</p>
-
-<p>He and Adrienne stood on one side of this chasm, and, while it seemed to
-widen with a dizzying rapidity, he saw that on the other stood Barney,
-Nancy, Coldbrooks, and Lydia&mdash;poor Lydia&mdash;and that they were being borne
-away from him for ever. He saw nothing before him but Adrienne; and for
-how<a name="page_325" id="page_325"></a> long was he to keep her? That was his supreme risk; but he could
-not allay it or step back to the further brink. It was his very life
-that had fallen in two while she had spoken and without the sense of
-choice; though he dimly saw that, in the restlessness and urgency of the
-hours since he had seen her last, the choice had been preparing.</p>
-
-<p>He was taking the only step possible for him to take on the narrow
-foothold of the present when he said, in a voice so quiet that she might
-even be unaware of his seeming gross irrelevance, “Do you know, about
-your plan&mdash;for Barney and Nancy&mdash;I’ve been thinking it over and I’ve
-decided that it must be I, not Hamilton.<a name="page_326" id="page_326"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VI-b" id="CHAPTER_VI-b"></a>CHAPTER VI</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">H<small>ER</small> eyes met his for a long time before he realized that she might find
-not only irrelevance but even irreverence. She had shown him her very
-soul and he had answered with this announcement. Of course it had been
-because of what she told him that he had seen at last his own necessity;
-but he could not tell her that.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sorry for you,†he said. “I envy you. You are one of the few
-really happy people in the world.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But I’d quite given that idea up, Mr. Oldmeadow,†she said. “What has
-made you change?â€</p>
-
-<p>He saw the trouble in her face, the suspicion of her power and its
-compulsion over the lives of others. He took the bull by the horns.</p>
-
-<p>“You, of course. I can’t pretend that it’s anything else. I want to do
-it for you and with you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s for Barney and Nancy that it’s to be done,†she said, and her
-gravity had deepened. “It’s just the same for them&mdash;and you explained
-yesterday that it would spoil it for them.â€</p>
-
-<p>“It may spoil it somewhat,†said Oldmeadow, contemplating her with a
-curious tranquillity; she was now all that was left him in life to
-contemplate; and she was all he needed. “But it won’t prevent it. I
-still think it a wrong thing to do. I still think it a felony. But,
-since I can’t turn you from it, what I’ve come to see is that it’s, as
-you said, for you and me, who care for them, to do. It’s not right, not
-decent or becoming, that anyone who doesn’t even know them should be
-asked to do such a thing.<a name="page_327" id="page_327"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“But Hamilton wouldn’t do it for them,†she said. “It would be for me he
-would do it. And he wouldn’t think it a felony.â€</p>
-
-<p>“All the more reason that his innocence shouldn’t be taken advantage of.
-I can’t stand by and see it done. It’s for my friends the felony will be
-committed and it’s I who will bear the burden for them. As to his doing
-it for you, I know you better than he possibly can know you, and care
-for you more than he possibly can. If you’re determined on committing a
-crime, I’ll share the responsibility with you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know you care more. You are a wonderful friend. You are my best
-friend in the world.†She gazed at him and he saw that for once he had
-troubled and perplexed her. “And it’s wonderful of you to say you’ll do
-it. But Hamilton won’t feel it a burden; not as you will; and for him to
-do it won’t spoil it for them. If you do it, it will spoil it for them.
-You said so. And how can I let you do a thing you feel so wrong for my
-sake?â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have to. I won’t have Hamilton sacrificed in order that their
-cake shall have no burnt edges. They’ll have to pay something for it in
-social and moral discomfort. It would be nothing to the discomfort of
-Miss Brown, would it? I shall be able to put it clearly to Barney when I
-write and tell him that it’s for your sake as well as his and that he
-and Nancy, who have never sought anything or hoped for anything, are in
-no way involved by our misdemeanour. I won’t emphasize to Barney what I
-feel about that side of it. He’s pretty ingenuous, too. It will be a
-less tidy happiness they’ll have to put up with. That’s all it comes to,
-as far as they are concerned.<a name="page_328" id="page_328"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>She was looking at him with the trouble and perplexity and she said:</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll have to pay in far more than social and moral discomfort.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well? In what way? How?†he challenged her.</p>
-
-<p>“You said they’d lose you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Only, if you married me,†he reminded her.</p>
-
-<p>But she remembered more accurately. “No. They’d lose you anyway. You
-said so. You said that if they could ever see you again it would make it
-too blatantly a fake. And it’s true. I see it now. How could you turn up
-quietly, as if nothing had happened, after Barney had divorced me with
-you as co-respondent? There’s Lady Cockerell,†said Adrienne, and,
-though she was so grave, so troubled, it was with a touch of mild
-malice. “There’s Mr. Bodman and Johnson, to say nothing of Mrs. Chadwick
-and Nancy’s mother. No, I really don’t see you facing them all at
-Coldbrooks after we’d come out in the ‘Daily Mail’ with head-lines and
-pictures.â€</p>
-
-<p>Her lucidity could indeed disconcert him when it sharpened itself like
-this with the apt use of his vocabulary. He had to stop to think.</p>
-
-<p>“There won’t, at all events, be pictures,†he paused by the triviality
-to remark. “We shan’t appear. It will be an hotel over here and the case
-will be undefended. We needn’t, really, consider all that too closely.
-At the worst, if they do lose me, it’s not a devastating loss. They’ll
-have each other.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but who will you have?†Adrienne inquired. “Hamilton will have
-Carola and they will have each other. But who will you have?â€</p>
-
-<p><a name="page_329" id="page_329"></a>He lay and looked at her. There was only one answer to that question
-and he could not make it. He was aware of the insufficiency of his
-substitute. “I’d have your friendship,†he said.</p>
-
-<p>“You have that now,†said Adrienne. “And though I’m so your friend, I’ll
-be leaving you, soon, probably for ever. We’ll probably never meet
-again, Mr. Oldmeadow. Our paths lie so apart, don’t they? My friendship
-will do you very little good.â€</p>
-
-<p>Her words cut into him, but he kept a brave countenance. “I’d have the
-joy of knowing I’d done something worth while for you. How easily I
-might have died here, if it hadn’t been for you. My life is yours in a
-sense and I want you to use it rather than Hamilton’s. I have my work,
-you know; lots of things I’m interested in to go back to some day. As
-you remarked, a divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and in the same way
-a co-respondent can write articles and go to concerts.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I know. I know what a fine, big life you have,†she murmured, and the
-trouble on her face had deepened. “But how can I take it from you? A
-felony? How can I let you do, for my sake, something you feel to be so
-wrong?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Give it up then,†said Oldmeadow. And if he had found it difficult to
-make his plea for Barney a little while before, how much more difficult
-he found it to say this, and to mean it, now. “Give it up. That’s your
-choice, and your only choice. You owe that to me. Indeed you do. To give
-it up or to accept me as your companion in iniquity. I’m not going to
-pretend I don’t think it iniquity to give you ease. You’re not a person
-who needs ease. And I can do without it, too. For your sake. So there
-you have it.<a name="page_330" id="page_330"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not quite. Not quite,†she really almost pleaded. “I couldn’t ask it of
-Hamilton if he felt about it in the least little way as you do. And
-Carola doesn’t care a bit about the law either. She’s an Imagist, you
-know.â€&mdash;Adrienne offered this fact as if it would help to elucidate
-Carola’s complaisances. “She’s written some very original poetry. If it
-were Hamilton no one would lose anything, and Barney and Nancy would be
-free. Indeed, indeed I can’t give it up when it’s all there, before me,
-with everything to gain and nothing to lose for anybody, if it’s
-Hamilton.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Then it must be me, you see,†said Oldmeadow. “And I shan’t talk to you
-about the iniquity again, I promise you. I’ve made my protest and
-civilization must get on as best it can. You’re a terrible person, you
-knowâ€&mdash;he smiled a little at her, finding the banter so that she should
-not guess at the commotion of his heart. “But I like you just as you
-are. Now where shall we go?<a name="page_331" id="page_331"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VII-b" id="CHAPTER_VII-b"></a>CHAPTER VII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">H<small>E</small> could not have believed that it would be so delicious to live with
-Adrienne Toner.</p>
-
-<p>Even at the moment when he had known that he loved her, he had been,
-though filled with the sense of a present heaven, as aware as ever of
-the discrepancies between them, and during the three months that
-separated them, he at Cannes, she nursing in Paris, he knew many doubts;
-never of his love, but of what it was making him do and of where it was
-going to lead them. He couldn’t for the life of him imagine what was to
-become of them if his hopes were fulfilled, for he hardly saw himself
-following her off to Central Europe&mdash;it was to Serbia, her letters
-informed him, that her thoughts were turning&mdash;nor saw them established
-in London under the astonished gaze of Lydia Aldesey.</p>
-
-<p>She had selected Lyons as their place of meeting, because of the work
-for the <i>rapatriés</i> that she wished to inspect there, and from the
-moment that he saw her descend from the Paris express, dressed in dark
-civilian clothes and carrying, with such an air of competence, her rug
-and dressing-case, all doubts were allayed and all restlessness
-dispelled.</p>
-
-<p>He had arrived the day before and had found an old-fashioned hotel with
-spacious rooms overlooking the Saône, and, as they drove to it on that
-November evening, she expressed herself, scrutinizing him with a
-professional eye, as dissatisfied with his recovery.</p>
-
-<p>It was because of the restlessness, of course, that<a name="page_332" id="page_332"></a> he had not got as
-well as he should have, and he knew that he must, in the stress of
-feeling that now beset him, look strangely, and he promised her, feeling
-that he spoke the truth, that now that he had his nurse again complete
-recovery would be only a matter of days.</p>
-
-<p>“I want you to see our view,†he said to her when the porter had carried
-up her little box and they were left alone in the brocaded and gilded
-salon that separated their rooms; “I chose this place for the view; it’s
-the loveliest in Lyons, I think.â€</p>
-
-<p>There was still a little twilight, and standing at the window they
-looked down at the lighted quai with its double row of lofty plane-trees
-and across the jade-green Saône at St. Jean, the grey cathedral, and at
-the beautiful white <i>archevêché</i> glimmering in a soft, dimmed atmosphere
-that made him think of London.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a horrible modern cathedral up on the hill,†he said; “but we
-don’t need to see it. We need only see the river and the <i>archevêché</i>
-and St. Jean. And in the mornings there’s a market below, a mile of it,
-all under huge mushroom-coloured umbrellas; flowers and cheeses and
-every kind of country produce. I think you’ll like it here.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I like it very much. I think it’s beautiful,†said Adrienne. “I like
-our room, too,†and she turned and looked up at the painted ceiling and
-round at the consoles and mirrors, inlaid tables and richly curved,
-brocaded chairs. “Isn’t it splendid.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Madame Récamier is said to have lived here,†Oldmeadow told her. “And
-this is said to have been her room.â€</p>
-
-<p>“And now it’s mine,†said Adrienne, smiling<a name="page_333" id="page_333"></a> slightly as though she
-found the juxtaposition amusing.</p>
-
-<p>Already the stealing sense of deliciousness was breathing over him. The
-very way in which she said, “our room,†was part of it. Even the way in
-which she said that made him feel the peace, comfort, and charm of a
-shared life as he had never before felt it. And the sense grew and grew
-on that first evening.</p>
-
-<p>It was delicious to hear the waiters address her as Madame, and to know
-that it was his madame they imagined her to be, when he sat opposite to
-her at their little table in the dining-room. She wore a grey dress now
-and, with her quiet, her calm glances cast about her, might indeed have
-been the veritable Madame Oldmeadow inscribed at the <i>bureau</i>. If they
-had the aspect of a devoted, long-mated couple, it was because of her
-calm. But she would have been as unperturbed, he felt sure, had she been
-stopping there under her own name instead of his and looked upon as his
-well-established mistress. Situations would never embarrass her as long
-as she knew what she was doing with them. That night when she gave him
-her hand at bedtime she said, looking at him with the affectionate,
-professional eyes: “I’ll come and put you to sleep if you need me; be
-sure to let me know.â€</p>
-
-<p>But he had no need to call her. He slept as soundly as though she sat
-beside him with her hand upon his brow.</p>
-
-<p>So the mirage of conjugal felicity was evoked about him.</p>
-
-<p>She poured out his coffee for him in the morning wearing a silk
-<i>négligé</i> edged with fur, and said, as<a name="page_334" id="page_334"></a> they buttered their rolls, that
-they must buy some honey for their breakfasts. She said, too, that they
-must do a great deal of sight-seeing in the afternoons. “There is so
-much to be seen in Lyons. And I shall finish with my <i>rapatrié</i> work in
-the mornings.†He asked if he might not come with her to the <i>rapatrié</i>
-work, but was told that he was not yet strong enough for more than one
-walk in the day. “In our evenings, after tea,†she went on, “I thought
-perhaps you’d like to study Dante a little with me. My Dante is getting
-so rusty and I’ve brought a very fine edition. Are you good at Italian?â€</p>
-
-<p>He said he wasn’t, but would love to read Dante with her.</p>
-
-<p>“And we must get a piano,†she finished, “and have music after dinner.
-It will be a wonderful holiday for me.â€</p>
-
-<p>So the days fell at once into a series of rituals. He saw that she had
-always mapped them out conscientiously, as Mrs. Toner had doubtlessly
-taught her to do, careful of the treasure of time&mdash;as Mrs. Toner would
-have said&mdash;entrusted to each soul by life. So, no doubt, Adrienne would
-put it still. And what he would, in first knowing her, have found part
-of her absurdity, he found now part of her charm.</p>
-
-<p>That was what it all came back to. He saw, reconstructing their past,
-that from the beginning she had had her deep charm for him.</p>
-
-<p>It was the trivial word for the great fact; the compulsion of
-personality; the overflow of vitality; the secret at once of the saint
-and of the successful music-hall singer. Her own absorption in life was
-so intense that it communicated itself. Her confidence<a name="page_335" id="page_335"></a> was so secure
-that it begot confidence. Her power was implicit in all she did. It was
-not only the <i>rapatriés</i> she dealt with, as, at the first, she had dealt
-with the wounded. She dealt as successfully and as accurately with the
-little things of life. Honey was on their breakfast-table; flowers on
-the consoles; music on the piano. The gilded hotel salon became a home.</p>
-
-<p>She was still, in demeanour, the cultured, travelled American, equipped
-always, for their walks, with a guide-book or history, from which she
-often read to him as they paused to lean on the parapets of the splendid
-quais. There were few salient facts in the history of the potent city
-that were not imparted to him; and with anyone else what a bore it would
-have been to have to listen! But he was more than content that she
-should tell him about the Romans or Richelieu. It was everything to him
-to feel that they shared it all, from the honey to Richelieu.</p>
-
-<p>And with all the intimacy went the extreme reserve.</p>
-
-<p>She had showed him, when it was necessary for their understanding as
-friends, the centre of her life; yet she remained, while so gentle, so
-absorbed, and even loving, as remote, as inaccessible, as he had felt
-her to be on those first days in the hospital. She never referred to her
-own personal situation not to any emotion connected with it. She never
-referred to herself or expressed a taste or an opinion touched with
-personal ardour. He did not know what she was really feeling, ever.
-Though, when he looked at her, sitting opposite him in her grey and
-addressed by the assiduities of the waiters, he could imagine that he
-was living with a wife, he could imagine<a name="page_336" id="page_336"></a> more often that he was living
-with a nun. Her control and her selflessness were cloistral. He could
-not think her in any need of a director.</p>
-
-<p>They walked one afternoon along the Quai des Brotteaux, returning from
-the park of the Tête d’Or, where they had wandered on the gravel under
-the tall, melancholy trees and fed the deer. The ugly yet magnificent
-city was spread before them in one of its most splendid aspects,
-climbing steeply, on the further banks of the Rhône, to the cliff-like
-heights of the Croix Rousse and marching, as it followed the grandiose
-curve of the river, into a sunset sky where the cupola of the Hospice
-hung like a dark bubble against the gold and the Alps, not visible from
-the river level, seemed yet to manifest themselves in the illumined
-clouds ranged high above the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>Ten days of their appointed fortnight had now passed and while Oldmeadow
-kept a half unseeing yet appraising eye upon the turbulent glories of
-the river, he was wondering when and how he should make his revelation
-and his appeal. If her reserve made it more difficult to imagine, her
-intimacy did not make it more easy. It was because she was so intimate
-that she had remained so unaware. For all his self-command he felt sure
-that in any other circumstances she could not, for these ten days, have
-remained so blind.</p>
-
-<p>Here she walked beside him, the Madame Oldmeadow of the hotel, looking
-before her as she walked and thinking, he would have wagered, not of him
-but of Serbia.</p>
-
-<p>She wore a beautifully adjusted little costume, conveying in its sober
-darkness the impression of<a name="page_337" id="page_337"></a> richness and simplicity that her clothes had
-always given him. Fur was turned up about her ears and a small hat of
-fur and velvet was turned down over her eyes as she had always worn her
-hats. The straight fringe of gold showed under its brim and under the
-gold were those calm, those questing, melancholy eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Or perhaps&mdash;he carried further his rueful reverie&mdash;she was thinking
-about the date of the Hospice. He had the guide-book in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it jolly?†he suggested, as she looked up at him, indicating the
-prospect spread before them and adding, since he knew that his English
-instinct for boyish understatement still puzzled her: “Like a great,
-grim queen in shabby clothes; raised on such a throne and crowned with
-such jewels that one feels her glorious rather than ugly.â€</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne studied the shabby queen attentively and then looked back at
-him. Perhaps something dwelling in his eyes, something for her only and
-not at all for Lyons, caught her more special attention, for she said
-suddenly, and so unexpectedly that, with a sort of terror, he felt that
-his crisis might be coming: “You’ve been very dear to me, Mr. Oldmeadow,
-in all our time here. I feel it to have been a great privilege, you
-know; a great opportunity.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Really? In what way?†He could at all events keep his voice quiet and
-light. “I thought it had been you who made all the opportunities.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no. I never make any of the opportunities I am thinking of,†said
-Adrienne. “I only know how to take them. It isn’t only that you are more
-widely and deeply cultured than I am&mdash;though your Italian accent isn’t
-good!â€&mdash;she smiled; “but I always<a name="page_338" id="page_338"></a> feel that you see far more in
-everything than I do, even when you seem to be seeing less. I have to go
-carefully and pick up fact by fact, while you see things in a sort of
-vision and they are all related as they enter your mind. That’s where my
-privilege comes in. You make me share your vision sometimes. You have
-the artistic mind, and I am not really artistic at all&mdash;though Mother
-always wanted that for me more than anything; with all that goes with
-it.â€</p>
-
-<p>She was speaking of herself&mdash;though it was only in order to express more
-exactly her gratitude, and, as he walked beside her, he was filled with
-the mingled hope and terror. After all he had still four more days of
-her. It would be terrible to spoil them.</p>
-
-<p>“No; you aren’t artistic,†he agreed. “And I don’t know that I am,
-either. Whether I am or not, I feel mine to have been the opportunity
-and the privilege.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t understand that at all,†she said, with her patent candour.</p>
-
-<p>“It may be part of the artistic temperament to feel things one can’t
-understand. Though I do understand why I feel it,†he added.</p>
-
-<p>“And it’s part of the artistic temperament not to tryâ€&mdash;Adrienne turned
-their theme to its more impersonal aspect. “Never to try to enjoy
-anything that you don’t enjoy naturally. I don’t believe I ever enjoy
-any of the artistic things quite naturally. I’ve always been trained to
-enjoy and I’ve always tried to enjoy; because I thought it was right to
-try. But since I’ve been here with you I’ve come to feel that what I’ve
-enjoyed has been my own effort and my mastery of the mere study, and<a name="page_339" id="page_339"></a> I
-seem to feel that it might be as well to give up trying and training and
-fall back on the things that come naturally; scenery artists would think
-sentimental, and babies; and patriotic songs.†She smiled a little as
-she found her list. But she was grave, too, thinking it out and adding
-another to her discovered futilities.</p>
-
-<p>“It may be as well to limit your attention to the sentimental scenery
-and the babies, since you’ve so many other things to do with it,†he
-acquiesced. “We come back to big people again, you see; they haven’t
-time to be artistic; don’t need to be.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, but it’s not a question of time at all,†said Adrienne, and he
-remembered that long ago, from the very first, he had said that she
-wasn’t stupid. “It’s a question of how you’re born. That’s a thing I
-would never have admitted in my old days, you know. I would never have
-admitted that any human soul was really shut out from anything. Perhaps
-we’re not, any of us, if we are to have all eternity to grow in. But as
-far as this life is concerned I see quite clearly now that some people
-are shut out from all sorts of things, and that the sort of mistake I
-made in my old time was in thinking that anyone who had the will could
-force eternity into any given fragment of our temporal life. I did do a
-little philosophy, you see! That’s what I mean and you understand, I
-know. All the same I wish I weren’t one of the shut-out people. I wish I
-were artistic. I’d have liked to have that side of life to meet people
-with. I sometimes think that one doesn’t get far with people, really, if
-all that one has to give are the fundamental things like the care of
-their minds and bodies. One goes deep, of course; but one doesn<a name="page_340" id="page_340"></a>’t go
-far. You can do something for them; but there’s nothing, afterwards,
-that they can do <i>with</i> you; and it makes it rather lonely in a
-way&mdash;when one has time to be lonely.â€</p>
-
-<p>He did not know, indeed, whether she saw the beauty of the scene spread
-before them as they walked, and he was remembering, with a sort of
-tranced tenderness, the flower-wreathed shepherdess and her crook; and
-Mrs. Toner with her lilies and seagulls. But why should she see beauty
-when she made it? It was all that he could see in her now.</p>
-
-<p>“What you can do for them afterwards is to pour out their coffee for
-them in the most enhancing way,†he suggested, “and make sight-seeing a
-pleasure, and arrange flowers and place chairs and tables so that a
-hotel salon becomes loveable. If you find the person to whom you can
-give the fundamental things and do all sorts of homely things with
-afterwards, why be lonely? We are very happy together, aren’t we? We get
-a great deal out of each other. I can speak for myself, at all events;
-and you’ve just told me that I give something, too. So why should you go
-off to Central Europe next week? Why not go back with me to the South,â€
-he finished, “and wander about together enjoying, quite naturally, the
-sentimental scenery?â€</p>
-
-<p>He held his breath after he had thus spoken, wondering with intensity,
-while he felt his heartbeats, what she would make of it. He knew what he
-could make of it, seizing his opportunity on the instant, if only she
-would recognize the meaning that underlay the easy words. And framed in
-the little hat on the background of transfigured Lyons, Adrienne’s face
-was turned towards him and, after<a name="page_341" id="page_341"></a> he had made his suggestion, she
-studied him in silence for what seemed to him a long lapse of time. Then
-she said, overwhelmingly:</p>
-
-<p>“That’s perfectly lovely of you, Mr. Oldmeadow.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all; not perfectly lovely at all,†he stammered as he
-contradicted her and he heard that his voice sounded angry. “It’s what I
-want. I want it very much.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. I know you do. And that’s what’s so lovely,†said Adrienne. “I
-know you want it. You are sorry for me all the time. And you want to
-cheer me up. Because you feel I’ve lost so much. But, you know; you
-remember; I told you the truth that time. I don’t need cheering. I’m not
-unhappy. One can be lonely without being unhappy.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not sorry for you,†poor Oldmeadow rejoined, still in the angry
-voice. “I’m not thinking of you at all. I’m thinking of myself. I’m
-lonely, too, and I am unhappy, even if you aren’t.â€</p>
-
-<p>She stopped short in her walk. He saw in her eyes the swift, almost
-diagnosing solicitude that measured his need and her own capacity. It
-was as though his temperature had gone up alarmingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Mr. Oldmeadow,†she said; and then she faltered; she paused. She
-no longer found her remedies easily. “It’s because you are separated
-from your own life,†she did find. “It’s because all this is so bitter
-to you; what you are doing now&mdash;how could I not understand?&mdash;and the
-war, that has torn us all. But when it’s over, when you can go home
-again and take up your own big life-work and find your own roots,
-happiness will come back; I’m sure of it. We are all unhappy sometimes,<a name="page_342" id="page_342"></a>
-aren’t we? We must be; with our minds and hearts. Our troubled minds;
-our lonely hearts. But you know as well as I do, dear Mr. Oldmeadow,
-that our souls can find the way out.â€</p>
-
-<p>Her nature expressed itself in platitudes; yet sometimes she had
-phrases, rising from her heart as if from a fountain fed by unseen
-altitudes, that shook him in their very wording. “Our troubled minds.
-Our lonely hearts,†echoed in his ears while, bending his head
-downwards, he muttered stubbornly: “My soul can’t, without you.â€</p>
-
-<p>She still stood, not moving forward, her eyes raised to his. “Please
-don’t say that,†she murmured, and he heard the trouble in her voice.
-“It can’t be so, except for this time that you are away from everybody.
-You have so many things to live for. So many people near you. You are
-such a big, rare person. It’s what I was afraid of, you know. It happens
-so often with me; that people feel that. But you can’t really need me
-any longer.â€</p>
-
-<p>He said nothing, still not raising his eyes to hers, and she went on
-after a moment. “And I have so many things to live for, too. You’ve
-never really thought about that side of my life, I know. Why should you?
-You think of any woman’s life&mdash;isn’t it true?&mdash;as not seriously
-important except on its domestic side. And you know how important I
-think that. But it isn’t so with me, you see. I have no hearth and I
-have no home; I have only my big, big life and it’s more important than
-you could believe unless you could see it all. When I’m in it it takes
-all my mind and all my strength and I’m bound to it, yes, just as
-finally, just as irrevocably as a wife who loves is bound by her
-marriage vows;<a name="page_343" id="page_343"></a> because I love it. Do you see? They are waiting for me
-now. They need me now. There are starving people, dying people; and
-confusion; terrible confusion. I have a gift for all that. I can deal
-with it. Those are just the things I can deal with. And I mustn’t put it
-off any longer&mdash;when our time is up. I must leave you, my dear, dear
-friend, however much I’d love to stay.â€</p>
-
-<p>She was speaking at last with ardour, and about herself. And what she
-said was true. He had never thought about her work except in the sense
-that he thought her a saint and knew that saints did good deeds. That
-she was needed, sorely needed, by the starving and dying, was a fact,
-now that it was put before him, silencing and even shaming him. It gave
-him, too, a new fear. If she had her blindness, he had his. His hopes
-and fears, after all, were all that he had to think of; she had the
-destinies of thousands. He remembered Sir Kenneth’s tone in speaking of
-her; its deep respect. Not the respect of the man for the
-tender-hearted, merciful woman; but the respect of a professional expert
-for another expert; respect for the proved organizer and leader of men.</p>
-
-<p>“I have been stupid,†he said after a moment. “It’s true that I’ve been
-thinking about you solely in relation to myself. Would you really love
-to stay? If it wasn’t for your work? It would be some comfort to believe
-that.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I’d love to stay,†she said, eagerly scanning his face. “I’d
-love to travel with you&mdash;to pour out your coffee in Avignon, Nîmes,
-Cannes&mdash;anywhere you liked. I’d love our happy time here to go on and
-on. If life could be like that; if<a name="page_344" id="page_344"></a> I didn’t want other things more. You
-remember how Blake saw it all:</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">‘He who bends to himself a joy<br /></span>
-<span class="i1">Doth the winged life destroy.’<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="nind">I mustn’t try to bend and keep this lovely time. I must let it fly&mdash;and
-bless it as it goes. And so it will bless me.â€</p>
-
-<p>She seldom made quotations nowadays. For this one he felt a gratitude
-such as his life had rarely known.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s been a joy to you, too, then?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it has,†said Adrienne smiling at him and turning at last
-towards the bridge that they must cross. “It’s been one of the most
-beautiful things that has ever happened to me.<a name="page_345" id="page_345"></a>â€</p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_VIII-b" id="CHAPTER_VIII-b"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">O<small>LDMEADOW</small> sat at the inlaid table in the gilded salon on the afternoon
-of the last day. He had two letters to write, for, as he had put off
-speaking to Adrienne till their last evening, so he had put off writing
-to Barney and to Lydia Aldesey till this last afternoon, and he saw now
-how difficult it would be to write coherently while his thoughts
-stretched themselves forward to those few hours of the night when his
-fate would be decided.</p>
-
-<p>Adrienne had gone out. She had written her short communication to Barney
-and brought it in with its envelope and laid it before him, asking him
-in the voice that, again, made him think of snow: “Is that quite right?â€</p>
-
-<p>It was, quite, he told her, after glancing through it swiftly. It
-stated, in the most colourless terms, the facts that Barney was to take
-to his solicitor. “Quite right,†he repeated, looking up at her. “Are
-you going out? Will you post it?&mdash;or shall I?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Will you post it with yours? Yes. I must go out. But I’ll try to be
-back by tea-time. It’s very disappointing; our last afternoon. But that
-poor woman from Roubaix&mdash;the one with consumption up at the Croix
-Rousse&mdash;is dying. They’ve sent for me. All the little children, you
-remember I told you. I’m going to wire to Joséphine and ask her if she
-can come down and look after them for a little while.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Joséphine?†he questioned. He had, till now, entirely forgotten
-Joséphine. Adrienne told him<a name="page_346" id="page_346"></a> that she was with her parents in a
-provincial town. “They lost their only son and are very sad. Fine, brave
-old people. He is a baker, the old father, and makes the most wonderful
-bread. I went to see them last summer.â€</p>
-
-<p>Their packing was done and the room denuded; the men had taken away the
-piano that morning. He had his letters to write; so there was really no
-reason why she should not go. And there was, besides, nothing that they
-had to say to each other, except the one thing he had to say.</p>
-
-<p>The silence that overtakes parting friends on a station platform had
-overtaken them since the morning, though, at lunch, Adrienne had talked
-with some persistence of her immediate plans and prospects and about the
-unit of doctors and nurses who were to meet her in Italy. There was no
-reason why she should not go, and he would even rather she did. He would
-rather see no more of her until evening when everything but the one
-thing would be over and done with. And so he was left with his letters,
-leaning his elbows on the table over the hotel paper and staring out at
-the Saône and the white <i>archevêché</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Both letters were difficult to write; but beside the one to Lydia, the
-one to Barney was easy. Barney, after all, was to gain everything from
-what he had to tell him, and Lydia was to lose; how much was Lydia to
-lose? He recalled their last evening together and its revelations and
-saw that the old laughing presage was now more than fulfilled. Lydia was
-to lose more than her toes and fingers; in any case. Even if he returned
-to her alone, she cared for him too much not to feel, always, the shadow
-of<a name="page_347" id="page_347"></a> his crippled heart; his heart not only crippled, but occupied, so
-occupied that friendships, however near, became, in a sense,
-irrelevancies. And if he returned with Adrienne&mdash;but could he return
-with Adrienne? What kind of a life could he and Adrienne lead in
-London?&mdash;even if Lydia’s door, generously, was opened to them, as he
-believed it would be&mdash;knowing her generous.</p>
-
-<p>He laid down his pen and fixed his eyes on the river and he tried to see
-Lydia and Adrienne together. But it was a useless effort. From this
-strange haven of the Lyons hotel where he had spent the happiest
-fortnight of his life, he could not see himself into any future with
-familiar features. He could only see himself and Adrienne, alone, at
-hotels. To attempt to place her in Lydia’s generous drawing-room was to
-measure more accurately than he had yet measured it the abyss that
-separated him from his former life. If it could be spanned; if Adrienne
-could be placed there, on the background of eighteenth-century fans and
-old glass, she became a clipped and tethered seagull in a garden,
-awkward, irrelevant, melancholy. Lydia might cease to find her
-third-rate and absurd; but she wouldn’t know what to do with her any
-more than she would have known what to do with the seagull. So what, if
-Adrienne became his wife, remained of his friendship with Lydia?</p>
-
-<p>He put aside the unresolved perplexity and took Barney first.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Barney,†he wrote,&mdash;“I don’t think that the letter Adrienne has
-written to you will surprise you as much as this letter of mine. You
-will understand from hers that she wishes to free herself<a name="page_348" id="page_348"></a> and to free
-you. You will understand that that is my wish, too. She only tells you
-that she has been staying here with me, for a fortnight, as my wife;
-that’s for your solicitor; you will read between the lines and know that
-it seemed worth while to both of us to make the necessary sacrifice in
-order to gain so much for you and for her. I hope that you and my dear
-Nancy will feel that we are justified, and that you will take your
-happiness as bravely as we secure it for you. You’ll know that our step
-hasn’t been taken lightly.</p>
-
-<p>“But, now, dear Barney, comes my absolutely personal contribution. It is
-a contribution, for it will make you and Nancy happier to know that I
-have as much to gain as you and she. I have fallen in love with Adrienne
-and I hope that I may win her consent to be my wife. Yes, dear Barney,
-unbelievable as it will look to you, there it is; and she dreams of it
-as little as you could have dreamed of it. I met her again, as her
-letter informs you, at the Boulogne hospital. She asked me to say
-nothing about our meeting. She wanted to disappear out of your lives.
-She saved my life, I think, and I saw a great deal of her. What I found
-in her that I had not seen before I need not say.</p>
-
-<p>“My great difficulty, my burden and perplexity now, lie in the fact that
-she has no trace of feeling for me that might give me hope. We became,
-at Boulogne, the best of friends; such friends that this plan suggested
-itself to her; and we remain, after our fortnight here, the best of
-friends; and that is all. Yet I have hope, unjustified and groundless
-though it may be, and had I not had it from the beginning I couldn’t
-have entered upon the enterprise;<a name="page_349" id="page_349"></a> not even for you and Nancy. From one
-point of view it’s possible that you may feel that I’ve entered upon it
-in spite of you and Nancy. You may feel inclined to repudiate and disown
-the whole affair and to remain unaware of it. In that case it would come
-down to an appeal from me to you to carry it through for my sake. But
-from another point of view it makes it easier for you; easier for you to
-accept, since my hope gives integrity to the situation. That’s another
-thing that decided me. If it had been mere sham I don’t think I could
-have undertaken it. Adrienne felt none of my scruples on this score. She
-walked over legal and conventional commandments like a saint over hot
-ploughshares. But I haven’t her immunities. I should have felt myself
-badly scorched, and felt that I’d scorched you and Nancy, if my hope
-hadn’t given everything its character of <i>bona fides</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Barney, dear Nancy, please forgive me if I’ve been selfish. It
-hasn’t all been selfishness, that I promise you; it was in hopes for
-you, too; and I have to face sacrifices. The worst of them will be that
-if Adrienne takes me I’ll have to lose you. You can measure the depth of
-my feeling for her from the fact that I can make such sacrifices.
-Perhaps you’ll feel that even if she doesn’t take me I’ll have to lose
-you. I hope not. I hope, in that case, that mitigations and refuges will
-be found for me and that some day you’ll perhaps be able to make a
-corner in your lives where I may creep and feel my wounds less aching.
-In any case, after Adrienne, you are the creatures dearest to me in the
-world and I am always and for ever your devoted friend,</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-<span class="smcap">Roger</span>.â€</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><a name="page_350" id="page_350"></a></p>
-
-<p>And now Lydia. There was no use in thinking about it. The plunge must be
-taken.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Lydia,†he wrote,&mdash;“I have fallen in love with Adrienne Toner.
-I feel that with such a friend as you it’s better to begin with the
-bomb-shell. She doesn’t know it, and if we are here in this Lyons hotel
-together, it’s only, she imagines, because she wishes to set Barney free
-and that I’ve undertaken, for her sake and for Barney’s, a repugnant
-task. It is a repugnant task, in spite of what it may mean to me of
-happiness. I hate it for her, and for Barney and for myself. But since
-she was determined on it and since, if it wasn’t I it was to be another
-friend, and since I have fallen in love with her, I saw that it was only
-decent that the co-respondent in the case should be the man who married
-her afterwards. For I hope to become her husband, and I haven’t one jot
-of ground for my hope. We are studying Dante together, and she shows me
-the sights of Lyons. She is just the same. Yet completely altered.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know whether you’ll feel you can ever see me again, with or
-without her. I don’t want to cast myself too heavily on your compassion,
-so I’ll only remind you that even if I return to England alone I shall
-probably have to lose Nancy and Barney and that you will be my only
-refuge. It will be the culmination of my misfortunes if I have to lose
-you.</p>
-
-<p>“Dear Lydia, I am always your devoted</p>
-
-<p class="r">
-“<span class="smcap">Roger</span>â€</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>But he hadn’t lost her. He knew he hadn’t lost her; in any case. And the
-taste of what he did was<a name="page_351" id="page_351"></a> sharp and bitter to him, for she was generous
-and loyal and he had cut off her very limbs. When he had addressed and
-stamped the letters he went downstairs, and, for the sense of greater
-finality, carried them to the post instead of dropping them into the
-hotel-box.</p>
-
-<p>He had almost the sense of disembodiment as he returned to the empty and
-dismantled room. He seemed to have become a mere consciousness suspended
-between two states of being. The past was gone. He had dropped it into
-the post-box. And he saw no future. He felt, for the moment, no hopes.
-At the moment it seemed absurd to think that Adrienne could ever love
-him. He tried to picture Coldbrooks and Somer’s Place when the
-bomb-shell struck them. Would Barney show Nancy the letter? Nancy would
-be pale, aghast, silent. Barney would have to wait for days, perhaps,
-before saying to her: “But, after all, it’s for their sakes, too, Nancy
-dear. See what Roger says.†Mrs. Averil would cast up her hands and cry
-“That woman!â€&mdash;but, perhaps, with as much admiration as repudiation, and
-Meg, if she were summoned to the scene of confusion, would say, “So
-she’s got hold of Roger, too.†Funnily enough it was the dear March
-Hare, he felt sure, who would be the first one to stretch out a hand
-towards the tarnished freedom. “After all, you know,†he could hear her
-murmuring, “it would be much <i>nicer</i> for Barney and Nancy to be married,
-wouldn’t it? And Adrienne wasn’t a Christian, you know, so probably the
-first marriage doesn’t <i>really</i> count. We mustn’t be conventional,
-Monica.†Yes, perhaps it would go like that at Coldbrooks. But at
-Somer’s Place Lydia would sit<a name="page_352" id="page_352"></a> among her fans and glass and wish that
-they had never seen Adrienne Toner.</p>
-
-<p>He paced up and down before the windows and he had never been so lonely
-in his life. He was so lonely that he became aware at last that his mere
-negative state was passing into a positive and that grief at the
-severance of old ties had become fear of losing Adrienne. The fear and
-the loneliness seemed actualized when, at five, the waiter appeared
-bearing the tea-tray on his shoulder. He had never had tea alone before
-in this strange, foreign room. Adrienne always made a complicated and
-charming ritual of the occasion, boiling the water on their own little
-spirit-kettle and measuring the tea from her own caddy&mdash;the very same
-kettle and caddy, she told him, that had accompanied herself and her
-mother on all their travels. And to see the cups and bread and butter
-and not to have her there, added a poignant taste of abandonment to his
-loneliness.</p>
-
-<p>She kept the kettle in her room and when the boy was gone he softly
-opened the door and went in. It would keep his heart up to have the
-water boiling in readiness for her arrival. He recognized, as he stood,
-then, and looked about him, that his instinct had also been that of
-taking refuge. In her room he could more closely recover the sense of
-her presence.</p>
-
-<p>She had finished all the essentials of her packing and her box stood
-with its lid open ready for the last disposals. Yet the room seemed
-still full of her personality. He noted it all gazing around him with
-eyes almost those of a solemn little boy permitted to glance in at a
-Christmas-tree.<a name="page_353" id="page_353"></a></p>
-
-<p>Her dressing-table, improvised from the mantelpiece, was neatly laid out
-with small, worn, costly, and immaculate appurtenances. He moved forward
-and looked at them, not touching. The initials intertwined on the backs
-of the ivory brushes were her girlish ones: A. T. She had discarded,
-long since, no doubt, her wedding toilet set.</p>
-
-<p>If he became her husband, the thought crossed his mind and quickened his
-heart, he might brush her hair for her, that wonderful golden hair,
-before many months were over.</p>
-
-<p>Near the ivory hand-glass stood two photographs in a folding frame of
-faded blue leather. He stooped to look and saw that one was of Mrs. and
-the other certainly of Mr. Toner, in their early days. Remote,
-mysterious and alien, their formally directed eyes looked back at him
-and in the father’s ingenuous young countenance, surmounted by a roll of
-hair that was provincial without being exactly rural, the chin resting
-upon a large, peculiar collar, he could strangely retrace Adrienne’s
-wide brow and steadfast light-filled eyes. Mrs. Toner wore a ruffled
-dress and of her face little remained distinct but the dark
-gaze&mdash;forceful and ambiguously gentle.</p>
-
-<p>The room was full of the fragrance that was not a fragrance and that
-had, long ago, reminded him of Fuller’s earth. A pair of small blue
-satin <i>mules</i> stood under a chair near the bed.</p>
-
-<p>Only after he had withdrawn, gently closing the door behind him, did he
-realize that he had forgotten the kettle and then he felt that he could
-not go back again. A moment after the boy returned with a note, sent, by
-hand, he was informed, from the Croix Rousse.<a name="page_354" id="page_354"></a></p>
-
-<p>“I am so dreadfully sorry, so disappointed,†he read. “Our last
-afternoon, but I can’t get away yet. Don’t wait dinner for me, if I
-should be late, even for that. I won’t be very late, I promise, and we
-will have our evening.â€</p>
-
-<p>The note had no address. He rushed forth and down to find the messenger
-gone. Had he only known where to seek her in the vast, high, melancholy
-district of the Croix Rousse he would have gone to join her. His sense
-of loneliness was almost a panic.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, he tried to fix his mind on that realization, as he went back
-to the salon, her rapatriés had no doubt preoccupied her mind, from the
-first, quite as much as their own situation. She had spoken to him in
-especial of this family and of their sorrows. One child they had left
-dead at Evian and the mother, on the eve of their return to their
-Northern home, had become too desperately ill to travel. “Such dear,
-good, <i>gentle</i> people,†he recalled her saying. No; he must not repine.
-After all he had only the one thing to say to her; and the evening would
-be long enough for that.</p>
-
-<p>It was nearly seven when he heard her quick footstep outside. When she
-entered, the brim of her little hat, in the electric light, cast a sharp
-shadow over her eyes, but he saw at once that she had been crying.</p>
-
-<p>She came in so quickly that he had not time to rise and, going to him,
-behind his chair, she put her hands on his shoulders and pressed him
-down, saying: “I’m so sorry to have left you all alone.â€</p>
-
-<p>It was astonishingly comforting to have her put these fraternal hands
-upon him like this. She had<a name="page_355" id="page_355"></a> never done it before. Yet there was a salty
-smart in her words to him. What else did she intend to do but leave him
-all alone for always?</p>
-
-<p>“I’m dreadfully lonely, I confess,†he said, “and I see that you’re
-dreadfully tired.â€</p>
-
-<p>She went round to the other side of the table and sat down, not looking
-at him and said, in a low voice: “Oh&mdash;the seas&mdash;the seas of misery.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You are completely worn out,†he said. He was not thinking so much of
-the seas of misery as of his few remaining hours. Were they to be
-spoiled by her fatigue?</p>
-
-<p>“No; not worn out. Not at all worn out,†said Adrienne, stretching her
-arms along the table in front of her as she sat, and though she had wept
-he could see something of ardour, of a strength renewed, in the lines of
-her pallid lips. “I’ve sat quite still all afternoon. I’ve been with
-him. She died soon after I got there. At the end she was talking about
-the little girl’s grave at Evian. I was able to comfort her about that.
-She was so afraid it would not be tended. That it would have no flowers.
-Joséphine will go to Evian afterwards and see about it. There are always
-dear nuns to do those things. There was a nun with her to-day. That was
-the greatest comfort of all; and the priest who came. But I was with the
-father and the five poor little children; so frightened and miserable. I
-could not leave them, you see. He talked and talked and talked. It
-helped him to talk and tell me about their home and how they had had
-everything so nice and bright. Linen, a garden, a goat and fowls. Oh, if
-only she could have seen her home again! That was what he kept saying
-and saying. They were<a name="page_356" id="page_356"></a> full of hope when they got to Evian. He told me
-how the children sang at dawn when the train panted up the mountain
-among the golden trees. Like birds, he said, and <i>Vive la France</i>! They
-all believed they were to be safe and happy. <i>Et, Madame, c’était notre
-calvaire qui commencait alors seulement.</i>â€</p>
-
-<p>She spoke, not really thinking of him, he saw, absorbed still in the
-suffering she had just left, measuring her power against such problems
-and the worse ones to which she was travelling to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p>“Joséphine will be with them, I hope,†she went on presently, “in three
-or four days. She will help them to get home and then she will come back
-and go to see about the grave at Evian. Joséphine is a tower of strength
-for me.â€</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes were raised to him now, and, as they rested, he saw the
-compunction, the solicitude, with which they had met him on her
-entrance, return to them. “I’m not so very late, am I?†she said,
-rising. “I’ll take off my hat and be ready in a moment.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t hurry,†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>She was tired, more tired than she knew. During dinner she hardly spoke,
-and, finding the resolve suddenly, he said, as they came back to their
-salon: “Do you know what you must do now. Go and lie down and rest for
-an hour. Until nine. It’s not unselfishness. I’d rather have half of you
-to talk to for our last talk, than none of you at all.â€</p>
-
-<p>“How dear of you,†she said. She looked at him with gratitude and,
-still, with the compunction. “It would be a great rest. It would be
-better for<a name="page_357" id="page_357"></a> our talk. I can go to sleep at once, you know. Like
-Napoleon,†she added with a flicker of her playfulness.</p>
-
-<p>When she had gone into her room Oldmeadow went out and walked along the
-quai. The night was dark and dimmed with fog, but there was a moon and
-as he walked he watched it glimmer on the windows of St. Jean. He seemed
-to see the august form of the cathedral through a watery element and the
-grey and silver patterns of the glass were like the scales of some vast
-fish. A sort of whale waiting to swallow up the Jonah that was himself,
-he reflected, and, leaning his elbows on the parapet of the quai, the
-analogy carried him further and he saw the cathedral like a symbol of
-Adrienne’s life&mdash;her “big, big†life&mdash;looming there before him,
-becoming, as the moon rose higher, more and more visible in its austere
-and menacing majesty. What was his love to measure itself against such a
-vocation?&mdash;for that was what it came to, as she had said. She was as
-involved, as harnessed, as passionately preoccupied as a Saint Theresa.
-How could he be fitted in with Serbia and all the hordes of human need
-and wretchedness that he saw her sailing forward to succour? He knew a
-discouragement deeper than any he had felt, for he was not a doctor and
-his physical strength was crippled by his wounds; and, shaking his
-shoulders in the chilly November air, he turned his back on the
-cathedral and leaned against the parapet to look up through leafless
-branches where the plane tassels still hung, at the lighted windows of
-the hotel; their hotel, where the room, still theirs, waited for them.
-He felt himself take refuge in the banal lights. After<a name="page_358" id="page_358"></a> all, she wasn’t
-really a Saint Theresa. There was human misery everywhere to succour.
-Couldn’t she, after a winter in Serbia, found crêches and visit slums in
-London? The masculine scepticism she had detected in him had its
-justification. Women weren’t meant to go on, once the world’s crisis
-past, doing feats of heroism; they weren’t meant for austere careers
-that gave no leisure and no home. The trivial yet radiant vision of
-intimacy rose again before him. She slept there above him and he was
-guarding her slumber. He would always watch over her and guard her. He
-would follow her round the world, if need be, and brush her hair for her
-in Serbia or California.<a name="page_359" id="page_359"></a></p>
-
-<h3><a name="CHAPTER_IX-b" id="CHAPTER_IX-b"></a>CHAPTER IX</h3>
-
-<p class="nind">T<small>HE</small> gilt clock on the mantelpiece pointed to nine, but when he went to
-Adrienne’s door and listened there was no sound within her room, and his
-heart sank as he wondered if she might not sleep on, in her fatigue,
-sleep past all possible hour for their colloquy. Yet he did not feel
-that he could go in and wake her. The analogy of the cathedral loomed
-before him. It would be like waking Saint Theresa.</p>
-
-<p>He walked up and down the empty, glittering salon; walked and walked
-until the clock struck ten. Desperation nerved him then and he went
-again to her door and knocked.</p>
-
-<p>With hardly a pause her voice answered him; yet he knew that he had
-awakened her and it echoed for him with the pathos of so many past
-scenes of emergency when it must so have answered a summons from
-oblivion: “Coming, coming.†Among bombings, he reflected; and sudden
-terrible influxes of dying men from the front.</p>
-
-<p>“Coming,†he heard her repeat, on a note of dismay. She had sprung up,
-turned on her light and seen the hour.</p>
-
-<p>He was reminded vividly, as he saw her enter&mdash;and it was as if a great
-interval of time had separated them&mdash;of his first meeting with her. She
-was so changed; but now as then she was more composed than anyone he had
-ever met.</p>
-
-<p>But it was of much more than the first meeting that the pale, still face
-reminded him. His dreams were in it; the dream where she had come to
-him<a name="page_360" id="page_360"></a> along the terrace, lifting her hand in the moonlight; and the dream
-of horror when he had again and again pushed it down to drown.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m so ashamed,†she said, and he saw that it was with an effort she
-smiled. The traces of her weeping were now, after her sleep, far more
-visible, ageing her, yet making her, too, look younger; like a child
-with swollen lids and lips. “I didn’t know I was so tired. I slept and
-slept. I didn’t stir until I heard your knock. Never mind. We’ll talk
-till midnight.â€</p>
-
-<p>She was very sorry for him.</p>
-
-<p>She sat down at the table and under the electric chandelier her braided
-hair showed itself all ruffled and disarranged. She had on her dark
-travelling dress and she had thrust her feet into the pale blue satin
-<i>mules</i>. The disparity of costume in one so accurate, her air of
-readiness for the morrow, made him feel her transitoriness almost more
-than her presence, though his sense of that pressed upon him with a
-stifling imminence. Even though she sat there the room kept its look of
-desolate, glittering emptiness and more than their shared life in it he
-remembered the far places from which she had come and to which she was
-going. It was as if she had just arrived and were pausing for the night
-<i>en route</i>.</p>
-
-<p>As he had seen them years ago, so he saw again the monster engines
-crossing the prairies at night and flying illumined pennons of smoke
-against the sky as they bore her away from blue seas, golden sands, a
-land where the good and gifted lurked behind every bush; and before her
-stretched the shining rails, miles and miles of them, running through<a name="page_361" id="page_361"></a>
-ruin and desolation, that were to bear her ever onwards into the
-darkness. This was what life had brought her to. She had been only a
-sojourner among them at Coldbrooks. The linked life of order and family
-affection had cast her forth and he saw her, for ever now, unless he
-could rescue her, with only hotels to live in and only the chaos she was
-to mould, to live for. She seemed already, as she sat there under the
-light with her ruffled hair, to be sitting in the train that was to bear
-her from him.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you owe me till midnight, at least,†he said. He had not sat
-down. He stood at some little distance from her leaning, his arms
-folded, against a gilded and inlaid console. “We’ve lots of things to
-talk about.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Have we?†Adrienne asked, smiling gently, but as if she humoured an
-extravagance. “We’ll be together, certainly, even if we don’t talk much.
-But I have some things to say, too.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had dropped her eyes to her hands which lay, lightly crossed, on the
-table before her, and she seemed to reflect how best to begin. “It’s
-about Nancy and Barney,†she said. “I wanted, before we part, to talk to
-you a little about them. There are things that trouble me and you are
-the only person with whom I can keep in touch. You will know how I shall
-be longing to hear, everything. You’ll let me know at once, won’t you?â€</p>
-
-<p>“At once,†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“There might be delays and difficulties,†Adrienne went on. “I shall be
-very troubled until all that is clear. And then the money. You know
-about the money? Barney isn’t well off and he was worse off after I’d
-come and gone. I tried to arrange<a name="page_362" id="page_362"></a> that as best I could. Palgrave
-understood and entered into all my feelings.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I’d heard. You arranged it all very cleverly,†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>He moved away now and, at the other end of the room, his back to her,
-came to a standstill, while his eyes dwelt on a large gilt-framed
-engraving that hung there; some former Salon triumph; a festive,
-spring-tide scene where young women in bustles and bonnets offered sugar
-to race-horses in a meadow, admired by young men in silk hats.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think this may make a difficulty?†Adrienne asked. “Make him
-more reluctant to take what is to come to him? It’s Mrs. Chadwick’s now,
-you know.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve arranged it all so well,†said Oldmeadow, noting the gardenias
-in the young men’s button-holes, “that I don’t think they can get away
-from it.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But will they hate it dreadfully?†she insisted, and he felt that her
-voice in its added urgency protested, though unconsciously, against his
-distance; “I seem to see that they might. If they can’t take it as a
-sign of accepted love, won’t they hate it?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well,†said Oldmeadow, trying to reflect, though his mind was far from
-Barney and Nancy, “dear Eleanor Chadwick doesn’t mind taking it,
-whatever it’s a sign of. And since it will come to Barney through her, I
-don’t think there’ll be enough personality left hanging about it to hurt
-much.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I wish they could take it as a sign of accepted love,†Adrienne
-murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps they will,†he said. “I’ll do my best that they shall, I
-promise you.<a name="page_363" id="page_363"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>It was one thing to promise it and another to know his hope that it
-might be a promise never to be redeemed. The cross-currents in his own
-thought made him light-headed as he stood there, his back to her, and
-examined the glossy creatures in the meadow. “Do you think it will all
-take a long time?†Adrienne added, after a little pause. “Will they be
-able to marry in six or eight months, say?â€</p>
-
-<p>“It depends on how soon Barney takes action. Say about a year,†he
-suggested. “They’d wait a little first, wouldn’t they?â€</p>
-
-<p>“I hope not. They’ve waited so long already. I hope it will be as soon
-as possible. I shall feel so much more peaceful when I hear they’re
-married. Could you, perhaps, make them see that, too?â€</p>
-
-<p>And again he promised. “I’ll make them see everything I can.â€</p>
-
-<p>He turned to her at last. She sat, her face still downcast in its
-shadow, while the light glittered on her wreaths of hair. Her hands
-still lay before her on the table, and the light fell on her
-wedding-ring. Perhaps she was looking at the ring.</p>
-
-<p>“It all depends on something else,†he heard himself say suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>She turned her head and looked round at him. His attitude, his distance
-from her, drew her attention rather than his words, for she repeated
-mildly: “On something else?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Whether I can keep those promises, you know,†said Oldmeadow. “Yes, it
-all depends on something else. That’s what I want to talk to you about.â€</p>
-
-<p>He hardly knew what he was saying as he approached the table and pushed
-the brocaded chair,<a name="page_364" id="page_364"></a> companion to the one in which she sat, a little
-from its place. He leaned on its back and looked down at her hands and
-Adrienne kept her eyes on him, attentive rather than perplexed.</p>
-
-<p>“May I talk to you about it now?†he asked. “It’s something quite
-different.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, do,†said Adrienne. She drew her hands into her lap and sat
-upright, in readiness. And, suddenly, as he was silent, she added:
-“About yourself? I’ve been forgetting that, haven’t I? I’ve only been
-thinking of my side. You have quite other plans, perhaps. Perhaps you’re
-not going back to England for ever so long. Is it an appointment?â€</p>
-
-<p>“No; not an appointment,†he muttered, still looking down, at the table
-now, since her hands were no longer there. “But perhaps I shan’t be
-going back for a long time. I hope not.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,†she murmured. And now he had perplexed her. After what he had just
-promised her, his hope must perplex and even trouble her. “Do tell me,â€
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s something I want to ask you,†said Oldmeadow&mdash;“And it will
-astonish you. You may find it hard to forgive; because I’ve meant to ask
-it from the beginning; from our deciding to go away together. As far
-back as the time in the hospital.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But you may ask anything. Anything at all,†she almost urged upon him.
-“After what I’ve asked you&mdash;you have every right. If there’s anything I
-can do in the wide, wide world for you&mdash;oh! you know how glad and proud
-I should be. As for forgivenessâ€&mdash;he heard the smile in her voice, she
-was<a name="page_365" id="page_365"></a> troubled, yet tranquil, too&mdash;“you’re forgiven in advance.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Am I? Wait and see.†He, too, tried to smile, as he used the tag; but
-it was a mechanical smile and he felt his heart knocking against the
-chair-back as he went on: “Because I haven’t done what you asked me to
-do as you asked me to do it. I haven’t done it from the motive you
-supposed. It’s been for Barney and for Nancy and for you; but it’s been
-most of all for myself.†He screwed his glass into his eye as he spoke
-with a gesture as mechanical as the smile had been and he looked at her
-at last, thus brought nearer. “I want you not to go on to-morrow.†It
-was the first, the evident, the most palpable desire that rose to his
-lips. “I want you never to go on again, alone. If you can’t stay with
-me, I want you to let me follow you. When the time comes I want you to
-marry me. I love you.â€</p>
-
-<p>The light as it fell on her seemed suddenly strange, almost portentous
-in its brilliancy. Or was it her stillness, as she sat and gazed at him
-after he had spoken the words, that was strange and portentous? It was
-as if they arrested the currents of her being and she sat tranced,
-frozen into the fixed shape of an astonishment too deep for emotion. Her
-eyes did not alter in their gentleness; but the gentleness became tragic
-and pitiful, like the inappropriate calm on the mask of a dead face at
-Pompeii, fixed in an eternal unreadiness by the engulfing lava.</p>
-
-<p>She put up her hand at last and pushed back her hair. With her forehead
-bared she became more like the photograph of her father. When she spoke
-her voice was slow and feeble, like the voice of a person dangerously
-ill. “I don’t understand you.<a name="page_366" id="page_366"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>“Try to,†said Oldmeadow. “You must begin far back.â€</p>
-
-<p>She still kept her hand pressed upon her hair. “You don’t mean that it’s
-the conventionally honourable thing to do? Oh, no; you don’t mean that?â€
-Her face in its effort to understand was appalled.</p>
-
-<p>“No; I don’t mean anything conventional,†he returned. “I’m thinking
-only of you. Of my love. I’ll come with you to Serbia to-morrow&mdash;if
-you’ll let me. I could kneel and worship you as you sit there.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,†she more feebly murmured. She sank back in her chair.</p>
-
-<p>“My darling, my saint,†said Oldmeadow, gazing at her; “if you must
-leave me, you’ll take that with you; that the man who destroyed you is
-your lover; that you are dearer to him than anything on earth.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,†she murmured again, and she put her hands before her face. Her
-eyes were hidden; she had spoken no word of reproach and he could not
-keep himself from her. He knelt beside her, grasping the chair across,
-behind her. She was so near that he could have laid his head upon her
-breast. “Don’t leave me,†he heard his pleading voice, but she seemed so
-much nearer than his own voice; “or let me come. Everything shall be as
-you wish and when you wish. Tell me that you care, too; or that you can
-come to care. Tell me that you can think of me as your husband.â€</p>
-
-<p>She was there, with her hidden eyes, within his arms, and inevitably
-they closed around her, and though he heard her murmur, “Please, please,
-please,†he could not relinquish her. She was free<a name="page_367" id="page_367"></a> and he was free.
-They had cut themselves off from the world. They were alone in the
-strange city; in the strange, bright, hallucinated room; and he knew
-from the ache and rapture of her nearness how he had craved it.</p>
-
-<p>But, gently, he heard her say again, “Please,†and gently she put him
-from her and he saw her face, and her eyes full of grief and gentleness.
-“Forgive me,†she said.</p>
-
-<p>“My darling. For what?†he almost groaned. “Don’t say you’re going to
-break my heart.â€</p>
-
-<p>She kept her hand on his breast, holding him from her while she looked
-into his eyes. “It is so beautiful to be loved,†she said, and her voice
-was still the slow, feeble voice of exhaustion. “Even when one has no
-right to be. Don’t misunderstand. Even when one may not love back; not
-in that way. Forgive me; not in that way; my dearest friend.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Why mayn’t you love back? Why not in that way? If it’s beautiful, why
-mayn’t you?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Sit there, will you? Yes; keep my hand. How weak I’ve been, and cruel.
-It can’t be. Don’t you know? Haven’t you seen? It has always been for
-him. He must be free; but I can never be free.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no. No. That’s impossible,†Oldmeadow said, leaning towards her
-across the table and keeping her hand in both of his. “I can’t stand
-that. I could stand your work, your vocation, better. But not Barney,
-who loves another woman. That’s impossible.â€</p>
-
-<p>“But it is so,†she said, softly, looking at him. “Really it is so.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No, no,†Oldmeadow repeated, and he raised her hand to his lips and
-kept it there, a talisman<a name="page_368" id="page_368"></a> against the menace of her words. “He lost
-you. He’s gone. I’ve found you and you care for me. You can’t hide from
-me that you care for me. Just now. For those moments. You were mine.â€</p>
-
-<p>“No,†she repeated. “I was weak and cruel, but I was not yours.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had been incredibly near so short a time ago before. Now, looking at
-him, with her difficult breaths and gentle, inflexible eyes, she was
-incredibly remote. “I am his, only his,†she said. “I love him and I
-shall always love him. It makes no difference. He loves Nancy, but it
-makes no difference. He is my husband. The father of my baby.â€</p>
-
-<p>She tried to speak on steadily while she thus gave him the truth that
-ended all his hope; but the desperate emotion with which he received it
-made real and overpowering to her her outlived yet living sorrow. With
-all that she must relinquish laid bare to her in the passion of his eyes
-she could measure all that she had lost, as she had, perhaps, till then,
-never measured it. “Don’t you know?†she said. “Don’t you see? My heart
-is broken, broken, broken.â€</p>
-
-<p>She put her head down on her arms as she said the words and he heard her
-bitter weeping.</p>
-
-<p>He knew, as he listened, that it was all over with him. Dimly, in the
-terrible suffering that wrenched at him, he received his further
-revelation of the nature already nearer him than any in the world. Her
-strength would be in all she did and felt. She had loved Barney and she
-would always love him. Her marriage had been to her an ultimate and
-indissoluble experience. That was why she had been<a name="page_369" id="page_369"></a> so blind. She could
-not have thought of herself as a woman to be again loved and wooed.</p>
-
-<p>Her hair lay against his hands, still holding hers, and he found himself
-stroking it, without tenderness or solicitude it seemed. It seemed to be
-only automatically that his fingers passed across it, while he noted its
-warmth and fineness and bright, lovely colour, remembering that he had
-thought it at the first her one indubitable beauty.</p>
-
-<p>They sat there thus for a long time. The gilt clock paused, choked, then
-in a voice of hurrying, hoarsened silver rang out eleven strokes.
-Footsteps passed and faded up the corridor; doors closed. A tramway on
-the quai clashed and clanged, came to a noisy standstill, and moved on
-again with a rattling of cables and raucous blasts from a horn; and in
-the profound silence that followed he seemed to hear the deep old river
-flowing.</p>
-
-<p>“Really, you see, it’s broken,†said Adrienne. She had ceased to weep,
-but she still leaned forward, her head upon her folded arms. “You saw it
-happen,†she said. “That night when you found me in the rain.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve seen everything happen to you, haven’t I?†said Oldmeadow.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,†she assented. “Everything. And I’ve made you suffer, too. Isn’t
-that strange; everybody who comes near me I make suffer.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Well, in different ways,†he said. “Some because you are near and
-others because you won’t be.â€</p>
-
-<p>His voice was colourless. His hand still passed across her hair.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you see,†she said, after a moment, “that it couldn’t have been.
-Try to see that and to accept<a name="page_370" id="page_370"></a> it. Not you and me. Not Barney’s friend
-and Barney’s wife. In every way it couldn’t have done, really. It makes
-no difference for me. I’m a <i>déracinée</i>, as I said. A wanderer. But what
-would have become of you, all full of roots as you are? You can live it
-down without me. You never could have with. And how could you have
-wandered with me? For that must be my life.â€</p>
-
-<p>“You know, it’s no good trying to comfort me,†said Oldmeadow. “What I
-feel is that any roots I have are in you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“They will grow again. The others will grow again.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want others, darling,†said Oldmeadow. “You see, my heart is
-broken, too.â€</p>
-
-<p>She lifted her head at last and he saw her marred and ravaged face.</p>
-
-<p>“It can’t be helped,†he tried to smile at her. “You weren’t there to be
-recognized when I first met you and now that you are there, I’ve come
-too late. I believe that if I’d come before Barney, you’d have loved me.
-It’s my only comfort.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Who can say,†said Adrienne. Her gaze, as she looked at him, was deep
-with the mystery of her acceptance. “Perhaps. It seems to me all this
-was needed to bring us where we are&mdash;enmity and bitterness and grief.
-And my love for Barney, too. Let me tell you. It’s in the past that I
-think of him. As if he were dead. It’s something over; done with for
-ever; yet something always there. How can one be a mother and forget?
-Even when he is Nancy’s husband and when she is a mother, I shall not
-cease to feel myself his wife. Perhaps you think that strange, after Meg
-and what I believed right for<a name="page_371" id="page_371"></a> her. But it is quite clear to me, and
-simple. It isn’t a thing of laws and commandments; only of our own
-hearts. If we can love again, we may. But for me it would be impossible.
-With me everything was involved. I couldn’t, ever, be twice a wife.â€</p>
-
-<p>Silence fell between them.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll see about the little girl’s grave,†said Oldmeadow suddenly. He
-did not know what had made him think of it. Perhaps something that had
-gone on echoing in him after she had spoken of her maternity. “I’ll go
-to Evian to-morrow. It will spare Joséphine the journey and give me
-something to do. You’ll tell me the name and give me the directions
-before you go.â€</p>
-
-<p>Tears filled her eyes as she looked at him; but they did not fall. They
-could need no controlling. The springs of weeping must be nearly
-drained. “Thank you,†she said, and she looked away, seeming to think
-intently.</p>
-
-<p>It was now too late for the tramways. They had ceased to crash and
-rattle by, but a sound of belated singing passed along the quais,
-melancholy in its induced and extravagant mirth.</p>
-
-<p>The horrible sense of human suffering that had beaten in upon him at the
-hospital, pressed again upon his heart. He saw himself departing next
-day to find the abandoned grave and he saw himself standing beside her
-train and measuring along the shining rails the vast distances that were
-to bear her away for ever.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the worst,†he said. “You’re suffering too. I must see you go
-away and know that you are unhappy. I must think of you as unhappy. With
-a broken heart.<a name="page_372" id="page_372"></a>â€</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes, after she had thanked him, had been fixed in the intent
-reverie. She, too, perhaps, had been seeing those tides of misery, the
-sea of which she had spoken, breaking in tragic waves for ever; so
-unchanged by all the alleviations that love or mercy could bring; and it
-was perhaps with despair that she saw herself as one with it. Her eyes
-as she turned them on him were full of distance and of depth and, with
-sickening grief, he felt that a woman with a broken heart could do
-nothing more for herself or for him.</p>
-
-<p>But her thought, whatever the voids of darkness it had visited, drew
-nearer and nearer to his need as she looked at him. Something of her own
-strong vigilance was in the look, bringing the seagull to his mind. The
-seagull caught and battered by the waves, with sodden wings, half
-dragged down, yet summoning its strength to rise from the submerging
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>“But you can be happy with a broken heart,†she said. Their hands had
-fallen apart long since. She stretched out hers now and took his in her
-small, firm grasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you?†he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“You mustn’t think of me like this,†she said, and it was as if she read
-his thoughts and their imagery. “I went down, I know; like drowning.
-Sometimes the waves break over you and pull you down, and there seems
-nothing else in all the world but yourself and what you’ve suffered. But
-it doesn’t last. Something brings you up again.â€</p>
-
-<p>Something had brought her up again now. His darkness. His misery. It was
-as if he saw her spread her wings and saw her eyes measuring, for them
-both, the spaces of sea and sky.<a name="page_373" id="page_373"></a></p>
-
-<p>He remembered a picture in a book he had loved as a little boy: little
-Diamond held to the breast of the North Wind as she flies forth in her
-streaming hair against a sky of stars. So he felt himself lying on her
-breast and lifted with her.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve told you how happy I can be. It’s all true,†she said. “It’s all
-there. The light, the peace, the strength. I shall find them. And so
-will you.â€</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I?†he questioned gently. “Without you?â€</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Without me. You will find them. But you won’t be without me,†said
-Adrienne.</p>
-
-<p>Already she was finding them. He knew that, for, as she looked at him,
-he felt an influence passing from her to him like the laying of her hand
-upon his brow. But it was closer than that. It was to her breast that
-her eyes held him while, in a long silence, the compulsion of her faith
-flowed into him. First quietness; then peace; then a lifting radiance.</p>
-
-<p>“Promise me,†he heard her say.</p>
-
-<p>He did not know what it was he must promise, but he seemed to feel it
-all without knowing and he said: “I promise.â€</p>
-
-<p>She rose and stood above him. “You mustn’t regret. You mustn’t want.â€</p>
-
-<p>She laid her hands upon his shoulders as she spoke and looked down at
-him, so austere, so radiant. “Anything else would have spoiled it. We
-were only meant to find each other like this and then to part.â€</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be good,†said Oldmeadow. It was like saying one’s prayers at
-one’s mother’s knees and his lips found the child-like formula.</p>
-
-<p>“We must part,†said Adrienne. “I have my<a name="page_374" id="page_374"></a> life and you have yours and
-they take different ways. But you won’t be without me, I won’t be
-without you. How can we be, when we will never, never forget each other
-and our love?â€</p>
-
-<p>He looked up at her. He had put out his hands and they grasped her dress
-as a donor in a votive altarpiece grasps the Madonna’s healing garment.
-It was not, he knew, to keep her. It was rather in an accepting
-relinquishment that he held her thus for their last communion, receiving
-through touch and sight and hearing her final benison.</p>
-
-<p>“I will think of you every day, until I die,†she said. “I will pray for
-you every day. Dear friend&mdash;dearest friend&mdash;God bless and keep you.â€</p>
-
-<p>She had stooped to him and for a transcending moment he was taken into
-her strong, life-giving embrace. The climax of his life was come as he
-felt her arms close round him and her kiss upon his forehead. And as she
-held him thus he believed all that she had said and all for which she
-could have found no words. That he should find the light and more and
-more feel their unity in it: that the thought of her would be strength
-to him always; as the thought of him and of his love would be strength
-to her.</p>
-
-<p>After she had gone, he sat for a long time bathed in the sense of her
-life, and tasting, for that span of time, her own security of eternal
-goodness.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="c">THE END</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="c">Typographical error was corrected by the etext transcriber:</p>
-
-<p class="c">“<span class="errata">Adriennes</span> mustn’t fail,†said Mrs. Averil dryly. “The only
-justification for <span class="errata">Adriennes</span> is to be in the right. => “Adrienne mustn’t
-fail,†said Mrs. Averil dryly. “The only justification for Adrienne is
-to be in the right. {pg 241}</p>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Adrienne Toner, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Adrienne Toner, by Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Adrienne Toner
-
-Author: Anne Douglas Sedgwick
-
-Release Date: March 29, 2013 [EBook #42428]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADRIENNE TONER ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
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-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-_A Novel_
-
-BY
-ANNE DOUGLAS SEDGWICK
-(Mrs. Basil de Selincourt)
-
-AUTHOR OF "CHRISTMAS ROSES, AND OTHER STORIES," "TANTE"
-"FRANKLIN KANE," "THE ENCOUNTER," ETC.
-
-[Illustration: colophon]
-
-BOSTON AND NEW YORK
-HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
-The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
-COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY ANNE DOUGLAS DE SELINCOURT
-ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-THIRD IMPRESSION, MAY, 1922
-
-The Riverside Press
-CAMBRIDGE . MASSACHUSETTS
-PRINTED IN THE U . S . A.
-
-
-
-
-
-ADRIENNE TONER
-
-
-
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-"Come down to Coldbrooks next week-end, will you, Roger?" said Barney
-Chadwick. He had been wandering around the room, pausing once to glance
-at the Cesar Franck on the piano and once at the window to look down at
-the Thames, and his voice now, though desultory in intention, betrayed
-to his friend preoccupation and even anxiety. "There is going to be an
-interesting girl with us: American; very original and charming."
-
-Roger Oldmeadow sat at his writing-bureau in the window, and his high
-dark head was silhouetted against the sky. It had power and even beauty,
-with moments of brooding melancholy; but the type to which it most
-conformed was that of the clever, cantankerous London bachelor; and if
-he sometimes looked what he was, the scholar who had taken a double
-first at Balliol and gave brain and sinew to an eminent review, he
-looked more often what he was not, a caustic, cautious solicitor,
-clean-shaved and meticulously neat, with the crisp bow at his collar,
-single eyeglass, and thin, wry smile.
-
-There was a cogitative kindness in his eyes and a latent irony on his
-lips as he now scrutinized Barney Chadwick, who had come finally to lean
-against the mantelpiece, and it was difficult before Roger Oldmeadow's
-gaze at such moments not to feel that you were giving yourself away.
-This was evidently what Barney was trying not to feel, or, at all
-events, not to show. He tapped his cigarette-end, fixing his eyes upon
-it and frowning a little. He had ruffled his brown hair with the nervous
-hand passed through it during his ramble, but ruffled or sleek Barney
-could never look anything but perfection, just as, whether he smiled or
-frowned, he could never look anything but charming. In his spring-tide
-grey, with a streak of white inside his waistcoat and a tie of petunia
-silk that matched his socks, he was a pleasant figure of fashion; and he
-was more than that; more than the mere London youth of 1913, who danced
-the tango and cultivated Post-Impressionism and the Russian ballet. He
-was perhaps not much more; but his difference, if slight, made him
-noticeable. It came back, no doubt, to the fact of charm. He was radiant
-yet reserved; confident yet shy. He had a slight stammer, and his smile
-seemed to ask you to help him out. His boyhood, at twenty-nine, still
-survived in his narrow face, clumsy in feature and delicate in contour,
-with long jaw, high temples and brown eyes, half sweet, half sleepy. The
-red came easily to his brown cheek, and he had the sensitive, stubborn
-lips of the little boy at the preparatory school whom Oldmeadow had met
-and befriended now many years ago.
-
-In Oldmeadow's eyes he had always remained the "little Barney" he had
-then christened him--even Barney's mother had almost forgotten that his
-real name was Eustace--and he could not but know that Barney depended
-upon him more than upon anyone in the world. To Barney his negations
-were more potent than other people's affirmations, and though he had
-sometimes said indignantly, "You leave one nothing to agree about,
-Roger, except Plato and Church-music," he was never really happy or
-secure in his rebellions from what he felt or suspected to be
-Oldmeadow's tastes and judgments. Oldmeadow had seen him through many
-admirations, not only for books and pictures, but for original girls.
-Barney thought that he liked the unusual. He was a devotee of the
-ballet, and had in his rooms cushions and curtains from the Omega shop
-and a drawing by Wyndham Lewis. But Oldmeadow knew that he really
-preferred the photograph of a Burne-Jones, a survival from Oxford days,
-that still bravely, and irrelevantly, hung opposite it, and he waited to
-see the Wyndham Lewis replaced by a later portent. Barney could remain
-stubbornly faithful to old devotions, but he was easily drawn into new
-orbits; and it was a new star, evidently, that he had come to describe
-and justify.
-
-"What have I to do with charming American girls?" Oldmeadow inquired,
-turning his eyes on the blurred prospect of factory-chimneys and
-warehouses that the farther waterside of Chelsea affords. One had to go
-to the window and look out to see the grey and silver river flowing, in
-the placidity that revealed so little power. Oldmeadow lived in a flat
-on the Embankment; but he was not an admirer of Chelsea, just as he was
-not an admirer of Whistler nor--and Barney had always suspected it--of
-Burne-Jones. His flat gave him, at a reasonable cost, fresh air,
-boiling-hot water and a walk in Battersea Park; these, with his piano,
-were his fundamental needs; though he owned, for the mean little stream
-it was, that the Thames could look pretty enough by morning sunlight
-and--like any river--magical under stars. After Plato and Bach,
-Oldmeadow's passions were the rivers of France.
-
-"She'll have something to do with you," said Barney, and he seemed
-pleased with the retort. "I met her at the Lumleys. They think her the
-marvel of the age."
-
-"Well, that doesn't endear her to me," said Oldmeadow. "And I don't like
-Americans."
-
-"Come, you're not quite so hide-bound as all that," said Barney, vexed.
-"What about Mrs. Aldesey? I've heard you say she's the most charming
-woman you know."
-
-"Except Nancy," Oldmeadow amended.
-
-"No one could call Nancy a charming woman," said Barney, looking a
-little more vexed. "She's a dear, of course; but she's a mere girl. What
-do you know about Americans, anyway--except Mrs. Aldesey?"
-
-"What she tells me about them--the ones she doesn't know," said
-Oldmeadow, leaning back in his chair with a laugh. "But I own that I'm
-merely prejudiced. Tell me about your young lady, and why you want her
-to have something to do with me. Is she a reformer of some sort?"
-
-"She's a wonderful person, really," said Barney, availing himself with
-eagerness of his opportunity. "Not a reformer. Only a sort of mixture of
-saint and fairy-princess. She cured Charlie Lumley of insomnia, three
-years ago, at Saint Moritz. Nothing psychic or theatrical, you know.
-Just sat by him and smiled--she's a most extraordinary smile--and laid
-her hand on his head. He'd not slept for nights and went off like a
-lamb. Lady Lumley almost cries when she tells about it. They thought
-Charlie might lose his mind if he went on not sleeping."
-
-"My word! She's a Christian Science lady? A medium? What?"
-
-"Call her what you like. You'll see. She does believe in spiritual
-forces. It's not only that. She's quite lovely. In every way. Nancy and
-Meg will worship her. The Lumley girls do."
-
-Oldmeadow's thoughts were already dwelling in rueful surmise on Nancy.
-He had always thought her the nicest young creature he had ever known,
-nicer even than Barney; and he had always wanted them to marry. She was
-Barney's second cousin, and she and her mother lived near the Chadwicks
-in Gloucestershire.
-
-"Oh, Nancy will worship her, will she? She must be all right, then.
-What's her name?" he asked.
-
-Barney had given up trying to be desultory, and his conscious firmness
-was now not lost upon his friend as he answered, stammering a little,
-"Adrienne. Adrienne Toner."
-
-"Why Adrienne?" Oldmeadow mildly inquired. "Has she French blood?"
-
-"Not that I know of. It's a pretty name, I think, Adrienne. One hears
-more inane names given to girls every day. Her mother loved France--just
-as you do, Roger. Adrienne was born in Paris, I think."
-
-"Oh, a very pretty name," said Oldmeadow, noting Barney's already
-familiar use of it. "Though it sounds more like an actress's than a
-saint's."
-
-"There was something dramatic about the mother, I fancy," said Barney,
-sustained, evidently, by his own detachment. "A romantic, rather absurd,
-but very loveable person. Adrienne worshipped her and, naturally, can't
-see the absurdity. She died out in California. On a boat," said Barney
-stammering again, over the _b_.
-
-"On a boat?"
-
-"Yes. Awfully funny. But touching, too. That's what she wanted, when she
-died: the sea and sky about her. They carried her on her yacht--doctors,
-nurses, all the retinue--and sailed far out from shore. It's beautiful,
-too, in a way you know, to be able to do that sort of thing quite simply
-and unself-consciously. Adrienne sat beside her, and they smiled at each
-other and held hands until the end."
-
-Oldmeadow played with his penholder. He was disconcerted; and most of
-all by the derivative emotion in Barney's voice. They had gone far,
-then, already, the young people. Nancy could have not the ghost of a
-chance. And the nature of what touched Barney left him singularly dry.
-He was unable to credit so much simplicity or unself-consciousness. He
-coughed shortly, and after a decently respectful interval inquired: "Is
-Miss Toner very wealthy?"
-
-"Yes, very," said Barney, relapsing now into a slight sulkiness. "At
-least, perhaps not very, as rich Americans go. She gave away a lot of
-her fortune, I know, when her mother died. She founded a place for
-children--a convalescent home, or creche--out in California. And she did
-something in Chicago, too."
-
-And Miss Toner had evidently done something in London at the Lumleys'.
-It couldn't be helped about Nancy, and if the American girl was pretty
-and, for all her nonsense, well-bred, it might not be a bad thing, since
-there was so much money. The Chadwicks were not at all well off, and
-Coldbrooks was only kept going by Mrs. Chadwick's economies and Barney's
-labours at his uncle's stock-broking firm in the city. Oldmeadow could
-see Eleanor Chadwick's so ingenuous yet so practical eye fixed on Miss
-Toner's gold, and he, too, could fix his. Miss Toner sounded benevolent,
-and it was probable that her presence as mistress of Coldbrooks would be
-of benefit to all Barney's relatives. All the same, she sounded as
-irrelevant in his life as the Wyndham Lewis.
-
-"Adrienne Toner," he heard himself repeating aloud, for he had a trick,
-caught, no doubt, from his long loneliness, of relapsing into
-absent-minded and audible meditations. The cadence of it worried him. It
-was an absurd name. "You know each other pretty well already, it seems,"
-he said.
-
-"Yes; it's extraordinary how one seems to know her. One doesn't have any
-formalities to get through with her, as it were," said Barney. "Either
-you are there, or you are not there."
-
-"Either on the yacht, or not on the yacht, eh?" Oldmeadow reached out
-for his pipe.
-
-"Put it like that if you choose. It's awfully jolly to be on the yacht,
-I can tell you. It _is_ like a voyage, a great adventure, to know her."
-
-"And what's it like to be off the yacht? Suppose I'm not there? Suppose
-she doesn't like me?" Oldmeadow suggested. "What am I to talk to her
-about--of course I'll come, if you really want me. But she frightens me
-a little, I confess. I'm not an adventurous person."
-
-"But neither am I, you know!" Barney exclaimed, "and that's just what
-she does to you: makes you adventurous. She'll be immensely interested
-in you, of course. You can talk to her about anything. It was down at a
-week-end at the Lumleys' I first met her, and there were some tremendous
-big-wigs there, political, you know, and literary, and all that sort of
-thing; and she had them all around her. She'd have frightened me, too,
-if I hadn't seen at once that she took to me and wouldn't mind my being
-just ordinary. She likes everybody; that's just it. She takes to
-everybody, big and little. She's just like sunshine," Barney stammered a
-little over his _s_'s. "That's what she makes one think of straight off;
-shining on everything."
-
-"On the clean and the unclean. I see," said Oldmeadow. "I feel it in my
-bones that I shall come into the unclean category with her. But it'll do
-me the more good to have her shine on me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-Roger Oldmeadow went to have tea with Mrs. Aldesey next afternoon. She
-was, after the Chadwicks, his nearest friend, and his relation to the
-Chadwicks was one of affection rather than affinity. They had been
-extraordinarily kind to him since the time that he had befriended Barney
-at the preparatory school, hiding, under his grim jocularities, the
-bewilderment of a boy's first great bereavement. His love for his mother
-had been an idolatry, and his childhood had been haunted by her
-ill-health. She died when he was thirteen, and in some ways he knew
-that, even now, he had never got over it. His unfortunate and frustrated
-love-affair in early manhood had been, when all was said and done, a
-trivial grief compared to it. Coldbrooks had become, after that, his
-only home, for he had lost his father as a very little boy, and the
-whole family had left the country parsonage and been thrown on the
-mercies of an uncle and aunt who lived in a grim provincial town.
-Oldmeadow's most vivid impression of home was the high back bedroom
-where the worn carpet was cold to the feet and the fire a sulky spot of
-red, and the windows looked out over smoky chimney-pots. Here his
-stricken mother lay in bed with her cherished cat beside her and read
-aloud to him. There was always a difficulty about feeding poor Effie,
-Aunt Aggie declaring that cats should live below stairs and on mice; and
-Roger, at midday dinner, became adroit at slipping bits of meat from
-his plate into a paper held in his lap and carried triumphantly to his
-mother's room afterwards. "Oh, darling, you _oughtn't_ to," she would
-say with her loving, girlish smile, and he would reply, "But I went
-without, Mummy; so it's quite all right." His two little sisters were
-kept in the nursery, as they were noisy, high-spirited children, and
-tired their mother too much. Roger was her companion, her comrade; her
-only comrade in the world, really, beside Effie. It had been Mrs.
-Chadwick who had saved Effie from the lethal chamber after her
-mistress's death. Roger never spoke about his mother, but he did speak
-about Effie when she was thus threatened, and he had never forgotten,
-never, never, Mrs. Chadwick's eager cry of, "But bring her here, my dear
-Roger. I _like_ idle cats! Bring her here, and I promise you that we'll
-make her happy. Animals are _so_ happy at Coldbrooks." To see Effie
-cherished, petted, occupying the best chairs during all the years that
-followed, had been to see his mother, in this flickering little ghost,
-remembered in the only way he could have borne to see her explicitly
-remembered, and it was because of Effie that he had most deeply loved
-Coldbrooks. It remained always his refuge during a cheerless and
-harassed youth, when, with his two forceful, black-browed sisters to
-settle in life, he had felt himself pant and strain under the harness.
-He was fonder of them than they of him, for they were hard, cheerful
-young women, inheriting harshness of feature and manner from their
-father, with their father's black eyes. It was from his mother that
-Oldmeadow had his melancholy blue ones, and he had never again met his
-mother's tenderness.
-
-Both sisters were now settled, one in India and one, very prosperously,
-in London; but he seldom turned for tea into Cadogan Gardens and
-Trixie's brisk Chippendale drawing-room; though Cadogan Gardens was
-obviously more convenient than Somer's Place, where, on the other side
-of the park, Mrs. Aldesey lived. He had whims, and did not know whether
-it was because he more disliked her husband or her butler that he went
-so seldom to see Trixie. Her husband was jovial and familiar, and the
-butler had a face like a rancid ham and a surreptitious manner. One had
-always to be encountered at the door, and the other was too often in the
-drawing-room, and Trixie was vexatiously satisfied with both; Trixie
-also had four turbulent, intelligent children, in whom complacent
-parental theories of uncontrol manifested themselves unpleasantly, and
-altogether she was too much hedged in by obstacles to be tempting; even
-had she been tempting in herself. Intercourse with Trixie, when it did
-take place, consisted usually of hard-hearted banter. She bantered him a
-great deal about Mrs. Aldesey, who, she averred, snubbed her. Not that
-Trixie minded being snubbed by anybody.
-
-It was a pleasant walk across the park on this spring day when the
-crocuses were fully out in the grass, white, purple and gold, and the
-trees just scantly stitched with green, and, as always, it was with a
-slight elation that he approached his friend. However dull or jaded
-oneself or the day, the thought of her cheered one as did the thought of
-tea. She made him think of her own China tea. She suggested delicate
-ceremoniousness. Though familiar, there was always an aroma of
-unexpectedness about her; a slight, sweet shock of oddity and surprise.
-
-Mrs. Aldesey was unlike the traditional London American. She was neither
-rich nor beautiful nor noticeably well-dressed. One became gradually
-aware, after some time spent in her company, that her clothes,
-soft-tinted and silken, were pleasing, as were her other appurtenances;
-the narrow front of her little house, painted freshly in white and green
-and barred by boxes of yellow wallflower; the serenely unfashionable
-water-colours of Italy, painted by her mother, on the staircase; and her
-drawing-room, grey-green and primrose-yellow, with eighteenth-century
-fans, of which she had a collection, displayed in cabinets, and good old
-glass.
-
-Mrs. Aldesey herself, behind her tea-table, very faded, very thin, with
-what the French term a _souffreteux_ little face--an air of just not
-having taken drugs to make her sleep, but of having certainly taken
-tabloids to make her digest--seemed already to belong to a passing order
-of things; an order still sustained, if lightly, by stays, and keeping a
-prayer-book as punctually in use as a card-case.
-
-Oldmeadow owed her, if indirectly, to the Chadwicks, as he owed so much,
-even if it was entirely on his own merits that he had won her regard.
-They had met, years ago, in France; an entirely chance encounter, and
-probably a futureless one, had it not been for the presence in the hotel
-at Amboise of the Lumleys. They both slightly knew the Lumleys, and the
-Lumleys and the Chadwicks were old friends. So it had come about; and if
-he associated Mrs. Aldesey with tea, he associated her also with perfect
-omelettes and the Loire. He had liked her at once so much, that, had it
-not been for an always unseen yet never-repudiated husband in New York,
-he would certainly, at the beginning, have fallen in love with her. But
-the unrepudiated husband made as much a part of Mrs. Aldesey's
-environment as her stays and her prayer-book. The barrier was so evident
-that one did not even reflect on what one might have done had it not
-been there; and indeed, Mrs. Aldesey, he now seemed, after many pleasant
-years of friendship, to recognize, for all the sense of sweetness and
-exhilaration she gave him, had not enough substance to rouse or sustain
-his heart. She was, like the tea again, all savour.
-
-She lifted to-day her attentive blue eyes--with age they would become
-shrewd--and gave him her fine little hand, blue-veined and ornamented
-with pearls and diamonds in old settings. She wore long earrings and a
-high, transparent collar of net and lace. Her earrings and her
-elaborately dressed hair, fair and faded, seemed as much a part of her
-personality as her eyes, her delicate nose and her small, slightly
-puckered mouth that dragged provocatively and prettily at one corner
-when she smiled. Oldmeadow sometimes wondered if she were happy; but
-never because of anything she said or did.
-
-"I want to hear about some people called Toner," he said, dropping into
-the easy-chair on the opposite side of the tea-table. It was almost
-always thus that he and Mrs. Aldesey met. He rarely dined out. "I'm
-rather perturbed. I think that Barney--you remember young Chadwick--is
-going to marry a Miss Toner--a Miss Adrienne Toner. And I hope you'll
-have something to her advantage to tell me. As you know, I'm devoted to
-Barney and his family."
-
-"I know. The Lumleys' Chadwicks. I remember perfectly. The dear boy with
-the innocent eyes and sulky mouth. Why don't you bring him to see me?
-He's dancing the tango in all his spare moments, I suppose, and doesn't
-care about old ladies." Mrs. Aldesey was not much over forty, but always
-thus alluded to herself. "Toner," she took up, pouring out his tea. "Why
-perturbed? Do you know anything against them? Americans, you mean. We
-poor expatriates are always seen as keepers to so many curious
-brethren.--Toner. _Cela ne me dit rien_."
-
-"I know nothing against them except that Mrs. Toner, the girl's mother,
-died, by arrangement, out at sea, on her yacht--in sunlight. Does that
-say anything? People don't do that in America, do they, as a rule? A
-very opulent lady, I inferred."
-
-"Oh, dear!" Mrs. Aldesey now ejaculated, as if enlightened. "Can it be?
-Do you mean, I wonder, the preposterous Mrs. Toner, of whom, fifteen
-years ago, I had a glimpse, and used to hear vague rumours? She wandered
-about the world. She dressed in the Empire period: Queen Louise of
-Prussia, white gauze bound beneath her chin. She had a harp, and warbled
-to monarchs. She had an astral body, and a Yogi and a yacht and
-everything handsome about her. The typical spiritual _cabotine_ of our
-epoch--though I'm sure they must always have existed. Of course it must
-be she. No one else could have died like that. Has she died, poor woman?
-On a yacht. Out at sea. In sunlight. How uncomfortable!"
-
-"Yes, she's dead," said Oldmeadow resignedly. "Yes; it's she, evidently.
-And her daughter is coming down to Coldbrooks this week-end. I'm afraid
-that unless Barney has too many rivals, he'll certainly marry her. But
-what you say leads me to infer that he will have rivals and to hope they
-may be successful. She will, no doubt, marry a prince."
-
-"Something Italian, perhaps. Quite a small fortune will do that.
-Certainly your nice Barney wouldn't have been at all Mrs. Toner's
-_affaire_. The girl on her own may think differently, for your Barney
-is, I remember, very engaging, and has a way with him. I don't know
-anything about the girl. I didn't know there was one. There's no reason
-why she may not be charming. Our wonderful people have the gift of
-picking up experience in a generation and make excellent princesses."
-
-"But she's that sort, you think. The sort that marries princes and has
-no traditions. Where did they come from? Do you know that?"
-
-"I haven't an idea. Yet, stay. Was it not tooth-paste?--Toner's Peerless
-Tooth-Paste. Obsolete; yet I seem to see, reminiscently, in far-away
-nursery days, the picture of a respectable old gentleman with
-side-whiskers, on a tube. A pretty pink glazed tube with a gilt top to
-it. Perhaps it's that. Since it was Toner's it would be the father's
-side; not the warbling mother's. Well, many of us might wish for as
-unambiguous an origin nowadays. And, in America, we did all sorts of
-useful things when we first, all of us, came over in the Mayflower!"
-said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile.
-
-Oldmeadow gazed upon his friend with an ironically receptive eye. "Have
-they ever known anyone decent? Anyone like yourself? I don't mean over
-here. I mean in America."
-
-"No one like me, I imagine; if I'm decent. Mrs. Toner essayed a season
-in New York one winter, and it was then I had my glimpse of her, at the
-opera, in the Queen Louise dress. A pretty woman, dark, with a sort of
-soulful and eminently respectable coquetry about her; surrounded by
-swarms of devotees--all male, to me unknown; and with something in a
-turban that I took to be a Yogi in the background. She only tried the
-one winter. She knew what she wanted and where she couldn't get it. We
-are very dry in New York--such of us as survive. Very little moved by
-warblings or astral bodies or millions. As you intimate, she'll have
-done much better over here. You _are_ a strange mixture of materialism
-and ingenuousness, you know."
-
-"It's only that we have fewer Mrs. Toners to amuse us and more to do
-with millions than you have," said Oldmeadow; but Mrs. Aldesey, shaking
-her head with a certain sadness, said that it wasn't as simple as all
-that.
-
-"Have you seen her? Have you seen Adrienne?" she took up presently,
-making him his second cup of tea. "Is she pretty? Is he very much in
-love?"
-
-"I'm going down to Coldbrooks on Saturday to see her," said Oldmeadow,
-"and I gather that it's not to subject her to any test that Barney wants
-me; it's to subject me, rather. He's quite sure of her. He thinks she's
-irresistible. He merely wants to make assurance doubly sure by seeing me
-bowled over. I don't know whether she's pretty. She has powers,
-apparently, that make her independent of physical attractions. She lays
-her hands on people's heads and cures them. She cured Charlie Lumley of
-insomnia at Saint Moritz three years ago."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey, at this, looked at him for some moments in silence.
-"Yes," she assented, and in her pause she seemed to have recognized and
-placed a familiar object. "Yes. She would. That's just what Mrs. Toner's
-daughter would do. I hope she doesn't warble, too. Laying on hands is
-better than warbling."
-
-"I see you think it hopeless," said Oldmeadow, pushing back his chair
-and yielding, as he thrust his hands into his pockets and stretched out
-his legs, to an avowed chagrin. "What a pity it is! A thousand pities.
-They are such dear, good, simple people, and Barney, though he doesn't
-know it, is as simple as any of them. What will become of them with this
-overwhelming cuckoo in their nest."
-
-At this Mrs. Aldesey became serious. "I don't think it hopeless at all.
-You misunderstand me. Isn't the fact that he's in love with her
-reassuring in itself? He may be simple, but he's a delicate, discerning
-creature, and he couldn't fall in love with some one merely pretentious
-and absurd. She may be charming. I can perfectly imagine her as
-charming, and there's no harm in laying on hands; there may be good.
-Don't be narrow, Roger. Don't go down there feeling dry."
-
-"I am narrow, and I do feel dry; horribly dry," said Oldmeadow. "How
-could the child of such a mother, and of tooth-paste, be charming? Don't
-try specious consolation, now, after having more than justified all my
-suspicions."
-
-"I'm malicious, not specious; and I can't resist having my fling. But
-you mustn't be narrow and take me _au pied de la lettre_. I assert that
-she may be charming. I assert that I can see it all working out most
-happily. She'll lay her hands on them and they'll love her. What I
-really want to say is this: don't try to set Barney against her. He'll
-marry her all the same and never forgive you."
-
-"Ah; there we have the truth of it. But Barney would always forgive me,"
-said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Well then, she won't. And you'd lose him just as surely. And she'll
-know. Let me warn you of that. She'll know perfectly."
-
-"I'll keep my hands off her," said Oldmeadow, "if she doesn't try to lay
-hers on me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-The Chadwicks all had a certain sulkiness in their charming looks, and
-where in Barney it mingled with sweetness, in Palgrave, his younger
-brother, it mingled with brilliancy. It was Palgrave who, at the
-station, met the family friend and counsellor in the shabby, inexpensive
-family car. He was still a mere boy, home from Marlborough for the
-Easter holidays; fond of Oldmeadow, as all the Chadwicks were; but more
-resentful of his predominance than Barney and more indifferent to his
-brotherly solicitude. He had Barney's long, narrow face and Barney's
-eyes and lips; but the former were proud and the latter petulant.
-To-day, as he sat beside him in the car, Oldmeadow was aware of
-something at once fixed and vibrating in his bearing. He wanted to say
-something, and he had resolved to be silent. During their last encounter
-at Coldbrooks, he and Oldmeadow had had a long, antagonistic political
-discussion, and Palgrave's resentment still, no doubt, survived.
-
-Coldbrooks lay among the lower Cotswolds, three miles from the station,
-and near the station was the village of Chelford where Nancy Averil and
-her mother lived. Nancy was at Coldbrooks; Aunt Monica--she was called
-aunt by the Chadwick children, though she and Mrs. Chadwick were first
-cousins--was away. So Palgrave informed him. But he did not speak again
-until the chill, green curve of arable hill-side was climbed and a
-stretch of wind-swept country lay before them. Then suddenly he
-volunteered: "The American girl is at Coldbrooks."
-
-"Oh! Is she? When did she come?" Somehow Oldmeadow had expected the
-later train for Miss Toner.
-
-"Yesterday. She and Barney came down together in her car."
-
-"So you've welcomed her already," said Oldmeadow, curious of the
-expression on the boy's face. "How does she fit into Coldbrooks? Does
-she like you all and do you like her?"
-
-For a moment Palgrave was silent. "You mean it makes a difference
-whether we do or not?" he then inquired.
-
-"I don't know that I meant that. Though if people come into your life it
-does make a difference."
-
-"And is she going to come into our lives?" Palgrave asked, and Oldmeadow
-felt pressure of some sort behind the question. "That's what I mean. Has
-Barney told you? He's said nothing to us. Not even to Mother."
-
-"Has Barney told me he's going to marry her? No; he hasn't. But it's
-evident he hopes to. Perhaps it depends on whether she likes Coldbrooks
-and Coldbrooks likes her."
-
-"Oh, no, it doesn't. It doesn't depend on anything at all except whether
-she likes Barney," said Palgrave. "She's the sort of person who doesn't
-depend on anything or anybody except herself. She cuts through
-circumstance like a knife through cheese. And if she's not going to take
-him I wish she'd never come," he added, frowning and turning, under the
-peak of his cap, his jewel-like eyes upon his companion. "It's a case of
-all or nothing with a person like that. It's too disturbing--just for a
-glimpse."
-
-Oldmeadow felt himself disconcerted. Oddly enough, for the boy was
-capricious and extravagant, Palgrave's opinion had more weight with him
-than Barney's. Barney, for one thing, was sexually susceptible and
-Palgrave was not. Though so young, Oldmeadow felt him already of a
-poetic temperament, passionate in mind and cold in blood.
-
-"She's so charming? You can't bear to lose her now you've seen her?" he
-asked.
-
-"I don't know about charming. No; I don't think her charming. At least
-not if you mean something little by the word. She's disturbing. She
-changes everything."
-
-"But if she stays she'll be more disturbing. She'll change more."
-
-"Oh, I shan't mind that! I shan't mind change," Palgrave declared. "If
-it's her change and she's there to see it through." And, relapsing to
-muteness, he bent to his brakes and they slid down among the woods of
-Coldbrooks.
-
-For the life of him and with the best will in the world, he couldn't
-make it out. That was Oldmeadow's first impression as, among the
-familiar group gathered in the hall about the tea-table, Miss Toner was
-at last made manifest to him. She was, he felt sure, in his first shrewd
-glance at her, merely what Lydia Aldesey would have placed as a
-third-rate American girl, and her origins in commercial enterprise were
-eminently appropriate.
-
-She got up to meet him, as if recognizing in him some special
-significance or, indeed, as it might be her ingenuous habit to do in
-meeting any older person. But he was not so much older if it came to
-that; for, after he had met the direct and dwelling gaze of her large,
-light eyes, the second impression was that she was by no means so young
-as Barney had led him to expect. She was certainly as old as Barney.
-
-There were none of the obvious marks of wealth upon her. She wore a
-dark-blue dress tying on the breast over white. She was small in stature
-and, in manner, composed beyond anything he had ever encountered. With
-an irony, kindly enough, yet big, he knew, with unfavourable inferences,
-he even recognized, reconstructing the moment in the light of those that
-followed, that in rising to meet him as he was named to her, it had
-been, rather than in shyness or girlishness, in the wish to welcome him
-and draw him the more happily into a group she had already made her own.
-
-They were all sitting round the plentiful table, set with home-made
-loaves and cakes, jams and butter, and a Leeds bowl of primroses; Miss
-Toner just across from him, Barney on one side of her--his was an air of
-tranquil ecstasy--and little Barbara on the other, and they all seemed
-to emanate a new radiance; almost, thought Oldmeadow, with an
-irritability that was still genial, like innocent savages on a remote
-seashore gathered with intent eyes and parted lips round the newly
-disembarked Christopher Columbus. Mrs. Chadwick, confused, as usual,
-among her tea-cups, sending hasty relays of sugar after the unsugared or
-recalling those sugared in error, specially suggested the simile. She
-could, indeed, hardly think of her tea. Her wide, startled gaze turned
-incessantly on the new-comer and to Oldmeadow, for all his nearly filial
-affection, the eyes of Eleanor Chadwick looked like nothing in the
-world so much as those of the March Hare in Tenniel's evocation of the
-endearing creature. Unlike her children, she was fair, with a thin,
-high, ridiculously distinguished nose; but her mouth and chin had
-Barney's irresolution and sweetness, and her untidy locks Meg's beauty.
-Meg was a beauty in every way, rose, pearl and russet, a Romney touched
-with pride and daring, and the most sophisticated of all the Chadwicks;
-yet she, too, brooded, half merrily, half sombrely, on Miss Toner, her
-elbows on the table for the better contemplation. Palgrave's absorption
-was manifest; but he did not brood. He held his head high, frowned and,
-for the most part, looked out of the window.
-
-Oldmeadow sat between Palgrave and Nancy and it was with Nancy that the
-magic ended. Nancy did not share in the radiance. She smiled and was
-very busy cutting the bread and butter; but she was pale; not puzzled,
-but preoccupied. Poor darling Nancy; always his special pet; to him
-always the dearest and most loveable of girls. Not at all a Romney. With
-her pale, fresh face, dark hair and beautiful hands she suggested,
-rather, a country lady of the seventeenth century painted by Vandyck. A
-rural Vandyck who might have kept a devout and merry journal, surprising
-later generations by its mixture of ingenuousness and wisdom. Her lips
-were meditative, and her grey eyes nearly closed when she smiled in a
-way that gave to her gaiety and extraordinary sweetness and intimacy.
-Nancy always looked as if she loved you when she smiled at you; and
-indeed she did love you. She had spent her life among people she loved
-and if she could not be intimate she was remote and silent.
-
-But there was no hope for Nancy. He saw that finally, as he drank his
-tea in silence and looked across the primroses at the marvel of the age.
-
-Miss Toner's was an insignificant little head, if indeed it could be
-called little, since it was too large for her body, and her way of
-dressing her hair in wide braids, pinned round it and projecting over
-the ears, added to the top-heavy effect. The hair was her only
-indubitable beauty, fine and fair and sparkling like the palest, purest
-metal. It was cut in a light fringe across a projecting forehead and her
-mouth and chin projected, too; so that, as he termed it to himself, it
-was a squashed-in face, ugly in structure, the small nose, from its
-depressed bridge, jutting forward in profile, the lips, in profile, flat
-yet prominent. Nevertheless he owned, studying her over his tea-cup,
-that the features, ugly, even trivial in detail, had in their assemblage
-something of unexpected force. Her tranquil smile had potency and he
-suddenly became aware of her flat, gentle voice, infrequent, yet oddly
-dominating. Sensitive as he was to voices, he saw it as a bland, blue
-ribbon rolled out among broken counters of colour, and listened to its
-sound before he listened to what it said. All the other voices went up
-and down; all the others half said things and let them drop or trail.
-She said things to the end: when the ribbon began it was unrolled; and
-it seemed, always, to make a silence in which it could be watched.
-
-"We went up high into the sunlight," she said, "and one saw nothing but
-snow and sky. The bells were ringing on the mountains beneath; one heard
-no other sound. I have never forgotten the moment. It seemed an
-inspiration of joy and peace and strength."
-
-"You've walked so much in the Alps, haven't you, Roger?" said Mrs.
-Chadwick. "Miss Toner has motored over every pass."
-
-"In the French Alps. I don't like Switzerland," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"I think I love the mountains everywhere," said Miss Toner, "when they
-go so high into the sky and have the sun and snow on their summits. But
-I love the mountains of Savoy and Jura best."
-
-It vexed him that she should. She was a person to stay in and prefer
-Switzerland. "Joy and peace and strength," echoed in his ears and with
-the words, rudely, and irrelevantly, the image of the pink glazed tube
-with the gilt stopper. Miss Toner's teeth were as white as they were
-benignant.
-
-"I wish I could see those flowers," said Mrs. Chadwick. "I've only been
-to Vevey in the summer; oh, years and years ago. So dull. Fields of
-flowers. You've seen them, too, of course, Roger. All the things we grow
-with such pains. My Saint Brigid anemones never really do--though what I
-put in of leaf-mould!"
-
-"You'll see anemones, fields of them, in the Alpine meadows; and violets
-and lilies; the little lilies of Saint Bruno that look like freesias. I
-love them best of all," the bland, blue ribbon unrolled. "You shall go
-with me some day, Mrs. Chadwick. We'll go together." And, smiling at her
-as if they had, already, a happy secret between them, Miss Toner
-continued: "We'll go this very summer, if you will. We'll motor all the
-way. I'll come and get you here. For a whole month you shall forget that
-you've ever had a family to bring up or a house to take care of or
-anemones that won't grow properly--even in leaf-mould."
-
-Her eyes, as they rested on her hostess, seemed to impart more than her
-words. They imparted something to Oldmeadow. He had not before
-conjectured that Eleanor Chadwick might be bored or tired, nor realized
-that since Barbara's birth, fourteen years ago, she had not left
-Coldbrooks except to go to London for a week's shopping, or to stay with
-friends in the English country. He had taken Eleanor Chadwick's life for
-granted. It seemed Miss Toner's function not to take things that could
-be changed for granted. It was easy to do that of course, when you had a
-large banking account behind you; and yet he felt that Miss Toner would
-have had the faculty of altering accepted standards, even had she been
-materially unequipped. She and Mrs. Chadwick continued to look at each
-other for a moment and the older woman, half bashfully, seemed, with
-what softness, compelled to a tacit confession. She'd never known before
-that she was tired. Springs of adventure and girlishness within her were
-perhaps unsealed by Miss Toner's gaze.
-
-"And where do the rest of us come in!" Barney ejaculated. He was so
-happy in the triumph of his beloved that his eyes, their sleepiness
-banished, were almost as brilliant as Palgrave's.
-
-"But you're always coming in with Mrs. Chadwick," said Miss Toner. She
-looked at him, if with a touch of tender humour, exactly as she looked
-at his mother; but then she looked at them both as if they were precious
-to her. "I don't want you to come in at all for that month. I want her
-to forget you ever existed. There ought to be waters of Lethe for
-everyone every now and then, even in this life. We come out, after the
-plunge into forgetfulness, far brighter and stronger and with a
-renovated self to love the better with. Afterwards--after she's had her
-dip--you'll all come in, if you want to, with me. I'll get a car big
-enough. You, too, Miss Averil; and Mr. Oldmeadow; though he and Barney
-and Palgrave may have to take turns sitting on the portmanteaus."
-
-"Barney" and "Palgrave" already. Her unpretentious mastery alarmed
-almost as much as it amused him. He thanked her, with his dry smile,
-saying that he really preferred to see the Alps on his legs and asked,
-to temper the possible acerbity, "Do you drive yourself?" for it seemed
-in keeping with his picture of her as an invading providence that she
-should with her own hand conduct the car of fate. He could see her,
-somehow, taking the hairpin curves on the Galibier.
-
-But Miss Toner said she did not drive. "One can't see flowers if one
-drives oneself; and it would hurt dear Macfarlane's feelings so.
-Macfarlane is my chauffeur and he's been with me for years; from the
-time we first began to have motors, my mother and I, out in California.
-Apart from that, I should like it, I think, with the sense of risk and
-venture it must give. I like the sense of high adventure--of 'Childe
-Roland to the dark tower came'; don't you, Palgrave? It's life, isn't
-it? The pulse of life. Danger and venture and conquest. And then
-resting, on the heights, while one hears the bells beneath one."
-
-This, thought Oldmeadow, as he adjusted his glass the better to examine
-Miss Toner, must prove itself too much, even for Palgrave to swallow.
-But Palgrave swallowed it without a tremor. His eyes on hers he
-answered: "Yes, I feel life like that, too."
-
-"Oh, dear!" sighed Mrs. Chadwick, and Oldmeadow blessed her antidote to
-the suffocating sweetness: "I'm afraid I don't! I don't think I know
-anything about risks and dangers; or about conquest either. I'm sure
-I've never conquered anything; though I have been dreadfully afraid of
-ill-tempered servants--if that counts, and never let them see it.
-Barbara had such an odious nurse. She tried, simply, to keep me out of
-the nursery; but she didn't succeed. And there was a Scotch cook once,
-with red hair--that so often goes with a bad temper, doesn't it? Do you
-remember, Barney?--your dear father had to go down to the kitchen when
-she was found lying quite, quite drunk under the table. But cooks and
-nurses can't be called risks--and I've never cared for hunting."
-
-Miss Toner was quietly laughing, and indeed everybody laughed.
-
-"Dear Mrs. Chadwick," she said. And then she added: "How can a mother
-say she has not known risks and dangers? I think you've thought only of
-other people for all your life and never seen yourself at all. Alpine
-passes aren't needed to prove people's courage and endurance."
-
-Oldmeadow now saw, from the sudden alarm and perplexity of Mrs.
-Chadwick's expression, that she was wondering if the marvellous guest
-alluded to the perils of child-birth. Perhaps she did. She was ready, he
-imagined, to allude to anything.
-
-"You're right about her never having seen herself," said Palgrave,
-nodding across at Miss Toner. "She never has. She's incapable of
-self-analysis."
-
-"But she's precious sharp when it comes to analysing other people,
-aren't you, Mummy dear!" said Barney.
-
-"I don't think she is," said Meg. "I think Mummy sees people rather as
-she sees flowers; things to be fed and staked and protected."
-
-"You're always crabbing Mummy, Meg. It's a shame!--Isn't it a shame,
-Mummy dear!" Barbara protested, and Barney tempered the apparent
-criticism--peacemaker as he usually was--with: "But you have to
-understand flowers jolly well to make them grow. And we do her credit,
-don't we!"
-
-Miss Toner looked from one to the other as they spoke, with her clear,
-benignant, comprehending gaze, and Mrs. Chadwick stared with her March
-Hare ingenuousness that had its full share, too, of March Hare
-shrewdness. She undertook no self-justification, commenting merely, in
-the pause that followed Barney's contribution: "I don't know what you
-mean by self-analysis unless it's thinking about yourself and mothers
-certainly haven't much time for that. You're quite right there, my
-dear," she nodded at Miss Toner, adding in a tone intended specially for
-her: "But young people often exaggerate things that are quite, quite
-simple when they come."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-"Come out and have a stroll," said Oldmeadow to Nancy. Tea was over and
-a primrose-coloured sunset filled the sky. They walked up and down the
-gravelled terrace before the house.
-
-Coldbrooks stood high, yet encircled by still higher stretches of bare
-or wooded upland. Its walled garden, where vegetable beds and lines of
-cordon apple-trees were pleasingly diversified by the herbaceous borders
-that ran beneath the walls, lay behind it; most of the bedroom windows
-looked down into the garden. Before it, to the south, lawns and meadows
-dropped to a lake fed by the brooks that gave the place its name. Beyond
-the lake were lower copses, tinkling now with the musical run of water
-and climbing softly on either side, so that from the terrace one had a
-vast curved space of sky before one. The sun was setting over the woods.
-
-It was Barney's grandfather, enriched by large shipping enterprises in
-Liverpool, who had bought the pleasant old house, half farm, half manor,
-and Barney's father had married the daughter of a local squire. But the
-family fortunes were much dwindled, and though Barney still nursed the
-project of returning one day to farm his own land there was little
-prospect of such a happy restoration. In spite of the Russian ballet and
-London portents, he was fonder, far, of Coldbrooks than of all of them
-put together. But he could afford neither time nor money for hunting,
-and his home was his only for week-ends and holidays. It was the most
-loveable of homes, more stately without than within, built of grey-gold
-Cotswold stone with beautiful stone chimneys and mullioned windows and
-three gables facing the southern sky. Within, everything was rather bare
-and shabby. There was no central heating, and no bathrooms. The
-tiger-skin that lay on the stone flags of the hall had lost all its
-hair. The piano rattled and wheezed in many of its notes. The patterns
-of the drawing-room chintzes were faded to a mere dim rosy riot, and
-stuffing protruded from the angles of the leather arm-chairs in the
-smoking-room. But it was, all the same, a delightful house to stay in.
-Eleanor Chadwick's shrewdness showed itself in her housekeeping. She
-knew what were the essentials. There was always a blazing fire in one's
-bedroom in the evening and the hottest of water with one's bath in the
-morning. Under the faded chintz, every chair in the drawing-room was
-comfortable. The toast was always crisp; the tea always made with
-boiling water; the servants cheerful. Mrs. Chadwick had a great gift
-with servants. She could reprove with extreme plaintiveness, yet never
-wound a susceptibility, and the servants' hall, as she often remarked
-with justice, was smarter and prettier than the drawing-room. Johnson,
-the old butler, had been at Coldbrooks since before her marriage, and
-the grey-haired parlourmaid had come with her when she had come as a
-bride. These familiar faces added depth to the sense of intimacy that
-was the gift of Coldbrooks. Oldmeadow loved the place as much as any of
-the Chadwicks did, and was as much at home in it.
-
-"There is a blackcap," said Nancy, "down in the copse. I felt sure I
-heard one this morning."
-
-"So it is," said Oldmeadow. They paused to listen.
-
-"It's the happiest of all," said Nancy.
-
-He had been wondering about Nancy ever since he had come. It was not her
-voice, gentle and meditative, that told him now she was unhappy. It was
-rather in contrast to the bird's clear ecstasy that he felt the
-heaviness of her heart.
-
-"It's wilder than the thrush and blackbird, isn't it?" he said. "Less
-conscious. The thrush is always listening to himself, I feel. Do you
-want to go to the Alps with Miss Toner, Nancy?"
-
-Nancy would not see Miss Toner as an angelic being and he wanted to know
-how she did see her. The others, it was evident, thought her angelic by
-a sort of group suggestion. She thought herself so, to begin with; snow,
-flowers, bells and all the rest of it; and they, ingenuous creatures,
-saw the mango-tree rising to heaven as the calm-eyed Yogi willed they
-should. But Nancy did not see the mango-tree. She was outside the group
-consciousness--with him.
-
-"Oh, no!" she now said quickly; and she added: "I don't mean that I
-don't like her. It's only that I don't know her. How can she want us?
-She came only yesterday."
-
-"But, you see, she means you to know her. And when she's known she
-couldn't imagine that anyone wouldn't like her."
-
-"I don't think she's conceited, if you mean that, Roger."
-
-"Conceit," he rejoined, "may be of an order so monstrous that it loses
-all pettiness. You've seen more of her than I have, of course."
-
-"I think she's good. She wants to do good. She wants to make people
-happy; and she does," said Nancy.
-
-"By taking them about in motors, you mean."
-
-"In every way. She's always thinking about pleasing them. In big and
-little ways. Aunt Eleanor loves her already. They had a long talk last
-night in Aunt Eleanor's room. She's given Meg the most beautiful little
-pendant--pearl and amethyst, an old Italian setting. She had it on last
-night and Meg said how lovely it was and she simply lifted it off her
-own neck and put it around Meg's. Meg had to keep it. She gave it in
-such a way that one would have to keep it."
-
-"Rather useful, mustn't it be, to have pendants so plentifully about you
-that you can hand them out to the first young lady who takes a fancy to
-them? Has she given you anything, Nancy?"
-
-"I'm sure she would. But I shall be more careful than Meg was."
-
-"Perhaps Meg will practise carelessness, since it's so remunerative.
-What has she given Palgrave? He seems absorbed."
-
-"Isn't it wonderful," said Nancy. "It's wonderful for Palgrave, you
-know, Roger, because he is rather sad and bitter, really, just now; and
-I think she will make him much happier. They went off to the woods
-together directly after breakfast."
-
-"What's he sad and bitter about? You mean his socialism and all the rest
-of it?"
-
-"Yes; and religion. You remember; when you were here at Christmas."
-
-"I remember that he was very foolish and made me lose my temper. Is
-there a chance of Miss Toner turning him into a good capitalist and
-churchman?"
-
-Nancy smiled, but very faintly. "It's serious, you know, Roger."
-
-"What she's done to them already, you mean?"
-
-"Yes. What she's done already. She had Meg, after lunch, in her room.
-Meg looked quite different when she came out. It's very strange, Roger.
-It's as if she'd changed them all. I almost feel," Nancy looked round at
-the happy house and up at the tranquil elms where the rooks were noisily
-preparing for bed, "as if nothing could be the same again, since she's
-come." Her clear profile revealed little of the trouble in her heart.
-They had not named Barney; but he must be named.
-
-"It's white magic," said Oldmeadow. "You and I will keep our heads, my
-dear. We don't want to be changed, do we? What has she done to Barney?
-He is in love with her, of course."
-
-"Of course," said Nancy.
-
-He had never been sure before that she was in love with Barney. She was
-nine years younger and had been a child during years of his manhood.
-Oldmeadow had thought it in his own fond imagination only that the link
-between them was so close. But now he knew what Nancy herself, perhaps,
-had hardly known till then. The colour did not rise in her cheek, but
-through her voice, through her bearing, went a subtle steadying of
-herself. "Of course he is in love with her," she repeated and he felt
-that she forced herself to face the truth.
-
-They stopped at the end of the terrace. A little path turned aside
-towards the copse and the grass beneath the trees was scattered with the
-pale radiance of primroses. Nancy seemed to look at the flowers, but she
-sought no refuge in comment on them; and as they looked in silence,
-while the rooks, circling and cawing above, settled on their nests, a
-sense of arrested time came to Oldmeadow, and a phrase of music,
-blissful in its sadness, where gentle German words went to a gentle
-German strain, passed through his mind. Something of Schubert's--Young
-Love--First Grief. It seemed to pierce to him from the young girl's
-heart and he knew that he would never forget and that Nancy would never
-forget the moment; the rooks; the primroses; the limpid sky. The
-blackcap's flitting melody had ceased.
-
-"Do you think she may make him happy?" he asked. It was sweet to him to
-know that she had no need of a refuge from him. She could take counsel
-with him as candidly as if there had been no tacit avowal between them.
-She looked round at him as they went on walking and he saw pain and
-perplexity in her eyes.
-
-"What do you think, Roger?" she said. "Can she?"
-
-"Well, might she, if Barney is stupid enough?"
-
-"I don't feel he would have to be stupid to be happy with her, Roger.
-You are not fair to her. What I wonder is whether he will be strong
-enough not to be quite swept away."
-
-"You think she'll overpower him? Leave him with no mind of his own?"
-
-"Something like that perhaps. Because she's very strong. And she is so
-different. Everything in her is different. She has nothing--nothing with
-us, or we with her. We haven't done the same things or seen the same
-sights or thought the same thoughts. I hardly feel as if the trees could
-look the same to her as they do to us or the birds sound the same. And
-she'll want such different things."
-
-"Perhaps she'll want his things," Oldmeadow mused. "She seems to like
-them quite immensely already."
-
-"Ah, but only because she's going to do something to them," said Nancy.
-"Only because she's going to change them. I don't think she'd like
-anything she could do nothing for."
-
-Nancy had quite grown up. She had seen further than he had. He felt her
-quiet comment big with intuitive wisdom.
-
-"You see deep, my dear," he said. "There's something portentous in your
-picture, you know."
-
-"There is something portentous about her, Roger. That is just what I
-feel. That is just what troubles me."
-
-"She may be portentous, in relation to us, and what she may do to us,"
-said Oldmeadow, "but I'm convinced, for all her marvels, that she's a
-very ordinary young person. Don't let us magnify her. If she's not
-magnified she won't work so many marvels. They're largely an affair, I'm
-sure of it, of motors and pendants. She's ordinary. That's what I take
-my stand on."
-
-"If she's ordinary, why do you feel, too, that she'll sweep Barney
-away?" Nancy was not at all convinced by his demonstration.
-
-"Why, because he's in love with her. That's all. Her only menace is in
-her difference; her complacency. What it comes to, I suppose, is that we
-must hope, if they're to be happy, that he'll like her things."
-
-"Yes; but what it comes to then, Roger, is that we shall lose Barney,"
-Nancy said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-Miss Toner did not come down to breakfast next morning and Oldmeadow was
-conscious of a feeling of disproportionate relief at not finding her in
-the big, bare, panelled dining-room where a portrait of Mrs. Chadwick in
-court dress presided over one wall and Meg and Barney played with
-rabbits, against an imitation Gainsborough background, on another. Both
-pictures were an affliction to Barney; but to Mrs. Chadwick's eye they
-left nothing to be desired in beauty, and, when Barney was not there to
-protest, she would still fondly point out the length of eyelash that the
-artist had so faithfully captured in the two children.
-
-The sense of change and foreboding that he and Nancy, with differences,
-had recognized in their talk, must have haunted Oldmeadow's slumbers,
-for he had dreamed of Miss Toner, coming towards him along the terrace,
-in white, as she had been at dinner, with the beautiful pearls she had
-worn, lifting her hand and saying as the rooks cawed overhead--for the
-rooks cawed though the moon was brightly shining: "I can hear them,
-too."
-
-There had been nothing to suggest such a dream in her demeanour at
-dinner; nothing portentous, that is. Simple for all her competence,
-girlish for all the splendour of her white array, she had spoken little,
-looking at them all, and listening, gravely sometimes, but with a
-pervading gentleness; and once or twice he had found her eyes on his;
-those large, light eyes, dispassionately and impersonally benignant,
-giving him, with their suggestion of seeing around but also very far
-beyond you, a curious sense of space. Once or twice he had felt himself
-a little at a loss as he met their gaze--it had endeared her to him the
-less that she should almost discompose him--and he had felt anew the
-presence of power in her ugly little face and even of beauty in her
-colourless skin, her colourless yet so living eyes, and her crown of
-wondrous gold. It had been, no doubt, this element of aesthetic
-significance, merging with Nancy's words, that had built up the figure
-of his dream; for so he had seen her, grey and white and gold in the
-unearthly light, while the rooks cawed overhead.
-
-His friends this morning, though they were all talking of her, possessed
-in their gaiety and lightness of heart an exorcising quality. So much
-gaiety and lightness couldn't be quenched or quelled--if that was what
-Miss Toner's influence menaced. Between them all they would manage to
-quench and quell Miss Toner, rather, and he recovered his sense of her
-fundamental absurdity as he felt anew their instinctive and
-unself-conscious wisdom.
-
-"Isn't it odd, Roger, she hardly knows England at all," said Mrs.
-Chadwick, as he finished his porridge, made his tea at the side-table,
-and took his place beside her. "She's been so little here, although she
-seems to have travelled everywhere and lived everywhere."
-
-"Except in her own country," Oldmeadow ventured the surmise, but
-urbanely, for Barney sat opposite him.
-
-"Oh, but she's travelled there, too, immensely," said Barney. "She's
-really spent most of her life in America, I think, Mother. She has a
-little sort of bungalow on the coast in California, orange-trees and
-roses and all the rest of it; a fairy-tale place; and a house in the
-mountains in New England, high up among the pine-woods."
-
-"And a private train, I suppose, to carry her from one to the other.
-What splendid pearls," said Oldmeadow, buttering his toast. "Haven't you
-asked for them yet, Meg?"
-
-Meg was not easily embarrassed. "Not yet," she said. "I'm waiting for
-them, though. Meanwhile this is pretty, isn't it?" The pendant hung on
-her breast.
-
-"I believe she would give Meg her pearls, or any of us. I believe she'd
-give _anything_ to _anyone_," sighed Mrs. Chadwick. "She doesn't seem to
-think about money or things of that sort, material things you know, at
-all. I do wish I could get the map of America straight. All being in
-those uneven squares, like Turkish Delight, makes it so difficult. One
-can't remember which lump is which--though Texas, in my geography, was
-pale green. The nice tinned things come from California, don't they? And
-New England is near Boston--the hub of the universe, that dear, droll
-Oliver Wendell Holmes used to call it. I suppose they _are_ very clever
-there. She has been wonderfully educated. There's nothing she doesn't
-seem to have learned. And her maid adores her, Roger. I was talking to
-her just now. Such a nice French woman with quite beautiful dark eyes,
-but very melancholy; we make a mistake, I believe, in imagining that the
-French are a gay people. I always think that's such a good sign. So kind
-about my dreadful accent."
-
-"A good sign to have your maid like you, Mummy, or to have melancholy
-eyes?" Meg inquired. "I think she's a rather ill-tempered looking woman.
-But of course anybody would adore Adrienne. She's an angel of patience,
-I'm sure. I never met such an angel. We don't grow them here," said Meg,
-while Barney's triumphant eyes said: "I told you so," to Oldmeadow
-across the table.
-
-After breakfast, in the sunlight on the terrace, Mrs. Chadwick confided
-her hopes to him. "She really is an angel, Roger. I never met anyone in
-the least like her. So good, and gifted, too, and all that money. Only
-think what it would mean for dear Barney. He could take back the farm;
-the lease falls in next year, and come back here to live."
-
-"You think she cares for him?"
-
-"Yes; indeed I do. She cares for us all, already, as you can see. But I
-believe it's because she's adopting us all, as her family. And she said
-to me yesterday that she disapproved so much of our English way of
-turning out mothers and thought families ought to love each other and
-live together, young and old. That's from being so much in France,
-perhaps. I told her _I_ shouldn't have liked it at all if old Mrs.
-Chadwick had wanted to come and live with Francis and me. She was such a
-masterful old lady, Roger, very Low Church, and quite dreadfully jealous
-of Francis. And eldest sons should inherit, of course, or what would
-become of estates? My dear father used always to say that the greatness
-of England was founded on landed estates. I told her that. But she
-looked at me quite gravely as if she hardly understood when I tried to
-explain--it all goes in with Waterloo being won on the fields of Eton,
-doesn't it? It's quite curious the feeling of restfulness she gives me,
-about Barney--a sort of Nunc Dimittis feeling, you know."
-
-"Only she doesn't want you to depart. Well, that's certainly all to the
-good and let's hope England's greatness won't suffer from the
-irregularity. Has she told you much about her life? her people?"
-Oldmeadow asked. He could not find it in his heart to shadow such
-ingenuous contentment. And after all what was there to say against Miss
-Toner, except that she would change things?
-
-"Oh, a great deal. Everything I asked; for I thought it best, quite
-casually you know, to find out what I could. Not people of any position,
-you know, Roger, though I think her mother was better in that way than
-her father; for _his_ father made tooth-paste. It's from the tooth-paste
-all the money comes. But it's always puzzling about Americans, isn't it?
-And it doesn't really make any difference, once they're over here, does
-it?"
-
-"Not if they've got the money," he could not suppress; it was for his
-own personal enjoyment and Mrs. Chadwick cloudlessly concurred: "No, not
-if they have the money. And she has, you see. And besides that she's
-good and gifted and has had such a wonderful education. Her mother died
-five years ago. She showed me two pictures of her. A beautiful woman;
-very artistic-looking. Rather one's idea of Corinne, though Corinne was
-really Madame de Stael, I believe; and she was very plain."
-
-"Was she dressed like Queen Louise of Prussia; coming down the steps,
-you know, in the Empire dress with white bound round her head?"
-
-"Yes; she was. How did you know, Roger? Extremely picturesque; but quite
-a lady, too. At least"--Mrs. Chadwick hesitated, perplexed between
-kindliness and candour--"almost."
-
-"I heard about her from Mrs. Aldesey. You remember my American friend.
-She didn't know her, but had seen her years ago in New York in that
-romantic costume."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick felt perhaps the slight irony in his voice, for she
-rejoined, though not at all provocatively: "Why shouldn't people look
-romantic if they can? I should think Mrs. Toner had a much more romantic
-life than Mrs. Aldesey. _She's_ gone on just as we have, hasn't she,
-seeing always the same people; and being conventional. Whereas Adrienne
-and her mother seem to have known everyone strange and interesting
-wherever they went; great scientists and thinkers, you know; and poets
-and pianists. Adrienne told me that her mother always seemed to her to
-have great wings and that's just what I felt about her when I looked at
-her. She'd flown everywhere." As she spoke Miss Toner appeared upon the
-doorstep.
-
-Although it was Sunday she had not varied her dress, which was still the
-simple dress of dim, dark-blue; but over it she wore a silk jacket, and
-a straw hat trimmed with a lighter shade of blue was tied, in
-summer-like fashion, beneath her chin. She carried a sunshade and a
-small basket filled with letters.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick, both hands outstretched, went to meet her. Oldmeadow had
-never before seen her kiss an acquaintance of two days' standing. "I do
-hope you slept well, my dear," she said.
-
-"Very well," said Miss Toner, including Oldmeadow in her smile. "Except
-for a little while when I woke up and lay awake and couldn't get the
-cawing of your rooks out of my mind. I seemed to hear them going on and
-on."
-
-"Oh, dear! How unfortunate! But surely they weren't cawing in the
-night!" cried Mrs. Chadwick, and Miss Toner, laughing and holding her
-still by the hands, turned to tell Barney, who closely followed her,
-that his mother was really afraid, because she had thought of rooks in
-the night, that their Coldbrooks birds had actually been inhospitable
-enough to keep her awake with their cawings. Meg and Barbara and Nancy
-had all now emerged and there was much laughter and explanation.
-
-"You see, Mummy thinks you might work miracles--even among the rooks,"
-said Barney, while Oldmeadow testily meditated on his own discomfort. It
-might have been mere coincidence, or it might--he must admit it--have
-been Miss Toner's thoughts travelling into his dream or his dream
-troubling her thoughts; of the two last alternatives he didn't know
-which he disliked the more.
-
-"It's time to get ready for church, children," said Mrs. Chadwick, when,
-after much merriment at her expense, the rooks and their occult
-misdemeanours were disposed of. "Where is Palgrave? I do hope he won't
-miss again. It does so hurt dear Mr. Bodman's feelings. Are you coming
-with us, my dear?" she asked Miss Toner.
-
-Miss Toner, smiling upon them all, her sunshade open on her shoulder,
-said that if they did not mind she did not think she would come. "I only
-go to church when friends get married or their babies christened," she
-said, "or something of that sort. I was never brought up to it, you see.
-Mother never went."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's March Hare eyes dwelt on her. "You aren't a
-Churchwoman?"
-
-"Oh, dear, no!" said Miss Toner, and the very suggestion seemed to amuse
-her.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick hesitated: "A Dissenter?" she ventured. "There are so many
-sects in America I've heard. Though I met a very charming American
-bishop once."
-
-"No--not a Dissenter; if you mean by that a Presbyterian or a Methodist
-or a Swedenborgian," said Miss Toner, shaking her head.
-
-Palgrave had now joined them and stood on the step above her. She smiled
-round and up at him.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick, her distress alleviated yet her perplexity deepened,
-ventured further: "You are a Christian, I hope, dear?"
-
-"Oh, not at all," said Miss Toner gravely now and very kindly. "Not in
-any orthodox way, I mean. Not in any way that an American bishop or your
-Mr. Bodman would acknowledge. I recognize Christ as a great teacher, as
-a great human soul; one of the very greatest; gone on before. But I
-don't divide the human from the divine in the way the churches do;
-creeds mean nothing to me, and I'd rather say my prayers out of doors on
-a day like this, in the sunlight, than in any church. I feel nearer God
-alone in His great world, than in any church built with human hands. But
-we must all follow our own light." She spoke in her flat, soft voice,
-gravely but very simply; and she looked affectionately at her hostess as
-she added: "You wouldn't want me to come with you from mere conformity."
-
-Poor Mrs. Chadwick, standing, her brood about her, in the sweet Sabbath
-sunlight, had to Oldmeadow's eye an almost comically arrested air. How
-was a creedless, churchless mistress of Coldbrooks to be fitted in to
-her happy vision of Barney's future? What would the village say to a
-squiress who never went to church and who said her prayers in the
-sunlight alone? "But, of course, better alone," he seemed to hear her
-cogitate, "than that anyone should see her doing such a very curious
-thing." And aloud she did murmur: "Of course not; of course not, dear.
-And if you go into the little arbour down by the lake no one will
-disturb you, I'm sure. Must it be quite in the open? Mere conformity is
-such a shallow thing. But all the same I should like the rector to come
-and talk things over with you. He's such a good man and very, very
-broad-minded. He brings science so often into his sermons--sometimes I
-think the people don't quite follow it all; and only the other day he
-said to me, about modern unrest and scepticism:
-
- 'There is more faith in honest doubt,
- Believe me, than in half the creeds.'
-
-Mamma met Lord Tennyson once and felt him to be a deeply religious
-man--though rather ill-tempered; he was really very rude to her, I
-always thought, and I do so dislike rudeness.--And travelling about so
-much, dear, you probably had so little teaching."
-
-Miss Toner's eyes were incapable of irony and they only deepened now in
-benevolence as they rested on her hostess. "But I haven't any doubts,"
-she said, shaking her head and smiling: "No doubts at all. You reach the
-truth through your church and I reach it through nature and love and
-life. And the beautiful thing is that it's the same truth, really; the
-same beautiful truth that God loves us all, and that we are all the
-children of God. I should be very pleased to meet your rector, of
-course, because I like meeting anyone who is good and true. But I was
-taught. My mother taught me always. And she was the freest, wisest soul
-I have ever known."
-
-"I'll stay with you," said Palgrave suddenly from his place on the step
-above her. His eyes, over her shoulder, had met Oldmeadow's and perhaps
-what he saw in the old friend's face determined his testimony. "Church
-means nothing to me, either; and less than nothing. I'm not so
-charitable as you are, and don't think all roads lead to truth. Some
-lead away, I think. You know perfectly well, Mummy, that the dear old
-rector is a regular duffer and you slept all through the sermon the last
-time I went; you did, really! I was too amused to sleep. He was trying
-to explain original sin without mentioning Adam or Eve or the Garden of
-Eden. It was most endearing! Like some one trying to avoid the eye of an
-old acquaintance whom they'd come to the conclusion they really must
-cut! I do so like the idea of Adam and Eve becoming unsuitable
-acquaintances for the enlightened clergy!"
-
-"There is no sin," said Miss Toner. Barney was not quite comfortable;
-Oldmeadow saw that. He kicked about in the gravel, a little flushed,
-and when, once or twice, the old family friend met his eye, it was
-quickly averted. "God is Good; and everything else is mortal
-mind--mistake--illusion."
-
-"You are a sound Platonist, Miss Toner," Oldmeadow observed, and his
-kindness hardly cloaked his irony.
-
-"Am I?" she said. When she looked at one she never averted her eyes.
-She looked until she had seen all that she wished to see. "I am not fond
-of metaphysics."
-
-"Socrates defined sin as ignorance, you know, and in a sense it may be.
-All the same," said Oldmeadow, and he felt that they were all listening
-and that in the eyes of his old friends it was more than unlikely that
-he would get the better of Miss Toner--"there's mortal mind to be
-accounted for, isn't there, and why it gets us continually into such a
-mess. Whatever name you call it by, there is something that does get us
-into a mess and mightn't it be a wholesome discipline to hear it
-denounced once a week?"
-
-"Not by some one more ignorant than I am!" said Miss Toner, laughing
-gently. "I'll go to church for love of Mrs. Chadwick, but not for the
-sake of the discipline!"
-
-"Mr. Bodman never denounces. Roger is giving you quite a wrong idea,"
-said Mrs. Chadwick. She had stood looking from one to the other,
-distressed and bewildered, and she now prepared to leave them. "And
-Palgrave is very, very unjust. Of course you must not come, dear. It
-would make me quite unhappy. But Mr. Bodman is not a duffer. If Palgrave
-feels like that he must certainly stay away. Perhaps you can teach him
-to be more charitable. It's easy to see the mote in our neighbour's
-eye." Mrs. Chadwick's voice slightly trembled. She had been much moved
-by her son's defection.
-
-"Come, Mummy, you're not going to say _I'm_ a duffer!" Palgrave passed
-an affectionately bantering arm round her shoulders. "Dufferism isn't
-_my_ beam!"
-
-But very sadly Mrs. Chadwick drew away, saying as she turned into the
-house: "No; that isn't your beam. But pride may be, Palgrave. Spiritual
-pride."
-
-Oldmeadow remained standing in the sunlight with Miss Toner and the two
-young men. The girls had followed Mrs. Chadwick, Meg casting a laughing
-glance of appreciation at him as she went. Religious scruples would
-never keep Meg from church if she had a pretty spring dress to wear.
-
-"After all," he carried on, mildly, the altercation--if that was what it
-was between him and Miss Toner--"good Platonists as we may be, we
-haven't reached the stage of Divine Contemplation yet and things do
-happen that are difficult to account for, if sin is nothing more
-positive than illusion and mistake. All the forms of _ote-toi que je m'y
-mette_. All the forms of jealousy and malice. Deliberate cruelties.
-History is full of horrors, isn't it? There's a jealousy of goodness in
-the human heart, as well as a love. The betrayal of Christ by Judas is
-symbolic."
-
-He had screwed his eyeglass into his eye the better to see Miss Toner
-and looked very much like a solicitor trying to coax dry facts out of a
-romantic client. And in the transparent shadow of her hat Miss Toner,
-with her incomparable composure, gave him all her attention.
-
-"I don't account. I don't account for anything. Do you?" she said. "I
-only feel and know. But even the dreadful things, the things that seem
-to us so dreadful--isn't it always ignorance? Ignorance of what is
-really good and happy--and the illusion of a separate self? When we are
-all, really, one. All, really, together." She held out her arms, her
-little basket hanging from her wrist. "And if we feel that at last, and
-know it, those dreadful things can't happen any more."
-
-"Your 'if' is the standing problem of metaphysics and ethics. Why don't
-we feel and know it? That's the question? And since we most of us, for
-most of the time, don't feel and know it, don't we keep closer to the
-truth if we accept the traditional phraseology and admit that there's
-something in the texture of life, something in ourselves, that tempts
-us, or impedes us, or crushes us, and call it sin--evil?"
-
-He was looking at her, still with his latent irony though kindly enough
-indeed, and he had, as he looked, an intuition about her. She had never
-been tempted, she had never been impeded, she had never been crushed.
-That was her power. She was, in a fashion, sinless. It was as if she had
-been hypnotized in infancy to be good. And while the fact made her in
-one sense so savourless, it made her in another so significant. She
-would go much further than most people in any direction she wanted to go
-simply because she was not aware of obstacles and had no inhibitions.
-
-"Call it what you like," said Miss Toner. She still smiled--but more
-gravely. Barney had ceased to stroll and kick. He had come to a
-standstill beside them, and, his hands in his pockets, his eyes fixed on
-his beloved, showed himself as completely reassured. Palgrave still
-stood on the step above her and seemed to watch the snowy, piled-up
-clouds that adorned the tranquil sky. "I feel it a mistake to make
-unreal things seem real by giving them big names. We become afraid of
-them and fear is what impedes us most of all in life. For so many
-generations humanity has seen ghosts in the evening mists and taken its
-indigestion for the promptings of a demon. We've got away from all that
-now, Mr. Oldmeadow. We see that mists are mists and indigestion
-indigestion, and that there aren't such things as ghosts and demons.
-We've come out, all together, hand in hand, on the Open Road and we
-don't want, ever any more, to be reminded, even, of the Dark Ages."
-
-Before her fluency, Oldmeadow felt himself grow less kindly. "You grant
-there have been dark ages, then? I count that a concession. Things may
-not be evil now, but they were once."
-
-"Not a concession at all," said Miss Toner. "Only an explanation of what
-has happened--an explanation of what you call the mess, Mr. Oldmeadow."
-
-"So that when we find ourselves misbehaving to one another as we march
-along the Open Road, we may know it's only indigestion and take a pill."
-
-She didn't like badinage. That, at all events, was evident to him, even
-in her imperturbability. She took it calmly--not lightly; and if she was
-not already beginning to dislike him, it was because disliking people
-was a reality she didn't recognize. "We don't misbehave if we are on the
-Open Road," she said.
-
-"Oh, but you're falling back now on good old-fashioned theology,"
-Oldmeadow retorted. "The sheep, saved and well-behaved, keeping to the
-road, and the goats--all those who misbehave and stray--classed with the
-evening mists."
-
-"No," said Miss Toner eyeing him, "I don't class them with the evening
-mists; I class them with the sick, whom we must be kind to and take care
-of."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick was now emerging in her new spring hat, which was not very
-successful and gave emphasis to her general air of strain. Meg's hat was
-very successful, as Meg's hats always were; and if Nancy's did not shine
-beside it, it was, at all events, exceedingly becoming to her. Nancy's
-eyes went to Barney. Barney, in the past, had been very appreciative of
-becoming hats. But he had no eyes for Nancy now. He had drawn Miss Toner
-aside and Oldmeadow heard their colloquy:
-
-"Would you rather I didn't go?"
-
-"I'd rather, always, you followed your light, dear friend."
-
-"I do like going here, you know. It seems to belong with it all--and
-Mummy can't bear our not going."
-
-"It makes your dear mother happy. It all means love to you."
-
-"Not only that"--Oldmeadow imagined that Barney blushed, and he heard
-his stammer: "I don't know what I believe about everything; but the
-service goes much deeper than anything I could think for myself." Their
-voices dropped. All that came further to Oldmeadow was from Miss Toner:
-"It makes you nearer than if you stayed."
-
-"Confound her ineffability!" he thought. "It rests with her, then,
-whether he should go or stay."
-
-It certainly did. Barney moved away with them all, leaving Palgrave to
-the more evident form of proximity.
-
-"You know," Mrs. Chadwick murmured to Oldmeadow as they went, between
-the primroses, down the little path and through a wicket-gate that led
-to the village--"you know, Roger, it's _quite_ possible that they may
-say their prayers together. It's like Quakers, isn't it--or Moravians;
-or whoever those curious people are who are buried standing up--so
-dismal and uncomfortable, I always think. But it's better that Palgrave
-should say his prayers with some one, and somewhere, isn't it, than that
-he shouldn't say them at all?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-"Mother's got the most poisonous headache," said Meg. "I don't think
-she'll be able to come down to tea."
-
-She had joined Oldmeadow on the rickety old bench where he sat reading
-and smoking in a sunny corner of the garden. A band of golden
-wallflowers behind them exhaled the deep fragrance that he always
-associated with spring and Sunday and Coldbrooks, and the old stone wall
-behind the flowers exhaled a warmth that was like a fragrance.
-
-"Adrienne is with her," Meg added. She had seated herself and put her
-elbows on her knees and her chin in her hands as though she intended a
-solid talk.
-
-"Will that be likely to help her head?" Oldmeadow inquired. "I should
-say not, if she's going to continue the discourse of this morning."
-
-"Did you think all that rather silly?" Meg inquired, tapping her smart
-toes on the ground and watching them. "You looked as if you did. But
-then you usually do look as though you thought most things and people
-silly. I didn't--I mean, not in her. I quite saw what you did; at least
-I think so. But she can say things that would be silly in other people.
-Now Palgrave is silly. There's just the difference. Is it because he
-always feels he's scoring off somebody and she doesn't?" Meg was
-evidently capable, for all her devotion, of dispassionate inquiry.
-
-"She's certainly more secure than Palgrave," said Oldmeadow. "But I
-feel that's only because she's less intelligent. Palgrave is aware,
-keenly, of a critical and probably hostile world; and Miss Toner is
-unaware of everything except her own benevolence, and the need for it."
-
-Meg meditated. Then she laughed. "You _are_ spiteful, Roger. Oh--I don't
-mean about Adrienne in particular. But you always see the weak spots in
-people, first go. It's rather jolly, all the same, if you come to think
-it over, to be like that. Perhaps that's all she is aware of; but it
-takes you a good way--wanting to help people and seeing how they can be
-helped."
-
-"Yes; it does take you a good way. I don't deny that Miss Toner will go
-far."
-
-"And make us go too far, perhaps?" Meg mused. "Well, I'm quite ready for
-a move. I think we're all rather stodgy, really, down here. And up in
-London, too, if it comes to that. I'm rather disappointed in London, you
-know, Roger, and what it does for one. Just a different kind of sheep,
-it seems to me, from the kind we are in the country; noisy skipping
-sheep instead of silent, slow ones. But they all follow each other about
-in just the same way. And what one likes is to see someone who isn't
-following."
-
-"Yes; that's true, certainly," Oldmeadow conceded. "Miss Toner isn't a
-sheep. She's the sort of person who sets the sheep moving. I'm not so
-sure that she knows where she is going, all the same."
-
-"You mean--Be careful; don't you?" said Meg, looking up at him sideways
-with her handsome eyes. "I'm not such a sheep myself, when it comes to
-that, you know, Roger. I look before I leap--even after Adrienne," she
-laughed; and Oldmeadow, looking back at her, laughed too--pleased with
-her, yet a little disconcerted by what she revealed of experience.
-
-"The reason I like her so awfully," Meg went on--while he reflected
-that, after all, she was now twenty-five--"and it's a good thing I do,
-isn't it, since it's evident she's going to take Barney; but the reason
-is that she's so interested in one. More than anyone I ever knew--far
-and far away. Of course Mother's interested; but it's _for_ one; _about_
-one; not _in_ one, as it were. And then darling old Mummy isn't exactly
-intelligent, is she; or only in such unexpected spots that it's never
-much good to one; one can never count on it beforehand. Whereas Adrienne
-is so interested in you that she makes you feel more interested in
-yourself than you ever dreamed you could feel. Do you know what I mean?
-Is it because she's American, do you think? English people aren't
-interested in themselves, off their own bat, perhaps; or in other people
-either! I don't mean we're not selfish all right!" Meg laughed.
-
-"Selfish and yet impersonal," Oldmeadow mused. "With less of our social
-consciousness in use, with more of it locked up in automatism,
-possibly."
-
-"There's nothing locked up in Adrienne; absolutely nothing," Meg
-declared. "It's all there--out in the shop-window. And it's a big window
-too, even though some of the hats and scarves, so to speak, may strike
-us as funny. But, seriously, what is it about her, do you think? How can
-she care so much?--about everybody?"
-
-He remembered Nancy's diagnosis. "Not about everybody. Only about people
-she can do something for. You'll find she won't care about me."
-
-"Why should she? You don't care for her. Why should she waste herself on
-people who don't need her?" Meg's friendliness of glance did not
-preclude a certain hardness.
-
-"Why indeed? It could never occur to her, of course, that she might need
-somebody. I don't mean that spitefully. She is strong. She doesn't
-need."
-
-"Exactly. Like you," said Meg. "She's quite right to pay no attention to
-the other strong people. For of course you are very strong, Roger, and
-frightfully clever; and good, too. Only one has to be cleverer, no
-doubt, than we are to see your goodness as easily as Adrienne's. It's
-the shop-window again. She shows her goodness all the time; and you
-don't."'
-
-Oldmeadow knocked the ashes out of his pipe and felt for his
-tobacco-pouch. "I show my spite. No; you mustn't count me among the
-good. I suppose your mother's headache came on this morning after she
-found out that Miss Toner doesn't go to church."
-
-"Of course it was that. You saw that she was thinking about it all
-through the service, didn't you?" said Meg. "And once, poor lamb, she
-said, 'Have mercy upon us, miserable sinners' instead of Amen. Did you
-notice? It will bother her frightfully, of course. But after all it's
-not so bad as if Adrienne were a Dissenter and wanted to go to chapel!
-Mummy in her heart of hearts would much rather you were a pagan than a
-Dissenter. I don't think it will make a bit of difference really. So
-long as she gives money to the church, and is nice to the village
-people. Mother will get over it," said Meg.
-
-He thought so too. His own jocose phrase returned to him. As long as the
-money was there it didn't make any difference. But Meg's security on
-that score interested him. With all her devotion to the new friend she
-struck him, fundamentally, as less kind than Nancy, who had none. But
-that, no doubt, was because Meg, fundamentally, was hard and Nancy
-loving. It was because of Miss Toner's interest in herself that Meg was
-devoted. "You're so sure, then, that she's going to take Barney?" he
-asked.
-
-"Quite sure," said Meg. "Surer than he is. Surer than she is. She's in
-love with him all right; more than she knows herself, poor dear. No
-doubt she thinks she's making up her mind and choosing. Weighing Barney
-in the balance and counting up his virtues. But it's all decided
-already; and not by his virtues; it never is," said Meg, again with her
-air of unexpected experience. "It's something much more important than
-virtues; it's the thickness of his eyelashes and the way his teeth show
-when he smiles, and all his pretty ways and habits. Things like that.
-She loves looking at him and more than that, even, she loves having him
-look at her. I have an idea that she's not had people very much in love
-with her before; not people with eyelashes and teeth like Barney. In
-spite of all her money. And she's getting on, too. She's as old as
-Barney, you know. It's the one, real romance that's ever come to her,
-poor dear. Funny you don't see it. Men don't see that sort of thing I
-suppose. But she _couldn't_ give Barney up now, simply. It's because of
-that, you know"--Meg glanced behind them and lowered her voice--"that
-she doesn't like Nancy."
-
-"Doesn't like Nancy!" Oldmeadow's instant indignation was in his voice.
-"What has Nancy to do with it?"
-
-"She might have had a great deal, poor darling little Nancy; and it's
-that Adrienne feels. She felt it at once. I saw she did; that Nancy and
-Barney had been very near each other; that there was an affinity, a
-sympathy, call it what you like, that would have led to something more.
-It wouldn't have done at all, of course; at least I suppose not. They
-knew each other too well; and, until the last year or two, she's been
-too young for him. And then, above all, she's hardly any money. But all
-the same, if he hadn't come across Adrienne and been bowled over like
-this, Barney would have fallen in love with Nancy. She's getting to be
-so lovely looking, for one thing, isn't she? And Barney's so susceptible
-to looks. He was falling in love with her last winter and she knew it as
-well as I did. It's rather rotten luck for Nancy because I'm afraid she
-cares; but then women do have rotten luck about love affairs," said Meg,
-now sombrely. "The dice are loaded against them every time."
-
-Oldmeadow sat smoking in silence for some moments, making no effort to
-master his strong resentment; taking, rather, full possession of its
-implications. "Somewhat of a flaw in your angel you must admit," he said
-presently. "She doesn't like people who are as strong as she is and she
-doesn't like people who might have been loved instead of herself. It
-narrows the scale of her benevolence, you know. It makes her look
-perilously like a jealous prig, and a prig without any excuse for
-jealousy into the bargain."
-
-"Temper, Roger," Meg observed, casting her hard, friendly glance round
-at him; "I know you think there's no one quite to match Nancy; and I
-think you're not far wrong. She's the straightest, sweetest-tempered
-girl who ever stepped on two feet. But all the same Adrienne isn't a
-prig, and if she's jealous she can't help herself. She _wants_ to love
-Nancy; she thinks she does love her; she'll always be heavenly to her.
-She can do a lot for Nancy, you know. She will do a lot for her, even if
-Nancy holds her off. But she wishes frightfully that she was old and
-ugly. She wishes that Barney weren't so fond of her without thinking
-about her. She's jealous and she can't help herself--like all the rest
-of us!" Meg laughed grimly. "When it comes to that we're none of us
-angels."
-
-It was tea-time and the dear old gong sounded balmily from the house. As
-they went along the path the rooks again were cawing overhead and dimly,
-like the hint of evening in the air, he remembered his dream and the
-sense of menace. "You know, it's not like all the rest of you," he said.
-"It's not like Nancy, for instance. Nancy wouldn't dislike a person
-because she was jealous of them. In fact I don't believe Nancy could be
-jealous. She'd only be hurt."
-
-"It's rather a question of degree, that, isn't it?" said Meg. "In one
-form of it you're poisoned and in the other you're cut with a knife; and
-the latter is the prettier way of suffering; doesn't make you come out
-in a rash and feel sick. Nancy is cut with the knife; and if she's not
-jealous in the ugly sense, she dislikes Adrienne all right."
-
-"Why should she like her?" Oldmeadow retorted, and Meg's simile seemed
-to cut into him, too. "She doesn't need her money or her interest or her
-love. She doesn't dislike her. She merely wishes she were somewhere
-else--as I do."
-
-The garden path led straight into the house. One entered a sort of
-lobby, where coats and hats and rackets and gardening baskets were kept,
-and from the lobby went into the hall. Tea was, as always, laid there
-and Mrs. Chadwick, as Meg and Oldmeadow came in, was descending the
-staircase at the further end, leaning on Adrienne Toner's arm.
-
-"You see. She's done it!" Meg murmured. She seemed to bear him no
-ill-will for his expressed aversion. "I never knew one of Mother's
-headaches go so quickly."
-
-"I expect she'd rather have stayed quietly upstairs," said Oldmeadow;
-"she looks puzzled. As if she didn't know what had happened to her."
-
-"Like a rabbit when it comes out of the conjuror's hat," said the
-irreverent daughter.
-
-That was precisely what poor Eleanor Chadwick did look like and for the
-moment his mind was diverted by amusement at her appearance from its
-bitter preoccupation. Mrs. Chadwick was the rabbit and Miss Toner was
-the conjuror indeed; bland and secure and holding her trophy in a firm
-but gentle grasp. Not until they were all seated did Barney and Nancy
-appear and then it was evident to him that if Miss Toner were jealous of
-Nancy she did not fear her, for it was she who had arranged the walk
-from which the young couple had just returned.
-
-"Was it lovely?" she asked Barney, as he took the place beside her. "Oh,
-I do wish I could have come; but I knew your Mother needed me."
-
-"The primroses are simply ripping in the wood," said Barney.
-
-Nancy carried a large bunch of primroses.
-
-"Ripping," said Miss Toner, laughing gently.
-
-"How absurd of you, Barney. Could anything be less ripping than
-primroses? How beautiful they are and what a lovely bunch. One sees that
-Miss Averil loves them from the way she has picked them." If she did not
-call Nancy by her Christian name it was, Oldmeadow knew, not her but
-Nancy's fault.
-
-Nancy still stood beside the table and from the fact of standing, while
-all the rest of them were seated, from the fact of being called Miss
-Averil, she seemed, for the moment, oddly an outsider; as if she hardly
-belonged to the circle of which Miss Toner was the centre. "Do come and
-sit near us," said Miss Toner. "For I had to miss you, too, you see, as
-well as the primroses."
-
-"I'd crowd you there," said Nancy, smiling. "I'll sit here near Aunt
-Eleanor." From something in her eyes Oldmeadow felt suddenly sure that
-not till now had she realized that it had not, really, been her and
-Barney's walk. She offered the primroses to Mrs. Chadwick as she took
-the chair beside her, saying, "They'll fill your white bowl in the
-morning-room, Aunt Eleanor."
-
-"Oh, I say; but I meant those for Adrienne, Nancy!" Barney exclaimed,
-and as he did so Meg's eyes met Oldmeadow's over the household loaf.
-"She didn't see them in the wood, so she ought to have them. Mummy is
-suffocated with primroses already."
-
-But Nancy showed no rash and only an acute Meg could have guessed a cut
-as she answered: "I'll pick another bunch to-morrow for Miss Toner,
-Barney. They'll be fresher to take to London. These are really Aunt
-Eleanor's. I always fill that bowl for her."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-"I do so want a talk with you, Roger," Mrs. Chadwick murmured to him
-when tea was over. The dining-room opened at one end of the hall and the
-drawing-room at the other and the morning-room, Mrs. Chadwick's special
-retreat, into which she now drew him, was tucked in behind the
-dining-room and looked out at an angle of the garden wall and at the
-dove-cot that stood there. Mrs. Chadwick's doves were usually fluttering
-about the window and even, when it was open, entering the room, where
-she sometimes fondly fed them, causing thereby much distress of mind to
-Turner, the good old parlourmaid. A pleasant little fire was burning
-there and, after placing her primroses in the white bowl, Mrs. Chadwick
-drew her chair to it, casting a glance, as she did so, up at the large
-portrait of her husband in hunting dress that hung above the
-mantelpiece. It was painted with the same glib unintelligence as the
-dining-room portraits, but the painter had been unable to miss entirely
-the whimsical daring of the eyes or to bring into conformity with his
-own standard of good looks the charm of the irregular and narrow face.
-Francis Chadwick had been an impulsive, idle, endearing man, and,
-remaining always in love with his wife, had fondly cherished all her
-absurdities. Since his death poor Mrs. Chadwick had been perplexed by
-her effort to associate with gravity and inspiration one who had always
-been a laughing incentive to inconsequence. Oldmeadow reflected, as he,
-too, looked up at him, that Francis Chadwick would neither have needed
-nor have liked Miss Toner.
-
-"It's so very, very strange, Roger, I really must tell you," Mrs.
-Chadwick said. Her hair, still bright and abundant, was very untidy. She
-had evidently not brushed it since rising from her sofa. "I had one of
-my dreadful headaches, you know. It came on at church this morning and I
-really couldn't attend to Mr. Bodman at all. Perhaps you saw."
-
-"I heard. Yes. Miss Toner had disturbed you a good deal."
-
-"I did feel so bewildered and unhappy about it all," said Mrs. Chadwick,
-fixing her blue eyes upon the family friend. Eleanor Chadwick's eyes
-could show the uncanny ingenuousness and the uncanny wisdom of a baby's.
-"Nothing so innocent or so sharp was ever seen outside a perambulator,"
-her husband had once said of them. "About her, you know, Roger," she
-continued, "and Barney and Palgrave. The influence. I could not bear
-them to lose their faith in the church of their fathers."
-
-"No," said Oldmeadow. "But you must be prepared to see it shift a good
-deal. Faiths have to shift nowadays if they're to stand."
-
-"Well. Yes. I know what you mean, Roger. But it isn't a question of
-shifting, is it? I'm very broad. I've always been all for breadth. And
-the broader you are the firmer you ought to be, oughtn't you?"
-
-"Well, Miss Toner's broad and firm," Oldmeadow suggested. "I never saw
-anyone more so."
-
-"But in such a queer way, Roger. Like saying one's prayers out of doors
-and thinking oneself as good as Christ. Oh, it all made me perfectly
-wretched and after lunch my head was so bad that I went and lay down in
-the dark; and it raged, simply. Oh, dear, I thought; this means a day
-and night of misery. They go on like that once they begin. Mamma used
-to have them in precisely the same way. Absolutely incapacitating. I can
-never see how anybody can deny heredity. That's another point, Roger.
-I've always accepted evolution. I gave up Adam and Eve long ago; gave
-them up as white and good-looking, I mean; because we must have begun
-_somewhere_, mustn't we? And Darwin was such a good man; though you
-remember he came not to care anything at all about music. That may mean
-a great deal, if one could think it all out; it's the most religious of
-the arts, isn't it? But there's no end to thinking things out!" Mrs.
-Chadwick pressed her hand against her forehead, closing her eyes for a
-moment. "And Adrienne is very musical."
-
-"You were at your headache," Oldmeadow reminded her. It was customary in
-the family circle thus to shepherd Mrs. Chadwick's straying thoughts.
-
-"Yes, I know. But it all hangs together. Heredity and Mamma and my
-headaches; and Adrienne's mother, who was musical, too, and played on a
-harp. Well, it was raging and I was lying there, when there came a
-little rap at the door. I knew at once who it was and she asked in such
-a gentle voice if she might come in. It's a very soothing voice, isn't
-it? But do you know I felt for a moment quite frightened, as if I simply
-couldn't see her. But I had to say yes, and she came in so softly and
-sat down beside me and said: 'I used to help Mother, sometimes, with her
-headaches. May I help you?' She didn't want to talk about things, as I'd
-feared. Such a relief it was. So I said: 'Oh, do my dear,' and she laid
-her hand on my forehead and said: 'You will soon feel better. It will
-soon quite pass away.' And then not another word. Only sitting there in
-the dark, with her hand on my forehead. And do you know, Roger, almost
-at once the pain began to melt away. You know how a dish of junket melts
-after you cut into it. It was like that. 'Junket, junket,' I seemed to
-hear myself saying; and such a feeling of peace and contentment. And
-before I knew anything more I fell into the most delicious sleep and
-slept till now, just before tea. She was sitting there still, in the
-dark beside me and I said: 'Oh, my dear, to think of your having stayed
-in on this lovely afternoon!' But she went to pull up the blinds and
-said that she loved sitting quietly in the dark with some one she cared
-for, sleeping. 'I think souls come very close together, then,' she said.
-Wasn't it beautiful of her, Roger? Like astral bodies, you know, and
-auras and things of that sort. She _is_ beautiful. I made up my mind to
-that, then. She gives me such a feeling of trust. How can one help it?
-It's like what one reads of Roman Catholic saints and people in the
-Bible. The gift of healing. The laying on of hands. We don't seem to
-have any of them and we can't count _her_, since she doesn't believe in
-the church. But if only they'd give up the Pope, I don't see why we
-shouldn't accept their saints; such dear, good people, most of them. And
-the Pope is quite an excellent man just now, I believe. But isn't it
-very strange, Roger? For a person who can do that to one can't be
-irreligious, can they?"
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's eye was now fixed upon him, less wistfully and more
-intently, and he knew that something was expected of him.
-
-"Hypnotic doctors can do it, you know. You needn't be a saint to do it,"
-he said. "Though I suppose you must have some power of concentration
-that implies faith. However," he had to say all his thought, though most
-of it would be wasted upon poor Eleanor Chadwick, "Miss Toner is
-anything but irreligious. You may be sure of that."
-
-"You feel it, too, Roger. I'm so, so glad."
-
-"But her religion is not as your religion," he had to warn her, "nor her
-ways your ways. You must be prepared to have the children unsettled;
-everyone of them; because she has great power and is far more religious
-than most people. She believes in her creed and acts on it. You must
-give the children their heads. It's no good trying to circumvent or
-oppose them."
-
-"But they mustn't do wrong things, Roger. How can I give them their
-heads if it's to do wrong things? I don't know what Mamma would have
-said to their not going to church--especially in the country. She would
-have thought it very wrong, simply. Sinful and dangerous."
-
-"Hardly that," Oldmeadow smiled. "Even in the country. You don't think
-Miss Toner does wrong things. If they take up Miss Toner's creed instead
-of going to church, they won't come to much harm. The principal thing is
-that there should be something to take up. After all," he was reassuring
-himself as well as Mrs. Chadwick, "it hasn't hurt her. It's made her a
-little foolish; but it hasn't hurt her. And your children will never be
-foolish. They'll get all the good of it and, perhaps, be able to combine
-it with going to church.
-
-"Foolish, Roger?" Mrs. Chadwick, relieved of her headache, but not of
-her perplexity, gazed wanly at him. "You think Adrienne foolish?"
-
-"A little. Now and then. You mustn't accept anything she says to you
-just because she can cure you of a headache."
-
-"But how can you say foolish, Roger? She's had a most wonderful
-education?"
-
-"Everything that makes her surer of herself and makes other people surer
-of her puts her in more danger of being foolish. One can be too sure of
-oneself. Unless one is a saint--and even then. And though I don't think
-she's irreligious I don't think she's a saint. Not by any means."
-
-"I don't see how anyone can be more of one, nowadays, Roger. She heals
-people and she says prayers, and she is always good and gentle and never
-thinks of herself. I'm sure I can't think what you want more."
-
-A touch of plaintiveness and even of protest had come into Mrs.
-Chadwick's voice.
-
-"Perhaps what I want is less," he laughed. "Perhaps she's too much of a
-saint for my taste. I think she's a little too much of one for your
-taste, really--if you were to be quite candid with yourself. Has she
-spoken to you at all about Barney? Are you quite sure you'll have to
-reckon with her for yourself and the children?"
-
-At this Mrs. Chadwick showed a frank alarm. "Oh, quite, quite sure!" she
-said. "She couldn't be so lovely to us all if she didn't mean to take
-him! Why do you ask, Roger? You haven't any reason for thinking she
-won't?"
-
-"None whatever. Quite the contrary." He didn't want to put poor Mrs.
-Chadwick to the cruel test of declaring whether she would rather have
-the children go to church and lose Miss Toner and all her money or have
-them stay away and keep Miss Toner. After all such a test was not to be
-asked of her. Miss Toner wanted people to follow their own light. "I
-only wondered if she talked to you about him. Asked any girlish leading
-questions."
-
-"None, none whatever," said Mrs. Chadwick. "But I feel that's because
-she thinks she knows him far better than I do and that he's told her
-everything already. It's rather hard to be a mother, Roger. For of
-course, though she is so much better and cleverer than I am, I feel sure
-that no one understands Barney as I do."
-
-"She'd be a little cleverer still if she could see that, wouldn't she?"
-
-"Well, I don't know. Girls never do. I was just the same when I was
-engaged to Francis. Even now I can't think that old Mrs. Chadwick really
-understood him as I did. It's very puzzling, isn't it? Very difficult to
-see things from other people's point of view. When she pulled up the
-blind this afternoon, she told me that Nancy and Barney were down in the
-copse and she seemed pleased."
-
-"Oh, did she?"
-
-"I told her that they'd always been like brother and sister, for I was
-just a little afraid, you know, that she might imagine Barney had ever
-cared about Nancy."
-
-"I see. You think she wouldn't like that?"
-
-"What woman would, Roger?" And he imagined that Mrs. Chadwick, for all
-her folly, was cleverer than Miss Toner guessed, as she added: "And then
-she told me that she'd made Barney go without her. She wanted me to see,
-you know, that it depended on her. That's another reason why I feel sure
-she is going to take him."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-He sat, for the first time, next Miss Toner that night at dinner and
-Nancy sat across from them next Barney. Nancy was pale, and now that he
-could scrutinize her he imagined that the walk had been more of an
-ordeal than a pleasure. Barney, no doubt, with the merciless blindness
-of his state, had talked to her all the time of Adrienne. But Nancy
-would not have minded that. She was of the type that hides its cut for
-ever and may become aunt and guardian-angel to the other woman's
-children. It had not been Barney's preoccupation that had so drained her
-of warmth and colour, but its character, its object. Her grey eyes had
-the considering look with which they might have measured the height of a
-difficult hedge in hunting, and, resting on Oldmeadow once or twice,
-seemed to tell him that the walk had shown her more clearly than ever
-that, if Barney married Miss Toner, they must lose him. He felt sure
-that she had lain down since tea with a headache to which had come no
-ministering angel.
-
-She and Barney did not talk to each other now, for he had eyes and ears
-only for Miss Toner. At any former time they would have kept up the
-happiest interchange, and Oldmeadow would have seen Nancy's eyelashes
-close together as she smiled her loving smile. There was a dim family
-likeness between her face and Barney's, for both were long and narrow,
-and both had the singular sweetness in the very structure of the smile.
-But where Barney was clumsy, Nancy was clear, and her skin was as fair
-as his was brown. To the fond onlooker at both, they were destined mates
-and only an insufferable accident had parted them.
-
-Nancy was as much a part of the Coldbrooks country as the primroses and
-the blackcaps in the woods. Her life had risen from the familiar soil to
-the familiar sky, as preordained to fitness, as ordered by instinct and
-condition as theirs, and from her security of type she had gained not
-lost in savour. The time that unfinished types must give to growing
-conscious roots and building conscious nests, Nancy had all free for
-spontaneities of flight and song. Beside her, to his hostile eye, Miss
-Toner was as a wide-spread water-weed, floating, rootless and scentless,
-upon chance currents: A creature of surfaces, of caprice and hazard. If
-the multiplicity of her information constituted mental wealth, its
-impersonality constituted mental poverty. She was as well furnished and
-as deadening as a catalogue, and as he listened to her, receiving an
-impression of continual, considered movings-on, earnest pursuits, across
-half the globe, of further experience, he saw her small, questing figure
-on a background of railways, giant lines stretching forth across plain
-and mountain, climbing, tunnelling, curving; stopping at great capitals,
-and passing on again to glitter on their endless way under the sun and
-moon. That was what he seemed to see as Miss Toner talked: and
-sleeping-berths and wardrobe-boxes and luxurious suites in vast hotels.
-
-She wore again her white dress, contrasting in its richness of texture
-with the simplicity of her daytime blue, and, rather stupidly, an
-artificial white rose had been placed, in her braids, over each ear.
-Her pearls were her only other ornament, and her pearls, he supposed,
-were surprising.
-
-Oldmeadow was aware, in his close proximity to her, while she ate beside
-him with a meticulous nicety that made the manners of the rest of them,
-by contrast, seem a little casual and slovenly, of the discomfort that
-had visited him in his dream. Yet the feeling she evoked was not all
-discomfort. It was as if from her mere physical presence he were
-subjected to some force that had in its compulsion a dim, conjectural
-charm. It was for this reason no doubt that he seemed to be aware of
-everything about her. Her hands were small and white, but had no beauty
-of form or gesture. She moved them slowly and without grace, rather like
-a young child handling unfamiliar objects in a kindergarten, and this in
-spite of the singular perfection of her table manners. She could have
-made little use of them, ever, in games of skill or in any art requiring
-swift accuracy and firmness. It was as if her mind, overtrained in
-receptivity and retentiveness, had only dull tentacles to spare for her
-finger-tips. He was aware of these hands beside him all through dinner
-and their fumbling deliberation brought to him, again and again, a
-mingled annoyance, and satisfaction. There was something positive and
-characteristic about her scentlessness, for if she smelt of anything it
-was of Fuller's Earth--a funny, chalky smell--and beside Meg, who
-foolishly washed liquid powder over her silvery skin, Miss Toner's
-colourlessness was sallow. She had hardly talked at all the night
-before, but to-night she talked continuously. It was Meg who questioned
-her, and Mrs. Chadwick, and Oldmeadow guessed that his ingenuous
-friend, still perplexed by his use of the word foolish, was drawing out
-and displaying her future daughter-in-law for his benefit.
-
-Miss Toner and her mother had been to Russia, to India, to China and
-Japan. They had visited Stevenson's grave at Vailima and in describing
-it she quoted "Under the wide and starry sky." They had studied every
-temple in Greece and Sicily and talked of the higher education with
-ladies in Turkish harems. "But it was always Paris we came back to," she
-said, "when we were not at home. Home was, and is, a great many places:
-California and Chicago--where my father's people live, and New England.
-But Paris was, after it, closest to our hearts. Yes, we knew a great
-many French people; but it was for study rather than friendship we went
-there. It is such a treasure-house of culture. Mother worked very hard
-at French diction for several winters. She had lessons from Mademoiselle
-Jouffert--you know perhaps--though she has not acted for so many years
-now. Our friendship with her was a great privilege, for she was a rare
-and noble woman and had a glorious gift. Phedre was her favourite role
-and I shall never forget her rendering of it:
-
- Ariane ma soeur! de quel amour blessee
- Vous mourutes aux bords ou vous futes laissee!
-
-She taught Mother to recite Phedre's great speeches with such fire and
-passion. There could hardly be a better training for French," said Miss
-Toner, repeating the lines with a curious placidity and perfection. "I
-preferred Mademoiselle Jouffert's rendering to Bernhardt's. Her Phedre
-was, with all the fire, more tender and womanly."
-
-"Do you care about Racine?" Oldmeadow asked her, while the lines rang in
-his ears--rather as in his dream the rooks' cawing had done--with an
-evocative sadness that hung, irrelevantly, about their speaker. "It's
-not easy for our English ears to hear the fire and passion, is it; but
-they are there."
-
-"He is very perfect and accomplished," said Miss Toner. "But I always
-feel him small beside our Shakespeare. He lacks heart, doesn't he?"
-
-"There's heart in those lines you've just recited."
-
-"Yes," said Miss Toner. "Those lines are certainly very beautiful. It's
-the mere music of them, I think. They make me feel--" she paused. It was
-unlike her to pause and he wondered what she made of Ariane, off her own
-bat, without Mademoiselle Jouffert to help her.
-
-"They make you feel?" he questioned.
-
-"They are so sad--so terribly melancholy. The sound of them. They make
-me want to cry when I hear them. But I think it's the sound; for their
-meaning makes me indignant. There is such weakness in them; such
-acceptance of destiny. I want to revolt and protest, too--for women. She
-should not have died."
-
-Oldmeadow involuntarily glanced across at Nancy. She was looking at Miss
-Toner and if she had been pale before, she was paler now. Nancy would
-never think of herself in connection with Ariane and tragic grief; yet
-something in the lines, something in Miss Toner's disavowal of their
-applicability, had touched the hidden cut. And, once again, it was Meg's
-eyes that met his, showing him that what he saw she saw, too. Barney saw
-nothing. All his solicitude was for Miss Toner in her imaginary plight.
-"I'm sure you never would!" he exclaimed. "Never die, I mean!"
-
-"You think Miss Toner would have come to terms with Bacchus," Oldmeadow
-suggested. He didn't want to take it out of Barney, though he was vexed
-with him, nor to take it out of Miss Toner, either. He only wanted to
-toss and twist the theme and make it gay where Miss Toner made it
-solemn.
-
-"Come to terms with Bacchus!" Barney quite stared, taken aback by the
-irreverence. "Why should she! She'd have found somebody more worth while
-than either of the ruffians."
-
-Miss Toner smiled over at him.
-
-"I'm sure that if Bacchus had been fortunate enough to meet Miss Toner
-she'd have converted him to total abstinence in a jiffy and made a model
-husband of him. He was a fine, exhilarating fellow; no ruffian at all;
-quite worth reforming." Oldmeadow, as he thus embroidered his theme, was
-indulging in his own peculiar form of mirth.
-
-He saw Miss Toner laying her hand on the head of Bacchus; Miss Toner
-very picturesque on the rugged sea-shore in her white and pearls and
-roses, and Bacchus dazed and penitent, his very leopards tamed to a
-cat-like docility. His laugh was visible rather than audible and that
-Miss Toner had never before been the subject of such mirth was evident
-to him.
-
-She met whatever she saw or guessed of irreverence, however, as
-composedly as she would have met Bacchus; perhaps already, he reflected,
-she was beginning to think of him in the light of an undesirable
-wine-bibber. Perhaps even, she was beginning to think of him as a
-ruffian. He didn't mind in the least, so long as he succeeded in keeping
-off her solemnity.
-
-"I should have been quite willing to try and reform him," she said;
-"though it takes much longer than a jiffy to reform people, Mr.
-Oldmeadow; but I shouldn't have been willing to marry him. There are
-other things in life, aren't there, than love-stories--even for women."
-
-"Bravo!" said Oldmeadow. He felt as well as uttered it. She wasn't being
-solemn, and she had returned his shuttlecock smartly. "But are there?"
-he went on. He had adjusted his eyeglass for a clearer confrontation of
-her.
-
-Miss Toner's large eyes, enlarged still further by the glass, met his,
-not solemnly, but with a considering gravity.
-
-"You are a sceptic, Mr. Oldmeadow," she observed. "A satirist. Do you
-find that satire and scepticism take you very far in reading human
-hearts?"
-
-"There's one for you, Roger!" cried Barney.
-
-Oldmeadow kept his gaze fixed on Miss Toner. "You think that Ariane
-might prefer Infant Welfare work or Charity Organization to a
-love-story?"
-
-"Not those necessarily." She returned his gaze. "Though I have known
-very fine big people who did prefer them. But they are not the only
-alternatives to love-stories."
-
-"I am sceptical," said Oldmeadow. "I am, if you like, satirical. I don't
-believe there are any alternatives to love-stories; only palliatives to
-disappointment."
-
-Barney leaned forward: "Adrienne, you see, doesn't accept that
-old-fashioned, sentimentalizing division of the sexes. She doesn't
-accept the merely love-story, hearth-side role for women."
-
-"Oh, well," Oldmeadow played with his fork, smiling with the wryness
-that accompanied his reluctant sincerities, "I don't divide the sexes as
-far as love-stories are concerned. We are all in the same boat. For us,
-too, Barney, it's love-story or palliative. You don't agree? If you were
-disappointed in love? Hunting? Farming? Politics? Post-Impressionism?
-Would any of them fill the gap?"
-
-It wasn't at all the line he had intended the talk to take. He knew that
-as he glanced across at Nancy. Saying nothing, as if its subject could
-not concern her, and with a dim little smile, she listened, and he knew
-that for her, though she wouldn't die of it, there would be only
-palliatives. If only Barney, confound him, hadn't been so charming.
-
-Barney did not know how to answer the last assault, and, boyishly,
-looked across at his beloved for succour. She gave it instantly.
-
-"Sadness, sorrow, tragedy, even, isn't despair," she said. "Barney, I
-believe, if sorrow overtook him, would mould the rough clay of his
-occupation to some higher beauty than the beauty he'd lost. To lie down
-and die; to resign oneself to palliatives. Oh, no. That's not the
-destiny of the human soul."
-
-"Roger's pulling your leg, Barney, as usual," Palgrave put in
-scornfully. He had been listening with his elbows on the table, his eyes
-on the table-cloth. "He knows as well as I do that there's only one
-love. The sort you're all talking about--the Theseus and Ariane
-affair--is merely an ebullition of youth and as soon as nature has
-perpetuated the species by means of it, it settles down, if there's any
-reality under the ebullition, to grow into the other--the divine love;
-the love of the soul for the Good, the True and the Beautiful," Palgrave
-declared, growing very red as he said it.
-
-"Really--my dear child!" Mrs. Chadwick murmured. She had never heard
-such themes broached at her table and glanced nervously up at old
-Johnson to see if he had followed. "That is a very, very materialistic
-view!"
-
-Oldmeadow at this began to laugh, audibly as well as visibly, and
-Palgrave, as their eyes met in a glance of communicated comedy, could
-not withhold an answering smile. But Barney's face showed that he
-preferred to see Palgrave's interpretation as materialistic and even
-Miss Toner looked thoughtfully at her champion.
-
-"But we need the symbol of youth and nature," she suggested. "The divine
-love, yes, Palgrave, is the only real one; but then all love is divine
-and human love sometimes brings the deepest revelation of all. Browning
-saw that so wonderfully."
-
-"Browning, my dear!" Palgrave returned with a curious mingling of
-devotion, intimacy and aloofness, "Browning never got nearer God than a
-woman's breast!"
-
-At this, almost desperately, Mrs. Chadwick broke in: "Did you ever see
-our Ellen Terry act, Adrienne? I liked her much better than Madame
-Bernhardt who had such a very artificial face, I think. I can't imagine
-her as Rosalind, can you? While Miss Terry was a perfect Rosalind. I met
-her once with Henry Irving at a garden-party in London and she was as
-charming off as on the stage and I'm sure I can't see why anybody
-should wish to act Phedre--poor, uncontrolled creature. Rhubarb-tart,
-dear, and custard? or wine-jelly and cream? How beautifully you speak
-French. How many languages do you speak?" Mrs. Chadwick earnestly
-inquired, still turning the helm firmly away from the unbecoming topic.
-
-Miss Toner kept her head very creditably and, very tactfully, at once
-accepted her hostess's hint. "Rhubarb-tart, please, dear Mrs. Chadwick.
-Not so very many, really. My German has never been good; though French
-and Italian I do know well, and enough Spanish for Don Quixote. But,"
-she went on, while Mrs. Chadwick looked gratefully at her, "Mother and I
-were always working. We never wasted any of our precious hours together.
-She couldn't bear the thought of _missing_ anything in life; and she
-missed very little, I think. Music, poetry, painting--all the
-treasure-houses of the human spirit--were open to her. And what she won
-and made her own, she gave out again with greater radiance. How I wish
-you could all have known her!" said Miss Toner, looking round at them
-with an unaccustomed touch of wistfulness. "She was radiance
-personified. She never let unhappiness _rest_ on her. I remember once,
-when she had had a cruel blow from a person she loved and trusted--in
-the middle of her sadness she looked at me and saw how sad she was
-making me; and she sprang up and seized my hands and cried: 'Let's
-dance! Let's dance and dance and dance!' And we did, up and down the
-terrace--it was at San Remo--she in her white dress, with the blue sky
-and sea and the orange-trees all in bloom. I can see her now. And then
-she rushed to get music, her harp, and flowers and fruit, to take to an
-invalid friend, and we spent the afternoon with her, mother surpassing
-herself in charm and witchery. She was always like that. She would have
-found something, oh, very beautiful, to make from her sorrow if Theseus
-had abandoned her! But no one," said Miss Toner, looking round at
-Oldmeadow, now with a mild playfulness, "could ever have abandoned
-Mother."
-
-There was something to Oldmeadow appealing in her playfulness; her
-confidence, when it took on this final grace, was really touching. For
-Mrs. Toner the light-giver he knew that he had conceived a rooted
-aversion. And he wondered if she would go on, over the rhubarb-tart, to
-tell, after the dancing on the terrace, of the death at sea. But he was
-spared that.
-
-"And your father died when you were very young, didn't he, dear?" said
-Mrs. Chadwick, fearful of the reference to Theseus. "I think your mother
-must often have been so very lonely; away from home for such a great
-part of the time and with so few relatives."
-
-Miss Toner shook her head. "We were always together, she and I, so we
-could never, either of us, be lonely. And wherever we went she made
-friends. People were always so much more than mere people to her. She
-saw them always, at once, high and low, prince and peasant, as souls,
-and they felt it always, and opened to her. Then, until I was quite big,
-we had my lovely grandmother. Mother came from Maine and it was such a
-joy to go and stay there with Grandma. It was a very simple little home.
-It was always high thinking and plain living, with Grandma; and though,
-when she married and became rich, Mother showered beautiful things upon
-her, Grandma stayed always in the little house, doing for her poor
-neighbours, as she had always done, and dusting her parlour--a real New
-England parlour--and making her own griddle cakes--such wonderful cakes
-she made! I was fifteen when she died; but the tie was so close and
-spiritual that she did not seem gone away from us."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-"Rather nice to think that there are so many good and innocent people in
-the world, isn't it," Barney remarked, when he, Palgrave and Oldmeadow
-were left to their wine and cigars. It was evident that he would have
-preferred to omit the masculine interlude, but Oldmeadow was resolved on
-the respite. She had touched him because she was so unaware; but he was
-weary and disconcerted. How could Barney be unaware? And was he?
-Altogether? His comment seemed to suggest a suspicion that Miss Toner's
-flow might have aroused irony or require justification.
-
-"Miss Toner and her mother seem to have found the noble and the gifted
-under every bush," he remarked, and he was not sure that he wished to
-avoid irony though he knew that he did wish to conceal it from Barney.
-"It's very good and innocent to be able to do that; but one may keep
-one's goodness at the risk of one's discrimination. Not that Miss Toner
-is at all stupid."
-
-Palgrave neither smoked nor drank. He had again leaned his elbows on the
-table and his head on his fists, but, while Oldmeadow spoke, he lifted
-and kept his gaze on him. "You don't like her," he said suddenly. He and
-Oldmeadow had, irrepressibly, over Mrs. Chadwick's conception of
-materialism, interchanged their smile at dinner; but since the morning
-Oldmeadow had known that Palgrave suspected him of indifference, perhaps
-even hostility, towards the new-comer. "Why don't you like her?" the
-boy went on and with a growing resentment as his suspicions found voice.
-"She _isn't_ stupid; that's just it. She's good and noble and innocent;
-and gifted, too. Why should we pretend to be too sophisticated to
-recognize such beauty when we meet it? Why should we be ashamed of
-beauty--afraid of it?"
-
-Barney, flushing deeply, looked down into his wine-glass.
-
-"My dear Palgrave, I don't understand you," said Oldmeadow. But he did.
-He seemed to hear the loud beating of Palgrave's heart. "I don't dislike
-Miss Toner. How should I? I don't know her."
-
-"You do know her. That's an evasion. It's all there. She can't be seen
-without being known. It's all there; at once. I don't know why you don't
-like her. It's what I want to know."
-
-"Drop it, Palgrave," Barney muttered. "Let Roger alone. He and Adrienne
-get on very well together. It's no good forcing things."
-
-"I'm not forcing anything. It's Roger who forces his scepticism and his
-satire on us," Palgrave declared.
-
-"I'm sorry to have displeased you," said Oldmeadow with a slight
-severity. "I am unaware of having displayed my disagreeable qualities
-more than is usual with me."
-
-"Of course not. What rot, Palgrave! Roger is always disagreeable, bless
-him!" Barney declared with a forced laugh. "Adrienne understands him
-perfectly. As he says: she isn't stupid."
-
-"Oh, all right. I'm sorry," Palgrave rose, thrusting his hands in his
-pockets and looking down at the two as he stood above them. He hesitated
-and then went on: "All I know is that for the first time in my
-life--the very first time, mind you--all the things we are told about in
-religion, all the things we read about in poetry, the things we're
-supposed to care for and live by, have been made real to me--outside of
-books and churches. What do we ever see of them at home here, with dear
-Mummy and the girls? What do we ever talk of, all of us--but the
-everlasting round--hunting, gardening, cricket, hay; village treats and
-village charities. A lot of chatter about people--What a rotter
-So-and-so is; and How perfectly sweet somebody else: and a little about
-politics--Why doesn't somebody shoot Lloyd George?--and How wicked Home
-Rulers are. That's about all it amounts to. Oh, I know we're not as
-stupid as we sound. _She_ sees that. We can feel things and see things
-though we express ourselves like savages. But we're too comfortable to
-think; that's what's the trouble with us. We don't want to change; and
-thought means change. And we're shy; idiotically shy; afraid to express
-anything as it really comes to us; so that I sometimes wonder if things
-will go on coming; if we shan't become like the Chinese--a sort of
-_objet d'art_ set of people, living by rote, in a rut. Well. That's all
-I mean. With her one isn't ashamed or afraid to know and say what one
-feels. With her one wants to feel more. And I, for one, reverence her
-and am grateful to her for having made beauty and goodness real to me."
-Having so delivered himself, Palgrave, who had, after his deep flush,
-become pale, turned away and marched out of the room.
-
-The older men sat silent for a moment, Oldmeadow continuing to smoke and
-Barney turning the stem of his wine-glass in his fingers. "I'm awfully
-sorry," he said at last. "I can't think what's got into the boy. He's in
-rather a moil just now, I fancy."
-
-"He's a dear boy," said Oldmeadow. "There's any amount of truth in what
-he says. He's at an age when one sees these things, if one is ever going
-to see them. I hope he'll run straight. He ought to amount to
-something."
-
-"That's what Adrienne says," said Barney. "She says he's a poet. You
-think, too, then, that we're all in such a rut; living Chinese lives;
-automata?"
-
-"It's the problem of civilization, isn't it, to combine automatism with
-freedom. Without a rut to walk in you reach nowhere--if we're to walk
-together. And yet we must manage to ramble, too; individuals must;
-that's what it comes to, I suppose. Individuals must take the risk of
-rambling and alter the line of the rut for the others. Palgrave may be a
-rambler. But I hope he won't go too far afield."
-
-"You do like her, Roger, don't you?" said Barney suddenly.
-
-It had had to come. Oldmeadow knew that, as the depth of silence fell
-about them. It was inevitable between them, of course. Yet he wished it
-might have been avoided, since now it must be too late. He pressed out
-the glow of his cigar and leaned his arms on the table, not looking at
-his friend while he meditated, and he said finally--and it might seem,
-he knew, another evasion--"Look here, Barney, I must tell you something.
-You know how much I care about Nancy. Well, that's the trouble. It's
-Nancy I wanted you to marry."
-
-Barney had held himself ready and a deep, involuntary sigh of relief, or
-of postponed suspense, now escaped him. "I see. I didn't realize that,"
-he said. And how he hoped, poor Barney! it was all there was to realize!
-"Of course I'm very fond of Nancy."
-
-"You realize, of course, how fond she is of you."
-
-"Well; yes; of course. We're both awfully good pals," said Barney,
-confused.
-
-"That's what Palgrave would call speaking like a savage, Barney. Own to
-it that if Miss Toner hadn't appeared upon the scene you could have
-hoped to make Nancy your wife. I don't say you made love to her or
-misled her in any way. I'm sure you never meant to at any rate. But the
-fact remains that you were both so fond of each other that you would
-certainly have married. So you'll understand that when I come down here
-and find Miss Toner installed as tutelary goddess over you all, what I'm
-mainly conscious of is grief for my dear little relegated nymph."
-
-Still deeply flushed, but still feeling his relief, Barney turned his
-wine-glass and murmured: "I see. I quite understand. Yes; I should have
-been in love with her, I own. I nearly was, last winter. As to her being
-in love with me, that's a different matter. I've no reason to think she
-was in love. It would just be a difference of degree, with Nancy,
-wouldn't it; she loves us all so much, and she's really such a child,
-still. Of course that's what she seems to me now, since Adrienne's come;
-just a darling child."
-
-"I suppose so. But you understand what I feel, too. I feel her much more
-than a darling child, and it's difficult for me to like anybody who has
-dispossessed her. I perfectly recognize Miss Toner's remarkable
-qualities and hope to count myself among her friends one day; but, being
-a satirist and a sceptic, I rebel instinctively against goddesses of
-whatever brand. Nymphs are good enough for me; and I can't help wishing,
-irrepressibly, that nymphs had remained good enough for you, my dear
-boy."
-
-"It isn't a question of nymphs; it isn't a question of goddesses,"
-Barney said, glancing up now at his friend. "I'm awfully sorry about
-Nancy; but of course she'll find some one far better than I am; she's
-such a dear. You're not quite straight with me, Roger. I don't see
-Adrienne as a goddess at all; I'm not like Palgrave, a silly boy, bowled
-over. It's something quite different she does to me. She makes me feel
-safe; safe and happy in a way I never imagined possible. It's like
-having the sunlight fall about one; it's like life, new life, to be with
-her. She's not a goddess; but she's the woman it would break my heart to
-part with. I never met such loveliness."
-
-"My dear boy," Oldmeadow murmured. He still leaned on the table and he
-still looked down. "I do wish you every happiness, as you know." He was
-deeply touched and Barney's quiet words troubled him as he had not
-before been troubled.
-
-"Thanks. I know you do. I know you care for my happiness. And I can't
-imagine anything coming into my life that would make a difference to us.
-That's just it." Barney paused. "It won't, will it, Roger?"
-
-The crisis was again upon them. Oldmeadow did not look up as he said:
-"That depends on her, doesn't it?"
-
-"No; it depends on you," Barney quickly replied.
-
-"She likes you, quite immensely, already. She says you make her think of
-one of Meredith's dry, deep-hearted heroes," Barney gave a slightly
-awkward laugh, deprecating the homage as he offered it. "She says you
-are the soul of truth. There's no reason, none whatever, why you
-shouldn't be the best of friends, as far as she is concerned. It's all
-she asks."
-
-"It's all I ask, of course."
-
-"Yes, I know. But if you don't meet her half-way? Sometimes I do see
-what Palgrave means. Sometimes you misunderstand her."
-
-"Very likely. It takes time really to understand people, doesn't it."
-
-But poor Barney was embarked and could not but push on. "As just now,
-you know, about finding nobility behind every bush and paying for one's
-goodness by losing one's discrimination. There are deep realities and
-superficial realities, aren't there, and she sees the deep ones first.
-It's more than that. Palgrave says she makes reality. He didn't say it
-to me, because I don't think he feels me to be worthy of her. He said it
-to Mother, and puzzled her by it. But I know what he means. It's because
-of that he feels her to be a sort of saint. Do be straight with me,
-Roger. Say what you really think. I'd rather know; much. You've never
-kept things from me before," Barney added in a sudden burst of boyish
-distress.
-
-"My dear Barney," Oldmeadow murmured.
-
-It had to come, then. He pushed back his chair and turned in it, resting
-an arm on the table; and he passed his hand over his head and kept it
-there while he stared for a moment hard at the ceiling.
-
-"I think you've made a mistake," he then said.
-
-"A mistake?" Barney faltered blushing. It was not anger; it was pain,
-simple, boyish pain that thus confessed itself.
-
-"Yes; a mistake," Oldmeadow repeated, not looking at him, "and since I
-fear it's gone too far to be mended, I think it would have been better
-if you'd not pressed me, my dear boy."
-
-"How do you mean? I'd rather know, you see," Barney murmured, after a
-moment.
-
-"I don't mean about the goodness, or the power," said Oldmeadow. "She is
-good, and she has power; but that's in part, I feel, because she has no
-inhibitions--no doubts. To know reality we must do more than blow
-soap-bubbles with it. It must break us to be known. She's never been
-broken. Perhaps she never will be. And in that case she'll go on blind."
-
-Barney was silent for a moment, and that it was not as bad as he had
-feared it might be was apparent from the attempted calm with which he
-asked, presently: "Why shouldn't you be blind to evil and absurdity if
-you can see much further than most people into goodness? Perhaps one
-must be one-sided to go far."
-
-"Perhaps. But it's dangerous to be one-sided--to oneself and others. And
-does she see further? That's the question. Doesn't she tend, rather, to
-accept as first-rate what you incline to find second? You're less strong
-than she is, Barney, and less good, no doubt. But you can't deny that
-you're less blind. So what you must ask yourself is whether you can be
-sure of being happy with a wife who'll never doubt herself and who'll
-not see absurdity where you see it. Put it at that. Will you be happy
-with her?"
-
-He was, he knew, justified of Miss Toner's commendation, for truth
-between friends could go no further and, in the silence, while he
-sickened for his friend, he felt it searching Barney's heart. How it
-searched, how many echoes it found awaiting it, was proved by the
-prolongation of the silence.
-
-"I think you exaggerate," said Barney at length, and in the words
-Oldmeadow read his refusal to examine further the truths revealed to
-him. "You see all the defects and none of the beauty. It can't be a
-mistake if I can see both. She'll learn a little from me, that's what it
-comes to, for all the lot I'll have to learn from her. I'll be happy
-with her if I'm worthy of her. What it comes to, you see, as I said at
-the beginning, is that I can't be happy without her." He rose and
-Oldmeadow, rising also, knew that they closed upon an unresolved
-discord. Yet these final words of Barney's pleased him so much that he
-could not leave it quite at that.
-
-"Mine may be the mistake, after all," he said. "Only you must give me
-time to find it out. I began by telling you I couldn't be really
-dispassionate; and I feel much better for our talk, if that's any
-satisfaction to you. If you can learn from each other and see the truth
-together, you'll be happy. You're right there, Barney. That is what it
-comes to." They moved towards the door. "Try not to dislike me for my
-truth too much," he added.
-
-"My dear old fellow," Barney muttered. He laid his hand for a moment on
-his friend's shoulder, standing back for him to pass first. "Nothing can
-ever alter things between you and me."
-
-But things were altered already.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-
-Palgrave had not gone to the drawing-room, and that, at all events, was
-a comfort. A wood fire burned on the hearth and near it Nancy was
-holding wool for Mrs. Chadwick to wind. Barbara had been sent to bed and
-Meg and Miss Toner sat on the sofa hand in hand. Even in the pressure of
-his distress and anxiety Oldmeadow could but be aware of amusement at
-seeing Meg thus. It had, of course, been Miss Toner who had taken her
-hand. But no one else could have taken it. No one else could have been
-allowed to go on holding it placidly before on-lookers of whose mirthful
-impressions Meg must be well aware. She didn't mind in the least. That
-was what Miss Toner had done to her. She enjoyed having her hand held by
-anyone so much interested in her.
-
-Barney walked to the fireplace and stood before it. He had no faculty
-for concealing his emotions and the painful ones through which he had
-just passed were visible on his sensitive face.
-
-"Give us a song, Meg," Oldmeadow suggested. He did not care for Meg's
-singing, which conveyed, in a rich, sweet medium, a mingled fervour and
-shallowness of feeling. But to hear her sing would be better than to see
-her holding Miss Toner's hand.
-
-Barney crossed at once to the seat Meg vacated and dropped down into it,
-no doubt thanking his friend for what he imagined to be a display of
-tact, and Oldmeadow saw the quiet, firm look that flowed over and took
-possession of him. Miss Toner knew, of course, that Barney had been
-having painful emotions; and she probably knew that they had been caused
-by the dry, deep-hearted Meredithian hero. But after the long look she
-did not speak to him. She sat in her pearls and whiteness and gave
-careful attention to the music.
-
-Oldmeadow accompanied Meg, tolerantly, and a trifle humorously, throwing
-a touch of mockery into his part. Meg's preference to-night seemed to be
-for gardens; Gardens of Sleep; Gardens of Love; God's Gardens. "What a
-wretch you are, Roger," she said, when she had finished. "You despise
-feeling."
-
-"I thought I was wallowing in it," Oldmeadow returned. "Did I stint
-you?"
-
-"No; you helped me to wallow. That's why you're such a wretch. Always
-showing one that one is wallowing when one thinks one's soaring. It's
-your turn, now, Adrienne. Let's see if he'll manage to make fun of you."
-
-"Does Miss Toner sing, too? Now do you know, Meg," said Oldmeadow,
-keeping up the friendly banter, "I'm sure she doesn't sing the sort of
-rubbish you do."
-
-"I think they're beautiful songs," Mrs. Chadwick murmured from her wool,
-"and I think Roger played them most beautifully. Why should you say he
-is making fun of you, Meg?"
-
-"Because he makes you think something's beautiful that he thinks
-rubbish, Mummy. Come along, Adrienne. You will, won't you? I expect my
-voice sounds all wrong to you. I've had no proper training."
-
-"It's a very lovely voice, Meg, used in a poor cause," said Miss Toner
-smiling. "And it is badly placed. I think I could help you there. I've
-no voice at all, but I have been taught how to sing. It would be more to
-the point, though, if Mr. Oldmeadow were to play to us, for I hear that
-he is an accomplished musician."
-
-"I'm really anything but accomplished," said Oldmeadow; "but I can play
-accompaniments cleverly. Do sing to us. I know you'll give us something
-worth accompanying."
-
-Miss Toner rose and came to the piano with her complete and unassuming
-confidence. She turned the pages of the music piled there and asked him
-if he cared for Schubert's songs. Yes; she was a watch wound to go
-accurately and she could rely on herself, always, to the last tick. Even
-if she knew--and he was sure she knew--that he had been undermining her,
-she would never show a shadow or a tremor; and she would always know
-what was the best music. Only, as she selected "Litanei" and placed it
-before him, he felt that over him, also, flowed the quiet, firm look.
-
-"Litanei" was one of his favourites in a composer he loved, and, as she
-sang there above him, he found the song emerging unharmed from her
-interpretation. It was as she had said--no voice to speak of; the
-dryest, flattest little thread of sound; and no feeling, either (what a
-relief after Meg!), except the feeling for scrupulous accuracy. Yet her
-singing was what he found in her to like best. It was disciplined; it
-accepted its own limits; it fulfilled an order. There was no desecration
-of the heavenly song, for, intelligently after all, she made no attempt
-upon its heart.
-
-When she had finished, she looked down at him. They were removed by half
-the length of the room from the fireside group. The lamps were behind
-them. Only the candles set in the piano-rack illumined Miss Toner; and
-while the white roses over her ears struck him anew as foolish, her eyes
-anew struck him as powerful.
-
-"Thank you. That was a pleasure," he said.
-
-It was a pleasure. It was almost a link. He had found a ground to meet
-her on. He saw himself in the future accompanying Barney's wife. He
-need, then, so seldom talk to her. But, alas! she stepped at once from
-the safe frame of art.
-
-"If we can rise from loss to feel like that, if we can lift our sorrows
-like that, we need never turn to palliatives, need we, Mr. Oldmeadow?"
-she said.
-
-Stupidity, complacency, or power, whatever it was, it completely
-disenchanted him. It left him also bereft of repartee. What he fell back
-upon, as he looked up at her and then down at the keys again, was a mere
-schoolboy mutter of "Come now!"
-
-After all a schoolboy mutter best expressed what he felt. She was not
-accustomed to having her ministrations met with such mutters and she did
-not like it. That was apparent to him as she turned away and went back
-to the sofa and Barney. She had again tried him and again found him
-wanting.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Barney and Miss Toner left in her motor next morning shortly after
-breakfast, and though with his friend Oldmeadow had no further exchange,
-he had, with Miss Toner, a curious encounter that was, he felt sure, a
-direct result of her impressions of the night before. They met in the
-dining-room a few moments before breakfast, and as she entered, wearing
-already her motoring hat, closely bound round her face with a veil, he
-was aware that she looked, if that were possible, more composed than he
-had ever seen her. He felt sure that she had waited for her opportunity,
-and had followed him downstairs, knowing that she would find him alone;
-and he realized then that she was more composed, because she had an
-intention or, rather, since it was more definite, a determination.
-Determination in her involved no effort: it imparted, merely, the added
-calm of an assured aim.
-
-She gave him her hand and said good morning with the same air of
-scrupulous accuracy that she had given to the rendering of "Litanei" and
-then, standing before the fire, her hands clasped behind her, her eyes
-raised to his, she said: "Mr. Oldmeadow, I want to say something to
-you."
-
-It was the gentle little voice, unaltered, yet he knew that he was in
-for something he would very much rather have avoided; something with
-anybody else unimaginable, but with her, he saw it now, quite
-inevitable. Yet he tried, even at this last moment, to avoid it and
-said, adjusting his eyeglass and moving to the sideboard: "But not
-before we've had our tea, surely. Can't I get you some? Will you trust
-me to pour it out?"
-
-"Thanks; I take coffee--not tea," said Miss Toner from her place at the
-fire, "and neither has been brought in yet."
-
-He had just perceived, to his discomfiture, that they had not. There was
-nothing for it but to turn from the ungarnished sideboard and face her
-again.
-
-"It's about Barney, Mr. Oldmeadow," Miss Toner said, unmoved by his
-patent evasion. "It's because I know you love Barney and care for his
-happiness. And it's because I hope that you and I are to be friends, and
-friendship can only be built on truth. Try to trust more; will you?
-That's all I want to say. Try to trust. You will be happier if you do
-and make other people happier."
-
-Oldmeadow had never experienced such an assault upon his personality,
-and he met it gagged and bound, for, assuredly, this was to be Barney's
-wife. A slow flush mounted to his face.
-
-"I'm afraid I seem very strange and unconventional to you," Adrienne
-Toner went on. "You've lived in a world where people don't care enough
-for each other to say the real things. They must be felt if they've to
-be said, mustn't they? Yet you do care for people. I have seen that,
-watching you here; and you care for real things. It's a crust of caution
-and convention that is about you. You are afraid of expression. You are
-afraid of feeling. You are afraid of being taken in and of wasting
-yourself. Don't be afraid, Mr. Oldmeadow. We never lose ourselves by
-trusting. We never lose ourselves by giving. It's a realer self that
-comes. And with you, I see it clearly, if you let the crust grow
-thicker, it will shut life and light and joy away from you; and when
-light cannot visit our hearts, they wither within us. That is your
-danger. I want to be your friend, so I must say the truth to you."
-
-He knew, though he had to struggle not to laugh, that he was very angry
-and that he must not show anger; though it would really be better to
-show that than his intense amusement; and it took him a moment, during
-which they confronted each other, to find words; dry, donnish words;
-words of caution and convention. They were the only ones he had
-available for the situation. "My dear young lady," he said, "you take
-too much upon yourself."
-
-She was not in the least disconcerted. She met his eyes steadily. "You
-mean that I am presumptuous, Mr. Oldmeadow?"
-
-"You take too much upon yourself," he repeated. "As you say, I hope we
-may be friends."
-
-"Is that really all, Mr. Oldmeadow?" she said, looking at him with such
-a depth of thoughtfulness that he could not for the life of him make out
-whether she found him odious or merely pitiful.
-
-"Yes; that's really all," he returned.
-
-The dining-room was very bright and the little blue figure before the
-fire was very still. The moment fixed itself deep in his consciousness
-with that impression of stillness and brightness. It was an
-uncomfortable impression. Her little face, uplifted to his, absurd, yet
-not uncharming, was, in its still force, almost ominous.
-
-"I'm sorry," was all she said, and she turned and went forward to greet
-Mrs. Chadwick.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-
-It was a soft June day and Oldmeadow was strolling about Mrs. Averil's
-garden admiring her herbaceous borders. It was a day that smelt of
-ripening strawberries, of warm grass and roses, and the air was full of
-a medley of bird voices, thrushes and blackbirds, sweet as grass and
-strawberries, and the bubbling rattle of the chaffinch as happy as the
-sunlight.
-
-Adrienne Toner was Mrs. Chadwick now, and she and Eleanor Chadwick and
-Barney were motoring together in the French Alps. Coldbrooks was empty,
-and he had come to stay with Nancy and her mother.
-
-They lived in a small stone house with a Jacobean front that looked,
-over a stone wall, at Chelford Green, and had behind it a delightfully
-unexpected length of lawn and orchard and kitchen-garden, all enclosed
-by higher walls and presided over by a noble cedar. Seen from the garden
-The Little House was merely mid-Victorian, but the modern additions were
-masked by climbing roses and a great magnolia-tree opened its
-lemon-scented cups at the highest bedroom windows. The morning-room was
-in the modern part, and from one of its windows, presently, Mrs. Averil
-emerged, opening her sunshade as she crossed the grass to join her
-guest. She wore a white straw garden hat, tipping over her eyes and
-tying, behind, over her thick knot of hair, in a manner that always
-recalled to Oldmeadow a lady out of Trollope. Her face was pale, like
-Nancy's, and her eyes grey; but rather than blackcaps and primroses she
-suggested lace tippets and porcelain tea-sets, and though it was from
-her Nancy had her pretty trick of closing her eyes when she smiled, Mrs.
-Averil's smile was cogitative and impersonal, and in her always
-temperate mirth there was an edge of grimness.
-
-"Well, Roger, I want to hear what you thought about the wedding," she
-said. She had not gone to church that morning with Nancy and it was, he
-knew, because she wanted an interchange of frank impressions. She had
-been prevented from attending Miss Toner's London nuptials by a touch of
-influenza and, as she now went on to say, she had got little from Nancy,
-who had no eye for pageants and performances. "Eleanor was so absorbed,"
-she went on, "in the fact that the Bishop had indigestion and had, at
-her suggestion, taken magnesia with his breakfast, that I could not get
-much else out of her. She seemed to have seen the Bishop's symptoms
-rather than Adrienne and Barney. Now from you I expect all the relevant
-details."
-
-"Well, if you call it a detail, Nancy was lovely," said Oldmeadow. "She
-looked like a silver-birch in her white and green."
-
-"And pearls," said Mrs. Averil. "You noticed, of course, the necklaces
-Adrienne gave them; quite the gift of a princess, yet so innocent and
-unobtrusive looking, too. She has great taste in such matters. Did she
-look well? Eleanor did say that she, like the Bishop, was very pale."
-
-"She was pale; but not a bit nervous. She rather looked as if she had
-been married every day of her life. Nothing ever puts her out, you know.
-She was very grave and benign; but she wasn't an imposing bride and the
-wreath of orange-blossoms aged her. Nancy and Meg and Barbara and the
-Lumley girl aged her, too. She must be older than Barney."
-
-"Yes; she is. A year older. But she's the sort of woman who will wear,"
-said Mrs. Averil, pausing before a bed of rose-trees to snip off a
-fading flower. "She'll not look very differently at fifty, you know; and
-her hair is the sort that may never turn grey. I can see her at seventy
-with those big golden braids and all her teeth. There's something very
-indestructible about her. Like a doll made of white leather compared to
-one made of porcelain. She'll last and last," said Mrs. Averil. "She'll
-outlast us all. Barney was radiant, of course."
-
-"Yes. But he _was_ nervous; like a little boy frightened by the
-splendour of his Christmas-tree. He looked as though he were arm in arm
-with the Christmas-tree itself as he came down the nave. A rather dumpy
-little Christmas-tree, but exquisitely lighted and garnished."
-
-"Well, he ought to be radiant," Mrs. Averil observed. "With all that
-money, it's an extremely good match for him. The fact of her being
-nobody in particular makes no difference, really, since she's an
-American. And she has, I gather, no tiresome relations to come
-bothering."
-
-"She's very unencumbered, certainly. There's something altogether very
-solitary about her," Oldmeadow agreed, watching Mrs. Averil snip off the
-withered roses. "I felt that even as she came down the nave on Barney's
-arm. It's not a bit about the money he's radiant," he added.
-
-"Oh, I know. Of course not. That was only my own gross satisfaction
-expressing itself. He's as in love as it's possible to be. And with
-every good reason."
-
-"You took to her as much as they all did, then?"
-
-"That would be rather difficult, wouldn't it? And Barney's reasons would
-hardly be those of a dry old aunt. She was very nice and kind to Nancy
-and me and she's evidently going to do everything for them. Barbara's
-already, you know, been sent to that admirable school that was too
-expensive for Eleanor; riding and singing and all the rest of it. And
-Meg's been given a perfect trousseau of fine clothes for her London
-season. Naturally I don't feel very critically towards her."
-
-"Don't you? Well, if she weren't a princess distributing largess,
-wouldn't you? After all, she's not given Nancy a trousseau. So why be
-mute with an old friend?"
-
-"Ah, but she's given her the pearls," said Mrs. Averil. "Nancy couldn't
-but accept a bridesmaid's gift. And she would give her a trousseau if
-she wanted it and would take it. However, I'll own, though decency
-should keep me mute, that I should find myself a little bored if I had
-to see too much of her. I'm an everyday person and I like to talk about
-everyday things."
-
-"I can hear her asking you, in answer to that, if there is anything more
-everyday than the human soul. I wish I could have seen you _aux prises_
-with her," Oldmeadow remarked. "Did she come down here? Did she like
-your drawing-room and garden?"
-
-Mrs. Averil's drawing-room and garden lay very near her heart. Eleanor
-Chadwick sometimes accused her of caring more about her china and her
-roses than about anything else in the world except Nancy.
-
-"I don't think she saw them; not what I call see," Mrs. Averil now said.
-"Oh, yes; she came several times and recognized, very appreciatively,
-the periods of my Queen Anne furniture and my Lowestoft. Beyond their
-period I don't think she went. She said the garden was old-world," Mrs.
-Averil added, looking about her and twirling her parasol on her
-shoulder.
-
-"She would," Oldmeadow agreed. "That's just what she would call it. And
-she'd call you a true, deep-hearted woman and Nancy a gifted girl. How
-do she and Nancy hit it off? It's that I want most of all to hear
-about."
-
-"They haven't much in common, have they?" said Mrs. Averil. "She's never
-hunted and doesn't, I imagine, know a wren from a hedge-sparrow. She
-_does_ know a skylark when she hears one, for she said 'Hail to thee,
-blithe spirit' while one was singing. But I felt, somehow, it was like
-the Queen Anne and the Lowestoft--a question of the label."
-
-Oldmeadow at this began to laugh with an open and indulged mirth. He and
-Mrs. Averil, at all events, saw eye to eye. "If you'd tie the correct
-label to the hedge-sparrow she'd know that, too," he said. "Poor girl.
-The trouble with her isn't that she doesn't know the birds, but that she
-wouldn't know the poets, either, without their labels. It's a mind made
-up of labels. No; I don't think it likely that Nancy, who hasn't a label
-about her, will get much out of her--beyond necklaces."
-
-"I wish Nancy _had_ a few labels," said Mrs. Averil. "I wish she could
-have travelled and studied as Miss Toner--Adrienne that is--has done.
-She is such a little ignoramus. Adrienne may bore you and me, but Nancy
-will never interest anyone--except you and me."
-
-It was always amusing to Oldmeadow, if a little sardonically so, to note
-that any conception of himself as a possible suitor for Nancy had never
-entered Mrs. Averil's mind. As a friend he was everything a mother could
-desire; as a match for Nancy almost unimaginable. Well, he could not
-give a wife even one hunter and he never had had any intention of
-falling in love with his dear nymph; yet that other people might not do
-so was a suggestion he repudiated with warmth.
-
-"Oh; in love, yes," Mrs. Averil agreed. "I don't deny that she's very
-loveable and I hope she may marry well. But that's not the same thing as
-being interesting, is it? A man may be in love with a woman who doesn't
-interest him."
-
-"I dispute that statement."
-
-"I'm sure dear Eleanor never interested her husband--devoted to the day
-of his death as he was. There's something in my idea. To be interesting
-one must offer something new. If Nancy had been interesting to Barney
-she would now, I think, have been in Adrienne's place. Not that it would
-have been a marriage to be desired for either of them."
-
-So he and Mrs. Averil had been thinking the same thoughts.
-
-"And you contend that if Nancy had been to China and read Goethe and
-Dante in the originals he'd have been interested? I think he was quite
-sufficiently interested and that if Miss Toner hadn't come barging into
-our lives he'd have known he was in love."
-
-"Going to China is a figure of speech and stands for all the things she
-hasn't got and doesn't know. My poor little Nancy. All the same, _she_
-isn't a bore!" said Mrs. Averil with as near an approach to acerbity as
-she could show.
-
-"No; she isn't a bore. The things she knows have to be found out, by
-degrees, through living with her. Barney hasn't been to China, either,
-so, according to your theory, Nancy didn't find him interesting."
-
-At this Mrs. Averil's eyes met his and, after a moment of contemplation,
-they yielded up to him the secret they saw to be shared. "If only it
-were the same for women! But they don't need the new. She's young.
-She'll get over it. I don't believe in broken hearts. All the same,"
-Mrs. Averil stopped in their walk, ostensibly to examine the growth of a
-fine pink lupin, "it hasn't endeared Adrienne to me. I'm too
-_terre-a-terre_, about that, too, not to feel vexation, on Nancy's
-account. And what I'm afraid of is that she knows she's not endeared to
-me. That she guesses. She's a bore; but she's not a bit stupid, you
-know."
-
-"You don't think she's spiteful?" Oldmeadow suggested after a moment,
-while Mrs. Averil still examined her lupin.
-
-"Dear me, no! I wish she could be! It's that smooth surface of hers
-that's so tiresome. She's not spiteful. But she's human. She'll want to
-keep Barney away and Nancy will be hurt."
-
-"Want to keep him away when she's got him so completely?"
-
-"Something of that sort. I felt it once or twice."
-
-"My first instinct about her was right, then," said Oldmeadow. "She's a
-bore and an interloper, and she'll spoil things."
-
-"Oh, perhaps not. She'll mend some things. Have you heard about Captain
-Hayward?"
-
-"Do you mean that stupid, big, tawny fellow? What about him?"
-
-"You may well ask. I've been spoken to about him and Meg by more than
-one person. They are making themselves conspicuous, and it's been going
-on for some time."
-
-"You don't mean that Meg's in love with him?"
-
-"He's in love with her, at all events, and, as you know, he's a married
-man. I questioned Nancy, who was with Meg for a few weeks in London, and
-she owns that Meg's unhappy."
-
-"And they're seeing each other in London now?" Oldmeadow was deeply
-discomposed.
-
-"No. He's away just now. And Meg is going to meet the bridal party in
-Paris at the end of July. Nancy feels that when Meg gets back under
-Adrienne's influence there'll be nothing to fear."
-
-"We depend on her, then, so much, already," he murmured. He was
-reviewing, hastily, his last impressions of Meg and they were not
-reassuring. The only thing that was reassuring was to reflect on his
-impressions of Adrienne. "Grandma's parlour" returned to him with its
-assurance of deep security. Above everything else Adrienne was
-respectable.
-
-"Yes. That's just it," Mrs. Averil agreed. "We depend on her. And I feel
-we're going to depend more and more. She's the sort of person who mends
-things. So we mustn't think of what she spoils."
-
-What Adrienne Toner had spoiled was, however, to be made very plain next
-morning both to Nancy's old friend and to her mother. Beside her plate
-at breakfast was a letter addressed in Barney's evident hand, a letter
-in a narrow envelope stamped with the name of a French hotel and
-showing, over the address, an engraving of peaks against the sky. Nancy
-met the occasion with perfect readiness, saying as she looked at the
-letter, waiting to open it till she had made the tea--Nancy always made
-the tea in the morning while her mother sat behind the bacon and eggs at
-the other end of the table--"How nice; from Barney. Now we shall have
-news of them."
-
-Nothing less like an Ariane could be imagined than Nancy as she stood
-there in her pink dress above the pink, white and gold tea-cups. One
-might have supposed from her demeanour that a letter from Barney was but
-a happy incident in a happy day. But, when she dropped into her chair
-and read, it was evident that she was not prepared for what she found.
-She read steadily, in silence, while Oldmeadow cut bread at the
-sideboard and Mrs. Averil distributed her viands, and, when the last
-page was reached, they both could not fail to see that Nancy was
-blushing, blushing so deeply that, as she thus felt herself betray her
-emotion, tears came thickly into her downcast eyes.
-
-"I'll have my tea now, dear," said Mrs. Averil. "Will you wait a little
-longer, Roger?" She tided Nancy over.
-
-But Nancy was soon afloat. "The letter is for us all," she said. "Do
-read it aloud, Roger, while I have my breakfast."
-
-Barney's letters, in the past, had, probably, always been shared and
-Nancy was evidently determined that her own discomposure was not to
-introduce a new precedent. Oldmeadow took up the sheets and read.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"DEAREST NANCY,--How I wish you were with us up here. It's the most
-fantastically lovely place. One feels as if one could sail off into it.
-I dug up some roots of saxifrage for your wall yesterday, such pretty
-pink stuff. It's gone off in a box wrapped in damp moss and I hope will
-reach you safely. A horrid, vandal thing to do; but for you and Aunt
-Monica I felt it justified, and there are such masses of it. I saw a
-snow-bunting yesterday, much higher up than the saxifrage; such a jolly,
-composed little fellow on a field of snow. The birds would drive you
-absolutely mad, except that you're such a sensible young person you'd no
-doubt keep your head even when you saw a pair of golden eagles, as we
-did, floating over a ravine. I walked around the Lac d'Annecy this
-morning, before breakfast, and did wish you were with me. I thought of
-our bird-walks at dawn last summer. There were two or three darling
-warblers singing, kinds we haven't got at home; and black redstarts and
-a peregrine falcon high in the air. I could write all day if I'd the
-time, about the birds and flowers. You remember Adrienne telling us that
-afternoon when she first came to Coldbrooks about the flowers. But I
-mustn't go on now. We're stopping for tea in a little valley among the
-mountains with flowers thick all around us and I've only time to give
-our news to you and Aunt Monica and to send our love. Mother is
-extremely fit and jolly, though rather scared at the hairpin curves;
-Adrienne has to hold her hand. I'm too happy for words and feel as if
-I'd grown wings. How is Chummie's foot? Did the liniment help? Those
-traps are beastly things. I feel just as you do about the rabbits.
-Adrienne reads aloud to us in the evenings; a man called Claudel;
-awfully stiff French to follow but rather beautiful. I think you'd like
-him. Not a bit like Racine! Best love to you and Aunt Monica. Here's
-Adrienne, who wants to have her say."
-
-Had it been written in compunction for _Ariane aux bords laissee_? or,
-rather, in a happy reversion to sheer spontaneity, a turning, without
-any self-consciousness, to the comrade of the bird-walks who would,
-after all, best feel with him about snow-buntings and redstarts?
-Oldmeadow paused for the surmise, not looking up, before he went on from
-Barney's neat, firm script to his wife's large, clear clumsy hand.
-
- "DEAREST NANCY," ran the postscript, and it had been at the
- postscript, Oldmeadow now could gauge, that Nancy had first found
- herself unprepared. "I, too, am thinking of you, with Barney. It is
- a great joy to feel that where, he says, I've given him golden
- eagles and snow-buntings he's given me--among so many other dear,
- wonderful people--a Nancy. I get the best of the bargain, don't I?
- I can't see much of the birds for looking at the peaks--_my_ peaks,
- so familiar yet, always, so new again. 'Stern daughters of the
- voice of God' that they are. Radiantly white against a cloudless
- sky we find them to-day. Barney's profile is beautiful against
- them--but his nose is badly sun-burned! _All_ our noses are
- sun-burned! That's what one pays for flying among the Alps.
-
- "Mother Nell--we've decided that that's what I'm to call
- her--looks ten years younger all the same, as I knew she would. We
- talk of you all so often--of you and Meg and Palgrave and Barbara,
- and half a dozen times a day Barney wishes that one or the other of
- you were with us to see this or that. It's specially you for the
- birds I notice. You must take me for some bird-walks at dawn some
- day and teach me to know all your lovely English songsters.... Dear
- little Cousin-Sister, I send you my love with his and, with him,
- hold you warmly in my heart. Will 'Aunt Monica' accept my
- affectionate and admiring homages?
-
- "Yours ever
-
- "ADRIENNE"
-
-
-
-Oldmeadow had not expected that she could write such a human letter; yet
-it explained Nancy's blush. Barney's spontaneous affection she could
-have faced, but she had not been able to face his wife's determined
-tenderness. Adrienne had meant it well, no doubt--Oldmeadow gazed on
-after he had finished, but she had no business to mean so well, no
-business to thrust herself, in this community of intimacy, into what was
-Barney's place alone. There was more in it, he knew, with Meg and Mrs.
-Averil to help him, than the quite successful playfulness. She was to be
-more intimate than Barney, that was what it came to; more, much more
-tender if Barney was to be allowed intimacy and tenderness. That was
-really what she intended Nancy to see, and that Barney had no place at
-all where she, Adrienne, did not also belong.
-
-"Very sweet; very sweet and pretty," Mrs. Averil's voice broke in, and
-he realized that he had allowed himself to drop into a grim and
-tactless reverie; "I didn't know she had such a sense of humour.
-Sun-burned noses and 'Stern daughters of the voice of God.' Well done. I
-didn't think Adrienne would ever look as low as noses. They must be
-having a delightful tour. I know black redstarts. There was one that
-used to wake me every morning at four, one summer, in Normandy, with the
-most foolish, creaking song; just outside my window. Give Barney my love
-when you write and return my niece's affectionate and admiring homages.
-Mother Nell. I shouldn't care to be called Mother Nell somehow."
-
-So Mrs. Averil's vexation expressed itself and so she floated Nancy
-along. But Nancy, long since, had pulled herself together and was able
-to look at Oldmeadow, while her lashes closed together in her own smile,
-and to say that she'd almost be willing to lose her nose for the sake of
-hearing the new warblers. Mrs. Averil opened her "Times" and over
-marmalade Nancy and Oldmeadow planned the trip that they would take some
-day, when their ship came in, the three of them, a bird-trip to the
-French Alps.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat beside Adrienne Chadwick and knew that from the other end
-of the room, where he talked to Mrs. Aldesey, Barney's eyes were on
-them, though he tried to keep them off. It was the first dinner-party
-the young couple had given since they had come up to town, for though
-they were established at Coldbrooks in the communal family life Adrienne
-seemed to find to her taste, and though Barney had at once immersed
-himself in country pursuits, they had taken and furnished this large
-house in Connaught Square and it was, apparently, settled that the
-winter months were to be spent in London. How that was to be combined
-with farming at Coldbrooks, or whether Barney intended to take a header
-into politics and felt a London house, big enough for entertaining, part
-of the programme, Oldmeadow hadn't an idea, and for the rather sinister
-reason that he had hardly laid his eyes on Barney since his return from
-his wedding-journey. Even though asked to tea once or twice, while,
-established in an hotel, they were finding and furnishing the house, he
-had never found them alone and either Barney had made no opportunity, or
-his wife had seen to it that none should be made, for having a
-_tete-a-tete_ with his old friend.
-
-Oldmeadow could not associate Barney with ambitions, either social or
-political, nor, he was bound to say, as he looked round the
-dinner-table, where Adrienne sat at one end with Lord Lumley and Barney
-at the other with Lady Lumley, could one infer from its disparate and
-irrelevant elements any such ambitions in Adrienne. He had taken Mrs.
-Aldesey down and had felt her at moments to be almost too resourceful,
-her air of graceful skill in keeping the ball rolling seeming too much
-to emphasize its tendency to drop. Without Mrs. Aldesey, without
-Meg--vividly engaged at one corner with a fair young American--without
-himself, for he had aided and abetted Lydia to the best of his ability,
-the dinner would have been a dull one and he was not sure that even
-their enterprise had redeemed it. Adrienne had not any air of fearing
-dullness or of being in need of assistance. Oldmeadow saw that the blue
-ribbon was frequently unrolled and that, as always, it made a silence in
-which it could be watched. Lord Lumley, his handsome, official head bent
-in an attitude of chivalrous devotion, watched earnestly, and the fair
-young American paused in the midst of whatever he might be saying to Meg
-to take almost reverent note; but Oldmeadow fancied more than once that
-he caught startled eyes fixed upon it, especially when there emerged a
-lustrous loop of quotation:--
-
- "One who never turned his back but marched breast forward,
- Never doubted clouds would break,--"
-
-The silence for that had been so general that even Barney, far away, and
-protected by Mrs. Aldesey, was aware of it.
-
-"How wonderfully he _wears_, doesn't he, dear old Browning," said Mrs.
-Aldesey, and in the glance that Barney cast upon her was an oddly
-mingled gratitude and worry. The fair young American, he was very fair
-and had clear, charming eyes, finished the verse in a low voice to Meg
-and Meg looked at him affectionately the while. He was evidently one of
-Adrienne's appurtenances.
-
-It was a dull dinner. Pretty, festive Mrs. Pope and young Mr. Haviland,
-reputed to be a wit and one of Meg's young men as Mrs. Pope was one of
-Barney's young women, would not with any eagerness again attend a board
-where the hostess quoted Browning and didn't know better than to send
-you down, the first with a stern young socialist who sat silent for the
-most part and frowned when addressed, and the second with a jocular,
-middle-aged lady from California, the mother, Oldmeadow gathered, of the
-clear-eyed youth, from whose ample bosom Mr. Haviland's subtle arrows
-glanced aside leaving him helplessly exposed to the stout bludgeonings
-of her humour. Adrienne paused once or twice in her conversation to
-smile approval upon her compatriot and to draw Lord Lumley's attention
-to her special brand of merriment, good Lord Lumley adjusting his
-glasses obediently to take it in.
-
-And now they were all assembled in the drawing-room. Like everything
-about Adrienne, it was simple and rather splendid. Barney had wisely
-kept his modernities for his own study and it was a pity, Oldmeadow
-reflected, that Adrienne had not kept for her own boudoir the large
-portrait of herself that hung over the mantelpiece, since it was a note
-more irrelevant than any Post Impressionist could have been and cast a
-shade of surmise over the taste displayed in the Chippendale furniture
-and the Chinese screens.
-
-"Rather sweet, isn't it; pastoral and girlish, you know," Barney had
-suggested tentatively as Mrs. Aldesey had placed herself before it.
-"Done in Paris a good many years ago; the man was very much the fashion
-then. Adrienne was only sixteen. It's an extraordinarily perfect
-likeness still, isn't it?"
-
-To which Mrs. Aldesey, all old lace and exquisite evasion, had murmured,
-her lorgnette uplifted: "Quite dear and ingenuous. Such a relief after
-your arid Cubists. What would they make of Mrs. Barney _en bergere_, I'd
-like to know? A jumble of packing-cases with something twisted in a
-corner to signify a bleat."
-
-For the picture, painted with glib assurance and abounding in pink and
-azure, portrayed Adrienne dressed as a shepherdess and carrying a
-flower-wreathed crook.
-
-Adrienne, to-night at all events, was looking very unlike the
-shepherdess, but that might be because of the approaches of her
-maternity. Mrs. Chadwick, when he had last been at Coldbrooks, had told
-him that the baby was expected in May and that Adrienne was wonderful
-about it, dedicating herself to its perfection in thought and deed with
-every conscious hour.
-
-"If only I'd thought about my babies before they came like that, who
-knows what they might have turned out!" she had surmised. "But I was
-very silly, I'm afraid, and the only thing I really did think of was how
-I should dress them. I've always loved butcher's-blue linen for children
-and I must say that mine did look very nice in it. For everyday, you
-know."
-
-Oldmeadow found it extremely difficult to think of Adrienne as a mother;
-it was much easier to think of her as a shepherdess. Such solidities of
-experience gave her even a certain pathos in his eyes, though he was in
-no whit dislodged from his hostility to her. She was as mild, as
-satisfied, apparently, with herself and with existence, as ever, yet her
-eyes and lips expressed fatigue and a purely physical sadness that was
-uncharacteristic, and it was uncharacteristic that she should be rather
-thickly powdered.
-
-They had not really met since the morning of her adjuration to him at
-Coldbrooks and he wondered if she remembered that little scene as
-vividly as he did. She would be very magnanimous did she not remember it
-unpleasantly; and he could imagine her as very magnanimous; yet from the
-fact that she had kept Barney from him he could not believe that she was
-feeling magnanimously.
-
-She watched Barney and Mrs. Aldesey now, as they stood before her
-portrait, and he fancied that the sadness in her eyes, whatever might be
-its cause, deepened a little. When she turned them on him it was with an
-effect of being patiently ready for him. Perhaps, really, she had been
-more patient than pleased all evening.
-
-"So you are settled here for the winter?" he said. "Have you and Barney
-any plans? I've hardly seen anything of him of late."
-
-"We have been so very, very busy, you know," said Adrienne, as if quite
-accepting his right to an explanation.
-
-She was dressed in pale blue and wore, with her pearl necklace, a little
-wreath of pearls in her hair. In her hands she turned, as they talked, a
-small eighteenth-century fan painted in pink and grey and blue, and he
-was aware, as he had been at Coldbrooks, of those slow and rather
-fumbling movements.
-
-"We couldn't well ask friends," she went on, "even the dearest, to come
-and sit on rolls of carpet with us while we drank our tea, could we?
-We've kept our squalor for the family circle. Meg's been with us; so
-dear and helpful; but only Meg and a flying visit once or twice from
-Mother Nell. Nancy couldn't come. But nothing, it seems, will tear Nancy
-from hunting. I feel that strange and rather sad; the absorption of a
-fine young life in such primitiveness."
-
-"Oh, well; it's not her only interest, you know," said Oldmeadow, very
-determined not to allow himself vexation. "Nancy is a creature of such
-deep country roots. Not the kind that grow in London."
-
-"I know," said Adrienne. "And it is just those roots that I want to
-prevent my Barney's growing. Roots like that tie people to routine;
-convention; acceptance. I want Barney to find a wider, freer life. I
-hope he will go into politics. If we have left Coldbrooks and the dear
-people there for these winter months it's because I feel he will be
-better able to form opinions here than in the country. I saw quite well,
-there, that people didn't form opinions; only accepted traditions. I
-want Barney to be free of tradition and to form opinions for himself. He
-has none now," she smiled.
-
-She had been clear before, and secure; but he felt now the added weight
-of her matronly authority. He felt, too, that, while ready for him and,
-perhaps, benevolently disposed, she was far more indifferent to his
-impressions than she had been at Coldbrooks. She had possessed Barney
-before; but how much more deeply she possessed him now and how much
-more definitely she saw what she intended to do with him.
-
-"You must equip him with your opinions," said Oldmeadow, and his voice
-was a good match for hers in benevolence. "I know that you have so many
-well-formed ones."
-
-"Oh, no; never that," said Adrienne. "That's how country vegetables are
-grown; first in frames and then in plots; all guided and controlled. He
-must find his own opinions; quite for himself; quite freely of
-influence. That is the rock upon which Democracy is founded. Nothing is
-more arresting to development than living by other people's opinions."
-
-"But we must get our opinions from somebody and somewhere. The danger of
-democracy is that we don't grow them at all; merely catch them, like
-influenza, from a mob. Not that I disbelieve in democracy."
-
-"Don't you, Mr. Oldmeadow?" She turned her little fan and smiled on him.
-"You believe in liberty, equality, fraternity? That surprises me."
-
-"Democracy isn't incompatible with recognizing that other people are
-wiser than oneself and letting them guide us; quite the contrary. Why
-surprised? Have I seemed so autocratic?"
-
-"It would surprise me very much to learn that you believed in equality,
-to start with that alone"; Adrienne smiled on.
-
-"Well, I own that I don't believe in people who have no capacity for
-opinions being impowered to act as if they had. That's the fallacy
-that's playing the mischief with us, all over the world."
-
-"They never will have opinions worth having unless they are given the
-liberty to look for them. You don't believe in liberty, either, when you
-say that."
-
-"No; not for everybody. Some of our brothers are too young and others
-too stupid to be trusted with it."
-
-"They'll take it for themselves if you don't trust them with it," said
-Adrienne, and he was again aware that though she might be absurd she, at
-all events, was not stupid. "All that we can do in life is to trust, and
-help, and open doors. Only experience teaches. People must follow their
-own lights."
-
-He moved forward another pawn, and though he did not find her stupid he
-was not taking her seriously. "Most people have no lights to follow.
-It's a choice for them between following other people's or resenting and
-trampling on them. That, again, is what we can see happening all over
-the world."
-
-"So it is, you must own, just as I thought; you don't even believe in
-fraternity," said Adrienne, and she continued to smile her weary,
-tranquil smile upon him; "for we cannot feel towards men as towards
-brothers, and trust them, unless we believe that the light shines into
-each human soul."
-
-He saw now that unless they went much deeper, deeper than he could be
-willing, ever, to go with Adrienne Toner, he must submit to letting
-himself appear as worsted. He knew where he believed the roots of trust
-to grow and he did not intend, no never, to say to Adrienne Toner that
-only through the love of God could one at once distrust and love the
-species to which one belonged. He could have shuddered at the thought of
-what she would certainly have found to say about God.
-
-"You've got all sorts of brothers here to-night, haven't you," he
-remarked, putting aside the abstract theme and adjusting his glass.
-"Some of them look as though they didn't recognize the relationship.
-Where did you find our young socialist over there in the corner? He
-looks very menacing. Most of the socialists I've known have been the
-mildest of men."
-
-"He is a friend of Palgrave's. Palgrave brought him to see me. Oh, I'm
-so glad--Gertrude is going to take care of him. She always sees at once
-if anyone looks lonely. That's all right, then."
-
-Oldmeadow was not so sure it was as he observed the eye with which Mr.
-Besley measured the beaming advance of the lady from California.
-
-"I wonder if you would like my dear old friend, Mrs. Prentiss," Adrienne
-continued, watching her method with Mr. Besley. "The Laughing
-Philosopher, Mother used to call her. She is a very rare, strong soul.
-That is her son, talking to Lady Lumley. He's been studying architecture
-in Paris for the past three years. A radiant person. Mrs. Prentiss runs
-a settlement in San Francisco and has a brilliant literary and artistic
-salon. She is a real force in the life of our country."
-
-"Why should you question my appreciation of rarity and strength? I can
-see that she is very kind and that if anybody can melt Mr. Besley she
-will."
-
-"Gertrude would have melted Diogenes," said Adrienne with a fond
-assurance that, though it took the form of playfulness, lacked its
-substance. "I hope they will find each other, for he is rare and strong,
-too. What he needs is warmth and happiness. He makes me think of Shelley
-when he talks."
-
-"He's too well up in statistics to make me think of Shelley," Oldmeadow
-commented. Barney, he saw, from his place beside Mrs. Aldesey at the
-other end of the room, was still watching them, pleased now, it was
-evident, by the appearance of friendly, drifting converse they
-presented. "He's not altogether unknown to me for we often, in our
-review, get our windows broken by his stones; well-thrown, too. He's
-very able. So you thought it might do the British Empire good to face
-him? Well, I suppose it may."
-
-"Which are the British Empire?" asked Adrienne. "You. To begin with."
-
-"Oh, no. Count me out. I'm only a snappy, snuffy scribbler. Good old
-Lord Lumley, of course, with all his vast, well-governed provinces
-shimmering in the Indian sun behind him. And Sir Archibald, who talks so
-loudly in the House. Palgrave didn't bring him, I'll be bound."
-
-"No. Lady Lumley brought him. He and Lord Lumley are certainly more than
-odds and ends." She had an air of making no attempt to meet his
-badinage, if it was that, but of mildly walking past it. "They are, both
-of them, rather splendid people, in spite of their limitations. They've
-accepted tradition, you see, instead of growing opinion. That is their
-only trouble. I was afraid you were going to say Mr. Haviland. He is
-certainly an odd and end."
-
-Mr. Haviland and Mrs. Pope had found each other and were indulging in
-mirthful repartee in the back drawing-room. "I feel safe with Lord
-Lumley and Sir Archibald," Adrienne added.
-
-"I'd certainly rather trust myself in their hands than in Mr. Besley's.
-I'd almost rather trust myself in the hands of Mr. Haviland."
-
-"You mean that they would, at least, keep you comfortable and that Mr.
-Besley wouldn't." She, too, had her forms of repartee.
-
-"I expect it's just what I do mean," he assented. "If Mr. Besley and his
-friends had their way, I for instance, and workers of my type, would
-soon, I suspect, have to forego our tobacco and our chamber-music. We're
-only marketable in a comfortable world. And there are more comfortable
-people, I maintain, under Lord Lumley, than there would be under Mr.
-Besley."
-
-"'Heartily know, when half-gods go, the gods arrive,'" said Adrienne.
-"All revolutions must begin by burning away the evil and the refuse. Not
-that I am a revolutionist, or even a socialist."
-
-"You can't separate good from evil by burning," he said. "You burn them
-both. That's what the French did in their lamentable bonfire, for which
-they've been paying in poorer brains and poorer blood ever since. We
-don't want revolutions. All we want is slow, good-tempered reform.
-Revolutions are always ill-tempered, aren't they, and nothing worth
-doing was ever done in an ill-temper. You are making me very didactic."
-
-"Oh, but I prefer that so much to persiflage," said Adrienne, with her
-tranquillity. "And I am glad to hear what you really believe. But it is
-sad to me that you should see no ardour or glory in anything. With all
-its excesses and errors, I have always felt the French Revolution to be
-a sublime expression of the human spirit."
-
-"It might have been; if they could only have kept their
-heads--metaphorically as well as literally. But the glory and ardour
-were too mixed with hatred and ignorance. I'm afraid I do tend to
-distrust those states of feeling. They tend so easily to
-self-deception."
-
-She was looking at him, quietly and attentively, and he was, for the
-first time since their initial meeting, perhaps, feeling quite
-benevolently towards her; quite as the British Empire might feel towards
-a subject race. It was, therefore, the more difficult to feel anything
-but exasperation when she said, having, evidently, summed up her
-impressions and found her verdict: "Yes. You distrust them. We always
-come back to that, don't we? You distrust yourself, too. So that, when
-you tell me what you believe, you can only do it in the form of making
-fun of my beliefs. I feel about you, Mr. Oldmeadow, what I felt that
-morning when I tried to come near you and you wouldn't let me. I feel it
-more the more I see you; and it makes me sad. It isn't only that you
-distrust ardour and glory, all the sunlight and splendour of life; but
-you are afraid of them; afraid to open your heart to trust. You shut
-your door upon the sunlight and take up your caustic pen; and you don't
-see how the shadows fall about you."
-
-It was indeed a dusty tumble from the quite civilized pavement of their
-interchange, and it was unfortunate that upon his moment of
-discomfiture, when he saw himself as trying to clap the dust off his
-knees and shoulders in time to be presentable, Barney and Mrs. Aldesey
-should have chosen to approach them. Barney, no doubt, imagined it a
-propitious moment in which to display to Mrs. Aldesey his wife's and his
-friend's amity.
-
-Adrienne was perfectly composed. She had borne her testimony and, again,
-done her best for him, pointing out to him that the first step towards
-enfranchisement was to open his door to the sunlight that she could so
-bountifully supply. She turned a clear, competent eye upon her husband
-and his companion.
-
-"Well, dear, and what have you and Roger been so deep in?" Barney
-inquired, looking down at her with a fondness in which, all the same,
-Oldmeadow detected the anxiety that had hovered in his eye all evening.
-"You've seemed frightfully deep."
-
-"We have been," said Adrienne, looking up at him. "In liberty, equality
-and fraternity; all the things I believe in and that Mr. Oldmeadow
-doesn't. I can't imagine how he gets on at all, he believes in so few
-things. It must be such a sad, dim, groping world to live in when there
-are no stars above to look at and no hands below to hold."
-
-"Oh, well, you see," said Mrs. Aldesey with her dragging smile, "his
-ancestors didn't sign the Declaration of Independence."
-
-"We don't need ancestors to do that," Adrienne smiled back. "All of us
-sign it for ourselves--all of us who have accepted our birthright and
-taken the gifts that our great, modern, deep-hearted world hold out to
-us. You are an American, Mrs. Aldesey, so you find it easy to believe in
-freedom, don't you?"
-
-"Very easy; for myself; but not for other people," Mrs. Aldesey replied
-and Oldmeadow saw at once, with an added discomfort, that she
-underestimated, because of Adrienne's absurdity, Adrienne's
-intelligence. "But then the very name of any abstraction--freedom,
-humanity, what you will--has always made me feel, at once, dreadfully
-sleepy. It's not ever having had my mind trained, Mrs. Barney. Now
-yours was, beautifully, I can see."
-
-Adrienne looked up at her, for Mrs. Aldesey, her lace about her
-shoulders, her lorgnette in her hands, had not seated herself, and it
-was further evident to Oldmeadow that she weighed Mrs. Aldesey more
-correctly than Mrs. Aldesey weighed her. "Very carefully, if not
-beautifully," she said. "Have I made you sleepy already? But I don't
-want to go on talking about abstractions. I want to talk about Mr.
-Oldmeadow. The truth is, Barney," and her voice, as she again turned her
-eyes on her husband, had again the form but not the substance of gaiety,
-"the truth is that he's a lonely, lonely bachelor and that we ought to
-arrange a marriage for him, you and I. Since he doesn't believe in
-freedom, he won't mind having a marriage arranged, will he?--if we can
-find a rare, sweet, gifted girl."
-
-Barney had become red. "Roger's been teasing you, darling. Nobody
-believes in freedom more. Don't let him take you in. He's an awful old
-humbug with his Socratic method. He upsets you before you know where you
-are. He's always been like that."
-
-"Yes; hasn't he," Mrs. Aldesey murmured.
-
-"But he hasn't upset me at all," said Adrienne. "I grant that he was
-trying to, that he was doing his very best to give me a tumble; but I
-quite see through him and he doesn't conceal himself from me in the very
-least. He doesn't really believe in freedom, however much he may have
-taken _you_ in, Barney; he'd think it wholesome, of course, that you
-should believe in it. That's his idea, you see; to give people what he
-thinks wholesome; to choose for them. It's the lack of faith all
-through. But the reason is that he's lonely; dreadfully lonely, and
-because of that he's grown to be, as he says, snappy and snuffy; so that
-we must borrow a page from his book and find what is wholesome for him.
-I know all the symptoms so well. I've had friends just like that. It's a
-starved heart and having nobody to be fonder of than anyone else; no one
-near at all. He must be happily married as soon as possible. A happy
-marriage is the best gift of life, isn't it, Mrs. Aldesey? If we haven't
-known that we haven't known our best selves, have we?"
-
-"It may be; we mayn't have," said Mrs. Aldesey, cheerfully; but she was
-not liking it. "I can't say. Am I to have a hand in choosing his bride?
-I know his tastes, I think. We're quite old friends, you see."
-
-"No one who doesn't believe in freedom for other people may help to
-choose her," said Adrienne, with a curious blitheness. "That's why he
-mayn't choose her himself. We must go quite away to find her; away from
-ceilings and conventions and out into the sunlight. I don't believe
-happiness is found under ceilings. And it's what we all need more than
-anything else. Even tobacco and chamber-music don't make you a bit
-happy, do they, Mr. Oldmeadow? and if one isn't happy one can't know
-anything about anything. Not really."
-
-"Alas!" sighed Mrs. Aldesey, keeping up her end, but not very
-successfully, while Barney fixed his eyes upon his wife. "And I thought
-I'd found it this evening, under this ceiling. Well, I shall cherish my
-illusion, since you tell me it's only that, and thank you for it, Mrs.
-Barney. The Lumleys are going to give me a lift and I see that their car
-has been announced."
-
-"Stay on a bit, Roger," Barney murmured, as the Lumleys approached.
-"I've seen nothing of you for ages."
-
-Adrienne rose to greet her parting guests.
-
-"Darling Adrienne, good-night. It's been perfectly delightful, your
-little party," said Lady Lumley, who was large, light and easily
-pleased; an English equivalent of the lady from California, but without
-the sprightliness. "Your dear young Mr. Prentiss is a treasure. He's
-been telling me about Sicilian temples. We _must_ get there one day.
-Mrs. Prentiss says they will come to us for a week-end before they go.
-How extraordinarily interesting she is. Don't forget that you are coming
-on the fifteenth."
-
-"I shall get up a headache, first thing!" Lord Lumley stated in a loud,
-jocular whisper, reverting to a favourite jest on Adrienne's powers.
-"That's the thing to go in for, eh? I won't let Charlie cut me out this
-time. Not a night's sleep till you come!"
-
-"Go in for as many as you like, dear Lord Lumley," said Adrienne,
-smiling her assurance of being able to deal with a series.
-
-"Good-night, Mrs. Barney," said Mrs. Aldesey. "Leave me a little
-standing-room under the stars, won't you."
-
-"There's always standing-room under the stars," said Adrienne. "We don't
-exclude each other there."
-
-The party showed no other signs of breaking up. The Laughing Philosopher
-had melted, or, at all events, mastered Mr. Besley, and talked to him
-with, now and again, a maternal hand laid on his knee. Mr. Haviland and
-Mrs. Pope still laughed in the back drawing-room, Meg and Mr. Prentiss
-had come together again and Sir Archibald was engaged with a pretty
-girl. After looking around upon them all, Adrienne, with the appearance
-of a deeper fatigue, sank back upon her sofa.
-
-"You know, darling," Barney smiled candidly upon his wife, "you rather
-put your foot in it just now. Mrs. Aldesey's marriage isn't happy. I
-ought to have warned you."
-
-"How do you mean not happy, Barney?" Adrienne looked up at him. "Isn't
-Mr. Aldesey dead?"
-
-"Not at all dead. She left him some years ago, didn't she, Roger? He
-lives in New York. It's altogether a failure."
-
-Adrienne looked down at her fan. "I didn't know. But one can't avoid
-speaking of success sometimes, even to failures."
-
-"Of course not. Another time you will know."
-
-Adrienne seemed to meditate, but without compunction. "That was what she
-meant, then, by saying she believed in freedom for herself but not for
-other people."
-
-"Meant? How do you mean? She was joking."
-
-"If she left him. It was she who left him?"
-
-"I don't know anything about it," Barney spoke now with definite
-vexation and Oldmeadow, in his corner of the sofa, his arms folded, his
-eyes on the cornice, gave him no help. "Except that, yes, certainly;
-it's she who left him. She's not a deserted wife. Anything but."
-
-"It's only Mr. Aldesey who is the deserted husband," Adrienne turned her
-fan and kept her eyes on it. "It's only he who can't be free. Forgive me
-if she's a special friend of yours, Mr. Oldmeadow; but it explains. I
-felt something so brittle, so unreal in her, charming and gracious as
-she is. It is so very wrong for a woman to do that, I think."
-
-"Wrong?" Barney echoed, staring at Oldmeadow while this firm hand was
-laid upon his Egeria. "What the dickens do you mean, darling? She is a
-special friend of Roger's. You don't surely mean to say a woman must,
-under all circumstances, stick to a man she doesn't love?"
-
-"Anything but that, Barney. I think that she should leave him and set
-him free. It's quite plain to me that if a wife will not live with her
-husband it is her duty to divorce him. Then, at any rate, he can try for
-happiness again."
-
-"Divorce him, my dear child!" Barney was trying to keep up appearances
-but the note of marital severity came through and as it sounded Adrienne
-raised her eyes to his: "It's not so easy as all that! Aldesey, whatever
-his faults, may have given her no cause to divorce him, and I take it
-you'll not suggest that Mrs. Aldesey should give him cause to divorce
-her."
-
-On her sofa, more pallid under her powder, more sunken than before, and
-with the queer squashed-in look emphasized, Adrienne kept steady eyes
-uplifted to her husband. "Not at all, dear Barney," she returned and
-Oldmeadow, though hardened against the pathos of her physical
-disability, saw that she spoke with difficulty, "but I think that you
-confuse the real with the conventional wrong. Mrs. Aldesey would not
-care to face any unconventionality; that is quite apparent. She would
-draw her skirts aside from any conventional wrong-doing. But the real
-wrong she would be blind to; the wrong of keeping anyone bound in the
-emptiness you have made for them. Setting free is not so strange and
-terrible a matter as you seem to imagine. It's quite easy for brave,
-unshackled people."
-
-"Well, I must really be off," Oldmeadow now seized the occasion to
-declare. "I believe, as a matter of fact, that Mr. Aldesey lives very
-contentedly in New York, collecting French prints and giving excellent
-dinners. Anything open and scandalous would be as distasteful to him as
-to his wife. They are, both of them, happier apart; that's all it comes
-to. So you must read your lessons, even by proxy, to more authentic
-misdemeanants, Mrs. Barney. All right, Barney. Don't come down. I'll
-hope to see you both again quite soon."
-
-So he got away, concealing as best he might, his sense of tingling
-anger. But it died away to a sense of chill as he walked down Park Lane.
-Was not Barney unhappy, already? What did she say to him when she got
-him to herself? He felt sure that she had never bargained for a husband
-who could look at her with ill-temper.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-"Roger, see here, I've only come to say one word--about the absurd
-little-matter of last night. Only one; and then we'll never speak of it
-again," said poor Barney.
-
-He had come as soon as the very next day--to exonerate, not to
-apologize; that was evident at once. Oldmeadow had not long to wait
-before learning what she had said to him when she got him to herself,
-nor long to wait before realizing that if Barney had been unhappy last
-night he thought himself happy to-day.
-
-"Really, my dear boy," he said, "it's not worth talking about."
-
-"Oh, but we must talk about it," said Barney. He was red and spoke
-quickly. "It upset her frightfully; it made her perfectly miserable. She
-cried for hours, Roger," Barney's voice dropped to a haggard note. "You
-know, though she bears up so marvellously, she's ill. She doesn't admit
-illness and that makes it harder for her, because it simply bewilders
-her when she finds herself on edge like this and her body refusing to
-obey her. The baby is coming in May, you know."
-
-"I know, my dear Barney. The evening was very fatiguing for her. I saw
-it all I think. I noticed from the beginning how tired she looked."
-
-"Horribly tired. Horribly fatiguing. I'm glad you saw it. For that's
-really what I came to explain. She was tired to begin with and Mrs.
-Aldesey put her on edge. I think I saw that myself at dinner--and, oh,
-before that; on the day we had tea with her, when we first came up, in
-November--Adrienne felt then that Mrs. Aldesey didn't understand or care
-for her. You know she is so full of love and sympathy for everybody
-herself that she is literally sickened when she is treated in that
-artificial, worldly way. And you know, Roger, Mrs. Aldesey _is_
-artificial and worldly."
-
-That was how she had put it to Barney, of course. But Oldmeadow saw
-further than Mrs. Aldesey and her artificiality. He saw a dishevelled
-and weeping Adrienne stricken to the heart by the sense of threatened
-foundations, aghast by what she had seen in her husband's eyes; and he
-was aware, even while he resented having it put upon Lydia, of a
-curious, reluctant pity for the pale, weeping figure. Lydia had,
-obviously, displeased her; but Lydia had been the mere occasion; she
-could have dealt easily enough with Lydia. It had been the revelation
-that Barney could oppose her, could almost, for a moment, dislike her,
-that had set her universe rocking. Her first taste of reality, then. The
-thought came rather grimly, with the pity. After all it was their best
-chance of happiness; that she should learn to accept herself as a person
-who could be opposed, even disliked, in flashes, while still loved. He
-had sat silent while he thought, one of his silences which, when he
-emerged from them, he often recognized as over-long. Barney must have
-felt the weight of all he did not say when all that he found to say was:
-"What it comes to, doesn't it, is that they neither of them take much to
-each other. Lydia is certainly conventional."
-
-"Ah, but Lady Lumley is conventional, too," said Barney with an
-irrepressible air of checkmate. "Hordes of conventional people adore
-Adrienne. It's a question of the heart. There are people who are
-conventional without being worldly. It's worldliness that stifles
-Adrienne. It's what she was saying last night: 'They have only ceilings;
-I must have the sky.' Not that she thinks _you_ worldly, dear old boy."
-
-"I hope you try to interpret me to her kindly," said Oldmeadow, smiling.
-Even at the moment when Barney, all innocently, was revealing to him
-Adrienne's tactics, the fragments of her vocabulary imbedded in his
-speech were affording him amusement. "You must try and persuade her that
-I've quite a fondness for the sky myself, and even published a volume of
-verse in my youth."
-
-"I do. Of course I do," said Barney eagerly. "And I gave her your poems,
-long ago. She loved them. It's your sardonic pessimism she doesn't
-understand--in anyone who could have written like that when they were
-young. She never met anything like it before in her life. And the way
-you never seem to take anything seriously. It makes her dreadfully sorry
-for you, even while she finds it so hard to accept in anyone she cares
-for--because she really does so care for you, Roger"--there was a note
-of appeal in Barney's voice--"and does so long to find a way out for
-you. It was a joke, of course; but all the same we've often wished you
-could find the right woman to marry."
-
-Barney, as he had done last night, grew very red again, so that it was
-apparent to Oldmeadow that not only the marriage but the woman--the
-rare, gifted girl--had been discussed between him and his wife.
-
-"Adrienne thinks everyone ought to be married, you see," he tried to
-pass it off. "Since we are so happy ourselves."
-
-"I see," said Oldmeadow. "There's another thing you must try to persuade
-her of: that I'm not at all _un jeune homme a marier_, and that if I
-ever seek a companion it will probably be some one like myself, some one
-sardonic and pessimistic. If I fixed my affections on the lovely girl,
-you see, it isn't likely they'd be reciprocated."
-
-"Oh, but"--Barney's eagerness again out-stepped his
-discretion--"wouldn't the question of money count there, Roger? If she
-had plenty of money, you know, or you had; enough for both; and a place
-in the country? Of course, it's all fairy-tale; but Adrienne is a
-fairy-tale person; material things don't count with her at all. She
-waves them away and wants other people to wave them away, too. What she
-always says is: 'What does my money _mean_ unless it's to open doors for
-people I love?' She's starting that young Besley, you know, just because
-of Palgrave; setting him up as editor of a little review--rotten it is,
-I think--but Adrienne says people must follow their own lights. And it's
-just that; she'd love to open doors for you, if it could make you
-happy."
-
-Oldmeadow at this, after a moment of receptivity, began to laugh softly;
-but the humour of the situation grew upon him until he at last threw
-back his head and indulged in open and prolonged mirth. Barney watched
-him bashfully. "You're not angry, I see," he ventured. "You don't think
-it most awful cheek, I mean?"
-
-"I think it is most awful cheek; but I'm not angry; not a bit," said
-Oldmeadow. "Fairy-godmothers are nothing if not cheeky; are they? Oh, I
-know you meant your, not her, cheek. But it's the fault of the
-fairy-godmother, all the same, and you must convince her that I'm not in
-love with anybody, and that if ever I am she'll have to content herself
-with my small earnings and a flat in Chelsea."
-
-So he jested; but, when his friend was gone, he realized that he was a
-little angry all the same and he feared that his mirth had not been able
-to conceal from Barney that what he really found it was confounded
-impudence. Barney's face had worn, as he departed, the look of mingled
-gratitude and worry and Barney must feel, as well as he felt, that their
-interview hadn't really cleared up anything--except his own readiness to
-overlook the absurdities of Barney's wife. What became more and more
-clear to himself was that unless he could enable Adrienne to enroll his
-name on her banner she would part him from Barney and that her very
-benevolence was a method. The more he thought of it the more
-uncomfortable he felt, and his inner restlessness became at length an
-impulse urging him out to take counsel or, rather, seek solace, with the
-friend from whom Adrienne could never part him. He would go and have tea
-with Lydia Aldesey and with the more eagerness from the fact that he was
-aware of a slight dissatisfaction in regard to Lydia. She had not
-altogether pleased him last night. She had put herself in the wrong; she
-had blundered; she hadn't behaved with the skill and tact requisite; and
-to elicit from her a confession of ineptitude would make his sense of
-solace the more secure.
-
-The day was a very different day from the one in April when he had
-first gone to ask Mrs. Aldesey for information about people called
-Toner. It was early February, dull and cold and damp. No rain was
-falling, but the trees were thick with moisture and Oldmeadow had his
-hands deep in his pockets and the collar of his coat turned up about his
-ears. As he crossed the Serpentine, an electric brougham passed him,
-going slowly, and he had a glimpse within it, short but very vivid, of
-Adrienne, Meg, and Captain Hayward.
-
-Adrienne, wearing a small arrangement of black velvet that came down
-over her brows, was holding Meg's hand and, while she spoke, was looking
-steadily at her, her face as white as that of a Pierrot. Meg listened,
-gloomily it seemed, and Captain Hayward's handsome countenance, turned
-for refuge towards the window, showed an extreme embarrassment.
-
-They passed and Oldmeadow pursued his way, filled with a disagreeable
-astonishment though, absurdly, his mind was at first occupied only in an
-attempt to recover a submerged memory that Captain Hayward's demeanour
-suggested. It came at last in an emancipating flash and he saw again,
-after how many years, the golden-brown head of his rather silly setter,
-John, turned aside in shy yet dignified repudiation, that still, by a
-dim, sick smile, attempted to conceal distress and to enter into the
-spirit of the game--as a kitten was held up for his contemplation. A
-kitten was a very inadequate analogy, no doubt, for the theme of
-Adrienne's discourse; yet Captain Hayward's reaction to a situation for
-which he found himself entirely unprepared was markedly like John's. And
-he, like John, had known that the game was meant to be at his expense.
-John and Captain Hayward got Oldmeadow out of the park before he had
-taken full possession of his astonishment and could ask himself why, if
-Adrienne were engaged in rescuing Meg from her illicit attachment, she
-should do it in the company of the young man. Yet, strangely enough, he
-felt, as he walked, a growing sense of reassurance. For an emergency
-like this, after all, given amenable subjects, Adrienne was the right
-person. He hadn't dreamed it to be such an emergency; but since it was,
-Adrienne would pull them through. As she would have laid her hand on the
-head of Bacchus and reformed him, so she would lay it on the head of
-Captain Hayward.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-The incident put Mrs. Aldesey quite out of his mind, and it was not till
-he stood on her doorstep and rang her bell that he remembered his
-grievance against her and realized that it had been made more definite
-by this glimpse of Adrienne's significance. That his friend was prepared
-for him was evident at his first glance; she had even, he saw, been
-expecting him, for she broke out at once with: "Oh, my dear Roger--what
-_are_ you going to do with her?"
-
-He was actually pleased to find himself putting her, with some grimness,
-in her place. "What is she going to do with us? you mean. You underrate
-Mrs. Barney's capacity, let me tell you, my dear friend."
-
-But Mrs. Aldesey was not easily quelled. "Underrate her! Not I! She's a
-Juggernaut if ever there was one. Her capacity is immense. She'll roll
-on and she'll crush flat. That poor Barney! She is as blind as a
-Juggernaut, but _he_ will come to see--alas! he is seeing
-already--though you and I danced round him with veils and cymbals--that
-people won't stand being pelted with platitudes from soup to dessert.
-The Lumleys will, of course; it's their natural diet; though even they
-like their platitudes served with a touch of _sauce piquante_; but
-Rosamund Pope told me that she felt black and blue all over and Cuthbert
-Haviland--malicious toad--imitates her already to perfection: dreadful
-little voice, dreadful little smile, dreadful little quotations and all.
-It will be one of his London gags. That shepherdess! My dear Roger,
-don't pretend to me that _you_ don't see it!"
-
-Oldmeadow, sunken in the chair opposite her, surveyed her over his
-clasped hands with an air of discouragement.
-
-"What I'm most seeing at the moment is that she's made you angry," he
-remarked. "If what you say were all the truth, why should she make you
-angry? She's not as blind as a Juggernaut. That's where you made your
-mistake. She'll only crush the people who don't lie down before her. She
-knows perfectly well where she is going--and over whom. So be careful,
-that is my advice, and keep out of her way; unless you want to lose a
-toe or a finger."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey showed, at this, that he had arrested her. In spite of the
-element of truth in Adrienne's verdict upon her he knew her to be, when
-veils and cymbals were cast aside, a sincere and gallant creature. She
-did not attempt to hide from him now and, after a moment of mutual
-contemplation, she laughed a little, with not unreal mirth and said: "I
-suppose I am angry. I suppose I'm even spiteful. It's her patronage, you
-know. Her suffocating superiority. To have to stand there, for his sake,
-and _take_ it! You overrate her, Roger. No woman not abysmally stupid
-could say the things she says."
-
-"Your mistake again. She's able to say them because she's never met
-irony or criticism. She's not stupid," he found his old verdict. "Only
-absurd. You know, you gave yourself away to her. You showed her what you
-thought of her. You patronized _her_."
-
-"Is _no_ retaliation permitted?" Mrs. Aldesey moaned. "Must one accept
-it all? Be scourged with the stars and Browning and then bow one's head
-to her caresses? After all, Barney is your friend, not mine, and it's
-as your friend that I've tried to be decent to his wife. But she hates
-me like poison. She gave herself away, too, you know. I liked the way
-she excluded me from her prospects for your welfare. And of course she
-knew my marriage wasn't a happy one."
-
-"I don't think that she did. No; I don't think so. You _are_ poison to
-her--cold poison," said Oldmeadow. "Don't imagine for a moment she
-didn't see that you were dancing about him with veils and cymbals. She
-didn't give herself away, for she had nothing to conceal. She was candid
-and you weren't. She didn't pretend that you were under the stars with
-her; while you kept up appearances."
-
-"But what's to become of your Barney if we don't keep them up!" Mrs.
-Aldesey cried. "Is he to be allowed to see that nobody can stand
-her--except people he can't stand? He'll have to live, then, with Mrs.
-and Mr. Prentiss. Did you try to talk to Mrs. Prentiss? Do you know that
-she told me that death was 'perfectly sublime'?"
-
-"Perhaps it is. Perhaps she'll find it so. They all seem to think well
-of death, out in California"--Oldmeadow allowed himself to relax from
-his admonitory severity. "Mrs. Prentiss isn't as silly as she seems, I
-expect. And you exaggerate Barney's sensitiveness. He'd get on very well
-with Mrs. Prentiss if you weren't there to show him you found her a
-bore. He has a very simple side and we must hope it may become simpler.
-The only chance for Barney, I see it more and more, is that we should
-efface ourselves as much as possible. The people who find the Prentisses
-a bore, I mean. And it won't be difficult for us to do that. She will
-see to it that we are effaced. Only, of course, it's a grief. I'm so
-fond of him"; and as Oldmeadow stretched forth his legs and put his
-hands in his pockets there drifted across his mind, in a thin, sharp,
-knife-like stroke, the memory of Barney--tall eighteen-year-old
-Barney--with dear old Effie, luxuriously upturned in his arms, being
-softly scratched--Barney's hand with a cat was that of an expert--and
-told that she was the best and most beautiful of cats.
-
-"It's a great shame," said Mrs. Aldesey; "I've been thinking my spiteful
-thoughts, too, instead of sympathizing with you. Of course, if it's any
-consolation to you, one usually does lose one's friends when they marry.
-But it needn't have been as bad as this. What a thousand pities he
-couldn't have fallen in love with a nice girl of his own kind. You
-couldn't do anything about it when you went down in the spring?"
-
-Oldmeadow had never said anything to Mrs. Aldesey about his hopes for
-Nancy. He had a secretive instinct for keeping his friendships in
-compartments and discussed only those portions that overflowed.
-"Nothing," he said. "And the mischief was that I went down hostile, as
-you warned me against doing. Barney saw at once that I didn't care for
-her; and she saw it at once. He even forced a sort of expression of
-opinion from me and I know now that it's always glooming there at the
-back of his mind when he sees me. It was quite useless. Once he'd fallen
-under her spell it was all up with him. She has her singular power and,
-for a man in love with her, her singular charm. Even I, you know,
-understand that."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey contemplated him. "I confess I can't," she said. "She is so
-desperately usual. I've seen her everywhere, ever since I can remember.
-Attending lectures at the Sorbonne; listening to Wagner at Bayreuth;
-having dresses tried on at Worth's; sitting in the halls of a hundred
-European hotels. She is the most unescapable form of the American woman;
-only not _du peuple_ because of the money and opportunity that has also
-extirpated everything racy, provincial and individual."
-
-"I don't know," said Oldmeadow. He mused, his hands clasped behind his
-head. "She's given me all sorts of new insights." His eyes, after his
-wont, were on the cornice and his friend's contemplation, relaxed a
-little from its alert responsiveness, allowed itself a certain
-conjectural softness as she watched him. "I feel," he went on, "since
-knowing her, that I understand America, her America, better than you do.
-You're engaged in avoiding rather than in understanding it, aren't you?
-What you underrate, what Americans of your type don't see--because, as
-you say, it's so oppressively usual--is the power of her type. If it is
-a type; if she is as ordinary as you say. It's something bred into them
-by the American assumption of the fundamental rightness of life; a
-confidence unknown before in the history of the world. An individual,
-not an institutional or social, confidence. They do, actually, seem to
-take their stand on the very universe itself. Whereas the rest of us
-have always had churches or classes to uphold us. They have all the
-absurdities and crudities of mere individualism. They have all the
-illusions of their ignorance. Yet I sometimes imagine, after I've seen
-her, that it's a power we haven't in the least taken into our
-reckoning. Isn't it the only racial thing that America has produced--the
-only thing that makes them a race? It makes them independent of us, when
-we've always imagined, in our complacency, that they were dependent. It
-enables them to take what we have to give, but to do with it what they,
-not we, think best. And by Jove, who knows how far it will carry them!
-Not you, my dear Lydia. You'll stay where you are--with us."
-
-His eyes had come back and down to her, and her gaze resumed its
-alertness and showed him that she found the picture he drew disquieting.
-"You mean it's a new kind of civilization that will menace ours?"
-
-"It's not a civilization; that's just what it's not. It's a state of
-mind. Perhaps it will menace us. Perhaps it does. We've underrated it;
-of that I'm sure; and underrated power is always dangerous. It will be
-faith without experience against experience without faith. What we must
-try for, if we're not to be worsted, is to have both--to keep experience
-and to keep faith, too. Only so shall we be able to hold our own against
-Mrs. Barney. And even so we shan't be able to prevent her doing things
-to us--and for us. She'll do things for us that we can't do for
-ourselves." His mind reverted to the faces of the brougham. "In that way
-she's bound to worst us. We'll have to accept things from her."
-
-Oldmeadow's eyes had gone back to the cornice and, in the silence that
-followed, Mrs. Aldesey, as she sat with folded arms, played absently
-with the lace ruffle at her wrist. The lace was an heirloom, like her
-rings, and the contemplation of them may have afforded her some
-sustainment. "She's made you feel all that, then," she remarked. "With
-her crook and her hat and her rose-wreathed lamb. If such a sardonic
-old lion as you does really grow bodeful before the rose-wreathed lamb
-there is, I own, reason to fear for the future. I'm glad I'm growing
-old. It would hurt me to see her cutting your claws."
-
-"Oh, she won't hurt us!" Oldmeadow smiled at her. "It's rather we who
-will hurt her--by refusing to lie down with her lamb. If that's any
-comfort to you."
-
-"Not in the least. I'm not being malicious. You don't call it hurt,
-then, to be effaced?"
-
-"Smothered in rose-leaves, eh?" he suggested. "It would be suffocating
-rather than suffering. She does give me that feeling. But you'll make
-her suffer--you have, you know--rather than she you."
-
-"I really don't know about that," said Mrs. Aldesey. "You make me quite
-uncomfortable, Roger. You make me superstitious. She's done that to me
-already. I refuse to take her seriously, but I shall avoid her. That's
-what it comes to. Like not giving the new moon a chance to look at you
-over your left shoulder."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-
-On a morning in early March Oldmeadow found, among the letters waiting
-for him on his breakfast-table, one from Nancy. Nancy and he, with all
-their fondness, seldom wrote to each other and he was aware, on seeing
-her writing, of the presage of something disagreeable that the
-unexpected often brings.
-
- "Dear Roger," he read, and in his first glance he saw his presage
- fulfilled. "We are in great trouble. Aunt Eleanor has asked me to
- write because she is too ill and it is to me as well as to her that
- Meg has written and she wants you to see Barney at once. Here are
- Meg's letters. She has gone away with Captain Hayward. Aunt Eleanor
- and Mother think that Barney may be able to persuade Adrienne to
- bring her back. No one else, we feel convinced, will have any
- influence with her. Do anything, anything you can, dear Roger.
- Mother and I are almost frightened for Aunt Eleanor. She walks
- about wringing her hands and crying, and she goes up to Meg's room
- and opens the door and looks in--as if she could not believe she
- would not find her there. It is heart-breaking to see her. We
- depend on you, dear Roger.
-
- "Yours ever
-
- "NANCY."
-
-
-
-"Good Lord!" Oldmeadow muttered while, in lightning flashes, there
-passed across his mind the face of John the setter and a Pierrot's face,
-white under a low line of black velvet. He took up Meg's letters,
-written from a Paris hotel.
-
- "DARLING MOTHER, I know it will make you frightfully miserable and
- I can't forgive myself for that; but it had to be. Eric and I cared
- too much and it wasn't life at all, going on as we were apart. Try,
- darling Mother, to see it as we do see things nowadays. Adrienne
- will explain it all--and you must believe her. You know what a
- saint she is and she has been with us in it all, understanding
- everything and helping us to be straight. Everything will come
- right. Iris Hayward will set Eric free, of course; she doesn't care
- one bit for him and has made him frightfully unhappy ever since
- they married, and she wants to marry some one else herself--only of
- course she'd never be brave enough to do it this way. When Eric is
- free, we will marry at once and come home, and, you will see, there
- are so many sensible people nowadays; we shall not have a bad time
- at all. Everything will come right, I'm sure; and even if it
- didn't, in that conventional way--I could not give him up. No one
- will ever love me as he does.
-
- "Your devoted child
-
- "MEG."
-
-
-
-That was the first: the second ran:
-
- "DEAREST NANCY,--I know you'll think it frightfully wrong; you are
- such an old-fashioned little dear and you told me often enough that
- I oughtn't to see so much of Eric. Only of course that couldn't
- have prepared you for this and I expect Aunt Monica won't let you
- come and stay with us for ages. Never mind; when you marry, you'll
- see, I'm sure. Love is the _only_ thing, really. But I should hate
- to feel I'd lost you and I'm sure I haven't. I want to ask you,
- Nancy dear, to do all you can to make Mother _take_ it. I feel,
- just because you will think it so wrong, that you may be more good
- to her than Adrienne--who doesn't think it wrong at all--at least
- not in Mother's way. It would be frightfully unfair if Mother
- blamed Adrienne. She did all she could to show us where we stood
- and to make us play the game, and it would be pretty hard luck if
- people were to be down on her now because we _have_ played it. We
- might have been really rotters if it hadn't been for Adrienne;
- cheats and hypocrites, I mean; stealing our happiness. I know
- Adrienne can bring Barney round. It's only Mother who troubles me,
- just because she is such a child that it's almost impossible to
- make her see reason. She doesn't recognize right and wrong unless
- they're in the boxes she's accustomed to. Everything is in a box
- for poor, darling old Mummy. But I mustn't go on. Be the dear old
- pal you always have and help me out as well as you can.
-
- "Your loving
-
- "MEG."
-
-
-
-"Good Lord," Oldmeadow muttered once more. He pushed back his chair and
-rose from the table in the bright spring sunlight. He had the feeling,
-almost paternal, of disgrace and a public stripping. He saw Eleanor
-Chadwick stopping at Meg's door to look in at the forsaken room,
-distraught in her grief and incomprehension. He saw Nancy's pale,
-troubled face and Monica Averil's, pinched and dry in its sober dismay.
-And then again, lighted by a flare at once tawdry and menacing, the
-face of Adrienne Toner, the intruder, the insufferable meddler and
-destroyer, a Pierrot among fire-works that had, at last, set fire to the
-house. He found a taxi on the Embankment and drove to Connaught Square.
-Freshly decorated with window-boxes, the pleasant, spacious house had a
-specially smiling air of welcome, but the butler's demeanour told him
-that something of the calamity had already penetrated. Adrienne, if she
-had not heard before, would have had her letters; Barney, who had been
-kept in the dark, would have been enlightened, and the irrepressible
-exclamations that must have passed between them seemed dimly reflected
-on the man's formal countenance. Mrs. Chadwick, he told Oldmeadow, was
-breakfasting upstairs with Mr. Chadwick, and he ushered him into
-Barney's study.
-
-Oldmeadow waited for some time among the Post Impressionist pictures,
-one of which remained for ever afterwards vividly fixed in his memory of
-the moment; a chaotic yet determined picture; featureless yet, as it
-were, conveying through its unrecognizable elements the meaning of a
-grin. And, as he stood in the centre of the room and looked away from
-the derisive canvas, he saw on Barney's desk photographs of Adrienne,
-three photographs of her; one as a child, a sickly looking but beaming
-child; one in early girlhood, singularly childlike still; and one in her
-bridal dress of only the other day, it seemed, mild and radiant in her
-unbecoming veil and wreath.
-
-It was Barney who came to him. Poor Barney. He was more piteously boyish
-than ever before to his friend's eye; so beautifully arrayed, all in
-readiness for a happy London day with his angel, so pale, so haggard
-and perplexed. "Look here, Roger," were his first words, "do you mind
-coming upstairs to Adrienne's room? She's not dressed yet; not very
-well, you know. You've heard, then, too?"
-
-"I've just heard from Nancy. Why upstairs? I'd rather not. We'd better
-talk this over alone, Barney. All the more if your wife isn't well."
-
-"Yes; yes; I know. I told her it would be better. But she insists."
-
-The effect of a general misery Barney gave was heightened now by his
-unhappy flush. "She doesn't want us to talk it over without her, you
-see. She comes into it all too much. From Nancy, did you say? What's
-Nancy got to do with this odious affair?"
-
-"Only what Meg has put upon her--to interpret her as kindly as she can
-to your mother. Here are the letters. I'd really rather not go
-upstairs."
-
-"I know you'll hold Adrienne responsible--partly at least. She expects
-that. She knows that I do, too; she's quite prepared. I only heard half
-an hour ago and of course it knocked me up frightfully. Meg! My little
-sister! Why she's hardly more than a child!"
-
-"I'm afraid she's a good deal more than a child. I'm afraid we can't
-hold Meg to be not responsible, though, obviously, she'd never have
-taken such a step unaided and unabetted. Just read these letters,
-Barney; it won't take a moment to decide what's best to be done. I'll go
-down to your mother and you must be off, at once, to Paris, and see if
-you can fetch Meg back."
-
-But after Barney, with a hesitating hand and an uncertain glance, had
-taken the letters and begun to read them, the door was opened with
-decorous deliberation and Adrienne's French maid appeared, the tall,
-sallow, capable-looking woman whom Oldmeadow remembered having seen at
-Coldbrooks a year ago.
-
-"Madame requests that _ces Messieurs_ should come up at once; she awaits
-them," Josephine announced in unemphatic but curiously potent accents.
-Adrienne's potency, indeed, was of a sort that flowed through all her
-agents and Oldmeadow thought that he detected, in the melancholy gaze
-bent upon Barney, reprobation for his failure to attain the standard set
-for him by a devotion wholehearted and reverential. Mrs. Chadwick, he
-remembered, had said that Adrienne's maid adored her.
-
-"Yes, yes. We're coming at once, Josephine," said Barney. Reading the
-letters as he went, he moved to the door and Oldmeadow found himself,
-perforce, following.
-
-He had not yet visited the morning-room and even before his eyes rested
-on Adrienne they saw, hanging above her head where she sat on a little
-sofa, a full-length portrait of Mrs. Toner; in white, standing against a
-stone balustrade and holding lilies; seagulls above her and a background
-of blue sea.
-
-Adrienne was also in white, but she wore over her long, loose dress a
-little jacket of pink silk edged with swan's down and the lace cap
-falling about her neck was rosetted with pink ribbon. It was curious to
-see her in this almost frivolous array, recalling the shepherdess, when
-her face expressed, for the first time in his experience of her, an
-anger and an agitation all the more apparent for its control. She was
-pale yet flushed, odd streaks of colour running up from her throat and
-dying in the pallor of her cheeks. Her condition had evidently much
-affected her complexion and her nose, through its layer of powder,
-showed a pinched and reddened tint. It made Oldmeadow uncomfortable to
-look at her; her mask of calm was held at such a cost; she was at once
-so determinedly herself and so helplessly altered; and it was not with
-an automatic courtesy only that he went up to her and held out his hand.
-An impulse of irrelevant yet irrepressible pity stirred him.
-
-She had fixed her eyes on him as he entered, but now looking at her
-husband and not moving, she said: "I do not think you want to take my
-hand, Mr. Oldmeadow. You will think me a criminal too, as Barney does."
-
-"Darling! Don't talk such nonsense!" Barney cried. "I haven't blamed
-you, not by a word. I know you've done what you think right. Look,
-darling; Roger has had these letters. Just read them. You see what Meg
-writes--there--to Nancy--about your having done all you could to keep
-them straight. You haven't been fair to yourself in talking to me just
-now."
-
-Adrienne, without speaking, took the letters and Oldmeadow moved away to
-the window and stood looking down at the little garden at the back of
-the house where a tall almond-tree delicately and vividly bloomed
-against the pale spring sky. He heard behind him the flicker of the fire
-in the grate, the pacing of Barney's footsteps as he walked up and
-down, and the even turning of the pages in Adrienne's hands. Then he
-heard her say: "Meg contradicts nothing that I have said to you, Barney.
-She writes bravely and truly; as I knew that she would write."
-
-Barney stopped in his pacing. "But darling; what she says about
-straightness?" It was feeble of Barney and he must know it. Feeble of
-him even to think that Adrienne might wish to avail herself of the
-loophole or that she considered herself in any need of a shield.
-
-"You can't misunderstand so much as that, Barney," she said. "Meg and I
-mean but one thing by straightness; and that is truth. That was the way
-I tried to help them; it is the only way in which I can ever help
-people. I showed them the truth and kept it before their eyes when they
-were in danger of forgetting it. I said to them that if they were to be
-worthy of their love they must be brave enough to make sacrifices for
-it. I did not hide from them that there would be sacrifices--if that is
-what you mean."
-
-"It's not what I mean, darling! Of course it's not!" broke from poor
-Barney almost in a wail. "Didn't you try at all to dissuade them? Didn't
-you show them that it was desperate, and ruinous, and wrong? Didn't you
-tell Meg that it would break Mother's heart!"
-
-The blue ribbon was again unrolled and Oldmeadow, listening with rising
-exasperation, heard that the sound of her own solemn cadences sustained
-her. "I don't think anything in life is desperate or ruinous or wrong,
-Barney, except turning away from one's own light. Meg met a reality and
-was brave enough to face it. I regret, deeply, that it came to her
-tragically, not happily; but happiness can grow from tragedy if we are
-brave and true and Meg is brave and true in her love. It won't break
-your mother's heart. Hers is a small, but not such a feeble, heart as
-that. I believe that the experience may strengthen and ennoble her. She
-has led too sheltered a life."
-
-Oldmeadow at this turned from the window and met Barney's miserable
-eyes. "There's really no reason for my staying on, Barney," he said, and
-his voice as well as his look excluded Adrienne from their interchange.
-"I'll take the 1.45 to Coldbrooks. What shall I tell your mother? That
-you've gone to Paris this morning?"
-
-"Yes, that I've gone to Paris. That I'll do my best, you know. That I
-hope to bring Meg back. Tell her to keep up her courage. It'll only be a
-day or two after all, and we may be able to hush it up."
-
-"Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne in a grave, commanding tone. It was
-impossible before it to march out of the room and shut the door, though
-that was what his forcibly arrested attitude showed that he wished to
-do. "You as well as Barney must hear my protest," said Adrienne, and she
-fixed her sombre eyes upon him. "Meg is with the man she loves. In the
-eyes of heaven he is her husband. It would be real as contrasted with
-conventional disgrace were she to leave him now. She will not leave him.
-I know her better than you do. I ask you"--her gaze now turned on
-Barney--"I desire you, not to go to her on such an unworthy errand."
-
-"But, Adrienne," Barney, flushed and hesitating, pleaded, "it's for
-Mother's sake. Mother's too old to be enlarged like that--that's really
-nonsense, you know, darling. You see what Nancy says. They are
-frightened about her. It's not only convention. It's a terrible mistake
-Meg's made and she may be feeling it now and only too glad to have the
-way made easy for her to come back. I promise you to be as gentle as
-possible. I won't reproach her in any way. I'll tell her that we're all
-only waiting to forgive her and take her back."
-
-"Forgive her, Barney? For what? It is only in the eyes of the world that
-she has done wrong and I have lifted her above that fear. Convention
-does not weigh for a moment with me beside the realities of the human
-heart; nor would it with you, Barney, if it were not for the influence
-of Mr. Oldmeadow. I have warned you before; it is easy to be
-worldly-wise and cynical and to keep to the broad road; it is easy to be
-safe. But withering lies that way: withering and imprisonment, and--"
-
-"Come, come, Mrs. Barney," Oldmeadow interposed, addressing her for the
-first time and acidly laughing. "Really we haven't time for sermons. You
-oughtn't to have obliged me to come up if you wanted to influence Barney
-all by yourself. He sees quite clearly for himself the rights and the
-wrongs of this affair, as it happens. If I were to preach for a moment
-in my turn I might ask you how it was that you didn't see that it was
-your duty to tell Meg's mother and brother how things were going and let
-them judge. You're not as wise as you imagine--far from it. Some things
-you can't judge at all. Meg and Hayward aren't people of enough
-importance to have a right to break laws; that's all that it comes to;
-there's nothing to be gained by their breaking laws; not only for other
-people, but for themselves. They're neither of them capable of being
-happy in the ambiguous sort of life they'd have to lead. There's a
-reality you didn't see at all in your haste to flout convention. Barney
-could have dealt with Hayward, and Meg could have been packed off to the
-country and kept there till she'd learned to think a little more about
-other people's hearts and a little less about her own. What business had
-you, after all, to have secrets from your husband and to plot with the
-two young fools behind his back? Isn't Meg his sister rather than
-yours?" His bitterness betrayed him and conscious hostility rose in him,
-answering the menace that measured him in her eyes. "What business had
-you, a new-comer among us, to think yourself capable of managing all
-their lives and to set yourself up above them all in wisdom? You take
-too much upon yourself"; his lips found the old phrase: "Really you do.
-It's been your mistake from the beginning."
-
-He could not have believed that a face so framed for gentleness could
-show itself at once so calm and so convulsed. He knew that something had
-happened to her that had never happened to her before in her life. She
-kept her eyes steadily on him and he wondered if she were not reciting
-some incantation, some exorcism, derived from the seagulled lady above
-her: Power in Repose--Power in Love--Power in Light. Her mouth and eyes
-and nostrils were dark on her pallor and he felt that she held back all
-the natural currents of her being in order to face and quell him with
-the supernatural.
-
-"Never mind all that, Roger," Barney was sickly murmuring. "I don't
-feel like that. I know Adrienne didn't for a moment mean to deceive me."
-
-"We will mind it, Barney," said Adrienne, breathing with difficulty. "I
-had, Mr. Oldmeadow, the business, first, of loyalty to another human
-soul who, in the crisis of its destiny, confided in me. I have been
-nearer Meg than any of you have guessed, from my first meeting with her.
-You were all blind. I saw at once that she was tossed and tormented. I
-am nearer, far nearer her, than her brother and mother. In them she
-would never have dreamed of confiding and she came to me because she
-felt that in me she would find reality and in them mere formulas. I do
-not look upon women as chattels to be handed about by their male
-relatives and locked up if they do not love according to rule and
-precedent. I look upon them as the equals of men in every respect, as
-free as men to shape their lives and to direct their destinies. You
-speak a mediaeval language, Mr. Oldmeadow. The world, our great, modern,
-deep-hearted world, has outstripped you."
-
-"Darling," Barney forestalled, breathlessly, as she paused, any reply
-that Oldmeadow might have been tempted to make, "don't mind if Roger
-speaks harshly. He's like that and no one cares for us more. He doesn't
-mean conventionality at all, or anything mediaeval. You don't understand
-him. He puts his finger on the spot about Meg and Hayward. It's exactly
-as he says; they're not of enough importance to have a right to break
-laws. If you could have confided in me, it would have been better; you
-must own that. We'd have given Meg a chance to pull herself together.
-We'd have sent Hayward about his business. It's a question, as Roger
-says, of your wisdom; of your knowledge of the world. You didn't
-understand them. They're neither of them idealists like you. They can't
-be happy doing what you might be big enough to do. Just because they're
-not big. Try to take it in, darling. And we really needn't go on talking
-about it any longer, need we? It isn't a question of influence. All we
-have to decide on is what's to be done. Roger must go to Mother and tell
-her I'm starting this morning to try and fetch Meg back. Imagine Mother
-with a divorce case on! It would kill her, simply. That's all. Isn't it,
-Roger?"
-
-"Stop, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne, again. She rose as she spoke. As
-he saw her stand before them, her approaching maternity dominated for a
-moment all his impressions of her. Veiled and masked adroitly as it was,
-its very uncouthness curiously became her. Her head, for once, looked
-small. Like an archaic statue, straight and short and thick, her altered
-form had dignity and amplitude and her face, heavy with its menace, hard
-with its control, might have been that of some austere and threatening
-priestess of fruitfulness.
-
-"Barney, wait," she said. Her arms hung straight beside her, but she
-slightly lifted a hand as she spoke and Oldmeadow noted that it was
-tightly clenched. "It is I, not your friend, whom you must question as
-to what it is right that you should do. I do not consent to his reading
-of my unwisdom and unworthiness. I ask you not to consent to it. I ask
-you again not to go. I ask you again to respect my judgment rather than
-his."
-
-"Darling," the unfortunate husband supplicated; "it's not because it's
-Roger's judgment. You know it's what I felt right myself--from the
-moment you told me what had happened. You say people must follow their
-own light. It _is_ my light. I must do what Mother asks and try to bring
-Meg back."
-
-"It is not your light, Barney. It is craft and caution and fear. More
-than that, do you not see, must I make plain to you what it is you do to
-me in going? You insult me. You treat what I have believed right for Meg
-to do as a crime from which she must be rescued. You drag me in the dust
-with her. Understand me, Barney"--the streaks of colour deepened on her
-neck, her breath came thickly--"if you go, you drag me in the dust."
-
-"How can it drag you in the dust, Mrs. Barney, if Meg wants to come
-back?" Oldmeadow interposed in the tone of a caustic doctor addressing a
-malingering patient. "We're not talking of crimes; only of follies.
-Come; be reasonable. Don't make it so painful for Barney to do what's
-his plain duty. You're not a child. You have, I hope, courage enough and
-humour enough to own that you can make mistakes--like other people."
-
-"Yes, yes, Adrienne, that's just it," broke painfully from Barney, and,
-as he seized the clue thus presented to him, Adrienne turned her head
-slowly, with an ominous stillness, and again rested her eyes upon him.
-"It's childish, you know, darling. It's not like you. And of course I
-understand why; and Roger does. You're not yourself; you're
-over-strained and off-balance and I'm so frightfully sorry all this has
-fallen upon you at such a time. I don't want to oppose you in anything,
-darling--do try to believe me. Only you must give me the credit for my
-own convictions. I do feel I must go. I do feel Roger must take that
-message to Mother. After all, darling," and now in no need of helping
-clues he found his own and the irrepressible note of grief vibrated in
-his voice, "you do owe me something, don't you? You do owe us all
-something--to make up, I mean. Because, without you, Meg would never
-have behaved like this and disgraced us all. Oh--I don't mean to
-reproach you!"
-
-"Good-bye then, I'm off," said Oldmeadow. "I'm very sorry you made me
-come up. Good-bye, Mrs. Barney." She had not spoken, nor moved, nor
-turned her eyes from Barney's face.
-
-"Good-bye. Thanks so much, Roger." Barney followed him, with a quickness
-to match his own, to the door. But Adrienne, this time, did not call him
-back. She remained standing stock-still in front of her sofa.
-
-"Tell Mother I'm off," said Barney, grasping his hand. "Tell her she'll
-hear at once, as soon as I know anything. Thanks so awfully," he
-repeated. "You've been a great help."
-
-It was unfortunate, perhaps, that Barney should say that, Oldmeadow
-reflected as he sped down the stairs. "But she's met reality at last,"
-he muttered, wondering how she and Barney faced each other above and
-hearing again the words that must echo so strangely in her ears:
-"Disgraced us all." And, mingled with his grim satisfaction, was, again,
-the sense of irrelevant and reluctant pity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-It was Saturday and he had to wire to Mrs. Aldesey that he could not go
-with her next day to the Queen's Hall concert they had planned to hear
-together.
-
-Nancy was waiting for him at the station in her own little pony-cart and
-as he got in she said: "Is Barney gone?"
-
-"Yes; he'll have gone by now," said Oldmeadow and, as he said it, he
-felt a sudden sense of relief and clarity. The essential thing, he saw
-it as he answered Nancy's question, was that he should be able to say
-that Barney had gone. And he knew that if he hadn't been there to back
-him up, he wouldn't have gone. So that was all right, wasn't it?
-
-As he had sped past the sun-swept country the reluctant pity had
-struggled in him, striving, unsuccessfully, to free itself from the
-implications of that horrid word: "Disgraced." It was Adrienne who had
-disgraced them; that was what Barney's phrase had really meant, though
-he hadn't intended it to mean it. She, the stranger, the new-comer, had
-disgraced them. And it was true. Yet he wished Barney hadn't stumbled on
-the phrase--just because she was a stranger and a new-comer. And Barney
-would never have found it had he not been there. But now came the sense
-of relief. If he hadn't been there, Barney wouldn't have gone.
-
-"Aunt Eleanor is longing to see you," said Nancy. "Her one hope, you
-know, is that he may bring Meg back." Nancy's eyes had a strained look,
-as though she had lain awake all night.
-
-"You think she may come back?"
-
-He felt, himself, unable to form any conjectures as to what Meg was
-likely to do. What she had done was so strangely unlike her.
-
-"Not if it means leaving Captain Hayward for good," said Nancy. "But
-Aunt Eleanor and Mother both think that she may be willing to come till
-they can marry."
-
-"That's better than nothing, isn't it," said Oldmeadow, and Nancy then
-surprised him by saying, as she looked round at him: "I don't want her
-to come back."
-
-"Don't want her to come back? But you wanted Barney to go?"
-
-"Yes. He had to go. Just so that everything might be done. So that it
-might be put before her. And to satisfy Aunt Eleanor. But, don't you
-see, Roger, it would really make it far more difficult for Aunt Eleanor
-to have her here. What would she do with her?--since she won't give up
-Captain Hayward? She can love Meg and grieve and yearn over her now. But
-if she were here she couldn't. It would be all grief and bitterness."
-
-Nancy had evidently been thinking to some purpose during her sleepless
-night and he owned that her conclusion was the sound one. What
-disconcerted him was her assurance that Meg would not leave her lover.
-After Adrienne, Nancy was likely to have the most authentic impressions
-of Meg's attitude; and, as they drove towards Chelford, he was further
-disconcerted by hearing her murmur, half to herself: "It would be silly
-to leave him now, wouldn't it."
-
-"Not if she's sorry and frightened at what she's done," he protested.
-"After all the man's got a wife who may be glad to have him back."
-
-But Nancy said: "I don't think she would. I think she'll be glad not to
-have him back. Meg may be frightened; but I don't believe she'll be
-sorry; yet."
-
-He meditated, somewhat gloomily, as they drove, on the unexpectedness of
-the younger generation. He had never thought of Nancy as belonging, in
-any but the chronological sense, to that category; yet here she was,
-accepting, if not condoning, the rebellion against law and morality.
-
-Mrs. Averil had driven down to the Little House where she was to be
-picked up and, as they turned the corner to the Green, they saw her
-waiting at the gate, her furs turned up around her ears, her neat little
-face pinched and dry, as he had known that he would find it, and showing
-a secure if controlled indignation, rather than Nancy's sad perplexity.
-
-"Well, Roger, you find us in a pleasant predicament," she observed as
-Oldmeadow settled the rug around her knees. "Somehow one never thinks of
-things like this happening in one's own family. Village girls misbehave
-and people in the next county run away sometimes with other people's
-wives; but one never expects such adventures to come walking in to one's
-own breakfast-table."
-
-"Disagreeable things do have a way of happening at breakfast-time, don't
-they," Oldmeadow assented. The comfort of Mrs. Averil was that even on
-her death-bed she would treat her own funeral lightly: "I wonder it
-remains such a comfortable meal, all the same."
-
-"I suppose you've had lunch on the train," said Mrs. Averil. "Will you
-believe it? Poor Eleanor was worrying about that this morning. She's
-got some coffee and sandwiches waiting for you, in case you haven't. I'm
-so thankful you've come. It will help her. Poor dear. She's begun to
-think of all the other things now. Of what people will say and how they
-will hear. Lady Cockerell is very much on her mind. You know what a
-meddlesome gossip she is, and only the other day Eleanor snubbed her
-when she was criticizing Barbara's new school. The thought of her is
-disturbing her dreadfully now."
-
-"I suppose these leech-bites do help to alleviate the pain of the real
-wound," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Not in the least. They envenom it," Mrs. Averil replied. "I'd like to
-strangle Lady Cockerell myself before the news reaches her."
-
-Nancy drove on, her eyes fixed on the pony's ears. "I don't believe
-people will talk nearly as much as you and Aunt Eleanor imagine," she
-now remarked. "I've told her so; and so must you, Mother."
-
-"You are admirable with her, Nancy. Far better than I am. I sit grimly
-swallowing my curses, or wringing my hands. Neither wringing nor cursing
-is much good, I suppose."
-
-"Not a bit of good. It's better she should think of what people say than
-of Meg; but when it comes to agonizing over them I believe the truth is
-that people nowadays _do_ get over it; far more than they used to;
-especially if Aunt Eleanor can show them that _she_ gets over it."
-
-"But she can't get over it, my dear child!" said Mrs. Averil, gazing at
-her daughter in a certain alarm. "How can one get over disgrace like
-that or lift one's head again--unless one is an Adrienne Toner! Oh, when
-I think of that woman and of what she's done! For she is responsible
-for it all! Every bit of it. Meg was a good girl, at heart; always. In
-spite of that silly liquid powder. And so I tell Eleanor. Adrienne is
-responsible for it all."
-
-"I don't, Mother; that's not my line at all," said Nancy. "I tell her
-that what Meg says is true." Nancy touched the pony with the whip. "If
-it hadn't been for Adrienne she might have done much worse."
-
-"Really, my dear!" Mrs. Averil murmured.
-
-"Come, Nancy," Oldmeadow protested; "that was a retrospective threat of
-Meg's. Without Adrienne she'd never have considered such an
-adventure--or its worse alternative. Encourage your aunt to curse
-Adrienne. Your Mother's instinct is sound there."
-
-But Nancy shook her head. "I don't know, Roger," she said. "Perhaps Meg
-would have considered the alternative. Girls do consider all sorts of
-things nowadays that Mother and Aunt Eleanor, in their girlhood, would
-have thought simply wicked. They _are_ wicked; but not simply. That's
-the difference between now and then. And don't you think that it's
-better for Meg and Captain Hayward to go away so that they can be
-married than to be, as she says, really rotters; than to be, as she
-says, cheats and hypocrites and steal their happiness?"
-
-"My dear child!" Mrs. Averil again murmured, while Oldmeadow, finding
-it, after all, a comfort to have a grown-up Nancy to discuss it with,
-said, "My contention is that, left to herself, Meg would have thought
-them both wicked."
-
-"Perhaps," Nancy said again; "but even old-fashioned girls did things
-they knew to be wicked sometimes. The difference Adrienne has made is
-that Meg doesn't think herself wicked at all. She thinks herself rather
-noble. And that's what I mean about Aunt Eleanor. It will comfort her if
-she can feel a little as Adrienne feels--that Meg isn't one bit the
-worse, morally, for what she's done."
-
-"Are you trying to persuade us that Meg isn't guilty, my dear?" Mrs.
-Averil inquired dryly. "Are you trying to persuade us that Adrienne has
-done us all a service? You surely can't deny that she's behaved
-atrociously, and first and foremost, to Barney. Barney could have known
-nothing about it, and can you conceive a woman keeping such a thing from
-her husband?"
-
-But Nancy was feeling the pressure of her own realizations and was not
-to be scolded out of them. "If Meg is guilty, and doesn't know it, she
-will suffer dreadfully when she finds out, won't she? It all depends on
-whether she has deceived herself or not, doesn't it? I'm not justifying
-her or Adrienne, Mother; only trying to see the truth about them. How
-could Adrienne tell Barney when it was Meg's secret? We may feel it
-wrong; but she thought she was justified." The colour rose in Nancy's
-cheek as she named Barney, but she kept her tired eyes on her mother and
-added, "I don't believe it was easy for her to keep it from him."
-
-"My dear, anything is easy for her that flatters her self-importance!"
-cried Mrs. Averil impatiently. "I'll own, if you like, that she's more
-fool than knave--as Meg may be; though Meg never struck me as a fool.
-Things haven't changed so much since my young days as all that; it's
-mainly a matter of names. If girls who behave like Meg find it
-pleasanter to be called fools than knaves, they are welcome to the
-alternative. Noble they never were nor will be, whatever the fashion."
-
-Oldmeadow did not want the sandwiches, so, as soon as they reached
-Coldbrooks, he was led upstairs to Mrs. Chadwick's room. He found his
-poor friend lying on the sofa, the blinds drawn down and a wet
-handkerchief on her forehead. She burst out crying as he entered.
-Oldmeadow sat down beside her and took her hand and, as he listened to
-her sobs, felt that he need not trouble to pity Adrienne.
-
-"What I cannot, cannot understand, Roger," she was at last able to say,
-and he realized that it was of Adrienne, not Meg, that she was speaking,
-"is how she can bear to treat us so. We all loved and trusted her. You
-know how I loved her, Roger. I felt Meg as safe in her hands as in my
-own. Oh, that wicked, wicked man! I hardly know him by sight. That makes
-it all so much more dreadful. All I do know is that his wife is a
-daughter of poor Evelyn Madderley, who broke her back out hunting."
-
-"I don't believe there's much harm in him, you know," Oldmeadow
-suggested. "And I believe that he is sincerely devoted to Meg."
-
-"Harm, Roger!" poor Mrs. Chadwick wailed, "when he is a married man and
-Meg only a girl! Oh, if there is harm in anything there is in that!
-Running away with a girl and ruining her life! Barney will make him feel
-what he has done. Barney _has_ gone?"
-
-"Yes, he's gone, and I am sure we can rely on him to speak his mind to
-Hayward."
-
-"And don't you think he may bring Meg back, Roger? Nancy says I must not
-set my mind on it; but don't you think she may be repenting already? My
-poor little Meg! She was hot-tempered and could speak very crossly if
-she was thwarted; but I think of her incessantly as she was when she was
-a tiny child. Self-willed; but so sweet and coaxing in her ways, with
-beautiful golden hair and those dark eyes. I always thought of Meg, with
-her beauty, as sure to marry happily; near us, I hoped"--Mrs. Chadwick
-began to sob again. "And now!--Will he find them in Paris? Will they not
-have moved on?"
-
-"In any case he'll be able to follow them up. I don't imagine they'll
-think of hiding."
-
-"No; I'm afraid they won't. That is the worst of it! They won't hide and
-every one will come to know and then what good will there be in her
-coming back! If only I'd had her presented last year, Roger! She can
-never go to court now," Mrs. Chadwick wept, none the less piteously for
-her triviality. "To think that Francis's daughter cannot go to court!
-She would have looked so beautiful, with my pearls and the feathers. The
-feathers are becoming to so few girls. Nancy could not wear them nearly
-so well. Nancy can go and my daughter can't!"
-
-"I don't think the lack of feathers will weigh seriously upon Meg's
-future, my dear friend."
-
-"Oh, but it's what they stand for, Roger, that will weigh!" Mrs.
-Chadwick, even in her grief, retained her shrewdness. "It's easy to
-laugh at the feathers, but you might really as well laugh at
-wedding-rings! To think that Francis's daughter is travelling about with
-a man and without a wedding-ring! Or do you suppose they'll have thought
-of it and bought one? It would be a lie, of course; but don't you think
-that a lie would be justifiable under the circumstances?"
-
-"I don't think it really makes any difference, until they can come home
-and be married."
-
-"I suppose she must marry him now--if they won't hide--and will be proud
-of what they've done; she seems quite proud of it!--everyone will hear,
-so that they will have to marry. Oh--I don't know what to hope or what
-to fear! How can you expect me to have tea, Nancy!" she wept, as Nancy
-entered carrying the little tray. "It's so good of you, my dear, but how
-can I eat?--I can hardly face the servants, Roger. They will all hear.
-And Meg was always such a pet of Johnson's; his favourite of all my
-children. He used to give her very rich, unwholesome things in the
-pantry and once, when her father punished her for disobeying him and put
-her in the corner, in the drawing-room, one day, after lunch, Johnson
-nearly dropped the coffee, when he came in. It upset him dreadfully and
-he would hardly speak to Francis for a week afterwards. I know he will
-think it all our fault, when he hears, now. And so it is, for having
-trusted to a stranger. I can't drink tea, Nancy."
-
-"Yes, you can, for Meg's sake, Aunt Eleanor, and eat some tea-cake,
-too," said Nancy. "If you aren't brave for her, who will be. And you
-can't be brave unless you eat. I remember so well, when I was little,
-Uncle Francis saying that when it came to the pinch you were the bravest
-woman he knew. You'll see, darling; it will all come out better than you
-fear. Johnson and all of us will help you to make it come out better."
-
-"She is such a comfort to me, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick with a summoned
-smile. "Somehow, when I see her, I feel that things _will_ come out
-better. _You_ will have to go to court, dear, next spring. We can't
-have none of our girls going. And you shall wear my pearls." Mrs.
-Chadwick's tears fell, but she took up the tea-cup.
-
-Nancy more and more was striking Oldmeadow as the wisest person in the
-house. He walked with her on the terrace after tea; it was an old custom
-of his and Nancy's to step outside then, whatever the weather, and have
-a few turns. This was a clear, chill evening and Nancy had wrapped a
-woollen scarf closely round her neck and shoulders. Her chin was sunken
-in its folds as she held it together on her breast, and with her dropped
-profile, her sad, meditative eyes, it was as if she saw a clue and, far
-more clearly than he did, knew where they all stood.
-
-"Adrienne was bitterly opposed to Barney's going," he said. "She seemed
-unable to grasp the fact that she herself had been in error."
-
-Nancy turned her eyes on him. "Did Barney tell you she was bitterly
-opposed?"
-
-"He didn't tell me. I was with them. It was most unfortunate. She
-insisted on my coming up."
-
-"Oh, dear," said Nancy. She even stopped for a moment to face him with
-her dismay. "Yes, I see," she then said, walking on, "she would."
-
-"Why would she? Unless she was sure of getting her own way? The only
-point in having me up was to show me that she could always get her own
-way with Barney."
-
-"Of course. And to make it quite clear to herself, too. She's not afraid
-of you, Roger. She's not afraid of anything but Barney."
-
-"I don't think she had any reason to be afraid of him this morning. He
-was badly upset, of course. But if I hadn't gone up, I imagine she'd
-have kept him from going. And you own that that would have been a pity,
-don't you?"
-
-"Yes. Oh, yes. He had to go," said Nancy, absently. And she added. "Were
-you very rough and scornful?"
-
-"Rough and scornful? I don't think so. I think I kept my temper very
-well, considering all things. I showed her pretty clearly, I suppose,
-that I considered her a meddling ass. I don't suppose she'll forgive me
-easily for that."
-
-"Well, you can't wonder at it, can you?" said Nancy. "Especially if she
-suspects that you made Barney consider her one, too."
-
-"But it's necessary, isn't it, that she should be made to suspect it
-herself? I don't wonder at her not forgiving me for showing her up
-before Barney, and upholding him against her, but I do wonder that one
-can never make her see she's wrong. It's that that's so really monstrous
-about her."
-
-"Do you think that anyone can ever make us see we are wrong unless they
-love us?" Nancy asked.
-
-"Well, Barney loves her," said Oldmeadow after a moment.
-
-"Yes; but he's afraid of her, too, isn't he? He'd never have quite the
-courage to try and make her see, would he?--off his own bat I mean. He'd
-never really have quite the courage to see, himself, how wrong she was,
-unless he were angry. And to have anyone who is angry with you trying to
-make you see, only pushes you further and further back into yourself,
-doesn't it, and away from seeing?"
-
-"You've grown very wise in the secrets of the human heart, my dear,"
-Oldmeadow observed. "It's true. He hasn't courage with her--unless some
-one is there to give it to him. But, you know, I don't think she'd
-forgive him if he had. I don't think she'd forgive anyone who made her
-see."
-
-"I don't know," Nancy pondered. "I don't love her, yet I feel as if I
-understood her; better, perhaps, than you do. I think she's good, you
-know. I mean, I think she might be good, if she could ever see."
-
-"She's too stupid ever, really, to see," said Oldmeadow, and it was with
-impatience. "She's encased in self-love like a rhinoceros in its hide.
-One can't penetrate anywhere. You say she's afraid of Barney and I can't
-imagine what you mean by that. It's true, when I'm by, she's afraid of
-losing his admiration. But that's not being afraid of him."
-
-Nancy still pondered; but not, now, in any perplexity. "She's afraid
-because she cares so much. She's afraid because she _can_ care so much.
-It's difficult to explain; but I feel as if I understood her. She's
-never cared so much before for just one other person. It's always been
-for people altogether; and because she was doing something for them. But
-Barney does something for her. He makes her happy. Perhaps she never
-knew before what it was to be really happy. You know, she didn't give me
-the feeling of a really happy person. It's something quite, quite new
-for her. It makes her feel uncertain of herself and almost bewildered
-sometimes. Oh, I'm sure of it the more I think of it. And you know,
-sometimes," Nancy turned her deep, sweet eyes on him, "I feel very sorry
-for her, Roger. I can't help it; although I don't love her at all."
-
-Yes. It must be true. Though he had seen Adrienne's vanity rather than
-her love. Nancy and Meg were united in their assurance and that must be,
-he saw, because they both, in their so different ways, knew what it was
-to care; to care so much that you were frightened. It was strange that
-the pang of pity that came with his new perception should be for
-Adrienne rather than for his dear little Nancy herself. Nancy had
-suffered, he knew, and her life was perhaps permanently scarred; yet,
-clear-eyed and unduped, he saw her as mistress of the very fate that had
-maimed her. Whereas Adrienne was blindfolded; a creature swayed and
-surrounded by forces of which she was unaware.
-
-Nancy had deepened his sense of perplexity, his sense of taking refuge
-from something, and what it was came fully upon him that night when he
-was at last alone. Meg and her misdemeanour sank into a mere background
-for the image of the cold, convulsed face that he had seen that morning.
-Almost angrily he felt himself pushing it back, pushing it down, as if
-he pushed it down to drown, and again and again it re-emerged to look at
-him.
-
-He fell asleep at last; but as, a year ago, on the first night of his
-meeting with her, he had dreamed of her, so to-night he dreamed again.
-
-He did not see her, but she was in some dreadful plight and the sense of
-her panic and bewilderment broke upon him in shocks of suffering. He
-could not see her, but he was aware of her, horribly aware. All remained
-a broken, baffled confusion, but it was as though, unable to shape and
-assert itself, he yet felt her very being wrestling with extinction.
-
-The sharpness had gone out of the sunlight next day and Mrs. Chadwick
-consented to come and sit with them in the warmest corner of the garden,
-the corner where, a year ago, Oldmeadow remembered, Meg had sat with him
-and explained to him the secret of Adrienne's power. Pitifully, with
-swollen eyes and trembling fingers, Mrs. Chadwick resumed her
-interrupted stocking while Oldmeadow read aloud from a Sunday paper the
-leading article on the critical situation in Ireland. "I suppose every
-one in London will be talking about Ulster and Sir Edward Carson, won't
-they?" said Mrs. Chadwick, and it was evident that she derived a dim
-comfort from the thought. The situation in Ireland, Oldmeadow reflected,
-had, at all events, been of so much service.
-
-Upon this quiet scene there broke suddenly the sound of a motor's horn
-and a motor's wheels turned into the front entrance.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick dropped her stocking and laid her hand on Nancy's arm.
-"Dear Aunt Eleanor--you know he couldn't possibly be back yet," said
-Nancy. "And if it's anyone to call, Johnson knows you're not at home."
-
-"Lady Cockerell is capable of anything. She might sit down in the hall
-and wait. She must have heard by now," poor Mrs. Chadwick murmured.
-"That married girl of hers in London must have written. With the
-projecting teeth."
-
-"I'll soon get rid of her, if it's really she," said Mrs. Averil; but
-she had hardly risen when the door at the back of the house opened and
-they saw Johnson usher forth a hurrying female figure, obviously not
-Lady Cockerell's; a figure so encumbered by its motoring wraps, so
-swathed in veils, that only Mrs. Chadwick's ejaculation enlightened
-Oldmeadow as to its identity.
-
-"Josephine!" cried Mrs. Chadwick and then, between the narrow framing of
-purple gauze, he recognized the dramatic, melancholy eyes and pale,
-pinched lips of Adrienne's maid.
-
-"Oh, Madame! Madame!" Josephine was exclaiming as she came towards them
-down the path. Her face wore the terrible intensity of expression so
-alien to the British countenance. "Oh, Madame! Madame!" she repeated.
-They had all risen and stood to await her. "He is dead! The little child
-is dead! And she is alone. Monsieur left her yesterday. Quite, quite
-alone, and her child born dead."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick faced her in pallid stupefaction.
-
-"The baby, Aunt Eleanor," said Nancy, for she looked indeed as if she
-had not understood. "Barney's baby. It has been born and it is dead.
-Oh--poor Barney. And poor, poor Adrienne."
-
-"Yes, dead!" Josephine, regardless of all but her exhaustion and her
-grief, dropped down into one of the garden-chairs and put her hands
-before her face. "Born dead last night. A beautiful little boy. The
-doctors could not save it and fear for her life. They will not let me
-stay with her. Only the doctors and the nurses--strangers--are with
-her." Josephine was sobbing. "Ah, it was not right to leave her so.
-Already she was ill. It could be seen that already she was very ill when
-Monsieur left her. I came to her when he was gone. She did not say a
-word to me. She tried to smile. _Mais j'ai bien vu qu'elle avait la mort
-dans l'ame._"
-
-"Good heavens," Mrs. Chadwick murmured, while Josephine, now, let her
-tears flow unchecked. "She is alone and Barney has left her! Oh, this
-is terrible! At such a time!"
-
-"He had to go, Aunt Eleanor. You know he had to go. We will send for him
-at once," said Nancy, and Josephine, catching the words, sobbed on in
-her woe and her resentment: "But where to send for him? No one knows
-where to send. The doctors sent a wire yesterday, at once, when she was
-taken ill; to the Paris hotel. But no answer came. He must have left
-Paris. That is why I have come. No telegrams for Sunday. No trains in
-time. I took the car. The doctor said, Yes, it was well that I should
-come. Some one who cares for Madame should return with me. If she is to
-die she must not die alone."
-
-"But she shall not die!" cried Mrs. Chadwick with sudden and surprising
-energy. "Oh, the poor baby! It might have lived had I been there. No
-doctor, no nurse, can understand like a mother. And I shall be able to
-help with Adrienne. I must go. I must go at once. Mademoiselle will see
-that you have something to eat and drink, my poor Josephine, and then
-you and I will return together. It will not take me a moment to get
-ready."
-
-"It will be the best thing for them all," Oldmeadow murmured to Mrs.
-Averil, as, taking Josephine's arm, Mrs. Chadwick hurried her along the
-path. "And I'll go with them."
-
-A little later, while Mrs. Chadwick made ready above and Josephine, in
-the hall, ate the meal that Johnson had brought for her, Oldmeadow and
-Nancy stood outside near the empty waiting car.
-
-"I'll wire to you at once, of course, how she is," he said. Adrienne had
-put Meg out of all their thoughts. "But it's rather grotesque," he
-added, "if poor Barney is to be blamed."
-
-Nancy stood and looked before her, wrapped, as she had been the day
-before, in her woollen scarf. "Roger," she said after a moment, "no one
-can be blamed; yet, if she dies, I shall feel that we have killed her."
-
-"Killed her! What nonsense, my dear! What do you mean?" He spoke angrily
-because something in his heart, shaken by his dream, echoed her. The
-dreaming had now revealed itself as definitely uncanny. What had he to
-do with Adrienne Toner that his sub-consciousness should be aware of her
-extremity?
-
-"I can't explain," said Nancy. "We couldn't help it. It's even all her
-fault. But she never asked to come to us. She never sought us out. She
-had her life and we had ours. It was we who sought her and drew her in
-and worshipped her. She never hid what she was; never in the least
-little way. It was for what she was, because she was so different and
-believed so in herself, that Barney loved her. And now because she has
-gone on believing in herself, we have struck her down."
-
-The rooks were cawing overhead and Oldmeadow was remembering his dream
-of a year ago, how Adrienne had come to him along the terrace saying, as
-she lifted her hand: "I can hear them, too." They had drawn her in. Yet
-she had loved their life. She had wanted to understand it and to be part
-of it. He wished he could get the pale, streaked, drowning face out of
-his mind. "It's generous of you, my dear child," he said, "to say 'we.'
-You mean 'you.' If anyone struck her down it was I."
-
-"You spoke for us all, Roger. And you only spoke for us. You were always
-outside. I count myself with them. I can't separate myself from them. I
-received her love--with them all."
-
-"Did you?" he looked at her. "I don't think so, Nancy."
-
-Nancy did not pretend not to understand. "I know," she said. "But I'm
-part of it. And she tried to love me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat in Barney's study, Mrs. Chadwick beside him. It was
-Tuesday and the only news of Barney had been a letter to his mother,
-from Paris, where he had not found Meg, and two wires from the South of
-France, one to Oldmeadow and one to his wife, saying that he had found
-Meg and was returning alone. He had not, it was evident, received the
-doctor's messages.
-
-Oldmeadow had not seen his old friend since the Sunday night when he had
-left her and Josephine in Connaught Square, and in his first glance at
-her this morning he saw that for her, too, Adrienne's peril had actually
-effaced Meg's predicament. It had done more. Faint and feeble as she
-must be, scarcely able to take possession of her returning life and, as
-Mrs. Chadwick told him, not yet out of danger, Adrienne had already
-drawn her mother-in-law back into the circle of her influence.
-
-"You see, Roger," she said, sitting there on the absurdly incongruous
-background of the Post Impressionist pictures and tightly squeezing her
-handkerchief first in one hand and then in the other, "You see, when one
-is with her one _has_ to trust her. I don't know why it is, but almost
-at once I felt all my bitterness against her die quite away. I knew,
-whatever she had done, that she believed it to be right; to be really
-_best_ for Meg, you know. And oh, Roger, Barney has hurt her so
-terribly! She can't speak of him without crying. I never saw her cry
-before. I never imagined Adrienne crying. She feels, she can't help
-feeling, that it is because of that they have lost their baby."
-
-Oldmeadow ordered with difficulty his astonished and indignant thoughts.
-"That is absolutely unfair to Barney," he said. "I was with them. No one
-could have been gentler or more patient."
-
-"I know you were with them. It would seem like that to you, Roger,
-because you are a man and men still think of women as a sort of chattel.
-That's how it looks to Adrienne. So much more independence, you know,
-than we ever had.--Oh, I don't say it's a good thing! I feel that we are
-weaker and need guidance."
-
-"Chattels? Where do chattels come in here? She said that to you. Barney
-merely pleaded with her so that he could do what you wanted him to do."
-
-"I know--I know, Roger. Don't get angry. But if I had been here and seen
-her I should have known that he must not go. I should have seen that she
-was in danger. A woman would have understood. No; you didn't treat
-Adrienne like a chattel; no one could treat Adrienne like one. It was
-poor little Meg I meant. I see now how wrong it was to think of taking
-her from the man she loves; when she _has_ gone, you know, so that
-everyone must know and there can be no good in it. And they probably
-_have_ bought a wedding-ring. Oh, Roger, she does comfort me about Meg.
-She makes me feel the deeper things, the things conventions blind us to.
-She makes me feel that the great thing, the only thing, is to follow
-one's own light and that Meg did do that. And after all, you know,
-Roger, Jowett had George Eliot and Lewes to breakfast and they were
-never married."
-
-"Ha! ha! ha!" Oldmeadow laughed. He could not repress his bitter mirth.
-"Follow your light if there's breakfast with a clergyman at the end of
-it!" he cruelly suggested. Yet he was too much amused, while so
-incensed, for there to be much cruelty, and Mrs. Chadwick, gazing at him
-as if from under her twisted straw, murmured: "He _was_ a sort of
-clergyman, Roger; and if people do what _seems_ to them right, why
-should they be punished?"
-
-He saw it all. He heard it all, in her echoes. The potent influence had
-been poured through her, all the more irresistible for the appeal of
-Adrienne's peril. Adrienne, bereaved and dying; yet magnanimous, gentle
-and assured; always assured. How could Mrs. Chadwick's feathers and
-wedding-rings stand a chance against her? They had been swept away, or
-nearly away, and what Nancy had seen as a possible hope was now an
-accomplished fact. Mrs. Chadwick had been brought to feel about Meg as
-Adrienne felt about her, and Oldmeadow, for his part, was not sure that
-the game was worth the candle. There was something more than absurd in
-his poor friend's attempts to adjust herself to the new standards. They
-were pitiable and even a little unseemly. She began presently softly to
-weep. "Such a pretty baby it was, Roger. A lovely little creature--that
-was the first thing she said to me--'Oh, Mother Nell, it was such a
-pretty baby.' And all that she said this morning--when it was taken
-away--was: 'I wish Barney could have been in time to see our baby.' Oh,
-it is terrible, terrible, Roger, that he is not here! Her heart is
-broken by it. How can she ever forget that he left her alone at such a
-time. And she begged him not to go. She told me that she almost knelt to
-him."
-
-The tears, irrepressibly, had risen to Oldmeadow's eyes; but as Mrs.
-Chadwick's sentence meandered on, his thoughts were roughly jolted from
-their pity. "But I tell you that that is absolutely unfair!" he
-repeated, fixing his glass to look his protest the more firmly at her.
-"I tell you that I was there and saw it all. It wasn't for the baby. She
-was thinking of the baby as little as Barney was; less than he was. What
-she was thinking of was her power over Barney. She was determined that
-she should not seem to be put in the wrong by his going."
-
-Like the March Hare Mrs. Chadwick was wild yet imperturbable. "Of course
-she was determined. How could she be anything else? It did put her in
-the wrong. And it put Meg in the wrong. That's where we were so blind.
-Oh, I blame myself as much as anybody. But Barney is her husband; and he
-was with her and should have seen and felt. How could she beg him to
-stay for her danger when he would not stay for her love?"
-
-Yes; Adrienne had her very firmly. She had even imparted to her, when it
-came to the issue, something of coherency. She was building up, in
-Barney's absence, strange ramparts against him. Barney had dragged her
-in the dust and there she intended to drag him. Wasn't that it?
-Oldmeadow asked himself as he eyed his altered friend, muttering
-finally: "I'm every bit as responsible as Barney, if it comes to that. I
-upheld him, completely, in his decision. I do still. Adrienne may turn
-you all upside down; but she won't turn me; and I hope she won't turn
-Barney."
-
-"I think, Roger, that you might at all events remember that she's not
-out of danger," said Mrs. Chadwick. "She may die yet and give you no
-more trouble. You have never cared for her; I know that, and so does
-she; and I do think it's unfeeling of you to speak as you do when she's
-lying there above us. And she looks so lovely in bed," Mrs. Chadwick
-began to weep again. "I never saw such thick braids; like Marguerite in
-Faust. Her hands on the sheets so thin and white and her eyes enormous.
-I don't think even you could have the heart to jibe and laugh if you saw
-her."
-
-"I didn't laugh at Adrienne, you know," Oldmeadow reminded her, rising
-and buttoning his overcoat. "I laughed at you and Jowett. No; Adrienne
-is no laughing matter. But she won't die. I can assure you of that now.
-She's too much life in her to die. And though I'm very sorry for
-her--difficult as you may find it to believe--I shall reserve my pity
-for Barney."
-
-Barney needed all his pity and the sight of him on the following Sunday
-evening, as he appeared on his threshold, would have exorcised for
-Oldmeadow, if Mrs. Chadwick had not already done so, the memory of the
-pale, drowning face. He looked like a dog that has been beaten for a
-fault it cannot recognize. There was bewilderment in his eyes and
-acceptance, and a watchful humility. To see them there made Oldmeadow
-angry.
-
-Barney had sent a line to say that he was back; but his friend had been
-prepared not to see him. Once engulfed in the house of mourning it was
-but too likely that he would not emerge for many days. And besides, what
-would Barney have to say to him now? But here he was, with his hollow
-eyes and faded cheeks, and it was with an echo of his old boyish manner
-of dropping in when beset by some perplexity that, without speaking, he
-crossed the room and sank on the sofa by the fireplace. But he had not
-come to seek counsel or sustainment. Oldmeadow saw that, as, after he
-had offered cigarettes, which Barney refused, and lighted his own pipe,
-he walked to and fro and watched him while Barney watched the flames. He
-had not come with a purpose at all. It was, again, precisely like the
-unhappy dog who wanders forth aimlessly, guided merely by a dim yearning
-towards warmth and kindliness. Barney had come where he would be
-understood. But it was not because he believed himself to be
-misunderstood that he came.
-
-"I went to Coldbrooks, first, you know," he said presently, and with an
-effect of irrelevance. "I thought I'd find Mother there. So it was only
-on that Thursday night I got back here. None of the wires caught me."
-
-"I know," said Oldmeadow. "It was most unfortunate. But you couldn't
-have got back sooner, could you, once you'd gone on from Paris."
-
-"Not possibly. I went on from Paris that very night, you see. I caught
-the night express to the Riviera. They'd left Cannes as an address, but
-when I got there I found they'd moved on to San Remo. It was Tuesday
-before I found them. My one idea was to find them as soon as possible,
-of course. No; I suppose it couldn't be helped; once I'd gone."
-
-"And it was quite useless? You'd no chance with Meg at all?"
-
-"None whatever. Quite useless. Never was such a wild-goose chase. It was
-exactly as Adrienne had said."
-
-"Still it couldn't have been foreseen so securely by anyone but
-Adrienne. Many girls would have jumped at the chance."
-
-"Not if they'd had Adrienne to help them. We might have realized that.
-That's what armed Meg. I heard Adrienne in everything she said. Even
-Mother thinks Adrienne was right, now, you know, Roger. And it was all
-for Mother, wasn't it? that I went. That makes it all so particularly
-ironic. Only dear Mummy was never very strong at logic. She takes the
-line now that we're narrow-minded conventionalists, you and I, for
-thinking that a girl oughtn't to go off with a married man. I can't feel
-that, you know, Roger," said Barney in his listless tone. "I can't help
-feeling that Meg has done something shameful. You ought to have seen
-her! Positively smug! sitting there with that ass of a fellow in that
-damned Riviera hotel! I had the horridest feeling, too, that Meg had
-brought him rather than he her. I don't mean he doesn't care for her--he
-does; I'll say that for him. He's a stupid fellow, but honest; and he
-came outside and tried to tell me what he felt and how it would be all
-right and that he was going to devote his life to her. But I think he
-feels pretty sick, really. While Meg treated me as if I were a silly
-little boy. If anyone can carry the thing through, Meg will."
-
-"It won't prove her right because she carries it through, you know,"
-Oldmeadow observed.
-
-"No," said Barney, "but it will make us seem more wrong. Not that you
-have any responsibility in it, dear old boy. I did what I felt I must do
-and mine was the mistake. It's not only Mother who thinks I've wronged
-Adrienne," he went on after a moment, lifting his arms as though he
-felt a weight upon them and clasping them behind his head. "Even Nancy,
-though she was so sorry for me, made me feel that I'd done something
-very dreadful."
-
-"Nancy? How did you come to see Nancy?"
-
-"Why, at Coldbrooks. She's still there with Aunt Monica. That was just
-it. It was my going there first, seeing her first, that upset her so.
-She couldn't understand, till I could explain, how it came about. She
-was thinking of Adrienne, you see. And I, knowing nothing, had been
-thinking of Mother all the time. It was too late, then, to go back at
-once. The next train wasn't for three hours. So I had to stay."
-
-"And it was Nancy who had to tell you everything?"
-
-"Yes; Nancy," said Barney, staring at the ceiling. There was a note,
-now, of control in his voice and Oldmeadow knew that if he had said no
-word of what must be foremost in both their thoughts it was because he
-could not trust himself to speak of it. And he went on quickly, taking
-refuge from his invading emotion, "Aunt Monica wasn't there. I didn't
-even see Johnson. I went right through the house and into the garden and
-there was Nancy, planting something in the border. Everything looked so
-natural. I just went up to her and said 'Hello, Nancy,' and then, when
-she looked up at me, I thought she was going to faint. Poor little
-Nancy. I knew something terrible had happened from the way she looked at
-me."
-
-"Poor little Nancy. But I'm glad it was she who told you, Barney."
-
-"No one could have been sweeter," said Barney, talking on quickly. "She
-kept saying, 'Oh, you oughtn't to be here, Barney. You oughtn't to be
-here.' But no one could have been sweeter. We sat down on the old bench,
-you know, and she told me. That Adrienne had nearly died. That the baby
-was dead. I could hardly believe her, at first. I stared at her, I know,
-and I kept saying, 'What do you mean, Nancy?--what do you mean?' And she
-began to cry and I cried, too. Men do feel, Roger, all the same, even
-though they haven't the mother's claim to feel. I thought about our baby
-so much. I loved it, too. And now--to think it's dead; and that I never
-saw it; and that it's my fault"--his voice had shaken more and more; he
-had put his hand before his eyes, and, then, suddenly, he leaned forward
-and buried his head on the arm of the sofa.
-
-"My poor Barney! My dear boy!" Oldmeadow muttered. He came and sat down
-beside him; he laid his arm around his shoulders. "It's not your fault,"
-he said.
-
-"Oh, don't say that, Roger!" sobbed Barney. "It's no good trying to
-comfort me. I've broken her heart. She doesn't say so. She's too angelic
-to say it; but she lies there and looks it. My poor darling! My poor,
-courageous darling; what she has been through! It can't be helped. I
-must face it. I'm her husband. I ought to have understood. She
-supplicated me, and I rejected her, and the child is dead."
-
-"The child's death is a calamity for which no one can be held
-responsible unless it is Adrienne herself," said Oldmeadow. While Barney
-sobbed he was thinking intently, for this was a turning-point in
-Barney's destiny. He would remain in subjugation to Adrienne's
-conception of the wrong done her or he must be enabled to regain the
-sense of innocence to which he had every right. "She forced the
-situation on you. She chose to break rather than bend," he said. "Listen
-to me, Barney. I don't speak in any enmity to your wife; but listen to
-me and try to think it out. Don't you remember how you once said that
-your marriage couldn't be a mistake if you were able to see the defects
-as well as the beauty of the woman you love. Don't you remember that you
-said she'd have to learn a little from you for the much you'd have to
-learn from her. Nothing more reassured me than what you said that night.
-And I was reassured the other day by your firmness. It implies no
-disloyalty in you to see the defects now. It was power over you she
-wanted the other day and to see herself put in the right, before me; and
-to see me worsted, before you. You know it, Barney; you know it in your
-heart. And she knows it too. There was no failure of love in what you
-said. There was only failure of homage. You were right in opposing her.
-She was wrong in the issue she made. She was wrong from the first of the
-miserable affair in having concealed it from you. If you'd stayed behind
-as she wanted you to do, you'd have shown yourself a weakling and she'd
-have been further than ever from knowing herself in error. There is the
-truth; and the sooner you see it, the sooner she will."
-
-For some time after his friend had ended, Barney lay silent, his face
-still hidden. But his sobs had ceased. And his silence, at last, grew
-too long for any disclaimer to be possible to him. He had been brought,
-Oldmeadow knew it from the very rhythm of his breathing, to the
-passionless contemplation where alone truth is visible. And what he said
-at last was: "She'll never see it like that."
-
-"Oh, yes, she will," said Oldmeadow. And he remembered Nancy's wisdom.
-"If you hold to it firmly and tenderly and make her feel you love her
-while you make her feel you think her wrong."
-
-"She'll never see it," Barney repeated, and Oldmeadow now suspected, and
-with a deep uneasiness, that Barney might be seeing further than
-himself. "She can't."
-
-"You mean that she's incapable of thinking herself wrong?"
-
-"Yes, incapable," said Barney. "Because all she's conscious of is the
-wish to do right. And she is right so often, she is so good and
-beautiful, that it must be like that with her. She can break; but she
-can't bend."
-
-Oldmeadow was silent for a moment and Barney, on the arm of the sofa,
-was silent. "Of course," Oldmeadow then said, "the less you say about it
-the better. Things will take their place gradually."
-
-"I've not said anything about it," said Barney. "I've only thought of
-comforting and cherishing her. But it's not enough. I'll never say
-anything; but she'll know I'm keeping something back. She knows it
-already. I see that now. And I didn't know it till you put it to me."
-
-"She'll have to accept it; or to live with it unaccepted, then. You
-can't consider yourself a criminal to give her moral ease."
-
-"No," said Barney after a pause. "No; I can't do that. Though that's
-what Mummy wants me to do. But I can be horribly sorry."
-
-"Horribly sorry. Let the rest sink into the unspoken. When people love
-each other they can, I'm sure, live over any amount of unspoken things."
-
-"It hasn't been unspoken between you and me, though, has it, Roger?"
-said Barney, and he raised himself and got upon his feet as he said it.
-"There's the trouble. There's where I _am_ wrong. For she'd feel it an
-intolerable wrong if she knew that it hadn't been unspoken between you
-and me. And she'd be right. When people love each other such reticences
-and exclusions wrong their love."
-
-"But since you say she knows," Oldmeadow suggested after another moment.
-
-Barney stood staring out of the twilight window.
-
-"She doesn't know that I tell you," he said.
-
-"You've told me nothing," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Well, she doesn't know what I listen to, then," said Barney.
-
-Oldmeadow was again conscious of the deep uneasiness. "It's quite true
-I've no call to meddle in your affairs," he said. "The essential thing
-is that you love each other. Let rights and wrongs go hang."
-
-"You haven't meddled, Roger." Barney moved towards the door. "You've
-been in my affairs, and haven't been allowed to keep out. Yes. We love
-each other. But rights and wrongs never go hang with Adrienne."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-Oldmeadow did not see Barney again for some months. He met Eleanor
-Chadwick towards the end of April, in the park, he on his way to Mrs.
-Aldesey's, she, apparently, satisfying her country appetite for
-exercise, since she seemed to be walking fast and at random. He almost
-thought for a moment that she was going to pretend not to see him and
-hurry down a path that led away from his; but his resolute eye perhaps
-checked the impulse. She faltered and then came forward, holding out her
-hand and looking rather wildly about her, and she said that London was
-really suffocating, wasn't it?
-
-"You've been here for so long, haven't you," said Oldmeadow. "Or have
-you been here all this time? I've had no news of any of you, you see."
-
-"It's all been such a troubled, busy time, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick.
-"Yes, I've been here ever since. But, thank goodness, the doctors say
-she may be moved now, and she and I and Barney are going down to
-Devonshire next week. To Torquay. Such a dismal place, I think; but
-perhaps that's because so many of my relations have died there. I never
-have liked that red Devonshire soil. But the primroses will be out. That
-makes up a little."
-
-"I'm glad that Mrs. Barney is better. When will you all be back at
-Coldbrooks?"
-
-"In June, I hope. Yes; she is better. But so feeble, still; so frail.
-And quite, quite changed from her old bright self. It's all very
-depressing, Roger. Very depressing and wearing," said Mrs. Chadwick,
-opening her eyes very wide and staring before her in a way
-characteristic of her when she repressed tears. "Sometimes I hardly know
-how to keep up at all. For nothing cheers her. And Barney isn't really
-much help. He has very little power of fighting against depression."
-
-"You've all been too much shut up with each other, I'm afraid."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick still held her eyes widely opened. "I don't think it's
-that, Roger. Being alone wouldn't have helped us to be happier, after
-what's happened."
-
-"Being with other people might. You must get back to Coldbrooks as soon
-as possible and see Nancy and Mrs. Averil and your neighbours. That will
-help to change the current of your thoughts."
-
-"People don't forget so easily as that, Roger," Mrs. Chadwick murmured,
-and it was now with severity, as though she suspected him of triviality.
-"When something terrible has happened to people they are _in_ the
-current and Nancy and the neighbours are not going to change it. Poor
-Nancy; she feels it all as much as we do, I'm sure."
-
-And that Mrs. Chadwick thought of him as unfeeling he saw. She thought
-of him, too, with Barney, as criminal; as responsible for the
-catastrophe. The old phrase of presage floated back into his mind:
-"She'll spoil things." She had spoiled, for ever perhaps, this deepest,
-dearest relation of his life. What was Coldbrooks to become to him with
-Adrienne Toner in possession? He said, and he was unable to keep a
-certain dryness that must sound like lightness, from his voice: "You are
-in it but you needn't keep your heads under it, you know. That's what
-people tend to do when they shut themselves up with their misfortunes.
-You and Barney and Mrs. Barney, I suspect, are engaged in drowning each
-other. If one of you puts their head up the others pull it down."
-
-"I suppose you mean Adrienne does," said Mrs. Chadwick. He had not meant
-it at all; but now he felt sure that so, exactly, did it happen. Poor
-Mrs. Chadwick left to herself would have drifted to the shore by this
-time and Barney, at all events, would be swimming with his head up; it
-was Adrienne, of course, that kept them suffocating under the surface.
-"Well, I think it a pity you three should go off to Torquay alone," he
-evaded. "What's happening to the farm all this time?"
-
-"Nancy is seeing to it for Barney," said Mrs. Chadwick. "She understands
-those things so well. Barney would not dream of letting the farm come
-between him and Adrienne at a time like this. He wants to be with her of
-course."
-
-"Of course. All I mean is that I wish he could be with her at
-Coldbrooks. I suppose the doctor knows what's best, however."
-
-"I'm glad to hear you own that anybody can know what's best, Roger,
-except yourself," said Mrs. Chadwick with her singularly unprovocative
-severity. "Of course she must go to the sea and of course Barney and I
-must be with her. She has two excellent nurses; but I would never trust
-the best nurse for certain things. I remember so well when I was ill
-myself once and saw the nurse behind a screen, eating raspberry jam out
-of the pot with her finger. You can't trust anybody, really." And that
-was all he got out of Eleanor Chadwick. Adrienne had spoiled things.
-
-It was in June that he heard from Mrs. Averil that she and Nancy were in
-London for a few days staying with an old aunt in Eccleston Square. Mrs.
-Averil asked him to come to tea and he asked her and Nancy to do a play
-with him; but before these meetings took place he saw them both. It was
-at a Queen's Hall concert on Sunday afternoon that Mrs. Aldesey called
-his attention to his friends and, to his surprise, Oldmeadow saw that
-Barney was with them. They sat across the gangway at some little
-distance and his first impression of the three was that they were not
-happy.
-
-"Did you know he was in town?" asked Mrs. Aldesey. "How ill he looks. I
-suppose he was frightfully upset about the baby, poor fellow."
-
-Mrs. Aldesey knew nothing of the catastrophes that had followed the
-baby's death. He had instinctively avoided any reference to the latest
-progress of the Juggernaut.
-
-"She's much better now, you know," he said, and he wasn't aware that he
-was exonerating Barney. "And they're all back at Coldbrooks."
-
-"She's not at Coldbrooks," said Mrs. Aldesey. "She's well enough to pay
-visits and Lady Lumley told me she was coming down to them for this
-week-end. I wonder he hasn't gone with her."
-
-Oldmeadow was wondering too. There was something about Barney's attitude
-as he sat there beside his cousin, silent and absent-minded it seemed,
-listening as little to the music as he looked little at her, that he
-would rather Lydia Aldesey had not been there to observe. They had a
-curiously marital appearance, the young couple, or, rather, Barney had;
-the air of being safe with some one with whom no explanations were
-needed and for whom no appearances must be kept up; some one, even, with
-whom he was so identified that he was hardly conscious of her. Nancy was
-not so unconscious. Once, when Barney leaned over to look at the
-programme, she drew away a little; and Oldmeadow even fancied a slight
-constraint in her glance when, now and then, he spoke to her. Had
-Adrienne spoiled things there, too? Mrs. Averil next day, in Eccleston
-Square, enlightened him as to Barney's presence. "It's been most
-unfortunate. He had planned to come up to this concert for a long time.
-He wanted Nancy to hear the Cesar Franck with him. And then it appeared
-that Adrienne had made an engagement for them with the Lumleys. He
-refused to go, I'm afraid, and she made an issue of it and, from what
-poor Eleanor told me, there was rather a row. So Adrienne has gone off
-alone and Barney is here till this evening. He's gone out now with Nancy
-to show her some pictures by a friend of his. It had all been arranged.
-So what were we to do about it, Roger?"
-
-"Do about it? Why just what you have done. Why shouldn't she go with
-him?"
-
-"Why indeed? Except that Adrienne has made the issue. It's awkward, of
-course, when you know there's been a row, to go on as if nothing had
-happened."
-
-Oldmeadow meditated. His friend's little face had been pinched by the
-family's distress when he had last seen it; it was clouded now by a
-closer, a more personal perplexity. "I suppose she made the issue on
-purpose so that Barney shouldn't come up," he said at length.
-
-"I really don't know. Perhaps it had been arranged first with the
-Lumleys. If it was to keep him from coming, that didn't come out. She
-wouldn't let it come out; not into the open; of course."
-
-"So things are going very badly. I'd imagined, with all Barney's
-contrition, that they might have worked out well."
-
-"They've worked out as badly, I'm afraid, as they could. He was full of
-contrition. He was as devoted as possible, when they came back in May.
-But nothing altered her unflagging melancholy. And I suppose what
-happened was that he got tired. Barney was always like that, from the
-time he was in the nursery. He'd go on being patient and good-tempered
-until, suddenly, everything would break down and he would sulk for days.
-It's when he's pushed too far. And she has pushed him too far. She's set
-them all against him."
-
-"Who is them?" Oldmeadow asked. "I saw, when we met in London, that Mrs.
-Chadwick actually had been brought to look upon Barney as a sort of
-miscreant and Adrienne as a martyr. Who else is there?"
-
-"Well, no one else except Palgrave and Barbara. Palgrave can be very
-exasperating, as you know, and he takes the attitude now that Barney has
-done Adrienne an irreparable injury. As you may imagine it isn't a
-pleasant life Barney leads among them all."
-
-"I see," said Oldmeadow. "I think I see it all. What happens now is that
-Barney more and more takes refuge with you and Nancy, and Adrienne more
-and more can't bear it."
-
-"That is precisely it, Roger," said Mrs. Averil. "And what are we to do?
-How can I shut my door against Barney? Yet it is troubling me more than
-I can say. We are forced to seem on his side and against her. And
-Adrienne has her eye upon them."
-
-"Let her keep it on them," said Oldmeadow in strong indignation. "And
-much good may it do her!"
-
-"Oh, it won't do her any good--nor us!" said Mrs. Averil. "She's sick
-with jealousy, Roger. Sick. I'm almost sorry for her when I see it and
-see her trying to hide it, and see it always, coming in by the back door
-when she shuts the front door on it--as it always does, you know. And
-Nancy sees it, of course; and is quite as sick as she is; and Barney, of
-course, remains as blind as a bat."
-
-"Well, as long as he remains blind--"
-
-"Yes. As long as he does. But Adrienne will make him see. She'll pick
-and pull at their friendship until Nancy will be forced into drawing
-back, and if she draws back Barney will see. What it's already come to
-is that she has to stand still, and smile, while Adrienne scratches her,
-lest Barney should see she's scratched; and once or twice of late I've
-had a suspicion that he has seen. It doesn't endear Nancy to Adrienne
-that Barney should scowl at her when he's caught her scratching."
-
-"What kind of scratches?" Oldmeadow asked, but Mrs. Averil had only time
-to say, "Oh, all kinds; she's wonderful at scratches," when the
-door-bell rang and Nancy, a moment after, came in.
-
-Nancy, if anything so fresh and neat could be so called, was looking
-rather dowdy, and he suspected that some self-effacing motive lay behind
-her choice of clothes.
-
-"Oh, Roger, Barney was so sorry to have to miss you," she said. And, at
-all events, whatever else Adrienne had spoiled, she had not spoiled
-Nancy's loving smile for him. "He had to catch the 4.45 to Coldbrooks,
-you know. There's a prize heifer arriving this evening and he must be
-there to welcome it. You must see his herd of Holsteins, Roger."
-Friesians were, at that date, still Holsteins.
-
-"I'd like to," said Oldmeadow. "But I don't know when I shall, for, to
-tell you the truth, I've not been asked to Coldbrooks this summer. The
-first time since I've known them."
-
-Nancy looked at him in silence.
-
-"You'll come to us, of course," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"Do you really think I'd better, all things considered?" Oldmeadow
-asked.
-
-"Why, of course you'd better. What possible reasons could there be for
-your not coming, except ones we don't accept?"
-
-"It won't seem to range us too much in a hostile camp?"
-
-"Not more than we're ranged already. Nancy and I are not going to give
-you up, my dear Roger, because Adrienne considers herself a martyr."
-
-"I hope not, indeed. But it makes my exclusion from Coldbrooks more
-marked, perhaps, if I go to you. I imagine, though I am so much in her
-black books, that poor Mrs. Chadwick doesn't want my exclusion to be
-marked."
-
-"You're quite right there. You are in her black books; but she doesn't
-want it marked; she'd like to have you, really, if Adrienne weren't
-there and if she didn't feel shy. And I really think it will make it
-easier for her if you come to us instead. It will tide it over a
-little. She'll be almost able to feel you are with them. After all, you
-do come to us, often."
-
-"And I'll go up with you to Coldbrooks as if nothing had happened? I
-confess I have a curiosity to see how Mrs. Barney takes me."
-
-"She's very good at taking things, you know," said Nancy.
-
-Mrs. Averil cast a glance upon him. "It may be really something of a
-relief to their minds, Roger," she said, "if you turn up as if nothing
-had happened. They are in need of distractions. They are all dreadfully
-on edge, though they won't own to it, about Meg. The case is coming on
-quite soon now. Mrs. Hayward has lost no time, and poor Eleanor only
-keeps up because Adrienne is there to hold her up."
-
-"Where is Meg? Do they hear from her?"
-
-"They hear from her constantly. She's still on the Continent. She writes
-very easily and confidently. I can't help imagining, all the same, that
-Adrienne is holding her up, too. She's written to Nancy and Nancy hasn't
-shown me her letters."
-
-"There is nothing to hide, Mother," said Nancy, and Oldmeadow had never
-seen her look so dejected. "Nothing at all, except that she's not as
-easy and confident as she wants to appear. Adrienne does hold her up.
-Poor Meg."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-The picture of Adrienne holding them up was spread before Oldmeadow's
-eyes on the hot July day when Mrs. Averil drove him up from the Little
-House to Coldbrooks. The shade of the great lime-tree on the lawn was
-like a canvas, only old Johnson, as he moved to and fro with tea-table,
-silver and strawberries, stepping from its cool green atmosphere into
-the framing sunshine. The Chadwick family, seated or lying in the shade,
-were all nearly as still as in a picture, and Adrienne was its centre.
-She sat in a high-backed wicker chair, her hands lying listlessly in her
-lap, a scarf about her shoulders, and in her black-veiled white, her
-wide, transparent hat, she was like a clouded moon. There was something
-even of daring, to Oldmeadow's imagination, in their approach across the
-sunny spaces. Her eyes had so rested upon them from the moment that they
-had driven up, that they might have been bold wayfarers challenging the
-magic of a Circe in her web. Palgrave, in his white flannels, lay
-stretched at her feet, and he had been reading aloud to her; Barbara and
-Mrs. Chadwick sat listening while they worked on either hand. Only
-Barney was removed, sitting at some little distance, his back half
-turned, a pipe between his teeth and his eyes on a magazine that lay
-upon his knee. But the influence, the magic, was upon him too. He was
-consciously removed.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick sprang up to greet them. "This is nice!" she cried, and
-her knitting trailed behind her as she came so that Barbara, laughing,
-stooped to catch and pick it up as she followed her; "I was expecting
-you! How nice and dear of you! On this hot day! I always think the very
-fishes must feel warm on a day like this! Or could they, do you
-think?--Dear Roger!" There was an evident altering in Mrs. Chadwick's
-manner towards him since the meeting in the Park. She was, with all her
-fluster, manifestly glad to see him.
-
-Palgrave had hoisted himself to his feet and now stood beside Adrienne,
-eyeing them as a faithful hound eyes suspicious visitors.
-
-"Isn't it lovely in the shade," Mrs. Chadwick continued, drawing them
-into it. "Adrienne darling, Aunt Monica after all. And we were afraid
-the heat might keep you away. I suppose the hill was very hot, Monica?"
-Adrienne was still, apparently, something of an invalid, for she did not
-rise to greet them. Neither did she speak as she held out her hand to
-each of them in turn, and while an enveloping smile dwelt fondly on Mrs.
-Averil, she made no attempt to smile at Oldmeadow.
-
-He found himself observing her with a sort of wonder. All the flaws and
-deformities of her maternity had fallen from her and she had the
-appearance almost of beauty. Yet he had never so little liked her face.
-Her dimly patterned features made him think of a Chinese picture he had
-once seen where, on a moth-wing background, pale chrysanthemums,
-mauvy-pink, a disk of carved jade with cord and tassel and a narrow
-ivory box softly spotted with darkness, conveyed in their seeming
-triviality an impression almost sinister of impersonality and magic.
-There was as little feeling in her face. It was like a mask.
-
-"Where's Nancy?" Barney asked. He had got up and joined them, giving
-Oldmeadow's hand, as they met, a curiously lifeless shake.
-
-"She had letters to write," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"Why, I thought we'd arranged she was to come up and walk round the farm
-after tea with me," said Barney and as he spoke Oldmeadow noted that
-Adrienne turned her head slowly, somewhat as she had done on the ominous
-morning in March, and rested her eyes upon him.
-
-"Oh, I'm so sorry," said Mrs. Averil cheerfully. "She must have
-misunderstood. She had these letters to finish for the post."
-
-Barbara was reconnoitring at the tea-table. "Strawberries!" she
-announced. "Who said they'd be over? Oh, what a shame of Nancy not to
-come! Roger, why aren't you staying here rather than with Aunt Monica,
-I'd like to know? Aren't we grand enough for you since she's had that
-bathroom put in!" Barbara had advanced to a lively flapperdom.
-
-"You see, by this plan, I get the bath with her and get you when she
-brings me up," Oldmeadow retorted.
-
-"And leave Nancy behind! I call it a shame when we're having the last
-strawberries--and you may have a bathroom with Aunt Monica, but her
-strawberries are over. Letters! Who ever heard of Nancy writing
-letters--except to you, Barney. She was always writing to you when you
-were living in London--before you married. And what screeds you used to
-send her--all about art!" said Barbara, and that her liveliness cast a
-spell of silence was apparent to everyone but herself.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick took Oldmeadow's arm and drew him aside. "You'll be able
-to come later and be quite with us, won't you, Roger?" she said
-"September is really a lovelier month, don't you think? Adrienne is
-going to take Palgrave and Barbara for a motor-trip in September. Won't
-it be lovely for them?" Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a swiftness that did
-not veil a sense of insecurity. "Barbara's never seen the Alps. They are
-going to the Tyrol."
-
-"If we don't have a European war by then," Oldmeadow suggested. "What is
-Barney going to do?"
-
-"Oh, Barney is going to the Barclay's in Scotland, to shoot. He loves
-that. A war, Roger? What do you mean? All those tiresome Serbians? Why,
-they won't go into the Tyrol, will they?"
-
-"Perhaps not the Tyrol; but they may make it difficult for other people
-to go there."
-
-"Do you hear what Roger is saying?" Mrs. Chadwick turned to her family.
-"That the Serbians may make war by September and that it might interfere
-with the trip. But I'm sure Sir Edward will quiet them. He always does.
-Though he is a Liberal, I've always felt him to be such a good man,"
-said Mrs. Chadwick, "and really patriotic. Simply sitting round a table
-with him cools their heads more than one would believe possible.
-Dreadfully violent people, I believe, killing their kings and queens and
-throwing them out of the window. I always think there's nothing in the
-world for controlling people's tempers like getting them to sit together
-round a table. I wonder why it is. Something to do with having your legs
-out of the way, perhaps. People don't look nearly so threatening if
-their legs are hidden, do they? My poor cousin, Fanny Jocelyn, used
-always to say that if any of the clergymen in Fred's diocese got very
-troublesome her one recipe was to ask them to lunch, or, if they were
-very bad, to dinner. But she had wonderful tact--that gift, you know,
-for seeming to care simply _immensely_ for the person she was talking
-to. Francis used to tell her that when she looked at you as if you were
-the only person in the world she loved she was really working out her
-next menu."
-
-"I'm afraid if war comes it won't be restricted to people, like Serbians
-and clergymen, who can be quieted by being asked to dinner," said
-Oldmeadow laughing. "We'll be fighting, too."
-
-"And who will we fight?" Palgrave inquired. After passing tea, he had
-resumed his place at Adrienne's feet. "Who has been getting in our way
-now?"
-
-"Don't you read the papers?" Oldmeadow asked him.
-
-"Not when I can avoid it," said Palgrave. "They'll be bellowing out the
-same old Jingo stuff on the slightest provocation, of course. As far as
-I can make out the Serbians are the most awful brutes and Russia is
-egging them on. But when it comes to a crime against humanity like war,
-every one is responsible."
-
-"Are you ready for strawberries, Aunt Monica," Barbara interposed. "If
-there is a war, I hope we may be in it so that I can do some of my first
-aid on real people at last."
-
-She was carrying strawberries now to Adrienne who, as she leaned down,
-took her gently by the wrist, and said some low-toned words to her. "I
-know, my angel. Horrid of me!" said Barbara. "But one can't take war
-seriously, can one!"
-
-"I can," said Mrs. Averil. "Too many of my friends had their sons and
-husbands killed in South Africa."
-
-"And it's human nature," said Mrs. Chadwick, eating her strawberries
-mournfully. "Like the poor: whom you have always with you, you know."
-
-"Human nature is altered already a good deal more than governments
-imagine," said Palgrave, "and they'll find themselves pretty well dished
-if they try to bring on a capitalist war now. The workers all over the
-world are beginning to see whose the hands are that pull the strings and
-they'll refuse to dance to their piping. They'll down weapons just as
-they've learned, at last, to down tools; and without them you can do
-nothing. That's the way human nature will end war."
-
-"A spirited plan, no doubt," said Oldmeadow, "and effective if all the
-workers came to be of the same mind simultaneously. But if those of one
-country downed weapons and those of another didn't, the first would get
-their throats cut for their pains."
-
-"It's easy to sneer," Palgrave retorted. "As a matter of principle, I'd
-rather have my throat cut by a hired ruffian than kill an innocent
-man--even if he did belong to a nation that happened to be cleverer and
-more efficient than my own. That's a crime, of course, that we can't
-forgive."
-
-"Don't talk such rot, Palgrave," Barney now remarked in a tone of
-apathetic disgust.
-
-"I beg your pardon," Palgrave sat up instantly, flushing all over his
-face. "I think it's truth and sanity."
-
-"It's not truth and sanity. It's rot and stupid rot," said Barney. "Some
-more tea, please, Barbara."
-
-"Calling names isn't argument," said Palgrave. "I could call names, too,
-if it came to that. It's calling names that is stupid. I merely happen
-to believe in what Christ said."
-
-"Oh, but, dear--Christ drove the money-lenders out of the Temple very,
-very roughly," Mrs. Chadwick interposed with the head-long irrelevance
-characteristic of her in such crises. "Thongs must hurt so much, mustn't
-they? He surely believed in punishing people who did wrong."
-
-"Which nation doesn't do wrong, Mummy? Which nation is a Christ with a
-right to punish another? It's farcical. And punishing isn't killing.
-Christ didn't kill malefactors."
-
-"The Gadarene swine," Mrs. Chadwick murmured. "They were killed. So
-painfully, too, poor things. I never could understand about that. I hope
-the Higher Criticism will manage to get rid of it, for it doesn't really
-seem kind. They had done no wrong at all and I've always been specially
-fond of pigs myself."
-
-"Ah, but you never saw a pig with a devil in it," Oldmeadow suggested,
-to which Mrs. Chadwick murmured, "I'm sure they seem to have devils in
-them, sometimes, poor dears, when they won't let themselves be caught.
-Do get some more cream, Barbara. It's really too hot for arguments,
-isn't it," and Mrs. Chadwick sighed with the relief of having rounded
-that dangerous corner.
-
-Barbara went away with the cream-jug and Johnson emerged bearing the
-afternoon post.
-
-"Ah. Letters. Good." Palgrave sat up to take his and Adrienne's share.
-"One for you, Adrienne; from Meg. Now we shall see what she says about
-meeting us in the Tyrol." His cheeks were still flushed and his eyes
-brilliant with anger. Though his words were for Adrienne his voice was
-for Barney, at whom he did not glance.
-
-Adrienne unfolded the foreign sheets, and held them so that Palgrave,
-leaning against her knee, could read with her.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick had grown crimson. She looked at Oldmeadow. "Dear Meg is
-having such an interesting time," she told him. "She and Eric are seeing
-all manner of delightful places and picking up some lovely bits of old
-furniture." Oldmeadow bowed assent. He had his eyes on Adrienne and he
-was wondering about Barbara.
-
-"What news is there, dear?" Mrs. Chadwick continued in the same badly
-controlled voice. Palgrave's face had clouded.
-
-"I'm afraid it may be bad news, Mother Nell," said Adrienne looking up.
-
-It was the first time Oldmeadow had heard her voice that afternoon and
-he could hardly have believed it the voice that had once reminded him of
-a blue ribbon. It was still slow, still deliberate and soft; but it had
-now the steely thrust and intention of a dagger.
-
-"It's this accursed war talk!" Palgrave exclaimed. "Eric evidently
-thinks it serious and he has to come home at once. What rotten luck."
-
-Adrienne handed the sheets to Mrs. Chadwick. "It will all have blown
-over by September," she said. "As Mother Nell says, we can trust Sir
-Edward to keep us out of anything so wicked as a war. I am so completely
-with you in all you say about the wickedness of war, Paladin, although I
-do not see its causes quite so simply, perhaps."
-
-It was the first time that Oldmeadow had heard the new name for her
-knight.
-
-"For my part," said Barney, casting a glance at the house, Barbara not
-having yet reappeared, "I shall be grateful to the war if it dishes your
-trip to the Tyrol. It's most unsuitable for Barbara."
-
-He did not look at his wife as he spoke. His hat brim pulled down over
-his eyes, he sat with folded arms and stared in front of him.
-
-"You find it unsuitable for one sister to meet another?" Adrienne
-inquired. Her eyes were on Barney, but Oldmeadow could not interpret
-their gaze.
-
-"Most unsuitable, to use no stronger word," said Barney, "while one
-sister is living with a man whose name she doesn't bear."
-
-"You mean to say," said Palgrave, sitting cross-legged at Adrienne's
-feet and grasping his ankles with both hands, "that Meg, until she's
-legally married, isn't fit for her little sister to associate with?"
-
-"Just what I do mean, Palgrave. Precisely what I do mean," said Barney,
-and his face, reddening, took on its rare but characteristic expression
-of sullen anger. "And I'll thank you--in my house, after all--to keep
-out of an argument that doesn't concern you."
-
-"Barney; Palgrave," murmured Mrs. Chadwick supplicatingly. Adrienne,
-not moving her eyes from her husband's face, laid her hand on Palgrave's
-shoulder.
-
-"It does concern me," said Palgrave, and he put up his hand and grasped
-Adrienne's. "Barbara's well-being concerns me as much as it does you;
-and your wife's happiness concerns me a good deal more. I can promise
-you that I wouldn't trouble your hospitality for another day if it
-weren't for her--and Mother. It's perfectly open to you, of course, to
-turn me out of my home whenever you like to make use of your legal
-privilege. But until I'm turned out I stay--for their sakes."
-
-"You young ass! You unmitigated young ass!" Barney snarled, springing to
-his feet. "All right, Mother. Don't bother. I'll leave you to your
-protector for the present. I only wish he were young enough to be given
-what he needs--a thorough good hiding. I'll go down and see Nancy. Don't
-expect me back to dinner."
-
-"Nancy is busy, my dear," poor Mrs. Averil, deeply flushing, interposed,
-while Palgrave, under his breath, yet audibly, murmured: "Truly
-Kiplingesque! Home and Hidings! Our Colonial history summed up!"
-
-"She would be here if she weren't busy," said Mrs. Averil.
-
-"I won't bother her," said Barney. "I'll sit in the garden and read.
-It's more peaceful than being here."
-
-"Please tell dear Nancy that it's ten days at least since _I've_ seen
-her," said Adrienne, "and that I miss her and beg that she'll give me,
-sometime, a few of her spare moments."
-
-At that Barney stopped short, and looked at his wife. "No, Adrienne, I
-won't," he said with a startling directness. "I'll take no messages
-whatever from you to Nancy. Let Nancy alone--do you see? That's all I've
-got to ask of you. Let her alone. She and Aunt Monica are the only
-people you haven't set against me and I don't intend to quarrel with
-Nancy to please you, I promise you."
-
-Sitting motionless and upright, her hand laid on Palgrave's shoulder,
-her face as unalterable as a little mask, Adrienne received these
-well-aimed darts as a Saint Sebastian might have received the arrows.
-Barney stared hard at her for a moment, then turned his back and marched
-out into the sunlight and Oldmeadow, as he saw him go, felt that he
-witnessed the end, as he had, little more than a year ago, witnessed the
-beginning, of an epoch. What was there left to build on after such a
-scene? And what must have passed between husband and wife during their
-hours of intimacy to make it credible? Barney was not a brute.
-
-When Barney had turned through the entrance gates and
-disappeared--Adrienne's eyes dropped to Palgrave's. "I think I'll go in,
-Paladin," she said, and it was either with faintness or with the mere
-stillness of her rage. "I think I'll lie down for a little while."
-
-Palgrave had leaped to his feet and, as she rose, drew her hand within
-his arm, and Mrs. Chadwick, her eyes staring wide, hastened to her: but
-Adrienne gently put her away. "No, no, dearest Mother Nell. Paladin will
-help me. You must stay with Aunt Monica and Mr. Oldmeadow." Her hand
-rested for a moment on Mrs. Chadwick's shoulder and she looked into her
-eyes. "I'm so sorry, Mother Nell. I meant no harm."
-
-"Oh, my darling child! As if I did not know that!" Mrs. Chadwick moaned
-and, as Adrienne moved away, she turned as if half distraught to her two
-friends. "Oh, it's dreadful! dreadful!" she nearly wept. "Oh, how can he
-treat her so--before you all! It's breaking my heart!"
-
-Barbara came running out with the cream. "Great Scott!" she exclaimed,
-stopping short. "What's become of everybody?"
-
-"They've all gone, dear. Yes, we've all finished. No one wants any more
-strawberries. Take yours away, will you, dear, we want to have a little
-talk, Aunt Monica, Roger and I."
-
-"I suppose it's Barney again," said Barbara, standing still and gazing
-indignantly around her. "Where's Adrienne?"
-
-"She has gone to lie down, dear. Yes. Barney has been very unkind."
-
-"About my trip, I suppose? He's been too odious about my trip and it's
-only the other day he made Adrienne cry. What possible business is it of
-Barney's, I'd like to know? One would think he imagined that wives and
-sisters were a sort of chattel. Why mayn't I stay, Mother--if you're
-going to talk about my trip? Adrienne has explained everything to me and
-I think Meg was quite right and I'd do the same myself if I were in her
-place. So I'm perfectly able to understand."
-
-"I know, dear; I know; Adrienne is so wonderful. But don't say things
-like that, I beg of you, for it makes me very, very unhappy. And please
-run away for a little while, for we have other things to talk of. I'm
-afraid there may be no trip at all, Barbara; Meg may be coming home at
-once. The letters had news about it, and Eric has to go to the war--if
-there is a war, you see." Mrs. Chadwick spoke with a supplicatory note
-very unlike her usual placid if complaining authority.
-
-"But I'd like to hear about the letters, then. Do we really have to give
-up the trip? I'm sure it's Barney at the bottom of it. He's been trying
-to dish it from the first and I simply won't stand it from him."
-
-"It's not Barney at all, Barbara. You shall hear all that there is to
-hear. And you mustn't, really, forget that Barney is your elder brother
-and has some right to say what you should do--even though we mayn't
-agree with him."
-
-"No, he hasn't. Not an atom," Barbara declared. "If anyone has any
-right, except you, it's Adrienne, because she's a bigger, wiser person
-than any of us."
-
-"And since you've borne your testimony, Barbara," Oldmeadow suggested,
-"you might obey your mother and give us the benefit of your experience
-on an occasion when it's invited."
-
-"Oh, I know you're against Adrienne, Roger," said Barbara, but with a
-sulkiness that showed surrender. "I shan't force myself on you, I assure
-you, and girls of fifteen aren't quite the infants in arms you may
-imagine. If Adrienne weren't here to stand up for me I don't know where
-I'd be. Because, you know, you _are_ weak, Mother. Yes you are. You've
-been really wobbling like anything about my trip and trying to wriggle
-out of it whenever you had a loop-hole, and Adrienne thinks you're weak,
-I know, for she told me so, and said we must help you to be brave and
-strong and that you belonged to a generation that had its eyes tightly
-bandaged from birth. So there!" And delivering this effective shot,
-Barbara marched away, not forgetting to pick up her plate of
-strawberries as she passed the table.
-
-Mrs. Chadwick attempted to conceal her confusion by following her
-child's retreating figure with grave disapprobation and Oldmeadow seized
-the propitious moment to remark: "I can't help feeling that there's
-something to be said for Barney, all the same. His wife _has_ set you
-all against him, hasn't she? I suspect Barbara's right, too, my dear
-friend, and that in your heart of hearts you dislike this trip of hers
-as much as he does. Certainly Barbara isn't a very pleasing example of
-Adrienne's influence."
-
-"She is very naughty, very naughty and rebellious," poor Mrs. Chadwick
-murmured, twisting and untwisting her handkerchief. "I know I've not a
-strong character, but I never spoiled my children and dear Adrienne
-does, I feel, spoil Barbara by taking her so seriously and talking to
-her as if she were grown up, you know. I had an aunt who married at
-sixteen; but it didn't turn out at all happily. They quarrelled
-constantly and she had two sets of twins, poor thing--almost like a
-judgment, dear Mamma used to say. But of course Barbara is really too
-young to understand; and so I've told dear Adrienne. Not that she isn't
-perfectly frank about it. She's told me over and over again that
-weakness was my besetting danger and that I must stand up straight and
-let the winds of freedom blow away my cobwebs. So dear and original,
-always, you know. And of course I see her point of view and Barbara
-will, no doubt, be a bigger, finer person"--Mrs. Chadwick's voice
-trailed off in its echo. "But I don't agree with you, Roger; I don't
-agree with you at all!" she took up with sudden vehemence, "about the
-trip. I don't agree that my poor Meg is a leper to be avoided until a
-legal ceremony has been performed. I think that a cruel
-convention--cruel, base and cowardly. She must have suffered so much
-already. Nothing will give her so much courage as for us to be seen
-standing by her. Adrienne has explained all that most beautifully to
-Barbara. And how true love is the most sacred thing in life."
-
-"My dear friend, Meg isn't a leper, of course, and we all intend to
-stand by her. But it is certainly best that a young girl like Barbara
-shouldn't be asked to meet, or understand, or exonerate such difficult
-situations."
-
-"That's what I've tried to say to Eleanor," Mrs. Averil murmured.
-
-"And why not, Roger! Why not!" Mrs. Chadwick cried, surprisingly yet not
-convincingly aroused. "Nothing develops the character so much as facing
-and understanding difficulty. And as for exoneration--I don't agree with
-you, and Adrienne doesn't agree. You and Monica are conventionalists and
-we must live on a higher plane than convention. I'm sure I try to,
-though it's very hard sometimes, but the noblest things are hardest.
-There is nothing to exonerate. Meg was following her own light in doing
-what she did."
-
-"It's not a question of Meg, but of her situation," Oldmeadow returned.
-
-"And because of her situation, because she is so in need of help and
-loyalty, you ask that Barbara should draw back her skirts from her! Oh!
-I knew it!" cried Mrs. Chadwick, "I knew that you would feel like that!
-That is why I felt it would be happier if you were not here with
-Adrienne."
-
-"You need hardly tell me that," said Oldmeadow smiling. "But it's not a
-question of convention, except in so far as convention means right
-feeling and good taste. Meg, whatever her lights--and personally I don't
-believe that she followed them--has done something that involves pain
-and humiliation for all concerned with her, and whether she was or was
-not justified in doing it is a moral problem that a child shouldn't be
-asked to meet. Such problems should be kept from her until she is old
-enough to understand them."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's vehemence had only fictitiously sustained her. It
-dropped from her now and for a little while she sat silent, and the
-confusion of her heart was piteously revealed to her friend as she said
-at last, "If there _is_ a war, it will all settle itself, won't it, for
-then Barbara couldn't go. I don't try to wriggle out of it. That's most
-unfair and untrue. I've promised Adrienne and I agree with Adrienne
-about it. I can't explain it clearly, as she does; it's all quite, quite
-different when Adrienne explains it. She seems to hold me up and you and
-Monica pull me down--oh, yes, you do, Roger. Of course it would kill
-me--I know that I should die, if Barbara were to do what Meg has done;
-you mustn't think Adrienne _wants_ her to behave like that, you know.
-Adrienne only wants people to be brave and follow their light; but your
-light needn't be a married man, need it? And sometimes I think it isn't
-_really_ so serious--falling in love, you know. I'm sure I thought _I_
-was in love half a dozen times before Francis proposed. It's a question
-of seeing what's best for you all round, isn't it, and it can't be best
-if it's a married man, can it? Oh! I know I'm saying what Adrienne
-wouldn't like, now; because it sounds so worldly and as if I believed in
-the French way. But I don't at all. I think love's everything, too. Only
-it always seemed to me when I was a girl that love meant white satin and
-orange-blossoms; and my poor, poor Meg can never wear those now. I
-should feel miserable, quite miserable about her, of course, if Adrienne
-weren't here to make me see the big, real things instead of the little
-ones. And Barney has been so unkind. Sneering and scoffing at
-everything"--her voice quivered. "However, if there's a war, that will
-settle it. Barbara couldn't go if there was a war."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-
-The war thus had its uses to Mrs. Chadwick. Barbara did not go to the
-Tyrol. By the end of September Oldmeadow and Barney were in training,
-one on the Berkshire and one on the Wiltshire downs, and Meg was
-ambiguously restored to her family at Coldbrooks.
-
-Oldmeadow had not seen Barney for many days, when they met one afternoon
-at Paddington and travelled together as far as Didcot. They had the
-carriage to themselves and though Barney's demeanour was reticent there
-were many things about which, it was evident, he found it a relief to be
-communicative. It was from him that Oldmeadow learned of Meg's return.
-
-"She'll be in a pretty box, won't she, if Hayward is killed," he said,
-smoking his cigarette and not looking at his friend. "He's over there,
-you know, and for my part I think there's very little chance of any of
-them coming back alive."
-
-They both smoked in silence for a little while after this, contemplating
-the ordeal in which their country was involved rather than their own
-relation to it; but Oldmeadow's mind returned presently to Barney's
-difficulties and he asked him if it had been to see Hayward off that
-he'd just been up to London.
-
-Barney, at this, had a quiet sardonic laugh. "Good heavens, no," he
-said. "Hayward went in the first week and Adrienne and Palgrave went up
-with Meg to see him off. Even if I'd wanted to, I'd have been allowed to
-have no hand in that. Adrienne is seeing to it all. Lawyers, money, I
-don't know what. No; I went up to spend my leave with old Boyd at his
-place in Chelsea. I didn't want to go home. Home is the last place I
-want to be just now."
-
-Oldmeadow at this maintained a silence that could not pretend surprise
-and Barney continued in a moment. "Palgrave isn't coming in, you know."
-
-"You mean he's carrying out his pacifist ideas?"
-
-"If they are his," said Barney in his colourless yet sardonic voice.
-"Any ideas of Palgrave's are likely to be Adrienne's, you know. She got
-hold of him from the first."
-
-"Well, after all," Oldmeadow after another moment felt impelled to say,
-"She got hold of you, too. In the same way; by believing in herself and
-by understanding you. She thinks she's right."
-
-"Ha! ha!" laughed Barney and for a moment, an acutely uncomfortable one
-for Oldmeadow, he turned his eyes on his friend. "Thinks she's right!
-You needn't tell me that, Roger!"
-
-It had indeed, Oldmeadow felt, hardly been decent of him.
-
-"I know. Of course she would. But, all the same, people must be allowed
-to hold their own opinions."
-
-"Must they?" said Barney. "At a time like this? Adrienne must, of
-course; as a woman she doesn't come into it; she brings other people in,
-that is to say, and keeps out herself. Besides she's an American. But
-Palgrave shouldn't be allowed the choice. He's dishonouring us all--as
-Meg has done. Poor, foolish, wretched Mother! She's seeing it at last,
-though she won't allow herself to say it, or, rather, Adrienne won't
-allow her--" He checked himself.
-
-"Dishonour is a strong word, Barney. Palgrave is hardly more than a
-boy."
-
-"Jim Errington is a year younger than Palgrave, and Peter Layard six
-months. They're both in. I don't think nineteen is too young to
-dishonour your family. If Palgrave committed a murder, he'd be hanged.
-But it will no doubt come to conscription and then we'll see where he'll
-find himself. Herded in as a Tommy. All this talk of a few months is
-folly."
-
-"I know. Yes. Folly," said Oldmeadow absently. "Have you tried to have
-it out with Palgrave, Barney? If he only hears Adrienne's side what can
-you expect of him? If you leave them all to sink or swim without you,
-you mustn't blame Adrienne for steering as best she can."
-
-"Sink or swim without me!" Barney echoed. "Why they'd none of them
-listen to me. You saw well enough how it was with them that day in July
-when you came up. Adrienne is twice as strong as I am when it comes to
-anything like a struggle and she has them all firmly under her thumb.
-She steers because she intends to steer and intends I shan't. I've tried
-nothing with Palgrave, except to keep my hands off him. Mother's talked
-to him, and Meg's talked to him; but nothing does any good. Oh, yes; Meg
-hangs on Adrienne because she's got nothing else to hang to; but she's
-frightfully down on Palgrave all the same. They're all united against
-me, but they're not united among themselves by any means. It's not a
-peaceful family party at Coldbrooks, I promise you. Poor Mother spends
-most of her time shut up in her room crying."
-
-Barney offered no further information on this occasion and Oldmeadow
-asked for no more. It was from Mrs. Aldesey, some weeks later, that he
-heard that Eric Hayward had been killed. Mrs. Aldesey was his most
-punctual correspondent and her letters, full of pungent, apposite
-accounts of how the war was affecting London, the pleasantest
-experiences that came to him on the Berkshire downs, where, indeed, he
-did not find life unpleasant. Mrs. Aldesey made time for these long
-letters after tiring days spent among Belgian refugees and his sense of
-comradeship had been immensely deepened by the vast, new experience they
-were, from their different angles, sharing. It was difficult, on the
-soft October day, to dissociate the mere pleasure of reading her letter
-from the miserable news she gave. Yet he knew, stretched at ease after
-strenuous exercise, the canvas of his tent idly flapping above him and
-the sunlight falling across his feet, that it was very miserable news
-indeed and must miserably affect his friends at Coldbrooks. What was to
-become of poor Meg now? And after his mind had paused on poor Meg a pang
-of memory brought back the face of his setter John. Poor Hayward.
-
-"She must, of course, find some work at once," Mrs. Aldesey wrote. "The
-war does help to solve problems of this sort as nothing else before ever
-could. She must nurse, or drive an ambulance and perhaps by the time
-it's all over we'll have forgotten irrelevancies that happened so long
-ago. Sometimes it feels like that to me and I know I'm much too old to
-face the world that will have grown up out of the wreckage of the world
-I knew." Mrs. Aldesey, still, always spoke of herself as antique,
-relegated and on the shelf. Rather absurd of her, as her friend pointed
-out in his reply, when she was obviously one of the people who were
-going to make the new world. She was organizing the Belgians in the most
-remarkable manner.
-
-As to Coldbrooks he hesitated. He could hardly see himself writing to
-Mrs. Chadwick or to Meg. Of Nancy he felt a little shy. There would be
-too much to say to Nancy if he said anything and he allowed the
-anonymous calamity that had overtaken his friends to pass without
-comment or condolence. But after an interval of some weeks it was from
-Nancy herself that he heard. Nancy seemed always to be selected as the
-vehicle for other people's emergencies.
-
-"Dear Roger," she wrote. "You have heard how very unhappy we all are. It
-is dreadful to see poor Meg, and Aunt Eleanor makes it really worse for
-her. Meg wears mourning, like a widow, and she is terribly bitter about
-Palgrave, and about Adrienne, too. Doesn't that seem to you very strange
-and unjust? Adrienne is doing for Palgrave what she did for
-Meg--standing by him. It is all more unhappy than you can imagine.
-Palgrave is at New College, now, you know, and I'm writing, because Aunt
-Eleanor's one hope is that you may be able to talk to him. Kindly, you
-know, Roger; and not as if you thought him a criminal or a coward; that
-is worse than useless, naturally. Palgrave is very arrogant; but you
-know what a tender heart he really has and I am sure that he is very
-lonely and unhappy. So be kind and understanding, won't you? He really
-cares for you and trusts you more than he likes to show; and of course
-he would expect you to be against him."
-
-Oldmeadow was going into Oxford in a week's time and he wrote to
-Palgrave and asked him to give him tea. "I've got to talk to you, if
-you'll let me," he said, "but I shan't make myself a nuisance, I promise
-you. I only want to satisfy myself that you have thought everything out,
-and if you have I'll be able to tell your people that they must give up
-tormenting themselves and you about it. I shall like talking over your
-work with you, too, if I may, and renewing my own Oxford memories." So
-conciliatory, so affectionate (and he found it easy to be affectionate
-to poor Palgrave) was the tone of the letter that he had a swift reply.
-Palgrave would be very glad to see him.
-
-It was a melancholy, deserted Oxford into which Oldmeadow drove his
-little car on a late October afternoon. Most of the youths he saw were
-of a nondescript variety, a type to whom Oxford means scholastic
-opportunity and nothing more. There were dark-skinned lads from distant
-parts of the Empire looking, to Oldmeadow's eye, rather pitiful and
-doomed to disappointment, and a hurrying, absorbed little Jap had an
-almost empty Broad as a setting for his alien figure.
-
-Palgrave's name was freshly painted at the bottom of a staircase in the
-Garden Quad and Oldmeadow mounted to rooms that most delightfully
-overlooked the garden and its catalpa-tree.
-
-Palgrave was ready for him. The tea was laid and he stood at the table
-cutting a cake as Oldmeadow entered. But some one else, too, was ready,
-for there, in the window-seat, her gaze fixed on the waning golds and
-russets beneath, sat Adrienne Toner. Oldmeadow, very much and very
-disagreeably affected, paused at the door.
-
-"Come in, Mr. Oldmeadow," said Adrienne, and there was a strange, jaded
-eagerness in the gaze she fixed on him. "I've only come for tea. I have
-to go directly afterwards. I am staying in Oxford, now, you know. To be
-near Palgrave."
-
-"Meg's turned her out of Coldbrooks," Palgrave announced, standing
-still, over the tea-tray, his hands in his pockets while, with bent
-head, he looked from under his brows at Oldmeadow. "Meg, you understand;
-for whose sake she's gone through everything. We're pariahs together,
-now; she and I."
-
-"It's not quite true or fair to say that, Palgrave," said Adrienne,
-whose eyes had returned to the garden. "Meg hasn't turned me out. I felt
-it would be happier for her if I weren't there; and for your
-Mother--since they feel as they do about what has happened; and happier
-for you and me to be together. You can't be surprised at Meg. She is
-nearly beside herself with grief."
-
-Adrienne was very much altered. The magic of the lime-tree scene no
-longer lay about her. Her skin was sallow, her eyes sunken, her
-projecting mouth was at once stubborn, weary and relaxed. She had been
-almost beautiful on that July day and to-day she was definitely ugly.
-Oldmeadow saw that some intent inner preoccupation held her thoughts.
-
-"I _am_ surprised at her; very much surprised," said Palgrave, "though I
-might have warned you that Meg wasn't a person worth risking a great
-deal for. Oh, yes, she's nearly beside herself all right. She's lost the
-man she cared for and she can't, now, ever be made 'respectable.' Oh, I
-see further into Meg's grief than you do, my poor Adrienne. She's just
-as conventional and unheroic at heart as Mother; and that's what _she_
-minds--more than anything."
-
-Oldmeadow, sunken in the deep chair Palgrave had drawn for him to the
-table, watched the curious interchange, and after a pause, in her jaded
-voice, Adrienne from the window-seat commented: "I understand her rage
-and misery. It's because her grief is divided and spoiled and tainted
-like that that she is distracted."
-
-"Will you pour out tea?" Palgrave asked her gloomily. "You'll see
-anyone's side, always, except your own."
-
-To this Adrienne, rising and coming forward to the table, made no reply.
-She wore a dark dress that recalled to Oldmeadow the one in which he had
-first seen her; the short jacket tying across white in front and white
-ruffles falling about her neck and hands. A small, dark hat was bent
-down about her face.
-
-Strange, brooding face. What was she thinking of, Oldmeadow wondered, as
-he watched her hands, impeded by the falling ruffles, moving with the
-old, fumbling gestures among the tea-things; she had constantly to throw
-back the ruffles, and the tea-pot, after all, was too heavy for her. It
-slipped on one side as she lifted it and the hot tea poured over her
-hand. She kept her hold bravely and Oldmeadow rescued her.
-
-"How stupid I am!" she said, biting her lip.
-
-"You've scalded your hand," said Palgrave, eyeing her with his air no
-longer of rapturous but of gloomy devotion.
-
-They made Oldmeadow think of comrade political prisoners moving off
-together in a convoy to Siberia. There was something as bleak, as
-heavy, as uninspired in their aspect. He could not think that Palgrave
-could now catch much light or flame from such a companion. They would
-trudge through the snow; condemned, but together; to be together was the
-best thing, now, that life offered them.
-
-She said that the scald was nothing and asked to be trusted to go on
-with the tea, grasping the handle with resolution. Oldmeadow, however,
-standing beside her, insisted on filling the cups for her.
-
-"You can be allowed to put in the milk and sugar, you see," he said. He
-was aware, as he thus succoured and rallied her, of an influx of feeling
-like the feeling that came with the uncanny dreams. Here she was, and
-reality had caught her. She deserved to be caught, of course; tragic,
-meddling Pierrot. But his heart was heavy and gentle; as in his dreams.
-
-They sat round the table together. On the mantelpiece was a large,
-framed photograph of Adrienne; on the walls photographs of a Botticelli
-Madonna, a Mantegna from Padua and the da Vinci drawing for the Christ
-of the Last Supper. Seeing Oldmeadow's eyes on them Palgrave said:
-"Adrienne gave me those. And lots of the books."
-
-"And don't forget the beautiful cushions, Palgrave," said Adrienne, with
-a flicker of her old, contented playfulness. "I'm sure good cushions are
-the foundation of a successful study of philosophy."
-
-The cushions were certainly very good; and very beautiful, as Oldmeadow
-commented. "That gorgeous chair, too," said Palgrave. "It ought to make
-a Plato of me."
-
-It was curious, the sense they gave him of trusting him. Were they
-aware, if only sub-consciously, that he was feeling Adrienne, her
-follies and misdeeds thick upon her, ill-used? Or was it only that they
-had come down to such fundamental securities as were left to them and
-felt that with him, at all events, they were in the hands of an
-impartial judge?
-
-"It's a happy life Meg and Mother lead at Coldbrooks, as you may
-imagine," Palgrave took up the theme that preoccupied him. "They only
-see Nancy and Aunt Monica, of course. Barbara is at school and Barney,
-as you are probably aware, never comes near his disgraced sister. Would
-you believe it, Roger," Palgrave went on, while Oldmeadow saw that a
-dull colour crept up to Adrienne's face and neck as her husband was thus
-mentioned, "Meg blames Adrienne now for the whole affair! About Eric and
-herself! Actually! On the one hand Eric is her hero for whom she'll
-mourn for ever and on the other Adrienne is responsible for the fact
-that she's not 'respectable' and can't claim to be his widow. Oh, don't
-ask me how she contrives to work it out! Women like Meg don't need logic
-when they've a thong in their hands and want to use it. And Adrienne's
-shoulders are bared for the lash! God! It makes me fairly mad to think
-of it!"
-
-"Please, Palgrave!" Adrienne supplicated in a low voice. She did not
-eat. She had drunk her tea and sat looking down at her plate. "Don't
-think of it any more. Meg is very, very unhappy. We can hardly imagine
-what the misery and confusion of Meg's heart must be."
-
-"Oh, you'll make excuses for anyone, Adrienne! You're not a shining
-example of happiness either, if it comes to that. It's atrocious of Meg
-to treat you as she does. Atrocious of her to hold you responsible."
-
-"But I am responsible," said Adrienne, while the dull flush still dyed
-her face. "I've always said that I was responsible. It was I who
-persuaded them to go."
-
-"Yes. To go. Instead of staying and being lovers secretly. I know all
-about it. And no doubt Meg would rather it had been so now. And so would
-Mother!" Palgrave ground his teeth on a laugh. "That's where morality
-lands them! Pretty, isn't it!"
-
-A silence fell and then Adrienne rose and said that Mr. Jackson would be
-waiting for her. "He's coming at half-past five," she said, and, with
-his gloomy tenderness, Palgrave informed Oldmeadow that she was reading
-logic and Plato; "to keep up with me, you know."
-
-Adrienne, smiling faintly, laid her hand for a moment on his shoulder as
-she went past his chair. "Come in to-night, after dinner, and tell me
-what you decide," she said.
-
-"I'll have no news for you," Palgrave replied.
-
-Oldmeadow had gone to hold the door open for her and, as she paused
-there to give him her hand, he heard her murmur: "Will you come down
-with me?"
-
-"Let me see you to the bottom of the stair," he seized the intimation,
-and, as she went before him, she said, still in the low, purposeful
-voice, and he felt sure now that this had been her intention in coming
-to tea: "It's only so that you shan't think I'll oppose you. If you can
-persuade him, I shall not oppose it. I think he's right. But it's too
-hard. I mean, I hope you can persuade him that it's right to go."
-
-She had stepped out on to the threshold at the foot of the stairs and he
-paused behind her, astonished. "You want me to persuade him of what you
-think wrong?"
-
-She stood still looking out at the sunny quadrangle. "People must think
-for themselves. I don't know who is right or who is wrong. Perhaps I've
-influenced Palgrave. Perhaps he wouldn't have felt like this if it
-hadn't been for me. I don't know. But if you can make him feel it right
-to go, I shall be glad." She stepped out into the quadrangle.
-
-"You mean," said Oldmeadow, following her, and strangely moved, "that
-you'd rather have him killed than stay behind like this?"
-
-"It would be much happier for him, wouldn't it," she said. "If he could
-feel it right to go."
-
-They were under the arch of the Library, she still going slowly, before
-him, and Oldmeadow stopped her there. "Mrs. Barney, forgive me--may I
-ask you something?" He had put his hand on her shoulder and she paused
-and faced him. "It's something personal, and I've no right to be
-personal with you, as I know. But--have you been to see Barney at
-Tidworth?"
-
-As Oldmeadow spoke these Words, Adrienne turned away vehemently, and
-then stood still, as though arrested in her impulse of flight by an
-irresistible desire to listen. "Barney does not want to see me," she
-said, speaking with difficulty.
-
-"You think so," said Oldmeadow. "And he may think so. But you ought to
-see each other at a time like this. He may be ordered to France at any
-time now." He could not see her face.
-
-"Do you mean," she said, after a moment, keeping the rigidity of her
-listening poise, "that he won't come to say good-bye?"
-
-"I know nothing at all," said Oldmeadow. "I can only infer how far the
-mischief between you has gone. And I'm most frightfully sorry for it.
-I've been sorry for Barney; but now I'm sorry for you, too. I think
-you're being unfairly treated. But yours have been the mistakes, Mrs.
-Barney, and it's for you to take the first step."
-
-"Barney doesn't want to see me," she repeated, and she went on, while he
-heard, growing in her voice, the note of the old conviction: "He has
-made mistakes, too. He has treated me unfairly, too. I can't take the
-first step."
-
-"Don't you love him, then?" said Oldmeadow, and in his voice was the
-note of the old harshness.
-
-"Does he love me?" she retorted, turning now, with sudden fire, and
-fixing her eyes upon him. "Why should he think I want to see him if he
-doesn't want to see me? Why should I love, if he doesn't? Why should I
-sue to Barney?"
-
-"Oh," Oldmeadow almost groaned. "Don't take that line; don't, I beg of
-you. You're both young. And you've hurt him so. You've meant to hurt
-him; I've seen it! I've seen it, Mrs. Barney. If you'll put by your
-pride everything can grow again."
-
-"No! no! no!" she cried almost violently, and he saw that she was
-trembling. "Some things don't grow again! It's not like plants, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Some things are like living creatures; and they can die. They
-can die," she repeated, now walking rapidly away from him out into the
-large quadrangle with its grass plot cut across by the late sunshine. He
-followed her for a moment and he heard her say, as she went: "It's
-worse, far worse, not to mean to hurt. It's worse to care so little that
-you don't know when you are hurting."
-
-"No, it's not," said Oldmeadow. "That's only being stupid; not cruel."
-
-"It's not thinking that is cruel; it's not caring that is cruel," she
-repeated, passionately, half muttering the words, and whether with tears
-of fury he could not say.
-
-He stood still at the doorway. "Good-bye, then," he said. And not
-looking behind her, as she went out swiftly into New College Lane, she
-answered, still on the same note of passionate protest: "Good-bye, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Good-bye." He watched her small, dark figure hurry along in
-the shadow of the wall until the turning hid it from view.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-Palgrave, apparently, had formed no conjectures as to their conversation
-and was thinking still of Adrienne's wrongs rather than of his own
-situation. "Did you take her home?" he said. "I see you're sorry for
-her, Roger. It's really too abominable, you know. I really can't say
-before her what I think, I really can't say before you what I think of
-Barney's treatment of her; because I know you agree with him."
-
-Oldmeadow felt all the more able, shaken though he was by the interview
-below, to remember, because of it, what he thought. "If you mean that I
-don't consider Barney in the very least responsible for the death of the
-baby, I do agree with him," he said.
-
-"Apart from that, apart from the baby," said Palgrave, controlling his
-temper, it was evident, in his wish to keep the ear of the impartial
-judge, "though what the loss of a child means to a woman like Adrienne I
-don't believe you can guess; apart from whose was the responsibility, he
-ought to have seen, towards the end, at all events, if he'd eyes in his
-head and a heart in his breast, that all she asked was to forgive him
-and take him back. She was proud, of course. What woman of her power and
-significance wouldn't have been? She couldn't be the first to move. But
-Barney must have seen that her heart was breaking."
-
-"Well," said Oldmeadow, taking in, with some perplexity, this new
-presentation of Adrienne Toner; "what about his heart? She'd led it a
-pretty dance. And you forget that I don't consider she had anything to
-forgive him."
-
-"His heart!" Palgrave echoed scornfully, yet with a sorrowful scorn; "He
-mended his heart quick enough. Went and fell in love with Nancy, who
-only asks to be let alone."
-
-"He's always loved Nancy. She's always been like a sister to him.
-Adrienne has infected you with her groundless jealousy."
-
-"Groundless indeed!" Palgrave reached for his pipe and began to stuff it
-vindictively. "Nancy sees well enough, poor dear! She's had to keep him
-off by any device she could contrive. She's a good deal more than a
-sister to him, now. She's the only person in the world for him. You can
-call it jealousy if you like. That's only another name for a broken
-heart."
-
-"I don't know what Barney's feeling may be, Palgrave, but I do know, it
-was quite plain to me, that Adrienne was jealous long before she had any
-ground for jealousy. If Nancy's all Barney's got left now, it's simply
-because Adrienne has taken everything else from him. You don't seem to
-realize that Adrienne drove him from her with her airs of martyrdom.
-Took vengeance on him, too; what else was the plan for Barbara going
-abroad with you? I don't want to speak unkindly of her. It's quite true;
-I'm sorry for her. I've never liked her so well. But the reason is that
-she's beginning, I really believe, to find out that her own feet are of
-clay, while her mistake all along has been to imagine herself above
-ordinary humanity. All our feet are of clay, and we never get very far
-unless we are aware of the weakness in our structure and look out for a
-continual tendency to crumble. You don't get over it by pretending you
-don't need to walk and imagining you have wings instead of feet."
-
-Palgrave, drawing stiffly at his pipe during this little homily,
-listened, gloomily yet without resentment. "You see, where you make
-_your_ mistake--if you'll allow the youthful ass you consider me to say
-so--is that you've always imagined Adrienne to be a self-righteous prig
-who sets herself up above others. She doesn't; she doesn't," Palgrave
-repeated with conviction. "She'd accept the feet of clay if you'll grant
-her the heart of flame--for everybody; the wings--for everybody. There's
-your mistake, Roger. Adrienne believes that everybody has wings as well
-as herself; and the only difference she sees in people is that some have
-learned and some haven't how to use them. She may be mortal woman--bless
-her--and have made mistakes; but they're the mistakes of flame; not of
-earthiness."
-
-"You are not an ass, Palgrave," said Oldmeadow, after a moment. "You are
-wise in everything but experience; and you see deep. Suppose we come to
-a compromise. You've owned that Adrienne may make mistakes and I own
-that I may misjudge her. I see what you believe about her and I see why
-you believe it. I've seen her at her worst, no doubt, and to you she's
-been able to show only her best. So let it rest at that. What I came to
-talk about, you know, was you."
-
-"I know," said Palgrave, and he gave a deep sigh.
-
-"Be patient with me," said Oldmeadow. "After all, we belong to the same
-generation. You can't pretend that I'm an old fogey who's lost the
-inspirations of his youth and has marched so far down towards the grave
-that the new torches coming up over the horizon are hidden from him."
-
-"That's rather nice, you know, Roger," Palgrave smiled faintly. "No;
-you're not an old fogey. But all the same there's not much torch about
-you."
-
-"It's rather sad, isn't it," Oldmeadow mused, "that we should always
-seem to begin with torches and then to spend the rest of our lives in
-quenching them. It may be, you know, that we're only trying to hold them
-straight, so that the wind shan't blow them out. However!--you'll let me
-talk. That's the point."
-
-"Of course you may. You've been awfully decent," Palgrave murmured.
-
-"Well, then, it seems to me you're not seeing straight," said Oldmeadow.
-"It's not crude animal patriotism--as you'd put it--that's asked of you.
-It's a very delicate discrimination between ideals."
-
-"I know! I know!" said Palgrave. The traces of mental anguish were on
-his worn young face. He knocked the ashes out of his pipe and rose to
-lean against the mantelpiece." I don't suppose I can explain," he said,
-staring out at the sky. "I suppose that with me the crude animal thing
-is the personal inhibition. I can't do it. I'd rather, far, be killed
-than have to kill other men. That's the unreasoning part, the
-instinctive part, but it's a part of one's nature that I don't believe
-one can violate without violating one's very spirit. I've always been
-different, I know, from most fellows of my age and class. I've always
-hated sport--shooting and hunting. The fox, the stag, the partridge,
-have always spoiled it for me. Oh, I know they have to be killed--poor
-brutes! I know that; but I can't myself be the butcher."
-
-"You'll own, though, that there must be butchers," said Oldmeadow, after
-a little meditation. He felt himself in the presence of something
-delicate, distorted and beautiful. "And you'll own, won't you, when it
-comes to a war like this, when not only our national honour but our
-national existence is at stake, that some men must kill others. Isn't it
-then, baldly, that you profit, personally, by other people doing what
-you won't do? You'll eat spring lamb as long as there are butchers to
-kill the lamb for you, and you'll be an Englishman and take from England
-all that she has to give you--including Oxford and Coldbrooks--and let
-other men do the nasty work that makes the survival of England and
-Oxford and Coldbrooks possible. That's what it comes to, you know.
-That's all I ask you to look at squarely."
-
-"I know, I know," Palgrave repeated. He had looked at little else, poor
-boy. Oldmeadow saw that. "But that's where the delicate discrimination
-between ideals comes in, Roger. That's where I have to leave intuition,
-which says 'No,' and turn to reason. And the trouble is that for me
-reason says 'No,' too. Because humanity--all of it that counts--has
-outgrown war. That's what it comes to. It's a conflict between a
-national and an humanitarian ideal. There are enough of us in the world
-to stop war, if we all act together; and why, because others don't,
-should I not do what I feel right? Others may follow if only a few of us
-stand out. If no one stands out, no one will ever follow. And you can't
-kill England like that. England is more than men and institutions,"
-Palgrave still gazed at the sky. "It's an idea that will survive;
-perhaps the more truly in the spirit for perishing in the flesh, if it
-really came to that. Look at Greece. She's dead, if you like; yet what
-existing nation lives as truly? It is Grecian minds we think with and
-Grecian eyes we see with. It's Plato's conception of the just man being
-the truly happy man--even if the whole world's against him--that is the
-very meaning of our refusal to go with the world."
-
-"You'll never stop war by refusal so long as the majority of men still
-believe in it," said Oldmeadow. "There are not enough of you to stop it
-now. The time to stop it is before it comes; not while it's on. It's
-before it begins that you must bring the rest of humanity not to behave
-in ways that make it inevitable. I'm inclined to think that ideas can
-perish," he went on, as Palgrave, to this, made no reply, "as far as
-their earthly manifestation goes, that is, if enough men and
-institutions are destroyed. If Germany could conquer and administer
-England, I'm inclined to think the English idea would perish. And war
-need not be unspiritual. Killing our fellow-men need not mean hating
-them. There's less hatred in war, I imagine, than in some of the
-contests of peaceful civilian life. Put it fairly on the ground of
-humanitarianism, then, Palgrave; not of nationality. It's the whole
-world that is threatened by a hateful idea, by the triumph of all you
-most fear and detest, and unless we strive against it with all we are
-and have it seems to me that we fall short of our duty not only as
-Englishmen, but as humanitarians. Put it at that, Palgrave: would you
-really have had England stand by and not lift a finger when Belgium was
-invaded and France menaced?"
-
-Palgrave was not ready with his reply and he turned away while he looked
-for it and shuffled the papers on his desk with a nervous hand. "Yes, I
-would," he said at last. "Hateful as it is to have to say it--I would
-have stood by." He came back to his place at the mantelpiece and looked
-down at Oldmeadow as he spoke. "The choice, of course, is hateful; but I
-think we should have stood by and helped the sufferers and let France
-and Germany fight it out. It always comes back to them, doesn't it?
-They're always fighting it out; they always will, till they find it's no
-good and that they can't annihilate each other; which is what they both
-want to do. Oh, I've read too many of the young French neo-Catholics to
-be able to believe that the hateful idea was all on one side. Their
-ideals don't differ much, once you strip them of their theological
-tinsel, from those of the Germans. Germany happens to be the aggressor
-now; but if the militarist party in France had had the chance, they'd
-have struck as quickly."
-
-"The difference--and it's an immense one--is that the militarist party
-in France wouldn't have had the chance. The difference is that it
-doesn't govern and mould public opinion. It's not a menace to the world.
-It's only a sort of splendid pet, kept in a Zoo, for the delectation of
-a certain class and party. Whereas Germany's the _bona fide_ hungry
-tigress at large. What you really ask of England, Palgrave, is that she
-should be a Buddha and lie down and let the tigress, after finishing
-France, devour her, too. It really comes to that. Buddhism is the only
-logical basis for your position, and I don't believe, however sorry one
-may be for hungry tigresses, that the right way to deal with them is to
-let them eat you. The Christian philosophy of the incarnation is the
-true one. Matter does make a spiritual difference. It does make a
-difference, a real difference, that the ideal should be made flesh. It's
-important to the world, spiritually, that the man rather than the
-tigress should survive."
-
-"Christ gave his life," said Palgrave, after a moment.
-
-"I'm not speaking of historical personages; but of eternal truths," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-But he knew already that he spoke in vain. Palgrave had turned away his
-eyes again and on his sad young face he read the fixity of a fanatic
-idealism. He had not moved him, though he had troubled him. No one would
-move Palgrave. He doubted, now, whether Adrienne herself had had much
-influence over him. It was with the sense of pleading a lost cause that
-he said, presently, "Adrienne hopes you'll feel it right to go."
-
-Palgrave at this turned a profound gaze upon him. "I know it," he said.
-"Though she's never told me so. It's the weakness of her love, its
-yearning and tenderness, not its strength, that makes her want it.
-Because she knows it would be so much easier. But she can't go back on
-what she's meant to me. It's because of that, in part at all events,
-that I've been able to see steadily what I mean to myself. That's what
-she helps one to do, you know. Hold to yourself; your true, deep self.
-It's owing to her that I can only choose in one way--even if I can't
-defend it properly. It seems to come back to metaphysics, doesn't it?"
-
-"Like everything else," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Yes. Like everything else. It would take a four-years' course in Greats
-to argue it out, Roger. Come back to me--if you're here and I'm here
-then--and we'll see what we can make of it."
-
-"I will," said Oldmeadow, rising, for the room was growing dark. "And
-before that, I hope."
-
-"After all, you know," Palgrave observed, "England isn't in any danger
-of becoming Buddhistic; there's not much nihilism about her, is there,
-but hardly much Christianity, either. England has evolved all sorts of
-things besides Oxford and Coldbrooks. She's evolved industrialism and
-factory-towns."
-
-"I don't consider industrialism and factory-towns incompatible with
-Christianity, you know," Oldmeadow observed. "Good-bye, my dear boy."
-
-"Good-bye, Roger," Palgrave grasped his hand. "You've been most awfully
-kind."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-"Isn't it becoming to him, Mother? And how tall he looks!" said Nancy,
-holding Oldmeadow off in his khaki for displayal.
-
-He had only written a line of his failure and that he would come as soon
-as he could and see them all and tell in full of his interview with
-Palgrave. And he had motored over to The Little House this afternoon in
-early November.
-
-Nancy was showing an unexpected gaiety. "What a nice grilled-salmon
-colour you are, too," she said.
-
-He divined the self-protective instinct under the gaiety. Most of the
-women in England were being gayer and more talkative at this time, in
-order to keep up. Nancy was thin and white; but she was keeping up. And
-she had put on a charming dress to receive him in.
-
-"I've been grilled all right; out on the downs," he said. "But it's more
-like cold storage just now, with these frosts at night. Yes; the big
-cup, please. I'm famished for tea. Ah! that's something like! It smells
-like your rose outside. I sniffed it as I waited at the door. Wonderful
-for such a late blooming."
-
-"Isn't it," said Mrs. Averil. "And I only put it in last autumn. It's
-doing beautifully; but I've cherished it. And now tell us about
-Palgrave."
-
-He felt reluctant to tell about Palgrave. The impression that remained
-with him of Palgrave was that impression of beauty and distortion and he
-did not want to have to disentangle his feelings or to seem to put
-Palgrave in the wrong. It was so sweet, too, after the long, chilly
-drive over the empty uplands, to sit here and forget the war, although
-it was for scenes like this, for girls like Nancy, women like Mrs.
-Averil--with so much else--that the war was so worth fighting. He turned
-his thoughts back to the realities that underlay the happy appearances
-and was aware, as he forced himself to tell, of what must seem a note of
-advocacy in his voice. "He can't think differently, I'm afraid," he
-said. "It's self-sacrifice, not selfishness, that is moving him."
-
-"He can't think differently while Adrienne is living there," said Mrs.
-Averil. "He didn't tell you, I suppose, that she has now taken up her
-abode in Oxford in order to study philosophy with him?"
-
-He was rather uncomfortably aware of the disingenuousness that must now
-be made apparent in his avoidance of all mention of Adrienne.
-
-"I saw her," he said, and he knew that it was lamely. "She was there
-when I got there."
-
-"You saw her!" Mrs. Averil exclaimed. "But then, of course you didn't
-convince him. I might have known it. Of course she would not let you see
-him alone."
-
-"But she did let me see him alone. That was what she wanted. And she was
-there only in order to tell me what she wanted. She wants him to go."
-
-Mrs. Averil was eyeing him with such astonishment that he turned to
-Nancy with his explanations. But Mrs. Averil would not leave him to
-Nancy's sympathy. "It's rather late in the day for her to want him to
-go," she said. "She may be sorry for what she's done; but it's her
-work."
-
-"Well, she's sorry for her work. That's what it comes to. And I'm sorry
-for her," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Good heavens! The cleverness of that woman!" Mrs. Averil exclaimed. "If
-she can't be powerful, she'll be pitiful! She's worked on your feelings;
-I can see that, Roger. And I thought you, at least, were immune. Well;
-she does not work on mine. I am not in the least sorry for her."
-
-"She's being unfairly treated," said Oldmeadow. "It's grotesque that Meg
-should have turned upon her."
-
-"And Eleanor has, too, you know," said Mrs. Averil. "It's grotesque, if
-you like; but I see a grim justice in it. She made them do things and
-believe things that weren't natural to them and now she's lost her power
-and they see things as they are."
-
-"It's because she's failed that they've turned against her," said Nancy.
-"If she'd succeeded they would have gone on accepting what she told them
-and making her their idol."
-
-"Adrienne mustn't fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only justification
-for Adrienne is to be in the right. If the blood of Saint Januarius
-doesn't liquefy, why should you keep it in a shrine? She's a woman who
-has quarrelled with her husband and disgraced her sister and
-brother-in-law, and broken her mother-in-law's heart. You can't go on
-making an idol of a saint who behaves like that."
-
-"She never claimed worldly success," said Nancy. "She never told Meg to
-go so that she could get married afterwards; she never told Palgrave
-that war was wrong because it was easier not to fight."
-
-"Oh, yes, she did claim worldly success, really," said Mrs. Averil,
-while her eyes rested on her daughter with a tenderness that contrasted
-with her tone. "Her whole point was that if you were right
-spiritually--'poised' she called it, you remember--all those other
-things would be added unto you. I've heard her claim that if you were
-poised you could get anything you really wanted. I asked her once if I
-should find a ten-pound note under the sofa-cushion every morning after
-breakfast if I could get poised sufficiently!" Mrs. Averil laughed,
-still more dryly while she still maintained her tender gaze and Nancy
-said, smiling a little: "She might have put it there for you if she'd
-been sure you were poised."
-
-"Well, let us bury Adrienne for the present," said Mrs. Averil. "Tell
-Roger about your nursing plans. She may go to London, Roger, this
-winter, and I'm to be left alone."
-
-"You're to be left to take care of Aunt Eleanor, if I do go," said
-Nancy; and Mrs. Averil said that there must certainly be some one left
-to take care of poor Eleanor.
-
-Oldmeadow went up to Coldbrooks next morning. The first person he saw
-was old Johnson at the door and he remembered Eleanor Chadwick's griefs
-on his account. Nothing, now, could have been kept from Johnson and his
-face bore the marks of the family calamities. He was aged and whitened
-and his voice had armed itself, since the downfall of his grave,
-vicarious complacency, with solemn cadences.
-
-"Yes, sir. The ladies will be very glad to see you, sir. These are sad
-days for them--the family dispersed as it is."
-
-Johnson defined the situation as he felt that it could be most fittingly
-defined and Oldmeadow inwardly applauded his "dispersed."
-
-The drawing-room, into which Johnson ushered him, had, for the first
-time in his memory of it, a mournful air. It had always been shabby, and
-these were the same faded chintzes, the same worn rugs; but now,
-fireless and flowerless, it neither spoke nor smiled and, with the sense
-it gave of an outlived epoch, it was almost spectral. The photographs
-all looked like the photographs of dead people and the only similitude
-of life was the loud, silly ticking of the French clock on the
-mantelpiece; Mrs. Chadwick's cherished clock; one of her
-wedding-presents.
-
-"I'm afraid it's rather chilly, sir," said Johnson. "No one has sat here
-of an evening now for a long time." He put a match to the ranged logs,
-drew the blinds up farther so that the autumnal sunlight might more
-freely enter, and left him.
-
-Oldmeadow went to the window and turned over the magazines, a month old,
-that lay on a table there.
-
-He was standing so when Meg entered, and she had half the length of the
-room to traverse before they met. She was in black, in deep black; but
-more beautiful than he had ever seen her; her tossed auburn locks bound
-low on her forehead with a black ribbon, her white throat upright, her
-eyes hard with their readiness, their resource. Beautiful and
-distressing. It distressed him terribly to see that hardness in her
-eyes.
-
-"How do you do, Roger," she said, giving him her hand. "It's good to see
-you. Mother will be glad."
-
-They seated themselves on one of the capacious sofas and she questioned
-him quickly, competently, while the hard eyes seemed to measure him lest
-he measure her. It was almost the look of the _declassee_ woman who
-forestalls withdrawal in an interlocutor. But, as he answered her
-quietly, his fond regard upon her, her defences began to fall. "It's the
-only life, a soldier's, isn't it?" she said. "At all times, really. But,
-at a time like this, anything else seems despicable, doesn't it;
-contemptibly smug and safe. The uniform is so becoming to you. You look
-a soldier already. One feels that men will trust and follow you. Didn't
-you burn with rage and shame, too, when, for those four days, it seemed
-we might not come in?"
-
-"I felt too sure we should come in, to burn with rage and shame," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-"Ah! but it was not so sure, I'm afraid," said Meg, and in her eyes, no
-longer hard, wild lights seemed to pass and repass. "I'm afraid that
-there are nearly enough fools and knaves in England to wreck us. Not
-quite enough, thank heaven! But, for those four days, Eric was terribly
-afraid. He was killed, you know, Roger, very splendidly, leading his
-men."
-
-"I know, Meg. My dear Meg," Oldmeadow murmured.
-
-"Oh! I don't regret it! I don't regret it!" Meg cried, while her colour
-rose and her young breast lifted. "It's the soldier's death! The
-consecrating, heroic death! He was ready. And deaths like that
-atone--for the others. He was not killed instantaneously, Roger."
-
-"I didn't know," said Oldmeadow, looking at her with a pitying, troubled
-gaze.
-
-"He lived for a day and night afterwards," said Meg, looking back,
-tearless. "They carried him to a barn. Only his man was with him. There
-was no one to dress his dreadful wound; no food. The man got him some
-water, at the risk of his own life. He was conscious until the end and
-he suffered terribly."
-
-Oldmeadow dropped his eyes before her fierce stare while, strangely,
-dimly, there passed through his mind the memory of the embarrassed,
-empty, handsome young face in the brougham and, again, the memory of his
-dog John. He had seen John die and his eyes of wistful appeal. So Eric
-Hayward's eyes might have looked as he lay in the barn dying.
-
-"Oh, Roger!" Meg said suddenly, seizing his hand. "Kill them! Kill them!
-Oh, revenge him! I was not with him! Think of it! I would have had no
-right to have been with him--had it been possible. I did not know till a
-week later. He was buried there. His man buried him."
-
-"My poor, poor child," said Oldmeadow, clasping her hands.
-
-But, at once, taking refuge from his pity and from her own desperate
-pain: "So you've seen Palgrave," she said. "And he isn't going. I knew
-it was useless. I told Mother it was useless--with that stranger--that
-American, with him. She has disgraced us all.--Wretched boy! Hateful
-woman!"
-
-"Meg, Meg; be soldierly. He wouldn't have spoken like that."
-
-"He never liked her! Never!" she cried. "I knew he didn't, even at the
-time she was flattering and cajoling us. I saw that she bewildered him
-and that he accepted her only because she was mine. How I loathe myself
-for having listened to her! How I loathe her! All that she ever wanted
-was power! Power over other people's lives! She'd commit any crime for
-that!"
-
-"You seem to me cruelly unfair," he said.
-
-"No! no! I'm not unfair! You know I'm not!" she cried. "You always saw
-the truth about her--from the very beginning. You never fell down and
-worshipped her, like the rest of us. And she knew that you were her
-enemy and warned us against you. Oh--why did Barney marry her!"
-
-"I never worshipped her; but I never thought her base and hateful."
-
-"You never knew her as I did; that was all. And I never knew her until I
-came back and found her doing to Palgrave what she had done to us.
-Paladin! Did you hear her call him Paladin? Always flattery! Always to
-make one think one was wonderful, important, mysterious! She forced us
-to go away, Roger. Sometimes I think it was hypnotism; that she uses her
-will-power consciously. We did not want to go. We did not want the
-divorce and the scandal."
-
-"What did you want, then, Meg?"
-
-She felt the gravity of his tone but, like a fierce Maenad, she snatched
-at the torch, not caring how it revealed her. "What of it! What if we
-had been secret lovers! Who would have known! Who would have been
-harmed! Some people go on for years and years. His wife loved another
-man. He had no one. Why should we have been pushed--such pitiful fools
-we were--into displaying our love to the world and being crushed by it!
-Oh, he was so loyal, so brave; but it made him very, very unhappy. Oh, I
-was cruel to him sometimes! I used to reproach him sometimes! Oh, Roger!
-Roger!--" She broke into wild tears and stumbled to her feet.
-
-As she reached the door, covering her face with her hands, her mother
-opened it and, meeting her on the threshold, Meg, with almost the effect
-of beating her aside with the other impediments to her rage and grief,
-pushed past her so that the knitting Mrs. Chadwick held was flung to the
-floor, the ball of khaki wool running rapidly away under a sofa and the
-socks and needles dangling at her feet.
-
-She stood looking down at them with a curious apathy and, as Oldmeadow
-went to help and greet her, he saw that as much as Meg was wild she was
-dulled and quiet.
-
-"Meg is so very, very violent," she said, as he disentangled the wool
-and restored her sock and ball to her. She spoke with listlessness
-rather than sympathy.
-
-"Poor child," said Oldmeadow. "One can hardly wonder at it. But it makes
-a wretched existence for you, I'm afraid. You and she oughtn't to be
-alone together."
-
-He drew her to a chair and, seating herself, her faded face and eyes
-that had lost their old look of surprise turned to the light, Mrs.
-Chadwick assented, "It's very fatiguing to live with, certainly.
-Sometimes I really think I must go away for a little while and have a
-change. Nancy would come and stay with Meg, you know. But I can't miss
-Barney's last weeks. He comes to us, now, again. And it might not be
-right to leave Meg. One must not think of oneself at a time like this,
-must one?" The knitting lay in her lap and she was twisting and
-untwisting her handkerchief after her old fashion; but her fingers
-moved slowly and without agitation and Oldmeadow saw that some spring of
-life in her had been broken.
-
-"The best plan would be that Meg should, as soon as possible, take up
-some work," he said, "and that you and Nancy should go away. Work is the
-only thing for Meg now. She'll dash herself to pieces down here; and you
-with her. There'll soon be plenty to do. Nursing and driving
-ambulances."
-
-"Nancy is going to nurse, you know," said Mrs. Chadwick. "But she won't
-go as long as we need her here. She has promised me that. I don't know
-what I should do without Nancy. I shouldn't care to be nursed by Meg
-myself, if I were a wounded soldier. She is so very restless and would
-probably forget quite simple things like giving one a handkerchief or
-seeing that hot-water-bottles were wrapped up before she put them to
-one's feet. A friend of mine--Amy Hatchard--such a pretty woman, though
-her hair was bright, bright red--and I never cared for that--had the
-soles of her feet nearly scorched off once by a careless nurse. Dear
-Nancy. I often think of Nancy now, Roger. I believe, you know, that if
-Adrienne had not come Nancy and Barney might have married. How happy we
-should all have been; though she has so little money."
-
-"I wish you could all think a little more kindly of Adrienne," said
-Oldmeadow after a silence. Mrs. Chadwick had begun to knit. "I must tell
-you that I myself feel differently about her."
-
-"Do you, Roger?" said Mrs. Chadwick, without surprise. "You have a very
-judicious and balanced mind, I know; even when you were hardly more
-than a boy Francis noticed it and said that he'd rather go by your
-opinion than by that of most of the men he knew. I always remembered
-that, afterwards. Till she came. And then I believed in her rather than
-in you. You thought us all far too fond of her from the very first. And
-now we have certainly changed. Meg is certainly very violent; much more
-violent than I could ever be.... I am sorry for Adrienne. I don't think
-she meant to do us any harm--as Meg believes."
-
-"She only meant to do you good, I am sure of it. I saw her in Oxford,
-let me tell you about it, when I went in to see Palgrave. She is very
-unhappy. She wants Palgrave to go. She wants him to feel it right to go.
-It's not she, really, who is keeping him back now."
-
-"My poor Palgrave. Meg is very unkind about him; very bitter and unkind;
-her own brother. But it was very wrong of Adrienne to go and set up
-housekeeping in Oxford near him. You must own that, Roger. She may not
-be keeping him back; but she is aiding and abetting him always. It made
-Barney even more miserable and disgusted than he was before. And it
-looks so very odd. Though I don't think that anyone could ever gossip
-about Adrienne. There is something about her that makes that
-impossible."
-
-"There certainly is. I am glad she is with Palgrave, poor boy."
-
-"I am glad you are sorry for him, Roger"--Mrs. Chadwick dropped a
-needle. "How clumsy I am. My fingers seem all to have turned to thumbs.
-Thank you so much. I try to make as many socks as I can for our poor
-men; fingering wool; not wheeling, which is so much rougher to the
-feet. I'm sure I'd rather march, and, if it came to that, die in
-fingering than in wheeling. Just as I've always felt, foolish as it may
-sound, that if I had to be drowned I'd rather it were in warm, soapy
-water than in cold salt. Not that one is very likely, ever, to drown in
-one's bath. But tell me about Adrienne and Palgrave, Roger, and what
-they said."
-
-Mrs. Chadwick's discourse seemed, beforehand, to make anything he might
-have to tell irrelevant and, even while he tried to make her see what he
-had seen, he felt it to be a fruitless effort.
-
-There was indeed no enmity to plead against. Only a deep exhaustion.
-Adrienne had pressed too heavily on the spring and it was broken.
-
-"I'm sure she is very sorry to have made so much mischief, but she isn't
-what I thought her, Roger," she said, shaking her head, when he had
-finished. "I'm sorry for her, but I used to believe her to be a sort of
-saint and now I know that she is very far indeed from being one."
-
-"The mere fact of failure doesn't deprive you of sainthood," said
-Oldmeadow, remembering Nancy's plea. "You haven't less reason now than
-you had then for believing her one."
-
-But even with her broken spring Mrs. Chadwick had not lost all her
-shrewdness. It flickered in the sad eyes she lifted from the khaki sock.
-"Some kinds of failure do, Roger. That gift of healing, you remember;
-all she could do for people in that way; she has quite, quite lost it.
-That is a reason. It's that more than anything that has made me feel
-differently about her."
-
-"Lost it?" He felt strangely discomposed, little as the gift of healing
-had ever impressed him.
-
-"Quite," Mrs. Chadwick repeated. "I think it distressed her dreadfully
-herself. I think she counted upon it more than upon anything, perhaps
-without knowing she did. It must have made her seem so sure to herself,
-mustn't it? The first time was before the war, just a little after you
-were here that day in the summer--dear me, how long ago it seems; and I
-had one of my headaches, one of the worst I ever had. I was so
-dreadfully troubled, you know, about Barbara and Meg. And Adrienne came
-and sat by me as she used to and put her hand on my forehead; and I know
-it wasn't my lack of faith, for I quite believed it would get well; but
-instead of the peaceful feeling, it grew much worse; oh, _much_. As if
-red hot needles were darting through my eyes and an iron weight pressing
-down on my head. And such tumult and distress. I had to tell her. I had
-to ask her to take away her hand. Oh, she felt it very much, poor thing,
-and grew very white and said it must be because she was still not
-strong; not quite herself. But I knew then that it was because she was
-not _right_; not what I had thought her. I began to suspect, from that
-very moment, that I had been mistaken; because hypnotizing people isn't
-the same as being a saint, is it, Roger? and--I think you said so once,
-long ago; and that was all that she had done; hypnotized us all to think
-her good and wonderful. Later on, after Meg had come, I let her try once
-more, though it quite frightened me; she looked so strange. And!--oh,
-dear--it was dreadful. It distressed me dreadfully. She suddenly put her
-hands before her face and sat quite still and then she burst into tears
-and got up and ran out of the room, crying. It made me feel quite ill.
-And of course I knew there could be nothing saintly about a person who
-made you feel like that--who could feel like that themselves, and break
-down."
-
-"Even saints have their times of darkness and dryness," Oldmeadow found
-after a little time had passed. The picture she put before him hurt him.
-"It was an error of judgment to have believed her a saint because she
-could hypnotize you--if that was what it was; but the fact that she
-can't hypnotize you any longer--that she's too unhappy to have any power
-of that sort--doesn't prove she's not a saint. Of course she's not. Why
-should she be?"
-
-"I'm sure I don't know why she should be; but she used to behave as if
-she were one, didn't she? And when I saw that she wasn't one in that way
-I began to see that she wasn't in other ways, too. It was she who made
-me so unjust, so unkind to poor Barney. _She_ was so unjust and so
-unkind; and I never saw it till then. I was blind till then; though you
-saw very well, that day you came to Connaught Square, that it was a sort
-of spell she cast. It was a spell, Roger. The moment I saw her, after
-the baby's death, I forgot everything she'd done and felt I loved her
-again. She willed me to. So as to get power over me. Everything, always,
-with her, was to get power over other people's lives," said Mrs.
-Chadwick, and as he had, in the past, heard echoes of Adrienne in all
-she said, now he heard echoes of Meg, "It's by willing it, you know.
-Some people practise it like five-finger exercises. You have to sit
-quite still and shut your eyes and concentrate. Meg has heard how it's
-done. I don't pretend to understand; but that must have been her way.
-And she made poor Barney miserable and set me against him at once; you
-said so yourself, Roger, and blinded me to all the cruel things she did.
-It was to punish him, you know. To make him feel he was dreadfully wrong
-and she quite right; about Meg, and everything else; for you came in,
-too. It used to be so dreadful at Torquay. I knew it would be sad there;
-but I never guessed how sad it would be--with that horrid blue, blue
-sea. She used to sit, day after day, on the terrace of the house, and
-gaze and gaze at the sea and if Barney would come, so lovingly, and ask
-her what he could do for her and take her hand, oh, it was more and more
-mournful, the way she would look at him; that dreadful, loving look that
-didn't mean love at all, but only trying to break him down and make him
-_say_ that he was down. I begged Barney's pardon, Roger, for having
-treated him as I did. We treated him dreadfully, all of us; because she
-put him, always, in the wrong. Oh, no, Roger, I'm sorry for her, but
-she's a dangerous woman; or _was_ dangerous. For now she has lost it all
-and has become like everybody else; quite ordinary and unhappy."
-
-He felt, in the little silence that, again, followed, that he could
-hardly better this summing-up. That was precisely what poor Adrienne
-Toner had become; ordinary and unhappy. The two things she would have
-believed herself least capable of becoming. There was nothing to be
-gained in urging extenuating circumstances, especially since he was not
-sure that there were any. Mrs. Chadwick, at bottom, saw as clearly as he
-did. He asked her presently, leaving the theme of Adrienne, whether she
-would not seriously consider going away for a little while with Nancy.
-"Meg could go down to The Little House," he said.
-
-"Oh, no, she couldn't, Roger," said Mrs. Chadwick, "she won't go
-anywhere. She'll hardly speak to Monica. She just sits out-of-doors, all
-day, wrapped in a cloak, in the corner of the garden, staring in front
-of her, and she pays not the slightest attention to anything I say. And
-at night, in her room, I hear her sobbing, sobbing, as if her heart
-would break. I can't think hardly of Eric any longer, Roger. Isn't it
-strange; but it's almost as if he were my son that had been killed. And
-Barney may be killed," the poor mother's lip and chin began to tremble.
-"And you, too, Roger. I don't know how we shall live through all that we
-must bear and I keep thinking of the foolish little things, like your
-having cold feet and wearing the same clothes day after day in those
-horrible trenches. He suffered it all, poor Eric. No, I can't think
-hardly of him. All the same," she sobbed, "my heart is broken when I
-remember that they can never be married now."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-"That's the way Mummy surprises one," said Barney as he and Oldmeadow
-went together through the Coldbrooks woods. "One feels her, usually,
-such a darling goose and then, suddenly, she shows one that she can be a
-heroine."
-
-Barney was going to France in two days' time and Oldmeadow within the
-fortnight, and the Coldbrooks good-byes had just been said. It had been
-poor Meg who had broken down and clung and cried. Mrs. Chadwick had, to
-the very last, talked with grave cheerfulness of Barney's next leave and
-given wise advice as if he had been merely leaving them for a rather
-perilous mountain-climbing feat. Oldmeadow could hardly believe her the
-same woman that he had seen ten days before.
-
-He was staying at The Little House and had come up on this afternoon of
-Barney's departure to join him at Coldbrooks and walk down with him.
-Barney had not yet seen or said good-bye to Nancy and her mother, and
-Oldmeadow had seized this, his only chance, of a talk with him. But, as
-they left the woods and began to climb the bare hill-side, Barney went
-on:
-
-"I've wanted a talk, too, Roger. I'm glad you managed this."
-
-"It doesn't rob anyone of you, does it," said Oldmeadow. "We'll get to
-Chelford in time to give you a good half-hour with them before your car
-comes for you."
-
-"That will be enough for Nancy," said Barney. "The less she sees of me,
-the better she's pleased. I've lots of things I want to say, Roger. Of
-course you understand that in every way it's a relief to be going out."
-
-"It settles things; or seems to settle them," said Oldmeadow. "They take
-another place at all events."
-
-"Yes; just that. They take another place. What difference does it make,
-after all, if a fellow has made a mess of his personal life when his
-personal life has ceased to count. I'm not talking mawkish sentiment
-when I say I hope I'll be killed--if I can be of some use first. I see
-no other way out of it. I'm sorry for Adrienne, after a fashion, for
-she's dished herself, too. We made a hopeless mistake in getting married
-and she knows it as well as I do; and when a man and woman don't love
-each other any longer it's the man's place to get out if he can."
-
-"It was about Adrienne I wanted to talk to you, Barney." For the first
-time in their long friendship Oldmeadow felt that he spoke to an equal.
-Barney had at last ceased to be a boy. "I've seen her, since seeing you
-that last time in the train."
-
-"Well?" Barney inquired, as Oldmeadow paused. "What have you got to say
-to me about Adrienne, Roger? You've not said very much, from the
-beginning; but everything you have said has been true and I've forgotten
-none of it. I'm the more inclined," and he smiled with a slight
-bitterness, "to listen to you now."
-
-"That's just the trouble," Oldmeadow muttered. "You've forgotten
-nothing. That's what I feel, with remorse. That it was I who helped to
-spoil things for you both, from the beginning. You'd not have seen her
-defects as you did if I hadn't shown them to you; and if you hadn't seen
-them you'd have adjusted yourselves to each other and have found them
-out together. She'd not have resented your finding them out in the
-normal course of your shared lives. It's been my opinion of her, in the
-background of both your minds, that has envenomed everything."
-
-Barney listened quietly. "Yes," he assented. "That's all true enough. As
-far as it goes. I mightn't have seen if you hadn't shown me. But I can't
-regret you did show me, for anything else would have been to have gone
-through life blind; as blind as Adrienne is herself. And it's because
-she can't stand being seen through that she revealed so much more; so
-much that you didn't see and that I had to find out for myself. What you
-saw was absurdity and inexperience; they're rather loveable defects; I
-think I accepted them from the beginning, because of all the other
-things I believed in her. You said, too, you remember, that she'd never
-know she was wrong. Well, it's worse than that. She'll never know she's
-wrong and she won't bear it that you should think her anything but
-right. She's rapacious. She's insatiable. Nothing but everything will
-satisfy her. You must be down on your knees, straight down, before her;
-and if you're not, she has no use for you. She turns to stone and you
-break your head and your heart against her. It's hatred Adrienne has
-felt for me, Roger, and I'm afraid I've felt it for her, too. She's done
-things and said things that I couldn't have believed her capable of;
-mean things; clever things; cruelly clever that get you right on the
-raw; things I can't forget. There's much more in her than you saw at the
-beginning. I was right rather than you about that; only they weren't
-the things I thought."
-
-Oldmeadow walked, cutting at the withered way-side grasses with his
-cane. Barney's short, slow sentences seemed to sting him as they came.
-He had to adjust himself to their smart; to adjust himself to the
-thought of this malignant Adrienne. Yet what he felt was not all
-surprise; he had foreseen, suspected, even this. "I know," he said at
-last; "I mean, I can see that it would happen just like that."
-
-"It did happen just like that," said Barney. "I don't claim to have been
-an angel or anything like one. I gave her as good as I got, or nearly,
-sometimes, no doubt. But I know that it wasn't my fault. I know it was
-Adrienne who spoiled everything."
-
-They had come out now on the upland road. The country dropped away
-beneath them wrapped in the dull mole-colour, the distant, dull
-ultramarines of the November afternoon. The smell of burning weeds was
-in the air and, in the west, a long, melancholy sheet of advancing
-rain-cloud hid the sun. Oldmeadow wondered if he and Barney would ever
-walk there together again, and his mind plunged deep into the past, the
-many years of friendship to which this loved country had been a
-background.
-
-"Barney," he said, "what I wanted to say is this: All that you feel is
-true; I'm sure of it. But other things are true, too. I've seen her and
-I've changed about her. If I was right before, I'm right now. She's been
-blind because she didn't know she could be broken. Well, she's beginning
-to break."
-
-"Is she?" said Barney, and his quiet was implacable. "I can quite
-imagine that, you know. Everyone, except poor Palgrave--all the rest of
-us, have found out that she's not the beautiful benignant being she
-thought she was, and that bewilders her and makes her pretty wretched,
-no doubt."
-
-Oldmeadow waited a moment. "I want you to see her," he said. "Don't be
-cruel. You are a little cruel, you know. It's because you are thinking
-of her abstractly; remembering only how she has hurt you. If you could
-see her, see how unhappy she is, you'd feel differently. That's what I
-want you to do. That's what I beg you to do, Barney."
-
-"I can't," said Barney after a moment. "That I can't do, Roger. It's
-over. She might want me back if she could get me back adoring her. It's
-only so she'd want me. But it's over. It's more than over. There's
-something else." Barney's face showed no change from its sad fixity.
-"You were right about that, too. It's Nancy I ought to have married.
-It's Nancy I love. And Adrienne knows it."
-
-At this there passed before Oldmeadow's mind the memory of the small,
-dark, hurrying figure, the memory of the words she had spoken: "Some
-things are like living creatures; and they can die. They can die."
-
-He felt rather sick. "In that case, how can you blame your wife?" he
-muttered. "Doesn't that explain it all?"
-
-"No, it doesn't explain it all." There was no fire of self-justification
-in Barney's voice. It was as fixed and sad as his face. "It was only
-after Adrienne made me so wretched I began to find it out. She was
-jealous of Nancy from the beginning, of course. But then she was jealous
-of everything that wasn't, every bit of it, hers. She had no reason for
-jealousy. No man was ever more in love than I was with Adrienne. Even
-now I don't feel for Nancy what I felt for her. It's something, I
-believe, one only feels once and if it burns out it burns out for ever.
-With Nancy, it's as if I had come home; and Adrienne and I were parted
-before I knew that I was turning to her."
-
-They had begun the final descent into Chelford and the wind now brought
-a fine rain against their faces. Neither spoke again until the grey
-roofs of the village came into sight at a turning of the road. "About
-money matters, Roger," Barney said. "Mother and Meg and Barbara. If you
-get through, and I don't, will you see to them for me? I've appointed
-you my trustee. I told Adrienne last summer that I couldn't take any of
-her money any longer, so that, of course, with my having thrown up the
-city job and taken on the farms, my affairs are in a bit of a mess. But
-I hope they'll be able to go on at Coldbrooks all right. Palgrave will
-have Coldbrooks if I don't come back, and perhaps you'll be able to
-prevent him handing it over to his Socialist friends."
-
-"Palgrave would be safely human if it came to taking care of his mother
-and sisters," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Would he?" said Barney. "I don't know."
-
-Across the village green the lights of The Little House shone at them.
-The curtains were still undrawn and, as they waited at the door, they
-could see Nancy in the drawing-room, sitting by the fire alone.
-
-"I want you to come in with me, please, Roger," said Barney. "Nancy
-hasn't felt it right to be very kind to me of late and she'll be able
-to be kinder if you are there. You'll know, you'll see if a chance comes
-for me to say what I want to say to her. You might leave us for a moment
-then."
-
-"You have hardly more than a half-hour, you know," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"One can say a good deal in a half-hour," Barney replied.
-
-Nancy had risen and, as they entered, she came forward, trying to smile
-and holding out her hand to each. But Oldmeadow was staying there. He
-was not going in half an hour. There was no reason why Nancy should give
-him her hand and Barney, quietly, took both her hands in his. "It's
-good-bye, then, Nancy, isn't it?" he said.
-
-They stood there in the firelight together, his dear young people, both
-so pale, both so fixedly looking at each other, and Nancy still tried to
-smile as she said, "It's dear of you to have come." But her face
-betrayed her. It was sick with the fear that, in conquering her own
-heart, she should hurt Barney's; Barney's, whom she might never see
-again. Oldmeadow went on to the fire and stood, his back to them,
-looking down at it.
-
-"Oh, no, it's not; not dear at all," Barney returned. "You knew I'd come
-to say good-bye, of course. Why haven't you been over to see me, you and
-Aunt Monica? I've asked you often enough."
-
-"You mustn't scold me to-day, Barney, since it's good-bye. We couldn't
-come," said Nancy.
-
-"It's never I who scold you. It's you who scold me. Not openly, I know,"
-said Barney, "but by implication; punish me, by implication. I quite
-understood why you haven't come. Well, I want things to be clear now.
-Roger's here, and I want to say them before him, because he's been in it
-all since the beginning. It's because of Adrienne you've never come; and
-changed so much in every way towards me."
-
-He had kept her hands till then, but Oldmeadow heard now that she drew
-away from him. For a moment she did not speak; and then it was not to
-answer him. "Have you said good-bye to her, Barney?"
-
-"No; I haven't," Barney answered. "I'm not going to say good-bye to
-Adrienne, Nancy. It must be plain to you by this time that Adrienne and
-I have parted. What did it all mean but that?"
-
-"It didn't mean that to her. She never dreamed it was meaning that,"
-said Nancy.
-
-"Well, she said it, often enough," Barney retorted.
-
-"Barney, please listen to me," said Nancy. "You must let me speak. She
-never dreamed it was meaning that. If she was unkind to you it was
-because she could not believe it would ever mean parting. She had
-started wrong; by holding you to blame; after the baby; when you and
-Roger so hurt her pride. And then she wasn't able to go back. She wasn't
-able to see it all so differently--just to get you back. It would have
-seemed wrong to her; a weakness, just because she longed so. And then,
-most of all, she believed you loved her enough to come of yourself."
-
-"I tried to," said Barney, in the sad, bitter voice of the hill-side
-talk with Oldmeadow. "You see, you don't know everything, Nancy, though
-you know so much. I tried to again and again."
-
-"Yes. I know you did. But only on your own terms. And by then I had come
-in. Oh, yes, I had, Barney. You didn't know it. It was long, long before
-you knew. But I knew it; and so did she and it was more than she could
-bear. What woman could bear it? I couldn't have, in her place." Tears
-were in Nancy's voice.
-
-"It's queer, Nancy," said Barney, "that--barring Palgrave, who doesn't
-count--you and Roger are the only two people she has left to stick up
-for her. Roger's just been saying all that to me, you know. The two she
-tried to crab whenever she got a chance. Well, say it's my fault, then.
-Say that I've been faithless to my wife and fallen in love with another
-woman. The fact is there, and you've said it now yourself. I don't love
-her any longer. I shall never love her again. And I love you. I love
-you, Nancy, and it's you I ought to have married; would have married, I
-believe, if I hadn't been a blinded fool. I love you, and I can say it
-now because this may be the end of everything. Don't let her spoil this,
-too. Nancy darling, look at me. Can't you consent to forget Adrienne for
-this one time, when we may never see each other again?"
-
-"I can't forget her! I can't forget her!" Nancy sobbed. "I mustn't.
-She's miserable. She hasn't stopped loving you. And she's your wife."
-
-"Do you want to make me hate her?"
-
-"Oh, Barney--that is cruel of you."
-
-There was a silence and in it Oldmeadow heard Barney's car draw up at
-the gate. He took out his watch. There were only a few more moments left
-them. Not turning to them he said. "It does her no good, you know, Nancy
-dear."
-
-"No. It does her no good," Barney repeated. "But forgive me. I was
-cruel. I don't hate her. I'm sorry for her. It's simply that we ought
-never to have married. Forget it, Nancy, and forget her. Don't let it
-be, then, that I love you and don't love my wife. Let it be in the old
-way. As if she'd never come. As if I'd come to say good-bye to my
-cousin; to my dearest friend on earth. Look at me. Give me your hands.
-It's your face I want to take with me."
-
-"Five minutes, Barney," Oldmeadow whispered, as he went past them. Nancy
-had given him her hands; she had lifted her face to his, and Barney's
-arms had closed around her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-Mrs. Averil was in the hall. "Give them another moment," he said. "I'm
-going outside."
-
-Tears were in his own eyes. He stepped out on to the flagged path of the
-little plot in front of the house where strips of turf and rose-beds ran
-between the house and the high wall. Between the clipped holly-trees at
-the gate he saw Barney's car, and its lights, the wall between, cast a
-deep shadow over the garden.
-
-The rain was falling thickly now and he stood, feeling it on his face,
-filled with a sense of appeasement, of accomplishment. They were
-together at last. It was not too late. At such a time, when all the
-world hung on the edge of an abyss, to be together for a moment might
-sum up more of real living than many happy years. They knew each other's
-hearts and what more could life give its creatures than that
-recognition.
-
-Suddenly, how he did not know, for there was no apparent movement and
-his eyes were fixed on the pallid sky, he became aware that a figure was
-leaning against the house in the shadow beside him. His eyes found it
-and it was familiar. Yet he could not believe his eyes.
-
-She was leaning back, her hands against the wall on either side, and he
-saw, with the upper layer of perception that so often blunts a violent
-emotion, that her feet were sunken in the mould of Mrs. Averil's
-rose-bed and that the cherished shoots of the new climbing rose were
-tangled in her clothes. The open window was but a step away.
-
-She had come since they had come. She had crept up. She had looked
-in--for how long?--and had fallen back, casting out her arms so that it
-might not be to the ground. Her eyes were closed; but she had heard and
-seen him. As he stood before her, aghast, unable to find a word, he
-heard her mutter: "Take me away, please."
-
-Barney's car blocked the egress of the gate and Barney might emerge at
-any moment. He leaned towards her and found that she was intricately
-caught in the rose. Her hat with its veil, her sleeve, her hair, were
-all entangled.
-
-Dumbly, patiently, she stood, while, with fumbling fingers and terror
-lest they should be heard within--Mrs. Averil's voice now reached him
-from the drawing-room--Oldmeadow released her and, his fingers deeply
-torn by the thorns, he was aware, in all the tumult of his thought, more
-than of the pain, of the wet fragrance of the roses that surrounded her.
-He shared what he felt to be her panic.
-
-She had come hoping to see Barney; she had come to say good-bye to
-Barney, who would not come to her; and his heart sickened for her at the
-shameful seeming of her plight. She knew now that it must be her hope
-never to see Barney again.
-
-There was a narrow passage, leading to the lawn and garden, between the
-house and the stable walls. Thickly grown with ivy, showing only a
-narrow opening above, where chimneys and gables cut against the sky, it
-was nearly as dark as a tunnel, and into this place of hiding he half
-led, half carried the unfortunate woman.
-
-With the darkness, the pungent smell of the wet ivy closed thickly,
-ominously about them. It was as if he and Adrienne Toner were buried
-there together. He heard a maid laugh far away and a boy passed on the
-green stridently whistling "Tipperary." It was like hearing, in the
-grave, the sounds of the upper world.
-
-Adrienne leaned against the wall. The ivy closing round her, nearly
-obliterated her, but he could dimly see the grey disk of her face,
-showing the unexpectedness of contour that reveals itself in the faces
-of the dead. The trivial features were erased and only a shape of grief
-remained, strangely august and emotionless.
-
-An eternity seemed to pass before the front door opened and Mrs.
-Averil's voice, steadied to a galvanized cheerfulness, came, half
-obliterated to a wordless rhythm. Barney's voice answered her, and his
-steps echoed on the flagged path. "Say good-bye to Roger for me if I
-don't see him on the road!" he called out from the gate. Then the car
-coughed, panted; the horn croaked out its cry and, above them, a shaft
-of light across the ivy, of which he had till then been unaware, flitted
-suddenly away, leaving the darkness more visible.
-
-He heard then that she was weeping.
-
-Putting his arm behind her, for the rain fell heavily and the ivy was
-drenched with it, he drew her forward and for a little while it was
-almost against his breast that she lay while her very heart dissolved
-itself in tears.
-
-She had come, he knew it all, with a breakdown of her pride, with a last
-wild hope and, perhaps, a longing to atone, believing that she might
-snatch a word somewhere with her husband, and find her way, at this
-last moment, back to the heart she had so alienated. She had seen all.
-She had heard all. He was sure of it. It had been as an outcast that he
-had found her leaning there. He understood her through and through and
-the tender heaviness that had already so often visited his heart flooded
-it to suffocation.
-
-Among her sobs, he heard her, at last, speaking to him. "Even Palgrave
-doesn't know. He told me--only this afternoon--that Barney was here. I
-thought I might find him. I was going to wait in the road. And when I
-got here there was no car and I was afraid that there was a mistake.
-That I had missed him. And I went up to the house; to the open window;
-and looked in; to see if he was there. It was not jealousy: not now. I
-did not mean to be an eavesdropper. But, when I saw them, I stayed and
-listened. It was not jealousy," she repeated. "It was because I had to
-know that there was no more hope."
-
-"Yes," said Oldmeadow gently, while, with long pauses, she spoke on and
-on; to the impartial judge, to the one sure refuge; and he said "Yes"
-again, gently, after she had finished; a long time after. She still half
-lay against his breast. He had never felt such an infinite tenderness
-towards any creature; not since his boyhood and his mother's death.
-
-She drew away from him at last. "Take me," she said. "There is a train;
-back to Oxford." She had ceased to weep. Her voice was hoarse and faint.
-
-"Did you walk up from the station? You're not fit to walk back. I can
-get a trap. There's a man just across the green."
-
-"No. Walking, please. I would be recognized. They might know me. I can
-walk. If you will help me."
-
-He drew her arm through his. "Lean on me," he said. "We'll go slowly."
-
-They went past the drawing-room windows and, softly opening, softly
-shutting, through the gate. The road, when it turned the corner, left
-the village behind; between its rarely placed trees, vague silhouettes
-against the sky that seemed of one texture with them, it showed its
-mournful pallor for only a little space before them; there was not
-enough light left in the sky to glimmer on its pools. The fields, on
-either side, vanished into obscurity. Pale cattle, once, over a hedge,
-put disconsolate heads and lowed and a garrulous dog, as they passed by,
-ran out from a way-side farm-yard, smelt at their heels, growled
-perfunctorily and, having satisfied his sense of duty, went back to his
-post. The sense of dumb emptiness was so complete that it was only after
-they had gone a long way that he knew that she was weeping and the soft,
-stifling sounds seemed only a part of nature's desolation.
-
-Her head bent down, she stumbled on, leaning on his arm, and from time
-to time she raised her handkerchief and pressed it to her mouth and
-nose. He did not say a word; nor did she.
-
-As he led her along, submissive to her doom, it was another feeling of
-accomplishment that overwhelmed him; the dark after the radiant; after
-Nancy and Barney, he and Adrienne. It was this, from their first
-meeting, that he had been destined to mean to her. She was his appointed
-victim. He had killed, as really as if with a knife, the girl whom he
-had seen at Coldbrooks, in the sunlight, on that Sunday morning in
-spring, knowing no doubts. She had then held the world in her hands and
-a guileless, untried heaven had filled her heart. Between her and this
-crushed and weeping woman there seemed no longer any bond; unless it was
-the strange aching that, in his heart, held them both together.
-
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat in Mrs. Aldesey's drawing-room and, the tea-table between
-them, Mrs. Aldesey poured out his tea. So it was, after three years,
-that they found each other. So it was, all over the world, Oldmeadow
-said to himself, that the tea-table, or its equivalent, reasserted
-itself in any interval where the kindly amenities of human intercourse
-could root themselves; though the world rocked and flames of anarchy
-rimmed its horizons.
-
-It was more real, he felt that now, to sit and look at Lydia over her
-tea than to parch on Eastern sands and shiver in Western trenches; from
-the mere fact that the one experience became a nightmare while the other
-was as natural as waking at dawn. Horrors became the dropped stitches of
-life; and though if there were too many of them they would destroy the
-stocking, the stocking itself was made up of tea-table talks and walks
-in the woods with Nancy. He had just come from Coldbrooks.
-
-So he put it, trivially, to himself, and he felt the need of clinging to
-triviality. The dropped stitches had been almost too much for him and
-the nightmare, at times, had seemed the only reality. At times he had
-known a final despair of life and even now he remembered that the worst
-might still come. One might be called upon to face the death of the
-whole order of civilization. Faith required one, perhaps, to recognize
-that the human spirit was bound up, finally, with no world order and
-unless one could face its destruction as one had to face the death of a
-loved individual, one was not secure of the spiritual order that
-transcended all mundane calamity. He believed, or hoped, that during
-these last three years, in Gallipoli, Egypt and Palestine, when, to the
-last fibre, he had felt his faiths tested, he had learned to be ready
-for the great relinquishment, should it be required of him; and it was
-therefore the easier to doff that consciousness, as he might have doffed
-a sword, and think of Lydia and of the order that still survived and
-that she still stood for.
-
-Lydia did not look the worse for the war; indeed she looked the better.
-She looked as if, in spite of long days in the hospital, she digested
-better and, in spite of air-raids, slept better, and as they talked,
-finding their way back to intimacy by the comparing of such
-superficialities, she told him that for years she hadn't been so strong
-or well. "Nothing is so good for you, I've found out, as to feel that
-you are being used; being used by something worth while. People like
-myself must keep still about our experiences, for we've had none that
-bear talking of. But even the others, even the people bereaved
-unspeakably, are strangely lifted up. And I believe that the populace
-enjoys the air-raids rather than the reverse; they give them a chance of
-feeling that they are enduring something, too; with good-humour and
-pluck. If anyone is pessimistic about the effect of war on average human
-nature, I should only ask them to come and talk to our men at the
-hospital. Of course, under it all, there's the ominous roar in one's
-ears all the time."
-
-"Do you mean the air-raids?" he asked her and, shaking her head,
-showing him that she, too, had seen with him and, he believed, with him
-accepted: "No; I mean the roar of nation after nation collapsing into
-the abyss. A sort of tumbril roar of civilization, Roger. And, for that,
-there's always the last resource of going gallantly to the guillotine.
-But all the same, I believe we shall pull through."
-
-It was the spring of 1918 and one needed faith to believe it. She asked
-him presently about his friends at Coldbrooks. He had gone to Coldbrooks
-for three days of his one week's leave. After this he went to France.
-
-"What changes for you there, poor Roger," said Mrs. Aldesey.
-
-"Yes. Terrible changes. Palgrave dead and Barney broken. Yet, do you
-know, it's not as sad as it was. Something's come back to it. Nancy sits
-by him and holds his hand and is his joy and comfort."
-
-"Will he recover?"
-
-"Not in the sense of being really mended. He'll go on crutches, always,
-if he gets up. But the doctors now hope that the injury to the back
-isn't permanent."
-
-"And Meg's married," said Mrs. Aldesey after a little pause. "Have you
-seen her?"
-
-"No. She runs a hospital in the country, at her husband's place, Nancy
-tells me; and is very happy."
-
-"Very. Has a fine boy, and is completely reinstated. It's a remarkable
-ending to the story, isn't it? She met him at the front, you know,
-driving her ambulance; and he has twice as much in him as poor Eric
-Hayward."
-
-"Remarkable. Yet Meg's a person who only needs her chance. She's the
-sort that always comes out on top."
-
-"Does it comfort her mother a little for all she's suffered to see her
-on top?"
-
-"It almost comically comforts her. All the same, Eleanor Chadwick has
-her depths. Nothing will ever comfort her for Palgrave's death."
-
-"I understand that," said Mrs. Aldesey. "Nothing could. How she must
-envy the happy mothers whose boys were killed at the front. To have
-one's boy die in prison as a conscientious objector must be the
-bitterest thing the war has given any mother to bear."
-
-"He was a dear boy," said Oldmeadow. "Heroically wrong-minded." He could
-hardly bear to think of Palgrave.
-
-"He wasn't alone, you know," said Mrs. Aldesey after a moment. Something
-was approaching that he would rather not have to speak of; a name he
-would so much rather not name. And, evading it, feebly, he said, "His
-mother got to him in time, I know."
-
-"Yes. But all the time. She went and lived near the prison. Adrienne
-Toner I mean."
-
-Her eyes were on him and he hoped that no readjustment of his features
-was visible. "Oh, yes. Nancy told me that," he said.
-
-"What's become of her, Roger?" Mrs. Aldesey asked. "Since Charlie was
-killed the Lumleys have lived in the country and I hardly see them. I
-haven't heard a word of her for years."
-
-He was keeping his eyes on her and he knew from her expression that he
-showed some strain or some distress.
-
-"Nor have I. Nancy said that they hadn't either. She went away, after
-Palgrave's death. Disappeared completely."
-
-"Nancy told you, of course, about the money; the little fortune she gave
-Palgrave, so that he could leave it to his mother?"
-
-"Oh, yes. Nancy wrote to me of that."
-
-"It was cleverly contrived, wasn't it. They are quite tied up to it,
-aren't they; whatever they may feel. No one could object to her giving a
-fortune to the boy she'd ruined. I admired that in her, I must confess;
-the way she managed it. And then her disappearance."
-
-"Very clever indeed," said Oldmeadow. "All that remains for her to do
-now is to manage to get killed. And that's easily managed. Perhaps she
-is killed."
-
-He did not intend that his voice should be emptier or dryer, yet Lydia
-looked at him with a closer attention.
-
-"Barney and Nancy could get married then," she said.
-
-"Yes. Exactly. They could get married."
-
-"That's what you want, isn't it, Roger?"
-
-"Want her to be killed, or them to be married?"
-
-"Well, as you say, so many people _are_ being killed. One more or less,
-if it's in such a good cause as their marriage--"
-
-"It's certainly a good cause. But I don't like the dilemma," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-He knew from the way she looked at him, discreet and disguised as her
-recognition was, that he was hiding something from her. Casting about
-his mind, in the distress that took the form of confusion, he could
-himself find nothing that he hid, or wished to hide, unless it was the
-end of Adrienne's story as Barney's wife. That wasn't for him to show;
-ever; to anyone.
-
-"Perhaps she's gone back to America," said Mrs. Aldesey presently,
-"California, you know. Or Chicago. She may very well be engaged in great
-enterprises out there that we never hear of. They'd be sure to be great,
-wouldn't they."
-
-"I suppose they would."
-
-"You saw her once more, didn't you, at the time you saw Palgrave," Mrs.
-Aldesey went on. "Lady Lumley told me of that. And how kind you had
-been. Adrienne had spoken of it. You were sorry for them both, I
-suppose; for her as well as for him, in spite of everything. Or did she
-merely take it for granted that the kindness to him extended to her?"
-
-"Not at all. It was for her too," said Oldmeadow, staring a little and
-gathering together, after this lapse of time that seemed so immense, his
-memories of that other tea-table set up in the chaos: Palgrave's
-tea-table on that distant day in Oxford. What was so confusing him was
-his consciousness that it hadn't been the last time he had seen
-Adrienne. "I was as sorry for her as for him," he went on. "Sorrier.
-There was so much more in her than I'd supposed. She was capable of
-intense suffering."
-
-"In losing her husband's affections, you mean? You never suspected her
-of being inhuman, surely? Lady Lumley blamed poor Barney for all that
-sad story. But, even from her account, I could see his side very
-plainly."
-
-"Perhaps I did think her inhuman. At all events I thought her
-invulnerable."
-
-"Yes. I remember. With all her absurdity you thought she had great
-power." Mrs. Aldesey looked at him thoughtfully. "And it was when you
-found she hadn't that you could be sorry for her."
-
-"Not at all," said Oldmeadow again. "I still think she has great power.
-People can have power and go to pieces."
-
-"Did she go to pieces? That day in Oxford? I can't imagine her in
-pieces, you know."
-
-He had a feeling of drawing back; or of drawing Adrienne back. "In the
-sense of being so unhappy, so obviously unhappy, over Palgrave," he
-said.
-
-He saw that Lydia would have liked to go on questioning, as, of course,
-it would have been perfectly natural for her to do. Was not Adrienne
-Toner and her absurdity one of their pet themes? Yet she desisted. She
-desisted and it was because she felt some change in him; some shrinking
-and some pain. "Well, let's hope that she is happy, now, or as happy as
-she can be, poor thing, doing great deeds in America," she said. And she
-turned the talk back to civilization and its danger.
-
-They talked a good deal about civilization during their last three days
-together. He wanted things, during these three days of mingled recovery
-and farewell, to be as happy as possible between him and his friend, for
-he knew that Lydia's heart was heavy, for him and not for civilization.
-The front to which he was going was more real to her, because it was
-much nearer, and his peril was more real than during his absence in
-distant climes. He felt himself that the French front, at this special
-time, would probably make an end of him and, for the first time since
-their early friendship, he knew conjecture as to his relation with
-Lydia; wondered, if it had not been for Mr. Aldesey in New York, whether
-Lydia might have been in love with him, and realized, with a curious
-sense of anxiety and responsibility, that her friendship for him now was
-the closest tie in her life. The war might to her, too, mean irreparable
-loss. And he was sorry that it was so; sorry to think that the easy,
-happy intercourse had this hidden depth of latent suffering.
-
-Lydia's feeling, and its implications, became the clearer to him when,
-on their last evening together, she said to him suddenly: "Perhaps
-you'll see her over there."
-
-He could not pretend not to know whom she meant, nor could he pretend to
-himself not to see that if it troubled Lydia that he should be sorry for
-Adrienne that could only be because she cared far more for him than he
-had ever guessed.
-
-He said, as easily as he could manage it, for the pressure of his
-realizations made him feel a little queer: "Not if she's in America."
-
-"Ah, but perhaps she's come back from America," said Mrs. Aldesey.
-"She's a great traveller. What will you do with her if you do find her?
-Bring her back to Barney?"
-
-"Hardly that," he said. "There'd be no point in bringing her back to
-Barney, would there?"
-
-"Well, then, what would you do with her?" Mrs. Aldesey smiled, as if
-with a return to their old light dealing with the theme, while, still in
-her nurse's coiffe and dress, she leaned back against her chair.
-
-"What would she do with me, rather, isn't it?" he asked. And he, too,
-tried to be light.
-
-"She'll be mended then, you think? Able to do things to people again?"
-
-"I'm not at all afraid of her, you know. She never did me any harm," he
-said.
-
-"Because you were as strong as she, you mean. She did other people harm,
-surely. You warned me once to keep away from her unless I wanted to lose
-my toes and fingers," Mrs. Aldesey still smiled. "She does make people
-lose things, doesn't she?"
-
-"Well, she makes them gain things, too. Fortunes for instance. Perhaps
-if I find her, she'll give me a fortune."
-
-"But that's only when she's ruined you," she reminded him.
-
-"And it's she who's ruined now," he felt bound to remind her; no longer
-lightly.
-
-Leaning back in her chair, her faded little face framed in white, Mrs.
-Aldesey looked at once younger yet more tired than he had ever seen her
-look and she sat for a little while silent; as if she had forgotten
-Adrienne Toner and were thinking only of their parting. But all her
-gaiety had fallen from her as she said at last: "I can be sorry for her,
-too; if she's really ruined. If she still loves him when he has ceased
-to care for her. Does she, do you think?"
-
-With the question he seemed to see a fire-lit room and lovers who had
-found each other and to smell wet roses. Lydia was coming too near; too
-near the other figure, outside the window, fallen back with outstretched
-arms against the roses. And again he felt himself softly, cautiously,
-disentangle the sleeve, the hair, felt himself draw Adrienne away into
-the darkness where the smell was now of wet ivy and where he could see
-only the shape of an accepting grief.
-
-"How could I know?" he said. "She was very unhappy when I last saw her.
-But three years have passed and people can mend in three years."
-
-"Especially in America," Mrs. Aldesey suggested. "It's a wonderful place
-for mending. Let's hope she's there. Let's hope that we shall never, any
-of us, ever hear of her again. That would be much the happiest thing,
-wouldn't it?"
-
-He was obliged to say that it would certainly be much the happiest
-thing; and he was too unhappy about Lydia to be able to feel angry with
-her. He knew how tired she must be when, for the first time in their
-long friendship, she must know that she was not pleasing him, yet not be
-able to help herself.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-
-"Good Lord!" Oldmeadow heard himself groaning.
-
-Even as he took possession of his physical suffering he knew that there
-was satisfaction in suffering, at last, himself. Until now the worst
-part of war had been to see the sufferings of others. This was at last
-the real thing; but it was so mingled with acquiescence that it ceased
-to be the mere raw fact. "We're all together, now," he thought, and he
-felt himself, even as he groaned, lifted on a wave of beatitude.
-
-Until now he had not, as a consciousness, known anything. There was a
-shape in his memory, a mere immense black blot shot with fiery lights.
-It must symbolize the moment when the shell struck him, bending, in the
-trench, over his watch and his calculations. And after that there were
-detached visions, the ceiling of a train where he had swung in a hammock
-bed, looking up; clean sheets, miraculously clean and the face of a
-black-browed nurse who reminded him of Trixie. The smell of chloroform
-was over everything. It bound everything together so that days might
-have passed since the black blot and since he lay here, again in clean
-sheets, the sweet, thick smell closing round him and a raging thirst in
-his throat. He knew that he had just been carried in from the operating
-room and he groaned again "Good Lord," feeling the pain snatch as if
-with fangs and claws at his thigh and belly, and muttered, "Water!"
-
-Something sweet, but differently sweet from the smell, sharp, too, and
-insidious, touched his lips and opening them obediently, as a young bird
-opens its bill to the parent bird, he felt a swab passed round his
-parched mouth and saw the black-browed nurse. "Not water, yet, you
-know," she said. "This is lemon and glycerine and will help you
-wonderfully."
-
-He wanted to ask something about Paris and the long-distance gun firing
-on it every day and he seemed to see it over the edge of the trench, far
-away on the horizon of No-man's-land, a tiny city flaming far into the
-sky. But other words bubbled up and he heard himself crying: "Mother!
-Mother!" and remembered, stopping himself with an act of will, that they
-all said that when they were dying. But as he closed his eyes he felt
-her very near and knew that it would be sweet to die and find her.
-
-A long time must have passed. Was it days or only the time of daylight?
-It was night now and a shaded light shone from a recess behind him and
-thoughts, visions, memories raced through his mind. Nancy; Barney; he
-would never see them again, then: poor Lydia and civilization.
-"Civilization will see me out," he thought and he wondered if they had
-taken off the wings of the Flying Victory when they packed her.
-
-A rhythm was beating in his brain. Music was it? Something of Bach's? It
-gathered words to itself and shaped itself sentence by sentence into
-something he had heard? or read? Ah, he was glad to have found it.
-"Under the orders of your devoted officers you will march against the
-enemy or fall where you stand, facing the foe. To those who die I say:
-You will not die: you will enter living into immortality, and God will
-receive you into his bosom." He seemed to listen to the words as he
-lay, quietly smiling. But it was music after all for, as he listened,
-they merged into the "St. Matthew Passion." He had heard it, of course,
-with Lydia, at the Temple. But Lydia did not really care very much for
-Bach. She might care more for "Litanei." She had sung it standing beside
-him with foolish white roses over her ears. How unlike Lydia to wear
-those roses. And was it Lydia who stood there? A mental perplexity
-mingled with the physical pain and spoiled his peace. It was not
-Lydia's, that white face in the coffin with wet ivy behind it. What
-suffering was this that beat upon his heart? The music had faded all
-away and he saw faces everywhere, dying faces; and blood and terrible
-mutilations. All the suffering of the war, worse, far worse than the
-mere claws and fangs that tore at him. Dying boys choked out their
-breaths in agonies of conscious loneliness, yearning for faces they
-would never see again. Oh, how many he had seen die like that!
-Intolerable to watch them. And could one do nothing? "Cigarettes. Give
-them cigarettes," he tried to tell somebody. "And marmalade for
-breakfast; and phonographs, and then they will enter living into
-immortality"--No: he did not mean that. What did he mean? He could catch
-at nothing now. Thoughts were tossed and tumbled like the rubbish of
-wreckage from an inundated town on the deep currents of his anguish. A
-current that raced and seethed and carried him away. He saw it. Its
-breathless speed was like the fever in his blood. If it went faster he
-would lose his breath. Church-bells ringing on the banks lost theirs as
-he sped past so swiftly and made a trail of whining sound.--Effie!
-Effie! It was poor little Effie, drowning. He saw her wild, small face,
-battling. Bubbles boiled up about his cry.
-
-Suddenly the torrent was stilled. Without commotion, without tumult, it
-was stilled. There was a dam somewhere; it had stopped racing; he could
-get his breath. Still and slow; oh! it was delicious to feel that quiet
-hand on his forehead; his mother's hand, and to know that Effie was
-safe. He lay with closed eyes and saw a smooth waterfall sliding and
-curving with green grey depths into the lower currents of the stream. He
-remembered the stream well, now; one of his beloved French rivers; one
-of the smaller, sylvan rivers, too small for majesty; with silver
-poplars spaced against the sky on either bank and a small town, white
-and pink and pearly-grey, clear on the horizon. Tranquil sails were
-above him and the bells from the distant church-tower floated to him
-across the fields. Soundlessly, slowly, he felt himself borne into
-oblivion.
-
-The black-browed nurse was tending him next morning. "You are better,"
-she said, smiling at him. "You slept all night. No; it's a shame, but
-you mayn't have water yet." She put the lemon and glycerine to his lips.
-"The pain is easier, isn't it?"
-
-He said it was. He felt that he must not stir an inch so as to keep it
-easier, but he could not have stirred had he wanted to, for he was all
-tightly swathed and bandaged. He remembered something he wanted
-specially to ask: "Paris? They haven't got it yet?"
-
-"They'll never get it!" she smiled proudly. "Everything is going
-splendidly."
-
-The English surgeon was such a nice fellow. He had spectacles on a
-square-tipped nose and a square, chubby face; yet his hair was nearly
-white. Oldmeadow remembered, as if of days before the flood, that his
-name was a distinguished one. Perhaps it was morphia they gave him,
-after his wound was dressed, or perhaps he fainted. The day passed in a
-hot and broken stupor and at night the tides of fever rose again and
-carried him away. But, again, before he had lost his breath, before he
-had quite gone down into delirium, the quiet hand came and sent him,
-under sails, to sleep.
-
-Next day Oldmeadow knew, from the way the surgeon looked at him, that
-his case was grave. His face was grim as he bent over the dressing and
-he hurt horribly. They told him, when it was over, that he had been very
-brave, and, like a child, he was pleased that they should tell him so.
-But the pain was worse all day and the sense of the submerging fever
-imminent, and he lay with closed eyes and longed for the night that
-brought the hand. Hours, long hours passed before it came. Hours of
-sunlight when, behind his eyelids, he saw red, and hours of twilight
-when he saw mauve. Then, for a little while, it was a soft, dense grey
-he saw, like a bat's wing, and then the small light shone across his
-bed; he knew that the night had come, and felt, at last, the hand fall
-softly on his head.
-
-He lay for some time feeling the desired peace flow into him and then,
-through its satisfaction, another desire pushed up into his
-consciousness and he remembered that, more than about Paris, he had
-wanted to speak to the nurse about what she did for him and thank her.
-
-"It's you who make me sleep, isn't it," he said, lying with closed eyes
-under the soft yet insistent pressure. "I've never thanked you."
-
-She did not reply. She did not want him to talk. But he still wanted to.
-
-"I couldn't thank you last night," he said, "I can't keep hold of my
-thoughts. And when morning comes I seem to have forgotten everything
-about the night. You are the nurse who takes care of me in the daytime,
-too, aren't you?"
-
-Again, for a moment, there was no reply; and then a voice came. "No; I
-am the night nurse. Go to sleep now."
-
-It was a voice gentle, cold and soft, like snow. It was not an English
-voice and he had heard it before. Where had he heard it? Rooks were
-cawing and he saw a blue ribbon rolling, rolling out across a
-spring-tide landscape. This voice was not like a blue ribbon; it was
-like snow. Yet, when he turned his head under her hand, he looked round
-at Adrienne Toner.
-
-The first feeling that came uppermost in the medley that filled him at
-the sight of her was one of amused vexation. It was as if he went back
-to his beginnings with her, back to the rooks and the blue ribbon. "At
-it again!" was what he said to himself, and what he said aloud,
-absurdly, was: "Oh, come, now!"
-
-She did not lift her hand, but there was trouble on her face as she
-looked back at him. "I hoped you wouldn't see me, Mr. Oldmeadow," she
-said.
-
-He was reminded of Bacchus and the laying on of hands; but a classical
-analogy, even more ridiculous, came to him with her words. "Like Cupid
-and Psyche," he said. "The other way round. It's I who mustn't look."
-
-The trouble on her face became more marked and he saw that she imagined
-him to be delirious. He was not quite himself, certainly, or he would
-not have greeted Adrienne Toner thus, and he made an effort to be more
-decorous and rational as he said, "I'm very glad to see you again. Safe
-and sound: you know."
-
-She had always had a singular little face, but it had never looked so
-singular as now, seen from below with shadows from the light behind cast
-so oddly over it. The end of her nose jutted from a blue shadow and her
-eyes lay in deep hollows of blue. All that he was sure of in her
-expression was the gravity with which she made up her mind to humour
-him. "We want you to be safe and sound, too. Please shut your eyes and
-go to sleep."
-
-"All right; all right, Psyche," he murmured, and he knew it wasn't quite
-what he intended to say, yet in his flippancy he was taking refuge from
-something; from the flood of suffering that had broken over him the
-other night after he had seen that dead face with white roses over its
-ears. This queer face, half dissolved in blue and yellow, was not dead
-and the white coiffe came closely down about it. If he obeyed her he
-knew that she would keep the other faces away and he closed his eyes
-obediently and lay very still, seeing himself again as the good little
-boy being praised. This was Psyche; not Ariane. "Ariane ma soeur," he
-murmured. It was Ariane who had the white roses--or was it wet ivy? and
-after her face pressed all the other dying faces. "You'll keep them
-away, won't you?" he murmured, and he heard her say: "Yes; I'll keep
-them quite away," and, softly, a curtain of sleep fell before his eyes
-crossed by a thin drift of mythological figures.
-
-"I thought it was you who sent me to sleep," he said to the English
-nurse next day. He could hardly, in the morning light, believe it was
-not a dream.
-
-She smiled with an air of vicarious pride. "No indeed. I can't send
-people to sleep. It's our wonderful Mrs. Chadwick. She does a good deal
-more than put people to sleep. She cures people--oh, I wouldn't have
-believed it myself, till I saw it--who are at death's door. It's lucky
-for you and the others that we've got her here for a little while."
-
-"Where's here?" he asked after a moment.
-
-"Here's Boulogne. Didn't you know?"
-
-"I thought I heard the sea sometimes. It's for cases too bad, then, to
-be taken home. Get her here from where?"
-
-"From her hospital in the firing-line. Now that we're advancing at the
-front everything there is changed and she could come away for a little.
-Sir Kenneth's been begging her to come ever since he saw her. He knew
-she would work marvels here, too." The nice young nurse was exuberant in
-her darkness and rosiness with a Jewish streak of fervour in her lips
-and eyes. "It's a sort of rest for her," she added. "She's been badly
-wounded once. You can just see the scar, under her cap, on her forehead.
-And she nearly died of fever out in Salonika. She had a travelling
-ambulance there before she came to France."
-
-"It must be very restful for her," Oldmeadow remarked with a touch of
-his grim mirth, "if she has to sit up putting all your bad cases to
-sleep. Why haven't I heard of her and her hospital?"
-
-"It's not run in her name. It's an American hospital--she is
-American--called after her mother, I believe. The Pearl Ambulance is
-what it's called and everybody here knows about it; all of us nurses and
-doctors, I mean. Her organizing power is as wonderful as her cures; her
-influence over her staff. They all worship the ground she walks on."
-
-"Pearl, Pearl Toner," Oldmeadow was saying to himself. How complete, how
-perfect it was. And the nurse went on, delighted, evidently, to talk of
-an idol, and rather as if she were speaking of a special cure they had
-installed, a sort of Carrel treatment not to be found anywhere else:
-"Everything's been different since she came. It's almost miraculous to
-see what the mere touch of her hand can do. Matron says she wouldn't be
-surprised if it turned out she was a sort of nun and wore a hair shirt
-under her dress. Whatever she is, it makes one feel better and stronger
-just to see her and one would do anything for her just to have her smile
-at one. She has the most heavenly smile."
-
-It was all very familiar.
-
-"Ah, you haven't abandoned me after all, though I have found you out,"
-he said to Adrienne Toner that night.
-
-He was able at last to see her clearly as she came in, so softly that it
-was like a dream sliding into one's sleep. She was like a dream in her
-nurse's dress which, though so familiar on other women, seemed to
-isolate and make her strange. Her face was smaller than he had
-remembered it and had the curious look, docile yet stubborn, that one
-sees on the faces of dumb-mutes. She might have looked like that had
-she been deafened by the sound of so many bursting shells and lost the
-faculty of speech through doing much and saying nothing among scenes of
-horror. But she spoke to him, after all, as naturally as he spoke to
-her, saying, though with no touch of his lightness: "You mustn't talk,
-you know, if I come to make you sleep. Sir Kenneth wants sleep for you
-more than anything else."
-
-"I promise you to be good," said Oldmeadow. "But I'm really better,
-aren't I? and can talk a little first."
-
-"You are really better. But it will take a long time. A great deal of
-sleeping."
-
-"No one knew what had become of you," said Oldmeadow, and he remembered
-that he ought to be sorry that Adrienne Toner had not been killed.
-
-She hesitated, and then sat down beside him. He thought that she had
-been going to ask him something and then checked herself. "I can't let
-you talk," she said, and in her voice he heard the new authority; an
-authority gained by long submission to discipline.
-
-"Another night, then. We must talk another night," he murmured, closing
-his eyes, for he knew that he must not disobey her. All the same it was
-absurd that Adrienne Toner should be doing this for him; absurd but
-heavenly to feel her hand fall softly, like a warm, light bird, and
-brood upon his forehead.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-
-They never spoke of Coldbrooks, nor of Barney, nor of Palgrave; not
-once. Not once during all those nights that she sat beside him and made
-him sleep.
-
-He had heard from Coldbrooks, of course; letters came often now. And the
-dark young nurse had written for him since he could not yet write for
-himself. He had said no word of seeing Adrienne. Nor had he let them
-know how near to death he had been and, perhaps, still was. He would
-have liked to have seen Lydia and Nancy if he were to die; but most of
-all he wanted to be sure of not losing Adrienne. And he knew that were
-he to tell them, were they to come, Adrienne would go.
-
-She never spoke to him at all, he remembered--as getting stronger with
-every day, he pieced his memories of these nights together--unless he
-spoke to her; and she never smiled. And it came upon him one morning
-after he had read letters that brought so near the world from which she
-was now shut out, that she had, perhaps, never forgiven him. After all,
-though he could not see that he had been wrong, she had everything to
-forgive him and the thought made him restless. That night, for the first
-time, she volunteered a remark. His temperature had gone up a little. He
-must be very quiet and go to sleep directly.
-
-"Yes; I know," he said. "It's because of you. Things I want to say. I'm
-really so much better. We can't go on like this, can we," he said,
-looking up at her as she sat beside him. "Why, you might slip out of my
-life any day, and I might never hear of you again."
-
-She sat looking down at him, a little askance, though gentle still, if
-gentle was the word for her changed face. "That's what I mean to do,"
-she said.
-
-"Oh, but--" Oldmeadow actually, in his alarm and resentment, struggled
-up on an elbow--"that won't do. I want to see you, really see you, now
-that I'm myself again. I want to talk with you--now that I can talk
-coherently. I want to ask you; well, I won't ask it now." She had put
-out her hand, her small, potent hand, and quietly pressed him back, and
-down upon his pillow while her face took on its look of almost stern
-authority. "I'll be good. But promise me you'll not go without telling
-me. And haven't you questions to ask, too?"
-
-Her face kept its severity, but, as he found this last appeal, her eyes
-widened, darkened, looked, for a moment, almost frightened.
-
-"I know that Barney is safe," she said. "I have nothing to ask."
-
-"Well; no; I see." He felt that he had been guilty of a blunder and it
-made him fretful. "For me, then. Not for you. Promise me. I won't be
-good unless you promise me. You can't go off and leave me like that."
-
-With eyes still dilated, she contemplated this rebellion.
-
-"You must promise me something, then," she said after a moment.
-
-He felt proud, delighted, as if he had gained a victory over her.
-
-"Done. If it's not too hard. What is it?"
-
-"You won't write to anybody. You won't tell anybody that you've seen me.
-Only Lady Lumley knows that I am here. And she has promised not to tell.
-Probably, soon, I shall have left France for ever."
-
-"I won't tell. I won't write. I can keep secrets as well as Lady Lumley.
-She does keep them, you know. So it's a compact."
-
-"Yes. It's a compact. You'll never tell them; and I won't go without
-letting you know. I promise. Now go to sleep."
-
-She laid her hand on his forehead, but, for a little while, he heard her
-breathing deeply and quickly and the sense of his blundering stayed with
-him so that sleep was longer in coming.
-
-All the same he was much better next day. He was able to sit up and had
-the glory and excitement of a chop for his midday dinner. And when the
-pleasant hour of tea arrived it was Adrienne herself who came in
-carrying the little tray.
-
-He had not seen her in daylight before and his first feeling was one of
-alarm, for, if she were afoot like this, in daylight, must it not mean
-that she was soon to leave the hospital? He felt shy of her, too, for,
-altered as she was by night, the day showed her as far more altered.
-Whether she seemed much older or much younger he could not have said.
-The coiffe, covering her forehead, and bound under her chin in a way
-peculiar to her, left only, as it were, the means of expression visible.
-
-She sat down by the window and looked out, glancing round from time to
-time as he drank his tea and it was she who found the calm little
-sentences, about the latest news from the front, the crashing of
-Bulgaria, that carried them on until he had finished. When he had pushed
-down his tray she turned her chair and faced him, folding her hands
-together on her white apron, and she said, and he knew that she had come
-to say it, "What was it you wanted to ask me?"
-
-He had had, while she sat at the window, her profile with the jutting
-nose, and her face, as it turned upon him now, made him think suddenly
-of a seagull. Questing, lonely, with vigilant eyes, it seemed to have
-great spaces before it; to be flying forth into empty spaces and to an
-unseen goal.
-
-"Are you going away, then?" He had not dared, somehow, to ask her
-before. He felt now that he could not talk until he knew.
-
-"Not yet," she said. "But I shall be going soon. The hospital is
-emptying and my nights on duty are very short. I have, really, only you
-and two others to take care of. That's why I am up so early to-day. And
-you are so much better that we can have a little talk; if you have
-anything to ask me."
-
-"It's this, of course," said Oldmeadow. "It seems to me you ought to
-dislike me. I misunderstood you in many ways. And now I owe you my life.
-Before we part I want to thank you and to ask you to forgive me."
-
-Her eyes, seen in daylight, were of the colour of distance, of arctic
-distances. That had always been their colour, though he had never before
-identified it.
-
-"But there is nothing to thank me for," she said. "I am here to take
-care of people."
-
-"Even people who misunderstood you. Even people you dislike. I know."
-He flushed, feeling that he had been duly snubbed. "But though you take
-care of everyone, anyone may thank you, too, mayn't they?"
-
-"I don't dislike you, Mr. Oldmeadow," she said after a moment. "And you
-didn't misunderstand me."
-
-"Oh," he murmured, more abashed than before. "I think so. Not, perhaps,
-what you did; but what you were. I didn't see you as you really were.
-That's what I mean."
-
-The perplexity, which had grown, even, to amazement, had left her eyes
-and she was intently looking at him. "There is nothing for you to be
-sorry for," she said. "Nothing for me to forgive. You were always
-right."
-
-"Always right? I can't take that, you know," said Oldmeadow, deeply
-discomposed. "You were blind, of course, and more sure of yourself than
-any of us can safely afford to be; but I wasn't always right."
-
-"Always. Always," she repeated. "I was blinder than you knew. I was more
-sure of myself."
-
-He lay looking at her and she looked back at him, but with a look that
-invited neither argument not protest. It remained remote and vigilant.
-She might have been the seagull looking down and noting, as she flew
-onward, that the small figure on the beach so far below had ceased to be
-that of an assailant in its attitude. How remote she was, white strange,
-fleeting creature! How near she had been once! The memory of how near
-rushed over his mind. He had, despite the delirious visions of her
-stricken face, hardly thought at all, since really seeing her again, of
-that last time. Everything had fitted itself on, rather, to his earliest
-memories of her, tinged all of them, it was true, with a deeper meaning,
-but not till this moment consciously admitting it. It rushed in now,
-poignant with the recovered smell of wet, dark ivy, the recovered sound
-of her stifled sobs as she had stumbled, broken, beside him in the rain.
-And with the memory came the desire that she should again be near.
-
-"Tell me," he said, "what are you going to do? You said you might be
-leaving France for ever. Shall you go back to America?"
-
-"I don't think so. Not for a long time," she answered. "There will be
-things to do over here, out of France, for a great many years I
-imagine."
-
-He hesitated, then took a roundabout way. "And when I get home, if,
-owing to you, I ever get there, may I not tell them that you're safe and
-sound? It would be happier for them to know that, wouldn't it?"
-
-Her vigilance still dwelt upon him as though she suspected in this
-sudden change of subject some craft of approach, but she answered
-quietly:
-
-"No; I think it will be happier for them to forget me. They will be told
-if I die. I have arranged for that."
-
-"They can't very well forget you," said Oldmeadow after a moment. "They
-must always wonder."
-
-"I know." She glanced away and trouble came into her face. "I know. But
-as much as possible. You must not make me real again by telling them.
-You have promised. You care for them. You know what I mean."
-
-"Yes; I've promised. And I see what you mean. But," said Oldmeadow
-suddenly, and this, of course, was what he had been coming to. "I don't
-want to forget. I want you to stay real. You must let me know what
-becomes of you, always, please."
-
-Astonishment, now, effaced her trouble. "You? Why?" she asked.
-
-He smiled a little. "Well, because, if you'll let me say it, I'm fond of
-you. I feel responsible for you. I've been too deeply in your life,
-you've been too deeply in mine, for us to disappear from each other.
-Don't you remember," he said, and he found it with a sense of
-achievement, ridiculous as it might sound, "how I held the tea-pot for
-you? That's what I mean. You must let me go on holding it."
-
-But she could feel no amusement. She was pressing her hands tightly
-together in her lap, her eyes were wide and her astonishment, he seemed
-to see, almost brought tears to them. "Fond? You?" she said. "Of me? Oh,
-no, Mr. Oldmeadow, I can't believe that. You are sorry, I know. You are
-very sorry. But you can't be fond."
-
-"And why not?" said Oldmeadow, and he raised himself on his elbow the
-more directly to challenge her. "Why shouldn't I be fond of you, pray?
-You must swallow it, for it's the truth and I've a right to my own
-feelings, I hope."
-
-She put aside the playfulness in which his grim earnest veiled itself.
-"Because you saw. Because you know. All about me. From the first."
-
-"Well?" he questioned after a moment, still raised on his elbow but now
-with the grimness unalloyed. "What of it?"
-
-"You remember what I was. You remember what you saw. You would have
-saved them from me if you could; and you couldn't. How can you be fond
-of a person who has ruined all their lives?"
-
-"Upon my soul," said Oldmeadow laughing, his eyes on hers, "you talk as
-though you'd been a Lucrezia Borgia! What were you worse than an
-exalted, stubborn, rather conceited girl? Things went wrong, I know, and
-partly because of me. But it wasn't all your fault, I'll swear it. And
-if it was, it was your mistake; not your crime."
-
-"Oh, no, no, no," said Adrienne, and the compulsion of his feeling had
-brought a note of anguish to her voice. "It wasn't that. It was worse
-than that. Don't forget. Don't think you are fond of me because I can
-make you sleep. It's always been so; I see it now--the power I've had
-over people; the horrible power. For power is horrible unless one is
-good; unless one is using it for goodness."
-
-"Well, so you were," Oldmeadow muttered, falling back on his pillow, her
-vehemence, her strange passion, almost daunting him. "It's not because
-you make me go to sleep that I'm fond of you. What utter rubbish!"
-
-"It is! it is!" she repeated. "I've seen it happen too often. It always
-happens. It binds people to me. It makes them cling to me as if I could
-give them life. It makes them believe me to be a sort of saint!"
-
-"Well, if you can help them with it? You have helped them. The war's
-your great chance in that, you'll admit. No one can accuse you of trying
-to get power over people now."
-
-"Perhaps not. I'm not thinking of what I may be accused of, but of what
-happens."
-
-"It doesn't happen with me. I was fond of you--well, we won't go back to
-that. And you did use it for goodness. Power came by the way and you
-took it. Of course."
-
-"I thought I was using it for goodness. I thought I was good. That was
-the foundation of everything. We must go back, Mr. Oldmeadow. You don't
-see as I thought you did. You don't understand. I didn't mean to set
-myself up above other people. I thought they were good, too. I was happy
-in my goodness, and when they weren't happy it seemed to me they missed
-something I had and that it was a mistake that I could set right for
-them. I'm going back to the very beginning. Long before you ever knew
-me. Everything fell into my hand. I loved people, or thought I did, and
-if they didn't love me I thought it their mistake. That was the way it
-looked to me, for my whole life long, until you came. I couldn't
-understand at first, when you came. I couldn't see what you thought. I
-believed that I could make you love me, too, and when I saw, for you
-made it plain, that you disliked me, it seemed to me worse than mistake.
-I thought that you must be against goodness; dangerous; the way you
-pushed me back--back--and showed me always something I had not thought I
-meant at the bottom of everything I did. I felt that I wanted to turn
-away from you and to turn people who loved me away from you, lest you
-should infect them. And all the while, all the while I was trying to
-escape--the truth that you saw and that I didn't." She stopped for a
-moment while, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow stared at her. Her breath
-seemed to fail her, and she leaned forward and put her elbows on her
-knees and bent her forehead on her joined hands. "It came at last. You
-remember how it came," she said, and the passion of protest had fallen
-from her voice. She spoke with difficulty. "Partly through you, and,
-partly, through my failure; I had never failed before. My failure with
-Barney. My failure to keep him and to get him back. I couldn't believe
-it at first. I struggled and struggled. You saw me. Everything turned
-against me. It was as if the world had changed its shape and colour when
-I struggled against it. Everything went down. And when I felt I wasn't
-loved, when I felt myself going down, with all the rest, I became bad.
-Bad, bad," she repeated, and her voice, heavy with its slow reiteration,
-was like a clenched hand of penitence beating on a breast: "really bad
-at last, for I had not known before what I was and the truth was there,
-staring me in the face. I did dreadful things, then. Mean things; cruel,
-hateful things, shutting my eyes, stopping my ears, so that I should not
-see what I was doing. I ran about and crouched and hid--from myself; do
-you follow my meaning?--from God. And then at last, when I was stripped
-bare, I had to look at Him."
-
-She raised herself and leaned back in her chair. Her voice had trembled
-more and more with the intensity of the feeling that upheld her and she
-put her handkerchief to her lips and pressed it to them, looking across
-at him. And, sunken on his pillows, Oldmeadow looked back at her,
-motionless and silent.
-
-Was it sympathy, pity or tenderness that almost overwhelmed him as he
-gazed at her? He could not have said, though knowing that the unity that
-was in them both, the share of the eternal that upheld their lives,
-flowed out from his eyes into hers as he looked and from hers to his.
-They were near at last; near as it is rarely given to human beings to
-experience nearness, and the awe of such a partaking was perhaps the
-ground of all he felt.
-
-"You see," he said, and a long time had passed, "I was mistaken."
-
-She did not answer him. Perhaps she did not understand.
-
-"I never knew you were a person who could come to the truth like that,"
-he said.
-
-Still holding her handkerchief to her lips, she slightly shook her head.
-
-"Even you never thought that I was bad."
-
-"I thought everybody was bad," said Oldmeadow, "until they came to know
-that goodness doesn't lie in themselves. The reason you angered me so
-was that you didn't see you were like the rest of us. And only people
-capable of great goodness can know such an agony of self-recognition."
-
-"No," she repeated. "Everyone is not bad like me. You know that's not
-true. You know that some people, people you love--are not like that.
-They need no agony of recognition, for nothing could ever make them mean
-and cruel."
-
-He thought for a moment. "That's because you expected so much more of
-yourself; because you'd believed so much more, and were, of course, more
-wrong. Your crash was so much greater because your spiritual pride was
-so great. And I thought you were a person a crash would do for; that
-there'd be nothing left of you if you came a crash. That was my mistake;
-for see what there is left."
-
-She rose to her feet. His words seemed to press her too far. "You are
-kind," she said in a hurried voice. "I understand. You are so sorry.
-I've talked and talked. It's very thoughtless of me. I must go now."
-
-She came and took the tray, but he put his hand on her arm, detaining
-her. "You'll own you're not bad now? You'll own there's something real
-for me to be fond of? Wait. I want you to acknowledge it, to accept
-it--my fondness. Don't try to run away."
-
-She stood above him, holding the tray, while he kept his hold on her
-arm. "All I need to know," she said, after a moment, and she did not
-look at him, "is that no one is ever safe--unless they always remember."
-
-"That's it, of course," said Oldmeadow gravely, "and that you must die
-to live; and you did die. But you live now, really, and life comes
-through you again. Your gift, you know, of which you were so much afraid
-just now, lest it had enveigled me. Don't you see it? How can I put it
-for you? You had a sort of wholeness before. There must be wholeness of
-a sort if life is to come through; harmony of a sort, and faith. It
-wasn't an illusion even then. When you were shattered you lost your
-gift. The light can't shine through shattered things; and that was when
-you recognized that without God we are a nothingness; a nothingness and
-a restlessness mingled. You know. There are no words for it, though so
-many people have found it and tried to say it. I know, too, after a
-fashion. I've had crashes, too. But now your gift has come back, for you
-are whole again; built up on an entirely new principle. You see, it's
-another you I am fond of. You must believe in her, too. You do believe
-in her. If you didn't you could not have found your gift."
-
-She had stood quite still while he spoke, looking down, not at him but
-at the little tray between her hands, and he saw that she was near
-tears. Her voice was scarcely audible as she said: "Thank you." And she
-made an effort over herself to add: "What you say is true."
-
-"We must talk," said Oldmeadow. He felt extraordinarily happy. "There
-are so many things I want to ask you about." And he went on, his hand
-still on her arm, seeing that she struggled not to cry and helping her
-to recover: "You're not going away for some time, yet, I hope. Please
-don't. There'll soon be no need of hospitals of this sort, anywhere,
-will there? and you must manage to stay on here a little longer. I
-shan't get on if you go. You won't leave me just as you've saved me,
-will you, Mrs. Barney?"
-
-At the name, over-taxed as she was already, a pitiful colour flooded her
-face and before his blunder made visible his own blood answered hers,
-mounting hotly to his forehead. "Oh, I'm so sorry," he murmured,
-helpless and hating himself, while his hand dropped. She stood over him,
-holding herself there so as not to hurt him by the aspect of flight. She
-even, in a moment, forced herself to smile. It was the first smile he
-had seen on her face. "You've nothing to be sorry for, Mr. Oldmeadow,"
-she said, as she had said before. "You're very kind to me. I wish I
-could tell you how kind I feel you are." And as she turned away,
-carrying the tray, she added: "No; I won't go yet."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-
-He did not see her again for two days; and she did not even come at
-night. But he now kept possession of his new strength and slept without
-her help. The sense of happiness brooded upon him. He did not remember
-ever having felt so happy. His life was irradiated and enhanced as if by
-some supreme experience.
-
-It was already late afternoon when, on the second day, she appeared; but
-in this month of August his room was still filled with the reflection of
-the sunlight and the warm colour bathed her as she entered. She wore a
-blue cloak over her white linen dress and she had perhaps been walking,
-for there was a slight flush on her cheeks and a look almost of
-excitement in her eyes.
-
-She unfastened her cloak and put it aside and then, taking the chair
-near the window, clasping her hands, as before, in her lap, she said,
-without preamble and with a peculiar vehemence: "You hear often from
-Barney, don't you?"
-
-Oldmeadow felt himself colouring. "Only once, directly. It rather tires
-him to sit up, you know. But he's getting on wonderfully and the doctors
-think he'll soon be able to walk a little--with a crutch, of course."
-
-"But you do hear, constantly, from Nancy, don't you," said Adrienne,
-clasping and unclasping her hands but speaking with a steadiness he felt
-to be rehearsed. "He is at Coldbrooks, I know, and Nancy is with him,
-and his mother and Mrs. Averil. It all seems almost happy, doesn't it?
-as happy as it can be, now, with Palgrave dead and Barney shackled."
-
-Startled as he was by her directness Oldmeadow managed to meet it.
-
-"Yes; almost happy," he said. "I was with them before I came out this
-last time and felt that about them. Poor Mrs. Chadwick is a good deal
-changed; but even she is reviving."
-
-"She has had too much to bear," said Adrienne. "I saw her again, too, at
-the end, when she came to Palgrave. She can never forgive me. Meg is
-happy now, but she will never forgive me either. I wrought havoc in
-their lives, didn't I?"
-
-"Well, you or fate. I don't blame you for any of that, you know," said
-Oldmeadow.
-
-"I don't say that I blame myself for it," said Adrienne. "I may have
-been right or I may have been wrong. I don't know. It is not in things
-like that that I was bad. But what we must face is that I wrought havoc;
-that if it hadn't been for me they might all, now, be really happy.
-Completely happy. If I had not been there Palgrave would not have been
-so sure of himself. And if I had not been there Nancy and Barney would
-have married."
-
-"I don't know," said Oldmeadow. "If Barney hadn't fallen in love with
-you he might very probably have fallen in love with some one else, not
-Nancy."
-
-"Perhaps, not probably," said Adrienne. "And if he had he would have
-stayed in love with her, for Barney is a faithful person. And it may
-have been because I was so completely the wrong person for him that he
-came to know so quickly that Nancy was completely the right one. What I
-feel is that anybody but Nancy would always have been, really, wrong.
-And now that he loves her but is shackled, there's only one thing more
-that can be done. I have often thought of it; I needn't tell you that.
-But, till now, I could never see my way. It's you who have shown it to
-me. In what you said the other day. It's wonderful the way you come into
-my life, Mr. Oldmeadow. You made me feel that I had a friend in you; a
-true, true friend. And I know what a friend Nancy and Barney have. So
-the way opens. We must set Barney free, Mr. Oldmeadow. He and Nancy must
-be free to marry. You and I can do it for them and only you and I."
-
-"What do you mean?" Oldmeadow murmured as, after her words, the silence
-had grown deep between them. He repeated, using now the name inevitably
-and forgetting the other day. "What do you mean, Mrs. Barney?"
-
-To-day she did not flush, but to-day there was a reason for her
-acceptance. It was, he saw in her next words, only as Barney's wife that
-she could help him.
-
-"He must divorce me," she said. "You and I could go away together and he
-could divorce me. Oh, I know, it's a dreadful thing to ask of you, his
-friend. I've thought of all that. Wait. Let me finish. I've thought of
-nothing else since the other day. It came to me in the night after you
-had been so wonderful to me; after that wonderful thing had happened to
-us. You felt it, too, I know. It was as if we had taken a sacrament
-together. I'm not a Christian. You know what I mean. We felt the deepest
-things together, didn't we. And it's because of that that I can ask
-this of you. No one else would understand. No one else would care for me
-enough, or for him. And then, you could explain it all to him and no one
-else could do that. You could explain that it had been to set him free.
-To set _me_ free. Because they'd have to think and believe it was for my
-sake, too, that you did it, wouldn't they? so as to have it really happy
-for them; so that it shouldn't hurt. When it was all over you could go
-and explain why you had done it. All we have to do, you know, is to stay
-in a hotel together; I bearing your name. It's very simple, really."
-
-He lay staring at her, overwhelmed. The tears had risen to his eyes as
-her beauty and her absurdity were thus revealed to him, and as she spoke
-of their sacrament; but amazement blurred all his faculties. He had
-never in his life been so amazed. And when he began to emerge, to take
-possession of himself again, it was only of her he could think; not of
-himself or Nancy and Barney. Only of her and of her beauty and
-absurdity.
-
-"Dear Mrs. Barney," he said at last, and he did not know what to say;
-"it's you who are wonderful, you alone. I'd do anything, anything for
-you that I could. Anything but this. Because, truly, this is
-impossible."
-
-"Why impossible?" she asked, and her voice was almost stern.
-
-"You can't smirch yourself like that." It was only one reason; but it
-was the first that came to him.
-
-"I?" she stared. "I don't think it is to be smirched. I shall know why I
-do it."
-
-"Other people won't know. Other people will think you smirched."
-
-"No one I care for. Everyone I care for will understand."
-
-"But to the world at large? Your name? Your reputation?" Oldmeadow
-protested. "Do they mean nothing to you?"
-
-A faintly bitter humour touched her lips. "You've always taken the side
-of the world in all our controversies, haven't you, Mr. Oldmeadow? and
-you were probably right and I was probably wrong; but not because of
-what the world would think. I know I'm right now, and those words: name:
-reputation--mean nothing to me. The world and I haven't much to do with
-each other. A divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and fever hospitals
-just as well as the most unsmirched woman of the world. I'm not likely
-to want to be presented at courts, am I? Don't think of me, please. It's
-not a question of me. Only of you. Will you do it?"
-
-"I couldn't possibly do it," said Oldmeadow, and he was still hardly
-taking her monstrous proposal seriously.
-
-"Why not?" she asked, scrutinizing him. "It's not that you mind about
-your name and reputation, is it?"
-
-"Not much. Perhaps not much," said Oldmeadow; "but about theirs. That's
-what you don't see. That it would be impossible for them. You don't see
-how unique you are; how unlike other people. Nancy and Barney couldn't
-marry on a fake. The only way out," said Oldmeadow, looking at her with
-an edge of ironic grimness in his contemplation, "if one were really to
-consider it, would be for you to marry me afterwards and for us to
-disappear."
-
-She gazed at him and he saw that she weighed the idea. "But you'd be
-shackled then," she said, and her thoughts were evidently clear. "It
-would mean, besides, that you would lose them."
-
-"As to being shackled," Oldmeadow, still grimly, met the difficulty,
-"that's of no moment. I'm the snuffy, snappy bachelor type, you
-remember, and I don't suppose I'd ever have married. As to losing them,
-I certainly should."
-
-"We mustn't think of it then," said Adrienne. "You and Barney and Nancy
-mustn't lose each other."
-
-"But we should in either way. I could hardly take up my friendship with
-them again after Barney had divorced you on account of me, even if you
-and I didn't marry. It would give the whole thing away, if it were
-possible for them to meet me again. As I say, they'd feel they had no
-right to their freedom on such a fake as that."
-
-"They couldn't feel really free unless some one had really committed
-adultery for their sakes?" Again Adrienne smiled with her faint
-bitterness and he wondered if a man and woman had ever before had a more
-astonishing conversation. "That seems to me to be asking for a little
-too much icing on your cake. Of course it couldn't be a nice, new, snowy
-wedding-cake; poor Mrs. Chadwick wouldn't like it at all, nor Mrs.
-Averil; but it would be the best we could do for them; and I should
-think that when people love each other and are the right people for each
-other they'd be thankful for any kind of cake. Even if it were a good
-deal burned around the edges," Adrienne finished, her slight bitterness
-evidently finding satisfaction in the simile.
-
-"But they wouldn't see it at all like that," said Oldmeadow, now with
-unalloyed gravity. "They'd see it as a cake they had stolen; a cake they
-had no right to. It's a question of the laws we live under. Not of
-personal, but of public integrity. They couldn't profit by a hoodwinked
-law. It's that that would spoil things for them. According to the law
-they'd have no right to their freedom. And, now that I am speaking
-seriously, it's that I feel, too. What you are asking of me, my dear
-friend, is no more nor less than a felony."
-
-She meditated, unmoved, still almost sternly, turning her eyes from him
-and leaning her elbow on the window-sill, her head upon her hand. "I
-see," she said at last. "For people who mind about the law, I see that
-it would spoil it. I don't mind. I think the law's there to force us to
-be kind and just to each other if we won't be by ourselves. If the law
-gets tied up in such a foolish knot as to say that people may sin to set
-other people free, but mayn't pretend to sin, I think we have a right to
-help it out and to make it do good against its own will. I don't mind
-the law; luckily for them. Because I won't go back from it now. I won't
-leave them there, loving each other but never knowing the fullness of
-love. I won't give up a thing I feel right because other people feel it
-wrong. So I must find somebody else."
-
-Oldmeadow looked at her in a culminated and wholly unpleasant
-astonishment. "Somebody else? Who could there be?"
-
-"You may well ask," Adrienne remarked, glancing round at him with a
-touch of mild asperity. "You are the only completely right person,
-because only you and I feel enough for them to do it for them. What I
-must do now is to find some one who would feel enough, just for me, to
-do it for me. It makes it more unfair for him, doesn't it. He'll have
-only the one friend to help. But on the other hand it will leave them
-without a scruple. They'd know from the beginning that with you and me
-it was a fake; but with him it might seem quite probable. Yes; it's
-strange; I had a letter from him only yesterday. I shouldn't have
-thought of him otherwise. I might have had to give up. But the more I
-think," Adrienne meditated intently, her head on her hand, her eyes
-turned on the prospect outside, "the more I seem to see that Hamilton
-Prentiss is the only other chance."
-
-"Hamilton Prentiss?" Oldmeadow echoed faintly.
-
-"You met him once," said Adrienne, looking round at him again. "But
-you've probably forgotten. At the dinner we gave, Barney and I, in
-London, so long ago. Tall, fair, distinguished looking. The son of my
-Californian friend; the one you and Mrs. Aldesey thought so tiresome."
-
-He felt himself colouring, but he could give little thought to the minor
-discomfiture, so deeply was his mind engaged with the major one.
-
-"Did we?" he said.
-
-"And you thought I didn't see it," said Adrienne. "It made me dreadfully
-angry with you both, though I didn't know I was angry; I thought I was
-only grieved. I behaved spitefully to Mrs. Aldesey that night, you will
-remember, though I didn't know I was spiteful. I did know, however, that
-she was separated from her husband"--again Adrienne looked, calmly,
-round at him--"and it was a lie I told Barney when I said I didn't.
-Sometimes I think that lie was the beginning of everything; that it was
-when I told it that I began to hide from myself. However--" She passed
-from the personal theme. "Yes; Hamilton is, I believe, big enough and
-beautiful and generous enough to do it."
-
-"Oh, he is, is he?" said Oldmeadow. "And I'm not, I take it. You're
-horribly unkind. But I don't want to talk about myself. What I want to
-talk about is you. You must drop this preposterous idea of yours. Really
-you must. You've had ideas like it before. Remember Meg; what a mess you
-made there. I told you then that you were wrong and I tell you you're
-wrong now. You must give it up. Do you see? We're always quarrelling,
-aren't we?"
-
-"But I don't at all know that I was wrong about Meg, Mr. Oldmeadow,"
-said Adrienne. "And if I was, it was because I didn't understand her. I
-do understand myself, and I don't agree that I'm wrong or that my plan
-is preposterous. You won't call it preposterous, I suppose, if it
-succeeds and makes Barney and Nancy happy. No; I'm not going to drop it.
-Nothing you could say could make me drop it. As for Hamilton, I don't
-set him above you; not in any way. It's only that you and he have
-different lights. I know why you can't do this. You've shown me why. And
-I wouldn't for anything not have you follow your own light."
-
-"And you seriously mean," cried Oldmeadow, "that you'd ask this young
-fellow--I remember him perfectly and I'm sure he's capable of any degree
-of ingenuousness--you'd ask him to go about with you as though he were
-your husband? Why, for one thing, he'd be sure to fall head over heels
-in love with you, and where would you be then?"
-
-Adrienne examined him. "But from the point of view of hoodwinking, that
-would be all to the good, wouldn't it?" she inquired; "though
-unfortunate for Hamilton. He won't, however," she went on, her dreadful
-lucidity revealing to him the hopelessness of any protest he might still
-have found to make. "There's a very lovely girl out in California he's
-devoted to; a young poetess. He'll have to write to her about it first,
-of course; Hamilton's at the front now, you see; and I must write to his
-mother. She and Carola Brown are very near each other and will talk it
-out together and I feel sure they will see it as I do. They'll see it as
-something big I'm asking them to do for me--to set me free. I'm sure I
-can count on Gertrude and I'm sure Hamilton can count on Carola. She's a
-very rare, strong spirit."
-
-Oldmeadow, suddenly, was feeling exhausted, and a clutch of hysterical
-laughter, as she spoke these last words, held his throat for a moment.
-He laid his head back on his pillow and closed his eyes, while he saw
-Adrienne and Hamilton Prentiss wandering by the banks of a French river
-where poplars stood against a silver sky. He knew that he had accepted
-nothing when he said at last: "Shall we talk about it another time?
-To-morrow? I mean, don't take any steps, will you, until we've talked.
-Don't write to your beautiful, big friend."
-
-"You always make fun of me a little, don't you," said Adrienne
-tranquilly. She seemed aware of some further deep discomposure in him
-and willing, though not comprehending it, to meet it with friendly
-tolerance. "If he is big and beautiful, why shouldn't I say it? But I
-won't write until we've talked again. It can't be, anyway, until the war
-is over. And I've had already to wait for four years."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-
-She might feel that he had cruelly failed her; but when she came at the
-same hour next day it was evident to him from her demeanour that she
-imagined him resigned, if not converted, to her alternative plan. She
-carried a bunch of late roses and said that she had been having a lovely
-drive with a dear old friend from Denver, who had managed to get to
-Boulogne to see her.
-
-"Your friends all come from such distant places," said Oldmeadow with a
-pretended fretfulness that veiled an indescribable restlessness.
-"California, Denver, Chicago. They have, all of them, an implacably
-remote sound, as if they were carrying you, already, off to other
-planets."
-
-"Well, it doesn't take so long, really, to get to any of them," said
-Adrienne, placing the roses in a glass of water by his side, a close,
-funny little bunch, red roses in the middle and white ones all round.
-She had taken off her cloak and laid a newspaper down on the little
-table, seating herself, then, in the window and keeping in her hands a
-pocket-book that, in its flatness and length and the way she held it,
-reminded him of the little blue and grey fan of the dinner-party where
-she had told her first lie. His mind was emptied of thought. Only
-pictures crossed it, pictures of Adrienne and the tall, fair youth with
-the ingenuous eyes, wandering by the French river; and, again, Adrienne
-on that night, now as distant as California, when, with her fan and
-pearl-wreathed hair, she had met his persiflage with her rebuking
-imperturbability. But under the pictures a sense of violent tension made
-his breathing shallow. He fixed his eyes on the pocket-book and wondered
-how she had nursed people with those ineffectual-looking hands.
-
-"Where were you trained for nursing?" he asked her suddenly. "Out here?
-or in England?"
-
-"In England. In Oxford. Before Palgrave was taken," said Adrienne. "I
-gave up my philosophy very soon for that. I worked in a hospital there."
-
-"And how came you to go out to Salonika? Tell me about it. And about
-your hospital here," he went on with a growing sense of keeping
-something off. "It's your own hospital I hear, and wonderfully run. Sir
-Kenneth was talking to me about you this morning."
-
-"What a fine person he is," said Adrienne. "Yes, he came to see us and
-liked the way it was done." She was pleased, he saw, to tell him
-anything he chose to ask about. She told him about her hospital and of
-all its adventures--they had been under fire so often that it had become
-an everyday event; and about how admirable a staff she had
-organized--"rare, devoted people"--and about their wounded, their
-desperately wounded _poilus_ and how they came to love them all. He
-remembered, as she talked, that she was rich; even richer than he had
-thought, since she could leave a fortune to Palgrave and yet equip
-hospitals in France and in Salonika. She told him about Salonika, too.
-It had been a fever hospital there and the misery and suffering had
-seemed worse than the suffering here in France. Yes; she had caught the
-fever herself and had nearly died.
-
-She had no gift for the apt or vivid word. Her nature had been revealed
-to him as barbarous, or sublime, in its unconventionality, yet it
-expressed itself only in the medium of trite convention. But his time of
-jibbing at her platitudes was long since passed. He listened, rather,
-with a tender, if superficial interest, seeing her heroic little figure
-moving, unconcerned, among pestilences and bombardments. "It's not only
-what you tell me," he said, when she had brought her recital up to date.
-"I heard so much from Sir Kenneth. You are one of the great people of
-the war."
-
-"Am I?" she said. That, too, unfeignedly, left her unconcerned.
-
-"You've the gift of leadership. The gift for big things generally."
-
-She nodded. "I'm only fit for big things."
-
-"Only? How do you mean?"
-
-"Little ones are more difficult, aren't they. My feet get tangled in
-them. To be fit for daily life and all the tangles; that's the real
-test, isn't it? That's just the kind of thing you see so clearly, Mr.
-Oldmeadow. Big things and the people who do them are just the kind of
-things you see through."
-
-"Oh, but you misunderstood me--or misunderstand," said Oldmeadow. "Big
-things are the condition of life; the little things can only be built up
-on them. One must fight wars and save the world before one can set up
-one's tea-tables." He remembered having thought of something like this
-at Lydia's tea-table. "Tea-tables are important, I know, and the things
-that happen round them. But if one can nurse a ward of typhus patients
-single-handed one must be forgiven for letting the tea-pot slip. Really
-I never imagined you capable of all you've done."
-
-"I always thought I was capable of anything," said Adrienne smiling
-slightly, her eyes meeting his in a tranquil partaking of the jest, that
-must be at her expense. "You helped me to find that out about
-myself--with all the rest. And I was right enough in thinking that I
-could face things and lead people. But I wasn't capable of the most
-important things. I wasn't capable of being a wise and happy wife. I
-wasn't even capable of being truthful in drawing-rooms when other women
-made me angry. But I can go on battle-fields and found hospitals and
-tend the sick and dying. Shells and pestilences"--her smile was
-gone--"if people knew how trivial they are--compared to seeing your
-husband look at you with hatred."
-
-She had turned her eyes away as she was thus betrayed into revealing the
-old bitternesses of her heart and he dropped his to the little
-pocket-book that now lay still between her hands. The feeling in her
-voice, the suffering it revealed to him, with the bitterness, woke an
-unendurable feeling in himself. He did not clearly see what the test was
-to which he put himself; but he knew that what he must say to her was
-the most difficult thing he had ever had to say; and he found it only
-after the silence had grown long.
-
-"Mrs. Barney--everything has changed, hasn't it; you've changed; I've
-changed; Barney may have changed. It was only, after all, a moment of
-miserable misunderstanding between you. He never really knew what you
-were feeling. He thought you didn't care for him any longer, when,
-really, you were finding out how much you cared. Don't you think,
-before you take final decisions, that you ought to see Barney again?
-Don't you think you ought to give him another chance? I could arrange it
-all for you, when I got home."
-
-The flood of colour, deep and sick, had mounted to her face, masking it
-strangely, painfully, to where the white linen cut across her brow and
-bound her chin. And, almost supplicatingly, since he saw that she could
-not speak, he murmured: "You can be a wise and happy wife now; and he
-loved you so dearly."
-
-She did not lift her eyes. She sat there, looking down, tightly holding
-the pocket-book in her lap.
-
-"Let me tell him, when I get home, that I've seen you again," he
-supplicated. "Let me arrange a meeting."
-
-Slowly, not lifting her eyes, she shook her head and he heard her, just
-heard her say: "It's not pride. Don't think that."
-
-"No; no; I know it's not. Good heavens, I couldn't think it that. You
-feel it's no good. You feel that his heart is occupied. It is. I can't
-pretend to hide from you that it is. But your place in it was supreme.
-There would be no unfairness if you took it again. Nancy would be the
-first person to want you to take it. You know that that is true of
-Nancy."
-
-"I know. I heard her plead for me," said Adrienne.
-
-The sentence fell, soft and trenchant; and he remembered, in the silence
-that followed, what she had heard. He drew a long breath, feeling half
-suffocated. But he had met his test. It was inevitable, he knew it now,
-that she should say "Barney and I are parted for ever."
-
-Silence dropped again between them. He did not know what was passing
-behind its curtain and whether bitterness or only grief was in her
-heart.
-
-He lay, drawing the slow, careful breaths of his recovery, and saw her
-presently put out her hand and take up her _New York Herald_ and unfold
-it. She looked down the columns unseeingly; but the little feint of
-interest helped her.
-
-Slowly the colour faded from her face and it was as if the curtain
-lifted when, laying the paper down, she said, and he knew that she was
-finding words to comfort him: "Really everything is quite clear before
-me now. I shall write at once to Hamilton, and to his mother. If he
-agrees, if they all agree, he and I can go away very soon I think.
-Afterwards, I shall stay over here. I've quite made up my mind to that.
-There'll be so much to do; for years and years; for all one's lifetime.
-Ways will open. When one is big," she smiled the smile at once so gentle
-and so bitter, "and has plenty of money, ways always do. I'm a
-_deracinee_ creature; I never had any roots, you know; and I can't do
-better, I'm sure, than to make soil for the uprooted people to grow in
-again. That's what's most needed now, isn't it? Soil. It's the
-fundamental things of life, its bare possibilities, that have been so
-terribly destroyed over here. America has, still, more soil than she can
-use, and since I'm an American, and a rich one, my best plan is to use
-America, in my fortune and my person, for Europe. Because I love them
-both and because they both need each other."
-
-She had quite recovered herself Her face had found again its pale, fawn
-tints and she was looking at him with her quietest contemplation while
-he, in silence, lay looking at her.
-
-"It's not about the things I shall do that I'm perplexed, ever," she
-went on. "But I'm sometimes perplexed about myself. I sometimes wish I
-were a Roman Catholic. In an order of some kind. Under direction. To put
-oneself in the hands of a wise director, it must be so peaceful. Like
-French friends I have; such wise, fine women; so poised and so secure. I
-often envy them. But that can't be for me."
-
-She must feel in his silence now the quality of some extreme emotion,
-and that she believed it to be pity was evident to him as she went on,
-seeking to comfort him; and troubled by his trouble: "You mustn't be
-sorry. I am not unhappy. I am a happy person. Do you remember that
-Sunday morning at Coldbrooks, long ago? How I said to Mother--to Mrs.
-Chadwick--that I had no doubts? You thought me fatuous. I dimly saw that
-you thought me fatuous. But it's still true of me. I must tell you, so
-that you shan't think I'm unhappy. I've been, it seems to me, through
-everything since then. I've had doubts--every doubt: of myself; of life;
-of all the things I trusted. Doubt at last, when the dreadful darknesses
-came--Barney's hatred, Palgrave's death--of God. We've never spoken of
-Palgrave, have we? I was with him, you had heard, and at the very end it
-was he who helped me rather than I him. He held me up. When he was dying
-he held me up. He made me promise him that I would not kill myself--for
-he guessed what I was thinking; he made me promise to go on. And he
-saved me. The light began to come back to me while I sat beside him
-after he had died."
-
-She had not looked at him while she spoke, but down at her hands that,
-trembling, turned and returned the little pocket-book. And controlling
-her voice as she sought to control the trembling of her hands, she said:
-"Perhaps it is always like that. When one confesses one's sin and hates
-it in oneself, even if it is still there, tempting one, the light begins
-to come back. After that it came more and more. What you call my gift is
-part of it. Isn't it strange that I should have had that gift when I was
-so blind? But what you said was true. I had a sort of wholeness then,
-because I was blind. And now that I see, it's a better wholeness and a
-safer gift. That is what I wanted to say, really. To explain, so that
-you shan't be sorry. No one who can find that light can be unhappy. It
-comes to me now, always, when I need it. I can make it shine in other
-people--as Palgrave made it shine in me. Love does it. Isn't it
-wonderful that it should be so? Nothing else is real beside it. Nothing
-is real without it. And when it happens, when one feels it come through
-and shine further, it is more, far more, than happiness."
-
-All the while that she had spoken, pale, and with her trembling hands,
-he had lain looking at her in silence, a silence that was dividing him,
-as if by a vast chasm, from all his former life.
-
-He and Adrienne stood on one side of this chasm, and, while it seemed to
-widen with a dizzying rapidity, he saw that on the other stood Barney,
-Nancy, Coldbrooks, and Lydia--poor Lydia--and that they were being borne
-away from him for ever. He saw nothing before him but Adrienne; and for
-how long was he to keep her? That was his supreme risk; but he could
-not allay it or step back to the further brink. It was his very life
-that had fallen in two while she had spoken and without the sense of
-choice; though he dimly saw that, in the restlessness and urgency of the
-hours since he had seen her last, the choice had been preparing.
-
-He was taking the only step possible for him to take on the narrow
-foothold of the present when he said, in a voice so quiet that she might
-even be unaware of his seeming gross irrelevance, "Do you know, about
-your plan--for Barney and Nancy--I've been thinking it over and I've
-decided that it must be I, not Hamilton."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-
-Her eyes met his for a long time before he realized that she might find
-not only irrelevance but even irreverence. She had shown him her very
-soul and he had answered with this announcement. Of course it had been
-because of what she told him that he had seen at last his own necessity;
-but he could not tell her that.
-
-"I'm not sorry for you," he said. "I envy you. You are one of the few
-really happy people in the world."
-
-"But I'd quite given that idea up, Mr. Oldmeadow," she said. "What has
-made you change?"
-
-He saw the trouble in her face, the suspicion of her power and its
-compulsion over the lives of others. He took the bull by the horns.
-
-"You, of course. I can't pretend that it's anything else. I want to do
-it for you and with you."
-
-"But it's for Barney and Nancy that it's to be done," she said, and her
-gravity had deepened. "It's just the same for them--and you explained
-yesterday that it would spoil it for them."
-
-"It may spoil it somewhat," said Oldmeadow, contemplating her with a
-curious tranquillity; she was now all that was left him in life to
-contemplate; and she was all he needed. "But it won't prevent it. I
-still think it a wrong thing to do. I still think it a felony. But,
-since I can't turn you from it, what I've come to see is that it's, as
-you said, for you and me, who care for them, to do. It's not right, not
-decent or becoming, that anyone who doesn't even know them should be
-asked to do such a thing."
-
-"But Hamilton wouldn't do it for them," she said. "It would be for me he
-would do it. And he wouldn't think it a felony."
-
-"All the more reason that his innocence shouldn't be taken advantage of.
-I can't stand by and see it done. It's for my friends the felony will be
-committed and it's I who will bear the burden for them. As to his doing
-it for you, I know you better than he possibly can know you, and care
-for you more than he possibly can. If you're determined on committing a
-crime, I'll share the responsibility with you."
-
-"I know you care more. You are a wonderful friend. You are my best
-friend in the world." She gazed at him and he saw that for once he had
-troubled and perplexed her. "And it's wonderful of you to say you'll do
-it. But Hamilton won't feel it a burden; not as you will; and for him to
-do it won't spoil it for them. If you do it, it will spoil it for them.
-You said so. And how can I let you do a thing you feel so wrong for my
-sake?"
-
-"You'll have to. I won't have Hamilton sacrificed in order that their
-cake shall have no burnt edges. They'll have to pay something for it in
-social and moral discomfort. It would be nothing to the discomfort of
-Miss Brown, would it? I shall be able to put it clearly to Barney when I
-write and tell him that it's for your sake as well as his and that he
-and Nancy, who have never sought anything or hoped for anything, are in
-no way involved by our misdemeanour. I won't emphasize to Barney what I
-feel about that side of it. He's pretty ingenuous, too. It will be a
-less tidy happiness they'll have to put up with. That's all it comes to,
-as far as they are concerned."
-
-She was looking at him with the trouble and perplexity and she said:
-
-"They'll have to pay in far more than social and moral discomfort."
-
-"Well? In what way? How?" he challenged her.
-
-"You said they'd lose you."
-
-"Only, if you married me," he reminded her.
-
-But she remembered more accurately. "No. They'd lose you anyway. You
-said so. You said that if they could ever see you again it would make it
-too blatantly a fake. And it's true. I see it now. How could you turn up
-quietly, as if nothing had happened, after Barney had divorced me with
-you as co-respondent? There's Lady Cockerell," said Adrienne, and,
-though she was so grave, so troubled, it was with a touch of mild
-malice. "There's Mr. Bodman and Johnson, to say nothing of Mrs. Chadwick
-and Nancy's mother. No, I really don't see you facing them all at
-Coldbrooks after we'd come out in the 'Daily Mail' with head-lines and
-pictures."
-
-Her lucidity could indeed disconcert him when it sharpened itself like
-this with the apt use of his vocabulary. He had to stop to think.
-
-"There won't, at all events, be pictures," he paused by the triviality
-to remark. "We shan't appear. It will be an hotel over here and the case
-will be undefended. We needn't, really, consider all that too closely.
-At the worst, if they do lose me, it's not a devastating loss. They'll
-have each other."
-
-"Ah, but who will you have?" Adrienne inquired. "Hamilton will have
-Carola and they will have each other. But who will you have?"
-
-He lay and looked at her. There was only one answer to that question
-and he could not make it. He was aware of the insufficiency of his
-substitute. "I'd have your friendship," he said.
-
-"You have that now," said Adrienne. "And though I'm so your friend, I'll
-be leaving you, soon, probably for ever. We'll probably never meet
-again, Mr. Oldmeadow. Our paths lie so apart, don't they? My friendship
-will do you very little good."
-
-Her words cut into him, but he kept a brave countenance. "I'd have the
-joy of knowing I'd done something worth while for you. How easily I
-might have died here, if it hadn't been for you. My life is yours in a
-sense and I want you to use it rather than Hamilton's. I have my work,
-you know; lots of things I'm interested in to go back to some day. As
-you remarked, a divorced wife can run soup-kitchens and in the same way
-a co-respondent can write articles and go to concerts."
-
-"I know. I know what a fine, big life you have," she murmured, and the
-trouble on her face had deepened. "But how can I take it from you? A
-felony? How can I let you do, for my sake, something you feel to be so
-wrong?"
-
-"Give it up then," said Oldmeadow. And if he had found it difficult to
-make his plea for Barney a little while before, how much more difficult
-he found it to say this, and to mean it, now. "Give it up. That's your
-choice, and your only choice. You owe that to me. Indeed you do. To give
-it up or to accept me as your companion in iniquity. I'm not going to
-pretend I don't think it iniquity to give you ease. You're not a person
-who needs ease. And I can do without it, too. For your sake. So there
-you have it."
-
-"Not quite. Not quite," she really almost pleaded. "I couldn't ask it of
-Hamilton if he felt about it in the least little way as you do. And
-Carola doesn't care a bit about the law either. She's an Imagist, you
-know."--Adrienne offered this fact as if it would help to elucidate
-Carola's complaisances. "She's written some very original poetry. If it
-were Hamilton no one would lose anything, and Barney and Nancy would be
-free. Indeed, indeed I can't give it up when it's all there, before me,
-with everything to gain and nothing to lose for anybody, if it's
-Hamilton."
-
-"Then it must be me, you see," said Oldmeadow. "And I shan't talk to you
-about the iniquity again, I promise you. I've made my protest and
-civilization must get on as best it can. You're a terrible person, you
-know"--he smiled a little at her, finding the banter so that she should
-not guess at the commotion of his heart. "But I like you just as you
-are. Now where shall we go?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-
-He could not have believed that it would be so delicious to live with
-Adrienne Toner.
-
-Even at the moment when he had known that he loved her, he had been,
-though filled with the sense of a present heaven, as aware as ever of
-the discrepancies between them, and during the three months that
-separated them, he at Cannes, she nursing in Paris, he knew many doubts;
-never of his love, but of what it was making him do and of where it was
-going to lead them. He couldn't for the life of him imagine what was to
-become of them if his hopes were fulfilled, for he hardly saw himself
-following her off to Central Europe--it was to Serbia, her letters
-informed him, that her thoughts were turning--nor saw them established
-in London under the astonished gaze of Lydia Aldesey.
-
-She had selected Lyons as their place of meeting, because of the work
-for the _rapatries_ that she wished to inspect there, and from the
-moment that he saw her descend from the Paris express, dressed in dark
-civilian clothes and carrying, with such an air of competence, her rug
-and dressing-case, all doubts were allayed and all restlessness
-dispelled.
-
-He had arrived the day before and had found an old-fashioned hotel with
-spacious rooms overlooking the Saone, and, as they drove to it on that
-November evening, she expressed herself, scrutinizing him with a
-professional eye, as dissatisfied with his recovery.
-
-It was because of the restlessness, of course, that he had not got as
-well as he should have, and he knew that he must, in the stress of
-feeling that now beset him, look strangely, and he promised her, feeling
-that he spoke the truth, that now that he had his nurse again complete
-recovery would be only a matter of days.
-
-"I want you to see our view," he said to her when the porter had carried
-up her little box and they were left alone in the brocaded and gilded
-salon that separated their rooms; "I chose this place for the view; it's
-the loveliest in Lyons, I think."
-
-There was still a little twilight, and standing at the window they
-looked down at the lighted quai with its double row of lofty plane-trees
-and across the jade-green Saone at St. Jean, the grey cathedral, and at
-the beautiful white _archeveche_ glimmering in a soft, dimmed atmosphere
-that made him think of London.
-
-"There's a horrible modern cathedral up on the hill," he said; "but we
-don't need to see it. We need only see the river and the _archeveche_
-and St. Jean. And in the mornings there's a market below, a mile of it,
-all under huge mushroom-coloured umbrellas; flowers and cheeses and
-every kind of country produce. I think you'll like it here."
-
-"I like it very much. I think it's beautiful," said Adrienne. "I like
-our room, too," and she turned and looked up at the painted ceiling and
-round at the consoles and mirrors, inlaid tables and richly curved,
-brocaded chairs. "Isn't it splendid."
-
-"Madame Recamier is said to have lived here," Oldmeadow told her. "And
-this is said to have been her room."
-
-"And now it's mine," said Adrienne, smiling slightly as though she
-found the juxtaposition amusing.
-
-Already the stealing sense of deliciousness was breathing over him. The
-very way in which she said, "our room," was part of it. Even the way in
-which she said that made him feel the peace, comfort, and charm of a
-shared life as he had never before felt it. And the sense grew and grew
-on that first evening.
-
-It was delicious to hear the waiters address her as Madame, and to know
-that it was his madame they imagined her to be, when he sat opposite to
-her at their little table in the dining-room. She wore a grey dress now
-and, with her quiet, her calm glances cast about her, might indeed have
-been the veritable Madame Oldmeadow inscribed at the _bureau_. If they
-had the aspect of a devoted, long-mated couple, it was because of her
-calm. But she would have been as unperturbed, he felt sure, had she been
-stopping there under her own name instead of his and looked upon as his
-well-established mistress. Situations would never embarrass her as long
-as she knew what she was doing with them. That night when she gave him
-her hand at bedtime she said, looking at him with the affectionate,
-professional eyes: "I'll come and put you to sleep if you need me; be
-sure to let me know."
-
-But he had no need to call her. He slept as soundly as though she sat
-beside him with her hand upon his brow.
-
-So the mirage of conjugal felicity was evoked about him.
-
-She poured out his coffee for him in the morning wearing a silk
-_neglige_ edged with fur, and said, as they buttered their rolls, that
-they must buy some honey for their breakfasts. She said, too, that they
-must do a great deal of sight-seeing in the afternoons. "There is so
-much to be seen in Lyons. And I shall finish with my _rapatrie_ work in
-the mornings." He asked if he might not come with her to the _rapatrie_
-work, but was told that he was not yet strong enough for more than one
-walk in the day. "In our evenings, after tea," she went on, "I thought
-perhaps you'd like to study Dante a little with me. My Dante is getting
-so rusty and I've brought a very fine edition. Are you good at Italian?"
-
-He said he wasn't, but would love to read Dante with her.
-
-"And we must get a piano," she finished, "and have music after dinner.
-It will be a wonderful holiday for me."
-
-So the days fell at once into a series of rituals. He saw that she had
-always mapped them out conscientiously, as Mrs. Toner had doubtlessly
-taught her to do, careful of the treasure of time--as Mrs. Toner would
-have said--entrusted to each soul by life. So, no doubt, Adrienne would
-put it still. And what he would, in first knowing her, have found part
-of her absurdity, he found now part of her charm.
-
-That was what it all came back to. He saw, reconstructing their past,
-that from the beginning she had had her deep charm for him.
-
-It was the trivial word for the great fact; the compulsion of
-personality; the overflow of vitality; the secret at once of the saint
-and of the successful music-hall singer. Her own absorption in life was
-so intense that it communicated itself. Her confidence was so secure
-that it begot confidence. Her power was implicit in all she did. It was
-not only the _rapatries_ she dealt with, as, at the first, she had dealt
-with the wounded. She dealt as successfully and as accurately with the
-little things of life. Honey was on their breakfast-table; flowers on
-the consoles; music on the piano. The gilded hotel salon became a home.
-
-She was still, in demeanour, the cultured, travelled American, equipped
-always, for their walks, with a guide-book or history, from which she
-often read to him as they paused to lean on the parapets of the splendid
-quais. There were few salient facts in the history of the potent city
-that were not imparted to him; and with anyone else what a bore it would
-have been to have to listen! But he was more than content that she
-should tell him about the Romans or Richelieu. It was everything to him
-to feel that they shared it all, from the honey to Richelieu.
-
-And with all the intimacy went the extreme reserve.
-
-She had showed him, when it was necessary for their understanding as
-friends, the centre of her life; yet she remained, while so gentle, so
-absorbed, and even loving, as remote, as inaccessible, as he had felt
-her to be on those first days in the hospital. She never referred to her
-own personal situation not to any emotion connected with it. She never
-referred to herself or expressed a taste or an opinion touched with
-personal ardour. He did not know what she was really feeling, ever.
-Though, when he looked at her, sitting opposite him in her grey and
-addressed by the assiduities of the waiters, he could imagine that he
-was living with a wife, he could imagine more often that he was living
-with a nun. Her control and her selflessness were cloistral. He could
-not think her in any need of a director.
-
-They walked one afternoon along the Quai des Brotteaux, returning from
-the park of the Tete d'Or, where they had wandered on the gravel under
-the tall, melancholy trees and fed the deer. The ugly yet magnificent
-city was spread before them in one of its most splendid aspects,
-climbing steeply, on the further banks of the Rhone, to the cliff-like
-heights of the Croix Rousse and marching, as it followed the grandiose
-curve of the river, into a sunset sky where the cupola of the Hospice
-hung like a dark bubble against the gold and the Alps, not visible from
-the river level, seemed yet to manifest themselves in the illumined
-clouds ranged high above the horizon.
-
-Ten days of their appointed fortnight had now passed and while Oldmeadow
-kept a half unseeing yet appraising eye upon the turbulent glories of
-the river, he was wondering when and how he should make his revelation
-and his appeal. If her reserve made it more difficult to imagine, her
-intimacy did not make it more easy. It was because she was so intimate
-that she had remained so unaware. For all his self-command he felt sure
-that in any other circumstances she could not, for these ten days, have
-remained so blind.
-
-Here she walked beside him, the Madame Oldmeadow of the hotel, looking
-before her as she walked and thinking, he would have wagered, not of him
-but of Serbia.
-
-She wore a beautifully adjusted little costume, conveying in its sober
-darkness the impression of richness and simplicity that her clothes had
-always given him. Fur was turned up about her ears and a small hat of
-fur and velvet was turned down over her eyes as she had always worn her
-hats. The straight fringe of gold showed under its brim and under the
-gold were those calm, those questing, melancholy eyes.
-
-Or perhaps--he carried further his rueful reverie--she was thinking
-about the date of the Hospice. He had the guide-book in his pocket.
-
-"Isn't it jolly?" he suggested, as she looked up at him, indicating the
-prospect spread before them and adding, since he knew that his English
-instinct for boyish understatement still puzzled her: "Like a great,
-grim queen in shabby clothes; raised on such a throne and crowned with
-such jewels that one feels her glorious rather than ugly."
-
-Adrienne studied the shabby queen attentively and then looked back at
-him. Perhaps something dwelling in his eyes, something for her only and
-not at all for Lyons, caught her more special attention, for she said
-suddenly, and so unexpectedly that, with a sort of terror, he felt that
-his crisis might be coming: "You've been very dear to me, Mr. Oldmeadow,
-in all our time here. I feel it to have been a great privilege, you
-know; a great opportunity."
-
-"Really? In what way?" He could at all events keep his voice quiet and
-light. "I thought it had been you who made all the opportunities."
-
-"Oh, no. I never make any of the opportunities I am thinking of," said
-Adrienne. "I only know how to take them. It isn't only that you are more
-widely and deeply cultured than I am--though your Italian accent isn't
-good!"--she smiled; "but I always feel that you see far more in
-everything than I do, even when you seem to be seeing less. I have to go
-carefully and pick up fact by fact, while you see things in a sort of
-vision and they are all related as they enter your mind. That's where my
-privilege comes in. You make me share your vision sometimes. You have
-the artistic mind, and I am not really artistic at all--though Mother
-always wanted that for me more than anything; with all that goes with
-it."
-
-She was speaking of herself--though it was only in order to express more
-exactly her gratitude, and, as he walked beside her, he was filled with
-the mingled hope and terror. After all he had still four more days of
-her. It would be terrible to spoil them.
-
-"No; you aren't artistic," he agreed. "And I don't know that I am,
-either. Whether I am or not, I feel mine to have been the opportunity
-and the privilege."
-
-"I can't understand that at all," she said, with her patent candour.
-
-"It may be part of the artistic temperament to feel things one can't
-understand. Though I do understand why I feel it," he added.
-
-"And it's part of the artistic temperament not to try"--Adrienne turned
-their theme to its more impersonal aspect. "Never to try to enjoy
-anything that you don't enjoy naturally. I don't believe I ever enjoy
-any of the artistic things quite naturally. I've always been trained to
-enjoy and I've always tried to enjoy; because I thought it was right to
-try. But since I've been here with you I've come to feel that what I've
-enjoyed has been my own effort and my mastery of the mere study, and I
-seem to feel that it might be as well to give up trying and training and
-fall back on the things that come naturally; scenery artists would think
-sentimental, and babies; and patriotic songs." She smiled a little as
-she found her list. But she was grave, too, thinking it out and adding
-another to her discovered futilities.
-
-"It may be as well to limit your attention to the sentimental scenery
-and the babies, since you've so many other things to do with it," he
-acquiesced. "We come back to big people again, you see; they haven't
-time to be artistic; don't need to be."
-
-"Ah, but it's not a question of time at all," said Adrienne, and he
-remembered that long ago, from the very first, he had said that she
-wasn't stupid. "It's a question of how you're born. That's a thing I
-would never have admitted in my old days, you know. I would never have
-admitted that any human soul was really shut out from anything. Perhaps
-we're not, any of us, if we are to have all eternity to grow in. But as
-far as this life is concerned I see quite clearly now that some people
-are shut out from all sorts of things, and that the sort of mistake I
-made in my old time was in thinking that anyone who had the will could
-force eternity into any given fragment of our temporal life. I did do a
-little philosophy, you see! That's what I mean and you understand, I
-know. All the same I wish I weren't one of the shut-out people. I wish I
-were artistic. I'd have liked to have that side of life to meet people
-with. I sometimes think that one doesn't get far with people, really, if
-all that one has to give are the fundamental things like the care of
-their minds and bodies. One goes deep, of course; but one doesn't go
-far. You can do something for them; but there's nothing, afterwards,
-that they can do _with_ you; and it makes it rather lonely in a
-way--when one has time to be lonely."
-
-He did not know, indeed, whether she saw the beauty of the scene spread
-before them as they walked, and he was remembering, with a sort of
-tranced tenderness, the flower-wreathed shepherdess and her crook; and
-Mrs. Toner with her lilies and seagulls. But why should she see beauty
-when she made it? It was all that he could see in her now.
-
-"What you can do for them afterwards is to pour out their coffee for
-them in the most enhancing way," he suggested, "and make sight-seeing a
-pleasure, and arrange flowers and place chairs and tables so that a
-hotel salon becomes loveable. If you find the person to whom you can
-give the fundamental things and do all sorts of homely things with
-afterwards, why be lonely? We are very happy together, aren't we? We get
-a great deal out of each other. I can speak for myself, at all events;
-and you've just told me that I give something, too. So why should you go
-off to Central Europe next week? Why not go back with me to the South,"
-he finished, "and wander about together enjoying, quite naturally, the
-sentimental scenery?"
-
-He held his breath after he had thus spoken, wondering with intensity,
-while he felt his heartbeats, what she would make of it. He knew what he
-could make of it, seizing his opportunity on the instant, if only she
-would recognize the meaning that underlay the easy words. And framed in
-the little hat on the background of transfigured Lyons, Adrienne's face
-was turned towards him and, after he had made his suggestion, she
-studied him in silence for what seemed to him a long lapse of time. Then
-she said, overwhelmingly:
-
-"That's perfectly lovely of you, Mr. Oldmeadow."
-
-"Not at all; not perfectly lovely at all," he stammered as he
-contradicted her and he heard that his voice sounded angry. "It's what I
-want. I want it very much."
-
-"Yes. I know you do. And that's what's so lovely," said Adrienne. "I
-know you want it. You are sorry for me all the time. And you want to
-cheer me up. Because you feel I've lost so much. But, you know; you
-remember; I told you the truth that time. I don't need cheering. I'm not
-unhappy. One can be lonely without being unhappy."
-
-"I'm not sorry for you," poor Oldmeadow rejoined, still in the angry
-voice. "I'm not thinking of you at all. I'm thinking of myself. I'm
-lonely, too, and I am unhappy, even if you aren't."
-
-She stopped short in her walk. He saw in her eyes the swift, almost
-diagnosing solicitude that measured his need and her own capacity. It
-was as though his temperature had gone up alarmingly.
-
-"Dear Mr. Oldmeadow," she said; and then she faltered; she paused. She
-no longer found her remedies easily. "It's because you are separated
-from your own life," she did find. "It's because all this is so bitter
-to you; what you are doing now--how could I not understand?--and the
-war, that has torn us all. But when it's over, when you can go home
-again and take up your own big life-work and find your own roots,
-happiness will come back; I'm sure of it. We are all unhappy sometimes,
-aren't we? We must be; with our minds and hearts. Our troubled minds;
-our lonely hearts. But you know as well as I do, dear Mr. Oldmeadow,
-that our souls can find the way out."
-
-Her nature expressed itself in platitudes; yet sometimes she had
-phrases, rising from her heart as if from a fountain fed by unseen
-altitudes, that shook him in their very wording. "Our troubled minds.
-Our lonely hearts," echoed in his ears while, bending his head
-downwards, he muttered stubbornly: "My soul can't, without you."
-
-She still stood, not moving forward, her eyes raised to his. "Please
-don't say that," she murmured, and he heard the trouble in her voice.
-"It can't be so, except for this time that you are away from everybody.
-You have so many things to live for. So many people near you. You are
-such a big, rare person. It's what I was afraid of, you know. It happens
-so often with me; that people feel that. But you can't really need me
-any longer."
-
-He said nothing, still not raising his eyes to hers, and she went on
-after a moment. "And I have so many things to live for, too. You've
-never really thought about that side of my life, I know. Why should you?
-You think of any woman's life--isn't it true?--as not seriously
-important except on its domestic side. And you know how important I
-think that. But it isn't so with me, you see. I have no hearth and I
-have no home; I have only my big, big life and it's more important than
-you could believe unless you could see it all. When I'm in it it takes
-all my mind and all my strength and I'm bound to it, yes, just as
-finally, just as irrevocably as a wife who loves is bound by her
-marriage vows; because I love it. Do you see? They are waiting for me
-now. They need me now. There are starving people, dying people; and
-confusion; terrible confusion. I have a gift for all that. I can deal
-with it. Those are just the things I can deal with. And I mustn't put it
-off any longer--when our time is up. I must leave you, my dear, dear
-friend, however much I'd love to stay."
-
-She was speaking at last with ardour, and about herself. And what she
-said was true. He had never thought about her work except in the sense
-that he thought her a saint and knew that saints did good deeds. That
-she was needed, sorely needed, by the starving and dying, was a fact,
-now that it was put before him, silencing and even shaming him. It gave
-him, too, a new fear. If she had her blindness, he had his. His hopes
-and fears, after all, were all that he had to think of; she had the
-destinies of thousands. He remembered Sir Kenneth's tone in speaking of
-her; its deep respect. Not the respect of the man for the
-tender-hearted, merciful woman; but the respect of a professional expert
-for another expert; respect for the proved organizer and leader of men.
-
-"I have been stupid," he said after a moment. "It's true that I've been
-thinking about you solely in relation to myself. Would you really love
-to stay? If it wasn't for your work? It would be some comfort to believe
-that."
-
-"Of course I'd love to stay," she said, eagerly scanning his face. "I'd
-love to travel with you--to pour out your coffee in Avignon, Nimes,
-Cannes--anywhere you liked. I'd love our happy time here to go on and
-on. If life could be like that; if I didn't want other things more. You
-remember how Blake saw it all:
-
- 'He who bends to himself a joy
- Doth the winged life destroy.'
-
-I mustn't try to bend and keep this lovely time. I must let it fly--and
-bless it as it goes. And so it will bless me."
-
-She seldom made quotations nowadays. For this one he felt a gratitude
-such as his life had rarely known.
-
-"It's been a joy to you, too, then?"
-
-"Of course it has," said Adrienne smiling at him and turning at last
-towards the bridge that they must cross. "It's been one of the most
-beautiful things that has ever happened to me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-Oldmeadow sat at the inlaid table in the gilded salon on the afternoon
-of the last day. He had two letters to write, for, as he had put off
-speaking to Adrienne till their last evening, so he had put off writing
-to Barney and to Lydia Aldesey till this last afternoon, and he saw now
-how difficult it would be to write coherently while his thoughts
-stretched themselves forward to those few hours of the night when his
-fate would be decided.
-
-Adrienne had gone out. She had written her short communication to Barney
-and brought it in with its envelope and laid it before him, asking him
-in the voice that, again, made him think of snow: "Is that quite right?"
-
-It was, quite, he told her, after glancing through it swiftly. It
-stated, in the most colourless terms, the facts that Barney was to take
-to his solicitor. "Quite right," he repeated, looking up at her. "Are
-you going out? Will you post it?--or shall I?"
-
-"Will you post it with yours? Yes. I must go out. But I'll try to be
-back by tea-time. It's very disappointing; our last afternoon. But that
-poor woman from Roubaix--the one with consumption up at the Croix
-Rousse--is dying. They've sent for me. All the little children, you
-remember I told you. I'm going to wire to Josephine and ask her if she
-can come down and look after them for a little while."
-
-"Josephine?" he questioned. He had, till now, entirely forgotten
-Josephine. Adrienne told him that she was with her parents in a
-provincial town. "They lost their only son and are very sad. Fine, brave
-old people. He is a baker, the old father, and makes the most wonderful
-bread. I went to see them last summer."
-
-Their packing was done and the room denuded; the men had taken away the
-piano that morning. He had his letters to write; so there was really no
-reason why she should not go. And there was, besides, nothing that they
-had to say to each other, except the one thing he had to say.
-
-The silence that overtakes parting friends on a station platform had
-overtaken them since the morning, though, at lunch, Adrienne had talked
-with some persistence of her immediate plans and prospects and about the
-unit of doctors and nurses who were to meet her in Italy. There was no
-reason why she should not go, and he would even rather she did. He would
-rather see no more of her until evening when everything but the one
-thing would be over and done with. And so he was left with his letters,
-leaning his elbows on the table over the hotel paper and staring out at
-the Saone and the white _archeveche_.
-
-Both letters were difficult to write; but beside the one to Lydia, the
-one to Barney was easy. Barney, after all, was to gain everything from
-what he had to tell him, and Lydia was to lose; how much was Lydia to
-lose? He recalled their last evening together and its revelations and
-saw that the old laughing presage was now more than fulfilled. Lydia was
-to lose more than her toes and fingers; in any case. Even if he returned
-to her alone, she cared for him too much not to feel, always, the shadow
-of his crippled heart; his heart not only crippled, but occupied, so
-occupied that friendships, however near, became, in a sense,
-irrelevancies. And if he returned with Adrienne--but could he return
-with Adrienne? What kind of a life could he and Adrienne lead in
-London?--even if Lydia's door, generously, was opened to them, as he
-believed it would be--knowing her generous.
-
-He laid down his pen and fixed his eyes on the river and he tried to see
-Lydia and Adrienne together. But it was a useless effort. From this
-strange haven of the Lyons hotel where he had spent the happiest
-fortnight of his life, he could not see himself into any future with
-familiar features. He could only see himself and Adrienne, alone, at
-hotels. To attempt to place her in Lydia's generous drawing-room was to
-measure more accurately than he had yet measured it the abyss that
-separated him from his former life. If it could be spanned; if Adrienne
-could be placed there, on the background of eighteenth-century fans and
-old glass, she became a clipped and tethered seagull in a garden,
-awkward, irrelevant, melancholy. Lydia might cease to find her
-third-rate and absurd; but she wouldn't know what to do with her any
-more than she would have known what to do with the seagull. So what, if
-Adrienne became his wife, remained of his friendship with Lydia?
-
-He put aside the unresolved perplexity and took Barney first.
-
-"My dear Barney," he wrote,--"I don't think that the letter Adrienne has
-written to you will surprise you as much as this letter of mine. You
-will understand from hers that she wishes to free herself and to free
-you. You will understand that that is my wish, too. She only tells you
-that she has been staying here with me, for a fortnight, as my wife;
-that's for your solicitor; you will read between the lines and know that
-it seemed worth while to both of us to make the necessary sacrifice in
-order to gain so much for you and for her. I hope that you and my dear
-Nancy will feel that we are justified, and that you will take your
-happiness as bravely as we secure it for you. You'll know that our step
-hasn't been taken lightly.
-
-"But, now, dear Barney, comes my absolutely personal contribution. It is
-a contribution, for it will make you and Nancy happier to know that I
-have as much to gain as you and she. I have fallen in love with Adrienne
-and I hope that I may win her consent to be my wife. Yes, dear Barney,
-unbelievable as it will look to you, there it is; and she dreams of it
-as little as you could have dreamed of it. I met her again, as her
-letter informs you, at the Boulogne hospital. She asked me to say
-nothing about our meeting. She wanted to disappear out of your lives.
-She saved my life, I think, and I saw a great deal of her. What I found
-in her that I had not seen before I need not say.
-
-"My great difficulty, my burden and perplexity now, lie in the fact that
-she has no trace of feeling for me that might give me hope. We became,
-at Boulogne, the best of friends; such friends that this plan suggested
-itself to her; and we remain, after our fortnight here, the best of
-friends; and that is all. Yet I have hope, unjustified and groundless
-though it may be, and had I not had it from the beginning I couldn't
-have entered upon the enterprise; not even for you and Nancy. From one
-point of view it's possible that you may feel that I've entered upon it
-in spite of you and Nancy. You may feel inclined to repudiate and disown
-the whole affair and to remain unaware of it. In that case it would come
-down to an appeal from me to you to carry it through for my sake. But
-from another point of view it makes it easier for you; easier for you to
-accept, since my hope gives integrity to the situation. That's another
-thing that decided me. If it had been mere sham I don't think I could
-have undertaken it. Adrienne felt none of my scruples on this score. She
-walked over legal and conventional commandments like a saint over hot
-ploughshares. But I haven't her immunities. I should have felt myself
-badly scorched, and felt that I'd scorched you and Nancy, if my hope
-hadn't given everything its character of _bona fides_.
-
-"Dear Barney, dear Nancy, please forgive me if I've been selfish. It
-hasn't all been selfishness, that I promise you; it was in hopes for
-you, too; and I have to face sacrifices. The worst of them will be that
-if Adrienne takes me I'll have to lose you. You can measure the depth of
-my feeling for her from the fact that I can make such sacrifices.
-Perhaps you'll feel that even if she doesn't take me I'll have to lose
-you. I hope not. I hope, in that case, that mitigations and refuges will
-be found for me and that some day you'll perhaps be able to make a
-corner in your lives where I may creep and feel my wounds less aching.
-In any case, after Adrienne, you are the creatures dearest to me in the
-world and I am always and for ever your devoted friend,
-
- ROGER."
-
- * * * * *
-
-And now Lydia. There was no use in thinking about it. The plunge must be
-taken.
-
-"My dear Lydia," he wrote,--"I have fallen in love with Adrienne Toner.
-I feel that with such a friend as you it's better to begin with the
-bomb-shell. She doesn't know it, and if we are here in this Lyons hotel
-together, it's only, she imagines, because she wishes to set Barney free
-and that I've undertaken, for her sake and for Barney's, a repugnant
-task. It is a repugnant task, in spite of what it may mean to me of
-happiness. I hate it for her, and for Barney and for myself. But since
-she was determined on it and since, if it wasn't I it was to be another
-friend, and since I have fallen in love with her, I saw that it was only
-decent that the co-respondent in the case should be the man who married
-her afterwards. For I hope to become her husband, and I haven't one jot
-of ground for my hope. We are studying Dante together, and she shows me
-the sights of Lyons. She is just the same. Yet completely altered.
-
-"I don't know whether you'll feel you can ever see me again, with or
-without her. I don't want to cast myself too heavily on your compassion,
-so I'll only remind you that even if I return to England alone I shall
-probably have to lose Nancy and Barney and that you will be my only
-refuge. It will be the culmination of my misfortunes if I have to lose
-you.
-
-"Dear Lydia, I am always your devoted
-
- "ROGER"
-
- * * * * *
-
-But he hadn't lost her. He knew he hadn't lost her; in any case. And the
-taste of what he did was sharp and bitter to him, for she was generous
-and loyal and he had cut off her very limbs. When he had addressed and
-stamped the letters he went downstairs, and, for the sense of greater
-finality, carried them to the post instead of dropping them into the
-hotel-box.
-
-He had almost the sense of disembodiment as he returned to the empty and
-dismantled room. He seemed to have become a mere consciousness suspended
-between two states of being. The past was gone. He had dropped it into
-the post-box. And he saw no future. He felt, for the moment, no hopes.
-At the moment it seemed absurd to think that Adrienne could ever love
-him. He tried to picture Coldbrooks and Somer's Place when the
-bomb-shell struck them. Would Barney show Nancy the letter? Nancy would
-be pale, aghast, silent. Barney would have to wait for days, perhaps,
-before saying to her: "But, after all, it's for their sakes, too, Nancy
-dear. See what Roger says." Mrs. Averil would cast up her hands and cry
-"That woman!"--but, perhaps, with as much admiration as repudiation, and
-Meg, if she were summoned to the scene of confusion, would say, "So
-she's got hold of Roger, too." Funnily enough it was the dear March
-Hare, he felt sure, who would be the first one to stretch out a hand
-towards the tarnished freedom. "After all, you know," he could hear her
-murmuring, "it would be much _nicer_ for Barney and Nancy to be married,
-wouldn't it? And Adrienne wasn't a Christian, you know, so probably the
-first marriage doesn't _really_ count. We mustn't be conventional,
-Monica." Yes, perhaps it would go like that at Coldbrooks. But at
-Somer's Place Lydia would sit among her fans and glass and wish that
-they had never seen Adrienne Toner.
-
-He paced up and down before the windows and he had never been so lonely
-in his life. He was so lonely that he became aware at last that his mere
-negative state was passing into a positive and that grief at the
-severance of old ties had become fear of losing Adrienne. The fear and
-the loneliness seemed actualized when, at five, the waiter appeared
-bearing the tea-tray on his shoulder. He had never had tea alone before
-in this strange, foreign room. Adrienne always made a complicated and
-charming ritual of the occasion, boiling the water on their own little
-spirit-kettle and measuring the tea from her own caddy--the very same
-kettle and caddy, she told him, that had accompanied herself and her
-mother on all their travels. And to see the cups and bread and butter
-and not to have her there, added a poignant taste of abandonment to his
-loneliness.
-
-She kept the kettle in her room and when the boy was gone he softly
-opened the door and went in. It would keep his heart up to have the
-water boiling in readiness for her arrival. He recognized, as he stood,
-then, and looked about him, that his instinct had also been that of
-taking refuge. In her room he could more closely recover the sense of
-her presence.
-
-She had finished all the essentials of her packing and her box stood
-with its lid open ready for the last disposals. Yet the room seemed
-still full of her personality. He noted it all gazing around him with
-eyes almost those of a solemn little boy permitted to glance in at a
-Christmas-tree.
-
-Her dressing-table, improvised from the mantelpiece, was neatly laid out
-with small, worn, costly, and immaculate appurtenances. He moved forward
-and looked at them, not touching. The initials intertwined on the backs
-of the ivory brushes were her girlish ones: A. T. She had discarded,
-long since, no doubt, her wedding toilet set.
-
-If he became her husband, the thought crossed his mind and quickened his
-heart, he might brush her hair for her, that wonderful golden hair,
-before many months were over.
-
-Near the ivory hand-glass stood two photographs in a folding frame of
-faded blue leather. He stooped to look and saw that one was of Mrs. and
-the other certainly of Mr. Toner, in their early days. Remote,
-mysterious and alien, their formally directed eyes looked back at him
-and in the father's ingenuous young countenance, surmounted by a roll of
-hair that was provincial without being exactly rural, the chin resting
-upon a large, peculiar collar, he could strangely retrace Adrienne's
-wide brow and steadfast light-filled eyes. Mrs. Toner wore a ruffled
-dress and of her face little remained distinct but the dark
-gaze--forceful and ambiguously gentle.
-
-The room was full of the fragrance that was not a fragrance and that
-had, long ago, reminded him of Fuller's earth. A pair of small blue
-satin _mules_ stood under a chair near the bed.
-
-Only after he had withdrawn, gently closing the door behind him, did he
-realize that he had forgotten the kettle and then he felt that he could
-not go back again. A moment after the boy returned with a note, sent, by
-hand, he was informed, from the Croix Rousse.
-
-"I am so dreadfully sorry, so disappointed," he read. "Our last
-afternoon, but I can't get away yet. Don't wait dinner for me, if I
-should be late, even for that. I won't be very late, I promise, and we
-will have our evening."
-
-The note had no address. He rushed forth and down to find the messenger
-gone. Had he only known where to seek her in the vast, high, melancholy
-district of the Croix Rousse he would have gone to join her. His sense
-of loneliness was almost a panic.
-
-Of course, he tried to fix his mind on that realization, as he went back
-to the salon, her rapatries had no doubt preoccupied her mind, from the
-first, quite as much as their own situation. She had spoken to him in
-especial of this family and of their sorrows. One child they had left
-dead at Evian and the mother, on the eve of their return to their
-Northern home, had become too desperately ill to travel. "Such dear,
-good, _gentle_ people," he recalled her saying. No; he must not repine.
-After all he had only the one thing to say to her; and the evening would
-be long enough for that.
-
-It was nearly seven when he heard her quick footstep outside. When she
-entered, the brim of her little hat, in the electric light, cast a sharp
-shadow over her eyes, but he saw at once that she had been crying.
-
-She came in so quickly that he had not time to rise and, going to him,
-behind his chair, she put her hands on his shoulders and pressed him
-down, saying: "I'm so sorry to have left you all alone."
-
-It was astonishingly comforting to have her put these fraternal hands
-upon him like this. She had never done it before. Yet there was a salty
-smart in her words to him. What else did she intend to do but leave him
-all alone for always?
-
-"I'm dreadfully lonely, I confess," he said, "and I see that you're
-dreadfully tired."
-
-She went round to the other side of the table and sat down, not looking
-at him and said, in a low voice: "Oh--the seas--the seas of misery."
-
-"You are completely worn out," he said. He was not thinking so much of
-the seas of misery as of his few remaining hours. Were they to be
-spoiled by her fatigue?
-
-"No; not worn out. Not at all worn out," said Adrienne, stretching her
-arms along the table in front of her as she sat, and though she had wept
-he could see something of ardour, of a strength renewed, in the lines of
-her pallid lips. "I've sat quite still all afternoon. I've been with
-him. She died soon after I got there. At the end she was talking about
-the little girl's grave at Evian. I was able to comfort her about that.
-She was so afraid it would not be tended. That it would have no flowers.
-Josephine will go to Evian afterwards and see about it. There are always
-dear nuns to do those things. There was a nun with her to-day. That was
-the greatest comfort of all; and the priest who came. But I was with the
-father and the five poor little children; so frightened and miserable. I
-could not leave them, you see. He talked and talked and talked. It
-helped him to talk and tell me about their home and how they had had
-everything so nice and bright. Linen, a garden, a goat and fowls. Oh, if
-only she could have seen her home again! That was what he kept saying
-and saying. They were full of hope when they got to Evian. He told me
-how the children sang at dawn when the train panted up the mountain
-among the golden trees. Like birds, he said, and _Vive la France_! They
-all believed they were to be safe and happy. _Et, Madame, c'etait notre
-calvaire qui commencait alors seulement._"
-
-She spoke, not really thinking of him, he saw, absorbed still in the
-suffering she had just left, measuring her power against such problems
-and the worse ones to which she was travelling to-morrow.
-
-"Josephine will be with them, I hope," she went on presently, "in three
-or four days. She will help them to get home and then she will come back
-and go to see about the grave at Evian. Josephine is a tower of strength
-for me."
-
-Her eyes were raised to him now, and, as they rested, he saw the
-compunction, the solicitude, with which they had met him on her
-entrance, return to them. "I'm not so very late, am I?" she said,
-rising. "I'll take off my hat and be ready in a moment."
-
-"Don't hurry," said Oldmeadow.
-
-She was tired, more tired than she knew. During dinner she hardly spoke,
-and, finding the resolve suddenly, he said, as they came back to their
-salon: "Do you know what you must do now. Go and lie down and rest for
-an hour. Until nine. It's not unselfishness. I'd rather have half of you
-to talk to for our last talk, than none of you at all."
-
-"How dear of you," she said. She looked at him with gratitude and,
-still, with the compunction. "It would be a great rest. It would be
-better for our talk. I can go to sleep at once, you know. Like
-Napoleon," she added with a flicker of her playfulness.
-
-When she had gone into her room Oldmeadow went out and walked along the
-quai. The night was dark and dimmed with fog, but there was a moon and
-as he walked he watched it glimmer on the windows of St. Jean. He seemed
-to see the august form of the cathedral through a watery element and the
-grey and silver patterns of the glass were like the scales of some vast
-fish. A sort of whale waiting to swallow up the Jonah that was himself,
-he reflected, and, leaning his elbows on the parapet of the quai, the
-analogy carried him further and he saw the cathedral like a symbol of
-Adrienne's life--her "big, big" life--looming there before him,
-becoming, as the moon rose higher, more and more visible in its austere
-and menacing majesty. What was his love to measure itself against such a
-vocation?--for that was what it came to, as she had said. She was as
-involved, as harnessed, as passionately preoccupied as a Saint Theresa.
-How could he be fitted in with Serbia and all the hordes of human need
-and wretchedness that he saw her sailing forward to succour? He knew a
-discouragement deeper than any he had felt, for he was not a doctor and
-his physical strength was crippled by his wounds; and, shaking his
-shoulders in the chilly November air, he turned his back on the
-cathedral and leaned against the parapet to look up through leafless
-branches where the plane tassels still hung, at the lighted windows of
-the hotel; their hotel, where the room, still theirs, waited for them.
-He felt himself take refuge in the banal lights. After all, she wasn't
-really a Saint Theresa. There was human misery everywhere to succour.
-Couldn't she, after a winter in Serbia, found creches and visit slums in
-London? The masculine scepticism she had detected in him had its
-justification. Women weren't meant to go on, once the world's crisis
-past, doing feats of heroism; they weren't meant for austere careers
-that gave no leisure and no home. The trivial yet radiant vision of
-intimacy rose again before him. She slept there above him and he was
-guarding her slumber. He would always watch over her and guard her. He
-would follow her round the world, if need be, and brush her hair for her
-in Serbia or California.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-
-The gilt clock on the mantelpiece pointed to nine, but when he went to
-Adrienne's door and listened there was no sound within her room, and his
-heart sank as he wondered if she might not sleep on, in her fatigue,
-sleep past all possible hour for their colloquy. Yet he did not feel
-that he could go in and wake her. The analogy of the cathedral loomed
-before him. It would be like waking Saint Theresa.
-
-He walked up and down the empty, glittering salon; walked and walked
-until the clock struck ten. Desperation nerved him then and he went
-again to her door and knocked.
-
-With hardly a pause her voice answered him; yet he knew that he had
-awakened her and it echoed for him with the pathos of so many past
-scenes of emergency when it must so have answered a summons from
-oblivion: "Coming, coming." Among bombings, he reflected; and sudden
-terrible influxes of dying men from the front.
-
-"Coming," he heard her repeat, on a note of dismay. She had sprung up,
-turned on her light and seen the hour.
-
-He was reminded vividly, as he saw her enter--and it was as if a great
-interval of time had separated them--of his first meeting with her. She
-was so changed; but now as then she was more composed than anyone he had
-ever met.
-
-But it was of much more than the first meeting that the pale, still face
-reminded him. His dreams were in it; the dream where she had come to
-him along the terrace, lifting her hand in the moonlight; and the dream
-of horror when he had again and again pushed it down to drown.
-
-"I'm so ashamed," she said, and he saw that it was with an effort she
-smiled. The traces of her weeping were now, after her sleep, far more
-visible, ageing her, yet making her, too, look younger; like a child
-with swollen lids and lips. "I didn't know I was so tired. I slept and
-slept. I didn't stir until I heard your knock. Never mind. We'll talk
-till midnight."
-
-She was very sorry for him.
-
-She sat down at the table and under the electric chandelier her braided
-hair showed itself all ruffled and disarranged. She had on her dark
-travelling dress and she had thrust her feet into the pale blue satin
-_mules_. The disparity of costume in one so accurate, her air of
-readiness for the morrow, made him feel her transitoriness almost more
-than her presence, though his sense of that pressed upon him with a
-stifling imminence. Even though she sat there the room kept its look of
-desolate, glittering emptiness and more than their shared life in it he
-remembered the far places from which she had come and to which she was
-going. It was as if she had just arrived and were pausing for the night
-_en route_.
-
-As he had seen them years ago, so he saw again the monster engines
-crossing the prairies at night and flying illumined pennons of smoke
-against the sky as they bore her away from blue seas, golden sands, a
-land where the good and gifted lurked behind every bush; and before her
-stretched the shining rails, miles and miles of them, running through
-ruin and desolation, that were to bear her ever onwards into the
-darkness. This was what life had brought her to. She had been only a
-sojourner among them at Coldbrooks. The linked life of order and family
-affection had cast her forth and he saw her, for ever now, unless he
-could rescue her, with only hotels to live in and only the chaos she was
-to mould, to live for. She seemed already, as she sat there under the
-light with her ruffled hair, to be sitting in the train that was to bear
-her from him.
-
-"I think you owe me till midnight, at least," he said. He had not sat
-down. He stood at some little distance from her leaning, his arms
-folded, against a gilded and inlaid console. "We've lots of things to
-talk about."
-
-"Have we?" Adrienne asked, smiling gently, but as if she humoured an
-extravagance. "We'll be together, certainly, even if we don't talk much.
-But I have some things to say, too."
-
-She had dropped her eyes to her hands which lay, lightly crossed, on the
-table before her, and she seemed to reflect how best to begin. "It's
-about Nancy and Barney," she said. "I wanted, before we part, to talk to
-you a little about them. There are things that trouble me and you are
-the only person with whom I can keep in touch. You will know how I shall
-be longing to hear, everything. You'll let me know at once, won't you?"
-
-"At once," said Oldmeadow.
-
-"There might be delays and difficulties," Adrienne went on. "I shall be
-very troubled until all that is clear. And then the money. You know
-about the money? Barney isn't well off and he was worse off after I'd
-come and gone. I tried to arrange that as best I could. Palgrave
-understood and entered into all my feelings."
-
-"Yes; I'd heard. You arranged it all very cleverly," said Oldmeadow.
-
-He moved away now and, at the other end of the room, his back to her,
-came to a standstill, while his eyes dwelt on a large gilt-framed
-engraving that hung there; some former Salon triumph; a festive,
-spring-tide scene where young women in bustles and bonnets offered sugar
-to race-horses in a meadow, admired by young men in silk hats.
-
-"Do you think this may make a difficulty?" Adrienne asked. "Make him
-more reluctant to take what is to come to him? It's Mrs. Chadwick's now,
-you know."
-
-"You've arranged it all so well," said Oldmeadow, noting the gardenias
-in the young men's button-holes, "that I don't think they can get away
-from it."
-
-"But will they hate it dreadfully?" she insisted, and he felt that her
-voice in its added urgency protested, though unconsciously, against his
-distance; "I seem to see that they might. If they can't take it as a
-sign of accepted love, won't they hate it?"
-
-"Well," said Oldmeadow, trying to reflect, though his mind was far from
-Barney and Nancy, "dear Eleanor Chadwick doesn't mind taking it,
-whatever it's a sign of. And since it will come to Barney through her, I
-don't think there'll be enough personality left hanging about it to hurt
-much."
-
-"I wish they could take it as a sign of accepted love," Adrienne
-murmured.
-
-"Perhaps they will," he said. "I'll do my best that they shall, I
-promise you."
-
-It was one thing to promise it and another to know his hope that it
-might be a promise never to be redeemed. The cross-currents in his own
-thought made him light-headed as he stood there, his back to her, and
-examined the glossy creatures in the meadow. "Do you think it will all
-take a long time?" Adrienne added, after a little pause. "Will they be
-able to marry in six or eight months, say?"
-
-"It depends on how soon Barney takes action. Say about a year," he
-suggested. "They'd wait a little first, wouldn't they?"
-
-"I hope not. They've waited so long already. I hope it will be as soon
-as possible. I shall feel so much more peaceful when I hear they're
-married. Could you, perhaps, make them see that, too?"
-
-And again he promised. "I'll make them see everything I can."
-
-He turned to her at last. She sat, her face still downcast in its
-shadow, while the light glittered on her wreaths of hair. Her hands
-still lay before her on the table, and the light fell on her
-wedding-ring. Perhaps she was looking at the ring.
-
-"It all depends on something else," he heard himself say suddenly.
-
-She turned her head and looked round at him. His attitude, his distance
-from her, drew her attention rather than his words, for she repeated
-mildly: "On something else?"
-
-"Whether I can keep those promises, you know," said Oldmeadow. "Yes, it
-all depends on something else. That's what I want to talk to you about."
-
-He hardly knew what he was saying as he approached the table and pushed
-the brocaded chair, companion to the one in which she sat, a little
-from its place. He leaned on its back and looked down at her hands and
-Adrienne kept her eyes on him, attentive rather than perplexed.
-
-"May I talk to you about it now?" he asked. "It's something quite
-different."
-
-"Oh, do," said Adrienne. She drew her hands into her lap and sat
-upright, in readiness. And, suddenly, as he was silent, she added:
-"About yourself? I've been forgetting that, haven't I? I've only been
-thinking of my side. You have quite other plans, perhaps. Perhaps you're
-not going back to England for ever so long. Is it an appointment?"
-
-"No; not an appointment," he muttered, still looking down, at the table
-now, since her hands were no longer there. "But perhaps I shan't be
-going back for a long time. I hope not."
-
-"Oh," she murmured. And now he had perplexed her. After what he had just
-promised her, his hope must perplex and even trouble her. "Do tell me,"
-she said.
-
-"It's something I want to ask you," said Oldmeadow--"And it will
-astonish you. You may find it hard to forgive; because I've meant to ask
-it from the beginning; from our deciding to go away together. As far
-back as the time in the hospital."
-
-"But you may ask anything. Anything at all," she almost urged upon him.
-"After what I've asked you--you have every right. If there's anything I
-can do in the wide, wide world for you--oh! you know how glad and proud
-I should be. As for forgiveness"--he heard the smile in her voice, she
-was troubled, yet tranquil, too--"you're forgiven in advance."
-
-"Am I? Wait and see." He, too, tried to smile, as he used the tag; but
-it was a mechanical smile and he felt his heart knocking against the
-chair-back as he went on: "Because I haven't done what you asked me to
-do as you asked me to do it. I haven't done it from the motive you
-supposed. It's been for Barney and for Nancy and for you; but it's been
-most of all for myself." He screwed his glass into his eye as he spoke
-with a gesture as mechanical as the smile had been and he looked at her
-at last, thus brought nearer. "I want you not to go on to-morrow." It
-was the first, the evident, the most palpable desire that rose to his
-lips. "I want you never to go on again, alone. If you can't stay with
-me, I want you to let me follow you. When the time comes I want you to
-marry me. I love you."
-
-The light as it fell on her seemed suddenly strange, almost portentous
-in its brilliancy. Or was it her stillness, as she sat and gazed at him
-after he had spoken the words, that was strange and portentous? It was
-as if they arrested the currents of her being and she sat tranced,
-frozen into the fixed shape of an astonishment too deep for emotion. Her
-eyes did not alter in their gentleness; but the gentleness became tragic
-and pitiful, like the inappropriate calm on the mask of a dead face at
-Pompeii, fixed in an eternal unreadiness by the engulfing lava.
-
-She put up her hand at last and pushed back her hair. With her forehead
-bared she became more like the photograph of her father. When she spoke
-her voice was slow and feeble, like the voice of a person dangerously
-ill. "I don't understand you."
-
-"Try to," said Oldmeadow. "You must begin far back."
-
-She still kept her hand pressed upon her hair. "You don't mean that it's
-the conventionally honourable thing to do? Oh, no; you don't mean that?"
-Her face in its effort to understand was appalled.
-
-"No; I don't mean anything conventional," he returned. "I'm thinking
-only of you. Of my love. I'll come with you to Serbia to-morrow--if
-you'll let me. I could kneel and worship you as you sit there."
-
-"Oh," she more feebly murmured. She sank back in her chair.
-
-"My darling, my saint," said Oldmeadow, gazing at her; "if you must
-leave me, you'll take that with you; that the man who destroyed you is
-your lover; that you are dearer to him than anything on earth."
-
-"Oh," she murmured again, and she put her hands before her face. Her
-eyes were hidden; she had spoken no word of reproach and he could not
-keep himself from her. He knelt beside her, grasping the chair across,
-behind her. She was so near that he could have laid his head upon her
-breast. "Don't leave me," he heard his pleading voice, but she seemed so
-much nearer than his own voice; "or let me come. Everything shall be as
-you wish and when you wish. Tell me that you care, too; or that you can
-come to care. Tell me that you can think of me as your husband."
-
-She was there, with her hidden eyes, within his arms, and inevitably
-they closed around her, and though he heard her murmur, "Please, please,
-please," he could not relinquish her. She was free and he was free.
-They had cut themselves off from the world. They were alone in the
-strange city; in the strange, bright, hallucinated room; and he knew
-from the ache and rapture of her nearness how he had craved it.
-
-But, gently, he heard her say again, "Please," and gently she put him
-from her and he saw her face, and her eyes full of grief and gentleness.
-"Forgive me," she said.
-
-"My darling. For what?" he almost groaned. "Don't say you're going to
-break my heart."
-
-She kept her hand on his breast, holding him from her while she looked
-into his eyes. "It is so beautiful to be loved," she said, and her voice
-was still the slow, feeble voice of exhaustion. "Even when one has no
-right to be. Don't misunderstand. Even when one may not love back; not
-in that way. Forgive me; not in that way; my dearest friend."
-
-"Why mayn't you love back? Why not in that way? If it's beautiful, why
-mayn't you?"
-
-"Sit there, will you? Yes; keep my hand. How weak I've been, and cruel.
-It can't be. Don't you know? Haven't you seen? It has always been for
-him. He must be free; but I can never be free."
-
-"Oh, no. No. That's impossible," Oldmeadow said, leaning towards her
-across the table and keeping her hand in both of his. "I can't stand
-that. I could stand your work, your vocation, better. But not Barney,
-who loves another woman. That's impossible."
-
-"But it is so," she said, softly, looking at him. "Really it is so."
-
-"No, no," Oldmeadow repeated, and he raised her hand to his lips and
-kept it there, a talisman against the menace of her words. "He lost
-you. He's gone. I've found you and you care for me. You can't hide from
-me that you care for me. Just now. For those moments. You were mine."
-
-"No," she repeated. "I was weak and cruel, but I was not yours."
-
-She had been incredibly near so short a time ago before. Now, looking at
-him, with her difficult breaths and gentle, inflexible eyes, she was
-incredibly remote. "I am his, only his," she said. "I love him and I
-shall always love him. It makes no difference. He loves Nancy, but it
-makes no difference. He is my husband. The father of my baby."
-
-She tried to speak on steadily while she thus gave him the truth that
-ended all his hope; but the desperate emotion with which he received it
-made real and overpowering to her her outlived yet living sorrow. With
-all that she must relinquish laid bare to her in the passion of his eyes
-she could measure all that she had lost, as she had, perhaps, till then,
-never measured it. "Don't you know?" she said. "Don't you see? My heart
-is broken, broken, broken."
-
-She put her head down on her arms as she said the words and he heard her
-bitter weeping.
-
-He knew, as he listened, that it was all over with him. Dimly, in the
-terrible suffering that wrenched at him, he received his further
-revelation of the nature already nearer him than any in the world. Her
-strength would be in all she did and felt. She had loved Barney and she
-would always love him. Her marriage had been to her an ultimate and
-indissoluble experience. That was why she had been so blind. She could
-not have thought of herself as a woman to be again loved and wooed.
-
-Her hair lay against his hands, still holding hers, and he found himself
-stroking it, without tenderness or solicitude it seemed. It seemed to be
-only automatically that his fingers passed across it, while he noted its
-warmth and fineness and bright, lovely colour, remembering that he had
-thought it at the first her one indubitable beauty.
-
-They sat there thus for a long time. The gilt clock paused, choked, then
-in a voice of hurrying, hoarsened silver rang out eleven strokes.
-Footsteps passed and faded up the corridor; doors closed. A tramway on
-the quai clashed and clanged, came to a noisy standstill, and moved on
-again with a rattling of cables and raucous blasts from a horn; and in
-the profound silence that followed he seemed to hear the deep old river
-flowing.
-
-"Really, you see, it's broken," said Adrienne. She had ceased to weep,
-but she still leaned forward, her head upon her folded arms. "You saw it
-happen," she said. "That night when you found me in the rain."
-
-"I've seen everything happen to you, haven't I?" said Oldmeadow.
-
-"Yes," she assented. "Everything. And I've made you suffer, too. Isn't
-that strange; everybody who comes near me I make suffer."
-
-"Well, in different ways," he said. "Some because you are near and
-others because you won't be."
-
-His voice was colourless. His hand still passed across her hair.
-
-"Don't you see," she said, after a moment, "that it couldn't have been.
-Try to see that and to accept it. Not you and me. Not Barney's friend
-and Barney's wife. In every way it couldn't have done, really. It makes
-no difference for me. I'm a _deracinee_, as I said. A wanderer. But what
-would have become of you, all full of roots as you are? You can live it
-down without me. You never could have with. And how could you have
-wandered with me? For that must be my life."
-
-"You know, it's no good trying to comfort me," said Oldmeadow. "What I
-feel is that any roots I have are in you."
-
-"They will grow again. The others will grow again."
-
-"I don't want others, darling," said Oldmeadow. "You see, my heart is
-broken, too."
-
-She lifted her head at last and he saw her marred and ravaged face.
-
-"It can't be helped," he tried to smile at her. "You weren't there to be
-recognized when I first met you and now that you are there, I've come
-too late. I believe that if I'd come before Barney, you'd have loved me.
-It's my only comfort."
-
-"Who can say," said Adrienne. Her gaze, as she looked at him, was deep
-with the mystery of her acceptance. "Perhaps. It seems to me all this
-was needed to bring us where we are--enmity and bitterness and grief.
-And my love for Barney, too. Let me tell you. It's in the past that I
-think of him. As if he were dead. It's something over; done with for
-ever; yet something always there. How can one be a mother and forget?
-Even when he is Nancy's husband and when she is a mother, I shall not
-cease to feel myself his wife. Perhaps you think that strange, after Meg
-and what I believed right for her. But it is quite clear to me, and
-simple. It isn't a thing of laws and commandments; only of our own
-hearts. If we can love again, we may. But for me it would be impossible.
-With me everything was involved. I couldn't, ever, be twice a wife."
-
-Silence fell between them.
-
-"I'll see about the little girl's grave," said Oldmeadow suddenly. He
-did not know what had made him think of it. Perhaps something that had
-gone on echoing in him after she had spoken of her maternity. "I'll go
-to Evian to-morrow. It will spare Josephine the journey and give me
-something to do. You'll tell me the name and give me the directions
-before you go."
-
-Tears filled her eyes as she looked at him; but they did not fall. They
-could need no controlling. The springs of weeping must be nearly
-drained. "Thank you," she said, and she looked away, seeming to think
-intently.
-
-It was now too late for the tramways. They had ceased to crash and
-rattle by, but a sound of belated singing passed along the quais,
-melancholy in its induced and extravagant mirth.
-
-The horrible sense of human suffering that had beaten in upon him at the
-hospital, pressed again upon his heart. He saw himself departing next
-day to find the abandoned grave and he saw himself standing beside her
-train and measuring along the shining rails the vast distances that were
-to bear her away for ever.
-
-"That's the worst," he said. "You're suffering too. I must see you go
-away and know that you are unhappy. I must think of you as unhappy. With
-a broken heart."
-
-Her eyes, after she had thanked him, had been fixed in the intent
-reverie. She, too, perhaps, had been seeing those tides of misery, the
-sea of which she had spoken, breaking in tragic waves for ever; so
-unchanged by all the alleviations that love or mercy could bring; and it
-was perhaps with despair that she saw herself as one with it. Her eyes
-as she turned them on him were full of distance and of depth and, with
-sickening grief, he felt that a woman with a broken heart could do
-nothing more for herself or for him.
-
-But her thought, whatever the voids of darkness it had visited, drew
-nearer and nearer to his need as she looked at him. Something of her own
-strong vigilance was in the look, bringing the seagull to his mind. The
-seagull caught and battered by the waves, with sodden wings, half
-dragged down, yet summoning its strength to rise from the submerging
-sea.
-
-"But you can be happy with a broken heart," she said. Their hands had
-fallen apart long since. She stretched out hers now and took his in her
-small, firm grasp.
-
-"Can you?" he asked.
-
-"You mustn't think of me like this," she said, and it was as if she read
-his thoughts and their imagery. "I went down, I know; like drowning.
-Sometimes the waves break over you and pull you down, and there seems
-nothing else in all the world but yourself and what you've suffered. But
-it doesn't last. Something brings you up again."
-
-Something had brought her up again now. His darkness. His misery. It was
-as if he saw her spread her wings and saw her eyes measuring, for them
-both, the spaces of sea and sky.
-
-He remembered a picture in a book he had loved as a little boy: little
-Diamond held to the breast of the North Wind as she flies forth in her
-streaming hair against a sky of stars. So he felt himself lying on her
-breast and lifted with her.
-
-"I've told you how happy I can be. It's all true," she said. "It's all
-there. The light, the peace, the strength. I shall find them. And so
-will you."
-
-"Shall I?" he questioned gently. "Without you?"
-
-"Yes. Without me. You will find them. But you won't be without me," said
-Adrienne.
-
-Already she was finding them. He knew that, for, as she looked at him,
-he felt an influence passing from her to him like the laying of her hand
-upon his brow. But it was closer than that. It was to her breast that
-her eyes held him while, in a long silence, the compulsion of her faith
-flowed into him. First quietness; then peace; then a lifting radiance.
-
-"Promise me," he heard her say.
-
-He did not know what it was he must promise, but he seemed to feel it
-all without knowing and he said: "I promise."
-
-She rose and stood above him. "You mustn't regret. You mustn't want."
-
-She laid her hands upon his shoulders as she spoke and looked down at
-him, so austere, so radiant. "Anything else would have spoiled it. We
-were only meant to find each other like this and then to part."
-
-"I'll be good," said Oldmeadow. It was like saying one's prayers at
-one's mother's knees and his lips found the child-like formula.
-
-"We must part," said Adrienne. "I have my life and you have yours and
-they take different ways. But you won't be without me, I won't be
-without you. How can we be, when we will never, never forget each other
-and our love?"
-
-He looked up at her. He had put out his hands and they grasped her dress
-as a donor in a votive altarpiece grasps the Madonna's healing garment.
-It was not, he knew, to keep her. It was rather in an accepting
-relinquishment that he held her thus for their last communion, receiving
-through touch and sight and hearing her final benison.
-
-"I will think of you every day, until I die," she said. "I will pray for
-you every day. Dear friend--dearest friend--God bless and keep you."
-
-She had stooped to him and for a transcending moment he was taken into
-her strong, life-giving embrace. The climax of his life was come as he
-felt her arms close round him and her kiss upon his forehead. And as she
-held him thus he believed all that she had said and all for which she
-could have found no words. That he should find the light and more and
-more feel their unity in it: that the thought of her would be strength
-to him always; as the thought of him and of his love would be strength
-to her.
-
-After she had gone, he sat for a long time bathed in the sense of her
-life, and tasting, for that span of time, her own security of eternal
-goodness.
-
-THE END
-
-
-Typographical error was corrected by the etext transcriber:
-
-"Adriennes mustn't fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only
-justification for Adriennes is to be in the right. => "Adrienne mustn't
-fail," said Mrs. Averil dryly. "The only justification for Adrienne is
-to be in the right. {pg 241}
-
-
-
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